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Coming up on this episode of the Doctor's Pharmacy. Now, if exercise were a drug, it would be the most powerful drug on the planet. Why is it so important for longevity? Well, essentially it has the ability to regulate almost every physiological function that your body has in a beneficial way and to lower your risk for chronic disease for every single disease, from heart disease to diabetes to cancer to dementia and lots more. Hey, everyone. It's Dr. Marc here. For me, being healthy means being able to get up every morning and do exactly what I want, no matter my age. In fact, I recently hiked 15 miles in Patagonia with a mile vertical straight up and down and trekked in the snow with crampons in the mountains. It was so amazing. I was a little sore and tired afterwards, but so was my 28-year-old guide who was half my age. That's why I'm excited to share a supplement that's been a game a danger in my fitness journey. Timelines, MitoPure. You see, as we age, our mitochondria, these little energy factories in the body become less efficient, causing us to struggle with low energy levels and muscle function.

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But MitoPure has clinically proven to replace your tired, worn-out mitochondria with new, healthy healthy mitochondria to deliver significantly improved cellular energy, muscle strength, and endurance. It's backed by more than 15 years of serious science, and I can tell you personally that my workouts have never felt more productive with noticeable gains in my muscle and endurance within just a few months of taking it. Right Now, Timeline is giving my community an exclusive 10% off your first order of might appear. Just head to timeline. Com/drhyman and start your journey to peak muscle health. And now, let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Pharmacy. Welcome to The Doctor's Pharmacy and to another episode of Health Bites, where we take a deeper bite into Juicy Topics. And today, my friends, the Juicy Topic is me, what I do to stay healthy and increase both my health span and my lifespan. And I think it's working because I just did my lab test again through Function Health, the company I co-founded, that allows you to get a panel of over 110 biomarkers for less than $500 and track them over time. And in the last five months since I did my test, and I just repeated it, I have reversed my biological age by in one year in just five months.

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I'm going to tell you what I do and why, so maybe you can learn what may also work for you. Now, I'm turning 65 this year, and I feel healthier than I have in decades. My friends and my colleagues often ask me what I do to look even in better shape than I did 20 years ago. And seriously, I didn't know it was possible to build muscle and get abs in your 60s, and now I know what it is. That's what today's Health Byte is all about. I'm giving you the inside scoop on what my longevity routine looks like and what I do on a daily basis to age in reverse. From my morning routine to what I eat in the day to how I destress and the supplements I take all the way up to my evening routine. This episode has everything you need to burn fat, build muscle, and stay young forever. So let's jump right into my daily routine for longevity from start to finish. How do I start my day? Well, I wake up around 6:30 or 7:00 in the morning, and first thing I do is hydrate. Now, we all wake up a little dehydrated in the day, so I drink 32 ounces of water with electrolytes.

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My favorite is light show. I have no connection with them, but I love their clean products. You can get the ones that just taste chicken soup without the chicken. It's salty, I don't mind it. Or you can get the little lemon-flaved one with a little stevia, that's fine. Then I'll do a short 10, 20-minute meditation. There's lots of apps out there and programs you can use, like Ziva Meditation, Sam Harris's apps, or Headspace. Then I'll have a coffee, and I'll journal to gather my thoughts and ground myself for the day. Then I don't have too much. I just maybe one or two cups and none after the first cup in the morning. Next, I'll do my morning workout. Now, why is exercise important for longevity? Well, essentially, it's the most powerful drug other than food to regulate every aspect of your biology that improves your health and extends your life. It has the ability to regulate almost every physiological function and lower your risk of every single chronic disease, from heart disease to diabetes to cancer to dementia. It's also essential for our mental health, for our mood, for our microbiome to keep those gut bugs happy, for your immune system and for longevity.

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Now, I used to think that yoga was enough to stay strong and fit along with running or cardio that I did or biking, but my body started to change after I did strength training in my late '50s, and it really revolutionized It's my idea of what is possible. I look back at pictures of me without a shirt when I'm 40, and now it's totally different. It looks like it should be reversed. 40 should be 60, and 60 should be 40. Now, there are four elements of fitness that are really important. The first is cardiovascular fitness. We call that cardio or aerobics. The second is strength or resistance training. Third is flexibility. The last one often people forget is stability, which means preventing yourself from falling and having a good core. My favorite tool is resistance bands. I can travel with them. I take them everywhere. I don't need any equipment other than the little bag of bands that I take with me and can use in any place. Whether I'm in a hotel room or a house, I just hook it on a door knob or a railing, I need a floor and a door, basically, the exercise.

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Now, it's possible to use these to put on a lot of muscle, and you can do it in your 50s, you can do it in your 60s, you can do it at any age, 70s, I started my dad's strength training when he was 88 years old, and it totally changed his life. Now, muscle is important because it's the currency of longevity. Without muscle, you're going to decline, your metabolism is going to slow down, you're going to become more inflamed, your hormones are going to screw up, you're going to have high cortisol, low growth hormone, your testosterone is dropping in for a guy. It's bad news. My morning routine doesn't take long. It's 20 to 30 minutes of full-out exercise with the bands three to four times a week. If I do five, I'll do five, but mostly three to four times a week. Now, I love the bands because like I said, I can take them anywhere. The program I use is from Tom Brady's system, which is called TB12. They have the bands, they have the workout app. It's pretty easy to do at home. You just follow the program and you can do it at any age, anywhere.

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You don't get injured with weight sometimes, so I like it for that. Now, in cardio, I know is also important. I love cardio. I love biking. I love road biking, mountain biking. If it's bad weather, I'll use my Peloton. I love tennis because I don't feel like I'm exercising. I love hiking, and I do something four or five times a week. I also do stretching every day a little bit, but I do hot yoga two or three times a week. That's my routine, my band, some cardio, stretching yoga. I don't spend that much time on it, but the dividends are enormous. After I do my band training in the morning, and pretty much every morning, I have my healthy aging shake for breakfast. Now, this is something I concocted for me, but I think it's good for everybody, and it's got a lot of benefits. I'll tell you what's in in a sec. But this shake is really important because it supports muscle protein synthesis. This is what you want to do to build and maintain and repair muscle. It's super healthy for you because it upregulates the pathways that build muscle. If you have it within an hour of exercise or maybe two, you actually will accelerate muscle building.

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I notice it when I don't have it in my routine, when I'm on the road, I end up having a change in my body that as I notice. The next thing it does, and this shake does, which is really important, is it supports my mitochondrial health and repair and renewal of my mitochondria, which are the energy factories of your cells that are necessary for healthy aging. As we age, our mitochondria decline in number and function. Keeping your mitochondria healthy is really important. I just did a test. It's a cheek swab for my mitochondrial function, and I just got it back actually yesterday, and it was amazing. The guy said, You look like an athlete. It looks great. Again, I'm 64, going to be 65, but I have really healthy, strong my endocondria. The next thing I do, use stuff in there that's going to support my microbiome. The healthy aging shake has things to support my gut health, which is really important because if you want to age well, you want to be healthy, you want to reduce inflammation, you have to have a lot of healthy, happy gut bugs and not the bad bugs.

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We now know that the disturbances in our microbiome are one of the hallmarks of aging. The other thing I think it's really important is to support my detox pathways, to support my hormones and adrenaline. All that is done through putting stuff in my shake. I put in the blender. It takes me about three minutes to make in the morning. It keeps me balanced and energetic throughout the day. It's really important to start the day with protein. Most people start the day with sugar. Sugar is being coffees, tea, muffins, bagels, pancakes, waffles, French toast, cereal, which is the worst thing they ever invented. This is what's killing us. It's driving our biology to become insulin resistant, put on weight, store belly fat, and drive inflammation. That leads to every single problem that we see as we age. How do you avert that? Well, you start the day with protein and fat. The first thing you do is get 30 to 50 grams, depending on your size or how much you work out, from high-quality protein. Now, what I use is regeneratively-raised goat way. Now, why I use goat way is because it has A2-cacine. It's not like regular cow way because regular cow has A1-cacine, which is more inflammatory and more likely to cause gut issues and other problems.

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I use Goat Whey. I tolerate it very well, and it's really easy to digest. It's the most easily absorbed, bioavailable, clean, and best muscle-building protein available. It also boosts glutathione, which is an important detoxifying compound. It reduces inflammation and oxidative stress, and it's really important for longevity. These are the things that you need to do as you age to get your glutathione up, and having whey is really good. I'll take 30 to 50 grams of regeneratively raised goat whey. I use Mount Capra or Naked Goat. Again, I have no relationship with them, but I like their products. That jump starts muscle protein synthesis right after exercise. Now, there are vegan options. Garden of Life Sport Organic Plant-based Protein is okay, but they basically have to jack up the plant protein because the amino acids in plants are not the right amino acids to build muscle. You need high amounts of lucine, which is an acid that is mostly found in animal protein, some in plant protein, but not in a high amount. You need about two and a half grams per serving of protein in order to activate the switch to turn on muscle building.

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With this sport protein, they basically add the amino acids. It's not naturally found in there. The next thing I do is I put in a packet or two of something called Mitopure. This is what we call a postbiotic. Now, what is this? It sounds fancy, but essentially your gut bacteria, when they consume certain foods, like polyphenols from pomegranate or berries, for example, It will create a compound that has beneficial effects on your biology. This particular compound has been very well studied. It's called Urolithin A. It's found in a product called Mitopure. It induces something called mitophagy. This basically is the process of cleaning up old mitochondria. Essentially, it's a I think of it like a recycling system. It gets through the old mitochondria, it increases new mitochondria, it increases muscle protein synthesis, it increases fitness without even exercising, so it increases your VO2 max in fitness, and it helps clean up old cells, reduce inflammation, and lots of other things. Really an amazing I use that every day. I take about 5 grams of creatine for muscle protein synthesis. It's just a powder. It's very inexpensive. I use a scoop of my gut food powder, which I developed as a multivitamin for the gut.

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Essentially, it's got prebiotics, probiotics, and polyphenols, all which helps support a healthy gut microbiome. Sort of like a multivitamin for your gut. You can find that at gutfood. Com. I take about a spoon of MCT oil to help my brain function in energy and mitochondria, which essentially medium change like glycerides. Really powerful for optimizing mitochondria health and for giving you a little fat in the morning. Also, I use an adaptogenic mushroom powder with reishi, shaga, lion's mane, cordyceps, and other things. It helps energy, immunity, stress resilience. That's called Stamet 7 mushroom powder. I love that. Then I put in about 8-12 ounces or sometimes more of unsweetened macadamium milk. I use a handful of frozen berries or other berries. That's it. I just hit the blender, turn it on, and I drink it with my morning supplements, and that's it. It doesn't take a long time. My morning routine, basically, I could do the whole thing in an hour or two. Sometimes if I want to do longer cardio, it'll take longer, but it's really a huge investment that sets my day up for success. In the best case scenario, I do all these things before starting my day.

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Sometimes I can, right? If I'm busy. I have certain non-negotiables, right? I might be in a rush or I have less time. I do something, even if I have 10 minutes. For example, I was busy this morning. I just did a 20-minute workout instead of a 30-minute workout. I had my protein shake, was heading to a meeting, so I basically didn't have the full-time, but I still got my workout in and my shake in. It's great. Those are non-negotiables for me. A 20, 30-minute workout, protein for breakfast, and I take my handful of I'm good to go. That's my morning routine. I think having a morning routine is really important because it's just a habit. You build the habit, you build the muscle, you build the practice, and you end up having these practices that work over time to up-level your health over and over again. What do I eat? What do I eat for health? What do I eat for longevity? Well, that was my breakfast. For lunch and dinner, I basically follow what I jokingly call a vegan diet. I wrote a book called The Vegan Diet as a Spoof, making fun of all the diet wars, paleo, vegan, and so forth.

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I focus essentially on nutritional principles everybody agrees on that are common sense and that there's a lot of science behind, which is focus on quality because that matters actually more than quantity. You can't eat 35 cups of broccoli, right? You mean you could, but good luck with that. If you did, it wouldn't matter because there's not that many calories in it. You can focus on quality. You don't have to worry about quantity. If you focus on what you eat, you don't have to worry about how much because the body will naturally take care of that. I also focus on nutrient density. I eat a very nutrient dense diet. What does that look like? It's a low glycemic, meaning low sugar and starch diet. It's high in phytochemicals, all those colorful plant compounds that have medicinal value. It's high in fiber to feed my microbiome. I have good fats and also the right amount of high-quality protein. What does that look like? Well, I eat lots of plants. I eat a plant-rich diet, not a plant-based diet. Plant-based means 100% vegan. I'm not vegan. You can be, but it's problematic if you don't do it carefully and you don't supplement.

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I just had Brian Johnson on the podcast who's trying to live to be forever. He's trying not to die, which I think maybe he has a chance at, I don't know. But he has to supplement processed pea protein because he can't get enough protein from food that's Whole Foods if he wants to be a vegan. That's just a note. Not that you can't be, but you have to be very smart about it. I eat lots of plants, a plant-rich diet with plenty of fiber to feed my gut bugs, plenty of polyphenols, all the colorful phytochemicals. About 75% of my plate is non-starchy veggies. Colorful veggies from lots of variety of plants, phytochemicals that are in food like purple foods, right? Purple cabeza and black raspberries and cherries that have anthocyanins in them or resveratrol in berries, or ECGC in green tea, which is really powerful compound for longevity, or flavanols in onions, spinach, arugula, watercress, lycopine, which is in tomatoes, curcumin, which is in turmeric, broccoli has all these great compounds, so furophane and isothianite which are incredibly powerful for longevity. There's a lot of compounds in these plant foods that are super medicinal and have longevity benefits.

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You don't have to worry about it. You just have to eat a lot of colorful variety of foods, and you'll get them. I also eat foods that are low glycemic, so low glycemic fruits, so berries, kiwis, and so forth. Try to stay away from pineapple and melons and really sugary fruits, like a lot of bananas, for example. But it's not that you can't have them. It's just they're more likely to spike your sugar. I also include lots of herbs and spices because they're really important. Herbs and spices have a lot of phytochemicals in them, like we curcumin, pepper, all sorts of wonderful compounds. I also eat lots of healthy fat, so extra virgin olive oil. Use that as much as you want. I go through a bottle a week, probably. Nuts and seeds, avocados, grass-fed meats, omega-3 rich foods, all really good for you and essential. You need the right fats. Fat used to be the bad guy. It turns out it's not the bad guy. It's not fat that's making you gain weight. It's the sugar and starch. I wrote a book about fat called Eat Fat, Get Thin. Pretty powerful. One guy wrote to me, I didn't know him, but he found my email, he wrote to me, he said he lost 200 pounds doing that.

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It was really quite amazing to see his before and after pictures. The body really has an amazing ability to get repaired and to heal and do all the things it has to do if you just feed it right. I also eat the right protein. We talked about this a little bit in terms of the regenerative, raised goat way. I eat about a gram of protein per pound of ideal body weight. I'm about 175 pounds. I eat about 160, 170 grams of protein a day. Now, that may seem like a lot. It is if you're just a sedentary person, but I'm very active. If you want to build muscle, especially as you age, you need more protein. Now, there's a whole phenomena called anabolic resistance. Anabolic resistance is a phenomenon that happens as you get older, where you need more protein and more exercise to build muscle than you did when you were younger, because most of the younger gains are based on high levels of certain hormones that decline as you get older. You really need to make sure you're getting adequate protein. It's about a palm-sized piece of protein with every meal or so.

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Not that much. It's important to eat enough because one of the things that happens as we get age is you get something called sarcopenia. Now, sarcopenia is this condition, which means less muscle. Sarko means muscle, penia means less, like osteopenia or osteoporosis. This is a disaster because when you lose muscle, and you could be the same weight that you were at 65 than you were at 25, but be twice as fat. In other words, your muscle becomes replaced with fat. When that happens, you get abnormal blood sugar, abnormal insulin, your cortisol goes up, you get abnormal cholesterol, your hormones get screwy, you get high cortisol, like I said, and low growth hormone, which is needed for tissue repair. You end up with more inflammation, more oxidative stress, and more aging. Plus, you can't function as well because you can't get up out of a chair, you can't do what you like to do, you can't feel nimble and athletic and fit and do whatever you want. That's the goal here, is not to just look good in a bathing suit, it's to actually be highly functional as you get older. My friend Pety Ortia talks about the Centenary Olympics or the Centenary decathlon.

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Basically, one of the things you need to do is you need to get up out of the floor, get up out of a chair, tie your own shoes, like basic stuff that puts people in nursing home if they can't do it. You need to build muscle to do that. You need more protein, as I mentioned, to overcome this anabolic resistance. Now, there was a huge study on this called the Prodage Study. We'll link to it in the show notes. But essentially, all the world's experts on protein got together looking at how much protein needs we have, what happens as we get older, what protein we need, and it basically says what I just said. Have a look at that if you're interested. I also focus on high-quality protein because not all protein is the same. I don't eat factory-farmed animals. I make sure I have regenerally-raised meats when I can, grass-fed and finished meats. If I can't get a regeneratively-raised meat, pasture-raised eggs, wild caught fish that's sustainably harvested or regenerally raised. It's low in mercury. I like sardines, macaron, anchovies, salmon, and herring. My go-to sources for healthy protein are various companies that allow you to get direct access to this food, like Force of Nature, which has regeneratively raised meats, Cetopia.

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Com, Fish, which is great for regenerally raised fish, and also Thrive Market, which is a great company that sells affordable meats and also other products that are really good for you, like snacks and so forth. I would check out thrivemarket. Com. Hey, everyone. It's Dr. Marc. Now, modern foods aren't nearly as nutrient dense as they used to be, so we all need a little help from supplements if we want to function and feel our best. But supplements can also be tricky. Some use low-quality ingredients that are difficult for the body to absorb, and others add cheap fillers and additives. That's why I love Symbiotica. Cutting edge formulas they have, like liposomal glutathione and liposomal vitamin C, use liposomal technology, making them the most bioavailable and optimal for absorption. If you're unfamiliar, liposomes are fatty membranes like little bubbles that encapsulate nutrients and prevent them from being broken down in your digestive system and increasing their bioavailability or the percentage of the active ingredient actually absorbed into your body. Not only do they formulate their supplements for higher absorption, but Symbiotica is also extremely transparent about how and where they source their ingredients. You know you're getting high-quality products that are safe, effective without any seed oils, preservatives, toxins, or artificial additives.

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It also means they taste great. Flavors like citrus vanilla made from organic vanilla extract and organic orange peel oil. I also love they come in convenient packets, so I never have to worry about missing doses or packing big bottles when I'm traveling. Right now, you can try them for 20% off with free shipping on all orders. Just go to symbiotica. Com and use the code Hyman. That's symbiotica, C-Y-Y-M-B-I-O-T-I-K-A. Com, and use the code Hyman for 20% off plus free shipping. Now, let's get back to this week's episode of The Doctor's Farm. Pharmacy. Now, plant proteins, as I said, are fine, but you want to focus on minimally processed plant proteins, not all this fake meats and plant These are based meats. Those are just science projects. They're made in a factory. They're not good for you. Tofu, edamame, lentils are fine. Dairy is okay, but I would be careful with conventionally-raised dairy. I would use sheep or goat dairy if you can, or sometimes you can get grass-fed, regenerally-raised dairy that's milk, that's hard to find, that has A2-cacin. That's hard to find. But goat and sheep you can get, which are pretty easy, and I would stick with those.

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Get away from all the refined oils. They're made in ways that are highly damaging to your body. They have oxidized fats in them. They're made with various chemicals. They're probably full of things like glyphosate because they spray all the soypine oil and canola oil with that. I think I would just stay away from those. Refined grains, obviously, you can have some, but also stay away from starch and sugar, as we've talked about so much in the podcast. These drive this phenomenon of insulin resistance, which is at the root of all age-related diseases and aging itself. What would that look like? What would I eat in a day? Well, after my protein shake in the morning, I'd probably have a big salad with avocado, arugula. I get the washed kind because I'm lazy. I don't want to wash the salad, but toast a pumpkin pine nuts, maybe a tin of fish like wild salmon or macroll or sardines, tomatoes, olives, cucumber, extra virgin olive oil. I call my fat salad. It's fat from avocados, fat from pumpkin seeds, fat from pine nuts or fat from salmon or macroll, fat from olives, fat from virgin olive oil.

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It's a lot of veggies, but also a lot of good fat. Keeps me satisfied and has good quality protein. Then dinner, what do I eat for dinner? Well, I have regenerally-raised steak. I'll have beef, bison, venison, elk. If I can get it, it's hard to get. I'll have pasture-raised chicken or sometimes small small cold water fish that are low in mercury. I do like Japanese sweet potatoes, those purple kinds. Those are the ones that are eaten by the Okinawans who live a long time. I need a bit of extra carbs because otherwise, I lose too much weight. I shouldn't probably say that in public, but I do. I need a little extra carbs because I'm very active. Sometimes I have roast it shiitaki mushrooms. I make this delicious dish. You just take the shiitaki, cut the stems off, put them on a tray in the oven with a little olive oil, salt and pepper, roast them for half hour, 45 minutes at 350, 400, and they're just crispy, delicious. I always I need to have two to four veggies as sides, so stir fried broccalini, steam broccoli, aspergus, and a salad. I have a lot of extra veggies, and I think you need to have veggies as your main dish and meat and fish as a side dish.

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Once you figure out the meals that are work for you, you can just mix and match and switch up protein sources and veggies so you cover all the bases. I basically have a formula. It's just really quick. I don't spend a lot of time cooking. I can take a piece of fish, chicken meat, cook it in the pan, it cooks very quick. Throw in the oven for In a few minutes, I'll chop up them, veggies, stir, fry them, put a sweet potato in the oven. It's really maybe 15, 20 minutes to make dinner by the time of my start till I sit down. I have to put the potato in early, but other than that, it doesn't take me much time. My main course is veggies, protein as a side dish, very low starch and sugar, except the sweet potato, as I mentioned. Sometimes I eat dessert or chocolate, but I usually eat at the end of a meal. When you do that, the sugar gets absorbed more slowly. It doesn't spike your blood sugar or insulin. It's really important to eat the right food, but also be clear about when you're eating. What you eat matters, but the timing also matters.

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Also, I stop eating about three hours before bed. That's my food routine. You can create any meals with this basic framework. My Pegan Diet book is a great framework for this. I obviously wrote a book called Young Forever on Longevity. I talk a lot about longevity in diet and how to use food to activate your biology for longevity. You can refer to that. We'll put a link in the show notes to that as well. Now, the other thing I do is based on all the research I've done and all the research that's out there on longevity, we have embedded within us what I call longevity switches. These are built-in pathways that we all have that are designed to regenerate, renew, and repair our biology. We just have to learn what they are and how to turn the switch on. Just like a light switch in your house, you have to find the switch to turn it on. I'm going to tell you exactly what you can do besides the food that I just talked about, which is also a way to do it. But how do you activate these longevity switches? Well, one of the best ways is through something called hormesis.

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Hormesis is essentially a stress that doesn't kill you, that makes you stronger. So exercise is a form of hormesis. You run or you lift weights and you're pushing your body. It's a stress. In fact, your cortisol will go up, but it ends up making you stronger. You make more mitochondria, you make more muscle, you get fitter. That's essentially a hormetic thing. There's others like saunas and cold plunges. We'll get into them. Basically, I make sure every day I practice some form of hormesis to activate these ancient-embedded longevity genes and reverse what I call inflammation. These switches are built in to help us deal with an adverse environment because we didn't live where there was grocery store in every corner, and we had cars we could drive everywhere, and we didn't have to do much. We had to work hard and to live, and we had to deal with cold and heat extremes. We had to deal with starvation, hunger. We had to deal with all kinds of stuff that we don't have to deal with anymore. Because we did that, our bodies actually learned how to adapt to these stresses and conserve our biology in ways that make us survive.

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This is the phenomenon of hormesis and why it's so important. These practices, we should really incorporate into our lives. I will do at least one, probably two or more of these a week, depending on my travel, but I like to do it every day if I actually can. Let's talk about the kinds of things you can do that are hormesis. The first is something you might have heard about. It's called time-restricted eating. Basically, it means giving yourself a 12 to 16-hour window, maybe three or four times a week where you're not eating. It sounds hard, but it's not really hard. If you eat dinner at 6:00 at night, if you eat breakfast at 8:00 in the morning, that's a 14-hour fast. If you wait till 10:00 in the morning, that's a 16-hour fast. It's not so hard. The next thing I recommend is what we call phytohormesis. I talked a little bit about it earlier with all these phytochemicals, but there are bioactive compounds in our food. We call them phytochemicals that I consume regularly that activate pathways that we have that are designed to reduce inflammation, improve blood sugar, activate our stem cells, reduce oxidative stress, the increased mitochondrial function, to do all these wonderful things that these plant compounds do to activate our longevity switches.

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I want to make sure I eat a lot of these colorful plant foods, all the flabinoid-rich berries, leafy greens, all the family of cruciferous vegetables, right? Ca cauliflower, kale, collard greens, all which are super powerful. Plant compounds are really nice because they're in our food, we can eat them. They're like the plant's defense system. When your plants are trying to survive, they're not making these chemicals for you. They're making them for themselves. They're their immune system, their defense system, their repellent system for predators to deal with drought and extremes of cold, and all these things that they have to deal with. They make these medicinal compounds. When you eat them, they create a little stress in your body because they're designed to be a little bit poisonous, but they're actually good for you because they basically turn on the right thing. Like exercise, for example, if you over-exercise, it's bad for you, but if you do the right amount, it's good for you. The next thing I recommend is hot and cold therapy. Now, saunas and cold plunge sound like a lot, but even if you don't have a sauna or a cold plunge, if you have a bathtub, you can take a really hot bath or you can fill your bathtub up with cold water.

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That's what I do. Now, ideally, you could do 30 minutes in a sauna three or four times a week. In fact, in a Finnish study, they looked at thousands of people who did saunas. They do saunas a lot there. They found that if you did 30 minutes of a hot sauna four times a week or more, you had a 47% reduction in your risk of having a heart attack or dying, which is not so bad for a sauna. Plus, it increases something called heat shock proteins, which repair all damaged proteins in your body. It activates your innate immune system. It improves your heart rate variability, reduces stress, helps with weight loss, detoxification. There's so many benefits. The cold therapy does a lot of benefits, too. It activates dopamine and mitochondrial function through brown fat. There's a A lot of benefits that are scientifically proven. I've had podcasts on these. I encourage you to check them out. We'll link to them in show notes. The other thing you might want to think about is red light therapy. Now, red light therapy sounds weird, but there's actually a fair bit of data on it. All you need is about 10 minutes a day, and it activates all these protective mechanisms in your cells.

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It stimulates the body to make more energy. It helps reduce inflammation. It helps stimulate your antioxidant system. It speeds up healing. There's been data that shows it helps improve eyesight, cognitive ability, physical mobility, even skin aging. There's a term for this actually called photobiomodulation, which is super cool. One of the things I do, it's a little hard to get, but I really think is a powerful therapy is ozone therapy. I use it as a tune up or when I have access to it. Ozone is a highly reactive molecule. It acts as a pro-oxident, so it's a stress. It's a hermetic stress. But then it triggers the body to make all these beneficial thing. It increases your body's antioxidant reserves. It's anti-inflammatory. It boosts your mitochondrial function, your stem cell function. It prevents blood clotting. It really helps your body can repair. It's a powerful hermetic therapy that activates all these anti-aging defense mechanisms. It's very safe. It's generally cost-effective, and it has the potential to really optimize our health. I'll do it maybe once a month if I can. The other thing I like to try to do, which is a little hard to get, is hyperbaric oxygen therapy.

[00:28:11]

There's some interesting data out of Israel and other studies that show that it kills all these zombie cells, which are one of the hallmarks of aging, better than anything. It also increases telomere length, another hallmark of aging, better than anything. They use about 60 sessions over 90 days. They put people in the chamber, and they found that it really helped rejuvenate people, repair their brain, improve their It helps actually do all these incredible things like boost new blood vessel growth, mitochondrial function, stem cell activity, activates one of the longevity switches called sirtuans. Really, really powerful therapy. I think we're going to learn more about it. But you want to obviously do this with your doctor It's not something you just do on your own, although there are home chambers, but you want to make sure you're really looking at the risks and the benefits. The next thing I want to mention is really stress. Now, stress is not good. We all have it, we all get it, we all have to deal with it. But if it's not mitigated by some type of practice to reset your nervous system, it'll wreak havoc on every single one of our core biological systems.

[00:29:07]

It damages our gut microbiome, it suppresses our immune system, it drives inflammation, it'll shorten your telomeres, it causes DNA damage, and it screws up our hormones. It's one of the most potent drivers of aging, besides probably lack of sleep and poor diet. I make sure that I live a very active life, a lot going on, but I make sure I give my nervous system a reset on a regular basis, daily. I do meditation, breathwork, guided imagery, spending time in nature, spending time with friends. I use Binaural Beats. I love that. It's like an app I use to synchronize my brain waves and it helped me go into a deep theta state and get really relaxed very quickly. You can put your headphones on and do that. It's an app called Nucom. It's fun. We'll link to it in the show notes. Of course, getting a massage is always good. Can't always do that, but I like to get a massage once in a while, maybe once a month. There are other practices that you can use as well for stress reduction, but I've written a lot about this, but it's really important to practice active relaxation.

[00:29:58]

It's not something that just happens passively. The next thing is sleep. How do I optimize my sleep for longevity? Well, it's one of the most important cornerstones of health because you don't have that right, everything else goes south. You eat worse, you don't exercise, you're more stressed, you're more reactive, everything gets messed up. Not to mention all the benefits that happen when you're sleeping. When you're sleeping, your body cleans up all the garbage from the day, especially your brain. There's a brain system called the glymphatic system. That's the brain immune system, and it cleans up all the metabolic waste. When you don't do that, you end up with brain brain fog, memory issues, maybe dementia even. When you don't sleep well, it disrupts your circadian rhythm, which is really important in regulating all the pathways of healthy aging. When your circadian rhythm is screwed up, your hallmarks of aging get worse. For example, more inflammation, more mitochondrial damage, altered hormones, and nutrient signaling pathways. All the stuff that you don't want to happen happens if you don't sleep enough. My goal is seven to eight hours a night of good quality sleep. I'm generally sleep between 10:00, 11:00 at night and up by six or seven.

[00:30:58]

I try to follow the Same sleep schedule every day because the body basically is a biological organism, so you need to make sure you keep it in rhythm. If I don't have a blackout chase in a room, I use my eye mask, especially when I travel. I use ear plugs to block out any noises. I turn off the WiFi, keep my cell phone out of the bedroom. No screens in the bed. Your bed is for sleep and romance. That's it. You can read a little bit if you want at night, that's fine, but basically, don't work in bed. Blue blocker glasses at night can be helpful. They can eliminate blue light, and I try to use those for two or three hours before I don't have alcohol or caffeine. I was still caffeine after the morning, and I try not to drink at all. But if I do, I try not to have anything before two or three hours before bed. Sometimes need help to wind down. If I got a very active day, I'll do an Epsom salt bath with a few drops of lavender oil. I'll take a supplement, maybe with some herbs in it, like passion flower, Valerian root.

[00:31:49]

I'll use magnesium. I'll use a little melatonin. Sometimes other things can be helpful, like theanine, GABA, 5HDP. Sometimes guided relaxation, meditations can also be helpful. So sleep, really important. Don't shortcut sleep. The next thing I do is take the right supplements, and they're designed for me, but there's some general principles here. There's trillions of chemical reactions that occur in your body every second, and every single reaction requires an enzyme, and every enzyme requires vitamins and minerals to run smoothly. They're the grease that lubricates your biochemical wheels. If you don't have those, your biochemistry won't work great. Now, since the nutrient density of our diet has declined over time, we all need supplements. I mean, unless you're hunting and gathering and foraging all your own wild food, unless you're drinking pure clean water, you have no exposure to environmental toxins. You have no chronic stress. You go to bed with the sun, wake up with the sun, sleep nine hours a night. If that's you, you don't need supplements. But everybody else needs supplements, right? Because our bodies need the extra help because of all the stresses of our modern society. Now, they help fill a lot of nutrient gaps, and about 90% of us are deficient in one or more nutrient at the minimum level that the RDA says.

[00:32:54]

So not the optimal amount you need for health, but the minimum amount you need not to get a deficiency disease like scurvy or rickets. Now, these nutrients help prevent age-related diseases. They help support optimal functioning of all their biological processes and basically help our bodies run as smoothly as possible. The key is you need to test. I don't guess, I test. I'm a big fan of testing your biology to know what's going on. You have to know what's happening. It's like you check your blood sugar to know if you're needing diabetes medication or your blood pressure, if you need blood pressure medication, you got to test what's going on. I'm a big fan of testing so you can personalize your supplement plan according to your body's own unique needs and your own biology. Now, how do you do that? Well, you can go to your doctor. But I co-founded a company called Function Health in order to allow people easy access to over 110 plus biomarkers, including vitamin D, magnesium, omega-3 fats, iron studies, ferritin, zinc, selenium, many things CRP that you're not going to get tested at your regular check-up. They're included in the basic function testing, and you don't have to worry about it.

[00:33:50]

It's just there. It tells you the interpretation. It tells you if you're high, low, or borderline, and then what to do about it. Let me just share with you the basics I recommend for everyone and my basic routine, and then we can go to what the extra plan is if you want to really go extra. I do because I like to, but you don't have to. The supplement plan I think everybody should be on is vitamin D. Vitamin D is super important. My favorite vitamin D is something called vitamin D Supreme. It has vitamin K2 as well, including the MK7 form, which is important for your heart. I take omega-3 Juvenate from Big Bold Health, which has EPA and DHA, a couple of grams a day. I take a multivitamin. My pure encapsulation is called Multitd. I take something called homocysteine supreme, which has extra folate B6 and B12 because I have some genetics that make me a little bit of extra help with something called methylation. I also take magnesium at night to help with sleep and relaxation. Just magnesium glycinate, super simple. Then I take probiotics to keep my gut healthy. I take my own product, gut food every day.

[00:34:41]

Sometimes I take extra probiotics, but that's what I take on a daily basis. I think that's the basic for everybody, a multivitamin fish oil, vitamin D, a magnesium, maybe some extra B vitamin support, and probiotics. That usually covers the basis. I have a longevity stack that I like to take, but again, this is optional. You don't have to do this. I take NMN, a form of younger NMN, about a thousand milligrams a day to support NAD production. Again, this is really critical for activating longevity switches. I take a senalytic product to help kill the zombie cells with phyceton, green tea, and curcumin. Basically, kills all the old damaged cells and helps activate sertuins and AMBK, some of these pathways that I talk about that are longevity switches in my book. I take quercetin, which is really important. This is a very powerful longevity compound. It's an anti-inflammatory. The form I use is something called HTB rejuvenate by Big Bold Health. It's from Himalayan Tartuffe Buck wheat. Really a lot of research on this. Curcumin, The one I like is Turbia, but there's many out there by orthomolecular. I take green tea extract. It's called ECGC, 500 milligrams a day by Designs for Health.

[00:35:37]

I take a broccoli extract that's called Uncleplex from Xymogen that has the ability to improve detoxification and is anti-cancer, a lot of data on that. As I mentioned, I also take my Mitopure packets, which are really helpful for preventing sarcopenia. I take a little creatinine, as I mentioned, in my shake. That's my longevity stack. It's a lot, but I like to take as much as I can just to stay healthy. It seems to be working. I reverse my biological by year, so I'm going to stick with the plan. I'm measuring, I'm tracking, I'm looking all the time. I'm not just doing this willy-nilly. I'm tracking my results and I use my Function Health panels twice a year or more often to see where I'm at, to adjust things and see what's happening. You can learn about that if you want. You can go to functionhealth. Com/mark to learn more. That's functionhealth. Com/mark. We'll put it in the show notes. All right, so what are other things that are out there? These are really on the edge. They're often very expensive. I've had the privilege of trying many of these things as a guinea pig. I find them very helpful for my health and well-being.

[00:36:32]

I've also had a lot of issues. I've had a lot of health challenges. I've had autoimmune diseases, I've had mole toxicity, mercury poisoning, chronic fatigue syndrome, Lyme disease, back injuries. I've had a lot. Still going pretty strong. I use a lot of these therapies to help fix a lot of these things. What are those things that I use and that may not be ready for prime time that we need more research on? I do a lot of things. I'm going to share some of the menu. But again, realize this is really just for your information purposes. If you really want to explore, I write about them in the book. It depends on your budget and capacity to do it. But I think these are going to be coming down in price. They're going to be more accessible. There's more research on this all the time. Peptide therapy is something that people are using a lot. Ozempic is a peptide. You might have heard about that. But there's a lot of peptides out there that help with immune function that help with muscle repair and healing, that help with hormone support. A lot of them out there.

[00:37:19]

Exosomes and stem cells are basically regenerative therapies. A lot of regenerative therapies out there that help repair and renew systems. You can use them locally, you can use them just intravenously, and I've done that as well. Natural killer cells, which are things that your body makes to kill cancer and infections. You can actually take your own, grow them in a lab, and then put them back in. I've done that. There's also another therapy. I think it's really exciting that I believe will become more widespread. It's called transfer plasma exchange or plasmapheresis. Essentially, it's a technique of taking out your blood, filtering out the cells, keeping them, and throwing out all the soup that the cells float around and call your plasma. It's like an oil and filter change, but it can be remarkably effective. The data on longevity for this is really impressive, even on reversing a lot of Alzheimer's symptoms. These are therapies that I don't think you're ready for primed time. I'm just giving you a sense of what's out there. I've written a lot about them in my book, Young Forever. You can read all the things I'm talking about in the book.

[00:38:08]

It's a great resource that guides you in exactly how to customize this for yourself. That's it. That's my daily longevity routine. That's how I age in reverse. That's how in the last five months, I got a year younger biologically, which I'm very happy about. But it's important to note that you don't have to do everything. You don't have to. I'm a crazy man. I like to do everything. You don't have to do anything. You get 80% of the benefit or more just Start by focusing on the basics, just a few basic principles. Focusing on what you're eating, exercising, sleep, managing your stress, some basic supplements, some simple hormetic stressors, things like hot and cold therapy, cold shower in the morning, or a cold plunge in your bathtub, or a hot bath or a sauna or steam if you can get it. All these will make a real difference. You don't really need to do all these things. Just focus on the basics. Now, the older I get chronologically, the more I actually see what's possible, the more I test myself, and I'm using myself as a guinea big. I'm not quite spending $2 million a year like Brian Johnson, but I'm I'm learning a lot, and I'm actually finding out what works and what doesn't.

[00:39:02]

I'm doing this with my patients, with myself. I'm tracking the data. It's really important to focus on your biology because if you want to live a good life, if you want to feel good, have energy, have healthy relationships, do the work you dream of in the life, be there with your family, be there with your friends, and actually feel good, you got to take care of the machine. We don't do that, and we just degrade and get dilapotated, but we don't have to. This is the promise here, that we now have the science to unpack what's going under the hood and to customize and personalize a routine that works for you basically solves a lot of the things that we're trying to fight in this society, which is all this chronic disease that everybody's suffering from. 6 in 10 Americans have a chronic disease. When we take care of our bodies, when we put energy in doing things right for yourselves most of the time. You don't have to be perfect. We'll get our energy back, we'll get our drive back, our zest for life, and we'll get stronger, and we'll do great. I'm really excited about this space of longevity.

[00:39:54]

It's teaching us not necessarily that we're going to live forever or to strive for a living longer, longer. It's helping us understand the basic mechanisms of disease and how to address these so that we can optimize our health and feel good now. I'm going to keep you up to date. I'm going to let you know how this progresses. I'm going to tell you what happens over time with myself, and I'm going to share what I learned with you. I hope you learn a few things that are going to help you live a long and healthy life. Thanks for listening today. If you love this podcast, please share it with your friends and family. Leave a comment on your own best practices on how you upgrade your health and subscribe wherever you get your podcast. And follow me on all social media channels at Dr. Marc Hyman. And we'll see you next time on the Doctors Pharmacy. I'm always getting questions about my favorite books, podcasts, gadgets, supplements, recipes, and lots more. Now you can have access to all of this information by signing up for my free Marks Picks newsletter at drhyman. Com/ marxpicks. I promise I'll only email you once a week on Fridays, and I'll never share your email address or send you anything else besides my recommendations.

[00:40:52]

These are the things that have helped me on my health journey, and I hope they'll help you too. Again, that's drhyman. Com/markspicks. Thank you again, and we'll see you next time on the Doctors Pharmacy. This podcast is separate from my clinical practice at the Ultra Wellness Center and my work at Cleveland Clinic and Function Health, where I'm the Chief Medical Officer. This podcast represents my opinions and my guests' opinions, and neither myself nor the podcast endorse the views or statements of my guests. This podcast is for educational purposes only. This podcast is not a substitute for professional care by a doctor or other qualified medical professional. This podcast is provided on the understanding that it does not constitute medical or other professional advice or services. If you're looking for your help in your journey, seek out a qualified medical practitioner, you can come see us at the Ultra Wellness Center in Lenox, Massachusetts. Just go to ultrawellnesscenter. Com. If you're looking for a functional medicine practitioner near you, you can visit ifm. Org and search, Find a Practitioner Database. It's important that you have someone in your corner who is trained, who's a licensed health care practitioner, and can help you make changes, especially when it comes to your health.

[00:41:52]

Keeping this podcast free is part of my mission to bring practical ways of improving health to the general public. In keeping with that theme, I'd like to express gratitude to the sponsors that made today's podcast possible.