Timestamps: 0:00 The Unaging System 34:03 Fasting Fallacy 58:35 Skin Aging Check out Crissman Loomis' website: UnAging.com
@susymay78312 ай бұрын
Please keep time-stamping your nice videos ❤
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Thanks@@susymay7831 , and always! If I miss posting them, please let me know!
@Heaven-0808Ай бұрын
Thank you for the insightful podcast. It was fascinating to hear various perspectives at the same challenge -how to effectively slow down the aging process.
@conqueragingordietrying123Ай бұрын
Thanks @Heaven-0808. Criss and I are scheduled for another podcast iin November, stay tuned!
@hvglaser2 ай бұрын
I really appreciate the rigor and non-sensational approach that you are promoting on this channel. Keep up the good work.
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Thanks @hvglaser!
@bestdoom12362 ай бұрын
Time-restricted feeding works for me to restrict calories and reduce insulin. I do enough resistance training (two 60-min intense sessions per week) and eat enough protein (1.2 grams/kilo) and that has allowed me to keep lean muscle while reducing weight. My fasting insulin decreased from 15 to ~3-6.
@rwh41142 ай бұрын
Bryan Johnson doesn't use CeraVe anymore, due to concerns about constituents. He uses EltaMd, much more expensive.
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
interesting, thanks-what's the pH of EltaMd?
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
I think it is unlikely to be a significant difference. I'm happy with my discount CeraVe
@allehelgen2 ай бұрын
You actually look younger in this video than in some previous ones. Skin looks smooth!
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
I think Criss had a filter on, that could be it, though I don't use filters on my videos, in contrast...
@allehelgen2 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123 Keep on doing what you do, regarding skin care. It obviously works. Have you tried growing a 3-day beard ?
@ChessMasterNate2 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123 That upper eye thing does not look bad at all. I always liked that feature. People have that at all ages. I always associated it with intelligence (except on the Pakleds). The presence/depth of smile lines is an age thing (and/or smoking, or drinking or extreme cardio like racing cyclists). And neck stuff. But your neck looks fine. Mine, however... My smile lines are very subtle. Did not have any before COVID (I am 55). I think a few things conspired to do that. Tight N95 masks, mistakes with taking too much niacinamide, weight loss (62 lb of fat), working outdoors in San Diego, sometimes without a hat, and I have light skin. And living my whole life here. Actually, I live inland a bit and it is nearly always sunny. The neck, though...mostly weight loss, I suspect. I also have scowl marks on my forehead. You look pretty youthful there. Too much hard pondering playing chess for me. I am considering surgery on my neck. I really don't like the look. Sounds like an admission of failure, though. Maybe it can recover. Annoyingly, I still have more weight to lose. So I plan to do that first and then reassess. It has been going very slowly, though. Every time I have tried to get below a weight, my thyroid hormone crashes. That has happened 4 times. But maybe this time I can get through it. I am now under that weight again, and I don't feel lethargic and cold. Maybe my body just needed a 7-month pause, after losing 60 pounds.
@bestdoom12362 ай бұрын
Time-restricted feeding by itself may not be sufficient to reduce calories given over-compensation. But combined with a whole-foods, plant-dominant diet, without processed foods or refined carbs, and high consumption of vegetables and fruits, helps increase satiety, in my personal n=1 experience. I am now satisfied on 2,000 calories whereas before I needed 2,300, and believe that TRE has played a part in helping me control cravings and food choices.
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Same, I agree 100%
@georgesamaras2922Ай бұрын
what is tre ?
@N-Unekistam2 ай бұрын
The easiest way to benefit from the effect of retinols on the skin is to eat tomatoes and carrots every day.
@Icarianbrother2 ай бұрын
The Cooper 1.5 mile Run Test estimates VO2 max. The test can be done at home on a treadmill. If you want to get better at a test that estimates VO2 max, practice doing the test. If a person runs 1.5 miles, three times a week, their test results will improve.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
Not a bad idea as an initial and final assessment. Some people preferred other exercises to running, though, like biking or elliptical.
@shonufftheshogun2 ай бұрын
I love kettlebells for their simplicity versatility and sustainability. You can up your volume with the same weight to progress.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
Some of the testers for the Unaging System are using kettlebells!
@shonufftheshogun2 ай бұрын
@@CrissmanLoomis Thats awesome! Only downside is no heavy dead lift for bone health. From a time efficiency perspective, you can get 150 swings, 55 goblet squats, and 55 pushups in 20 mins at home. A big win for most people.
@N-Unekistam2 ай бұрын
It is not about having many meals. The thing is to have a low, but not to low, blood sugar level 24/7.
@DavidRodriguez-er4rq2 ай бұрын
Great to know that red blood cells have no mitochondria so they need glucose, not ketones, lmade by the liver from muscle mass. That's why long fasting loses muscle.
@hereforthememes235119 күн бұрын
'Junk Load van Dam' 👀😜
@LVArturs2 ай бұрын
What are the ratios for active effort and recovery? As in how much of the high intensity cardio is sprinting vs jogging? And how much of the strength training is doing the reps vs preparing for the next exercise (circuit variant notwithstanding)?
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
All great questions-imo there isn't a 1-size-fits-all, the prescription should be individualized. I use HRV and RHR to help with that.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
For HIIT, initially 1 active : 4 recovery, increasing to 2 : 3. High intensity is maximum effort dash, no jogging. Recovery is jogging or other light cardio.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
Strength training time is the full time on the gym floor, including resting between sets and racking weights, etc. I rest a minute between sets.
@LVArturs2 ай бұрын
@@CrissmanLoomis thank you, good to know.
@deliveroobandit2 ай бұрын
So what is the skin soap or cleanser that you use or suggest? ( Can you help me to pick one as an European guy? :D is there any natural cleanser that works ?)
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
This is what I use, which has a pH of 4.5 www.amazon.com/Natures-Plus-Natural-Beauty-Cleansing/dp/B00014EKJC It's hard to get these days, though, I might have to get a new brand...
@deliveroobandit2 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123thank you for your fast response! I love you! :D
@arihaviv85102 ай бұрын
Cerave is fine...none of the ingredients in a cleanser will be on the skin long enough before rinsing to make a difference. The real magic comes from the retinoid and moisturizer you leave on afterwards
@scottk15252 ай бұрын
Just some constructive criticism. You might want to redesign your thumbnails. They're kind of chaotic and not very appealing. You would probably get more views if they were a little more aesthetic. Appreciate the content. Cheers!
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Yep, thanks @scottk1525. The longevity subreddit overwhelmingly agrees, so I might change it at some point. But, I kinda like the bare-bones approach, so I'm torn.
@LVArturs2 ай бұрын
@@scottk1525 nah, current style is good. It stands out in the feed among the generic overproduced thumbnails, it's more informative than most, less sensational.
@allehelgen2 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123 It makes your videos stand out, keep it that way I'd say. More appealing is not that much correlated with success or views.
@scottk15252 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123 Minimalism can be great. It's more just that the current thumbnail looks a little bit cluttered, uncoordinated, and slap-dash. Anyway, don't want to put too fine a point on it. The content is what matters and it's solid. Keep up the good work!
@AndrewOudin2 ай бұрын
I'm in favor of your current thumbnail style, including this one.
@MichaelAllenSmith2 ай бұрын
I see the podcast is on Spotify. Do you have any plans to add it to Apple Podcasts?
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Yep, but I'm slow with these things-one step at a time!
@hvglaser2 ай бұрын
Does the patterns of fasting / time restriction? Is there a benefit to being somewhat irregular and doing spontaneous fasts once in a while, for some optimal “good stress”?
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Using objective biomarker tracking is the best way to answer those questions-I wouldn't go solely based on feel.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
I'm going to continue doing a two- or three-day fast, probably monthly or so, to keep my body "ketosis-ready." I think there's a benefit to that, although I doubt you could see it in the objective biomarkers.
@belsha2 ай бұрын
@@CrissmanLoomisThat’s good to know. I’ve been doing a three day fast (84 hours) every two months since 2 years, and started to doubt listening to you. So is that still ok?
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
@@belsha Good habit 👍 Done every two months, immaterial calorie compression, and possible autophagy, ketosis benefits. Carry on
@arihaviv85102 ай бұрын
6:09 but we see the average and max bpm are lower on the right so they figured out to not go full max effort in order to recover faster?
@robertoisripped74552 ай бұрын
Thoughts on the fasting mimicking diet by Dr Valter Longo
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
If it improves biomarkers over the long term, go for it. But, I've seen anecdotal cases where that wasn't the case on 5:2
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
Consistent with the other fasting approaches, studies have not been able to show any benefit beyond weight loss. (Although, since fasting-mimicking is low-calorie, not zero, it will preserve more muscle.) If you are looking to lose weight, FMD is a reasonable approach.
@pierrejeanes2 ай бұрын
Fallacy sir ? Fallacy? C'mon , says who? The pharmaceutical industry? 😅😅 Yeah yeah
@whatthefunction91402 ай бұрын
Have you done a video on hydrogen water generators?
@factbasedcomradeАй бұрын
Cer Raaav? and Coola Gan?
@ChessMasterNate2 ай бұрын
I think the big data is suspect in this instance. I strongly suspect that this data was gathered before restricted time eating was a thing. The people skipping meals were probably mostly skipping them to make it easier on their work schedule or sleep schedule. And those evening meal skippers were probably night shift. And we know night shift work is bad for health. Those skipping breakfast probably have to get to work earlier, and have no one to make them breakfast, so they would rather have those 10-20 minutes of sleep. Those skipping lunch did not have time to make a sack lunch and there is not enough time to eat out, or they don't have the money to waste. I think this is one case where we need to track people who skip a meal for dietary/health reasons not convenience, or necessity.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
This study covered the NHANES years 1999-2014, predating most TRF studies. In any case, income, education, and physical activity levels were controlled for in the study, which should catch general work stress. Lunch was the most commonly skipped meal, and all meals had the same effect, so I doubt there's a different cause, like work schedules.
@ChessMasterNate2 ай бұрын
@@CrissmanLoomis Can't see how any of those corrections would address my concerns. And as I said, they likely chose to skip a meal for convenience rather than health. That also may mean they are not prioritizing their health. There were not a whole lot of health influencers suggesting doing this. If they did not correct for living alone, that in itself, would cast doubt on the result. Sex likely also matters, as I suspect women are less likely to skip meals. They are also more likely to "graze." There was encouragement of that approach years ago.
@cgprelude2 ай бұрын
How much do you weigh now?
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
140-141lbs
@cgprelude2 ай бұрын
@@conqueragingordietrying123 Yeah so in college at my peak weight i 170lbs (overeating, lifting every other day, taking protein, etc), fast forward to today at the age of 40 and I'm 140lbs. I try to do everything to be healthy (eat right, lift, yoga, etc) and I keep getting told I'm underweight which isn't healthy. When I try to eat more to gain weight I just feel floated. I would love to pack on another 10 lbs but it seems impossible. Just getting tired of people who haven't seen me in a like 6 years telling me how skinny I am now. I was doing the whole no breakfast once a week and no eating all day once a month fasting thing but recently cut that out after hearing Rhona speak on it... down that same thought I started adding in protein powder to my breakfast. Maybe it takes more time but I have not fasted in 2 months and have a pre-workout protein shake before morning gym sessions along with protein added to breakfast and I have not added a single pound of weight. Sort of a long rant but glad I see there's others in this weight class :).
@johnconcannon38442 ай бұрын
A percentage of people that strength train multiple hours per week take PEDs, which shorten longevity. I wonder could this skew strength longevity study results if not accounted for. Fasting studies have issues also especially regard protein fat carb ratios and adequate micro nutrients during the feeding window.
@conqueragingordietrying1232 ай бұрын
Yep, there are definitely confounders that could impact studies.
@CrissmanLoomis2 ай бұрын
This occurred to me, too, but a key study showing 60 minutes weekly is optimal was looking at 60-year-old women. I doubt high PED usage in that demographic.