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We are joined, uh, by Sarah Bayless.

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The, the theme of this fireside is Eat well, lead well.

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Uh, and for us, this idea of leadership and self-leadership underpins a lot of

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our work in the Happy Startup School.

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We talk about building businesses and making change, but that, that kind

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of work, we believe starts from the inside out, which means, before we

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lead others, how do we lead ourselves?

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And if we're gonna lead ourselves, how are we taking care of ourselves?

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So I'm, I'm looking forward to that conversation with Sarah today.

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What does that mean for her, particularly also, what does

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that mean in terms of thriving?

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So we're gonna explore.

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Multitude of topics and we'll see how, where it goes.

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But before that be for anyone who is listening who hasn't met

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you or come across your work.

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Sarah, how would you, uh, please share just a bit of a, a, a potted history,

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uh, however you wanna put that as maybe describe what you do now and,

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and who you help and how you help them, and then how you got into this

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work, however you wanna describe that.

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thank you.

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As I said, it is lovely to be here.

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I am a registered nutritional therapist, so I have a private practice in Bristol.

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I see clients come to see me for sort of a host of different reasons, but

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it's generally in the area of optimizing health, improving metabolic health, um,

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understanding potential risk factors.

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St people who are struggling, with anxiety, stress, energy.

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And so, my job is to very much understand their health history, how

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they're living their life today, and what's the impact of their environment

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on their health, and then how to help them thrive or feel better.

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And, um, and we do, I do that through a number of, number of different ways.

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Um, but at the core of everything that I'm doing is nutrition,

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um, helping people eat better.

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Um, and I like to frame it in this idea of, Creating energy for life.

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That's how I like to think about it when we, when I'm working with people, how

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do we give you the energy so that you can do what you want to do in your life?

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So nutrition is very central to that.

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But outside of nutrition, I will look at stress, I will look at sleep, I

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will look at, um, almost the seven pillars that we've talked about or

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we're gonna maybe introduce today.

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I'll talk about potential purpose, uh, relationships.

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And, you know, my job is really assessing where they're at

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now and how they are thriving in their current environment.

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and together I work with them over a number of weeks or months, depending

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on their goals and where they're at.

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And we take small steps to help them feel better and we'll work

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out together what that looks like in terms of actions, but

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also how we're gonna track that.

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So some clients'll run functional testing, I'll look at blood,

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some may look at stress hormones.

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I may look at gut.

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Some clients I don't do any testing and we just work on direct actions

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changing, changing food, changing environment, getting outside,

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managing stress, helping them find what their stresses are.

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So it's really, really quite broad in terms of the offering I

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provide a client, but the root of it we're just coming back to how

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can you thrive in the context of the world that you are living in.

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I originally started my career in, um, marketing and events.

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And that choice was um, sort of not directly intentional.

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I was led down that path based on where my education took me.

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Um, so I spent about 15 years or so.

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Working in, um, both agency and client side, delivering marketing

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campaigns and event campaigns.

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And, um, that environment sort of took its toll on my health,

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of which there was a sort of triggering change of job that

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helped me see how I wasn't thriving.

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And I started to make some shifts.

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And my first initial shift was actually what I ate and how I ate.

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And I noticed some fundamental personal differences in my own energy.

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And I was like, oh my gosh, why don't we know about this?

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And that took me to this space of going, right, I'm going back to school.

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I, I need to study, I need to understand what's happening, how our body works,

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what our body needs, and what do we need to do to thrive and function?

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and yeah, I did that and, uh, requalified and then set my

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business up about five years ago.

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And this sort of leads me to where I, where I am, where I'm today.

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I'd like to just delve a bit more into your story because

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you went back to study.

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Yeah.

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And as I understand it, studying wasn't your favorite thing at the beginning.

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Mm-hmm.

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So.

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Maybe just share a bit of that story because there is, well, I

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think there's some gold in there that would be helpful to share.

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Yes.

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I mean, I, I was quite severely dyslexic at school, so my journey towards getting

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my degree was a very tough journey.

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And it was a, it was a journey where I had to hide my struggles with

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the education system and, and, find a way to teach myself to learn.

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And so the whole journey to, to get through the education system was almost,

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um, felt like fighting for survival.

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It was not about thriving or finding passion or what you're gonna deliver

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in this world or what your purpose was.

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It was just.

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Get through, just try and get through.

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And I think, you know, we're very much sort of built in a society where

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we are told we have to get a degree or we have to get through that.

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And now I think things are changing.

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When I was younger, dyslexia wasn't really well recognized,

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or I had a number of occasions where I was chucked out schools.

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and it sort of led to this belief of, you know, I'm pretty stupid.

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And so this, this feeling sat behind me for a long time.

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And so when I finally got into the workplace, it was like, oh,

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oh, it was like a massive relief.

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This was over, but actually it wasn't over.

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I was just taking the, my disabilities or my challenges just into a new

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environment, into another setting.

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And you're still being judged, you're still being critiqued.

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and I guess the biggest shift for me was that when I found nutrition for

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my own journey to improve my health.

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it became something that I was so passionate about.

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The ability for me to get over my fears was gone because I was like, if I want

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to do this, I just have to keep going.

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And it was, it was almost like there was no choice, right?

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If I wanted to do nutrition, I had to go back to school.

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I had to face those fears and I had to study.

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And the biggest fear was that I hadn't done it for 15, 20 years.

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I'd forgotten what that process was.

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And then I was going into an area that was quite scientific.

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It's obviously very, very different to marketing.

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and it was, it was almost like I was gonna give it a go no matter what.

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'cause I had nothing to lose.

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And I think that was what came outta it.

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I had absolutely nothing to lose, but I had everything to gain.

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And it's like we get to a point where we stay the same or we

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make a de decision to change.

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And a. A push behind that was also that my daughter was very young.

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She, I, I'd had her, she's about nine months old.

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Um, I didn't want her growing up to see her mom unhappy in her job.

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I wanted to empower her.

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And it was like, this is my opportunity now.

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You know, the world is telling me to do this.

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I love this.

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And I think the other side of this is when I was working in marketing, I

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always built really good relationships.

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I felt like I met the most wonderful people, though the job was stressful.

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I was, you know, reaching myself into bed and out the environment was hard.

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I loved people and I thought, well, this, this role feels right for me.

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I found something that I finally, I could get in my teeth into, and almost

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the passion for it over, as I said, would overcome the fear of the study

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or, or the how hard I had to work.

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And then I was moving myself into a career where I was working

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with people, and it was like, everything just felt right.

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And if I failed, no one needed to know, did they?

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No one needed to know if I didn't get through, if I didn't get the

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qualification, nobody needed to know.

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And so what if I didn't get it?

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Who really, who would, who would sort of care?

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So the other thing that's incredible about this journey is that because I

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had to go back to face the challenges I have being dyslexic, I ended up coming

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out of my three years studying nutrition with this, passion for learning.

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So not only had I gone back to the education system and then

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I got through it, I now wanna learn more and more and more.

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I wanna read more.

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Like I didn't wanna read books before then, so it's almost like nutrition

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taught me how to overcome some of my own educational challenges.

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So it is like a, a win-win for me.

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yeah, and I'm ever so grateful for that.

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And it feels like it's sort of meant to, meant to be.

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And it, you know, it comes back to.

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And I think you, I think you both talk about this a lot.

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If we can find the purpose for ourselves and the love of something,

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it can overtake any, any fear.

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and, and I think that is what I'm incredibly grateful for.

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And that is what I wish for our education system to help

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our people find their purpose.

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And then it doesn't matter what potential disability or

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challenge you have, you are more likely to fight through it.

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The way I am, I'm hearing that is particularly maybe the environment

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and the education system, uh, the obstacles that are put in our way

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seem like a way to prove ourselves.

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Mm-hmm.

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If you get over this, if you get over this, then you are a good person.

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You know, you are a clever person.

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You, you pass the, the test as opposed to what I hear with your

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journey with learning about nutrition.

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The, the obstacles were there, but it was just something you

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needed to get through 'cause you wanted to get to the other side.

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It doesn't, it wasn't a measure of anything.

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It was just, well I'm just gonna have to learn and learn how to

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learn and I've gotta push through.

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But there was nothing about fear, failure or success.

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It was like, I just gotta do it if I want to get to where I wanna get to.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, absolutely.

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And I think within the, I think I'd had the time out, the education system.

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I think the thing with the school environment, it is, you know,

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you're constantly tested, you're constantly judged all of the time.

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I've had a bit of a break, a break from that.

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And I think that without that passion to drive through that testing,

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there is no purpose is there.

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And the education system doesn't enable us to set that purpose.

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So we have the freedom to drive through all of those challenges.

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Of, of whether that's being, you know, that persistent testing, um,

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and all the times you're persistently testing, you're putting each individual

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under so much pressure to perform in such a short period of time,

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which is judging their ability in a, in quite a harsh environment.

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Right.

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And you know, you to, to, and I was thinking about this the other day

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about the schooling system and testing.

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You know, you, to fully function in that test, you must be hydrated.

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You must have ate well, you must have slept well.

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You must have the right mindset.

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You must have the people behind you going, I'm here for you, otherwise

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you are not gonna do your best.

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And that is a lot to ask and to perform in that session.

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And I was thinking about this because my daughter's just done, you

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know, she's only in year seven, but she's done a whole load of tests.

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And it really made me think about, and, and a lot of this is coming

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down to what I do in my job actually.

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It's about.

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You know, every day is in somewhat a level of test to what we're trying to

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achieve in our job or, uh, our purpose.

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And, you know, that's what nutrition is, isn't it?

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It's it's setting you up to have the greatest strengths to deal with your

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environment, whether that is doing a school exam or whether that is

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running a workshop or, and when we have, you know, like I'm now with my

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daughter, drink that water because I know you're gonna think better.

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put a little bit more focus on the things that we have control of.

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We have a greater ability to achieve what we want to achieve.

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And maybe that's a part of my journey as well.

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What, when I was thinking about, you know, when I was retraining,

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I was eating well, I was drinking lots of water, I'd learned a lot,

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my nutrition was a completely different place to, it was when

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I was doing marketing and events.

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So, you know, part of it is that.

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I was feeding and fueling my function to be able to, you know,

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in some ways think more clearly.

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optimizing the conditions for you to perform as opposed to running

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a marathon on the broken leg.

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It's like, just make sure that you've got, yeah.

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At least address as much as you can so maybe we can drift into that.

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It's like, what are these aspects, what is it about nutrition that impacts

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our state of mind, our resilience, our creativity and what energetically Yeah.

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What, what, what could you share that you, you discovered

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or was really helpful for you?

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Well, I think what was very helpful for me is when we look at nutritional

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biology, I. We know that certain foods can make you more stressed

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and certain foods can feed you, so you can feed yourself in a way where

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you're gonna become more stressed.

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So if you are more stressed and you'll put yourself in a, a

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stressful environment, then you are not gonna thrive as well.

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And the biggest learning for me was coming out of, the training is

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that when we know how to feed the body, um, we have a greater ability

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to manage our resilience bucket to deal with what life throws at us.

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What we don't know is what that looks like.

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So many of us know, okay, well I understand I shouldn't

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be eating processed foods.

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I understand that sugar's bad for me.

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I understand that.

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Make drinking caffeine too much.

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Caffeine can make me feel wired.

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I understand that I shouldn't be drinking every day.

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Okay?

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So we all understand that.

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But when we go, okay, so what is it you should be doing?

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People go, well, they sort of know what good food looks like and they

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know it's meant to be whole food.

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And people generally try and eat well, but they don't know.

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Okay, so what is my hierarchy of choices when it comes to map nutrients?

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What does, what does an ideal plate look like?

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Where should I be focusing my attention?

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How should I build my nutrition to build my function?

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And so, you know what, you know what I came out of understanding from uni?

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Um, and the training was that.

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Food is, um, it's more than just fueling the body.

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So food is information, it tells a message to the body, and the bunch body

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then functions in response to that.

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And there are certain things that the body needs, um, that cannot make.

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And we must feed the body to do that.

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And I think understanding nutrition from that perspective.

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So there's nutritional biochemistry, what do I need to feed my body that

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it cannot make, is the priority in which I teach my clients to eat.

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And so then, you know, your, you have a better capacity to feed their brain,

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to keep their blood sugar stable.

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When we keep our blood sugar stable, we can keep our cortisol down.

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So it means we're more resilient to deal with stress.

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And I can, I can explain that relationship if you want me to.

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and then when we feed in that way, what you do is you, you provide.

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Low burning, consistent energy that you can access throughout your day so that

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you can thrive within that workplace.

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So you can do the things that you need to do.

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and the other part of the, the major learning that I took away from my

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own experience was that when I was in marketing, I didn't really eat.

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I would skip most meals and might eat dinner, but I

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wouldn't really eat properly.

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I might snack all the time.

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And I had really irregular energy, and, uh, poor sleep, high

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stress felt word all the time.

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And it's, it's when we feed the body in alignment to what it

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needs, when it needs, you can have a whole host of energy that is,

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more available to, for you to use.

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Okay.

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and.

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That's basically what I learned.

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But even beyond, even beyond that, you know, that is just

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the pure basics of nutrition.

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When you think about, when I think about individuals, you know, when we feed the

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body, what it needs, and we have the other inputs that are working, right?

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Where that's sleep, that stress, um, that's rest, that's movement.

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The body operates on these seven systems.

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And when these seven systems are balanced, you are a, you are well-rooted

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and oil organs function well.

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And at the very basics, when you think about every organ has a cell and every

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cell is working together for that organ to function, that cell needs energy and

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we provide that energy to that cell.

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But if we provide wrong energy, that cell won't work as well.

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So then that organ won't work as well.

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And so then the whole system doesn't work as well.

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And when you think about, illness and disease, what we're trying to do is get

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the seven systems in the body balanced.

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And it does come back to those core roots.

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You know, if you imagine yourself as a tree, when the roots are

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strong and they're grounded, you feed these seven systems and then

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all of the branches of that tree work, whether that's immunology,

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um, endocrinology, gastroenterology, cardiovascular system, all of the

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branches work when we have solid roots.

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Um, mm-hmm.

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I'm also curious

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about how much this varies from person to person as well.

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Like how individual some of this, um, support that you give people is,

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Everything is incredibly individual and I think that's a

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really important thing to say.

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And when I think about metabolic health, which for me is the metabolic

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health means how well the body.

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Converts food energy into chemical energy to function well.

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And at the, at the root of all modern diseases, whether it's cardiovascular

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disease, diabetes, Alzheimer's disease, neuro diseases, most of it

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is rooted in poor metabolic function.

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So the fact that you are not feeding the cells well to take on

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the energy and then to make their own energy to function as well.

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So it's almost like the way into nutrition, get your blood sugar

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balanced, and, um, that is very unique to everybody what that looks like.

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And what's even more interesting is that in middle life, which is, you know,

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where I am now, it is the most important time to protect your metabolic health.

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Because when we protect our metabolic health, we have a

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greater reduced risk of disease.

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Okay?

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And metabolic health can be a silent disease.

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can be, some people do feel symptoms of poor metabolic health, which

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is generally, um, low energy, potentially anxiety, potentially

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nervousness, um, cravings after food, brain fog, sluggishness

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could have some digestive issues.

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So things that people can normalize.

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Some of these are symptoms that you just think are just you

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and you begin to normalize.

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But essentially what metabolic health is, it's sort of

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divided into two sort of areas.

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I like to think about it.

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So one is about, you know, blood sugar.

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And when we eat in a way where we can release energy from our food into the

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blood system, slow at a very slow rate.

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So we eat a meal, blood sugar, the food enters the digestive

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system into the bloodstream at a very slow rate like this.

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So your energy availability to your cells is going up slowly.

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And it's staying there and providing this constant energy burn.

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So you are releasing slow energy to the body.

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the cells take on that energy slowly and then they provide, and

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then they burn that to create a TP and so that cell can function.

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When you're thinking about the relationship between blood sugar and

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cortisol, it's when we provide the body with fast, hard burning energy.

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So if you imagine a fire and you shove a load of gasoline on it,

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you're gonna get this massive burst of fire and then it's gonna go out

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and lots of us eat in that way.

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So we eat in a way where blood sugar rises incredibly quickly, too fast

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for the body to cope with that.

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It overproduces a hormone called insulin, and that hormone is,

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um, produced by the pancreas.

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And insulin's job is to get energy from the blood into storage sites.

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so body overproduces insulin, because the sugar's going up too fast and.

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Any one time the blood you, you should have no more than a teaspoon

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of sugar in your blood, okay?

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'cause any more than that, you are driving a risk of inflammation.

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So you're eating in a way where blood sugar goes up very fast,

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insulin comes in, pushes this blood sugar very down, fast and hard.

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What ends up happening is your blood sugar drops below normal levels

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at very harsh and far fast rate.

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The brain sees this as an emergency and says, okay, my

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human sugar is dropping too fast.

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Okay?

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They're not gonna have the energy they need to survive.

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So we are gonna put sugar back into the system for you.

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So it pumps cortisol, which is our stress hormone because cortisol's job

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is to mobilize you in times of danger.

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So it increases sugar into your system 'cause it thinks you're

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gonna run, fight, or flee to increase the sugar into your blood.

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And your blood sugar starts rising.

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so you can eat in this stressed way where you are

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on this sugar rollercoaster.

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And what happens is initially you feel the energy come in, you feel

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a bit great, and then suddenly your energy starts to drop and you

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start to feel wired, tired, angry.

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You almost start craving more foods.

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And so then go back to the sugar or the caffeine or, um, a

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processed food and you can end up on this stress rollercoaster.

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And all you're doing every single time is just, burning through this

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energy, burning through this cortisol, and it's affecting your mind.

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It's potentially driving up anxiety, it's affecting your energy, and

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it can, it can even go through the night and impact on sleep.

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So the core foundation of nutrition 1 0 1 is just balance that

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energy and when we do that, we have ability to, say sustained.

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I think more clearly have less anxiety, and fuel our body to survive well.

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And I think that, once we get that right, then we can work on,

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you can work on anything else that you may be struggling with.

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And the things that drive the blood sugar up hard and fast are

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generally, you know, processed foods, sugar, caffeine, too many

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carbohydrates in one session.

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and, and as well as not balancing your meals, which is why I come

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back to this idea of, nutritional biochemistry, really feeding the

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body what it needs and cannot make.

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And a lot of that comes from eating good amounts of protein, eating good amounts

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of fiber, eating good amounts of healthy fat to help balance that blood sugar.

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And that was how I lived basically when I was back at, my marketing

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world, I was living on, on this sort of borrowed energy.

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In some ways, the way you look at it is you can feed yourself to give

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you good energy or you can feed yourself to give you bad energy,

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I just wanted to, um, highlight a question and maybe whether

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you can answer or not.

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Rachel was asking if you have any specific advice for cellular, cellular

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energy in terms of those dealing with long covid or Emmy type conditions.

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Is there anything there that you know about that you could share?

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Well, interestingly enough, the second part to the story I didn't

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mention, and, and thank you Rachel, 'cause you've reminded me, is that

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once the sugar is outta the blood and is, moving into cells, right,

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so the, the, the cells then use this energy to create a TP and that is.

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All about mitochondrial health.

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So these mitochondrial, these tiny powerhouses that sit in every single

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cell and their job is to convert the food energy into chemical energy.

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And that chemical energy enables that cell to function.

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Therefore, that organ to function, to cellular energy is all about balancing

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blood sugar that I've just said.

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And then really looking after mitochondria.

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And mitochondria are, you know, the, the powerhouses of each cell.

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And you know, it's really interesting and the more I learn about this,

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the more important these, these cells are, is that, there is a

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belief that most modern disease is rooted in mitochondrial dysfunction.

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So the body is the, the, the, the cell, the mitochondrial

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is un unable to convert food energy into the chemical energy.

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So you can feel like you're, you are in me or on covid.

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And, and those mitochondria are, you know, pretty delicate.

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And one of the, there's many things that can cause damage to them.

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One is inappropriate eating.

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So flooding the system like I've just talked about.

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The second part of it is these mitochondrial need vital nutrients,

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micronutrients to do their job.

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And there's this thing called electro transport chain.

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And they need to move these electrons for electrical transport chain to

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create a TP and they need looking after.

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And there's a whole host of nutrients that are needed in that.

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And I talk a lot about this, and I touched on a lot of this in the book.

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So that's one part of it.

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The other part is that, if there's inflammation in the body, so whether

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that's inflammation because the gut is not working very well, there is

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dysbiosis in the gut, which is also linked to total cellular health.

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Whether you are stressed, whether you're not getting enough sunlight,

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whether you're not resting enough.

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Whether you are not moving enough, all of these can impact our mitochondria

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health and our cellular health.

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And therefore, how well those mitochondria work.

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What's incredibly interesting is that, you know, these mitochondria need

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light, you know, natural light outside.

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We, they thrive off light.

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And one of the biggest stresses in our environment today is, artificial light.

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So we're going artificial light, particularly that's coming from

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blue light, which is mainly from, you know, LEDs, screens, um,

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laptops, all those sorts of things.

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They overprocessing too much of that increases cortisol and that can also

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have an impact on mitochondrial health.

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And on the flip side of it, not getting enough light outside.

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Being in natural light that the sun provides, also has

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an impact on our health.

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And, and I think when it comes to your Rachel question, it comes

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to, you know, me and long covid, there are multiple factors that

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can affect that cellular energy.

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So it's what you're eating, how well you are sleeping, what your stress

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is like, how much exposure to natural light you're getting, how well is

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your gut functioning, are there any nutrients that you are low on?

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So it's almost, you almost have to assess all of those areas and

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go, okay, where are the weaker points and how can we, how can we

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support them to, to enable that cellular energy to, to work better?

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the way you've answered it, I think it gives us a nice, Uh, logical segue

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into these broader aspects around health that you're talking about.

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Mm-hmm.

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And maybe now we can expand if you'd like to just expand on these,

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these seven pillars, these seven roots that you were talking about

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before, and just share what they are and, and then maybe a little

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bit about what they mean for you.

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Yeah.

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Okay.

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So when we, when I think about resilience, I'm

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thinking about life energy.

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Okay?

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So what we're thinking about is the energy for you to do the

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things that you want in your life.

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and when you think about energy, there is sort of two parts to this.

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There's the energy that you create from the food that you eat.

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And there's that self-efficacy energy from the environment around you.

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We all know that some, some days we have more energy because the

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people around us, we know that stress can deplete our energy.

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And so these seven systems all play into this energy idea of,

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you know, optimizing life energy.

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And when we look at today's environment and we're looking at

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growing those really strong roots that you can be this beautiful

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tree that functions in this world.

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From, from my learning and the training I've done is that these

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are the seven routes that give us that stability to thrive.

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Okay.

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So one is stress, um, or one is nutrition.

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We sort of touch on it and that, and that's quite broad.

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Um, you know, we've only just touched on a small area of it.

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So the other one is stress.

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And I think we are in a. Uh, a society that is quite stressful.

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And whether that is the fact that, um, your job is stressful, whether that's

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your family life is stressful, whether that is the fact that, the toxins

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from the world around us, the air we breathe, the light we see, uh, the news

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we hear we're, we're in a, a bubble of sort of higher levels of stress.

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And it's not the type of stress that we get when, you know, when

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we think about ancestral days where we're actually fighting for our food

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or trying to catch our food, it's not that type of stress, but it's,

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it's a type of, um, environmental stress that we're all exposed to.

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And, you know, stress is a good thing on one part, but on

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another part it's a bad thing.

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So too little stress means we don't get motivated, right?

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So stress creates cortisol.

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Cortisol drives dopamine, right?

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We need that, that drive.

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We need that cortisol response at the right time of the day to

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give us the energy to thrive.

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But too much stress is debilitating, right?

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It steals our resources, it breaks down our muscles, and we can become depleted

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and it can disrupt our circadian rhythm.

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And so when I'm working with a client, I, we work through

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identifying what their stresses are.

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And we talk about this idea that stress is not something that you

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can remove, but it's something that you have to learn to, plan for when

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you can or if you can't plan for it, how to recover well from it.

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So stress long term, they, beyond seven days is when it becomes

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chronic and chronic stress can drive inflammation and that can drive disease.

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So one of the things I do with my clients is work out what is

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it in their life that's causing 'em to feel stressed and.

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A part of this is about really identifying what their stresses are.

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And then once we identify it together, we work out, okay,

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well how do we recover for it and how do we plan for it?

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And it's just a conversation we have.

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And then there are a number of tools I use to work with

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clients around this as well.

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Um, so in moments where you are feeling extremely anxious or you're feeling the

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system is becoming overwhelmed, how can you get yourself outta that situation?

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And what I try and teach my clients is that stress is in our control,

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which is what's so beautiful about it.

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'cause we have a stress system and we have a de-stress system.

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So we have the parasympathetic nervous system and the sympathetic nervous

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system and we can control them.

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And it's once we have a greater understanding of the things in our

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lives that drive our stress, we can use tools to activate the rest and

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digest system to come out of that.

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And it's a bit like going to the gym.

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Every time you go to the gym, you are stressing a muscle

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and that muscle gets stronger.

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And this is what I work with clients about.

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It's about every time, it's about using the tools to build their resilience to

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those stresses and to recover better.

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And I think, you know, what I find is that some clients take it for granted

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and they don't really think about, they don't really think about what it is

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in their life that's depleting their energy and causing that level of stress.

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And I think just having that conversation can be quite interesting.

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and you know, as I said, a part of that is environmental,

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you know, not enough light.

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uh, as well, and I'll just move into that actually.

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So.

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One of the other really important pillars is natural light.

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And I think when you think about how the body functions, the body functions

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on a system called circadian rhythm.

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That basically means, um, a study of what the body does over 24 hour period.

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And it does certain things at certain times.

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So we can function really, really well.

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And there's two hormones that set this circadian rhythm.

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One is cortisol, one is melatonin, and melatonin is our sleep hormone.

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And cortisol is our weight hormone per se.

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So we need cortisol at the right time of the day and the body to

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feel grounded and to function well.

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Um, uses the eyes to understand what time of day it is and

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therefore what hormones it needs to secrete to function.

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Therefore, what the cells need to do when.

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And one of the most important timekeepers to tell the body

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the time of day it is, is light.

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From the sun.

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So when we get up in the morning and we see morning light, the

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body uses receptors in the eyes to tell the brain that it's morning.

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The brain then tells the body that it's morning and it sets off a clock.

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So then every single cell does what it needs to do to function well.

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And what we are seeing in our environment is a very

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lack of natural light.

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People aren't seeing the light from the sun, and the light from

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the sun is made up of, visual light and in, and invisible light.

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And all of those spectrums are important to our health.

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In fact, this subject I could talk a lot about, but it, it goes down

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to even how a metabolism works.

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And so seeing morning light.

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It's what gives us our energy.

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It gives us that cortisol to get us out of bed, to function, to fill

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that drive we have in the morning.

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And then cortisol then drops as the day goes on, and it should

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be at its lowest at night.

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So it can produce melatonin, which is our sleep hormone.

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You cannot have melatonin cortisol high at the same time.

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So they, they, they, they work in opposites.

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So the good, the a morning cortisol peak enables an evening melatonin peak now

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at night to enable that melatonin peak, we need to make sure when the sun goes

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down, our environment is dark, Because blue light in our environment tells the

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body that it's in the middle of the day.

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So if you're coming home from work and it's.

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It's the evening, you should be moving into this restoration restore mode.

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You should be starting to secrete melatonin.

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So you're starting to feel sleepy.

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You walk into an environment that's brightly lit, your eyes will look at

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the lights, they'll see the blue light.

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It will tell the body it's the middle of the day.

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Your body will increase cortisol and stop the production of melatonin.

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And so you become slightly more stressed in the evening.

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Your heart rate goes up slightly, your heart rate availability goes down.

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Your sleep quality is impaired.

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And so when you're thinking about those core roots that I've been talking about,

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so stress and light, light in itself can be a stressor if we're not getting

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the right light in the daytime and we're getting the wrong light at night.

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And this is what seems to be happening more and more and more.

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And what's really important about your light environment at night?

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Is to, you know, make sure that you dim your lights, you know, you to stay

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off your screens, you get into bed at night and it's pitch black, and you

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can start to help push these signals to support function because at night

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we need to restore and we need to rest.

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And we can only do that when we've, cortisol is very low and

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we've got no food in our stomach.

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another area is purpose, and I sort of touched on that today, you know, purpose

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around is, is driving that motivation.

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When you have a purpose, you can drive your motivation to

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make sustainable change, um, movement, we need to be moving.

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and that can be, I mean, movement is very personal.

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And again, I work with a, a clients on, um, I. Giving them uh, a way in

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to begin that, whether that's walking or I will work with, um, movement

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specialists, but generally we are made to move or we need to move.

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When we move, we increase our muscle mass.

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We support our muscle mass.

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It helps balance our blood sugar.

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It sends our anti-inflammatory signals or over the body.

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It reduces inflammation, supports brain function.

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you know what's interesting about everything I'm saying

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is everything is connected.

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So everything we do is connected to how we function.

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And I think, a part of the journey that I do with clients

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and myself is to analyze your environment, analyze those inputs.

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Are they working for you?

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Are they working against you?

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And it's about changing one thing at a time.

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And it might be you work on nutrition for a year, then you might work

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on stress management for a year.

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You might work on sleep for a year to sleep as the other pillar.

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And when it comes to sleep.

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The most important thing is light, right?

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Light at the right time, and the, and ensuring that the environment

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is very, very dark at night.

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And I'm often changing, you know, I'm also thinking about

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purpose and relationships and that should they come together.

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But I think the part of relationships comes back to this life energy piece.

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People around us give us energy to thrive and function.

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And so relationship is in incredibly important to individuals, all of us.

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And, and when you look at the, the research on loneliness, you can

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see how loneliness can drive up inflammation and chronic disease.

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And I think there's some stats that show you that loneliness is, smoking

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a cigarette is better than loneliness.

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Better.

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Yeah.

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And I, so I think that we are human beings that live together and we need to

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function together and perform together.

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And so, you know, it is really important part of the health picture.

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And it is something that I do assess with my clients, you know, with,

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if I feel that we need to get them in, we need to think about those

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relationships and whether it's, whether it's community groups,

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whether it is, you know, literally spending more time with your friends.

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I think there was one goal I set myself this year, which was one

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night a week I, or day a week I'm seeing a friend because you

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get lost in your environment.

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You get very busy with work and family.

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And you lose connections.

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And I think those connections give you energy and your friends give you energy.

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And it's about providing that whole energy for life feeling.

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So I think it's a really important aspect of health and

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something that shouldn't be, you know, shouldn't be forgotten.

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And I think within purpose as well, this is very much

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rooted as well in self-belief.

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You know, a part of that is about really believing that you can do

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anything you want in your life.

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and how I, how I feel about that whole belief pieces when

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we can spend more time thinking about grounding those roots.

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And whether that is, getting time away from your day, being in light,

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having time in nature, really sensing yourself and what is important to you,

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you can then start to really think about, Believing in yourself more.

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And I like this phrase of like, if the more we unprocessed things,

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the more clearer our thinking is.

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And whether that's unprocessed, light, outprocessing, food

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processing technology, know, in some ways even on processing process

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relationships.

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Yeah, processing relationship.

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I'm not how to think about that one.

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And I, I feel like it's, yeah, it is about trying to feel

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grounded and centered and clear.

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And I think sometimes to do that, we need to do more away from work

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and more away from our world, get ourselves into night and nature,

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and then we can be clearer.

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A lot of.

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Our intention with these conversations and with all the work that we do, is

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to inspire action to motivate people to do the things they need to do.

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And, and what you're saying here is great, is foundational work to,

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to give us the resilience and the, you know, the purpose and the,

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and the strength to do the stuff.

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and I'm hearing a lot about us just like shifting into, uh, helpful behaviors

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is it seems to be part of this and I'm now relating it to my daughter.

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Mm-hmm.

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In terms of like, what is this message and whether my daughter

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or any young person now, this message that we can give about the

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way we, um, nourish our bodies.

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There isn't just about denying this, I can't have this, you know, there's

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like an association that I can see where people have with food that,

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oh, I can't eat this and I can't eat that because it will cause this.

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Is there a way that you could, that, you know, to talk about how

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we nourish ourselves that doesn't remove the joy, but at the same time

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bring some intentionality to it?

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I don't know.

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Just help me, Sarah, please.

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I mean,

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this is, this is such a complicated question and I think it really does

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come down to the, per the individual, because it's what do they, what are they

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seeing as being restrictive, you know?

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Um, because actually even the idea of feeling restriction in itself,

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even without eating, is having a stress response to that individual.

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Okay.

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And then you're yourself in all sorts of, sorts of loops So I, I

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think I can't answer that question specifically for your daughter.

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'cause I think we'd need to go a little bit deeper.

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But the way I look at this is the fact that, the closer we

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can eat to nature the better.

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and this is more difficult with children than it is with adults.

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The idea is that I want people to eat with intention and the idea of not

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what I cannot have, but what can I have and how does that food make me feel?

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And that is everything that the book is trying to do, I'm trying to do

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is get people to think about what can I have to make me feel good.

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And when we eat better like that, then we can intentionally

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go and enjoy a food that.

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May not be as good for us, but the intention is there

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and it's from another area.

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So for example, let me say I'm going out for cake with my mum, That

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intention is a relationship with my mum.

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I'm having a connection with her.

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We are building something together and I'm intentionally gonna to eat

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a piece of cake, but I'm not doing that every day, but I'm doing it

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there and then, and I'm giving myself permission to do that.

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I think context is really important.

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So I can't answer that.

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Quest can't answer that question as well, but the idea is that

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I don't like to fuel people from a place of restriction.

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And that's not why I like to think about it.

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And I think particularly with, you know, children, they are growing,

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They, their amount of energy that they need is more than what an adult needs.

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And we need to fuel that energy so that they can fuel

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the function for their day.

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And so the least thing you can do is restrict children.

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And we know they shouldn't be eating processed foods, but if we can feed

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them well at home and teach them what good looks like, then we can inform

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them how to make better decisions.

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And that's sort of how I work with my daughter.

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This is what we're eating for breakfast, lunch, and dinner.

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We're eating as a family or lunch obviously at school.

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And this is what I, why we're gonna eat this food.

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it's enjoy it together.

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Um, and I think it's, that's also such an important thing.

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Community around the table, family around the table, eating together,

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enjoying together, cooking together.

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All of all of those things are so important.

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So you and I, Carlos will have a separate conversation

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on our own about this.

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do you think you can know what makes you feel good at that age?

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Because I certainly have noticed the effect that food has on

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my body as I've got older.

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But I dunno if I would have that awareness then

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I think you can.

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I think my daughter feels it all the time.

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she always, she just doesn't eat certain foods at school

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'cause they make her feel bad.

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She'll even say to me, mommy, I want some veggies.

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I think you can.

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but I also think it has less of an impact on you when you're younger

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because you're more resilient because your cells are young, right?

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Everything's mm-hmm.

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Working well as we get older, you know, metabolic health,

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like contin a continuum.

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We're born perfectly healthy.

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And then what we need to do as you get to Middle Ages to protect

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that health and then we have to work a bit harder, our kids have

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more of variability around that.

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I think we are seeing data now about the impact on processed foods, on, you

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know, on behavior and kids and function.

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So we know it's having a negative impact.

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and it really just comes down to the individual.

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Like you could just shift someone's breakfast and get 'em really

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enjoying it and I promise you, you can eat healthy and enjoyable.

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You know, there is absolutely ways to do it I'm always thinking

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about snacks in my daughter or clever ways to make things and,

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It's about education as well.

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And you know, we, we know that if you're buying something from that's

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highly processed, it isn't good for you.

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But there's no, there's no harm to saying, I'm gonna make you a beet

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troop brownie with low sugar or made of bananas and it's gonna be just as yummy.

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Um, but it takes a little bit more plant planning, a little

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bit more intention than just popping down the shop and picking

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something up from the supermarket.

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, if you wanna know more about what Sarah does and you want to get her advice,

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where would you like to point them to?

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Sarah?

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Um,

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probably my website.

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also, I do write a newsletter biweekly, and I share, I try and share as much

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as I possibly can via my newsletters, just giving people advice on everything.

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And so if nobody's signed up to them before, I'd be more than happy to share.

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All of them with someone if they want to just message me.

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Uh, yeah, so my website, I'm also on LinkedIn and Instagram.

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I'm not so great with my socials, but I try and I do try and put my energy

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into my newsletter and obviously you can get in contact directly with me

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Lawrence, what are, what are you going away?

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Um, lots of phrases I hadn't heard before that I'm now gonna Google.

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Um, mitochondrial Health being one of them.

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Um, so yeah, fascinating.

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Just so much goodness there.

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And what am I taking away?

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Yeah, just this, well, the seven pillars really, which

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ties in the lot to our works.

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That's reassuring in some ways that it's not just about.

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Eating better, but actually this balance of purpose and stress and light and

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yeah, all of the stuff that I feel is important and I know what, when

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I get those things, I feel better.

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So yeah, it's reassuring to know that, yeah, on the good

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days that that's what I need.

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And again, maybe while feeling a bit low at the moment, not getting much

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natural light, I think is a big thing.

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So I thought it was just, I don't know, those who get seasoned affected

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disorder, but actually I think probably everyone affects it is affected by that.

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Um, and just the balance.

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Yeah.

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You talked about good energy versus bad energy.

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So yeah, as I've got older, energy is, is an important thing, isn't it?

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So yeah, that's my two Toth.

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How about you Ka?

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Um, I'm appreciating the systemic view of this, where it isn't just

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one thing and how I'm hearing even this idea of, Blending

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food, relationships and purpose.

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You know, they're all interconnected.

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For me, coming from an Italian Filipino heritage, it's all about

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family and food and, and rhythms of life and, and how that can get lost

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in a nuclear family that has busy parents, busy professional parents

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doing stuff and being intentional about this is, is something that

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I'm, I'm reaffirming and remembering.

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The other aspect for me is, is the intentionality aspect of this is like

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I'm, what I'm wanting to be more curious about, learn more about is I love food

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less so since I've lost my sense of smell, but I'm still a big fan of food.

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I enjoy cooking.

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and remembering that gathering around the table is an important aspect

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of eating, not just the food, but then also just trying to tune in.

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I. Because I, there's lots of stuff I love to cook, but just understanding

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more about what this type of food, what kind of impact this type of food can

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have on our bodies, and to be maybe more intentional about the menu for the week.

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It's something that I do regularly.

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It's like my wife and I spend a Saturday morning working out what we're

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gonna cook for the week primarily.

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So we don't have to think during the week, but also to now I think

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add this layer of like, okay, it'd be interesting to know, okay,

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what, what's the energy cadence?

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What's the nutritional aspect that I can bring into this practice?

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As well as what tastes nice?

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'cause being man of a certain age, I'm much more aware of

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protecting my metabolic health.

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Uh, I love to pass that on to my kids.

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Not only the joy of cooking, the joy of food, but the

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awareness of what food means.

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And that's why I was really interested in talking to you, Sarah.

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So there's a lot that I'm taking away, but most of all, if I

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was gonna encapsulate being more intentional about the joy.

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And the metabolic benefit around this stuff and how to mix those two.

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How about you, Sarah?

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How are you leaving us today?

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well, I'm, um, incredibly grateful to be here and to talk to you both.

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And, um, so thank you for that.

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And, you know, I guess one of the part, you know, parting messages I'd

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like to share and, and message to my own self and what I think about

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every day is everything is about doing the basics really, really well.

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And I think we lose sight of how powerful they are.

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and if you take anything away from this call is to think about

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how well you're doing the basics.

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Choose an area and just do it a little bit better.

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And for me, that always starts off with the, the first thing in the

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day, if that means a bit more light.

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Better breakfast that is gonna be mm-hmm.

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Enough power to, to, to get you to, to begin to feel different.

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and I feel like nature has given us all the tools that we need

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to really thrive and function.

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And actually the body is incredibly amazing and it heals itself.

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We just need to put it in the environment in which to do so.

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The idea that's come to me now is, like you were saying, you know,

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spend one year on each thing.

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Seven year course from Sarah Bayless.

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I know.

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Help me cry.

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In

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seven years

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no one's allowed to shut the doors.

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If anything, you've made Grace put down her pot noodle, so that's success.