Age Less / Live More

Most of us overestimate what we can accomplish in a year and underestimate what we can accomplish in the next five years. With health and fitness, most of us focus so much on the short term that we don’t allow ourselves the space to make lasting change. On this week’s podcast, we’ll discuss finding fitness, not fanaticism, by focusing on doing things you enjoy to achieve sustainable long-term results. 

Listen and learn:

  • How negative self talk, even subtle negativity, can undermine your success
  • How to be fiercely consistent in your plan
  • Why it’s important to fail forward
  • How it can take a full two years to change into a ‘lifelong exerciser’ 

Links

Mike’s Website


ABOUT OUR GUEST

Mike T. Nelson has a Ph.D. in exercise physiology. He’s an adjunct professor and a member of the American College of Sports Medicine. He teaches something called the Flex Diet and hosts a podcast by the same name. 

Nutritional Tip of the Week

  • Adults Acne

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Direct download: LRS_517_-_Finding_Fitness_Not_Fanaticism_with_Mike_Nelson.mp3
Category:Health -- posted at: 10:00am CEST

When it comes to health and fitness, one of the biggest challenges in the digital age is information overload. Whether you’re excited about running or cycling, ketogenic diets or intermittent fasting, you can get so far lost down a rabbit hole of research that you never manage to actually get started. On this week’s podcast we meet Marc Bubbs, a coach and nutritionist, who helps pro athletes and people from all walks of life in middle age and beyond set appropriate targets and reasonable goals to achieve above average fitness. 

Listen and learn:

  • Why most of us consume 40% of our calories after 6pm
  • The risk of non-functional overload (do we mean overtraining?)
  • How just 10 sets of exercises per body part per week can make a huge difference
  • Why consuming 1.2g of protein per kg of body weight can be a game changer

Links

Marc Bubbs Website

ABOUT OUR GUEST

Marc Bubbs is the Director of Performance Nutrition for Canada Basketball and consultant performance nutritionist for Olympic athletes. He’s the author of Peak: The New Science of Performance and Peak 40.

Nutritional Tip of the Week

  • How much protein

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Direct download: LRS_516_-_High_Performance_Life_with_Marc_Bubbs.mp3
Category:Health -- posted at: 10:00am CEST

You’ve no-doubt had a period of time in your life where your health was the first thing you thought of when you woke up, and the last thing on your mind before bed. Perhaps you had a virus, a severe injury, or even a serious disease like cancer, and your health suddenly dominated your life. For diabetics, this is a lifelong struggle - both physically and mentally. On this week’s podcast we meet Dr Mark, a psychologist who helps people find peace and balance despite the imposition caused by long-term health challenges on their lives. 

Listen and learn:

  • How diabetics have to make up to 180 decisions a day
  • How diabetes can lead to relationship stress
  • The highs and lows people experience throughout the day
  • The financial worries and health insurance insecurities associated with long-term conditions like diabetes
  • How people living with diabetes can find balance in their lives


Links

Dr Mark’s Site

ABOUT OUR GUEST

Dr. Mark Heyman (Dr. Mark) is a diabetes psychologist and Certified Diabetes Care and Education Specialist (CDCES). He has lived with Type I diabetes for over twenty years and is the author of Diabetes Sucks and You Can Handle It.

Nutritional Tip of the Week

  • Clean Your Veggies

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Direct download: LRS_515_-_How_To_Handle_Diabetes_with_Dr._Mark_Heyman.mp3
Category:Health -- posted at: 10:46am CEST

For an elementary school student with severe ADHD, who’s at risk of getting expelled for behavior problems, a proper mental health diagnosis can mean the difference between success or failure with traditional education. In situations like these, we can all understand and appreciate the importance of a medical diagnosis.  But what about the rest of us? What if you’re depressed after two years of COVID lockdowns, socially isolated, and feeling lost with your career and life? What if you’re getting anxiety at the grocery store or struggling to make friends in a new city? You might currently have five of nine symptoms required for a mental health diagnosis as per the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), but will that diagnosis actually help or hurt you? 

Sarah Fay, my guest on this week’s podcast, has been formally diagnosed with six different conditions ranging from anorexia to generalized anxiety disorder; and based on her research, believes that most labeling practices do more harm than good. 

Listen and learn:

  • Why many children are receiving mental health diagnoses from general practitioners, not psychiatrists
  • How a mental health label can turn into an identity
  • Differentiating between situational vs. chronic mental health problems


Links

Sarah’s Site

ABOUT OUR GUEST

Sarah Fay is an author and activist. Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Atlantic, Time Magazine, The New Republic, The Michigan Quarterly Review and more. She is on faculty in the English department at Northwestern University. Her new book is called, Pathological: The True Story of Six Misdiagnoses.

Nutritional Tip of the Week

  • When to Eat Chocolate Cake

Like the Show?

Leave us a Review on iTunes

Direct download: LRS_514_-_Risks_of_Mental_Health_Misdiagnosis_with_Sarah_Fay.mp3
Category:Health -- posted at: 10:00am CEST

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