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In this episode of Intermittent Fasting Stories, Gin talks to Rachel Koss from Wisconsin.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Are you ready to take your intermittent fasting lifestyle to the next level? There's nothing better than community to help with that. In the Delay, Don't Deny community we all embrace the clean fast, and there's just the right support for you as you live your intermittent fasting lifestyle. You can connect directly with Gin in the Ask Gin group, and she will answer all of your questions personally. If you're new to intermittent fasting or recommitting to the IF lifestyle, join the 28-Day FAST Start group. After your fast start, join us for support in The 1st Year group. Need tips for long term maintenance? We have a place for that! There are many more useful spaces beyond these, and you can interact in as many as you like. Visit ginstephens.com/community to join us. An annual membership costs just over a dollar a week when you do the math. If you aren't ready to fully commit for a year, join for a month and you can cancel at any time. If you know you'll want to stay forever, we also have a lifetime membership option available. IF is free. You don't need to join our community to fast. But if you're looking for support from a community of like-minded IFers, we are here for you at ginstephens.com/community. Rachel is an early learning principal. She discusses her struggles with perimenopause, her transition from high-protein diets to intermittent fasting, and how IF has simplified her life. She emphasizes the importance of community support, the science behind fasting, and the balance of eating intuitively. Rachel also touches on the significance of body positivity and how she communicates the principles of fasting to her teenage daughters. The conversation highlights the transformative effects of intermittent fasting on health and well-being.Takeaways:• Rachel just celebrated her one-year fastiversary.• She struggled with fat gain caused by following high protein recommendations before discovering fasting.• Intermittent fasting has simplified her meal planning and reduced food noise.• Rachel transitioned from a high-protein diet to a more intuitive eating approach.• She emphasizes the importance of community support in the fasting journey.• Rachel's experience with alternate day fasting (ADF) has been positive.• She learned to listen to her body's hunger signals and adapt her eating accordingly.• She encourages a balanced approach to meals, focusing on satisfaction.• Rachel shares her insights on discussing fasting with her teenage daughters.At the end of the episode, Rachel encourages listeners to nail the clean fast and to give yourself both grace and time to adapt.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Get Gin's books at: https://www.ginstephens.com/get-the-books.html. Good news! The second edition of Delay, Don't Deny is now available in ebook, paperback, hardback, and audiobook. This is the book that you'll want to start with or share with others, as it is a simple introduction to IF. It's been updated to include the clean fast, an easier to understand and more thorough description of ADF and all of your ADF options, and an all new success stories section. When shopping, make sure to get the second edition, which has a 2024 publication date. The audiobook for the second edition is available now! Join Gin's community! Go to: ginstephens.com/communityDo you enjoy Intermittent Fasting Stories? You'll probably also like Gin's other podcast with cohost Sheri Bullock: Fast. Feast. Repeat. Intermittent Fasting for Life. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts. Share your intermittent fasting stories with Gin: gin@intermittentfastingstories.comVisit Gin's website at: ginstephens.com Check out Gin's Favorite Things at http://www.ginstephens.com/gins-favorite-things.htmlSubscribe to Gin's YouTube Channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_frGNiTEoJ88rZOwvuG2CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Lori Morton Biography As of this podcast, I'm 68 years old. I'm a daughter, sister, aunt, great aunt, and dog mom of two delightful Shih Tzus. My struggle with weight began in middle school. I grew up with the advent of fast food. When I was growing up, I tried to keep up with my brothers when it came to eating. Fast food, candy, and desserts were my downfall. After graduating from college, I accepted a position as a 5th-grade teacher. Teaching and careers in education are rewarding, but also stressful. There was always food in the teachers' lounge, or parents would send you treats. I responded to the stress of teaching by eating, and as a result,t my battle with weight grew over the years. I happily retired in 2015 from my last position as an elementary school principal. After retiring, I was determined to shed the weight I had gained over my 30 years in education. Losing close family members to Diabetes, Dementia, and Sarcoidosis has been the catalyst for my weight loss and fitness journey. My older brother, who had type 1 diabetes since the age of 13, died at the age of 52 from colon cancer. The death of my younger, seemingly fit and healthy 47-year-old sister was a wake-up call. Also, watching my mother slowly deteriorate from Alzheimer's disease added to my trauma. She died two years after my sister. To make sure I was there for my family and my sister's children in particular, I rejoined WW in 2016 and followed the program successfully for several years, but was frustrated that I couldn't get past a plateau that lasted about 1 ½ years. During that time ,I was yo-yoing up and down 10-15 pounds. From the beginning of the pandemic, in February 2020, to April 2021, I gained 35 pounds. That's when I decided to get back on track. After resetting, I lost only a few pounds before my weight plateaued again. I was worried that I had a problem with my metabolism. My frustration led me to research other ways to lose weight. I was of the opinion that if you do what you've always done, you will get what you've always gotten. While researching obesity and how to lose weight, I found information about intermittent fasting and Dr Jason Fung's book, The Obesity Code. Reading his book, I had many aha moments. Everything he described was my experience, so I decided to give IF a try, beginning in June 2021. I also searched for how to implement Intermittent Fasting to maximise my results. That's when I found and read Gin Stephen's book, Fast, Feast, Repeat. After that, I searched for fasting groups on Facebook and the Podcast app. That's when I found Graeme Currie's The Fasting Highway group, book, and podcast. I initially lost 59.5+ pounds (22.6 kg) through intermittent fasting. At the time, I thought I had mastered my struggles with obesity. My old nemesis, stress, reentered my life about three years ago with the unexpected death of my best friend, which was followed a few weeks later by the passing of my dog of 17 years. Once again, I used food to comfort myself. By far, 2025 was the most stressful year of my life. My dear 90-year-old father began exhibiting Dementia and was no longer able to live independently. My brother and I welcomed him into our homes on a rotating basis and were his primary caregivers. As a result, I regained almost all of the weight I lost. Caregiving was an honour and privilege, but it is one of the most stressful experiences one could face. Throughout these challenges, I kept resetting my fasting journey. Sometimes I was successful and sometimes not. I have learned a lot through my journey and am on the path to improving my health. Intermittent fasting works! I am of the mindset that I'm losing weight for the last time and will no longer comfort myself with food. To Join Our Patreon Community click here.www.patreon.com/thefastinghighwaywebsite-www.thefastinghighway.com
Just a half teaspoon of this natural anti-inflammatory acts as a potent ibuprofen substitute for inflammation and pain relief. Discover the best home remedies for pain and inflammation, and learn how to address inflammation at the root. 0:00 Introduction: Natural ibuprofen substitute 0:18 Curcumin, the natural anti-inflammatory 1:58 Pain relievers and ibuprofen comparison 2:08 Ibuprofen effects 3:25 Turmeric as a natural remedy vs. ibuprofen 4:32 More natural pain relief alternatives 6:15 Triggers of pain and inflammation8:25 Preventing inflammation Turmeric contains a potent compound called curcumin that can naturally alleviate pain and inflammation.There are 4 biochemical pathways that act as “master switches” to turn pain and inflammation up or down:1. Pain and inflammatory factory2. Master inflammation on-switch3. Inflammation megaphone 4. Backup inflammatory alarm system Many inflammatory treatments do not address all four pathways. Ibuprofen is great at turning the pain and inflammation switch off, and does so very quickly. Unfortunately, this pathway protects the stomach and kidneys, so ibuprofen can cause stomach ulcers and kidney issues. It also doesn't address the other inflammatory pathways, which is why people often have to take it repeatedly. Tylenol works in the brain, affecting the central nervous system, but does not relieve any inflammation. Similar to ibuprofen, aspirin works on the first inflammatory pathway, which can also affect your stomach.Turmeric affects 3 out of the 4 inflammatory pathways! A double-blind randomized controlled study found that taking 1500 mg of turmeric with black pepper produced results comparable to ibuprofen without the side effects. Extra-virgin olive oil mimics ibuprofen's effects at the molecular level. Try adding it to your salad regularly! Ginger and omega-3 fatty acids also work to reduce inflammation. Boswellia targets the 5-LOX pathway, also known as the backup inflammatory alarm system.There are 5 primary causes that flip the inflammatory switches on, leading to pain and inflammation in the body. By addressing the root cause, you can correct the pain rather than simply managing it. The following 5 factors turn on all of the inflammatory switches:1. Insulin resistance2. Mitochondrial damage3. Chronic oxidative stress4. Leaky gut5. Chronic infectionsTo prevent inflammation and address the root cause, try the following:• Low-carb diet • Eliminate ultra-processed foods• Intermittent fasting/prolonged fasting• Magnesium, vitamin D3, zinc, omega-3sDr. Eric Berg DC Bio:Dr. Berg, age 60, is a chiropractor who specializes in Healthy Ketosis & Intermittent Fasting. He is the Director of Dr. Berg Nutritionals and author of the best-selling book The Healthy Keto Plan. He no longer practices, but focuses on health education through social media.Disclaimer: Dr. Eric Berg received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Palmer College of Chiropractic in 1988. His use of “doctor” or “Dr.” in relation to himself solely refers to that degree. Dr. Berg is a licensed chiropractor in Virginia, California, and Louisiana, but he no longer practices chiropractic in any state and does not see patients, so he can focus on educating people as a full-time activity, yet he maintains an active license. This video is for general informational purposes only. It should not be used to self-diagnose, and it is not a substitute for a medical exam, cure, treatment, diagnosis, prescription, or recommendation. It does not create a doctor-patient relationship between Dr. Berg and you. You should not make any change in your health regimen or diet before first consulting a physician and obtaining a medical exam, diagnosis, and recommendation. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
First detailed in 1972, clean intermittent catheterization has remained a cornerstone of urological care for more than half a century. Despite major advances in device design and materials, one challenge continues to stand out: ensuring patients can confidently and consistently adhere to the procedure.In this ICS Podcast episode, host Daniele Bianchi, urologist from Italy, explores the real‑world barriers to clean intermittent catheterization adherence. He speaks with Enrico Finazzi Agrò, urologist (Italy), and Angie Rantell, specialist nurse (UK), who share their clinical experience, insights, and practical suggestions for improving patient engagement and support. Together, they reveal what truly makes a difference for patients, and what the urology community can learn moving forward. Through its annual meeting and journal, the International Continence Society (ICS) has been advancing multidisciplinary continence research and education worldwide since 1971. Over 3,000 Urologists, Uro-gynaecologists, Physiotherapists, Nurses and Research Scientists make up ICS, a thriving society dedicated to incontinence and pelvic floor disorders. The Society is growing every day and welcomes you to join us. If you join today, you'll enjoy substantial discounts on ICS Annual Meeting registrations and free journal submissions. Joining ICS is like being welcomed into a big family. Get to know the members and become involved in a vibrant, supportive community of healthcare professionals, dedicated to making a real difference to the lives of people with incontinence.
Dans cet épisode du podcast La Pause Fitness nous allons parler de jeûne intermittent, de Cortisol, Arthrose et Jeux Vidéo. NOUVEAU : Cortisol et perte de graisse : le guide pour brûler du gras sans stress Au programme : Jeûne intermittent : sans réduction calorique, pas de bénéfice métabolique Une étude allemande remet en question les […] The post Jeûne intermittent : la douche froide ? Cortisol, Arthrose et Jeux Vidéo. appeared first on Fitnessmith.
Send us a textEn début d'année, la “perte de poids” revient souvent… et avec elle, les diètes restrictives qui mènent au yo-yo. Dans cet épisode de MAX Wellness, je reçois Mathieu Bouchard, naturopathe, pour remettre le focus sur l'essentiel : la santé métabolique (et pas juste le chiffre sur la balance).On démystifie :Poids vs gras vs gras viscéral : pourquoi le gras viscéral est si central (inflammation, résistance à l'insuline, etc.)Pourquoi “perdre du poids” ≠ “améliorer sa santé”Les diètes yo-yo : ce qui se passe vraiment (restriction, signaux de satiété, perte de masse maigre, etc.)Ozempic / GLP-1 : le débat, les nuances et le vrai enjeu (dont la masse maigre)Jeûne intermittent : quand ça peut aider… et quand ça peut te nuire (surtout en mode stress + “je ne déjeune jamais”)Protéines : la base #1 (quantités, repères, erreurs fréquentes)Sommeil & stress : pourquoi ça change tout (glycémie, cravings, inflammation)Bouger (sans obsession des calories) : marche après les repas, effets métaboliquesHydratation : un repère simple et applicable
Join Roxanne, a certified nurse midwife and former labor nurse as she demystifies fetal monitoring. Roxanne delves into continuous and intermittent fetal heart rate monitoring, discussing their history, benefits, limitations, and appropriate use for both high and low-risk pregnancies. Learn about categories of fetal heart tracings, how they influence labor decisions, and the importance of shared decision-making in choosing the right monitoring method for you. Whether you're expecting, a birth professional, or just curious, this comprehensive guide will empower you with essential insights on fetal monitoring!00:00 Introduction to Fetal Monitoring00:17 Meet Your Hosts01:08 Understanding Continuous Fetal Monitoring05:26 History and Evolution of Fetal Monitoring08:24 Intermittent Auscultation Explained13:01 Comparing Continuous and Intermittent Monitoring14:45 Shared Decision Making in Fetal Monitoring19:11 Conclusion and Resources
Subscribe to our channel: https://www.youtube.com/@optispanGet Our Newsletter: https://www.optispan.life/This is a reaction video on Peter Attia's 60-second health take, from carnivore diets and testosterone to seed oils and fasting. Matt provides nuanced medical commentary on where he agrees, disagrees, and adds crucial context that Attia's format couldn't include. Woven throughout is the surprising personal story of how Matt's 60 Minutes interview led to VIP New Year's Eve passes from Anderson Cooper, blending high-level health analysis with human connection. The episode debates headline health claims while sharing a once-in-a-lifetime NYC experience.This video was produced by One Billion Media, an agency that specializes in YouTube virality for health brands and experts. Learn more about their work here:Timestamps: 0:00 Cold open: rapid-fire takes (carnivore, testosterone, fasting, deodorant, etc.)0:42 Season 3 renewal + new year intro1:01 Holiday recap1:31 Times Square ball drop + Anderson Cooper passes (60 Minutes connection)3:33 Setup: reacting to Peter Attia's 60 Minutes “rapid fire”4:14 Multivitamin: “pass” (insurance policy vs evidence)5:01 Metformin: “definitely pass” for non-diabetics6:04 Seed oils: modest quantities likely not harmful6:27 Mouth taping: useful for some mouth breathers6:51 Bluetooth headphones + EMF: what we know vs what's uncertain8:32 Weighted vests vs rucksacks: does it matter?9:33 Carnivore diet: “very extreme”9:47 Heavy metal “detox”: snake oil vs real testing and interventions11:27 Food dyes: “deck chairs on the Titanic” (majoring in the minor)14:53 Microplastics: what to change, pragmatic exposure reduction18:47 Hormone replacement therapy (women): “crime of the century” + WHI fallout21:50 Testosterone for men: net positive, but abused/scamified23:16 Testosterone for menopausal women: emerging evidence + clinical reality25:37 Sleep tracking + wearables: helpful unless it creates anxiety26:23 Deodorant vs antiperspirant: aluminum concerns and skin irritation28:43 Non-stick pans / PFAS: relative risk and practical choices29:52 Intermittent fasting: protein risk + eating-disorder cautions31:39 Wrap-up + subscribe/comments outrohttps://onebillionmedia.com/DISCLAIMER: The information provided on the Optispan podcast is intended solely for general educational purposes and is not meant to be, nor should it be construed as, personalized medical advice. No doctor-patient relationship is established by your use of this channel. The information and materials presented are for informational purposes only and are not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. We strongly advise that you consult with a licensed healthcare professional for all matters concerning your health, especially before undertaking any changes based on content provided by this channel. The hosts and guests on this channel are not liable for any direct, indirect, or other damages or adverse effects that may arise from the application of the information discussed. Medical knowledge is constantly evolving; therefore, the information provided should be verified against current medical standards and practices.More places to find us:Twitter: https://x.com/Optispan_IncTwitter: https://twitter.com/mkaeberleinLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/optispanInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/optispan_/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@optispanhttps://www.optispan.life/
In this episode of Intermittent Fasting Stories, Gin talks to Corinne Loe from North St. Paul, MN.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Are you ready to take your intermittent fasting lifestyle to the next level? There's nothing better than community to help with that. In the Delay, Don't Deny community we all embrace the clean fast, and there's just the right support for you as you live your intermittent fasting lifestyle. You can connect directly with Gin in the Ask Gin group, and she will answer all of your questions personally. If you're new to intermittent fasting or recommitting to the IF lifestyle, join the 28-Day FAST Start group. After your fast start, join us for support in The 1st Year group. Need tips for long term maintenance? We have a place for that! There are many more useful spaces beyond these, and you can interact in as many as you like. Visit ginstephens.com/community to join us. An annual membership costs just over a dollar a week when you do the math. If you aren't ready to fully commit for a year, join for a month and you can cancel at any time. If you know you'll want to stay forever, we also have a lifetime membership option available. IF is free. You don't need to join our community to fast. But if you're looking for support from a community of like-minded IFers, we are here for you at ginstephens.com/community. Corinne shares her transformative journey with intermittent fasting, detailing her struggles with childhood trauma, anorexia, and the impact of family dynamics on her eating habits. She discusses her path to healing through therapy, the significant weight loss she achieved, and the non-scale victories that have improved her health. Corrine emphasizes the importance of emotional healing and self-acceptance, encouraging others to embrace flexibility in their fasting journey.Takeaways:• Corrine started intermittent fasting on July 18th, 2024.• She was borderline type two diabetic before starting her journey but now has a normal A1C.• Childhood chaos and control issues led to her early struggles with anorexia.• Family influence played a significant role in her eating habits.• Stepping away from legalism in food choices has been crucial for her.• Dealing with loss and grief has shaped her journey.• Therapy has been a vital part of her healing process.• Intermittent fasting has provided her with freedom and mental clarity.• She lost 60 pounds and improved her health significantly.At the end of the episode, Corinne encourages listeners to start with the clean fast, and also to not overlook the issues that brought you to overeating in the first place.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Get Gin's books at: https://www.ginstephens.com/get-the-books.html. Good news! The second edition of Delay, Don't Deny is now available in ebook, paperback, hardback, and audiobook. This is the book that you'll want to start with or share with others, as it is a simple introduction to IF. It's been updated to include the clean fast, an easier to understand and more thorough description of ADF and all of your ADF options, and an all new success stories section. When shopping, make sure to get the second edition, which has a 2024 publication date. The audiobook for the second edition is available now! Join Gin's community! Go to: ginstephens.com/communityDo you enjoy Intermittent Fasting Stories? You'll probably also like Gin's other podcast with cohost Sheri Bullock: Fast. Feast. Repeat. Intermittent Fasting for Life. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts. Share your intermittent fasting stories with Gin: gin@intermittentfastingstories.comVisit Gin's website at: ginstephens.com Check out Gin's Favorite Things at http://www.ginstephens.com/gins-favorite-things.htmlSubscribe to Gin's YouTube Channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_frGNiTEoJ88rZOwvuG2CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
I'm going to share 7 health lessons that changed my life. Find out what took me 30 years to learn the hard way. Don't wait to learn the most important life lessons at 60. Start now and change your health today!
Why do you keep feeling drawn to women who can't meet you emotionally, while overlooking those who actually want you? In this episode, David breaks down the unconscious drivers of attraction, attachment patterns, and nervous system conditioning that shape who we desire. You'll learn why attraction is not a conscious choice, how childhood attachment wiring influences adult dating, and what it actually takes to rewire attraction toward healthy, secure relationships. This is not surface-level dating advice. It's deep work on responsibility, self-awareness, and emotional maturity for men who want real connection. Key Topics: ⭐ Why attraction is unconscious, not a logical choice ⭐ The limbic system and emotional pattern recognition ⭐ How childhood attachment shapes adult relationships ⭐ Why emotionally unavailable partners feel intoxicating ⭐ Intermittent reinforcement and dating addiction ⭐ Anxious vs avoidant attachment dynamics ⭐ Why secure partners often feel "boring" at first ⭐ Projection and falling in love with fantasy ⭐ How confirmation bias keeps you stuck in dating loops ⭐ Why insight alone doesn't change attraction ⭐ Nervous system regulation and rewiring attraction ⭐ Reframing chemistry as a signal, not truth ⭐ Building attraction toward safety, stability, and intimacy Connect With David - The Authentic Man: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/theauthenticman_/ Website: https://www.theauthenticman.net/ For Coaching: hello@theauthenticman.net Newsletter: https://www.theauthenticman.net/home-subscribe
Fertility Friday Radio | Fertility Awareness for Pregnancy and Hormone-free birth control
Intermittent fasting is a trending nutrition strategy—but many women unknowingly compromise their hormonal health by skipping breakfast. In this episode, Lisa explores how breakfast impacts ovulation, energy levels, progesterone production, and overall cycle health. Drawing on research highlighted in Real Food for Fertility, she discusses why a strategic eating window—with sufficient calories and macronutrients—is critical for fertility optimization, especially for active women or those TTC. Follow this link to view the full show notes page! This episode is sponsored by Lisa's new book, Real Food for Fertility, co-authored with Lily Nichols! Grab your copy here!
Are your fitness goals realistic for the life of a busy sales professional? "I find that a lot of sales leaders I work with are operating at about 110% capacity. So when we're talking about tackling health and fitness, we have to really understand what is going to be the few habits that are really easy to do and have the biggest bang for buck." That's Josh Hulsebosch, a fitness coach who specializes in working with sales professionals, speaking on the Sales Gravy podcast. His observation cuts straight to the real reason most January fitness resolutions fail: they're trying to add more to an already overflowing plate. The typical sales professional is already drowning in competing priorities while operating at maximum capacity. When New Year's hits, the instinct is to overhaul everything at once. New diet. New workout plan. New morning routine. That approach might work for people with open calendars and low pressure. For salespeople pushing through Q1 kickoffs, territory planning, and quota pressure, it is a fast track to burnout. The All-or-Nothing Trap Meet Steve. He's an individual contributor who decided January 1st would mark his transformation. No more coffee. Five-mile runs every morning. Intermittent fasting. Four hours of cold calling daily because he just finished reading Fanatical Prospecting. Ten days in, Steve slept through his alarm, missed his workout, and ordered a triple-shot latte on the way to work. That emotional crash bled into his work. His prospecting activity dropped. His confidence dipped. His motivation evaporated under the weight of his own perfectionism. Steve's mistake wasn't lack of commitment. He turned ambitious goals into self-sabotage by refusing to acknowledge a simple truth: sustainable change requires starting where you are, not where you wish you were. Most sales professionals approach fitness goals like they approach pipeline building—more activity equals better results. But health doesn't work like prospecting. You can't brute force your way into better sleep or lower stress. The body requires a different strategy. The 110% Capacity Problem Sales is a cognitively demanding profession. You're the quarterback of the business. Every day requires strategic thinking, relationship management, objection handling, and staying mentally sharp through rejection. When you're already operating at 110% capacity, adding extreme fitness commitments creates another obligation you can't meet, another source of stress, another thing to feel guilty about when you inevitably miss a workout or eat fast food between calls. The sales professionals who successfully improve their health identify which habits will support their performance, then build them into their existing routine. They do not chase trends. They focus on fundamentals. The Four Pillars of Health for Sales Professionals Fitness and health goals for sales professionals need to be realistic for people working at maximum capacity. You can't afford to waste energy on complicated protocols or fitness fads. You need the fundamentals: exercise, nutrition, sleep, and stress management. When these four pillars are strong, everything else becomes easier. Pillar One: Exercise The fitness industry wants you to believe you need intense workouts, complicated programs, and hours at the gym. For sales professionals, the single most effective exercise habit is walking 8,000 steps daily. This number is achievable for most people regardless of fitness level. It builds momentum without requiring a complete schedule overhaul. When you consistently hit 8,000 steps, you prove to yourself that you can follow through on a commitment without sacrificing your work performance. Movement improves cognitive function, reduces stress hormones, and helps with sleep quality—all critical for sales performance. Make it automatic. Take calls while walking. Park farther away from the office. Walk to get coffee instead of ordering delivery. Use a standing desk and pace during internal meetings. Build movement into what you are already doing rather than treating it as another task. Once 8,000 steps become effortless, you can layer in strength training or other activities. But walking is the foundation. It's the one exercise habit that compounds without breaking you. Pillar Two: Nutrition Sales professionals tend to fall into two nutrition traps. The first is eating like garbage because they're too busy to care. The second is attempting some extreme diet overhaul that lasts nine days before they're back to their old patterns. The solution isn't meal plans or macro tracking or cutting entire food groups. It's having a system that works when you're slammed. Start here: don't skip meals. When you're running between meetings and surviving on coffee, your blood sugar crashes. That kills your cognitive performance and drives you toward quick fixes that leave you feeling worse an hour later. Keep protein-rich foods accessible. Greek yogurt, hard-boiled eggs, protein bars that aren't candy in disguise, rotisserie chicken, nuts. These don't require cooking or planning. They stabilize your energy and keep you sharp during long stretches between meals. Meal prep doesn't need to be complicated. Pick one day, cook a large batch of something simple—grilled chicken, ground turkey, rice, roasted vegetables—and portion it out. Now you have real food available when your schedule gets chaotic. Hydration matters more than most people realize. Dehydration mimics fatigue. Keep water at your desk. Drink it between calls. If you're consuming coffee all day, match it with water. You'll notice the difference in your afternoon energy levels. Pillar Three: Sleep Sleep deprivation destroys sales performance. You get paid to think. When you run on five or six hours of sleep, decision-making suffers. Decision-making suffers. Emotional regulation weakens. Your ability to read prospects and handle objections declines. You can't always control how many hours you sleep, especially during high-pressure periods. But you can improve sleep quality. Start with a simple nighttime routine that signals to your body it's time to wind down. Turn off screens thirty minutes before bed. Keep your bedroom cool. If your mind races when you lie down, acknowledge the thoughts without engaging with them. Notice they're there, then redirect your focus to your breathing. If you wake up in the middle of the night with work thoughts, write them down or set a reminder for the next day. This closes the mental loop and allows your brain to let go. Pillar Four: Stress Management Sales is a pressure environment. Constant decision-making. Emotional labor. Rejection. Urgency. You move from call to meeting to fire drill to another call with almost no downtime. Over time, your nervous system stays stuck in high alert. That chronic stress does not just affect your mood. It impacts your sleep, your focus, your patience with prospects, and your ability to think clearly in complex conversations. If you do not manage it, it will manage you. Controlled breathing is one of the fastest ways to regulate your nervous system. Inhale for four seconds. Hold for four. Exhale for four. Hold for four. This is box breathing. You can do it between calls. Before a tough conversation. While waiting for a prospect to answer. It does not draw attention. It just brings your system back into balance. When stress is regulated, sleep improves. When sleep improves, thinking becomes clearer. Clearer thinking leads to better sales performance. It is a small habit. The impact compounds. Building Fitness Goals That Actually Stick If you're surviving on five hours of sleep, start there. If you're skipping meals and running on caffeine, fix your nutrition first. If you haven't moved your body in weeks, commit to 8,000 steps. Don't try to overhaul all four pillars simultaneously. That's the all-or-nothing trap that killed Steve's momentum in ten days. When you take care of your physical and mental health, you show up sharper for your prospects, your team, and your numbers. Your body is the vehicle for your career. You can't hit quota consistently if you're running on empty. Start with one pillar. Build one habit. Give it time to take root before you add the next one. That's how you win in Q1 and beyond. If you are serious about building fitness habits that actually fit the realities of sales, go deeper with Josh Hulsebosch's performance-focused courses on Sales Gravy University. His programs are built specifically for sales professionals who are operating at full capacity and still want to win on health, energy, and longevity.
In this poignant yet provocative episode of The All About Nothing podcast, Barrett Gruber and Bill Kimler navigate a world where personal grief meets a dystopian political reality.Bill opens up about the emotional toll of losing his mother-in-law, leading into a heavy discussion on a tragic shooting incident involving ICE that has sparked national outrage. The hosts dive into the potential for martial law, the lasting legacy of 9/11, and the urgent need for accountability in law enforcement.The conversation then shifts to the global stage, analyzing Russia's desperation for oil and the reality of their military capabilities. To keep things from getting too dark, Barrett and Bill share a humorous take on intermittent fasting (or "intermittent gluttony"), the impact of surveillance technology on our daily lives, and why a sense of humor is a survival tool in today's world.Key Topics: #GriefAndLoss #ICEShooting #SocialJustice #RussiaOil #911Reflections #MartialLaw #IntermittentFasting #PublicSurveillance #PoliticalCommentary #AllAboutNothingPodcastBarrett Gruber | LinktreeBill Kimler | LinktreeThe All About Nothing: Podcast | LinktreeBlack White Blue in the South | Instagram, Facebook | LinktreeClick here for Episode Show Notes!As always, "The All About Nothing: Podcast" is owned and distributed by BIG Media LLC!Check out our network of fantastic podcasts!Click Here to see available advertising packages!Click Here for information on the "Fair Use Copyright Notice" for this podcast.Mentioned in this episode:ZJZ Designs - St Patrick's Day ShirtsZJZ DesignsBIG Media Copyright 2026BIG Media LLC
Send us a textBen and Daphna review the ICAF randomized clinical trial evaluating extended caffeine therapy in preterm infants and its impact on intermittent hypoxia through 41 weeks postmenstrual age. They discuss the study design, oximetry outcomes across multiple saturation thresholds, inflammatory biomarkers including TNF-α, and clinically relevant safety signals such as oxygen restart rates, length of stay, and weight gain. The conversation focuses on what intermittent hypoxia may mean for ongoing risk, and whether a targeted subgroup of infants might benefit from extending caffeine beyond traditional stopping points.----Intermittent hypoxia and caffeine in infants born preterm: the ICAF Randomized Clinical Trial. Eichenwald E, Corwin M, McEntire B, Knoblach S, Limperopoulos C, Kapse K, Kerr S, Heeren TC, Ikponmwonba C, Hunt CE; ICAF Study Group.Arch Dis Child Fetal Neonatal Ed. 2025 Nov 24:fetalneonatal-2025-329230. doi: 10.1136/archdischild-2025-329230. Online ahead of print.PMID: 41285561Support the showAs always, feel free to send us questions, comments, or suggestions to our email: nicupodcast@gmail.com. You can also contact the show through Instagram or Twitter, @nicupodcast. Or contact Ben and Daphna directly via their Twitter profiles: @drnicu and @doctordaphnamd. The papers discussed in today's episode are listed and timestamped on the webpage linked below. Enjoy!
Rosacea, SIBO, and rifaximin -Allergens in diaper creams -Crisaborole for morphea? -Acne fulminans -Juvenile intermittent facial flushing -Pediatric blistering reactions -Check out Luke's Urticaria CME experience! aaaaicsu.gathered.com/invite/KQe1wPZbJY Learn more about the U of U Dermatology ECHO model! physicians.utah.edu/echo/dermatology-primarycare Want to donate to the cause? Do so here! Donate to the podcast: uofuhealth.org/dermasphereCheck out our video content on YouTube:www.youtube.com/@dermaspherepodcastand VuMedi!: www.vumedi.com/channel/dermasphere/The University of Utah's Dermatology ECHO: physicians.utah.edu/echo/dermatology-primarycare -Connect with us!- Web: dermaspherepodcast.com/ - Twitter: @DermaspherePC- Instagram: dermaspherepodcast- Facebook: www.facebook.com/DermaspherePodcast/- Check out Luke and Michelle's other podcast,SkinCast! healthcare.utah.edu/dermatology/skincast/ Luke and Michelle report no significant conflicts of interest… BUT check out our friends at:- Kikoxp.com (a social platform for doctors to share knowledge)- www.levelex.com/games/top-derm (A free dermatology game to learn more dermatology!
In this episode of Intermittent Fasting Stories, Gin talks to Claire Watson-Pople from Gloucestershire, UK.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Are you ready to take your intermittent fasting lifestyle to the next level? There's nothing better than community to help with that. In the Delay, Don't Deny community we all embrace the clean fast, and there's just the right support for you as you live your intermittent fasting lifestyle. You can connect directly with Gin in the Ask Gin group, and she will answer all of your questions personally. If you're new to intermittent fasting or recommitting to the IF lifestyle, join the 28-Day FAST Start group. After your fast start, join us for support in The 1st Year group. Need tips for long term maintenance? We have a place for that! There are many more useful spaces beyond these, and you can interact in as many as you like. Visit ginstephens.com/community to join us. An annual membership costs just over a dollar a week when you do the math. If you aren't ready to fully commit for a year, join for a month and you can cancel at any time. If you know you'll want to stay forever, we also have a lifetime membership option available. IF is free. You don't need to join our community to fast. But if you're looking for support from a community of like-minded IFers, we are here for you at ginstephens.com/community. Claire is a midwife. She shares her journey to intermittent fasting, detailing her experiences with various diets before discovering the benefits of clean fasting. She discusses the challenges of maintaining weight, the importance of discipline, and how intermittent fasting has positively impacted her body image and parenting. Claire emphasizes the freedom and flexibility that fasting provides, encouraging others to embrace the lifestyle and jump in without hesitation.Takeaways:• Clean fasting is essential for a successful fasting experience.• Body image improves with a healthy relationship with food.• Discipline is more important than motivation in maintaining healthy habits.• Intermittent fasting can change parenting approaches to food.• It's important to focus on fitness and strength as we age.• Embracing the journey of intermittent fasting is key to long-term success.At the end of the episode, Claire encourages new intermittent fasters to just do it! Put away doubt and jump in.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Get Gin's books at: https://www.ginstephens.com/get-the-books.html. Good news! The second edition of Delay, Don't Deny is now available in ebook, paperback, hardback, and audiobook. This is the book that you'll want to start with or share with others, as it is a simple introduction to IF. It's been updated to include the clean fast, an easier to understand and more thorough description of ADF and all of your ADF options, and an all new success stories section. When shopping, make sure to get the second edition, which has a 2024 publication date. The audiobook for the second edition is available now! Join Gin's community! Go to: ginstephens.com/communityDo you enjoy Intermittent Fasting Stories? You'll probably also like Gin's other podcast with cohost Sheri Bullock: Fast. Feast. Repeat. Intermittent Fasting for Life. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts. Share your intermittent fasting stories with Gin: gin@intermittentfastingstories.comVisit Gin's website at: ginstephens.com Check out Gin's Favorite Things at http://www.ginstephens.com/gins-favorite-things.htmlSubscribe to Gin's YouTube Channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_frGNiTEoJ88rZOwvuG2CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
You're listening to Burnt Toast! We are Virginia Sole-Smith and Corinne Fay.Happy 2026!!! To celebrate—and kick off the most diet-y month of the year!—we are here with a roundup of the very best anti-diet fitness advice in the Burnt Toast archives. If you find this useful, consider a paid Burnt Toast subscription! We're way cheaper than a gym or a diet app membership, and arguably better for your health too. And in addition to getting behind paywalled episodes and essays, Burnt Toasties get to join our awesome chat rooms like Team CPAP, Anti-Diet Ozempic Life and Fat Fashion! You'll find so much practical support, inspiration, and fat joy. Join us here! Don't diet, come hang with us!
Andrew is obsessed with a special table from his youth, and he's unfortunately found it for sale on eBay. He also asks for Luke's help differentiating two comedians who have little in common. And listener Ben offers a list of Top Five Experiences You Can Have In A Grocery Store.
Don't miss out — elevate your skills and save $100 on any online course with code START26! Join our library of live and on-demand veterinary dental courses here: https://internationalveterinarydentistryinstitute.org/veterinary-dental-online-webinars-courses-discount/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=podcastlink&utm_campaign=start26 —------------------------------------------------------------------- Host: Dr. Brett Beckman, DVM, FAVD, DAVDC, DAAPM In this episode of The Vet Dental Show, Dr. Victoria Lukasik, DVM, DACVAA, tackles the complexities of managing high-risk dental cases. Through detailed case studies, they discuss anesthetic protocols for patients with hepatic portal shunts and chronic heart failure. Learn how to navigate potential complications like hypoglycemia, hemorrhage, and ventricular tachycardia, while ensuring patient safety and optimizing recovery. What You'll Learn: ✅ Understand anesthetic considerations for patients with hepatic portal shunts. ✅ Discover strategies for managing hypoglycemia and electrolyte imbalances. ✅ Simplify anesthetic protocols for patients with chronic heart failure. ✅ Apply techniques for recognizing and treating ventricular tachycardia. ✅ Master the use of short-acting and reversible drugs in high-risk patients. ✅ Recognize and address delayed recovery in the post-anesthetic period. Key Takeaways: ✅ Patients with hepatic portal shunts require short-acting, reversible drugs to minimize liver burden. ✅ Intermittent hemorrhage in patients with hepatic dysfunction may lead to platelet consumption and anemia. ✅ Bounding femoral pulses can indicate dehydration; adjust fluid therapy accordingly in cardiac patients. ✅ Lidocaine has centrally depressing effects; anticipate mental dullness or sedation post-administration. ✅ Early intervention with lidocaine is crucial for managing ventricular tachycardia and preventing further complications. Questions This Episode Answers: ❓ How should anesthetic protocols be adjusted for patients with hepatic portal shunts? ❓ Which anesthetic and analgesic drugs are safest for patients with true hepatic dysfunction? ❓ When should dextrose supplementation be considered in dental patients with liver disease? ❓ How do you manage intermittent hemorrhage, anemia, and low platelets during dental procedures? ❓ What causes delayed anesthetic recovery—and how do you systematically troubleshoot it? ❓ How should cardiac medications be handled on the morning of anesthesia for heart failure patients? ❓ What do bounding femoral pulses indicate, and how should fluid therapy be adjusted? ❓ Why can lidocaine cause deep sedation and delayed recovery after anesthesia? ❓ How do you recognize ventricular tachycardia intraoperatively—and when should you intervene? ❓ What recovery expectations should you have after treating ventricular tachycardia with lidocaine? —------------------------------------------------------------------- Explore Dr. Beckman's complete library of veterinary dentistry courses and CE resources! Save $100 on any online course with code START26! https://internationalveterinarydentistryinstitute.org/veterinary-dental-online-webinars-courses-discount/?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=podcastlink&utm_campaign=start26 —------------------------------------------------------------------- Questions? Leave a comment below with your thoughts, experiences, or cases related to veterinary dentistry! —------------------------------------------------------------------- KEYWORDS: Veterinary Dentistry, IVDI, Brett Beckman, Dog Dental Care, Cat Dental Care, VetTech Tips, Animal Health, Veterinary Education, Veterinary Dental Practitioner Program, Vet Dental Show, Anesthesia, High-Risk Patients, Hepatic Portal Shunt, Chronic Heart Failure, Ventricular Tachycardia, Lidocaine, Hypoglycemia, Electrolyte Imbalance, Delayed Recovery
In this episode of SHE MD Podcast, Katelin Dial sits down with Dr. Thaïs Aliabadi and Mary Alice Haney to discuss managing PCOS, insulin resistance, inflammation, and hormonal health through nutrition. Katelin shares her expertise in anti-inflammatory eating and integrative health, explaining how balanced meals with protein, fiber, and healthy fats can improve energy, stabilize blood sugar, and support overall wellness.She explains how to identify and reduce ultra-processed foods and added sugars, the role of low-glycemic foods in blood sugar balance, and practical ways to incorporate fermented foods for gut health. Katelin offers advice on navigating intermittent fasting safely, making healthy versions of favorite foods, and planning meals for busy lifestyles. She also shares insights from her Clean Life Collective and anti-inflammatory meal delivery service in Washington, DC, highlighting simple strategies to feel nourished and energized every day.This episode delivers actionable guidance for women seeking to support hormonal balance, manage PCOS and insulin resistance, and improve overall health through mindful eating. Listeners leave with practical tools for creating easy, delicious meals, stocking healthy snacks, and making gradual lifestyle changes that support long-term wellness.Subscribe to SHE MD Podcast for expert tips on PCOS, Endometriosis, fertility, and hormonal balance. Share with friends and visit SHE MD website and Ovii for research-backed resources, holistic health strategies, and expert guidance on women's health and well-being.Sponsors:Cymbiotika: Cymbiotika.com/Shemd for 20% off plus free shippingVibrant Wellness: ask your provider for the Hormone Zoomer by Vibrant Wellness — or find a Vibrant-certified provider today at vibrant-wellness.com/SheMDWhat You'll Learn How to support hormonal health with anti-inflammatory eating Ways to manage PCOS and insulin resistance through diet Tips for reducing ultra-processed foods and added sugars Incorporating probiotics and fermented foods into daily mealsKey Timestamps 00:00 Introduction and podcast disclaimer 01:30 Katelin Dial's background in integrative nutrition and Clean Life Collective 02:20 Using food as medicine to manage PCOS and inflammation 04:00 Anti-inflammatory diet examples: proteins, vegetables, healthy fats 10:00 Understanding insulin resistance and its impact on energy 18:30 Intermittent fasting considerations for women 19:45 Eating organic: practical tips and affordability strategies 20:40 How to identify ultra-processed foods and avoid them 29:45 Probiotics, fermented foods, and gut health tips 33:00 Five actionable nutrition tips for women with PCOS, inflammation, or insulin resistance 34:40 Closing remarks and podcast resourcesKey Takeaways Anti-inflammatory meals support blood sugar balance and hormonal health Low-glycemic vegetables, protein, and fiber reduce insulin spikes Fermented foods naturally support gut health and immunity Meal planning and healthy snack prep prevent cravings and overeating Gradual, sustainable changes to eating habits improve overall wellnessGuest Bio Katelin Dial is a health and wellness coach and founder of the Clean Life Collective, specializing in integrative nutrition and holistic health solutions for women. She focuses on anti-inflammatory eating, managing PCOS, supporting insulin resistance, and promoting hormonal balance. Katelin also runs a boutique anti-inflammatory meal delivery service in Washington, DC, helping clients achieve better health through delicious, balanced meals. She shares recipes, nutrition tips, and wellness insights on her website and Instagram, providing practical tools to support daily healthy living.Links: Website: thecleanlifecollective.com Instagram: @cleanlifecollectivedcSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
I haven't done a solo podcast in a while. Strength and age- resistance training - which leads me to women and strength. Resistancetraining Trump's aerobics. Which brings me to the BBM Kettlebell methodology - something I always knew but I nowhave the biometrics to prove it. Aerobicand Anaerobic. Almost Identical – slightly more Anaerobic than Aerobic and my boxing/kickboxing workouts are just the opposite. The New Year is upon us. I'm not a big “New Year's Resolution” type of guy. But this past year was enlightening for many reasons. My goal is to help others to Live Better Longer. I have had the great fortune of listening to and learning from others. My studies and experiences have helpedme attain success at what I love doing most. Sharing my experiences and knowledge with others is my way of paying it forward. So, if you're interested in learning what I gained from this year, please keep listening. We need to look at the aspects of our life- business/ financial, family/home and personal relationships, state of our fitness and health. Intermittent fasting: daily - autophagy - 12-17 hours, 24, 36, 48, 60 and 72 hours. Fasting stages progress from using food energy (0-4 hrs) to breaking down stored sugar(glycogen) for fuel (4-12 hrs), then burning fat (12-24+ hrs) as glucosedepletes, leading into ketosis (24+ hrs) where the liver produces ketones forenergy, with deeper benefits like cellular cleanup (autophagy) emerging after24-48+ hours, shifting your body from sugar-burning to fat-burning for fuel. Fasting Stages by Hour ● 0-4 Hours (Fed State): Your body digests food,uses glucose for immediate energy, releases insulin, and stores excess asglycogen. ● 4-12 Hours (Glycogen Depletion): Insulin drops, and yourbody starts breaking down stored glycogen (sugar) for energy. ● 12-16 Hours (Fat Burning Begins): Glycogen is low,prompting the body to release stored fat (lipolysis) for fuel, entering earlyfat-burning mode. ● 16-24 Hours (Entering Ketosis): The body significantlyramps up fat burning, producing ketones as an alternative fuel, especially forthe brain. ● 24-48+ Hours (Ketosis & Autophagy): Full ketosis isestablished, and the body burns fat exclusively; autophagy (cellular cleanup)begins to increase. ● 48-72+ Hours (Deep Fasting): Deeper benefits likeenhanced autophagy, significant growth hormone increases, and potential immunesystem regeneration may occur. Key Metabolic Shifts ● Insulin Drops: Blood sugar levels fall, signaling the body to stop storing fatand start releasing it. ● ● Glycogenolysis: Breakdown of stored sugar in the liver and muscles. ● ● Lipolysis: Breakdown of fat into fatty acids. ● ● Ketogenesis: The liver converts fatty acids into ketones for energy. ● ● Autophagy: Cellular repair and recycling process that gets activatedduring fasting. Biometrics:the BodyBell Method- Anerobic and Aerobic benefits almost equal- throw inmobility and the restorative benefits- and it's no wonder that the system isapproved by the state government for DPT's and chiropractors. Humeand InBody- biological age of 28. Theold saying- Die young and leave a good looking corpse. I say Die old and leavea good looking corpse! #masterphilinyourcorner#masterphil #philross #fitness #selfdefense #fighting #kettlebells#kettlebellworkshop #kettlebellking #bodybellmethod #bodybell #strength#strengthandconditioning #personaltrainer #knifefighting #mma #bjj #martialarts#boxing #kickboxing #podcast #professor #weightlifting #training#survivalstrong #AAAI #SCW #FITFIXNOW #womenwork #strengthforwomen #avocado#Zingaloo #bread
People who eat a strict keto diet are at risk for an accumulation of aged cells in their organs, but taking intermittent breaks from the diet can prevent these detrimental effects.
In this episode of Intermittent Fasting Stories, Gin talks to Erynn Moore from East Texas.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Are you ready to take your intermittent fasting lifestyle to the next level? There's nothing better than community to help with that. In the Delay, Don't Deny community we all embrace the clean fast, and there's just the right support for you as you live your intermittent fasting lifestyle. You can connect directly with Gin in the Ask Gin group, and she will answer all of your questions personally. If you're new to intermittent fasting or recommitting to the IF lifestyle, join the 28-Day FAST Start group. After your fast start, join us for support in The 1st Year group. Need tips for long term maintenance? We have a place for that! There are many more useful spaces beyond these, and you can interact in as many as you like. Visit ginstephens.com/community to join us. An annual membership costs just over a dollar a week when you do the math. If you aren't ready to fully commit for a year, join for a month and you can cancel at any time. If you know you'll want to stay forever, we also have a lifetime membership option available. IF is free. You don't need to join our community to fast. But if you're looking for support from a community of like-minded IFers, we are here for you at ginstephens.com/community. Erynn is a registered nurse who is currently a stay-at-home homeschooling mom. She shares her journey with intermittent fasting, detailing her struggles with diet culture, yo-yo dieting, and health issues like heartburn. She discusses how intermittent fasting has transformed her relationship with food, improved her health, and provided freedom from diet mentality. Erynn emphasizes the importance of listening to one's body, the benefits of fasting, and how it has positively impacted her family dynamics.Takeaways:• Erynn started intermittent fasting in the fall of 2023 due to health issues.• She struggled with diet culture and yo-yo dieting for years.• Intermittent fasting provided her with freedom from the diet mentality.• Erynn lost weight and improved her health significantly through fasting.• Erynn has improved her body composition and built muscle, even though she is less protein-focused than she used to be.• She emphasizes the importance of listening to one's body and its signals.• Erynn's relationship with food has changed; she now craves healthier options.• Erynn's family dynamics improved as they adopted healthier eating habits together.• She experienced non-scale victories, including better skin and hormone regulation.At the end of the episode, Erynn encourages listeners to give intermittent fasting a try for at least 100 days and take it slow.Join Gin in the new Fast Feast Repeat app for The Grown-Up Year: 52 Weeks to Listen, Play, and Nourish, as well as a growing collection of intermittent fasting resources. Go to app.fastfeastrepeat.com to join us or go to the App Store and download the Fast Feast Repeat app, available for both iPhone and Android.Get Gin's books at: https://www.ginstephens.com/get-the-books.html. Good news! The second edition of Delay, Don't Deny is now available in ebook, paperback, hardback, and audiobook. This is the book that you'll want to start with or share with others, as it is a simple introduction to IF. It's been updated to include the clean fast, an easier to understand and more thorough description of ADF and all of your ADF options, and an all new success stories section. When shopping, make sure to get the second edition, which has a 2024 publication date. The audiobook for the second edition is available now! Join Gin's community! Go to: ginstephens.com/communityDo you enjoy Intermittent Fasting Stories? You'll probably also like Gin's other podcast with cohost Sheri Bullock: Fast. Feast. Repeat. Intermittent Fasting for Life. Find it wherever you listen to podcasts. Share your intermittent fasting stories with Gin: gin@intermittentfastingstories.comVisit Gin's website at: ginstephens.com Check out Gin's Favorite Things at http://www.ginstephens.com/gins-favorite-things.htmlSubscribe to Gin's YouTube Channel! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_frGNiTEoJ88rZOwvuG2CASee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Intermittent fasting (IF) isn't just a diet; it's a pattern of eating. It's not about what you eat, but when. The idea is simple: you cycle between periods of eating and fasting. Popular methods include the 16/8 method, this involves fasting for 16 hours each day and eating all meals within an 8-hour window. On the 5:2 diet you eat normally for 5 days of the week and restricting calories to about 500–600 on the other 2 days. Finally, there is the Eat-Stop-Eat method that involves a 24-hour fast once or twice a week. What are the benefits of skipping meals ? What are the disadvantages ? How can you make it work for you ? In under 3 minutes, we answer your questions! To listen to the last episodes, you can click here: What is the living dead syndrome? How to make the most out of hybrid working? Does sex help us to sleep better? A podcast written and realised by Amber Minogue. First broadcast 21/03/2024 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Mana yang bikin lebih cepet kurus, jalan atau lari? Perlu cutting carbo dan lemak total ga sih? Intermittent #fasting itu sebenernya efektif apa enggak? Ini pertanyaan-pertanyaan yang bakal dijawab coach lulusan #sportscience , Arbiarso Wijatmoko. Ga cuma dari bukti anekdotal, tapi liat hasil #riset terkini. Ga cuma baca abstrak yak, tapi sampe tuntas. Semoga bisa bantu kita semua #diet dengan lebih sehat, dan bangun badan lebih bugar & kuat. Enjoy! #selfimprovement #fatlosstips
Salut les sportifs intelligents !Cette semaine, on s'attaque à un sujet qui fait beaucoup parler : le jeûne intermittent. C'est une méthode que j'ai moi-même déjà recommandée… jusqu'au jour où j'ai réalisé qu'elle était souvent contre-productive dans un objectif de perte de poids.Dans cet épisode, je t'explique :Pourquoi le jeûne intermittent est autant mis en avantCe que disent réellement les étudesEt surtout : pourquoi je ne le recommande plus aujourd'hui à mes élèvesCompensation calorique, dérèglement de la faim, pulsions alimentaires, TCA, baisse d'énergie, entraînements sabotés… On va décortiquer point par point ce qui se passe VRAIMENT dans ton corps et dans ton cerveau quand tu sautes des repas.Si tu veux comprendre pourquoi cette méthode n'est pas la solution miracle qu'on t'a vendue, cet épisode va t'éclairer — avec bienveillance, pédagogie et expérience terrain.Bonne écoute les sportifs intelligents !
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
Intermittent fasting isn't just about calories—it's about timing. Michael J. Wilkinson, M.D., F.A.C.C., F.N.L.A., explains how time-restricted eating aligns daily food intake with the body's natural circadian rhythms. He shares insights from animal studies, clinical trials, and UC San Diego research showing how consolidating meals into an 8–10 hour window can improve glucose control, blood pressure, and metabolic health. Wilkinson highlights why earlier eating windows may work best, what makes studies succeed or fail, and how these findings point to practical strategies for preventing cardiometabolic disease and supporting healthy aging. Series: "Stein Institute for Research on Aging" [Health and Medicine] [Show ID: 41184]
In this episode, we explore the deeper patterns that make emotionally unavailable partners feel so familiar — even when you want something different.Rather than framing this as a personal flaw or something you're “doing wrong,” this conversation explores the deeper emotional and relational patterns that make certain dynamics feel familiar, magnetic, or even safe on a nervous-system level.I walk through five core reasons this dynamic tends to repeat:Low self-worth: When love feels like something you need to earn, you may be drawn to people who require effort.Inconsistent early relationships: If connection was unpredictable growing up, inconsistency can feel like “home.”Hope, potential, and the saviour role: Why focusing on who someone could be keeps you invested long after the relationship stops feeling good.Intermittent reinforcement: How sporadic affection creates an addictive cycle that's hard to break.Your own emotional unavailability: The surprising ways pursuing unavailable people can protect you from deeper vulnerability.This episode offers a compassionate look at why these patterns form — and what it takes to move toward relationships that feel mutual, steady, and emotionally safe.Register for the 28-Day Secure Self Challenge here
Renaissance English History Podcast: A Show About the Tudors
Intermittent fasting might feel like a modern idea, but Tudor England practiced a full winter fast during Advent. People cut out meat and dairy, relied on fish and simple grains, and often waited until evening prayers for their main meal. In this episode we look at what the Advent fast involved, how it shaped daily life in December, and why it ends up sounding a lot like the fasting routines people follow today. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Karen Coleman-Ostrov, age 65, spent much of her adult life trapped in the exhausting cycle of dieting. She was a lifelong dieter who tried over a dozen different diet programs and protocols, each promising weight loss but ultimately leading to frustration. Some diets caused her to gain weight or slow down her metabolism, while others required tedious food measuring or strict deprivation. Though she often lost weight temporarily, none of these plans were sustainable long-term, and she would always regain what she lost.In August 2020, Karen had a pivotal moment when she saw a stunning, youthful photo of her sister-in-law, Dedra Campbell, on Facebook. Karen initially thought it was a much older photo because Dedra looked so slim and vibrant. When she learned it was recent, Karen immediately called her to uncover her secret. Dedra shared that her success came from practising intermittent fasting, a concept that initially worried Karen because it sounded like deprivation and constant hunger. Yet, out of curiosity and hope, Karen bought the book, “Fast.Feast.Repeat.” by Gin Stephens and decided to give fasting a try—starting with a clean 18/6 fast.To her surprise, Karen found fasting easier than expected. The first fast sparked a change that would transform her life.At the time, Karen weighed 175 pounds (fluctuating often between that and 182 pounds) at 5'5”. Over the coming months, Karen faced challenges like a slowed metabolism caused by years of yo-yo dieting, the effects of menopause, and managing type 2 diabetes. Less than a year into fasting, Karen joined The Fasting Highway and also ordered and read the book. Karen found encouragement from Graeme and fellow fasters, which was crucial as she learned to trust the process and understand that her weight-loss journey was uniquely hers—meaning she shouldn't compare her progress to others'. Karen lost weight gradually but steadily. After about two years, she dropped from 175 pounds to 160, and then a few months later to 149—a weight she hadn't seen in more than 20 years! Eventually, Karen's body settled around 142 pounds, a healthy and comfortable place for her. Her highest weight was 208 pounds, at which point she struggled with daily tasks such as bending over to tie her shoes, suffering from sleep apnea, and being out of breath after going up stairs or walking long distances.Today, Karen's health and mobility have vastly improved. She no longer has sleep apnea and can climb challenging staircases, like the 185 steps of the Gibbs Hill Lighthouse in Bermuda and the 294 steps of the Leaning Tower of Pisa, with ease. Maintaining her weight is effortless now with a flexible intermittent fasting routine, usually fasting 18/6 or OMAD on weekdays, and enjoying longer eating windows on weekends to socialise and eat out.Karen's favourite part about fasting is the control it gives her over food—not feeling controlled by it. When asked why she continues fasting after reaching and surpassing her goal weight, Karen's answer is simple: Intermittent fasting is not a diet or a fad—it's a sustainable lifestyle. This lifestyle has allowed her to lose weight for the last time and live confidently in her body every day.Come and Join Our Patreon Community. I highly recommend you do!Please consider joining the Fasting Highway Patreon community. It has been great for all who have joined. Please visit www.patreon.com/thefastinghighway to learn about the benefits you receive and how to join.Private coaching with Graeme is available on a one-on-one basis. Please visit www.thefastinghighway.com, click 'Help Get Coaching,' and book a time that suits you. All times you see are in your local time zone.Disclaimer: Nothing in this podcast should be taken as medical advice. The opinions expressed herein are those of the host and guest only.
Bumper to Bumper Radio, the car guys on KTAR, 92.3 FM in Phoenix, AZ, broadcast every Saturday from 11:00 am ...
Renee Fitton is a registered dietitian, entrepreneur, and expert in nutrition, longevity, and healthcare innovation. She specializes in fasting-mimicking diets, cellular renewal, and bridging scientific research with practical health applications. She is the Director of Education & Healthcare Sales at ProLon, where she develops sales strategies, educates healthcare practitioners on nutrition and longevity science, and promotes fasting-mimicking diets. She also serves as a Medical Science Liaison (since April 2023). 0.00: Renee's background as a longevity dietician 8.00: The power of diet 10.00: The power of Fasting 14.00: Why Fasting Mimicking diets are so powerful (Dr. Longo) 21.00: How Fasting Mimicking has insignificant muscle loss 26.00: How to eat healthy 31.00: Intermittent fasting (AM versus PM) 41.00: Ideal Evening Meal before athletic events 45.00: Supporting autophagy and cellular cleanup only in longer fasts 50.00: Coming off a longer fast/ fasting mimicking diet 56.00: Meat for athletic performance vs longevity 1.01.00: Different protein powder sources (and L-Protein) Renee on IG: @fitonnutrition Prolon website: https://prolonlife.com/ Until next time, love and good vibes. Podcast Website: https://enterthelionheart.com/ Check out the latest episode here: Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/enter-the-lionheart/id1554904704 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4tD7VvMUvnOgChoNYShbcI
Send us a textIntegration of brain metabolism with neural signaling, highlighting how core metabolites regulate energy use and protect neurons.Topics Discussed:Brain energy efficiency: Brains are much more energy-efficient than computers for similar processing, relying on adaptive metabolic strategies evolved under energy scarcity.Metabolism vs. information processing: Core metabolites like glutamate bridge basic cellular energy production and neural signaling.Lactate as a signal: Produced during exercise, lactate diffuses from muscles to brain, modulating neuronal excitability and providing neuroprotection.BHB in ketosis: During fasting or ketogenic diets, beta-hydroxybutyrate displaces glucose as fuel, enhances antioxidant defenses, and activates protective potassium channels in neurons.Adenosine and sleep: Accumulates from ATP breakdown during wakefulness, triggering sleep and locally inhibiting overactive neural networks for energy conservation.Glial cells' role: Astrocytes and oligodendrocytes handle sophisticated metabolism, release signaling molecules like lactate, and modulate synapses, and influence diseases like Alzheimer's.Practical Takeaways:Regular exercise elevates lactate, which signals the brain to adapt metabolism and may enhance neuroprotection against stress.Intermittent fasting or ketogenic diets can induce ketosis with BHB, potentially boosting brain antioxidant defenses and preconditioning against metabolic stress.Prioritizing sleep helps clear adenosine buildup, restoring energy balance and supporting long-term neural health.About the guest: Dr. Luis Felipe Barros, MD, PhD is a Chilean neurobiologist and professor at the Universidad de Valparaíso, where he leads a lab studying brain metabolism from glucose transport to mitochondrial function.Related Episode:M&M 255 | Unlocking Energy: How Nutrition & Drugs Impact Your Mitochondria | Chris Masterjohn*Not medical advice.Support the showAffiliates: Lumen device to optimize your metabolism for weight loss or athletic performance. Special sale Nov 10 - Dec 1: Lumen is half off ($599 → $299), and MINDMATTER gets another 15% off. AquaTru: Water filtration devices that remove microplastics, metals, bacteria, and more from your drinking water. Through link, get $100 off for AquaTru Carafe, Classic and Under the Sink Units, and $300 off Freestanding models. Seed Oil Scout: Find restaurants with seed oil-free options, scan food products to see what they're hiding, with this easy-to-use mobile app. KetoCitra—Ketone body BHB + electrolytes formulated for kidney health. Use code MIND20 for 20% off any subscription (cancel anytime) For all the ways you can support my efforts
Professor Grant Schofield Academic Pioneer & Health Disruptor Grant Schofield has been the Professor of Public Health at Auckland University of Technology, Director of the University’s Human Potential Centre, for 25 years. former Chief Scientific Adviser to the Ministry of Education in New Zealand, co-author of four best-selling books and Chief Science Officer for PREKURE. Professor Grant’s career has focused on preventing the diseases of modern times, and seeing what it takes to help people live a long, healthy and happy life. He lives and breathes the motto “be the best you can be”, and sees this as a game-changer for the health system – capable of transforming the current health (sickness) model, to one in which we aspire to be well. He is redefining public health as the science of human potential; the study of what it takes to have a great life. Grant is well known for thinking outside the box and challenging conventional wisdom in nutrition and weight loss, as well as physical activity and exercise. He brings his fluency across several scientific disciplines – from human physiology, to psychology, to peak performance – to his role at PREKURE, where he delivers world class training in lifestyle medicine. Link to Show Notes on Website https://fabulouslyketo.com/podcast/250. Professor Grant’s Top Tips Have periods of time when you are not eating. Intermittent fast with a couple of longer fasts a year. Use creatine for brain health. Get outside into daylight. Professor Grant’s Books What The Fast! What The Fat? What The Face! What The Fat? Recipes Choose Your Hard Resources Mentioned TheAnxious Generation – Jonathan Haidt Decode Your Food workshop Pay US dollars Pay in British pounds Connect with Professor Grant Schofield on social media Twitter: https://x.com/grantsnz Facebook Profile: https://www.facebook.com/Prof.Grant Facebook Page:https://www.facebook.com/Prof.Grant Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/profgrantschofield/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/grant-schofield-32512728/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@FabulouslyKeto Website Details: https://profgrantschofield.com https://prekure.com The Fabulously Keto Diet & Lifestyle Journal: A 12-week journal to support new habits – Jackie Fletcher If you have enjoyed listening to this episode – Leave us a review By leaving us a review on your favourite podcast platform, you help us to be found by others. Support Jackie Help Jackie make more episodes by supporting her. If you wish to support her we have various options from one off donations to becoming a Super Fabulously Keto Podcast Supporter with coaching and support. Check out this page for lots of different ways to support the podcast. https://fabulouslyketo.com/support Or You can find us on Patreon: https://www.patreon. com/FabulouslyKeto Connect with us on social media https://www.facebook.com/FabulouslyKeto https://www.instagram.com/FabulouslyKeto1 https://twitter.com/FabulouslyKeto https://www.youtube.com/@FabulouslyKeto Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/FabulouslyKeto Music by Bob Collum Recommend a guest We would love to know if you have a favourite guest you would like us to interview. Let us know who you would like to hear of if you have a particular topic you would like us to cover. https://fabulouslyketo.com/recommend-a-guest We sometimes get a small commission on some of the links, this goes towards the costs of producing the podcast.
NEW! Support your strength and muscle goals with PUORI Creatine+ — a clean, effective creatine monohydrate supplement enhanced with taurine. Get 20% off at puori.com/VANESSA In this science-packed episode, Dr. Cas Fuchs breaks down the surprising ways intermittent fasting, under-fueling, cold plunges, and low glycogen can quietly sabotage your muscle, strength, and body recomposition goals. We uncover the truth about IF for active women, what really matters for protein timing and distribution, how carbs impact strength performance, and why ice baths may be blunting your gains. If you want evidence-based strategies for fat loss and muscle retention, this episode is essential listening. If you loved Friday's solo episode on Why I Quit Intermittent Fasting, this conversation is the perfect follow-up — because Dr. Fuchs repeatedly emphasizes something Vanessa has discussed in detail
Aujourd'hui, on va parler de jeûne intermittent qui est très à la mode. Il s'agit de sauter des repas. Cela permettrait de manger moins, donc de maigrir. Il nous épargne comptage de calories, aliments interdits et autre lubie diététique. Il y a une seule règle à respecter : il faut s'abstenir de manger une partie du temps, au moins 12 heures d'affilée. Il existe plusieurs formules : on peut aussi ne rien manger 1 jour sur 2, voir même 2 jours sur 5. L'important, c'est de trouver la formule qui nous convient le mieux, compatible avec sa vie familiale et sociale. Hébergé par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.
Avoid these mistakes for a healthy gut! These 8 common gut health mistakes could be destroying your digestive health. Discover the habits and foods that ruin gut health, along with my expert gut health tips to improve your digestion and overall health today.1. Trying to improve gut health with fiberIncreasing fiber is one of the worst things you can do for your gut, yet it's commonly recommended. If your gut is damaged, fiber can exacerbate the issue, contributing to gas and inflammation. If you have gut inflammation, the carnivore diet can help!The carnivore diet helps increase glutamine, an amino acid that promotes gut healing. Zinc carnosine and butyrate, found in butter, are excellent for a healthy gut. Intermittent fasting and periodic prolonged fasting are crucial for maintaining digestive health.Approximately 40% of the population has SIBO. L. Reuteri can help reduce SIBO and has many other amazing benefits. It increases oxytocin, lowers stres, and even increases social capacity. Ensure you have strong stomach acid for healthy digestion and protection from microbes. 2. Commercial probiotics and yogurt The amount of probiotics in these products is so low that it won't make a difference in gut health. Many commercial yogurts are low-fat and contain added sugar and starch. 3. Colon cleansingThis eliminates beneficial gut bacteria, which can ultimately lead to constipation and other health issues. Avoid detoxing and focus on a healthy diet.4. Antibiotics Your gut microbiome does not fully recover after taking antibiotics. Bacteria that survive antibiotics can become antibiotic-resistant superbugs! If you have to take antibiotics take a good probiotic simultaneously.5. Antacids Acid reflux is a valve problem caused by low stomach acid. Weakening your stomach acid worsens the problem. Strong stomach acid is vital for digestion, protection against pathogens, and mineral absorption. 6. Low-fat diets Low-fat diets are bad for digestion because fat stimulates the gallbladder to release bile. Low bile leads to constipation and the inability to kill off microbes in the small intestine.7. Balanced diet Everything in moderation is the worst advice! Lowering carbs from 45% to 65% of your calories to 10% can significantly improve digestion.8. Superfood shakesSuperfood shakes and smoothies with kale, spinach, and fruit can overload the small intestine with fiber. Red meat is the best superfood! Dr. Eric Berg DC Bio:Dr. Berg, age 60, is a chiropractor who specializes in Healthy Ketosis & Intermittent Fasting. He is the Director of Dr. Berg Nutritionals and author of the best-selling book The Healthy Keto Plan. He no longer practices, but focuses on health education through social media.Disclaimer: Dr. Eric Berg received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Palmer College of Chiropractic in 1988. His use of “doctor” or “Dr.” in relation to himself solely refers to that degree. Dr. Berg is a licensed chiropractor in Virginia, California, and Louisiana, but he no longer practices chiropractic in any state and does not see patients, so he can focus on educating people as a full-time activity, yet he maintains an active license. This video is for general informational purposes only. It should not be used to self-diagnose, and it is not a substitute for a medical exam, cure, treatment, diagnosis, prescription, or recommendation. It does not create a doctor-patient relationship between Dr. Berg and you. You should not make any change in your health regimen or diet before first consulting a physician and obtaining a medical exam, diagnosis, and recommendation. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
After over a decade of hosting the Optimize Paleo Podcast, Dr. of Holistic Nutrition, Autumn Smith is taking the next big step — welcome to ReThink Health. This is where science meets real life — and where we go beyond paleo to explore what truly creates vibrant health in the modern world. In this next evolution, we'll dive deeper into: -Gut health and the microbiome — how to restore and protect your inner ecosystem -Intermittent fasting, circadian rhythm, and metabolic flexibility — practical tools to enhance energy and longevity -The most nutrient-dense foods on the planet and how to build your perfect diet -Eating psychology and mindset — using pleasure, awareness, and nervous system balance to transform your relationship with food -Functional medicine and fasting science, cutting-edge nutrition research, and stories from thought leaders redefining well-being -Regenerative agriculture and sustainable farming After 10+ years Dr. Smith is expanding the conversation — from audio to video, from Paleo to Rethink Health — now on iTunes, Spotify, and YouTube. We're celebrating the launch with a special giveaway! Enter for a chance to win our favorite Paleovalley health bundle — featuring nutrient-dense essentials! Simply subscribe to Dr. Autumn's You Tube Channel and introduce yourself on the Welcome Video (What Happens If You Change Just One Habit?). Let us know how long you've been listening and what you are excited to learn. Dr. Autumn will pick up to 3 winners! Giveaway Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dDjIng3QVzg&t=43s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@autumnsmithdr Instagram: www.instagram.com/drautumnsmith
If you suffer from severe menstrual cramps, this is for you. Find out how to stop menstrual cramps naturally by addressing the root cause with these 13 natural remedies for period pain. Never experience menstrual cramps again! 0:00 Introduction: How to reduce period pain0:23 What is a menstrual cramp? 1:30 What causes severe period cramps? 6:42 Vitamin D3 and painful menstrual cramps 12:38 13 natural remedies for period painToday, I'm going to show you how to relieve period cramps fast, and for good. There are two types of period cramps: the primary type is labeled idiopathic, and secondary cramps that are caused by fibroids, ovarian cysts, or endometriosis.Many women take NSAIDs, birth control pills, and Depo shots for period pain relief. The medical community generally discourages the use of natural remedies for menstrual cramps, but does not discourage the use of medication. Research has shown the effectiveness of vitamin B1 and vitamin E.Upon searching for the root cause, I stumbled upon the following clues:• Painful cramps are caused by pain chemicals called prostaglandins. • Vasopressin, which causes contractions and decreased blood flow, is elevated when you have menstrual cramps.• Painful period cramps are associated with high parathyroid hormone levels. • Women with painful menstrual cramps also have much higher inflammation in the uterus, often related to NF-KB. • Black women have a 33% higher likelihood of getting severe period cramps than white women. • Menstrual cramps are sometimes treated with calcium channel blockers. This led to the conclusion that the root cause of menstrual cramps is a severe vitamin D3 deficiency! Try the following natural remedies for period pain and say goodbye to menstrual cramps for good:1. Take 20,000 IU of vitamin D3 daily2. Take 400-600 mg of magnesium glycinate 3. Follow a low-carb diet4. Intermittent fasting5. Cod liver oil for pain relief6. Vitamin E7. Vitamin B18. Increase iron with red meat9. Zinc for vitamin D3 absorption10. Exercise11. Fenugreek12. Heating pad13. Ginger Dr. Eric Berg DC Bio:Dr. Berg, age 60, is a chiropractor who specializes in Healthy Ketosis & Intermittent Fasting. He is the Director of Dr. Berg Nutritionals and author of the best-selling book The Healthy Keto Plan. He no longer practices, but focuses on health education through social media.Disclaimer: Dr. Eric Berg received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Palmer College of Chiropractic in 1988. His use of “doctor” or “Dr.” in relation to himself solely refers to that degree. Dr. Berg is a licensed chiropractor in Virginia, California, and Louisiana, but he no longer practices chiropractic in any state and does not see patients, so he can focus on educating people as a full-time activity, yet he maintains an active license. This video is for general informational purposes only. It should not be used to self-diagnose, and it is not a substitute for a medical exam, cure, treatment, diagnosis, prescription, or recommendation. It does not create a doctor-patient relationship between Dr. Berg and you. You should not make any change in your health regimen or diet before first consulting a physician and obtaining a medical exam, diagnosis, and recommendation. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.
→ 1:1 Body Recomp Coaching (FREE Month) | What if you could get lean without tracking macros or doing hours of cardio?In this episode, we reveal the 10 highest return-on-investment habits for fat loss. These are the exact strategies that will get you lean without requiring hours of meal prep or six-day training splits. You'll discover how to naturally eat fewer calories without starving, why walking beats cardio for most people, simple sleep hacks that controls your hunger hormones, and more.Timestamps:02:06 – Why eating protein first = fewer calories consumed 06:07 – The 7,000 step rule (50% reduced mortality risk) 11:56 – 5 servings of fruits & vegetables per day 16:09 – How to reduce processed foods without restriction 21:21 – Sleep for fat loss: the bedtime alarm hack 26:00 – Sleep optimization (blue light, temperature, darkness) 30:26 – Minimal effective dose: lift 3x per week for 30 min 33:08 – Intermittent fasting & appetite control 36:12 – Meal planning: 2-3 staple breakfasts & lunches 41:27 – Rapid fire tips (hydration, grocery shopping & more)→ Get a FREE Month of Coaching (Podcast Special) → Book a Free Body Recomp Strategy Call → Get My Free Body Recomp Guide → Follow Kade on Instagram
Ready to finally break free from alcohol—and stop the cycle of numbing? Start your journey today with the Refresh & Reboot: 30 Day Alcohol-Free Challenge. This self-paced program gives you daily guidance, mindset tools, and video support from Sara to help you thrive through your first 30 days without alcohol. Podcast listeners get 20% off with code PODCAST20 at checkout.
Listen to the full episode: https://youtu.be/6jLhl8Zaznw?si=jaBuMbIWQApYpeEv Why does starting your day with protein reduce anxiety for the rest of the day? In this Fitness Friday episode on the Habits and Hustle podcast, Sal Di Stefano joins me to break down the science of blood sugar control, why intermittent fasting is "a terrible way to lose weight," and the shocking truth about cardio versus strength training for fat loss. We also unpack the biggest mistake women make when tracking progress: obsessing over the scale instead of body composition. Sal explains why 40% of weight lost through cardio comes from muscle, shares a study where strength training alone beat cardio AND strength training combined for fat loss, and reveals why psychologists now prescribe high-protein breakfasts to anxious patients. Sal Di Stefano is a fitness expert with over 20 years of personal training experience and co-host of the Mind Pump podcast, one of the top-rated fitness shows in the world. What we discuss: How protein at breakfast controls blood sugar and reduces anxiety throughout the day The two-question filter for any fitness advice: "Will I do it?" and "Is it realistic?" Intermittent fasting's original purpose and why it fails for weight loss Cortisol addiction and the binge-restrict cycle fasting creates When cold plunges hurt more than help for overstressed people Cardio vs strength training: why 40% of cardio weight loss comes from muscle The study where strength training alone beat cardio for fat loss Ditching the scale: better metrics for tracking body transformation Thank you to our sponsor: Therasage: Head over to therasage.com and use code Be Bold for 15% off Air Doctor: Go to airdoctorpro.com and use promo code HUSTLE for up to $300 off and a 3-year warranty on air purifiers. Magic Mind: Head over to www.magicmind.com/jen and use code Jen at checkout. Momentous: Shop this link and use code Jen for 20% off Manna Vitality: Visit mannavitality.com and use code JENNIFER20 for 20% off your order Prolon: Get 30% off sitewide plus a $40 bonus gift when you subscribe to their 5-Day Program! Just visit https://prolonlife.com/JENNIFERCOHEN and use code JENNIFERCOHEN to claim your discount and your bonus gift. Find more from Sal: Instagram: @mindpumpdistefano Podcast: https://mindpumppodcast.com/ X: https://x.com/mindpumpsal Find more from Jen: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Books: https://www.jennifercohen.com/books Speaking: https://www.jennifercohen.com/speaking-engagements
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Hey Heal Squad! We're back with Part 2 of our powerful conversation with Dr. Nadine Macaluso, psychotherapist, trauma expert, and former wife of the “Wolf of Wall Street.” Dr. Nadine breaks down the psychology of trauma bonds, what they are, why they're so hard to escape, and the real steps you need to take to leave safely. She explains how intermittent reinforcement keeps people stuck, why “love bombing” is actually manipulation, and how to spot the red flags of a pathological partner before it's too late. PLUS, we dive into the shame and self-blame survivors carry, how to reframe those beliefs with compassion, and why learning to trust yourself again is the key to healing. Nadine shares inspiring stories of women who not only left toxic love, but went on to build thriving lives and even find healthy love again.This episode will remind you that freedom, clarity, and joy are absolutely within reach. HEALERS & HEAL-LINERS Trauma bonds are designed to keep you stuck. Intermittent reinforcement, love bombing, and devaluation create a cycle that feels like love but is actually control. Love bombing is manipulation. Those over-the-top gifts, sweeping gestures, and declarations of “soulmate love” are tools to hook you fast. Dr. Nadine explains why true love builds slowly, while love bombing is a red flag that signals future coercion and abuse. Shame keeps survivors silent. Releasing self-blame and choosing self-compassion is the first step toward breaking free and healing. The healing shift comes when survivors reframe the story, release self-blame, and embrace compassion for what they endured. -- HEAL SQUAD SOCIALS IG: https://www.instagram.com/healsquad/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@healsquadxmaria HEAL SQUAD RESOURCES: Heal Squad Website:https://www.healsquad.com/ Heal Squad x Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/HealSquad/membership Maria Menounos Website: https://www.mariamenounos.com My Curated Macy's Page: Shop My Macy's Storefront Prenuvo: Prenuvo.com/MARIA for $300 off EMR-Tek Red Light: https://emr-tek.com/discount/Maria30 for 30% off Airbnb: https://www.airbnb.com/ Briotech: https://shopbriotech.com/ Use Code: HEALSQUAD for 20% off Join In-Person Heal Retreat Waitlist! https://mariamenounos.myflodesk.com/heal-retreat-waitlist GUEST RESOURCES: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/therealdrnadine/?hl=en Website: https://drnae.com/ Download the First Chapter of Dr. Nae's new book Book mentioned in the episode: https://www.amazon.com/Women-Who-Love-Psychopaths-Relationships/dp/0984172807 ABOUT MARIA MENOUNOS: Emmy Award-winning journalist, TV personality, actress, 2x NYT best-selling author, former pro-wrestler and brain tumor survivor, Maria Menounos' passion is to see others heal and to get better in all areas of life. ABOUT HEAL SQUAD x MARIA MENOUNOS: A daily digital talk-show that brings you the world's leading healers, experts, and celebrities to share groundbreaking secrets and tips to getting better in all areas of life. DISCLAIMER: This Podcast and all related content (published or distributed by or on behalf of Maria Menounos or http://Mariamenounos.com and http://healsquad.com) is for informational purposes only and may include information that is general in nature and that is not specific to you. Any information or opinions provided by guest experts or hosts featured within website or on Company's Podcast are their own; not those of Maria Menounos or the Company. Accordingly, Maria Menounos and the Company cannot be responsible for any results or consequences or actions you may take based on such information or opinions. This podcast is presented for exploratory purposes only. Published content is not intended to be used for preventing, diagnosing, or treating a specific illness. If you have, or suspect you may have, a health-care emergency, please contact a qualified health care professional for treatment.