The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett XX
[0] Did you know that the DariVosio now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus?
[1] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life, and the channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany and Austria.
[2] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[3] And along with the Dyeravisio channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV Plus.
[4] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a Cio channel.
[5] panel right now.
[6] What do you mean by opening up our detox pathways?
[7] Yeah.
[8] So if you look at our lymph system, each, the lymph is like, you know, people know lymph nodes because when you get sick, you can feel them.
[9] Mumps.
[10] Yeah.
[11] So the lymph is always carrying toxins out of organs.
[12] So the liver has a lymph pathway, the gut has lymph nodes in there that are going to pull all the toxins that are in there and move them out of you.
[13] So we need to keep these lymph pathways.
[14] open.
[15] So the gut's a great one.
[16] You should be having a bowel movement every single day.
[17] If you're not having a bowel movement every single day, then what the body's trying to get rid of is staying inside of you and it gets congested.
[18] A thing we teach women about the armpit, and actually it would work for men too, is that you should have a pit, not a puff.
[19] If it's a puff, like look in the mirror and if your armpit is a puff, then that's stagnant lymph.
[20] It means that you're not pulling the toxins for women that are coming out of her breasts are not getting out.
[21] Toxins that are coming out from the head down into the, into the thoracic areas not getting out because it's congested.
[22] So if your underarm is puffy and not like a pit, then you might be storing some of those toxins.
[23] That's right.
[24] And they're not moving.
[25] They're not mobilizing.
[26] Why aren't they?
[27] Am I blocking my pathways?
[28] Yeah, the pathways blocked.
[29] With what?
[30] Well, there's the question.
[31] With, I feel like people are going to leave.
[32] this podcast to be so depressed because there's so many pieces of this but uh deodorant deodorant clogs that up and so it doesn't mobilize all of the toxins out this was a big thing with breast cancer is a lot of women using toxic deodorants they weren't getting the toxins out of the breast and it was clogging in the armpit because of the toxins from the deodorant that explains why we sweat in that area right because it's a pathway why do we even have hair in that area i don't know you tell me it's a detox it's for detoxing.
[33] It's to help get those toxins out.
[34] Oh, so the molecules go down the hair.
[35] Yeah.
[36] Yeah.
[37] And what do women do?
[38] Shave it off.
[39] That's right.
[40] So you're saying, I shave.
[41] I'm, I just because I don't, I can't walk.
[42] It's just not in my, in my nature.
[43] But I, you know what I do is I have a lufa in my shower and I just lufa under my arms at whenever I shower to open up those pathways.
[44] What's a lufa?
[45] It's like a little organic sponge.
[46] okay that scrubs it yeah scrubs it we also have pubic hair we also have pubic hair we are getting toxins out from the ovaries the ovaries are the major area for and testes this is where hormones are being produced and so as they're coming out they are supposed to influence our everything biologically we need them to influence but then they're also supposed to get out of our system and so the hair ends up becoming like this way that we can mobilize the toxins out of us i never want I never knew or asked why I grow hair under my arms and in the pubic region.
[47] No one ever told me about that.
[48] No one ever, I never questioned it.
[49] I thought it was slightly inconvenient.
[50] Yes.
[51] Well, it is for sure.
[52] But the body doesn't do anything to inconvenience you.
[53] It does it to increase your chances of survival because I'm the byproduct of millions of years of survival of the fittest and evolution that has made me pruned a. sculpted to survive.
[54] It's funny because we spend so much of our time, and this goes back to the conversation around sugar.
[55] We spend, and just weight loss and all these things.
[56] We live in a world where we think that our body is against us.
[57] Right.
[58] It's fighting us.
[59] It's making me go for the sugar drawer.
[60] It's stopping me losing weight.
[61] It's growing all these pubs.
[62] Right.
[63] Inconvenient.
[64] Yeah, yeah, yeah.
[65] And then we fight it.
[66] We shave it off and we do all these crazy things to fight against our body.
[67] But our body is very much, it's actually.
[68] it's actually for us and many of the things we're choosing to do are against us we are against ourselves not our bodies our bodies cannot put a foot wrong you got it I mean you got it it's this is what I'm trying to bring back is this this respect for what the body's trying to do that's what we're missing we it's all inconvenient and it's everything from like even like weight gain why is your body gaining weight weight?
[69] because it's so brilliant that it decided not to put that fat around your organs, it put it around your belly, and now you're looking in the mirror and you're villainizing it, but your body was trying to save your life in that moment.
[70] Like everything the body is always doing for you, not against you, but we continually discredit what it's trying to do and manipulate it, which is why the best thing I can think of is that we're just in an evolutionary mismatch.
[71] we're just at the modern world does not line up with the human body's design.
[72] I was walking through New York City and I saw a poster and it is for weight loss injections.
[73] Yeah.
[74] Have you seen this?
[75] No, but OZempic is a drug that's really popular right now.
[76] There's a couple of drugs right now.
[77] There's one of my friends were talking about it and we were like, there's a diabetes drug, I think.
[78] And the headlines have been that so many people are taking.
[79] this diabetes drug to lose weight that people with diabetes are struggling there's another one called seymaglutide yeah this is this is people injecting things in their body to help them lose weight yeah and the poster which my friend had sent me and I'd seen it earlier and then he'd sent me the poster as well in our group chat says one shot a week lose weight and it has a little URL someone thankfully had actually ripped the URL off this billboard what's your take on all this Yeah, the new medications that are out there right now are creating a weight loss possibility when we look at the scale and when we look at how people feel when they put on their clothes.
[80] But it's at the expense of muscle.
[81] They're actually losing more muscle than they are losing fat.
[82] So yes, you feel thinner, but it's not because you lost fat.
[83] You lost muscle.
[84] Muscle is the organ of longevity.
[85] If you lose muscle, as you age, you are going to be in a bad situation.
[86] I mean, we need muscle to get out of a chair.
[87] Yeah.
[88] You need muscle to perform daily life functions.
[89] The other thing people don't realize about muscle is in muscle or insulin receptors.
[90] So if you lose muscle, you don't have as many insulin receptors, which means you're now putting yourself in a more insulin resistant state, which means you have to stay on the medication forever to be able to stay at the weight you want.
[91] because you don't have the same insulin sensitivity.
[92] So again, it's like the calorie in, calorie out.
[93] Short -term result, it's not, it's risky.
[94] It's risky.
[95] And then, you know, every medication has a side effect.
[96] But I'm more concerned about the person who thinks they solve their weight loss issue and all they've done is made it worse down the red.
[97] I've sat here with many a health expert and a fitness expert and nutritional experts and they all agree with what you just said about muscle.
[98] They all said to me, because I asked a question, question to, I think it was Tim Spector, about, might have been Giles Yo, asked a question about, do, does our metabolism fall off a cliff as we age, which is quite a popular thing.
[99] And a few of them said the same thing to me. They go, at a certain point, further down the line, metabolism does change.
[100] But really the thing that change is muscle mass. And that means that we stop moving as much, which means that we gain weight faster.
[101] So he said, the number one thing that you need to do as you age is keep doing resistance training.
[102] Keep your muscle.
[103] And because I was asking him a question about my father, I said, I went down this really steep cliff in Bali a couple of weekends before.
[104] And as I was going down those stairs, I was thinking, my dad couldn't do this anymore.
[105] And at the bottom of those stairs was our activity for the day.
[106] We were going white water rafting.
[107] And as I was walking down those stairs, I want to be my dad's age and be able to go down these stairs so I can do stuff with my kids.
[108] And getting into a place where I'm a mobile at, you know, by 60, that is a choice.
[109] That is an unavoid.
[110] That is a, for most of us, that is a choice.
[111] And it's one that we can avoid if we keep muscle and we keep, therefore, we'll keep fat.
[112] And what you've said there from what I garnered from it is I will actually, if I take those chemicals and if I inject them into my body, I'll lose my muscle mass. And if I lose my muscle mass, I will be, I will have a higher chance of weight gain and obesity when I'm older.
[113] And your functionality.
[114] Yeah.
[115] So the great, the perfect example that I always stuck in my head is my dad had a knee surgery.
[116] and he's 86 years old.
[117] And I remember trying to help him get around a chair that he was sitting in.
[118] And he was starting to lose his upper body strength.
[119] And he literally couldn't push himself up and out of the chair to be able to move into a comfortable position.
[120] And I thought, oh my gosh, that's where muscle is so important.
[121] At 86 years old is just being able to get up and out of a chair after recovering from a surgery.
[122] But if you think about the functionality of a human as we age, if you want to be able to not do as many activities like you're talking about, just make sure you don't have as much muscle.
[123] Like the minute muscle goes away, your functionality goes away.
[124] But more importantly, the minute muscle goes away, you're more insulin resistant.
[125] So you're going to gain weight more down the long haul.
[126] A lot of other people would say, you know, the way to lose weight is just to do lots of cardio, run a lot.
[127] Yeah.
[128] Good idea?
[129] No. No. So here's another interesting thing.
[130] I'm going to give it through a women's perspective because let's go back to women over 40.
[131] So cortisol goes up with extra cardio.
[132] Calorie set point goes, you know, you're more calorie output.
[133] So remember that's also happening and you're changing your set point.
[134] So I need more calories.
[135] My calorie set point goes up and my cortisol levels go up.
[136] Yeah.
[137] Okay.
[138] So what ends up happening is that you actually now are tanking all your other hormones.
[139] So let's follow the trail of progesterone.
[140] Cortisol goes up because you're doing so much cardio.
[141] So progestrone goes down because cortisol goes up, progesterone goes down.
[142] Well, progestone keeps estrogen in check.
[143] So now estrogen can go up.
[144] And if you have too much estrogen, eventually what's going to happen is it's going to be stored as fat.
[145] So that extra hormone will, so long term, that's not a great plan.
[146] For women?
[147] For women.
[148] For men?
[149] Well, so then the second piece applies to both.
[150] men and women is if you're doing a lot of cardio most likely you're breaking down muscle to be able to perform that cardio and a great example is look at a marathon runner versus a tennis player you know or a soccer player like even though soccer players are doing a lot of cardio it's a lot of start stop start stop but a marathon runner who's done so much cardio is breaking muscle down to be able to do that amount of cardio so it's okay to do just not at the expense of muscle and for a women, you can't do it at the expense of progestone.
[151] So it won't help me to lose weight.
[152] No. No. You know what's going to help you to lose weight is more weight lifting, build more muscles, you have more insulin receptor sites, fast more so you can get rid of all of the glucose that get stored in muscles, break your fast with protein.
[153] And yeah, I mean, that's what we saw.
[154] We see all the time in both my clinic and my online world is those three things will get you in the shape that you want is might not remember as you build muscle you're not going to lose the the number on the scale might be that much different you know it might it might not move but your whole shape is going to change you're going to look different so is any level of cardio good for weight loss would you recommend that just for the the broader health benefits I you know I think cardio is more of a mental health improvement improve you know you get all those endorphins.
[155] It's so good for your mental health.
[156] I love to go running.
[157] It's my favorite thing.
[158] But I do it for my mental health, not to lose weight.
[159] Did you know that the Dario of a CEO now has its own channel exclusively on Samsung TV Plus?
[160] And I'm excited to say that we've partnered with Samsung TV to bring this to life.
[161] And the channel is available in the UK, the Netherlands, Germany, and Austria.
[162] Samsung TV Plus is a free streaming service available to all owners of Samsung Smart TVs and Galaxy mobiles and tablets.
[163] And along with the Dyer of a CO channel, you'll find hundreds of more channels with entertainment for everyone all for free on Samsung TV Plus.
[164] So if you own a Samsung TV, tune in now and watch the Dyer of a CEO channel right now.