June 12, 2025 6 min read
Before we cover exactly how menopause and perimenopause work in the Menopause Series, I want to cover something that affects this area significantly due to the amount of false information currently existing on the subject.
This is information that leads to choices which can make menopause worse, or harder to deal with, as well as lower our overall longevity.
I'm talking about the subject of cholesterol.
As perimenopause and menopause have everything to do with a lowering of key hormones that occurs, this becomes quite important. Because cholesterol is what these key hormones are made from.
June 10, 2025 6 min read
There are key things causing hormonal disruptions in men and women today, even in our children, affecting their overall growth.
Testosterone levels have been dropping for decades while estrogen levels have risen sharply.
Levels of growth hormone and progesterone are lower and cortisol levels are too high.
And hormonal imbalances are now much more than just being deficient in one or another hormone.
There are exact chemicals in the environment today which block hormones from being created, block them from being used, disrupt their normal action, or impersonate them entirely.
And they're increasing each year.
While this affects muscle-building and fat loss significantly, its effect goes far beyond this to our sleep, stress levels, overall health and how fast we age.
In this article we cover what's happening and what you can do about it.
June 08, 2025 6 min read
While insulin is in the bloodstream, almost no fat burning can take place.
But something can happen here when our diet is quite high in sugar over a long period of time, keeping our Insulin levels high for longer each day.
The cells build up a resistance to the Insulin. Meaning, when Insulin comes knocking, trying to give the sugar to the cell so it can make energy, the cell says “no” and closes its doors.
June 05, 2025 7 min read
If we want a fit, lean, healthy body that lasts into our later years, then we need to not only put in the work and eat right, but we need to be able to spot any pitfalls in our path and handle them before they become a problem.
I'm talking about illness, physical issues, organ troubles, cardiovascular issues, etc.
Many things can exist and are quite visible or easy to spot. But only because they've become big enough to spot. However, there was a point before they became big enough to be visible when they were harder to spot... but much easier to address.
Health troubles can exist without us knowing, leading to troubles we can see later on, if only because they've gotten worse.
They can even impact our ability to build muscle, recover, or lose body fat, without us ever knowing they were there, existing.
But if these things are still too small to see right now, then how do we know? And how can we catch them before they become a problem?
That’s where Heart Rate Variability comes in.
Heart Rate Variability, or HRV, is a literal measuring stick of our current health and how well our body is able to adapt and recover. And it’s something we can use to monitor ourselves.
Whether we're into extreme sports and maximum physical performance, or trying to achieve optimal health for a long life, learning what HRV is, and how to use it, puts our health and performance in our hands.
This helps us spot trouble when it’s still a ways away, so we can handle it before it gets out of hand.
June 03, 2025 6 min read
Did you know low levels of thyroid can bring on not only low energy and weight gain, but also contribute to depression and brain fog?
This can make thinking, problem-solving, and just coping with the everyday stresses of life much harder.
With the rise in hormone-blocking toxins in our environment, processed foods and processed sugars, and the low amount of protein most of us consume, low thyroid is affecting more and more people, especially among women and the elderly.
But there’s one more thing affecting this — low magnesium. Magnesium is necessary for thyroid to be produced inside the body. Yet it’s being processed out of our foods more and more every year, until more than half the people in the US are now magnesium deficient.
In this article we dive into what thyroid is, how low thyroid occurs, how it affects our mood, energy levels, mental alertness, and our ability to think and cope with the problems of everyday life and what we can do to raise it.
June 01, 2025 6 min read
We know about amino acids, hormones, and how different foods affect our ability to build lean muscle, burn fat and stay healthy.
But if we want to achieve maximum levels of energy, recovery, health and performance, and build the most lean muscle, then we need to go down to the cellular level.
After all, our bodies are just one big mass of some 100 trillion cells all bonded together.
How well we're doing is an exact reflection of how well our cells are doing.
And they require a multitude of nutrients and biochemicals, all held in equilibrium, to ensure they can work properly, produce energy, build muscle, and keep our body going.
When these aren't properly balanced we can get headaches, brain fog, low levels of energy, muscle cramps, slower recoveries from workouts, and imbalances in hormones.
But when everything is in place, we have the most powerful you that you can be.
So let’s see how this works.
June 01, 2025 4 min read
Electrolytes are necessary for hydration, energy, recovery, and mental clarity.
They power our nervous system, regulate our water levels, allow our cells to function, and are key to protein synthesis, recovery, and even brain function.
And they're vital for fat loss.
Lack of electrolytes can cause dizziness, cramps, headaches, exhaustion, mental confusion, and even affect our heartbeat.
But they are exact minerals and they're needed by the body in exact ratios.
Too much of one and not enough of another can actually exacerbate the problems they're supposed to address.
In fact, the wrong ratio can even cause dehydration and bloating, not to mention weight gain and slower recoveries.
May 29, 2025 6 min read
When we look at the fact of aging, or getting older, we often measure it in two ways:
The number of years we’ve been on this earth, chronologically.
And the amount of decay that’s set in: fatigue, lower energy, poor fitness levels, poor sleep, loss of muscle, worsening vision and hearing, digestive problems, memory loss, etc.
But, while we’ve come to see the second as the inevitable result of the first, it’s actually not. It’s the result of getting biologically older, accelerated aging before our time.
We don’t realize this because our view is obviously based on what we’ve seen for decades now. And what we’ve seen is not good.
But this isn’t a natural situation. It’s a created situation.
Today, 90 percent of the money spent on health care in the US, almost $4.1 trillion, is spent on preventable chronic disease.
And a 2018 study found that 88 percent of Americans are in poor metabolic health—meaning they are on the road to the above diseases.
That’s not 88% of the elderly, that’s 88% of the population of the US.
This is despite the US spending nearly double the amount on healthcare and medicine as any other country.
But in the Blue Zones of the world, where they don’t have access to either our medicine or our toxins and very poor foods, they live quite healthily to 100 or more.
This is accelerated aging. And we don't need it.
So sit tight, because we’re about to get sciencey.
May 29, 2025 7 min read
Did you know that factors such as diet, exercise, toxins, sleep, stress and more can affect how able our DNA are to make new, healthy cells?
This is a huge factor in aging.
If our DNA can't make new cells properly, but instead makes "faulty" cells, then, as our body is nothing but cells, over time our body begins to slowly degrade.
We see it in our skin, our strength, our energy levels and our overall health.
This is half of what we call "aging."
But it doesn't have to be this way. This is a created situation.
And we can reverse it.
May 27, 2025 7 min read
If we want to actually increase longevity, increase lifespan and increase overall health and ability during the entirety of that lifespan, then we need to define what we’re talking about.
Even more, we need to compare the current “norm” we’ve become accustomed to… to what not only can exist, but does exist in other places today.
A person should be able to live past 100 years old, with high energy levels, strength and mental ability, doing what they want without the need of twenty different drugs to keep them going, and then pass away peacefully.
And not only should that be the case, but in places outside of our “modern world” — called Blue Zones — it is the case. Quite routinely.
Let's dive in.
May 25, 2025 7 min read
There is a lot of debate today about how much protein is too much.
And this includes what causes protein toxicity, something that overloads our kidneys and liver, affecting our overall health, and which can be more severe with those who already have issues with their kidneys, liver and insulin levels.
It’s basically consuming more protein than our body can use at the time.
But that’s a very general description, and doesn’t help us to determine how much is too much, or even tell us how this happens.
Saying: “You’re eating too much protein,” is both too general, but also incorrect.
Too much of which type of protein? Because different proteins, consumed in large amounts, cause different effects.
To understand protein toxicity, what causes it, and ensure we aren’t consuming too much protein, we need to take a step backwards.
Because with anything that doesn’t seem to have a direct answer, there is some missing piece of information.
And in this case it’s a big one: there is no such thing as protein toxicity.
You see, our body doesn’t use the protein we eat.
It uses the building blocks that make up the protein, the amino acids.
And unless we look at these, we don’t actually know what protein toxicity is or what causes it, and we don’t know how much protein is too much.
Because what we’re talking about when we say Protein Toxicity is actually Amino Acid Toxicity.
It doesn’t come from eating too much protein, it comes from eating too much of the wrong kinds of proteins that contain too many of the wrong amino acids.
And that can cause real issues.
Let’s dive in.
May 22, 2025 9 min read
Did you know that when Estrogen levels rise too high, it can unbalance other hormones? And this significantly impacts body fat gain and loss?
We've covered several hormones now, from Insulin and Cortisol causing fat gain and preventing fat loss, to Growth Hormone and IGF, the hormones that come out while we sleep and which are largely responsible for fat loss.
We cover all of these because they all work together, each influencing the other, and if we want sustainable fat loss, we need to address each one.
But high Estrogen also plays a large role in all of this in both women and men, building excess body fat and lowering testosterone and growth hormone.
It also lowers thyroid, a hormone that regulates our metabolism, which in turn regulates body fat and energy levels.
And it lowers progesterone in women and men, a calming, fat-burning, testosterone-building hormone.
All of this leads to excess body fat, decreased muscle mass, worsened mood, higher stress levels, slower recoveries, and lower energy.
So let's see what's actually happening here, what causes this, and what we can do about it.
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