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Are Humans Vegans or Omnivores? The Answer is All in Your Head

Today, we welcome internationally acclaimed keto and ancestral nutrition specialist Nora Gedgaudas, CNS, NTP, BCHN as a guest author on the Bulletproof Blog. You can listen to her chat live with Dave at PaleoFX on this episode of Bulletproof Radio (iTunes). 

Are Humans Vegans or Omnivores? The Answer is All in Your Head

by Nora Gedgaudas, CNS, NTP, BCHN

After experiencing detrimental health and mental health effects from my own foray into veganism, I became determined to find out what foods worked best for my biology.

My interests ultimately shifted toward studying the foundational roots of prehistoric ancestral diets, along with the various selective pressures that served to shape our physiological makeup and most basic nutritional requirements as humans. I sought to answer the question: Is human health enhanced or best supported by a strictly (or mostly) herbivorous diet?

Keep reading to find out how I found veganism, why I gave it up, and how a close examination of the human ancestral diet over thousands of years helped me realize that my body’s cravings for animal products weren’t a personal failure — they were biological.

Instantly download the Bulletproof Diet Roadmap, your cheat sheet to finding out which foods work with your unique biology. 

Why I became vegan in the first place

12 Best Vegetables and Fruit to Eat Right Now_farmers market_headerAround forty years ago, I bought into the mainstream perception that dietary animal fat was bad, and that animal source foods in general (especially red meat) should be consumed sparingly, if at all. Most of the propaganda in the health food stores I frequented in those days were rife with books and pamphlets on the many lofty virtues of vegetarianism and veganism as some established ideal.

For a time, I fully attempted adopting these approaches in the best quality and strictest possible way, which resulted in a near catastrophic failure in my health and well being. What began with positive effects rapidly led over the course of a year or two to woefully diminishing returns. My struggles with depression deepened to the point of near suicidality, and I even developed an eating disorder for a time. For the first time, I began experiencing panic attacks. What started out as some potentially positive early detoxification effects eventually gave way to a complete loss of vitality and mental clarity.

RELATED: Things You Should Know Before Going Vegan

Persistent cravings for animal source foods left me feeling guilty. I felt like a complete failure when I finally succumbed to those cravings. Eventually, I abandoned what was then my ideal for what I begrudgingly had to concede worked far better for me. I automatically assumed the fault lay with some odd abnormality in my biochemical makeup or perhaps just an intrinsic weakness of my own self-discipline and character. I struggled internally with my failure. But I soon realized that this was faulty thinking.

Historical diets of primates and early humans

The vegetarian and vegan communities seem to be under the impression that our species has evolved from an herbivorous line, and that leaves and bananas are meant to be our most natural dietary staple. Conversely, nowadays meat eating is popularly perceived by many as being more of a modern-day aberration (or abomination, according to the most passionate proponents of the vegan diet).

The only problem with this notion is that our closest great ape ancestors never quite got that memo. It turns out that all great apes (with one notable exception) regularly hunt, kill and consume some meat (comprising up to 20% of their diets).[ref url=”https://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=weoc7eW9kCIC&oi=fnd&pg=PP17&dq=Stanford,+Craig+B.+%22The+Hunting+Apes:+Meat+Eating+and+the+Origins+of+Human+Behavior.%E2%80%9D++Princeton+University+Press+(February+25,+2001)&ots=qNqibQ1OO_&sig=rgfZp7fgqGIHKq1BPzflgkuZcIA#v=onepage&q&f=false”] With a cursory search on YouTube, you’ll find a plethora of very strong and difficult to watch footage clearly showing just that.

Dietary changes and brain size changes

Some attribute cooking as the practice that made us human. Others say it was our increased consumption of starchy roots and tubers (much less grains or legumes) along the way. The most impactful practice that led to the brain architecture and capacity that we have today was our consistent consumption of the dietary fat of animals.

The notable exception to this meat-eating rule among our simian brethren includes herbivorous gorillas. The rub there is that these herbivorous gorillas also have a smaller brain-to-body ratio then would be expected for their size.[ref url=”https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/cne.21974″] In fact, a gorilla weighing about the same as a human has a brain just one-third of the size.

RELATED: What “The China Study” Gets Wrong About Vegan Diets

We can also turn to the chimpanzee for comparison. The size and sophistication of the chimpanzee’s brain really has not changed much at all in about seven million years. Why? In general terms, chimpanzees continued on to live as they always had, and kept persistently noshing on those leaves and bananas, along with the occasional meat of small and relatively lean animals. No real changes there.

Somewhere along the way, an intrepid primate ancestor began to do things a bit differently. Profound physiological changes, like the development of opposable thumbs, allowed them to more effectively cleave meat and marrow from the scavenged bones of animals. Eventually, they used new abilities, like the ability to grip and walk upright, to band together to hunt with the tribe, creating and grasping spears and other weaponry to hunt more efficiently.

Animal fat and rapid brain growth (encephalization)

the china study criticismAround 2 million years ago, we first emerged as the genus, ‘Homo’, standing fully upright and having by then established a fully hunting-based dietary economy.[ref url=”https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0062174″][ref url=”https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/%28SICI%291520-6505%281999%298%3A1%3C11%3A%3AAID-EVAN6%3E3.0.CO%3B2-M”] By this time, our brains were already double to triple that of our closest primate ancestor (the chimpanzee). From there, our hominid brain nearly doubled again by roughly 200,000 years ago when we finally emerged as Homo sapiens for the first time.[ref url=”https://www.jstor.org/stable/41464021?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents”]

This rapid rate of brain enlargement and sophistication, aka encephalization, is wholly unprecedented among the evolutionary lineages of any other species. What is also unique about us as human primates is our additionally unprecedented taste for fat — particularly animal fat — which we pursued voraciously along the way.[ref url=”https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/abs/10.1086/soutjanth.25.4.3629426″] We had available to us the meat of massive, fatty herbivores we now refer to as megafauna all the way from 2.6 million years ago—at the outset of the Quaternary Ice Age all the way to 13,000 or so years ago.

And this, more than any other single factor, has led to what is arguably our most unique and defining human characteristic: our unusually large brain. And unlike any other primate, the fatty acids responsible for our unique human cognition — both 20- and 22-carbon fatty acids: arachidonic acid (AA) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)—are both found within the human food supply exclusively within animal source foods.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1608562″]

It is the effect of dietary fat on brain growth that we have to thank for advanced human achievement: art, poetry, music, culture, mathematics, language, literary works, science and technology, and arguably even human spirituality. And it’s worth pointing out that we didn’t require fire in order to make excellent and consistent dietary use of that precious dietary commodity. We are meant as humans first and foremost to be fat-heads, not potato heads or grain brains.

Humans in reverse: more grains, smaller brains

The cataclysmic birth of the Holocene tragically led to the sudden mass extinction of more than half of the planet’s megafauna species (particularly the largest and fattiest of them), leaving us with much smaller, leaner prey that was much more fleet of foot. Even so, our Neolithic hunting ancestors never lost their preference for animal fat as their most coveted dietary staple.

Nevertheless, the advent of agriculture (and a diet increasingly based upon sugars, starches, and grains) has led not to any continued brain enhancement and evolution, but instead a loss of close to 11% of our brain volume over the last 10,000 years.[ref url=”https://link.springer.com/referenceworkentry/10.1007%2F978-3-642-39979-4_81″][ref url=”https://www.jstor.org/stable/41464021?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents”] Let’s just say that evolution has not continued in quite the direction we might have hoped, or as is popularly advertised.

Your brain is energy-hungry

An adult human brain utilizes an estimated 20-30% of our total human caloric energy demand,[ref url=”https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1550413111004207″] making it very, very expensive in energy terms. A baby’s brain requires closer to 85% of total energy, the brains of young children require 45-50% of total energy. For perspective, consider that the brains of other primates use no more than about 8% of their total caloric energy demands.

Fat supplies more than twice the caloric value of glucose, and in the form of ketones, can supply literally FOUR times the energy!

As understood by most anthropologists today, it was likely our dependence on the meat, and especially fat, of the animals we hunted that not only allowed us to survive, but to develop the structure and function of the human brain.

The fact is, compared to large-bodied apes, we humans have an enhanced capacity and a fundamentally optimized physiology toward digesting and metabolizing higher animal fat diets. We are unique among all animals in our capacity of our brains to make full time use of almost nothing but ketones, full time. I think we need to view this as a significantly meaningful adaptation. Without it, our species could not have evolved such large brains.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12813917″]

Stay tuned for Part 2, where we dig into the human digestive system and the guts of our primate ancestors. Read more from Nora at her web site, Primal Body, Primal Mind

 

3 Reasons to Love Your Big Butt, According to Science

[tldr]

  • A growing body of research shows that a larger rear-end increases longevity and improves cardiovascular and metabolic health.
  • Keep in mind that the benefits of a big butt are linked to a larger hip-to-waist ratio, not simply larger hips. That means you want to target the fat in your midsection.
  • Lifestyle changes that lead to weight loss, such as intermittent fasting or high intensity interval training (HIIT workouts), tend to target visceral fat first, helping you shed weight where it matters most.

[/tldr]

Sir Mixalot’s “Baby Got Back” may have been on to something, along with Nicki Minaj, J-Lo, Solange, Meghan Trainor, and countless women artists reframing the way America appreciates the fuller-figured body. It’s not just about aesthetics. As it turns out, curves in the right places may help keep disease at bay. 

A growing body of research shows that a larger booty is linked to lower mortality and better cardiovascular and metabolic health.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20663064″][ref url=”https://www.nature.com/articles/ijo2009286″] 

How can a big booty help you live longer? The key is in how your body stores its fat. Let’s start at the bottom (literally).

Download the Bulletproof 30-Day Upgrade to supercharge your brain and body

Benefits of a big butt: What the science says

Most studies on hip circumference are “controlled” to study hips alone. This means researchers statistically adjust for other variables like disease, obesity, or waist circumference, so that the differences left are more likely to be linked to hip circumference. The benefits of a big butt include:

Lowers disease risk: Studies show that folks with proportionally larger hips and behinds — more fat stored in their lower body — may be at lower risk for heart disease, metabolic disease, and overall mortality. A larger hip-to-waist ratio is linked to a drop in cardiovascular risk factors such as high blood pressure and stiff or calcified arteries, as well as a reduction in low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11522554″][ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/1870428″][ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9062540″]

Protects against diabetes: Lower body fat distribution is also associated with a lower prevalence of diabetes, and correlates with greater insulin sensitivity and lower fasting blood sugars. Along with these factors, heavier hips also correspond to higher levels of ascorbic acid in the blood, a powerful antioxidant.[ref url=”https://www.nature.com/articles/ijo2009286″]

Boosts longevity: Most importantly, when all other factors are controlled for, a larger hip circumference is linked to a longer life.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11595782″] Researchers are beginning to find that a proportionally larger hip area may be even more important than a small waist or low BMI (a weight to height ratio) when it comes to lowering risks of cardiovascular disease and premature death.[ref url=”https://www.nhs.uk/news/obesity/normal-bmi-with-a-big-belly-deadlier-than-obesity/”]

The hidden dangers of visceral fat

Keep in mind that the benefits above are linked to a larger hip-to-waist ratio, not simply larger hips. That means you want to target the fat in your midsection.

Society holds small waists in high regard, but the conversation goes deeper than vanity. A larger waist circumference is indicative of excess visceral fat in the abdomen. Healthy levels help protect your abdominal organs, and play a role in your endocrine and immune function, but when you have too much, visceral fat can seriously harm your performance and health.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22572689″]

Logically, a relative waist size and hip size have opposite effects on health. Studies show that excess visceral fat contributes to insulin resistance, diabetes, hypertension and heart disease.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10889795″] Visceral fat cells behave differently than fat in other body areas, and can also induce inflammation by releasing cytokines.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23303913″]

High visceral fat also inhibits adiponectin, the hormone that helps your body regulate how much fat it needs to pack on. Together, high visceral fat and low adiponectin are linked to weight gain and increased risk of cardiovascular disease.[ref url=”https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1002/oby.20425″]

Read more: The Dangers of Visceral Fat, and How to Lose It

Work that hip-to-waist ratio

Overall, staying within a healthy weight range and eating a low-carbohydrate, anti-inflammatory diet are the some of the best things you can do for you health. Remember that there is no single “perfect” body shape, but the way your body stores fat may give you important hints about your health. For example, different body shapes can provide clues that your hormones may be off.

For those on the curvier side, targeting the more dangerous visceral fat in your midsection can be a solid plan for raising your hip-to-waist circumference ratio. Luckily, studies have shown that lifestyle changes that lead to weight loss, such as intermittent fasting or high intensity interval training (HIIT workouts), tend to target visceral fat first, helping you shed weight where it matters most.[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23303913″]

You can also alter your hip-to-waist ratio by powering up on workouts that help build muscle in your lower body. Check out this article on butt-sculpting workouts for a roundup of top tips.

 

 

25 of the Best Mother’s Day Gifts for Every Mom in Your Life

Mom gave you the gift of life (and all your mitochondria). What’s the best way to say thanks? Celebrate her on Mother’s Day with gifts that help her kick back, stay fueled, and look fabulous.

These Mother’s Day gifts are handpicked to give the moms in your life an extra edge. From cool tech to budget-friendly finds, you’ll find the perfect way to thank the supermoms in your life.

Mother’s Day gifts: Personal care

Stitch Fix

 

  • What it is: A box of clothes curated to your personal style, sent as often as every 2 weeks.
  • Why get it: Eliminate the decision fatigue, shopping time, and mental real estate that Mom would rather spend elsewhere.

Buy now: Clothing items range from $25-100, plus a $20 styling fee. Learn more at stitchfix.com.

Biossance Rose Glow Set

  • What it is: Two beauty favorites: Vitamin C rose oil to firm your skin, plus a peptide eye gel to reduce dark circles and puffiness.
  • Why get it: Give Mom science-backed skincare without the junk. This set is nontoxic and free of parabens, plus uses eco-friendly ingredients.

Buy now: $88 at Biossance

Emerald CBD + Adaptogens Deep Moisture Glow Oil

  • What it is: A lightweight, moisturizing facial oil infused with full-spectrum Cannabidiol (CBD) and ashwagandha root.
  • Why get it: CBD won’t get you “high,” but science shows that it can improve your sleep and decrease anxiety. You don’t need edibles to get these benefits, either — topical CBD can also cross your skin barrier.

Buy now: $58 at Herbivore Botanicals

Float Tank Session

  • What it is: A 60- or 90-minute session in a sensory deprivation tank, usually filled with Epsom salt and warm water to help you float in it easily.
  • Why get it: Float tanks not only give you a feeling of weightlessness, they can also help you chill. Studies show that floating can lower stress, relieve pain, and even improve your athletic performance.

Buy now: Prices vary — check for float therapy centers near you.

Gabriel Non-Toxic Nail Polish

  • What it is: Nail polish free from 10 popular (yet toxic) ingredients, including formaldehyde and parabens.
  • Why get it: Toxins in your beauty products not only damage cells and disrupt hormones, they can also keep you from losing weight. For the mom who loves natural beauty, this nail polish makes a solid low-toxin swap.

Buy now: $8.50 at Gabriel Cosmetics

Orangetheory gym membership

  • What it is: High-intensity workout classes customized to help you burn more fat. Wearable fitness trackers allow you to measure performance in real time.
  • Why get it: High-intensity interval training (HIIT) is the perfect blend of cardio and strength training. This workout will keep her on her toes and take the guesswork out of building her own exercise routine.

Buy now: Prices vary. Check your local Orangetheory gym for details.

Mother’s Day gifts: Food and drink

Bulletproof Chocolate Fuel Bars, Original Dark flavor

  • What it is: Pleasantly sweet and smooth chocolate infused with ultra-filtered MCT oil.
  • Why get it: If you do chocolate this Mother’s Day, skip the sugary stuff. These bars satisfy Mom’s sweet tooth while delivering energizing fat in every bite. Moms on a keto diet can enjoy this one too, since an entire bar tallies up to just 7 net carbs.

Buy now: $18.95 for a pack of 3 bars at Bulletproof.com

Kin Euphorics High Rhode beverage

  • What it is: An elixir that blends adaptogens, nootropics, and botanicals in a way that helps you relax — no booze needed.
  • Why get it: For the mom that doesn’t drink: Kin “stacks” key ingredients like GABA and tyrosine in a way that lifts your mood and keeps you calm, without the hangover symptoms that come with excess alcohol.

Buy now: $47 at Kin

Related: Move Over, Alcohol. This Nootropics Cocktail Gives You a Buzz – Without the Hangover

Butcher Box membership

  • What it is: High-quality monthly meat delivery — including grass-fed and grass-finished beef, heritage breed pork, and free-range chicken.
  • Why get it: Quality matters when it comes to meat — not only does it fuel you better, it’s better for the planet. Butcher Box offers a perfect option for moms who won’t compromise on protein.

Buy now: Boxes start at $129 per month. Find out more at butcherbox.com.

Dry Farm Wines Classic Collection

  • What it is: 6 bottles of lab-tested, sustainably grown wine.
  • Why get it: If mom must have wine, get it from Dry Farm Wines. These bottles are tested for inflammation-producing mold and formulated to contain less sugar and alcohol — so she can still enjoy a glass with fewer ill effects.

Buy now: $159 for 6 bottles at Dry Farm Wines

Tech & biohacking gifts for Mother’s Day

Philips SmartSleep Deep Sleep Headband

  • What it is: A wearable headband and app to help you improve sleep quality and feel less drowsy during the day.
  • Why get it: Some studies suggest that sleep headbands can help you fall asleep faster and sleep deeper without changing your bedtime routine — perfect for the tired mom that needs to rest easier.

Buy now: $399 at Philips

23andMe Health + Ancestry Service

  • What it is: A DNA test kit you can do at home.
  • Why get it: 23andMe offers some of the most popular at-home genetic testing kits. This one delivers over 100 DNA-based reports, including your ancestry composition and your predisposition for hereditary conditions like celiac disease.

Buy now: $199 at 23andMe

Bulletproof Sleep Induction Mat

  • What it is: A mat with plastic points that relieves tension.
  • Why get it: Looks painful, feels amazing — this spiky mat stimulates pressure points and activates your nervous system to help you sleep better, release endorphins, and feel more energized.

Buy now: $49 at Bulletproof.com

Sony WH-1000XM3 Wireless Noise-Cancelling Headphones

  • What it is: “Smart listening” headphones that adapt to the noise around you.
  • Why get it: Mom can get all the quiet she craves with these premium headphones. In addition to total noise cancellation that improves focus, they can also adjust to environments when you need to hear your surroundings.

Buy now: $349 at Sony

Joovv Go Portable Red Light Therapy device

  • What it is: A portable light therapy device for improving skin and joint health.
  • Why get it: Red light therapy helps with skin inflammation, uneven skin tone, sun damage, scars and stretch marks — and while you could get a professional treatment, Joov Go allows Mom to get her red light benefits wherever, and whenever she pleases.

Buy now: $295 at Joovv

Mother’s Day gifts: Accessories and home decor

Aromatherapy diffuser

  • What it is: A device that releases essential oils into the air.
  • Why get it: Use custom essential oil blends for everything from better sleep, less stress, and a happier mood.

Buy now: For a budget buy, go for this well-reviewed $19.99 Urpower diffuser. For a pricier yet prettier option, you can’t lose with this doTerra Petal Diffuser, for $61.

Non-toxic home cleaning kit

  • What it is: A cleaning kit to scrub away grime in the kitchen, minus the toxic chemicals.
  • Why get it: Breathing in toxic chemicals from traditional cleaning products damages your cells, and regular exposure wears them down over time. Give mom the gift of clean products, for clean lungs.

Buy now: $52 (on sale) at Laundress.com

Instant Pot

  • What it is: The cult electric pressure cooker that makes it easy to cook recipes in a matter of minutes.
  • Why get it: Ask any mom and she’ll tell you there aren’t enough hours in the day to get everything done. The Instant Pot allows her to make Ina Garten-worthy meals in record time. For inspiration, check out  these easy keto Instant Pot recipes for meals in minutes.

Buy now: $69.99 at Amazon

Free & budget-friendly

A micro-needle roller (aka dermaroller)

  • What it is: If professional micro-needling sessions are out of your budget, an at-home micro-needle roller with .5mm needles will do.
  • Why get it: Micro-needling stimulates collagen production, revealing smoother, plumper skin.

Buy now: $28 at Skinmedix

Dry brush

Buy now: $15 at The Organic Pharmacy

Do the dishes

Kitchen clean-up is seldom fun, whether you’re a mom or not. Even if doing the dishes is a chore regularly shared by all family members, give mom the day off from cleaning. Try out these dishwashing hacks to make it a quick and speedy process.

Himalayan salt lamp

  • What it is: A lamp carved out from pink Himalayan salt that provides heat and light.
  • Why get it: Himalayan salt lamps can purify air, improve sleep, and boost mood. A bonus? Their soothing rosy glow adds a nice touch to any room.

Buy now: $21.99 at Amazon

Make her brunch

Who doesn’t love eating brunch? Treat the mom in your life to one of these scrumptious keto brunch recipes, like keto eggs benedict or lemon blueberry keto muffins for something sweet. For more inspiration, check out these Whole30 breakfast recipes.

 

Polyphenols: What They Are, Why They Work, & How to Eat More of Them

[tldr]

  • Polyphenols are naturally-occurring compounds in plants that can help fight inflammation, improve gut health, and keep your weight in check.
  • You can find these compounds in plant-based foods like green tea, coffee, and blueberries.
  • To make the most out of polyphenols, get a wide variety in your diet, enjoy them with fat, and try a broad-spectrum supplement to fill in the gaps.

[/tldr]

Your love for coffee, dark chocolate, and even red wine can be good for you. That’s because these foods are rich in polyphenols, plant compounds that work to fight aging and inflammation in your body.

Polyphenols are what gives many fruits and veggies their vibrant colors. You need a variety of them from different sources to keep your gut, brain, and heart strong — so you can’t just pick up a chocolate bar or iced latte and call it a day. With the right approach, you can fine-tune your polyphenol intake to kick your performance into high gear.

Learn more about the key benefits of polyphenols, where to find them, and how to get more of them in your life.

Click here to download the Bulletproof Gut Check guide to restore imbalances and get more good bacteria working for you

What are polyphenols?

Polyphenols can help fight aging, inflammation, and obesity. Read more about why these plant compounds matter, and how to get more of them in your life.

Polyphenols are a class of phytochemicals (a fancy word for chemical compounds in plants). These naturally-occurring compounds help protect plants from predators like UV rays, insects, and pollution. You can find them in a variety of fruits and vegetables like leafy greens and blueberries, as well as in beans and grains.

Unlike other protective plant compounds that may be harmful, polyphenols are beneficial to your health and can play a role in reducing inflammation, keeping blood sugar in check, and encouraging good bacteria in your gut.

There are over 500 known polyphenols classified into four main categories based on their chemical structure:

  • Flavonoids
  • Stilbenes
  • Phenolic acids
  • Lignans

Flavonoids and phenolic acids make up most of the polyphenol intake in your diet. Stilbenes and lignans are less common, with one notable exception: Resveratrol, the stilbene found in red wine.

Benefits of polyphenols

Polyphenols can help fight aging, inflammation, and obesity. Read more about why these plant compounds matter, and how to get more of them in your life.

  • Fight aging. Flavonoids have been shown to boost brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), a powerful protein that helps your mind age slower. They also protect your brain from stress and may ward off memory loss as you age.[ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20955649”][ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20955649”]
  • Feed your gut. Polyphenol-rich foods like blueberries and green tea can help grow the amount of good bacteria in your gut microbiome.[ref url=“https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0955286313000946”][ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22060186”][ref url=“https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1348-0421.2012.00502.x”]
  • Protect your heart health. Higher polyphenol intake is linked to a lower risk of cardiovascular disease.[ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3651847/”]
  • Manage blood sugar. Dietary flavonoids and phenolic acids may help reduce blood sugar spikes and type 2 diabetes risk.[ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4728631/”]
  • Keep weight in check. A variety of polyphenols, including those in green tea and turmeric, may make it easier to maintain or lose weight.[ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3257683/”]
  • Fight pain and inflammation. Certain dietary polyphenols also work to neutralize the effects of free radicals (unstable molecules that cause stress and aging in your body) and lower inflammation.

Foods with polyphenols

Polyphenols can help fight aging, inflammation, and obesity. Read more about why these plant compounds matter, and how to get more of them in your life.

Some plants have more polyphenols than others. For best results, choose foods with fewer antinutrients or risk for mold:

  • Green tea
  • Coffee (including decaf)
  • Spinach
  • Citrus fruits
  • Asparagus
  • Avocado
  • Dark chocolate (aim for at least 85% cacao) and cocoa powder
  • Olives
  • Strawberries
  • Blueberries
  • Fresh herbs and spices like cinnamon, turmeric, and oregano

Side effects of polyphenols

Polyphenols can help fight aging, inflammation, and obesity. Read more about why these plant compounds matter, and how to get more of them in your life.

You can get too much of a good thing when it comes to polyphenols. In large doses, they can impair thyroid function, disrupt hormones, or inhibit iron absorption.[ref url=“https://academic.oup.com/ajcn/article/81/1/326S/4607649”]. Allergies or other medical conditions can influence how your body uses them, too.

If you take statins or anti-anxiety medications, your doctor may have told you to avoid certain foods. That’s because some polyphenols, such as those in grapefruit juice, interact negatively with these drugs. Talk to your doctor if you have any concerns with how your diet affects your medication regimen.

How to get more polyphenols in your diet

Polyphenols can help fight aging, inflammation, and obesity. Read more about why these plant compounds matter, and how to get more of them in your life.

What’s the best dose of polyphenols? The answer is tricky, since the vitamins, fiber, and nutrients in food can affect how well your body absorbs them. The Bulletproof Diet offers a good baseline for how many servings of fruit and vegetables will help you get a daily dose of a wide variety of polyphenols — plus, a broad-spectrum polyphenol supplement can help fill in the gaps.

Here are other steps you can take to get more polyphenols in your day:

  • Eat organic. Studies show that industrial agriculture lowers polyphenol levels in food compared to organic farming.[ref url=“https://ucanr.edu/datastoreFiles/234-246.pdf”][ref url=“https://academic.oup.com/ajcn/article/79/5/727/4690182”]
  • Flavor your food with herbs and spices. These seasonings contain more concentrated polyphenols than other fruits and vegetables. (Cook with these anti-inflammatory varieties.)
  • Go for variety. Eat a range of plants, but supplement with a quality supplement like Polyphenomenal to cover all your bases (without having to eat a case of avocados).
  • Enjoy more quality fat. Studies show eating fat makes it easier for your body to absorb the goodness in polyphenols.[ref url=“https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2871118/”] Try it for yourself with classic Bulletproof Coffee, an iced matcha latte, or a turmeric latte.

Need more inspiration? Try polyphenol-rich recipes like strawberry cod ceviche, chocolate ice cream, or a green lemon smoothie.

 

Insta-Mom Turns Vegetables into Kid-Friendly Food Art That’s Almost too Gorgeous to Eat

Laleh Mohmedi takes “playing with your food” to a whole new level. In an effort to get more whole foods in her son’s diet, this Instagram mom turned his meals into jaw-dropping works of art.

Mohmedi’s food art journey started on a whim. After making healthy pancakes for her son, Jacob, she plated them to look like a lion. “He loved it,” she writes, and she began posting pictures of her creations on a personal Facebook page.

“I had such a positive response that I thought I would create an Instagram account to inspire other parents to get creative in the kitchen,” Mohmedi says. Out of healthy fare like vegetables, eggs and salmon she’s crafted everyone from “Game of Thrones” heroes and Snoop Dogg to Smurfs, Spongebob, and Winnie the Pooh. She even includes tutorials on how to create them in your own home. You know, if you have an hour or three to spare before dinner.

Mohmedi turned her food art process into nutrition lessons with her son, Jacob. “We would talk about how kale was a superfood,” Mohmedi says. “He would ask why, and I would say ‘because superheroes love eating it’ — that was a winner for him!”

Mohmedi’s food art uses clean eating choices like fresh produce, wild-caught salmon, and rice, plus no refined sugar or preservatives. She also uses vegetable-based dyes or powders like activated charcoal to give dishes a more vibrant look.

Check out some of her latest and greatest creations below, plus swaps you can make to give them a more Bulletproof spin:

Po from Kung Fu Panda

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Try it with wild-caught salmon.

Tyrion Lannister

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Use shirataki or kelp noodles, plus mashed white sweet potato.

Pua from Moana

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Swap in cauliflower fried rice and white mashed cauliflower (thoroughly squeeze out any liquid before pureeing).

Toy Story Toast

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Use keto bread and raw, full-fat, pastured cheese.

The Grinch

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Substitute mashed sweet potato and steamed spinach, plus pastured chicken.

Snow White

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Prep coconut flour pancakes and use low-fructose berries like blueberries, raspberries, or blackberries.

Chuckie from Rugrats

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Try it with mashed cauliflower and veggies like celery, carrots, and avocado.

Abu from Aladdin

Instagram mom Laleh Mohmedi turns her kid’s meals into edible food art. See her latest creations and how to recreate them in your home kitchen.

Use mashed white sweet potato and trade the mushrooms for sliced olives.

For more food art inspiration from Mohmedi, check out her Instagram account here.

 

How to Improve Memory: The Scientific Approach

[tldr]

  • This article covers several science-backed ways to improve your memory and get rid of brain fog. The good news is that most of them are lifestyle-based, and you can start them today for free.
  • Exercise is one of the best ways to improve memory, especially if you do a workout that boosts brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF).
  • Dual N-back training, a special type of brain training you can do for free online, improves working memory and also raises IQ.
  • Supplements like forskolin and bacopa improve memory as well.

[/tldr]

Memory is a valuable part of high performance. Improving your memory will help you learn faster, and getting rid of brain fog will make you more effective at work. Memory will even improve your social skills, especially if you’re prone to forgetting names or faces.

And, of course, taking care of your memory wards off cognitive decline as you age, keeping you mentally quick and independent well into the golden years of your life.

There are a few different ways to improve your memory and keep it strong. The good news is that the most powerful ones are lifestyle-based, and you can start them today for free. Download this printable checklist on the best ways to improve your memory

Science-backed ways to strengthen and improve memory

Exercise improves memory a lot

Man doing push-ups outside

Working out is one of the best ways to improve memory, as well as just about every other aspect of your body and brain.

Exercise of any type — strength training, endurance training, yoga, swimming, and so on — improves memory in healthy adults, young and old[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29108442″]. It decreases depression-related memory impairment, too (and it relieves the depression itself)[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5554572/”].

Working out also helps stabilize neurodegenerative diseases like dementia and Alzheimer’s[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20182027″].

There are a couple reasons exercise is so good for your brain. The first is neuroplasticity: working out makes your brain adapt to new situations or information better and helps it recover from stress faster[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5554572/”].

In rats, exercise specifically strengthens brain pathways in the hippocampus, the part of your brain that controls memory[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5808288/”]. And considering how good exercise is for memory in humans, working out may do the same for you.

If you aren’t sure where to start with exercise, try the 30-Day Bulletproof Body Workout Plan. It comes with a meal plan, workouts, and a complete day-by-day schedule, and it’s free.

Dual N-back training permanently improves working memory (and raises IQ)

Dual N-back training is a particularly intense type of brain training that challenges your working memory (short-term memory), as well as your problem-solving skills.

It permanently improves working memory and fluid intelligence (your ability to problem solve, and a central part of IQ) after just a few sessions[ref url=”https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2008/04/25/0801268105.abstract”][ref url=”https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160289610001091?via%3Dihub”][ref url=”https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/5454984″].

These results set it apart from other brain training techniques in a major way. Most brain training makes you better at brain training, but the benefits don’t apply to general ability in the rest of your life. Dual N-back training does — your memory and fluid intelligence become better overall, and the results seem to be permanent[ref url=”https://www.pnas.org/content/early/2008/04/25/0801268105.abstract”][ref url=”https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160289610001091?via%3Dihub”][ref url=”https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/5454984″].

You can download software to do dual N-back training for free online. Check out this article for the details. You can also learn more about dual N-back training in Game Changers.

Memory-enhancing supplements

Most research on memory-improving supplements looks at people with dementia or Alzheimer’s disease, and while a fair number of supplements help with dementia, they won’t necessarily enhance your memory if you’re in good cognitive shape.

That said, there are a couple supplements that work for healthy adults:

  • Bacopa monnieri is an herb that improves several aspects of cognition. Human trials have found that Bacopa enhances memory, attention, mood, and stress response[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22747190″]. Take 750 mg of Bacopa daily, with a fat source so you absorb it properly.
  • Artichoke extract and forskolin work together to improve learning and short-term memory. Forskolin increases cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP), a molecule that activates memory formation and learning pathways in your brain[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16924422″]. Artichoke extract inhibits PDE4, an enzyme that breaks down cAMP, which enhances forskolin’s benefits and boosts your learning and memory even more[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5750604/”]. There haven’t been specific studies on this combination, but it’s popular with brain hackers; try it yourself and see if you feel a difference. You can get it in the right doses from Smart Mode.

Get your omega-3s

farm raised salmon vs wild salmon

Your brain has one of the densest concentrations of omega-3 fats in your body, so it’s no surprise that eating plenty of omega-3s improves memory and overall brain function.

Omega-3s seem to be particularly good at preventing or reversing cognitive decline. People with mild cognitive impairment (the precursor to dementia) saw significant improvements in memory when they took a daily fish oil supplement[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22932777″].

DHA and EPA, the two animal-based omega-3s, also improve memory in both healthy adults and people with dementia[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4364972/”].

Aim for 1000-2000 mg of DHA and EPA omega-3 fatty acids per day. Good sources of DHA and EPA include wild fatty fish (Alaskan salmon, sardines, anchovies) and grass-fed beef and lamb.

A lot of companies promote nuts, seeds, and other plants for their omega-3 content. The trouble is that you have to convert ALA (the plant version of omega-3s) into DHA and EPA, which your body struggles to do. You only end up using about six to ten percent of the omega-3s from plants[ref url=”https://ods.od.nih.gov/factsheets/Omega3FattyAcids-HealthProfessional/”]. The one exception is algae, which is a plant source of DHA. Other than that, stick to omega-3s from animals, fish oil, or krill oil.

Hack your sleep

Sleep is also essential for memory. Your brain does most of its repair and cellular cleanup during deep sleep. It also encodes memories from the previous day. Insufficient or low-quality sleep will hurt your memory a lot, while good sleep will enhance it.

A single night of sleep deprivation makes you the equivalent of legally drunk– your brain works as if you have a blood alcohol content of 0.05-0.10[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1739867/pdf/v057p00649.pdf”]. Missing out on sleep for a single night also causes beta-amyloid plaques (the plaques that build up and cause memory loss in Alzheimer’s disease) to accumulate in your brain[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5924922/”].

On the other hand, consistent quality sleep improves both short-term and long-term memory, as well as overall cognitive function[ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16318592″][ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3768102/”][ref url=”https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3413705/”].

You often hear that you have to get eight hours of sleep a night, but quality is actually more important than quantity. Try these sleep hacks to maximize the amount of time you’re in deep, brain-restoring sleep each night. You’ll wake up feeling great, and your memory will be better, too.

With these habits and supplements, you can improve your memory and keep it strong your entire life. For more biohacks, you can also check out Head Strong; it contains dozens of tools that upgrade your mitochondria, the power plants of your cells, to activate untapped brain energy and enhance your overall cognition.

 

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