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Welcome to the Pick Revival podcast.

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My name is Vesna.

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I'm gonna talk about the 4 PILLARS of high performing gut

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and microbiome and why it matters.

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Now there's lots of, um, advice for gut health, and I've

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definitely done podcasts on this.

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And today I really wanna talk about, well, What is a high performing gut?

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Why does it matter in everything that you do?

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Because it has such an impact on our emotional wellbeing and our energy levels.

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And I'm gonna talk about four pillars that will help to give you the

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really good baseline of gut health.

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So.

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There are specifics that we can do when it comes down to microbiome testing.

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So testing, you know, the beneficial bacteria that we have in our gut, and

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also the, you know, the non-beneficial or the bacterial overgrowth that we have.

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When we do those microbiome testing, we can have a look in a lot more detail

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and get more specific in treatment of herbal medicines, supplementation,

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probiotics, and et cetera.

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But even without that.

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What are the four pillars that lead to a healthy gut, which we should

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have in practice now and maintain, and I'm really gonna show the gaps

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and they're significant, right?

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So quite often what I see is that women are like a pretty well, and you'll see as

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I go through this episode that actually a.

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You could do a lot better to maintain the microbiome that's kind of hands down in

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in the western world, in the western diet.

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So why having a healthy gut to high performing gut in a microbiome

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really matters is because if you are a high performer and you are

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busy and you've got a lot on your plate, then what you're gonna notice.

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That is at a high performing gut means you're gonna have

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a lot more mental clarity.

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So you'll have less brain fog, you'll have a better hormone or

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neurotransmitter levels in the brain.

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So just mental clarity, mental focus, a lot more bandwidth, a lot more capacity

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to take more work on work, deep focus.

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Because the gut is connected to the brain by the vagus nerve.

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We know that there's this massive connection between gut health

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and what's going on up here.

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So mental focus.

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Clarity bandwidth, but emotional resilience or emotional balance.

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Right.

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So I notice that my clients will often say when we do gut work, they'll

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be like, oh my gosh, I just don't feel like a roller coaster anymore.

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Right?

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I feel much more emotionally regulated, and that's one of the things that's

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really noticeable with doing gut work.

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Your energy goes up.

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It also helps with, um, hormone balancing and stress recovery.

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So those are.

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All the reasons why it matters, and it also helps to drive down inflammation,

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like there's such a huge part of our gut health that impacts every aspect of our

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life from how we feel to how we perform.

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So let's get into it.

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Pillar number one is diversity.

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This is the one thing that our western diet does not have.

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Okay?

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So it's, shown that on average women have between 10 to 12 foods

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that we recycle each week, okay?

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So very, very low diversity, and that means our gut microbes aren't getting the

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diversity that they need for the fuel.

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you are eating the same things all the time.

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For a long time.

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Then it's linked to inflammation.

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It's linked to irritable bowel syndrome.

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It's linked to weight gain, anxiety, and mood disorders, right?

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Because the population of the microbiome is not diverse.

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Okay?

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Low diversity in food, low diversity.

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In microbiome.

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And so therefore, we wanna make sure that we have a good range

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and variety of different foods.

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And I'm gonna go through which ones, because it supports serotonin

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production, that's a happy mood.

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Um, neurotransmitter helps to regulate our immune system, gives us clearer

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thinking and stabilizes our mood.

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So what are the things that you want to increase?

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I mean, the first thing pretty basic is having a lot more

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vegetables and even fruits, right?

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Really rotating, getting as like up to 20 or more than 20 a day, right?

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Different fruits, vegetables, legumes.

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That will help to increase the diversity of the microbiome.

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So like I said, we tend to focus on the same 10 to 12.

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All through the week, and we don't get much variety.

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And so things like polyphenols are really important to add, found in berries

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and herbs and spices and green teas.

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The colored, like the purple grape.

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Um, they help to add these polyphenols which help to fuel the microbiome.

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You can also add in there, um.

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Dark chocolate and pomegranate, and like I said, red grape.

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So all of those help to give fuel for the microbiome.

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But overall, we need to increase the diversity of the vegetables

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and also our fruits as well.

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I'll always say we are possible and if you can for everything, do organic

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because the pesticides are basically antibiotics for the gut, and so they're

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going to kill off the good bacteria.

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So wherever you can and really aim to do that as much as you can is

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bioorganic in your fruits and veg.

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So, number one, like I said, was diversity.

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Number two is prebiotics.

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There's a lot of talk about probiotics.

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We know about different, you know, probiotics in a capsule that's worth

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30 tubs or however much they say of yogurt, which is actually rubbish.

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Um, that's not true.

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'cause even though the sta like the quantity of, beneficial bacteria in the,

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in the capsule is higher, the utilization.

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And how much it has.

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An effect is much lower right than actually yogurt.

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So, or some of them.

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So bit of a marketing ploy.

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prebiotics are fuel for the microbiome.

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So probiotics, supplements good bacteria, but prebiotics feed

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what you currently have, right?

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And so nourish and fuel and give it energy for the current,

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microbiome that you have in your gut already.

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Now prebiotics also help to produce short chain fatty acids.

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And this is all important in the gut to reduce inflammation,

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to improve insulin sensitivity.

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So your glucose levels, it regulates your appetite, regulates your weight.

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It's important for gut lining and leaky gut and strengthening your immunity.

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so here are some examples and you can get this through your diet like

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sauerkraut and kefi and things like that help to provide a prebiotic.

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You can also take it in a supplement.

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So there are different supplements like goss, which is Galacto

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oligosaccharides or Foss, FOS, which is fructooligosaccharides long names.

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But what they help to do is feed the good bacteria that's already there.

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So this is a really good baseline, like you don't have

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to start adding probiotics yet.

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You could literally do this, and it starts to nourish your gut

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microbiome, and you already start having the effects of improved

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immunity, less inflammation, better moods, because your current bacteria

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is getting the fuel that it needs.

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The other things included in there are resistant starch, you know, like

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cooled potatoes and rice, green bananas, beta glucans, like oats and mushrooms.

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So there's a lot of different foods that you can include, but also supplementation

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for the prebiotics really, really key.

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Pillar three is combining prebiotics with probiotics.

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So we've got the prebiotics, which is the fuel for the microbiome that you

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currently have, and then the probiotics, which is adding the microbiome into it.

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So the important thing to notice is most probiotics will give you

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the bacteria while you're taking it, and then when you stop.

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That stops too, right?

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And so that's why we need the prebiotics 'cause it'll keep feeding what's there.

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' cause otherwise we have to stay on probiotics for a very, very long time.

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So the prebiotics already talked about a really good baseline probiotic.

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I mean, you can get it through yogurt.

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Surprisingly.

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There's a lot of studies with your cult.

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different strains do different things.

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And you know, just like you have a herbal medicine dispensary with all these

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different herbs for different conditions, the same applies for probiotics.

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Every different strain is targeting something different, but you can

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get a really good baseline probiotic that is kind of like the core

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architecture of the microbiome.

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Or the microbiota and you're looking at a combination of, you know, your

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lactobacillus and your bifido together will help to provide that core

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architecture with the probiotics to really nourish the gut environment.

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And pillar number four is microbiome stability.

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So it's one thing to supplement your way through this.

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It's another thing to really pay attention to, well, what is

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breaking down the microbiome.

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So we need to encourage that environment in the gut.

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We need to feed it, we need to nourish it, but then we also need

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to make sure we don't have those habits that destroy the microbiome.

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So medications like antibiotics will literally wipe out.

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Your gut flora.

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I mean, you've heard of this, but you probably don't know that one round of

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antibiotics can completely make some.

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Microbiome extinct, never to be returned, which is pretty scary.

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If you've had, uh, multiple courses of antibiotics or combination of antibiotics

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at one time, uh, for resistant bacteria, then that can even have, uh, you

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know, a more impact on the gut, right?

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Really wiping out the microbiome.

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Um, aspirin.

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And, um, painkillers will also have an effect on the gut microbiome,

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but the things that we have every day is processed foods, has huge

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impact on the microbiome, okay?

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Wiping out some of that microbiome, not extinct, but wiping it out, right?

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Um, sugary foods and processed foods, all of that have a negative impact on the gut,

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and we wanna make sure that we keep that an absolute minimum or completely remove

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processed foods altogether from the diet.

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So that's one part.

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So we look at medication, we're looking at diet, but then we're also

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looking at stress because stress has a huge impact on the gut microbiome.

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It creates leaky gut, disrupts the internal environment and disrupts

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that natural balance, right?

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Sleep is also key.

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They found that, um, after 48 hours of poor sleep.

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Um, the gut microbiome is already altered, right?

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And so sleep is important and nervous system regulation.

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So making sure that your nervous system is not stuck in that high alert mode, which

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is something that I see all the time.

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Women become accustomed to that level because, you know, we get used to

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operating at that, that, you know, high alert zone, and we don't realize

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that it's, it's draining our system and also draining the microbiome.

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So just to rehash, number one, we want the diversity.

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We want more vegetables, more fruits, different ingredients, rotating foods,

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not having the same foods every week.

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You want to include prebiotics that.

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The things that fuel the microbiome that you currently, currently have, um,

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provided nutrition help to grow, then prebiotics or symbiotics or adding the

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prebiotics and the probiotics together.

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Okay.

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So a really good baseline, probiotic I mentioned, and they work together to.

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Feed what you've got, create more.

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Okay.

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And then looking at pillar number four was looking at stability, looking at the other

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things that will wipe out your microbiome or even make it extinct, which is scary.

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So wherever you are at, if you've got gut symptoms or you feel like

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you've got brain fog and your moods are up and down, then I'd definitely

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be looking at your gut health.

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And these are the very simple things that you can do without starting any testing.

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Testing's always recommended.

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But if you're at a place where like, I'm not sure, but I wanna start on

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something, this is what I would recommend.

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I'd love to hear your comments below.