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Recap Episode on Love, Breathwork, Fertility, Metabolic Health, Routines, Epigenetics and Longevity

The Longevity & Lifestyle podcast

The Longevity & Lifestyle podcast

The Longevity & Lifestyle podcast

Episode 77

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Performance coach, detail-loving educator, big-thinking entrepreneur, podcaster, mama, passionate adventurer, and health optimization activist here to help people transform their lives, and reach their highest potential! All rolled into one.

qUOTE

“What you desire is on the other side of fear.”
- Claudia von Boeselager

Today’s episode is a recap featuring a short clip from the previous weeks' episodes. It serves as a teaser into the wealth of insights, entertaining anecdotes, and valuable tips from the various conversations to give you a flavor of the episode and guest.

Please enjoy!

Check out the full episodes:





#76: Longevity & Biohacking Products Series #8: Airofit - On Breathwork & Respiratory Muscle Training, Mouth Vs. Nasal Breathing, Respiratory Rate & Longevity, Mindfulness, New Airofit Pro 2.0 Features And The Science Behind It with Mike Bennet

#75: Dr. Jennifer Garrison - On Extending Female Reproductive Longevity, Ovarian Aging, Eradicating Menopause, Women's Health & Economic Inequality, Fertility, The Buck Institute, The Global Consortium for Reproductive Longevity & Equality

#74: Metabolic Health: Glucose Levels, Biofeedback, ‘Healthy’ Food Myths, Weight Loss, Keto Diet, Metabolic Conditioning, Intermittent Fasting with Levels Health’s Maziar Brumand

#73: Claudia in conversation with Leighanne Champion - On Mindset, Gratitude, Self-Care Techniques, Humor, Having a Choice, The 50:50 Concept, Limiting Beliefs, Fear, Neural Pathway Rewiring, and more

#71: Purpose In Health And Wellness Routines, Neurodegenerative Disease Prevention And Management, Feminine Energy, Intuition & Prioritising Self Care

#70: Larisa Petrini - On Sleep Deprivation, Aging, Skincare Secrets and Myths, Sustainable Weight Loss, Midlife Crisis, Epigenetics, Bodyology and More

#69: Dr Molly Maloof - On Love & Longevity, Childhood Trauma, Psychedelics, MDMA, Relationships, Metabolism, Oxytocin, And Building Stronger Connection In A Changing World

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Show Notes

  • #69: Dr Molly Maloof - On Love & Longevity, Childhood Trauma, Psychedelics, MDMA, Relationships, Metabolism, Oxytocin, And Building Stronger Connection In A Changing World [00:47]
  • #70: Larisa Petrini - On Sleep Deprivation, Aging, Skincare Secrets and Myths, Sustainable Weight Loss, Midlife Crisis, Epigenetics, Bodyology and More [5:17]
  • #71: Purpose In Health And Wellness Routines, Neurodegenerative Disease Prevention And Management, Feminine Energy, Intuition & Prioritising Self Care [ 14:47]
  • #73: Claudia in conversation with Leighanne Champion - On Mindset, Gratitude, Self-Care Techniques, Humor, Having a Choice, The 50:50 Concept, Limiting Beliefs, Fear, Neural Pathway Rewiring, and more [21:27]
  • #74: Metabolic Health: Glucose Levels, Biofeedback, ‘Healthy’ Food Myths, Weight Loss, Keto Diet, Metabolic Conditioning, Intermittent Fasting with Levels Health’s Maziar Brumand [29:14]
  • #75: Dr. Jennifer Garrison - On Extending Female Reproductive Longevity, Ovarian Aging, Eradicating Menopause, Women's Health & Economic Inequality, Fertility, The Buck Institute, The Global Consortium for Reproductive Longevity & Equality [33:35]
  • #76: Longevity & Biohacking Products Series #8: Airofit - On Breathwork & Respiratory Muscle Training, Mouth Vs. Nasal Breathing, Respiratory Rate & Longevity, Mindfulness, New Airofit Pro 2.0 Features And The Science Behind It with Mike Bennet [38:03]



People mentioned

  • Tommy Newberry
  • Christian Poulsen

Terminology

  • Obesity
  • Oxytocin
  • Dopamine
  • Homosapiens
  • Endosymbiotic hypothesis
  • DNA
  • Circadian rhythm
  • Melatonin
  • Human growth hormone
  • Breast cancer
  • Cerebral spinal fluid
  • Alzheimer’s
  • Dementia
  • Parkinsons
  • Cortisol
  • Stroke
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Glucose
  • Immune system
  • BDNF
  • Qigong
  • Breathwork
  • Keto diet
  • Menopause
  • Breathwork

MORE GREAT QUOTES 

‘It turns out that social connection is a bigger driver of health and happiness than any other factor.’ - Molly Maloof

‘Social disconnection on the other hand is actually potentially a bigger driver of disease than smoking, drinking, sanitary behavior, and obesity.’ - Molly Maloof

‘Love is a motivational force, similar to hunger or thirst. It actually drives people towards one another.and we get this dopamine from connection, but oxytocin is what creates these bonds and love is driven by a bunch of different neurotransmitters, but dopamine and oxytocin play a pretty big role and love is this motivational force that drives us together because proximity closeness actually increases the chances of information sharing and energy sharing.’ - Molly Maloof

‘I like to say our ability to lose weight, our ability to age slowly, our ability even to prevent diseases such as cancer, and the reason for that is the fact that sleep regulates most hormone production. Sleep is also part of our circadian rhythm, meaning that it occurs under a repeatable 24 hour process and it's determined by the light, dark cycle of our environment. At least 15% of our DNA is controlled by circadian rhythm, including certain repair mechanisms of our body.’ - Larisa Petrini

‘Timing our sleep is more important than the number of hours we spend sleeping. It's one thing to go to sleep at 10:00 PM, for example, and catch what I like to call the prime time hours. And these are between 10:00 PM and 2:00 AM and completely different things to go to bed at 2:00 AM and to actually miss the prime time hours and sleep until nine or 10 the next day. ‘ - Larisa Petrini

‘Depending on how brave I was at the beginning, it was literally having the cold shower at the end, starting with one hand and then the other. But having some sort of cold shower if it's even for a minute or longer as well, it's good for your hair. It's good for your skin. If you're overwhelmed with stress, cold water will definitely get you into your body and help focus on the present moment like nothing else. So that's really powerful. That's just a little morning practice that I have. Typically I'll do that 90 to 98% of my days. I really notice the difference if I don't have do that.’ - Claudia von Boselager

‘I had to do an hour of spinning and then I did an hour of some sort of weight training. Two hours over killing myself, cortisol, adrenals maxed out, and realizing that's not just the way you need to do things.You can do it in a softer way and your body will thank you as well. So that was also a revelation that it wasn't just about pushing myself, but actually about being more calm and centered.’ - Claudia von Boeselager

‘What you desire is on the other side of fear. Your ego is typically the fear that's holding you back.’ - Claudia von Boeselager

‘If we can listen long enough to our future self, they're going to give us the advice that we know intuitively already, but we haven't quite accessed.’ - Leighanne Champion

So I think it's important to take the context into consideration for keto diet. So it may work really well for some people and not so well for others. I think just knowing that again, there's no one size fits all is really important or the people that it does work for could be quite powerful.’ - Maziar Brumand, Levels Health

‘So ovaries are essentially aging at something like two and a half times the rate of other tissues. And what that means in practice is that a woman's ovaries are already showing overt signs of aging in late 20s, early 30s which is when most of the other organs in a woman's body are functioning perfectly, almost at almost a peak performance. So that comes as a shock to a lot of women and we think that if we can understand why ovaries are aging prematurely, that will have direct implications on understanding aging in the rest of the body.’ - Dr. Jennifer Garrison

Legal Disclaimer: Please note, to avoid any unnecessary headaches, Longevity & Lifestyle LLC owns the copyright in and to all content in and transcripts of The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast, with all rights reserved, as well as the right of publicity. You are welcome to share parts of the transcript (up to 500 words) in other media (such as press articles, blogs, social media accounts, etc.) for non-commercial use which must also include attribution to “The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast” with a link back to the longevity-and-lifestyle.com/podcast URL. It is prohibited to use any portion of the podcast content, names or images for any commercial purposes in digital or non-digital outlets to promote you or another’s products or services.

PODCAST EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Dr. Molly Maloof: It turns out that social connection is a bigger driver of health and happiness than any other factor that we. know According to this longevity study on men specifically.

Legal Disclaimer: Please note, to avoid any unnecessary headaches, Longevity & Lifestyle LLC owns the copyright in and to all content in and transcripts of The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast, with all rights reserved, as well as the right of publicity. You are welcome to share parts of the transcript (up to 500 words) in other media (such as press articles, blogs, social media accounts, etc.) for non-commercial use which must also include attribution to “The Longevity & Lifestyle Podcast” with a link back to the longevity-and-lifestyle.com/podcast URL. It is prohibited to use any portion of the podcast content, names or images for any commercial purposes in digital or non-digital outlets to promote you or another’s products or services.

PODCAST EPISODE TRANSCRIPT

Dr. Molly Mallof: Basically at the end of men's lives, they did an 80 year study. They basically showed that close personal relationships are what brought health, happiness and, satisfaction of life.

Social disconnection on the other hand is actually potentially a bigger driver of disease than smoking, drinking, sanitary behavior, and obesity. So when I started looking at this data and these numbers, I was like, what is social connection and how do we improve it? How do we build it? How do we make it stronger?

Basically one of the problems that we have right now is there's quite a lot of death of despair, because we're not dying from as many infectious diseases, although COVID has certainly killed a lot of people prior to COVID, we were mostly dying for chronic disease.

And, then as we started to prolong life, we actually started to see more and more deaths of despair developed. So death's due to isolation. Death's due to social conflict, social rejection and exclusion. And I was wondering so why, is this happening? If you actually look at the history of Oxytocin ,and you look at the history of humanity.

We evolved alongside a bunch of other hominids, but we won out of all the other hominids. So like we succeeded, like we were the ones homosapiens won, and it's thought that part of the reason why we succeeded is our ability to create social bonds. Because essentially this is the kicker love and social relationships.

If you think about love itself, like what is love, right? Like we always, we know it, we feel love, we have love, but what is love? So I was obsessed with love last year and I studied the science of love. And I discovered that love is a motivational force, similar to hunger or thirst. It actually drives people towards one another.

And we get this dopamine from connection, but oxytocin is what creates these bonds and love is driven by a bunch of different neurotransmitters, but dopamine and oxytocin play a pretty big role and love is this motivational force that drives us together because proximity closeness actually increases the chances of information sharing and energy sharing.

So we share resources and information and resources and information are what helped us survive? Now love also increases the chances of reproduction, right? So if we have close social ties, we're more likely to connect with people of the opposite sex and/ or the same sex, but have children.

And so when you look at love as this absolute fundamental facet of biology, that is so important to survival, just as important as hunger or thirst, just as important as food, you understand why lack of love and lack of social connection is so unbelievably detrimental to human. That's, one of the things that I started trying to figure out.

So communal support is actually really, important for people to flourish, right? Because we need to share information and resources and we need to maintain proximity to reproduce and life basically evolved oxytocin signaling for a reason. And this is the coolest thing about being a woman, because women are basically oxytocin, dominant.

So we are literally the keepers of life. We create it and we propagate it. We nurture it. Men are all about the protectors of life. They make sure that they're more vasopressor dominant. So they are more likely to be aggressive. They're more likely to defend. They're more likely to protect.

This is life's basic design for a reason. Before I go into oxytocin, I wanna back up to like evolutionary biology. The endosymbiotic hypothesis suggests that we engulfed bacteria, single cell organisms, the original form of life found on earth engulfed bacteria in order to harness energy from the environment which enabled evolution.

So this pattern of energy gathering. and information sharing, sensing, and integrating and reproducing. This goes back to the very earliest forms of life. And so this is why I'm so obsessed with biological comperative as a foundational way to teach health. because if you understand that life is about survival and reproduction and your biology does not care about your job, your biology only really cares about you staying alive and you making another person.

And that doesn't mean that our minds believe the same thing, because obviously I care about all sorts of stuff. That's not related to survival and reproduction, but our biology, this programming is running the show, under the surface, all the time. And when this programming gets disrupted, All hell breaks loose. And I'll give you a few examples of this later

Claudia von Boeselager: Can you share with my audience, your insights into the importance of sleep and the impact of sleep deprivation?

Larisa Petrini: Sleep is one of the main chapters I oftentimes talk about and the way I arrived here or the decision or the reason behind the decision to become a certified sleep coach was a very simple one.

I figured out by working with so many women, the fact that weight loss, and this is just one topic when it comes to sleep If we want to lose weight, in an efficient way and also sustain the weight loss process. Sleep is instrumental. It's very, important.

Can make or break.

I like to say our ability to lose weight, our ability to age slowly, our ability even to prevent diseases such as cancer. There are important studies about this and also our ability to perform at a high level. And the reason for that is the fact that sleep regulates most hormone production. Sleep is also part of our circadian rhythm, meaning that it occurs under a repeatable 24 hour process. And it's determined by the light, dark cycle of our environment.

At least 15% of our DNA is controlled by circadian rhythm, including certain repair mechanisms of our body. Because I mentioned the studies and I love using them as for those people who want to check. Who need to check. Data from my perspective should be used more and we should know about those studies more.

Claudia von Boeselager: So true.

Larisa Petrini: Every single time I have the opportunity to share anything interesting. I do that with my audience. It looks and this is for everyone, but specifically for us women is, a very important piece of information. So taking sleeping medication, even as little as one pill, 20 times a year, and in most cases we do this more often has been shown in three large studies to be associated with increased mortality.

Another important and interesting thing. There is the fact that our. Let me call it favorite prescription medication or prescription pill will only add 30 to 40 minutes of sleep on our schedule. Now why sleep is so important? So what happens when we get sleep and what happens when we don't get the, sleep we need?

And when we talk about sleep, there are two important things. The number one is the quantity. In other words, for how many hours we sleep and the other one is the quality of our sleep And oftentimes we only judge whether or not we sleep well or the quality of our sleep is, good enough by judging the number of hours.

Timing our sleep is more important than the number of hours we spend sleeping. It's one thing to go to sleep at 10:00 PM, for example, and catch the, what I like to call the prime time hours. And these are be between 10:00 PM and 2:00 AM and completely different thing to go to bed at 2:00 AM and to actually miss the prime time hours and sleep until nine or 10 the next day the main reason for that is the fact that our body is designed in such a way in which it releases certain hormones in certain time intervals human growth hormone. For example, this is one of the juiciest hormones, especially for us women when it comes to aging and aging slowly to be more specific and then Melatonin is another very, important hormone.

It's also called sleep hormone and it's called like that for a reason. And we get the first melatonin. I like to call it injection around 10:00 PM. I, like to use very funny metaphor and say the fact that it's, almost like a train. Then we miss the 10:00 PM train with that injection.

And then the second one is at around. 4:00 AM And for those women who experience issues around 4:00 AM with their sleep chances are the, melatonin, the quantity, the level of melatonin they get from their body is not high enough. And we lose, we start the, level of melatonin is decreasing as we age.

So this is changing and melatonin is also associated with youth. Same with human growth hormone So for those women or people in general, who miss these prime time hours, and also don't have a predictable routine around their sleep, chances are some of these juicy, good hormones are not in place, or they are not produced as they should.

Another important thing, and this has to do with us women as well is the fact that human growth hormone is a great way, probably the best way for us to protect or to do prevention for breast cancer. This is the number one hormone helping us stay away from this specific type of cancer.

So I hope I gave away a very important incentive for those women who like to, I don't know, binge on Netflix maybe, or spend some time in front of TV or screens going to bed around 10 is definitely important. So sleep is when growth, hormone and melatonin is released.

When this is happening, our body can maintain and also repair muscle mass in general and also decreased belly fat. Sleep also helps us consolidate our memory. And has the, ability to literally change the structure of our brain by providing a wash of cerebral. This is how you spell it. Cerebral spinal fluid that removes the damaging molecules associated with neuro-degeneration.

That's huge for someone who is predisposed. And as I'm using the genetic report. When I work with my clients and this is a 200 pages report, and one of the chapters, the pillars is all about mental health with a specific focus on Alzheimer dementia and Parkinson.

So we, can see whether or not someone is predisposed for those specific diseases. The prevention plan is definitely one that incorporates a healthy sleeping hygiene for those specific clients who discover the fact that are they're predisposed to get those diseases.

If we move a little bit to the way our skin looks, because this is usually very interesting for, women, right? Dark circles, I'm sure everyone knows about that. So dark circles are there. And if we move to the emotion and not just dark circles, of course, the level of hydration in our skin is changing.

And also the, glow we all want right is not there the next day. And there is another very interesting thing happening. And this has to do with our emotional health and the way we interact with other people. The way we interact with our kids as parents or key relationships in general, in our life, right?

We snap at people, we are not nice when we don't sleep enough, work productivity and our level of productivity declines definitely. Our level of cortisol is a stress hormone. Is a key hormone when it comes to stress is higher when we don't get the right amount of sleep and that makes us eat more and also store more belly fat.

The next thing happening in our bodies, the fact that our thyroid slows down when, we don't get enough sleep and then insulin doesn't work the same, or as well as before. So all these changes are important. We are not always aware about the way our hormones become unbalanced. The moment we don't sleep enough or we skip some hours of our sleep.

So I think it's important to remember the fact that timing our sleep and also prioritizing sleep is important. So what we get when we sleep enough, right? What are the juicy things we get? Better skin health. A more youthful appearance. A more rested appearance. If I can call it like that emotional regeneration and better relationships.

I just mentioned the fact that we snap at people and we are cranky. And we are not the same. We are not ourselves. I like to say this to my clients. And then there is a decreased risk of stroke. And this is coming out for, from studies and also cardiovascular disease. Fewer accidents.

I don't know if you are aware most accidents happened. Big accidents happened in history. They were associated with someone who was in charge with a specific task and that person was sleep deprived. Most of them happened around four in the morning. Which is interesting because that's when we get the second injection of melatonin, right?

So of course we, become more sleepy because that's the sleep hormone. So most accidents happen around 4:00 AM or five in the morning. Lower levels of inflammation, we speak more and more about inflammation. We like to call it silent inflammation. This is the chronic inflammation and it's, called silent also because we are not aware of that necessarily, unless we don't do there specific ways we can identify that.

And inflammation is the type of condition, if I can call it like that, that triggers so many diseases in our body and we want to keep that as low as possible. And I oftentimes talk about the impact of whites. I like to call them whites and the whites are sugar. Dairy products white flour and alcohol.

The more we consume those, the higher, the level of chronic inflammation in our body. What's going on the plate is definitely very important as well along with sleep. So I would say we would need to prioritize two health factors in order to age slowly, and to do age prevention. These two, I would start with these two and then with lotions and potions and minimal invasive procedures.

And there are so many things available on the market, but the fundamental factors are definitely diet and then sleep. Or I, would place them at the same level. I, wouldn't say sleep is the second. I would say they are on the same, definitely they have the same importance.

Our immune system is also triggered when we don't sleep enough. So when we spend the right amount of hours and also the quality of our sleep is right, or is high. Our immune system is definitely in the right place, lower risk of cancer and infection is also on the list. Our hormones are balanced, more balanced when we sleep. And then we have a faster rate of weight loss.

I mentioned this earlier, one of the interesting things happening when we don't sleep, we lose our brain glucose. A significant percentage of glucose. And our body next day, and this is something that everyone can check. Next day after I dunno, skipping a few hours of sleep. We are prone to consume more junk food and more sugar. And the reason for that is definitely our brain's wish if you want or desire to put back the glucose. So it's interesting to see how we behave the next day, because lots of things are so different the way we feel, the way we react in conversations and in certain relationships.

And then also how we behave around food, right? Alzheimer, there are studies important studies showing the fact that there is a lower risk of Alzheimer's Disease, and glucose would decline in general, better memory, longevity, overall stronger bones. So the list is so long. I, don't have enough words.

Persuade everyone to prioritize sleep. It's so, important.

Dana Frost: So what were some of the things that you did that you felt really made an impact on your energy?

Claudia von Boeselager: Great question, Dana as well. And obviously it's personalized. Everyone's gonna be a little bit different as well. And I think that and exactly, as you said, women tend to be like, as long as everyone else is fine around me, I'll be fine. But It's relearning, and for me, this was the case to actually check in and be like, how am I?

And not just from an emotional point view, but like, how is my body? Am I exhausted? What do I need? And being better at self-care and self-love, which was something that I definitely wasn't good at. And I've learned the importance of it. And if I'm not in a good place, how am I supposed to be in service to others?

So it's paying attention to that as well. So some of the strategies that have really helped me is starting off with a morning priming session. I get up a little bit before the kids do as well, just because as soon as they're up, it's a whole nother level of intensity. And just to have that time to myself and I start off with, having daylight exposure.

I live part of the year in London, sometimes in Florida where there's more sunshine, but, try to get that daylight exposure. And I do a little sort of gratitude practice. And as I'm sure you've shared with your listeners as well, there's so many studies that show, the power of gratitude and just getting into that positive vibration.

And it's literally two minutes with the sun on, my face. It did it this morning as well. It was beautiful, the sun's out again. And just focusing on things and it's not just saying I'm grateful for this. I'm grateful for that, but it's actually feeling gratitude. So I really important people.

Understand the difference of " oh, I'm grateful for my life. I'm grateful for my bed." and " I'm so grateful that my heart is beating every day. I don't even think about it.

Like I have a nice bed to sleep in." I have two children who are healthy and happy, whatever it is. I'm happy for a new pen that I got, whatever it is that, that it can be.
It doesn't need to be something, super profound, but to really feel that gratitude practice. So that already sets you up in a great way for me... , I have low blood pressure and I found also for cognition and different benefits around that. And BDNF, what I like to do is I have a Peloton at home, which I got during COVID when gyms were closed and things like that as well.

And I'll just do, even if it's a short 15 minute session with music that I like, you can program your thing and I do some weights and movement as well. And then I do a morning priming session, which is a mixture of Qigong. So really getting into the body. Some breathwork some meditation and a visualization as well.

And obviously there's tons of studies that show, the power of this of really visualizing your day, seeing things as done, like you've actually accomplished it because you're rewiring your brain to, " Oh, I don't know if I can achieve this" to " It's actually been done" you can even write it down, which is really powerful And again, circling back to the gratitude and things that you're looking forward to, then it's into the shower. And depending on how brave I am at the beginning, it was literally putting the shower cold at the very end and sort of one hand or the other.

But having some sort of cold shower if it's even for, a minute or longer as well, It's good for your hair.

It's good for your skin, but, if you're in your head with stress, cold water will definitely get you into your body and like focusing on the present moment, like nothing else. So that's really powerful as well. And so that's just a little morning practice that I have. And for, typically I'll get that sort of 90 to 98% of my days, I really notice the difference if I don't have that.

So that's just a little kind of sneak peek into that part of my morning routine. I think other big game changers is really taking sleep seriously. And not just seriously, but, getting that quality sleep and really tweaking things, making sure it's a dark room. I have light sensitivity, the blackout curtains that the temperature is also okay.

I'm a cozy person. I can have warm temperatures. I know now the importance of a colder room and that sort of sleep hygiene around that. And obviously it starts with. The evening routine as well. So the lack of blue lights, and there's so many things you can do, there's the F.Lux- F- dot- L- U- X free software.

You can download on your laptop to just change it to a warm light versus the blue lights. Avoiding screens, avoiding news television, things like this as well around bedtime. A long answer to a short question, but those are some of the things that really helped me set up the day to, to win obviously nutrition exercise I had been doing, but I made some alterations as well.

And maybe just one point on exercise. So my sort of a type personality was very much, I had to do an hour of spinning and then I did an hour of some sort of weight training. Two hours like over killing myself, cortisol, adrenals, maxed out, et cetera, and realizing that's not just the way you need to do things like you can do it in a softer way and your body will thank you as well.

So that was also a revelation that it wasn't just about push, push, but actually like to be a bit more calm and centered I had a daily meditation practice before, but it just took it to another level. And having that as a routine as well.

Claudia von Boeselager: So our mindset strategy, number four. Is around limiting beliefs and are limiting beliefs and fears holding you back. So we touched a little bit on this before, but it's really just to bring light to the awareness around limiting beliefs and how to face fears and how to reframe things.

How do face fears? If you think of fear this way as. What do you want? What you desire is at the other side of fear. So your ego is typically the fear that's holding you back. I dunno, maybe it's, you've started a new business and you have to cold call people. Like the fear of that, like how the shame, the embarrassment, like we build up all these scenarios in our heads, but like, how could you reframe that?

Be like, what the product or service that you're launching with your new. I am there to like really help these people who are struggling with the problem. So I'm actually, sales as a service, for example, right? So I'm really here to help the person and resolve their problem. How can you refr reframe something that you are fearing?

To do it in a different way. And whatever that fear may be understanding. Is it coming from a childhood limiting belief, like really dig into, sit with it, be like, why am I so fear, might be fear of flying or whatever. It may be public speaking. Where is that fear coming from? And then, how can you reframe it in a way that, if you public speaking, for example, if to go up on stage, you've got this amazing invitation to speak in public. Maybe make it about serving the people who need to hear your message and not about yourself, of the shift that shift, that focus as well. Knowing that what's keeping you from being the best version of you are typically these limiting beliefs made up in your mind and childhood.

And that there are strategies like the reframing that will allow you to step into the new you step into the stronger, faster, better, whatever you wanna call it you.

Leighanne Champion: Yes.

Claudia von Boeselager: Really enjoy life at a whole nother level.

Leighanne Champion: Yes. I love that. That's so key. This is, I get all passionate around all this kind of topic because, I immediately go to, what are we thinking?

And you, Claudia, have you ever heard that saying we are what we eat?

Claudia von Boeselager: Of course. Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: ...which is a depressing one. But it's reality is really, I think...

Claudia von Boeselager: yeah.

Leighanne Champion: but I think the reality is really much more if this makes anybody feel better. We are what we think.

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: And I just think it's so incredibly fascinating, just to reflect on all the negative emotions that we as humans share. The anger, the jealousy, the pride, the envy, frustration sadness. But they're all rooted. Where? And what we're thinking about, right?

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah. Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: And so to your point, so this awareness that you're speaking of is it's all about our thoughts. It's so crucial. It's the first step in taking responsibility for what we're choosing to think. We often believe it's all the things outside of us or the circumstances. Right?

In our lives that dictate our feelings and reactions. And this is a bitter truth pill to swallow, but it's always our thoughts. That we've chosen to think that are causing our emotional response. People don't really like to hear that one, but it's really true. And that this better than most Claudia neuroscientists have been able to demonstrate that every thought we have is sending signals.

Electrical signals throughout our brains affecting every cell in our bodies.

And it's affecting our sleep, our digestion, chemical makeup of our blood, right?

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah. The fight or flight pattern as well. So you could be living in this high stress state where you assume that every horn that honks is someone like honking, whatever it may be because you're in this hugely stressed way.

Cuz you're interpreting it is that everyone is against you and the world is against you. And I have to survive this day versus like today is a gift. Like I get...

Leighanne Champion: Today is a gift.

Claudia von Boeselager: Shift that...

Leighanne Champion: could shift outta that. Exactly. And I just think it's important too, that people understand how many thoughts we actually have flying through our minds.

I think research is a little confused on this, that whatever you read is somewhere between 6,000 and 50,000 thoughts that we have a day. Which is a lot. And I laugh at the 6,000 cause I'm pretty sure I've already had 6,000 by breakfast, but I guess it just depends on our brains, but if we really think that through that's really either really good news or bad news. Because every thought we're having right, is either moving us towards or potential or away from it.

Yes. Every thought we have either is moving us. I believe towards our God given potential or away from it. There's this quote by Tommy Newberry, that kind of blew my mind when I heard it. I had to like what?

But he said. He wrote the secret conversations that you hold in the privacy of your own mind. Or shaping your destiny little by little.

It's what? So I think we really need to think about that one. And ask ourselves, where are we mentally shining our spotlight currently...

Claudia von Boeselager: so is that negative self talk or is it that being your best cheerleader and being like, okay, I've had a trip up today, but I got this, I can totally do this and who can I reach out to whatever to help me, like I am solution orientated. And I got this, like I can.

Leighanne Champion: And it's beautiful when we catch ourselves.

Isn't it? It feels great. You're like, oh, look at me, go down the rabbit hole.

Claudia von Boeselager: Exactly.

Leighanne Champion: No.

Claudia von Boeselager: I'm smarter than that.

Leighanne Champion: I am smarter.

Claudia von Boeselager: I love it.

Leighanne Champion: No, but I always say, turn your spotlight on your future self. I encourage people to consider. Their future self in five to 10 years from now. Who have you become?

What have you created get excited about that?

Leighanne Champion: I don't know. We will have to have another conversation sometime around the future self. I love to take my clients on a journey of letter writing to, as to what their future self would say to them right now to give them.

Claudia von Boeselager: Can you expand a bit on that? Just for my audience's. I love the idea of that.

Leighanne Champion: Yes. It's this idea that our future self has the wisdom. So it's actually saying we actually, if we can listen long enough to our future self, they're going to give us the advice that we know intuitively already, but we haven't quite accessed.

So if you take the time, as you say, put pen to paper, And think of yourself 10 years from now and I'm think dearly am. I know that you will have achieved this dream. You have, you've been working hard and da, and now you're at a place where, and you get such marvelous advice. When you think of yourself.

In a future place. It's really a lot of fun.

Claudia von Boeselager: I really love that. And also, just what immediate comes up is so many things then get put into perspective and things that you think are like a big deal or a big decision you realize like in 10 years time, I'm gonna look back at will I even remember this as well?

Leighanne Champion: Huh. So good.

Claudia von Boeselager: So I have what some people call like the rocking chair test, right? So like when I'm 95, looking back, am I gonna be like, proud that I. Stepped out of my comfort zone and did this, or am I gonna look back and be like, oh, I missed opportunity. And so I wanna be doing the things where I'm like, oh cool.
I did that. And oh yeah, I was brave enough to do that. And, oh my gosh, that was super uncomfortable, but I did it and I loved it. And that was amazing as well.

Leighanne Champion: You loved it.

Claudia von Boeselager: I've had a few those experiences in my life and each and every one of them have just confirmed the more discomfort it was to actually go and do it the bigger, the upside, if you will.

Leighanne Champion: Exactly. And isn't it interesting too. It's something that we are tapping back into that. We were so good at as children, but when we're writing from our future sales, we're, we're using our imaginations again. And we're also our intuition.

And our we're being our best encouragers. It's fascinating. We're employing a lot of different things that are very helpful to us.

Claudia von Boeselager: I love that.

Leighanne Champion: Bringing imagination back.

Claudia: I'd love to hear your opinion on the keto diet and what your members are also seeing. Obviously from blood glucose spiking level, that should not be the case, but are there different effects? What are you seeing around your members with who are on the keto diet?

Maziar Brumand: I think keto diet could be different for different people, especially research has shown that women respond to keto diets different than men. So I think there are modified keto diets that accounts for some of this, I think in certain phase cycle, you may need more carbohydrate for second women.

So I think it's important to take the context into a consideration for keto diet. So it may work really, well for some people and not so well for others. So I think just knowing that again, there's no one size fits all is really important. Or the people that it does work for it could be quite powerful.

I've experimented with it for a while. And I find that a, I don't need as much sleep So my body's a lot more tune to being able to deal with less sleep. My energy zone are a lot higher. I find that I don't have crashes or that hangry feeling that we all get when we're really hungry.

And we don't eat for a while. Like I don't get that anymore. The head nods are completely gone cause you don't have these rollercoaster of energy changes. So typically keto diet, what it does, it changes your field source from glucose to fat And so what that does is if you think about we all carry around a hundred to 200,000 calories worth of fat, even if we're slim, right?

So you take somebody that let's say is 150 pounds while it's just like an average person, right? Average, slim person. And you say that their body fat levels are 10 to 15%. So they're carrying anywhere 10 to 20 pounds fat. And so each pounds of fat is about 4,000 calories. So a slim person is carrying something like 60,000 to 80,000 calories in fat.

And then you can go up from there. Some people maybe carry 200,000, so there's no shortage of energy in our body. It's just your body knowing how to use it. And so when you switch to a Ketogenic diet, your body learns to use fatso fuel source directly instead of glucose as a energy source And because of that, you have this constant energy resource that's available, that's decoupled from eating.

And so what that does, obviously you're burning that fat. And then when you eat it, you obviously replenish it, but you have a very stable energy source where you don't do this, which means that your energy's constant, you don't have these moments of hungry. And it also helps with sleep. I think for the people that works, it works and there are many types of ketogenic diets.

There is the really strict one that keeps the carbohydrates to really, low levels and is very hard to maintain And there is a modified version where you try to avoid added sugars, but you could have starches complex carbs as part of your meal, and also as part of a mixed meal. And if you build an exercise where you're consuming that carbohydrates as well, it creates a balance where you can actually have the best of both worlds, where you can have that stable energy of Ketogenic diet, but not have to be so strict so that you can't maintain.

And so I think. Thing that's constant to diet is do the thing that you can do for a long time. And you're not just cycling in and out because the cycling in and out inevitably leads to ups and downs and people being in their in it for month, but killing themselves and then out of it for nine months, because they're just trying to recover from that.

Claudia: And then they have the spike in the wrong direction.

Maziar Brumand: Exactly, so I think you, genetic, I think then the, none of it, at least From my perspective it's different for different people. And then do the thing that you can sustain. Because you don't sustain it, then you're just gonna go through the rollercoaster and it's just gonna leave you helpless.

Claudia: I think that's a really valid point and I think also because it's such a high fat diet that if you have too many carbohydrates or even too much protein, I think people don't realize that as well, that you're just, you're not in ketosis and you're just consuming a lot of fat as well. So it's almost bind elect the, very strict one as well, but I think, yeah, if you can find that, balance and for different people to try different things also.

Claudia von Boeselager: So I'd love to kick off just digging into female aging, fertility and reproductive aging specifically. Can you expand a little bit why this is your area of specialty and what is it that women need to know about this area?
Absolutely. That's quite a, that's quite a quote to kick off with. To be clear, that's not my work.

That is the results of several studies that we're looking at correlations between reproductive span, so that's the age at which woman goes through menopause and for overall lifespan. Now I would say that those are average numbers and so I always wanna back that up by, by telling women that, even if you go through an early menopause, that doesn't necessarily mean that you're doomed to live a short life.

Jennifer Garrison: In general, female reproductive biology is really incredibly distinct and stochastic and variable the level of the individual. So what we're talking about here are averages just to of course, just to be clear. I work on, I am a neuroscientist, but I work on understanding how the brain communicates with the rest of the body and how that changes during aging.

And that led us to reproductive aging. Thinking about how the brain talks to ovaries and the uterus and other reproductive organs. And the reason I. I find this area of science so compelling is because we don't know that much about it. So this is an area of biology that has really been long neglected.

And if you don't know anything about ovaries and to be honest, I didn't know that much about ovarian function until. Five ish years ago. Even though I happen to own a pair , if you don't know that much about ovaries, they're fascinating.

Claudia von Boeselager: Share with the audience why they're so important above and beyond just pure reproduction if you

Jennifer Garrison: Yeah...

There's so much to understand about them. The first thing to know is that they're incredibly complex, right? Unlike any other organ in the body, they go through this like dramatic dynamic remodeling every single month. During adulthood, every single cycle that a woman goes through, there's this huge macroscopic dynamic remodeling of the tissue that happens.

And so they're incredibly dynamic but they're also the first system in the body to age. There's, there.

A misconception, I think that that women somehow have the ability to rejuvenate their ovaries or extend their fertility by preserving eggs, by taking reproductive hormonal birth control. And that's just not true. So women are born with all the eggs they're ever gonna have. , somewhere around 26 weeks of gestation.

A female human has about six or 7 million eggs in her ovaries. . By the time she's born, that number drops to about a million by the time she goes through puberty. That number is somewhere between 3 and 400,000. And then once she starts cycling every single month that she ovulates she's going to lose about a thousand eggs every single month.

And so those numbers drop and it's not just the numbers, but also the quality of the eggs changes and goes down with age during adulthood until somewhere in her forties or fifties. She will essentially run out of eggs and her ovaries will stop working. And she will go through a menopause. And menopause is a funny thing.

It's a single day. We often, when we're talking about menopausal symptoms, we're talking about either perimenopause, so before menopause or postmenopause after menopause. Menopause itself is just the day on which a woman has not been, has not had a period for 12 months.

So it's just a single day and time. Ovaries are doing a lot of things for, that are important for health. I think most women are pretty familiar with the consequences of ovarian aging on fertility. Not as many women are familiar with the consequences of ovarian aging on overall health.

So ovaries are also secreting a whole cocktail of different chemicals and hormones that are important for general health.

Claudia von Boeselager: Why would you say Airofit was originally developed, and can you talk a little bit about what the Airofit device can do and for those people watching? So I have, I've been able to, I've had the pleasure of testing it and honestly, after even just a few sessions, I noticed a huge difference. If I went for a run, it was almost effortless.

Whereas before, I'd have breathing issues and I've actually retrained the ability for my belly, if you will, to actually move while I breathe instead of my lovely upper shoulders movements that weren't very effective before. So yeah. Can you share a little bit for us? Yeah...

Mike Bennet: Gladly. So our device was actually founded by a Danish company called Amble, which is a health tech company and they developed it to help with COPD and other pulmonary issues.

But our CEO, Christian, he actually found this device and wanted to practice it, our user to help practice singing. So he was a classical singer, filling audiences and filling the whole holes with his voice. Wow. And he wanted to pursue this a wee bit more and more air coming in, bigger lung capacity, you can sing notes bigger, longer.

Wow. And the device itself was very big and it required Christian to be there while training them, so not a very practical device. And alongside this, his sons were very competitive swimmers and went to the Nordic Sewing Championships. And the eldest actually went with the hope of qualifying for one final.

And after training with Airofit for just three not Airofit as we know and love today, but the original device. He came back with seven gold medals. Wow. And on the back end of that, actually obtained a scholarship to a university in America. So full ride scholarship just from breathing through essentially what was in the original Airofit Uhhuh and Christian being the ambitious man he is, started investing all of his money, all of his friends money and developing the device smaller. But one thing he noticed is he still had to be there to explain how to use the device. Hence, we now have an application which will actually guide you through all of these exercises.

So it went from a small idea and just grew in his head and yeah, being ambitious and wanting to change the world, he actually set off on that adventure, and I believe he has done.

Claudia von Boeselager: Completely. What an roi, I think for all parents out there listening and ambitions, sport ambitions for their children.

And I think the beauty of it is that you're not adding any chemicals, you're not doing anything unnatural. You're just training what's naturally there and just improving it and improving the oxygenation and excelling of carbon dioxide as well. So really phenomenal.

Yeah. Exactly. And for people wondering what is the cadence, what is the frequency you recommend for using it?

Depending on what, I guess the use case is, right? But is this like a daily device or is it, a few times a week? What would you typically recommend?

Mike Bennet: We generally recommend to begin with every day. So it's only a five to 10 minute exercise. So that's the really cool thing about our device that actually gives you your daily recommendation. So within the app it'll tell you what you're doing. Five to 10 minutes a day, and then after a six week period you kind of plate wee it . So either you can increase the duration or you can just decrease the frequency. So I, for one, I train. At the moment, I've become a wee bit Slack and I only train about five days.

Claudia von Boeselager: A. Okay.

Mike Bennet: But I've maintained my level. And then when I do my lung test, if I notice a decrease, I just jump back onto seven days. So our recommendation is seven days a week, but it's only five to 10 minutes.

There was a lady I was talking to in London and she uses it every day watching Coronation Street. So in the ad break, she'll just use the Airofit instead of gonna go make a cup of tea or instead of gonna go reach more cookies. She does something for her health and she was adamant the Coronation Street saved her life but I think it may have been us, but ...

Claudia von Boeselager: That's a great idea as well. Exactly. Some or even people watching Netflix or something like that. Its a great time. Exactly. Just sitting there. Yeah. What are some of the learnings or insights that the Airofit clients that you work with have found the most valuable?

Mike Bennet: That they can change their breathing no matter how old they are . So in five 50 minutes, they actually see massive benefits. And no matter your starting point, you can always increase something. So whether that is the inhalation or installation strength or the accessible lung capacity, the ability to open your lungs.
Everybody can get something out of training their breathwork because everybody breathes. So if I can, better at it. Yeah.

Claudia von Boeselager: So that's really helpful. Yeah. And let's talk about the respiratory muscle training, right? So you were saying that it's beneficial not only for athletes. How long would you say it takes also to start noticing?

Would you a difference basically for breath.

Mike Bennet: As you mentioned, with your own training, you have seen results very rapidly.

Claudia von Boeselager: Good time. Yeah.

Mike Bennet: Yeah. We had a study from a university in England that used a six week intervention with the Airofit, and they found on an average 30% increase in the thickness of their diaphragm.

So their main 30%, and that's just because it is such an undertrained muscle. You wouldn't see the... so if you train for another eight weeks or six weeks, you wouldn't see that 30% increase. But if you can train your biceps or quads and get 30% bigger in six weeks, that's phenomenal...

Claudia von Boeselager: And this is men and women. It's the same.

Mike Bennet: Yeah.

Claudia von Boeselager: Okay. Wow.

Basically at the end of men's lives, they did an 80, 80 year study. They basically showed that close personal relationships are what brought health, happiness and, satisfaction of life.

Social disconnection on the other hand is actually potentially a bigger driver of disease than smoking, drinking, sanitary behavior, and obesity. So when I started looking at this data and these numbers, I was like, what is social connection and how do we improve it? How do we build it? How do we make it stronger?

Basically one of the problems that we have right now is there's quite a lot of death of despair, because we're not dying from as many infectious diseases, although COVID has certainly killed a lot of people prior to COVID, we were mostly dying for chronic disease.

And, then as we started to prolong life, we actually started to see more and more deaths of despair developed. So death's due to isolation. Death's due to social conflict, social rejection and exclusion. And I was wondering so why, is this happening? If you actually look at the history of Oxytocin ,and you look at the history of humanity.

We evolved alongside a bunch of other hominids, but we won out of all the other hominids. So like we succeeded, like we were the ones homosapiens won, and it's thought that part of the reason why we succeeded is our ability to create social bonds. Because essentially this is the kicker love and social relationships.

If you think about love itself, like what is love, right? Like we always, we know it, we feel love, we have love, but what is love? So I was obsessed with love last year and I studied the science of love. And I discovered that love is a motivational force, similar to hunger or thirst. It actually drives people towards one another.

and we get this dopamine from connection, but oxytocin is what creates these bonds and love is driven by a bunch of different neurotransmitters, but dopamine and oxytocin play a pretty big role and love is this motivational force that drives us together because proximity closeness actually increases the chances of information sharing and energy sharing.

So we share resources and information and resources and information are what helped us survive? Now love also increases the chances of reproduction, right? So if we have close social ties, we're more likely to connect with people of the opposite sex and/ or the same sex, but have children.

And so when you look at love as this absolute fundamental facet of biology, that is so important to survival, just as important as hunger or thirst, just as important as food, you understand why lack of love and lack of social connection is so unbelievably detrimental to human. That's, one of the things that I started trying to figure out.

So communal support is actually really, important for people to flourish, right?

Because we need to share information and resources and we need to maintain proximity to reproduce and life basically evolved oxytocin signaling for a reason. And this is the coolest thing about being a woman, because women are basically oxytocin, dominant.

So we are literally the keepers of life. We create it and we propagate it. We nurture it. Men are all about the protectors of life. They make sure that they're more vasopressor dominant. So they are more likely to be aggressive. They're more likely to defend. They're more likely to protect.

This is life's basic design for a reason. Before I go into oxytocin, I wanna back up to like evolutionary biology. The endosymbiotic hypothesis suggests that we engulfed bacteria, single cell organisms, the original form of life found on earth engulfed bacteria in order to harness energy from the environment which enabled evolution.

So this pattern of energy gathering. and information sharing, sensing, and integrating and reproducing. This goes back to the very earliest forms of life. And so this is why I'm so obsessed with biological comperative as a foundational way to teach health. because if you understand that life is about survival and reproduction and your biology does not care about your job, your biology only really cares about you staying alive and you making another person.

And that doesn't mean that our minds believe the same thing, because obviously I care about all sorts of stuff. That's not related to survival and reproduction, but our biology, this programming is running the show, under the surface, all the time. And when this programming gets disrupted, All hell breaks loose. And I'll give you a few examples of this later

Claudia von Boeselager: Can you share with my audience, your insights into the importance of sleep and the impact of sleep deprivation?

Larisa Petrini: Sleep is one of the main chapters I oftentimes talk about and the way I arrived here or the decision or the reason behind the decision to become a certified sleep coach was a very simple one.

I figured out by working with so many women, the fact that weight loss, and this is just one topic when it comes to sleep If we want to lose weight, in an efficient way and also sustain the weight loss process. Sleep is instrumental. It's very, important. Can make or break.

I like to say our ability to lose weight, our ability to age slowly, our ability even to prevent diseases such as cancer. There are important studies about this and also our ability to perform at a high level. And the reason for that is the fact that sleep regulates most hormone production. Sleep is also part of our circadian rhythm, meaning that it occurs under a repeatable 24 hour process. And it's determined by the light, dark cycle of our environment.

At least 15% of our DNA is controlled by circadian rhythm, including certain repair mechanisms of our body. Because I mentioned the studies and I love using them as for those people who want to check. Who need to check. Data from my perspective should be used more and we should know about those studies more.

Claudia von Boeselager: So true.

Larisa Petrini: Every single time I have the opportunity to share anything interesting. I do that with my audience. It looks and this is for everyone, but specifically for us women is, a very important piece of information. So taking sleeping medication, even as little as one pill, 20 times a year, and in most cases we do this more often has been shown in three large studies to be associated with increased mortality.

Another important and interesting thing. There is the fact that our. Let me call it favorite prescription medication or prescription pill will only add 30 to 40 minutes of sleep on our schedule. Now why sleep is so important? So what happens when we get sleep and what happens when we don't get the, sleep we need?

And when we talk about sleep, there are two important things. The number one is the quantity. In other words, for how many hours we sleep and the other one is the quality of our sleep And oftentimes we only judge whether or not we sleep well or the quality of our sleep is, good enough by judging the number of hours.

Timing our sleep is more important than the number of hours we spend sleeping. It's one thing to go to sleep at 10:00 PM, for example, and catch the, what I like to call the prime time hours. And these are be between 10:00 PM and 2:00 AM and completely different thing to go to bed at 2:00 AM and to actually miss the prime time hours and sleep until nine or 10 the next day the main reason for that is the fact that our body is designed in such a way in which it releases certain hormones in certain time intervals human growth hormone. For example, this is one of the juiciest hormones, especially for us women when it comes to aging and aging slowly to be more specific and then Melatonin is another very, important hormone.

It's also called sleep hormone and it's called like that for a reason. And we get the first melatonin. I like to call it injection around 10:00 PM. I, like to use very funny metaphor and say the fact that it's, almost like a train. Then we miss the 10:00 PM train with that injection.

And then the second one is at around. 4:00 AM And for those women who experience issues around 4:00 AM with their sleep chances are the, melatonin, the quantity, the level of melatonin they get from their body is not high enough. And we lose, we start the, level of melatonin is decreasing as we age.

So this is changing and melatonin is also associated with youth. Same with human growth hormone So for those women or people in general, who miss these prime time hours, and also don't have a predictable routine around their sleep, chances are some of these juicy, good hormones are not in place, or they are not produced as they should.

Another important thing, and this has to do with us women as well is the fact that human growth hormone is a great way, probably the best way for us to protect or to do prevention for breast cancer. This is the number one hormone helping us stay away from this specific type of cancer.

So I hope I gave away a very important incentive for those women who like to, I don't know, binge on Netflix maybe, or spend some time in front of TV or screens going to bed around 10 is definitely important. So sleep is when growth, hormone and melatonin is released.

When this is happening, our body can maintain and also repair muscle mass in general and also decreased belly fat. Sleep also helps us consolidate our memory. And has the, ability to literally change the structure of our brain by providing a wash of cerebral. This is how you spell it. Cerebral spinal fluid that removes the damaging molecules associated with neuro-degeneration.

That's huge for someone who is predisposed. And as I'm using the genetic report. When I work with my clients and this is a 200 pages report, and one of the chapters, the pillars is all about mental health with a specific focus on Alzheimer dementia and Parkinson.

So we, can see whether or not someone is predisposed for those specific diseases. The prevention plan is definitely one that incorporates a healthy sleeping hygiene for those specific clients who discover the fact that are they're predisposed to get those diseases.

If we move a little bit to the way our skin looks, because this is usually very interesting for, women, right? Dark circles, I'm sure everyone knows about that. So dark circles are there. And if we move to the emotion and not just dark circles, of course, the level of hydration in our skin is changing.

And also the, glow we all want right is not there the next day. And there is another very interesting thing happening. And this has to do with our emotional health and the way we interact with other people. The way we interact with our kids as parents or key relationships in general, in our life, right?

We snap at people, we are not nice when we don't sleep enough, work productivity and our level of productivity declines definitely. Our level of cortisol is a stress hormone. Is a key hormone when it comes to stress is higher when we don't get the right amount of sleep and that makes us eat more and also store more belly fat.
The next thing happening in our bodies, the fact that our thyroid slows down when, we don't get enough sleep and then insulin doesn't work the same, or as well as before. So all these changes are important. We are not always aware about the way our hormones become unbalanced. The moment we don't sleep enough or we skip some hours of our sleep.

So I think it's important to remember the fact that timing our sleep and also prioritizing sleep is important. So what we get when we sleep enough, right? What are the juicy things we get? Better skin health. A more youthful appearance. A more rested appearance. If I can call it like that emotional regeneration and better relationships.

I just mentioned the fact that we snap at people and we are cranky. And we are not the same. We are not ourselves. I like to say this to my clients. And then there is a decreased risk of stroke. And this is coming out for, from studies and also cardiovascular disease. Fewer accidents.

I don't know if you are aware most accidents happened. Big accidents happened in history. They were associated with someone who was in charge with a specific task and that person was sleep deprived. Most of them happened around four in the morning. Which is interesting because that's when we get the second injection of melatonin, right?

So of course we, become more sleepy because that's the sleep hormone. So most accidents happen around 4:00 AM or five in the morning. Lower levels of inflammation, we speak more and more about inflammation. We like to call it silent inflammation. This is the chronic inflammation and it's, called silent also because we are not aware of that necessarily, unless we don't do there specific ways we can identify that.

And inflammation is the type of condition, if I can call it like that, that triggers so many diseases in our body and we want to keep that as low as possible. And I oftentimes talk about the impact of whites. I like to call them whites and the whites are sugar. Dairy products white flour and alcohol.

The more we consume those, the higher, the level of chronic inflammation in our body. What's going on the plate is definitely very important as well along with sleep. So I would say we would need to prioritize two health factors in order to age slowly, and to do age prevention. These two, I would start with these two and then with lotions and potions and minimal invasive procedures.

And there are so many things available on the market, but the fundamental factors are definitely diet and then sleep. Or I, would place them at the same level. I, wouldn't say sleep is the second. I would say they are on the same, definitely they have the same importance.

Our immune system is also triggered when we don't sleep enough. So when we spend the right amount of hours and also the quality of our sleep is right, or is high. Our immune system is definitely in the right place, lower risk of cancer and infection is also on the list. Our hormones are balanced, more balanced when we sleep. And then we have a faster rate of weight loss.

I mentioned this earlier, one of the interesting things happening when we don't sleep, we lose our brain glucose. A significant percentage of glucose. And our body next day, and this is something that everyone can check. Next day after I dunno, skipping a few hours of sleep. We are prone to consume more junk food and more sugar. And the reason for that is definitely our brain's wish if you want or desire to put back the glucose. So it's interesting to see how we behave the next day, because lots of things are so different the way we feel, the way we react in conversations and in certain relationships.

And then also how we behave around food, right? Alzheimer, there are studies important studies showing the fact that there is a lower risk of Alzheimer's Disease, and glucose would decline in general, better memory, longevity, overall stronger bones. So the list is so long. I, don't have enough words.

persuade everyone to prioritize sleep. It's so, important.

Dana Frost: So what were some of the things that you did that you felt really made an impact on your energy?

Claudia von Boeselager: Great question, Dana as well. And obviously it's personalized. Everyone's gonna be a little bit different as well. And I think that and exactly, as you said, women tend to be like, as long as everyone else is fine around me, I'll be fine. But It's relearning, and for me, this was the case to actually check in and be like, how am I?

And not just from an emotional point view, but like, how is my body? Am I exhausted? What do I need? And being better at self-care and self-love, which was something that I definitely wasn't good at. And I've learned the importance of it.

And if I'm not in a good place, how am I supposed to be in service to others?
So it's paying attention to that as well. So some of the strategies that have really helped me is starting off with a morning priming session. I get up a little bit before the kids do as well, just because as soon as they're up, it's a whole nother level of intensity. And just to have that time to myself and I start off with, having daylight exposure.

I live part of the year in London, sometimes in Florida where there's more sunshine, but, try to get that daylight exposure. And I do a little sort of gratitude practice. And as I'm sure you've shared with your listeners as well, there's so many studies that show, the power of gratitude and just getting into that positive vibration.

And it's literally two minutes with the sun on, my face. It did it this morning as well. It was beautiful, the sun's out again. And just focusing on things and it's not just saying I'm grateful for this. I'm grateful for that, but it's actually feeling gratitude. So I really important people.

Understand the difference of " oh, I'm grateful for my life. I'm grateful for my bed." and " I'm so grateful that my heart is beating every day. I don't even think about it.

Like I have a nice bed to sleep in." I have two children who are healthy and happy, whatever it is. I'm happy for a new pen that I got, whatever it is that, that it can be.
It doesn't need to be something, super profound, but to really feel that gratitude practice. So that already sets you up in a great way for me... , I have low blood pressure and I found also for cognition and different benefits around that. And BDNF, what I like to do is I have a Peloton at home, which I got during COVID when gyms were closed and things like that as well.

And I'll just do, even if it's a short 15 minute session with music that I like, you can program your thing and I do some weights and movement as well. And then I do a morning priming session, which is a mixture of Qigong. So really getting into the body. Some breathwork some meditation and a visualization as well.

And obviously there's tons of studies that show, the power of this of really visualizing your day, seeing things as done, like you've actually accomplished it because you're rewiring your brain to, " Oh, I don't know if I can achieve this" to " It's actually been done" you can even write it down, which is really powerful And again, circling back to the gratitude and things that you're looking forward to, then it's into the shower. And depending on how brave I am at the beginning, it was literally putting the shower cold at the very end and sort of one hand or the other. But having some sort of cold shower if it's even for, a minute or longer as well, It's good for your hair.

It's good for your skin, but, if you're in your head with stress, cold water will definitely get you into your body and like focusing on the present moment, like nothing else. So that's really powerful as well. And so that's just a little morning practice that I have. And for, typically I'll get that sort of 90 to 98% of my days, I really notice the difference if I don't have that.

So that's just a little kind of sneak peek into that part of my morning routine. I think other big game changers is really taking sleep seriously. And not just seriously, but, getting that quality sleep and really tweaking things, making sure it's a dark room. I have light sensitivity, the blackout curtains that the temperature is also okay.

I'm a cozy person. I can have warm temperatures. I know now the importance of a colder room and that sort of sleep hygiene around that. And obviously it starts with. The evening routine as well. So the lack of blue lights, and there's so many things you can do, there's the F.Lux- F- dot- L- U- X free software.

You can download on your laptop to just change it to a warm light versus the blue lights. Avoiding screens, avoiding news television, things like this as well around bedtime. A long answer to a short question, but those are some of the things that really helped me set up the day to, to win obviously nutrition exercise I had been doing, but I made some alterations as well.

And maybe just one point on exercise. So my sort of a type personality was very much, I had to do an hour of spinning and then I did an hour of some sort of weight training. Two hours like over killing myself, cortisol, adrenals, maxed out, et cetera, and realizing that's not just the way you need to do things like you can do it in a softer way and your body will thank you as well.

So that was also a revelation that it wasn't just about push, push, but actually like to be a bit more calm and centered I had a daily meditation practice before, but it just took it to another level. And having that as a routine as well.

Claudia von Boeselager: So our mindset strategy, number four. Is around limiting beliefs and are limiting beliefs and fears holding you back. So we touched a little bit on this before, but it's really just to bring light to the awareness around limiting beliefs and how to face fears and how to reframe things.

How do face fears? If you think of fear this way as. What do you want? What you desire is at the other side of fear. So your ego is typically the fear that's holding you back. I dunno, maybe it's, you've started a new business and you have to cold call people. Like the fear of that, like how the shame, the embarrassment, like we build up all these scenarios in our heads, but like, how could you reframe that?

Be like, what the product or service that you're launching with your new. I am there to like really help these people who are struggling with the problem. So I'm actually, sales as a service, for example, right? So I'm really here to help the person and resolve their problem. How can you refr reframe something that you are fearing?

To do it in a different way. And whatever that fear may be understanding. Is it coming from a childhood limiting belief, like really dig into, sit with it, be like, why am I so fear, might be fear of flying or whatever. It may be public speaking.

Where is that fear coming from? And then, how can you reframe it in a way that, if you public speaking, for example, if to go up on stage, you've got this amazing invitation to speak in public. Maybe make it about serving the people who need to hear your message and not about yourself, of the shift that shift, that focus as well. Knowing that what's keeping you from being the best version of you are typically these limiting beliefs made up in your mind and childhood.

And that there are strategies like the reframing that will allow you to step into the new you step into the stronger, faster, better, whatever you wanna call it you.

Leighanne Champion: Yes.

Claudia von Boeselager: Really enjoy life at a whole nother level.

Leighanne Champion: Yes. I love that. That's so key. This is, I get all passionate around all this kind of topic because, I immediately go to, what are we thinking? And you, Claudia, have you ever heard that saying we are what we eat?

Claudia von Boeselager: Of course. Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: ...which is a depressing one. But it's reality is really, I think...

Claudia von Boeselager: yeah.

Leighanne Champion: but I think the reality is really much more if this makes anybody feel better. We are what we think.

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: And I just think it's so incredibly fascinating, just to reflect on all the negative emotions that we as humans share. The anger, the jealousy, the pride, the envy, frustration sadness. But they're all rooted. Where? And what we're thinking about, right?

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah. Yeah.

Leighanne Champion: And so to your point, so this awareness that you're speaking of is it's all about our thoughts. It's so crucial. It's the first step in taking responsibility for what we're choosing to think. We often believe it's all the things outside of us or the circumstances. Right?

In our lives that dictate our feelings and reactions. And this is a bitter truth pill to swallow, but it's always our thoughts. That we've chosen to think that are causing our emotional response. People don't really like to hear that one, but it's really true. And that this better than most Claudia neuroscientists have been able to demonstrate that every thought we have is sending signals.

Electrical signals throughout our brains affecting every cell in our bodies.

And it's affecting our sleep, our digestion, chemical makeup of our blood, right?

Claudia von Boeselager: Yeah. The fight or flight pattern as well. So you could be living in this high stress state where you assume that every horn that honks is someone like honking, whatever it may be because you're in this hugely stressed way.

Cuz you're interpreting it is that everyone is against you and the world is against you. And I have to survive this day versus like today is a gift. Like I get...

Leighanne Champion: Today is a gift.

Claudia von Boeselager: Shift that...

Leighanne Champion: could shift outta that. Exactly. And I just think it's important too, that people understand how many thoughts we actually have flying through our minds.

I think research is a little confused on this, that whatever you read is somewhere between 6,000 and 50,000 thoughts that we have a day. Which is a lot. And I laugh at the 6,000 cause I'm pretty sure I've already had 6,000 by breakfast, but I guess it just depends on our brains, but if we really think that through that's really either really good news or bad news. Because every thought we're having right, is either moving us towards or potential or away from it.

Yes. Every thought we have either is moving us. I believe towards our God given potential or away from it. There's this quote by Tommy Newberry, that kind of blew my mind when I heard it. I had to like what?

But he said. He wrote the secret conversations that you hold in the privacy of your own mind. Or shaping your destiny little by little.

It's what? So I think we really need to think about that one. And ask ourselves, where are we mentally shining our spotlight currently...

Claudia von Boeselager: ...so is that negative self talk or is it that being your best cheerleader and being like, okay, I've had a trip up today, but I got this, I can totally do this and who can I reach out to whatever to help me, like I am solution orientated. And I got this, like I can.

Leighanne Champion: And it's beautiful when we catch ourselves.
Isn't it? It feels great. You're like, oh, look at me, go down the rabbit hole.

Claudia von Boeselager: Exactly.

Leighanne Champion: No.

Claudia von Boeselager: I'm smarter than that.

Leighanne Champion: I am smarter.

Claudia von Boeselager: I love it.

Leighanne Champion: No, but I always say, turn your spotlight on your future self. I encourage people to consider. Their future self in five to 10 years from now. Who have you become?

What have you created get excited about that?

Leighanne Champion: I don't know. We will have to have another conversation sometime around the future self. I love to take my clients on a journey of letter writing to, as to what their future self would say to them right now to give them.

Claudia von Boeselager: Can you expand a bit on that? Just for my audience's. I love the idea of that.

Leighanne Champion: Yes. It's this idea that our future self has the wisdom. So it's actually saying we actually, if we can listen long enough to our future self, they're going to give us the advice that we know intuitively already, but we haven't quite accessed.

So if you take the time, as you say, put pen to paper, And think of yourself 10 years from now and I'm think dearly am. I know that you will have achieved this dream. You have, you've been working hard and da, and now you're at a place where, and you get such marvelous advice. When you think of yourself.

In a future place. It's really a lot of fun.

Claudia von Boeselager: I really love that. And also, just what immediate comes up is so many things then get put into perspective and things that you think are like a big deal or a big decision you realize like in 10 years time, I'm gonna look back at will I even remember this as well?

Leighanne Champion: Huh. So good.

Claudia von Boeselager: So I have what some people call like the rocking chair test, right? So like when I'm 95, looking back, am I gonna be like, proud that I. Stepped out of my comfort zone and did this, or am I gonna look back and be like, oh, I missed opportunity. And so I wanna be doing the things where I'm like, oh cool.
I did that. And oh yeah, I was brave enough to do that. And, oh my gosh, that was super uncomfortable, but I did it and I loved it. And that was amazing as well.
Leighanne Champion: You loved it.

Claudia von Boeselager: I've had a few those experiences in my life and each and every one of them have just confirmed the more discomfort it was to actually go and do it the bigger, the upside, if you will.

Leighanne Champion: Exactly. And isn't it interesting too. It's something that we are tapping back into that. We were so good at as children, but when we're writing from our future sales, we're, we're using our imaginations again. And we're also our intuition.

And our we're being our best encouragers. It's fascinating. We're employing a lot of different things that are very helpful to us.

Claudia von Boeselager: I love that.

Leighanne Champion: Bringing imagination back.

Claudia: I'd love to hear your opinion on the keto diet and what your members are also seeing. Obviously from blood glucose spiking level, that should not be the case, but are there different effects? What are you seeing around your members with who are on the keto diet?

Maziar Brumand: I think keto diet could be different for different people, especially research has shown that women respond to keto diets different than men. So I think there are modified keto diets that accounts for some of this, I think in certain phase cycle, you may need more carbohydrate for second women.

So I think it's important to take the context into a consideration for keto diet. So it may work really, well for some people and not so well for others. So I think just knowing that again, there's no one size fits all is really important. Or the people that it does work for it could be quite powerful.

I've experimented with it for a while. And I find that a, I don't need as much sleep So my body's a lot more tune to being able to deal with less sleep. My energy zone are a lot higher. I find that I don't have crashes or that hangry feeling that we all get when we're really hungry.

And we don't eat for a while. Like I don't get that anymore. The head nods are completely gone cause you don't have these rollercoaster of energy changes. So typically keto diet, what it does, it changes your field source from glucose to fat And so what that does is if you think about we all carry around a hundred to 200,000 calories worth of fat, even if we're slim, right?

So you take somebody that let's say is 150 pounds while it's just like an average person, right? Average, slim person. And you say that their body fat levels are 10 to 15%. So they're carrying anywhere 10 to 20 pounds fat. And so each pounds of fat is about 4,000 calories. So a slim person is carrying something like 60,000 to 80,000 calories in fat.

And then you can go up from there. Some people maybe carry 200,000, so there's no shortage of energy in our body. It's just your body knowing how to use it. And so when you switch to a Ketogenic diet, your body learns to use fatso fuel source directly instead of glucose as a energy source And because of that, you have this constant energy resource that's available, that's decoupled from eating.

And so what that does, obviously you're burning that fat. And then when you eat it, you obviously replenish it, but you have a very stable energy source where you don't do this, which means that your energy's constant, you don't have these moments of hungry. And it also helps with sleep. I think for the people that works, it works and there are many types of ketogenic diets.

There is the really strict one that keeps the carbohydrates to really, low levels and is very hard to maintain And there is a modified version where you try to avoid added sugars, but you could have starches complex carbs as part of your meal, and also as part of a mixed meal. And if you build an exercise where you're consuming that carbohydrates as well, it creates a balance where you can actually have the best of both worlds, where you can have that stable energy of Ketogenic diet, but not have to be so strict so that you can't maintain.

And so I think. Thing that's constant to diet is do the thing that you can do for a long time. And you're not just cycling in and out because the cycling in and out inevitably leads to ups and downs and people being in their in it for month, but killing themselves and then out of it for nine months, because they're just trying to recover from that.

Claudia: And then they have the spike in the wrong direction.

Maziar Brumand: Exactly, so I think you, genetic, I think then the, none of it, at least From my perspective it's different for different people. And then do the thing that you can sustain. Because you don't sustain it, then you're just gonna go through the rollercoaster and it's just gonna leave you helpless.

Claudia: I think that's a really valid point and I think also because it's such a high fat diet that if you have too many carbohydrates or even too much protein, I think people don't realize that as well, that you're just, you're not in ketosis and you're just consuming a lot of fat as well. So it's almost bind elect the, very strict one as well, but I think, yeah, if you can find that, balance and for different people to try different things also.

Claudia von Boeselager: So I'd love to kick off just digging into female aging, fertility and reproductive aging specifically. Can you expand a little bit why this is your area of specialty and what is it that women need to know about this area?
Absolutely. That's quite a, that's quite a quote to kick off with. To be clear, that's not my work.

That is the results of several studies that we're looking at correlations between reproductive span, so that's the age at which woman goes through menopause and for overall lifespan. Now I would say that those are average numbers and so I always wanna back that up by, by telling women that, even if you go through an early menopause, that doesn't necessarily mean that you're doomed to live a short life.

Jennifer Garrison: In general, female reproductive biology is really incredibly distinct and stochastic and variable the level of the individual. So what we're talking about here are averages just to of course, just to be clear. I work on, I am a neuroscientist, but I work on understanding how the brain communicates with the rest of the body and how that changes during aging.

And that led us to reproductive aging. Thinking about how the brain talks to ovaries and the uterus and other reproductive organs. And the reason I. I find this area of science so compelling is because we don't know that much about it. So this is an area of biology that has really been long neglected.

And if you don't know anything about ovaries and to be honest, I didn't know that much about ovarian function until. Five ish years ago. Even though I happen to own a pair , if you don't know that much about ovaries, they're fascinating.
Claudia von Boeselager: Share with the audience why they're so important above and beyond just pure reproduction if you

Jennifer Garrison: Yeah...

There's so much to understand about them. The first thing to know is that they're incredibly complex, right? Unlike any other organ in the body, they go through this like dramatic dynamic remodeling every single month. During adulthood, every single cycle that a woman goes through, there's this huge macroscopic dynamic remodeling of the tissue that happens.

And so they're incredibly dynamic but they're also the first system in the body to age. There's, there.

A misconception, I think that that women somehow have the ability to rejuvenate their ovaries or extend their fertility by preserving eggs, by taking reproductive hormonal birth control. And that's just not true. So women are born with all the eggs they're ever gonna have. , somewhere around 26 weeks of gestation.

A female human has about six or 7 million eggs in her ovaries. . By the time she's born, that number drops to about a million by the time she goes through puberty. That number is somewhere between 3 and 400,000. And then once she starts cycling every single month that she ovulates she's going to lose about a thousand eggs every single month.

And so those numbers drop and it's not just the numbers, but also the quality of the eggs changes and goes down with age during adulthood until somewhere in her forties or fifties. She will essentially run out of eggs and her ovaries will stop working. And she will go through a menopause. And menopause is a funny thing. It's a single day. We often, when we're talking about menopausal symptoms, we're talking about either perimenopause, so before menopause or postmenopause after menopause. Menopause itself is just the day on which a woman has not been, has not had a period for 12 months

So it's just a single day and time. Ovaries are doing a lot of things for, that are important for health. I think most women are pretty familiar with the consequences of ovarian aging on fertility. Not as many women are familiar with the consequences of ovarian aging on overall health.

So ovaries are also secreting a whole cocktail of different chemicals and hormones that are important for general health.

Claudia von Boeselager: Why would you say Airofit was originally developed, and can you talk a little bit about what the Airofit device can do and for those people watching? So I have, I've been able to, I've had the pleasure of testing it and honestly, after even just a few sessions, I noticed a huge difference. If I went for a run, it was almost effortless.

Whereas before, I'd have breathing issues and I've actually retrained the ability for my belly, if you will, to actually move while I breathe instead of my lovely upper shoulders movements that weren't very effective before. So yeah. Can you share a little bit for us? Yeah...

Mike Bennet: Gladly. So our device was actually founded by a Danish company called Amble, which is a health tech company and they developed it to help with COPD and other pulmonary issues.

But our CEO, Christian, he actually found this device and wanted to practice it, our user to help practice singing. So he was a classical singer, filling audiences and filling the whole holes with his voice. Wow. And he wanted to pursue this a wee bit more and more air coming in, bigger lung capacity, you can sing notes bigger, longer.

Wow. And the device itself was very big and it required Christian to be there while training them, so not a very practical device. And alongside this, his sons were very competitive swimmers and went to the Nordic Sewing Championships. And the eldest actually went with the hope of qualifying for one final.

And after training with Airofit for just three not Airofit as we know and love today, but the original device. He came back with seven gold medals. Wow. And on the back end of that, actually obtained a scholarship to a university in America. So full ride scholarship just from breathing through essentially what was in the original Airofit Uhhuh and Christian being the ambitious man he is, started investing all of his money, all of his friends money and developing the device smaller. But one thing he noticed is he still had to be there to explain how to use the device. Hence, we now have an application which will actually guide you through all of these exercises.

So it went from a small idea and just grew in his head and yeah, being ambitious and wanting to change the world, he actually set off on that adventure, and I believe he has done.

Claudia von Boeselager: Completely. What an roi, I think for all parents out there listening and ambitions, sport ambitions for their children.

And I think the beauty of it is that you're not adding any chemicals, you're not doing anything unnatural. You're just training what's naturally there and just improving it and improving the oxygenation and excelling of carbon dioxide as well. So really phenomenal.

Yeah. Exactly. And for people wondering what is the cadence, what is the frequency you recommend for using it?

Depending on what, I guess the use case is, right? But is this like a daily device or is it, a few times a week? What would you typically recommend?

Mike Bennet: We generally recommend to begin with every day. So it's only a five to 10 minute exercise. So that's the really cool thing about our device that actually gives you your daily recommendation. So within the app it'll tell you what you're doing. Five to 10 minutes a day, and then after a six week period you kind of plate wee it . So either you can increase the duration or you can just decrease the frequency. So I, for one, I train. At the moment, I've become a wee bit Slack and I only train about five days.

Claudia von Boeselager: A. Okay.

Mike Bennet: But I've maintained my level. And then when I do my lung test, if I notice a decrease, I just jump back onto seven days. So our recommendation is seven days a week, but it's only five to 10 minutes.

There was a lady I was talking to in London and she uses it every day watching Coronation Street. So in the ad break, she'll just use the Airofit instead of gonna go make a cup of tea or instead of gonna go reach more cookies. She does something for her health and she was adamant the Coronation Street saved her life but I think it may have been us, but ...

Claudia von Boeselager: That's a great idea as well. Exactly. Some or even people watching Netflix or something like that. Its a great time. Exactly. Just sitting there. Yeah. What are some of the learnings or insights that the Airofit clients that you work with have found the most valuable?

Mike Bennet: That they can change their breathing no matter how old they are . So in five 50 minutes, they actually see massive benefits. And no matter your starting point, you can always increase something. So whether that is the inhalation or installation strength or the accessible lung capacity, the ability to open your lungs.
Everybody can get something out of training their breathwork because everybody breathes. So if I can, better at it. Yeah.

Claudia von Boeselager: So that's really helpful. Yeah. And let's talk about the respiratory muscle training, right? So you were saying that it's beneficial not only for athletes. How long would you say it takes also to start noticing?
Would you a difference basically for breath.

Mike Bennet: As you mentioned, with your own training, you have seen results very rapidly.

Claudia von Boeselager: Good time. Yeah.

Mike Bennet: Yeah. We had a study from a university in England that used a six week intervention with the Airofit, and they found on an average 30% increase in the thickness of their diaphragm.

So their main 30%, and that's just because it is such an undertrained muscle. You wouldn't see the... so if you train for another eight weeks or six weeks, you wouldn't see that 30% increase. But if you can train your biceps or quads and get 30% bigger in six weeks, that's phenomenal

Claudia von Boeselager: And this is men and women. It's the same.

Mike Bennet: Yeah.

Claudia von Boeselager: Okay. Wow.





I’m Claudia von Boeselager

Longevity Coach, detail-loving educator, big-thinking entrepreneur, podcaster, mama, passionate adventurer, and health optimization activist here to help people transform their lives, and reach their highest potential! All rolled into one.

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