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MAFIA MOMENTS: Why Humans Overeat with Dr. Ken Berry

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Manage episode 422373402 series 3360802
Content provided by The Meat Mafia. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Meat Mafia or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode of our Mafia Moments series, we are going back to our original episode with Dr. Ken Berry from episode 22. In this episode we discussed Dr. Berry's nutritional philosophy and dove into the science behind what the proper human diet should look like. As you'll hear in this clip, Ken talks about the nature of our biology and how we're not designed to overeat. Here's a summary:

  • Most mammals, unless exposed to processed human food, naturally regulate their hunger and eating based on hormonal signals. They eat when hungry and stop when full.
  • Big food corporations employ tactics to break human physiology and override natural hunger/satiety signals, leading to overeating and obesity. Humans are the only mammals that routinely overeat.
  • Eating a proper human diet of whole, unprocessed foods allows the body's natural regulatory systems to function normally again after a transition period. Hunger and satiety signals will normalize.
  • Ken recommends a low-carb whole foods diet with under 100g of carbs per day as a good starting point. The optimal level of carb restriction varies by individual.
  • Self-experimentation is encouraged to find the optimal diet. Eating more whole foods and fewer processed carbs will lead to improved health for most.
  • After adapting to a clean diet, occasional junk food indulgences will lead to noticeable negative effects, discouraging frequent "cheats."
  • The deliciousness of unhealthy foods is not worth the long-term health consequences, similar to how the euphoria of drugs like crack is not worth the outcome of addiction.
  continue reading

365 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 422373402 series 3360802
Content provided by The Meat Mafia. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by The Meat Mafia or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

In this episode of our Mafia Moments series, we are going back to our original episode with Dr. Ken Berry from episode 22. In this episode we discussed Dr. Berry's nutritional philosophy and dove into the science behind what the proper human diet should look like. As you'll hear in this clip, Ken talks about the nature of our biology and how we're not designed to overeat. Here's a summary:

  • Most mammals, unless exposed to processed human food, naturally regulate their hunger and eating based on hormonal signals. They eat when hungry and stop when full.
  • Big food corporations employ tactics to break human physiology and override natural hunger/satiety signals, leading to overeating and obesity. Humans are the only mammals that routinely overeat.
  • Eating a proper human diet of whole, unprocessed foods allows the body's natural regulatory systems to function normally again after a transition period. Hunger and satiety signals will normalize.
  • Ken recommends a low-carb whole foods diet with under 100g of carbs per day as a good starting point. The optimal level of carb restriction varies by individual.
  • Self-experimentation is encouraged to find the optimal diet. Eating more whole foods and fewer processed carbs will lead to improved health for most.
  • After adapting to a clean diet, occasional junk food indulgences will lead to noticeable negative effects, discouraging frequent "cheats."
  • The deliciousness of unhealthy foods is not worth the long-term health consequences, similar to how the euphoria of drugs like crack is not worth the outcome of addiction.
  continue reading

365 episodes

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