No.1 Harvard Doctor: The Shocking Link Between Your Diet ADHD & Autism!

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  • Опубликовано: 20 сен 2024

Комментарии • 4,5 тыс.

  • @TheDiaryOfACEO
    @TheDiaryOfACEO  7 месяцев назад +844

    If you enjoyed this episode please do us a favour and give it a like 👍🏾helps us massively and determine what you guys want in future episodes

    • @TraderAwaisx
      @TraderAwaisx 7 месяцев назад +23

      Thank you❤

    • @Xmyhearts
      @Xmyhearts 7 месяцев назад +91

      I would love for you not to imply to the whole world that autism is bad. I don't watch other things on RUclips except your podcast and it has given me so much. However, this tag line notification has really upset me this morning. I have 5 amazing, beautiful and intelligent autistic/ AuDHD children. I've also never been obese. Yes it is challenging because they don't fit into society's square hole. They're already fighting every day just to be accepted, without being made to feel like a disease that we need to get rid of. Fuck it let's just get Dustin Hoffman back for a remake of rain man.

    • @csharpe5787
      @csharpe5787 7 месяцев назад +22

      @@Xmyhearts I agree with you I have two autistic children both adopted their parents weren’t overweight. I think it’s quite common for autistic people not to get the sport they need and struggle with life and raising children

    • @Xmyhearts
      @Xmyhearts 7 месяцев назад +17

      @@csharpe5787 bless you for having such an open heart and mind. Those children are lucky to have you. I'm not disagreeing that there are many evils in this world that are poisonous to us. I just cannot abide this disgusting link to Autism. If more people took the time to speak to autistic individuals, never mind actually spending legitimate time with them, it would make them better people. It's so disheartening when you see huge voices that could really make a change, choose instead to set us back to the dark ages.

    • @RemyNas24
      @RemyNas24 7 месяцев назад +14

      GREAT INTERVIEW

  • @reneecaines9097
    @reneecaines9097 5 месяцев назад +1043

    I did genetic testing last year after numerous health challenges that couldn't be helped. I found out that I have 15 problematic genetic mutations. I am unable to breakdown most vitamins into a bioavailable form. The biggest problem with that is that my body can't make glutathione- the master antioxidant of the body. When I researched glutathione interestingly enough several write ups connected Autism and glutathione. I believe the study said they commonly find little to no glutathione in Autistic patients. I don't believe that I have Autism, but my child does. I also found out I don't make or use dopamine or serotonin correctly. I do have a history of mild depression, a high ACE score, and several autoimmune issues. I take specific formulated vitamins and injections now. I need an abnormal amount of magnesium to manage my nervous system. People need to be more kind as we don't know how everyone is wired. More grace, less hate. ❤

    • @allisonlew4508
      @allisonlew4508 4 месяца назад +64

      What testing company & what tests did you take?

    • @sayusayme7729
      @sayusayme7729 4 месяца назад +9

      Wow, yes. Thank you

    • @reesecup6915
      @reesecup6915 4 месяца назад +22

      Love this post and after researching my own genes, I have discovered so much of the same issues you have. I also have a whole different perspective about people! For years I had medical health issues that I was told was all in my head. My son also has autism and I have leaned so much about him as well.

    • @reneecaines9097
      @reneecaines9097 4 месяца назад

      ​@@allisonlew4508I did my DNA through 23nme, then took my DNA report to a Naturopath. The Naturopath used a genetics company called PureGenomics.

    • @eightbitw0rld
      @eightbitw0rld 4 месяца назад +6

      I’d like to know also

  • @henrikinaski7188
    @henrikinaski7188 5 месяцев назад +127

    I love how Steven conducts the interview. He asks very practical questions, he does not interrupt the guest while he is speaking, he behaves like a normal human being when he is not sure about something, and most importantly, he lets the guest speak and explain everything. Great values.

  • @claudiafrers8923
    @claudiafrers8923 6 месяцев назад +927

    I was put on an elimination diet in 1976. I did it for 2 months before we called it ADHD. I have never believed in the chemical imbalance argument. I was diagnosed with ADHD in 2006. I am quite neuro divergent but like my ADHD. I am 68 today. I dropped all drugs, tobacco and alcohol in my teens which was hard. I sleep 9-10 hours. I follow a keto diet and switch often to a mediterean diet. I train with weights and have improved my muscle mass with resistence training 4 days a week. I weigh the same and look better than when I was 20. I was considered not smart enough for higher education and my grades were inconsistent. So, to prove everyone different, I taught myself danish in 6 month and got my Masters in danish in Computer Science. I ran a consultancy and taught internationally. Never use a diagnosis as an excuse for not trying. This doctor is saying that I made the right choices. I know that we have had the solution years before we understood the problem and much discipline and character will reward your efforts in the end. I was also helped a lot by hypnotherapy.

    • @AgathaJaneID
      @AgathaJaneID 6 месяцев назад +1

      Did you go to a hypnotherapist?

    • @timsteinkamp2245
      @timsteinkamp2245 6 месяцев назад +13

      Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, you said nothing about your hyperactivity. Your comment does look like attention deficit. I'm glad you are doing good.

    • @claudiafrers8923
      @claudiafrers8923 6 месяцев назад

      @@timsteinkamp2245 Hi Tim. Thx. On that very extreme diet, my hyperactivity vanished. It felt very uncomfortable because my personality radically changed. In today’s world, avoiding processed foods is unrealistic. I buy canned tomatoes and stored bought mayo but never junk food and energy drinks. I hyperfixate, get the occasional hypomania but it is all very manageable. I also check my diet, sleep patterns and exercise habits and adjust from there. It is hard work that has really paid off.

    • @claudiafrers8923
      @claudiafrers8923 6 месяцев назад +20

      @@AgathaJaneID I took a 6 month course in hypnothrapy and nlp. As students, we treated each other. It was a very valuable investment. Before that, I did go to a psychologist/hypnotherapist. Anyone can start with a book from the library, some you tube and an open mind to learn self hypnosis as a stress reliever. Not how I make a living ;-)

    • @jefdby
      @jefdby 6 месяцев назад +1

      How did the elimination diet help you?
      Thank you for your share!!!❤

  • @lmg88.80
    @lmg88.80 12 дней назад +17

    This doctor is so compassionate, thought provoking and ground breaking that he needs more publicity. He is so on point and needs to come back on your show again! I love this episode.

  • @yeimmiperez8380
    @yeimmiperez8380 6 месяцев назад +1201

    My son was diagnosed with Asperger, ADHD, anxiety, depression, and something else that I don’t remember what it was. I trashed all the written diagnoses & started my own journey in helping my son improving the quality of his life.
    We did so many things consistently, from removing gluten from our meals for almost one year to removing all chemicals from my home, my son is now 16, he doesn’t take any medication anymore & he lives a normal life. A little bit on the introverted side but as healthy & happy as he can be. 🙌🏼
    There is hope, people.

    • @SuperLuckao
      @SuperLuckao 6 месяцев назад +39

      I did that too except mine eats junk with friends and she's addicted to energy drink. I see the difference in her behaviour when she refuses my healthy food. I go to great trouble to make it as nutritious as possible and she glows but then eats junk with friends. Including soda. She's 23 so it's hard to actually get her to understand importance of dietbecause of her need to fit in with peers.

    • @kays3956
      @kays3956 6 месяцев назад +29

      That is a lot of work. Congratulations on that inspiring parenting!

    • @plantstho6599
      @plantstho6599 6 месяцев назад +29

      Taurine and berberine helped with my brain inflammation from ASD.

    • @klszwarc
      @klszwarc 6 месяцев назад +30

      Is he gluten intolerant? This obsession with gluten is getting ridiculous.

    • @plantstho6599
      @plantstho6599 6 месяцев назад +60

      @@klszwarc gluten causes neuroinflammation, regardless of being intolerant or not.

  • @Divinefapper
    @Divinefapper 7 месяцев назад +1556

    I saw Chris Palmers visit on Huberman lab a year ago, and hopped on the ketogenic diet as a last ditch effort to cure my numerous mental health issues and physical issues - and if this wasn't going to work, I was ready to kill myself. And it worked. Adhd, aspergers, arthritis, parasomnias, daily panic attacks, depression, general anxiety, psychotic episodes, misophonia, skin picking.. Everything in remission. I mean, I still have ADHD and aspergers, but they are in way better control than they have ever been. I never knew my brain could function this properly. The clarity. No longer constant negative thoughts. Just a clear mind. This man literally saved my life.

    • @GrowingThroughItAll
      @GrowingThroughItAll 7 месяцев назад +88

      I’m so glad you are still here ♥️ your story will no doubt help someone else

    • @ljragsandfeathers
      @ljragsandfeathers 7 месяцев назад +20

    • @rufuspub
      @rufuspub 7 месяцев назад +68

      Same for me and did not take much time for the reversal. Adding daily fast walks and some basic calisthenics also help. Getting 10+K steps a day has become a new obsession of mine.

    • @Divinefapper
      @Divinefapper 7 месяцев назад +40

      @@rufuspub Good for you! I exercised rigorously prior to my diet change and was obsessed about diet in hopes of finding a cure, so this wasn't a big step for me.
      But thanks to my prior nutritional knowledge and now my improved mitochondrial health and insulin sensitivity; I had big muscles prior to this, but now I'm jacked without any effort. At worst I weighted 106 KG, and now I'm down to 85kg with visible 8 pack. Feels good man!

    • @charleyarchuleta4932
      @charleyarchuleta4932 7 месяцев назад +61

      Gut bacteria and gut health is brain health.

  • @Natalia-fr5pd
    @Natalia-fr5pd Месяц назад +121

    I am medical doctor myself. Diagnosed with depression 8 years ago. But I have had symptoms for 17years. I talked to doctors many times, I asked questions about taking vitamins (should I take it?) And they answered that there is no need to take vitamins to treat depression. Only vitamin D3.I graduated and started research by myself. After 2months of dietary treatment,supplements and vitamins my depression IS GONE,alltogether with PMDD and so on. I am disappointed for all those years and I trusted others more than myself and I did not know that they did not now how to help me as well! I lost mamy chances, I almost lost my son's love, I was on the edge, I was about to end it all... Dietary changes,sport, vitamins, gut health, dopamine and sleep is everything. Sometimes You need to take prescribed drugs but not as the only solution!

    • @susanlodgerelaxations5269
      @susanlodgerelaxations5269 Месяц назад +6

      Could you share vits u used?

    • @Natalia-fr5pd
      @Natalia-fr5pd Месяц назад

      @@susanlodgerelaxations5269 i took the whole bucket of pills. 😉 For my neurological problems-for sure D3, b-complex (b12, folic acid), magnesium, kalium, 2-2,5l od water daily, and aminoacids. These are only examples and I took all of them after checking levels in my blood (erythrocytes, plasma and so on). I cannot recommend anything specyfic on the internet, remember to do the diagnostic process before and it would be good for a physician to check Your outcomes from time to time. greetings!

    • @lauriepenner2718
      @lauriepenner2718 Месяц назад +1

      Yes please share what you took for pmdd as well. 🙏

    • @Natalia-fr5pd
      @Natalia-fr5pd Месяц назад +12

      I wrote back but my answear was not added to the conversation. I took magtein, cdp choline, b complex in fluid, ferrum, probiotics sanprobi, Sodium Butyrate, kaldyum and many others. This was my supplementation prescribed for my after blood tests. It is not recommended to take sth without blood tests. In addition, I totally changed my lifestyle- I started going to bed at 11p.m. I drink a lot of water, I ride a bike at least 20minutes daily. Greetings

    • @izzysmithart
      @izzysmithart Месяц назад +1

      I also cured my PMDD by eating loads of vegetables and pulses every day, PmDD was awful, I’m so sorry to anyone who has this ❤

  • @lena0529
    @lena0529 4 месяца назад +46

    There is so much pain in Christopher’s soul, that for another human being it’s hard to stand it. You can see how Steven at some point even can’t keep an eye contact with Cristopher. But I am very glad that Cristopher doesn’t hide his pain - we all need to know the real world we live in and the hardships people are suffering. This hopefully will bring more acceptance and understanding and help to those who need it.

  • @marilynroper5739
    @marilynroper5739 7 месяцев назад +60

    Dr Palmer …your passion is never diminished despite the many times you have given this interview! Please look after yourself
    - the world needs you.

  • @paper601
    @paper601 5 месяцев назад +85

    This man’s … what words do I apply? Passion, desperation, heartbreak, disbelief, empathetic, screaming for change, and so many more… he’s conviction is palpable.
    Thank you for sharing your knowledge, your experience, and your emotion, on such important topics, I’m so sorry for what you, and your mother experienced 😞

    • @CoralBalmoral
      @CoralBalmoral Месяц назад +1

      @paper601 well said thank you 🙏

    • @paper601
      @paper601 Месяц назад

      @@CoralBalmoral 😊

  • @mireladimofte8318
    @mireladimofte8318 7 месяцев назад +201

    Chris, as a former spouse of a person who suffered from alcoholism, anxiety and depression, I feel your pain. Living with someone who lives a life in darkness has a tremendous impact on your own mental health. You are an amazing human and professional.

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 6 месяцев назад +5

      :3 We see eczema go away with plant-based diets, in 3 to 4 weeks (sometimes longer) usually diet related cancers (most cancers) reverse on a plant-based diet, 3 to 4 weeks (sometimes longer) diabetes is reversed on a plant-based diet, etc.

    • @carlosipec2270
      @carlosipec2270 6 месяцев назад +11

      @@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked - Carnivore diet clean/clear all that and a whole lot more!
      And no farting involved. LOL 🙂

    • @coljoy9367
      @coljoy9367 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked carnivore diet and the gaps diet out weight a plant based.

    • @jefdby
      @jefdby 6 месяцев назад

      Stop. Just stop.
      Veganism CAUSES mental illness more than cures.
      We need fat for our brains.
      Obviously it gets them off processed food.
      But it does nothing to refeed and nourish the brain.
      High fat animal based diets and carnivore actually nourish the brain and heal depression.
      ​@@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked

    • @Snappypantsdance
      @Snappypantsdance 6 месяцев назад

      @@carlosipec2270thank you for sharing that!

  • @maja-kehn9130
    @maja-kehn9130 Месяц назад +32

    The statement that the teachers have not been missing it and ADHD, Depression and other mental health problems are "something new" feels like a slap in the face to every adult that has been diagnosed later in life. YES, teachers in the last 30 years have been missing it in a LOT of cases. I´m 33 and was only diagnosed with ADHD this year, so did my best friend and I know of many others that have only been diagnosed as adults.

    • @colinshaw8662
      @colinshaw8662 25 дней назад +6

      Of course it was being missed , your correct, the awareness wasn't there at all and the increased awareness , services etc results in an upsurge in diagnosing what would have been missed in the 70s 80s 90s etc .

    • @christinewhitrick5669
      @christinewhitrick5669 17 дней назад +3

      Diagnosed in my late 50s with ADHD. They didn’t even know what it was when I was young. Infant delinquencies was the label used

    • @stevenpace892
      @stevenpace892 15 дней назад +2

      Oh, I was impossible to miss, but they had no idea what it was. Of course if it was worse, they probably would have figured it out.

    • @whatkjsaw4461
      @whatkjsaw4461 6 дней назад

      As a teacher we are not allowed to say who has what - no matter how sure we are. We are ‘not qualified’ to comment, as we are not qualified paediatricians . … because if we are wrong… Litigation. It is the expectation that we will not mention the name of any condition to parents because of this. We se it alright!
      It is considered the responsibility of the parent to seek medical advice.

    • @salparadise1220
      @salparadise1220 2 дня назад

      Here we go again. Another person who thinks that the solution that worked for them is the only truth there is and we can scrap an entire area of science because he knows better.
      This is a pretty negligent way to treat science. It panders to all the ignorance, prejudice and fear surrounding mental health problems and denies empirical research.
      I’ve had ADHD all my life. No obesity in my family. I grew up on a good diet. It made no difference to the ADHD or the damage it’s done to my life. The only thing that touches it is methamfetamine.
      Bottom line?
      When someone says nothing touched my ADHD until I changed my diet you’re probably dealing with food allergy not ADHD. Real ADHD doesn’t go away with dietary changes. Real ADHD doesn’t go away, period.
      There is some evidence that for some people consistent ADHD medication, over some years, appears to permanently sort out the issue that led to the ADHD. Heavy stress on some. For everyone else it’s for life.
      Encouraging people to think that standard ADHD diagnosis and treatment is all wrong and it’s just a diet thing is about as irresponsible as it’s possible to be.
      ADHD is a killer. The suicide rate is way higher for us. Don’t fuck with psychiatry unless you’re willing to stand accountable for anyone who gets the wrong idea and goes off refusing medication.

  • @vbyrntliving
    @vbyrntliving 7 месяцев назад +509

    Steve the ending where you gave him that affirmation, or piece of closure for him that he has saved thousands of Mothers, etc. That was so kind!

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +37

      Affirmations are so powerful.
      The whole interview is so kind because you create a sacred space for someone to share their vulnerable feelings and story.
      It is incredibly cathartic to go through an interview like this. It's a gift. A beautiful gift.

    • @Snoopysdoggydiary
      @Snoopysdoggydiary 7 месяцев назад +18

      I agree, it was very heartfelt and was the perfect way to respond to Chris after his final discussion point. This is why I really love Steve’s style of interviewing. He connects on many levels, helps direct conversation to explore topics of relevance to his listeners and gives the guest space to dig deeper and unfold some real nuggets - this was a great example. Thank you Steve and Chris. Amazing content. Will buy this book.

    • @AgataNVDW0
      @AgataNVDW0 7 месяцев назад +3

      Indeed! Thank you, Steve! 🫶💐

    • @niwaleaf
      @niwaleaf 7 месяцев назад +6

      That is where I cried.

    • @TamiaPeach
      @TamiaPeach 7 месяцев назад +5

      This thread just made me cry and I haven’t even made it to the end. Steve’s interview style is the best I’ve seen in a long time.

  • @Rayofgy
    @Rayofgy 7 месяцев назад +542

    This is a powerful listen. I can feel the pain and brokenness in his voice.
    At 42 and suffering from mental health issues since childhood, I've attended countess therapies, most effective was self funded, but I don't ever feel whole.. more symptoms alleviated for a short while.
    Keep up the fight Chris, you're saving more people than you realise

    • @BallietBran
      @BallietBran 7 месяцев назад +8

    • @margesimpson805
      @margesimpson805 7 месяцев назад +9

      check out buddhism

    • @tzc9309
      @tzc9309 7 месяцев назад

      @@margesimpson805 i advocate this too, shi heng yi has some very good perspectives on youtube - buddhist shaolin monk. Yoga too, helps you learn to focus your mind, see how your mind reacts when going into certain stressful poses, then you can exercise discipline in the moment/whilst accepting that there may be pain or whatever else, but then you can choose your mental/emotional/bodily reaction to such a thing, so almost like an experietial form of cbt as well as a good perspective/foundation for dealing with your own thoughts. It is a physical practice of doing so, in which given more time to, you become more skilled at it. In addition, relaxing, medidative, and exercise which is all round good for brain health/biochemistry. Plus breathing techniques, which helps with the nervous system. Also just lots of questioning of things, sometimes feelings are justified, and you may not actually be the issue. Very important to realise. Accept the emotions, but understand why it is there, then go from there with rational thought and action. The key thing is realising, you do have the power to get better. As this mans research suggest too, food has a big big impact. If certain food causes stress within your body, this can cause your mind to react in certain ways too sometimes. A good example, some people get axious or hangry lol. Or feel lethargic after eating certain things. The food you eat can have an effect on your mental wellbeing. Stick to all of these things, whilst actively pursuing what you really want to be doing in life, and you will be ok.

    • @misterg2201
      @misterg2201 7 месяцев назад +6

      Stay strong mate 🙏

    • @tzc9309
      @tzc9309 7 месяцев назад +3

      Not sure why i can longer see my response.. maybe youtube censorship at it again.. lol. But hopefully you can see it.

  • @thecarolthomasshow4809
    @thecarolthomasshow4809 6 месяцев назад +255

    I was depressed from I was 10 through 25. My psychiatrist started sleeping while he was speaking to me when I went for checkup. I slapped the table and he woke up confused. I was 90% cure that day. I have not taken Prozac and Xanax since I am 25. Now I am 52 yrs. I have cured myself with a process I use called filling the empty space of my mind with active things. Singing, dancing, laughing, relationships, hard work, exercises, painting, cleaning, praying, meditation, gardening,cooking,speaking how I feel, protecting myself child rearing and many more.

    • @alisonperry8612
      @alisonperry8612 4 месяца назад +6

      Good on you.... we must believe in ourselves & figure it out nobody else really understands.

    • @elfi9409
      @elfi9409 3 месяца назад

      So, you're Psychiatrist 'therapeutically' fell asleep (reality check) and you realised that you needed to find your own cure and fill the empty space. Brilliant! And you cured yourself. Thank God because BigPharma just want to keep you sick, medications are not the solution, and Psychiatry is a scam.

    • @testymann5045
      @testymann5045 3 месяца назад

      You engage in self treatment called behavioral activation: ruclips.net/video/SApOxZ7BMwE/видео.htmlsi=TcCbvfvwXnZu3mTB

    • @deefee701
      @deefee701 3 месяца назад +1

      Refreshing ideas.

    • @dianelane9664
      @dianelane9664 3 месяца назад

      Yes! Thankyou...you're so right!

  • @globalwellbeing1984
    @globalwellbeing1984 Месяц назад +27

    I was mentally ill for a long time. Two things turned it around for me. I joined a grow group and learned how to stop worrying. I joined a prayer group and started to help others. I learned to help others with therapy and counselling, really because the people who asked me to help were getting no help from the doctor.Somewhere in the process my psychosis label fell off and I was able to come off the pills. I learned strategies to help others which I used on myself. I pray that my story may offer a spark of hope that it is possible to beat mental illness. My diagnosis varied from hyperactive schizomanic depression, to bipolar to hypermania to high anxiety.

    • @testimony-
      @testimony- Месяц назад +1

      The prayer part saved my life. Thank you for sharing!

    • @tamilee9462
      @tamilee9462 Месяц назад

      whats as grow group?

    • @globalwellbeing1984
      @globalwellbeing1984 Месяц назад +2

      Grow group is a self help group it's now called Grow Mental Health. It was meeting locally in UK. There was a booklet we followed. It was based on 12 step programs, but for people with mental illness. It had Christian principles but I think it's open to anyone. It's on line still, but I'm not sure what it's like now. In 2000 it made a considerable difference to me, and I'm still friends with one of the former members. I would encourage people to give it a go, or find other help. Recovery is not "one size fits all "but the grow meetings and helping others (rather than just worrying about myself)did it for me.

    • @tamilee9462
      @tamilee9462 Месяц назад

      @@globalwellbeing1984 thank you so much!

  • @Cocomoon28
    @Cocomoon28 7 месяцев назад +322

    It is sky rocketing because people like myself and lots of people I know weren't diagnosed as children. We were not obviously autistic/ADHD enough to be diagnosed. In school we DID fall through the cracks. We were massively let down by all those teachers who you say didn't ignore us. Yes they didn't ignore us, they just labelled us as problematic children. I left school with no qualifications. My nan who is quite severely autistic, never got a diagnosis until she was into her late 70's. This is why the rates are rising because society is becoming more knowledgeable...Thank god.

    • @THEROOTMATTERS
      @THEROOTMATTERS 6 месяцев назад +25

      AND, BECAUSE SOCIETY IS FALLING APART AT EVERY SEAM. THE ENVIRONMENT IS TRAUMATIZING.

    • @jujajuja
      @jujajuja 6 месяцев назад +11

      Although I agree with you, I was curious about the rate of profound autism cases, since it's unlikely that these cases were overlooked due to their severity. After researching, I found that the rate almost doubled over 16 years, from 2000 to 2016. Though it's not a five-fold increase as in the less severe cases, it's worth looking into what caused that. Maybe about half of the new cases are because doctors diagnose milder cases more often. The other half might be caused by things like what people eat and the environment they live in. This makes me curious about how much of the increase we're seeing is because of the changes in diagnostic criteria, how much is it environmental, and how the researchers took that into account.

    • @honestlee4532
      @honestlee4532 6 месяцев назад

      I disagree. I think it has a LOT more to do with the "food" we see in the stupid markets. Many fruits and vegetables are now Garbage Mutant Organisms that are covered in cancer causing poison. I have turned my health around by changing my diet. I feel MUCH better now in my mid 50s than I did in my late 30s. People can't keep eating garbage and expect to be healthy. Doctors are not trained in health and nutrition. Doctors prescribe pills which hide the symptoms. Doctors do NOT help patients HEAL. REAL FOOD helps real people make real recoveries. Order following doctors and poLIEticians are prolonging the problems. People need to realize that doctors and poLIEticians are NOT helping society!

    • @sarahredden8119
      @sarahredden8119 6 месяцев назад +24

      I understand where you are coming from and agree to a point. However, there is a huge shift to mental health issues in our children today that wasn’t prevalent before. Food and tech are HUGE factors imo.

    • @robinr5337
      @robinr5337 6 месяцев назад +48

      I appreciate his passion about his hypothesis but I feel he's biased. So many of us went through school undiagnosed. My husband and I both weren't ever seen as neurodivergent until our 40's. Getting my son's diagnosis pushed us to get ours. Anytime a child is diagnosed we really need to check the parents and even grandparents.

  • @aliciabadashian7234
    @aliciabadashian7234 7 месяцев назад +127

    I appreciate Dr Palmer. I’m in grad school for clinical Mental Health Counseling. My goal is to bridge the gap and open a practice that includes whole person approach (diet, deficiencies , genetics and talk therapy)

    • @faux-nefarious
      @faux-nefarious 6 месяцев назад +4

      Good for you!! We need more clinicians with this approach. Out of curiosity, what grad school program are you in, and do you recommend it? I’ve been thinking on career switching into being a therapist

    • @SuzyTodd-j6l
      @SuzyTodd-j6l 6 месяцев назад +6

      My best advice is to plant that in a wealthy area and grow it from there. You’re going to need folks who can pay flat out for things bc insurance is going to be a nightmare. This is certainly the direction we all need to be going but unless you’re in a zip code with plenty of disposable income the system is going to make this very difficult. Good luck! 🍀

    • @lesliewb9059
      @lesliewb9059 3 месяца назад +1

      Thank you for doing that.

    • @franklesko2485
      @franklesko2485 2 месяца назад +2

      I’m planning that too. Best of luck to you!

    • @TheMinimalistTherapist
      @TheMinimalistTherapist Месяц назад

      Same.

  • @alexhb12333
    @alexhb12333 7 месяцев назад +493

    I am a food addict and in a 12-step recovery program called Food Addicts in Recovery Anonymous.
    My physical and mental health problems were dramatically increased by eating sugar and flour addictively. I am now 140lb lighter, physically the healthiest and mentally making massive gains week to week.
    My inflammation, headaches, diabetes, back pain, mental exhaustion, anxiety disorder, and social isolation are gone.
    Food (flour/sugar) addiction is right up there with alcoholism and drug addiction as a destructive force in the world. Look at the obesity and diabetes statistics in the United States.

    • @Paul-rg4is
      @Paul-rg4is 7 месяцев назад +10

      Did you go totally sugar-free?

    • @SPEAKSB
      @SPEAKSB 7 месяцев назад +16

      I cut out all gluten this year, I don’t think gluten flour is good for us at all even if we don’t have a gluten allergy. I don’t eat processed sugar but I ate loads of fruit sugar years ago and lost 70 pounds. I prefer fruit to anything for sweetness.

    • @headlesschicken99
      @headlesschicken99 7 месяцев назад +19

      People need to understand that encourage healthy weight has nothing to do with vanity. The satisfaction, pride and positivity People feel from the physical and mental transformation is priceless. You gain self respect, prolonged life expectancy and generally feeling better.
      Well done, you, keep it up 👏

    • @alexhb12333
      @alexhb12333 7 месяцев назад +28

      @Paul-rg4is No added sugar or flour in products. Includes corn syrup, dextrose, etc. With the support structures in place to grow and heal, the food becomes fairly easy. You're replacing the garbage with a lot of fresh simple vegetables, fruits, grains, starches, and proteins. Im very rarely hungry, and finding fulfillment somewhere else than drowning my sorrows in food.

    • @Sky10811
      @Sky10811 7 месяцев назад +1

      hypnozio helped mea lot

  • @Lovejoypeace69
    @Lovejoypeace69 3 месяца назад +24

    I am completely addicted to this doctor. I am a retired Health, life and fitness coach of 25 years. I am 59 years old in fantastic shape, mentally strong and with that being said, I have a passion for mental health. There’s a lot of suicide in my family and I’ve seen the lifelong effects of suicide and mental health and even light depression. Oh my gosh, this interview is beyond, anything I would’ve ever expected. Awesome job on interviewing and to this amazing Dr I will continue to watch you, support you and everything that you’re doing. I eat well I exercise but I wanted to change things up recently and I want to share that I went on the carnivore lifestyle and I have to say I am amazed at the results that I’m seeing for somebody that is already healthy and happy. my energy is nonstop, my joy level has gone to another level, I’ve lost a lingering 12 pounds that I thought was just part of my aging not concerned but wow my body is back to feeling and looking like I’m in my 20s again. I’m not here to share the power of carnivore. I’m here to share the power of caring for oneself and mental health is a real deal and what we’re eating matters beyond belief. Very fuel listen, very few because we are in love with our food, but our food is not loving us back. To one person out there that has issues please know I’m asking you your food matters. I have years and years of experience when it comes to food, fitness and living that is also, deep in God’s word. I’ll stop here. I just want to thank you too for an amazing interview and once again you have my support.

    • @DayanPimentel.
      @DayanPimentel. 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for your insight ❤

    • @laurajw7278
      @laurajw7278 3 месяца назад

      Wow, I find your story very interesting! Have you ever shared your knowledge and experience somewhere?

    • @deefee701
      @deefee701 3 месяца назад

      Thank you for your story.

    • @CoralBalmoral
      @CoralBalmoral Месяц назад

      Great affirmations and another interesting testimonial for carnivore diet? I'd like to be financially comfortably, healthily and productively retired by 59 by the way 😊

  • @debramoore1428
    @debramoore1428 6 месяцев назад +153

    I might be lost in the thousands of comments but I will put a shoulder to it. I've seen Dr. Palmer speak many times and didn't know of his mom. May each telling of your story bring you closer to peace in your heart. Thank you for your dedication.

  • @LauraAmanda8888
    @LauraAmanda8888 7 месяцев назад +176

    The raw emotion in his voice is so powerful. I love this man. Doing the most for humanity ❤️ x

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +3

      Me too! He is genuine, empathic, deeply caring, ethical, and just a kind hearted person.

    • @bianchaesson1441
      @bianchaesson1441 7 месяцев назад +2

      Can we also include immunisations?! This 'stuff' that's injected into a beautiful innocent defenceless little creature, the sheer number of these immunisations, in huge numbers now, absolutely MUST add to the putrefaction of the blood stream, which feeds the brain!!
      So put this together with the addition of foods, unnatural foods, and then add trauma which, yes, we know scientifically also changes both our brain functioning AND our biological order.
      And how about our soul/spiritual lives .... there is just so much lacking in that area too!! We are primarily spiritual beings.
      A child in the womb is only, generally,
      there just long enough to develop what it needs for birth from the womb into its full earthly journey.
      Likewise, we have a soul .... the development of which prepares us for our eternal life in the spiritual realm. And definitely gives us the tools we need to deal with our earthly life.
      If we don't take this into consideration we are greatly incomplete, which the soul recognises, and strives to help us to re balance ourselves in this area by finding a genuine spiritual development pathway. Hopefully!

    • @bianchaesson1441
      @bianchaesson1441 7 месяцев назад +2

      And what if you have a mature age son who's been on pharmeceutical medications for just over a decade, has become totally dependent on these, hasn't improved at all, in fact I think even worse, and ridicules me when I mention to him that his eating habits are greatly contributing to his overall condition.
      Here DOES lie a problem! Difficult!

    • @autisticdan6151
      @autisticdan6151 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@NeseretBemient how is genocide ethical?

    • @Ghryst
      @Ghryst 7 месяцев назад +4

      if you think that is raw emotion, you'd love tiktok, the "that girl"s on tiktok are better actors.
      he sounds so damn forced. for good cause maybe, but still forced and fake.

  • @lidiabeaulac2048
    @lidiabeaulac2048 6 месяцев назад +237

    I struggled with mental illness from age 16-38 until I related diet to my illness. After years of inpatient psychiatric hospitalizations and medications of every kind I decided to do a 21 day water fas and it completely reset my brain and body. I have been medication free for 8 years and the bipolar symptoms went from a level ten to a level one. The symptoms that do occur are very easy to recognize and confront. When manic, I read more, exercise more…if I’m blue, I watch my diet. Sugar was my worst enemy. #feelingbetter

    • @crafter_4966
      @crafter_4966 6 месяцев назад +4

      How did you do that? Did you have any energy at all to get through the day? I'm so glad it worked for you!

    • @deer105
      @deer105 6 месяцев назад +7

      You're very resilient and I congratulate you. My mother died very recently in her early 70s. She had schizoaffective bipolar type, but through conversations with psychiatrists and reading I believe her DSM diagnosis was really just a severe manifestation of the bipolar spectrum. She did improve for short periods of time when she would eliminate sugar years ago, but never would stick to any suggestions for diet changes and supplements. It was very frustrating for me because I was always trying to help her fix herself. The fact that you were able to do this for yourself is so commendable. She died primarily of COPD from heavy smoking after spending 8 years with an end-stage diagnosis, multiple hospitalizations for respiratory failure, and being completely dependent on home family care. Her death was terrible

    • @laurieblanchard1171
      @laurieblanchard1171 6 месяцев назад +16

      ​@crafter_4966 hey friend, if you research into slowly easing into fasting, you'll learn ways to start that help eliminate major symptoms of fasting right away. But basically, after 1 or 2 days, your gherlin (hunger hormone) will suppress, glucose will run out of stores in your muscles and you'll excrete ketones and start using stored fat for your energy, which is a cleaner process for your brain and body. The first week, you'll have a surge of endorphins and find yourself strangely happy, glowing and full of energy. Your cells, skin start to rejuvenate. Your body now can focus on autphagy (cleaning "house" internally). Your hunger literally turns off and you kind of don't even notice anymore, especially if you're busy and have found something to do during normal eating times. Stay hydrated, plenty of sleep, and liquid electrolytes is safe and helpful.

    • @stellaancimer8505
      @stellaancimer8505 5 месяцев назад

      But, what about blood sugar, on fasting we can do more damage, and what about adrenal Grands? I am glad it help you, for me is crutial to eat meat every Two hourse that my body feel save ;)😊

    • @kiwio3o387
      @kiwio3o387 5 месяцев назад +10

      The difference is you’re not born being bipolar. You’re born with autism or ADHD (or both), and it’s not something that can just go away. You can decrease negative symptoms of it, but the best way to do that is actually eliminating the stressors around you and growing up in a loving environment where you’re taught to be yourself and not mask. That doesn’t happen for most.

  • @brendasears9650
    @brendasears9650 3 месяца назад +20

    It took me a few minutes to adjust to this man's extremely emotive tone of voice. I stuck out the whole episode and discovered that I love this guy. "Don't just pop out a pill." Let's hear it for the power of clean living.

    • @kw7796
      @kw7796 Месяц назад +1

      At first, I was put off by this docs mannerism but loved his conviction. I stayed. I watched. This man is a national treasure. God bless him. He really is a healer. He offers hope for millions.

  • @mayamichelle6741
    @mayamichelle6741 7 месяцев назад +90

    His sympathy and empathy are so apparent throughout the interview. The explanation about mitochondria, mRNA and metabolism was very helpful.

  • @monna1111
    @monna1111 6 месяцев назад +99

    I was in and out mental breakdowns that had caused me to have insomnia, be suicidal and self mutilating/destructive; thank goodness, I did not comply in taking the drugs, and thank God, I was not locked up as I had been threatened. Moral support from genuinely caring people, meditation and change in what I eat have been the main reasons I am still here and loving life again.

    • @ANANG408
      @ANANG408 5 месяцев назад +5

      For most suicidal cases tho opting for medication is better than death. I was on 26 pills each day for almost 4 years, looking back (even with all of those short and long term medication effects) I would opt for being medicated all over again. I am lucky it was along with intensive counseling sessions, cognitive therapy definitely helps to get off those medication 100%. Took about 4 years of counseling as well.
      After those, then I can eat and exercising in a good manner.
      I am glad you have all the support you need! ❤ Hoping that everyone was/is struggling for their success in each journey 🎉

  • @Thebirthyourwaydoula
    @Thebirthyourwaydoula 7 месяцев назад +245

    I’ve never shared a podcast so fast. 12 minutes in, I was in tears. His pain and passion is evident with every word he speaks. Such a powerful podcast, thank you 🧡

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +24

      I felt the same way.
      I am a Psychiatric RN, and have worked with so many psychiatrist but this one is different.
      I call him Doctor of TRUTH.
      It's amazing.
      He tells it like it is.
      Just the unvarnished truth.
      I'm so grateful for his work.

    • @christinaurbarbieUkRapper
      @christinaurbarbieUkRapper 7 месяцев назад +1

      🎯

    • @Snoopysdoggydiary
      @Snoopysdoggydiary 7 месяцев назад +8

      So deeply touched by this, what an amazing man to turn his pain to a path of pursuit, with such tremendous results in the field of mental health. Love Dr of Truth! ❤️

    • @malgorzatakawczynska6266
      @malgorzatakawczynska6266 7 месяцев назад +2

      Outstanding! Life saving knowledge !Thank-you both from my Heart ❤❤❤❤❤!
      Margo.

    • @wombat4583
      @wombat4583 6 месяцев назад

      There's lots of leaps and logic, outdated studies being the core of his arguments, etc. You probably shouldn't take anything he says at face value. There are so many harmful implicit biases being shared here.

  • @laisa.
    @laisa. 2 месяца назад +15

    Intermittent fasting saved me in 2014. I just started fasting after seing a BBC documentary showing several benefits. I had ME/CFS for over 6 years at that time, couldn't exercise, only work part time, my husband had to do most with our kids and home. After a few weeks of intermittent fasting my energy suddenly sky rocketed. I went from chronic fatigue to running several times a week. Food and possibly breaks from food is so important. Sadly not everything works for everyone, I know I was so lucky to find *the key that fit for me*. I wish everyone will find their solution ❤

  • @ettena93
    @ettena93 7 месяцев назад +1364

    It’s not uncommon for people with autism to have eating disorders. Binge eating is one of them. Could be that the mother is obese and autistic. So the «problem» is not the obesity, but the overlooked autism in the mother and the coping mechanism she developed as a result. I don’t think people realize how much food and weight plays into mental health.

    • @charlottelouise6366
      @charlottelouise6366 7 месяцев назад +100

      I agree. I was late diagnosed autistic at age 35 and suffered anorexia in my teens & early twenties. My main diagnosis was anxiety & depression until I had my own children who were diagnosed autistic.

    • @LeeBurden
      @LeeBurden 7 месяцев назад

      A lot of autistic individuals require structure and routine to reduce stress and anxiety. If an individual can't get structure and routine then individuals may control food as a way of creating structure and routine. I am speaking as an autistic individual.@@charlottelouise6366

    • @invisibelle7590
      @invisibelle7590 7 месяцев назад

      Got autistic child. Was skiny as hell and ate well. Not autistic. Clue; he didnt have it when he was born, was fine till he was about two. Instant autism!! Just look at safety sheet for thimiserol, a further clue there...

    • @headlesschicken99
      @headlesschicken99 7 месяцев назад +78

      Many autistic binge eat due to environment (many parents simply want to please them or wrongly use food/treats to reinforce positive behaviour) but also due to the sensory feedback from food texture (many autistic todlers can just graze forever unless limitted or refuse to for the same reason) and lack of "sense"/understanding what their body is actually full. Basic things that neurotypical find easy have to be specifically taught - show an autistic kid what an average portion looks like, work on all senses, especially understanding interception and really keep their insulin spikes under control - it's parents responsibility.
      Later on in life eating disorders and other mental health disorders such as anorexia and depression are quite common. Low self esteem and difficulty in pubery/social interaction, being quite impressionable can contribute to that

    • @ruthhorowitz7625
      @ruthhorowitz7625 7 месяцев назад

      We binge eat because of abuse. When you're autistic you get a lot of abuse.

  • @mrssmithh
    @mrssmithh 7 месяцев назад +42

    I’m almost done with his book and it’s very detailed and informative. This gives me so much hope for us all. I always look for root causes instead of quick fixes. Quick fixes many times turn into long term issues. I pray more people wake up and don’t give up hope.

    • @ThuyNguyen-lf2sm
      @ThuyNguyen-lf2sm 7 месяцев назад +1

      It’s heartbreaking to hear the statistics because every one of us is either related to one or knew one with mental health.

  • @johnhardy2702
    @johnhardy2702 7 месяцев назад +447

    35 years in the classroom teaching 8th graders. No doubt there is a much higher incidence of mental health issues. Teachers are struggling to deal with these issues and leaving the classroom, unfortunately. I retired last year and miss the kids, but don't miss the stress of the work. Mental health, in my students, were a significant part of that stress.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +32

      I have the utmost respect for teachers. As a Psych Emerge RN, I was assessing these kids all day everyday for 6 years.
      Many of them would be referred to ER by their teacher or school counsellor.
      Many of them identify school as one of their biggest stressors. The school environment is just very different today.
      I feel for the students and the teachers. It takes a toll on both sides. So many challenges in every direction.
      Today, kids have free access to websites where they can go learn how to tie a noose to hand themselves.
      No other generation had do content with such things. Not to mention school shootings and all the happenings in the world's stage.
      It's just an absolute mess out there. Bless your heart for all those years of service. Thank you.

    • @CocoPink44
      @CocoPink44 7 месяцев назад +5

      There is a lot of mental health issues in the work place too. People are whack.

    • @ChrisHurstyyy
      @ChrisHurstyyy 7 месяцев назад +18

      Do you think it's food or also screens/devices? Combination of both?

    • @Gesundheit888
      @Gesundheit888 7 месяцев назад +26

      I can imagine with all the crap and ultra processed food they ingest, starting first thing in the morning... How can anyone control a classroom with a bunch of teenagers who have no nutrition in their body? SAD -

    • @annmarieknapp
      @annmarieknapp 7 месяцев назад +20

      Than you for your educational service. College professor here. Mad respect for your work. My students are very anxious and depressed like never before. Been teaching at uni for over 28 years. Something has changed.

  • @anomalyweddings
    @anomalyweddings 4 месяца назад +85

    Natural health circles have been discussing the mitochondria and gut-mind-body connection for years. It's great to see "the science" catching up. Love this Dr. Protect him at all costs.

  • @lucasley20
    @lucasley20 7 месяцев назад +100

    Yes! I am so happy that good Doctors are speaking up and allowing the patients to find more natural/holistic ways to fix ourselves. The gut/brain connection seems to play a huge role in our overall health. Thank you Dr. Palmer for giving us more information to research!

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +6

      I call him the Doctor of Truth:)

  • @brandonreed1319
    @brandonreed1319 7 месяцев назад +35

    Chris, your talks and your book saved my life. I wish more people would be open to these ideas, because you've helped rescue me from pretty dark days. I was hit with a viral illness in 2022 and suffered major episodes of anxiety and depressive symptoms until I read your book and began focusing on my metabolic health. You've given me my life back, and I will forever be grateful. Thank you for being a lighthouse in this storm of modernity. Thank you for embodying compassion in a world of empty voices.

  • @annettestephens5337
    @annettestephens5337 7 месяцев назад +198

    I had been on prescription drugs for anxiety for over 40 years and had suffered with alcohol and food addiction. Then I took control of my diet and eliminated ALL ultra processed foods and ate just meat, eggs and seafood. I healed my painful guts and weaned myself odd of my anxiety meds. My circumstances have not changed but my anxiety has GONE it’s a miracle for me.

    • @Sky10811
      @Sky10811 7 месяцев назад +1

      also books about PTSD r helpful like Peter Walker, "from surviving to thriving "

    • @Venusbabe66
      @Venusbabe66 7 месяцев назад +6

      No vegetables? No greens? No fruit?

    • @annettestephens5337
      @annettestephens5337 7 месяцев назад +20

      @@Venusbabe66 correct. For years and years I ate high fibre, fresh fruit and veges and simply got sicker snd sicker. I believe I was pre-diabetic, with very inflammed guts. High fats and protein has healed me.

    • @Venusbabe66
      @Venusbabe66 7 месяцев назад +6

      @@annettestephens5337 Well, good for you! You found what worked for you. I just hope you're getting all the nutrients you need.

    • @annettestephens5337
      @annettestephens5337 7 месяцев назад +12

      @@nancymello5246 it took almost a year during which time I carried on receiving the prescriptions’just in case’. I can hardly believe it myself. The only thing I changed was what, and when I ate food. All animal products (no dairy). The carnivore diet has done more for me than any medications could ever do.

  • @jaisyw7569
    @jaisyw7569 5 месяцев назад +52

    I’m a mom of 4 young kids, not only is this saving my life but theirs also as they’ve shown early signs of some mental health issues. I’m done with the medications, they never worked for me anyway, and going back to focusing on diet for my whole family. I have hope now that it’s not too late for us and we can all live happy lives and for them a happy childhood.❤ I felt like such a failure despite trying so hard but this has restored my faith.

    • @abbyxiong3931
      @abbyxiong3931 4 месяца назад +5

      It's always hard taking that first step. Good luck to you.

  • @christinaM.1931
    @christinaM.1931 7 месяцев назад +61

    each episode gives me a new piece to improve my life-puzzle. each guest is a diamond and their aim to help with their knowledge and work is so touching. I've learned so much from your podcast, Steven. It' s beautiful to see how you treat your guests with kindness and appreciation. that's what makes a real good man. thank you so much to you and your team.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +2

      It's beautiful.
      What a gift to create this sacred space for learning and growth.

  • @ravelanone9462
    @ravelanone9462 6 месяцев назад +19

    I'm sure Chris's mother is very proud of what he is doing for so many other mothers, fathers, and their children. And I believe she doesn't regret her part in helping him in his life's work. She's there with him in spirit, cheering him on.

  • @wildeevolution
    @wildeevolution 7 месяцев назад +233

    At 51 I healed my lifelong mental illness and a very serious autoimmune disease with a ketogenic diet. Not just any keto diet will work if you are as sick as I was. Thank God I discovered the answers I needed and I’m still alive to finish raising my son.

    • @chrisbrown2211
      @chrisbrown2211 7 месяцев назад +7

      What do you mean not any keto diet?

    • @headlesschicken99
      @headlesschicken99 7 месяцев назад +13

      Keto diet and aminoacids IV are the solution. Get your gut health and brain chemistry right and that's that . Being positive and optimistic simply isn't enough, sorting the physiological crap that fuels/feeds our mental issues is a must! ❤

    • @TheodoreHoesevelt
      @TheodoreHoesevelt 7 месяцев назад +9

      I'm fixing to switch to keto. I basically just eat meat anyways. I need to stop eating carbs all together.

    • @TheodoreHoesevelt
      @TheodoreHoesevelt 7 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@headlesschicken99where do I find the iv amino acids? Walmart was out? My dealer?

    • @headlesschicken99
      @headlesschicken99 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@TheodoreHoesevelt From what I know is widely used in Europe - they are quite expensive but really effective for addiction, etc. So we're talking as part of healing process - helping with mental health, (some) autism symptoms, addiction - great diet for the gut and aminoacids to balance the (fu*ked) brain chemistry, that will enable nurve repair and new pathways (which then will affect out choices, cravings, etc)
      Don't know what of this is/will be commercially available and what is a good alternative
      The prices here are a few hundred for a couple of hours drip (hense the reason celebrities use it even as a recovery after tours/wellbeing)
      But my understanding is that retail is a tiny fraction of that.

  • @az_spain
    @az_spain 5 месяцев назад +25

    Love the sensitivity and understanding developed by Dr. Aditi Nerurkar, greatly admiring your resilience and heart. Thank you Steven for orchestrating and sharing.

  • @belannatay846
    @belannatay846 6 месяцев назад +57

    I am a mother who is autistic, adhd and has dissociative disorder and a range of health issues. I didn't know it when I was pregnant that I had these. But now I have 3 kids and they all have a combination of asd & adhd. The diet wasn't brilliant but I always cooked from scratch.
    I want to thank Dr Chris as he has given me a chance to improve my kids futures. One of my sons has epilepsy and so again this has given me hope for him to reduce or lose his epilepsy.
    Thank you for a ray of hope, thank you for a chance to live but most of all, thank you for caring enough!! I send you big hugs and lots of love from an overwhelmed and disheartened mother. You give us all hope!!! XxXxXxXxXx

    • @julianocka
      @julianocka 6 месяцев назад +6

      my daughter had epilepsy, but as we excluded gluten from her diet, her seisures immediately stopped. It has been seven years without medication now. i am keeeping my fingers crossed for you, as i know how difficult it is for a mother to feel helpless when your child suffers, God bless you!

    • @michmack2008
      @michmack2008 5 месяцев назад +1

      Lots of light and love to you and your family ❤ btw I was reading that Vagal nerve stimulation is a way to overcome seizures, not sure if it would be useful to your child…

    • @joachimguth6226
      @joachimguth6226 4 месяца назад

      you surely will find your way, you and your kids deserved so much to get well

    • @WildandFree4
      @WildandFree4 2 месяца назад +1

      Consider Psilocybin ❤

    • @coffeeandsnails8157
      @coffeeandsnails8157 2 месяца назад +3

      Fellow late diagnosed AuDHD mom here. C-PTSD & an eating disorder too. All of my kids are ASD/ADHD. It's a daily struggle. Wishing you and your family the best.

  • @LovePhoenix96
    @LovePhoenix96 7 месяцев назад +59

    As a Canadian who's sister has been working in a hospital for over 10 years has in fact confirmed through stories that there are many little kids in Emerg coming in for suicide. I remember the first time she mentioned it completely broke my heart but the more she was telling me the more I was upset that we don't have spaces for these kids to get better they are just in emerg.... not the place they should be going. As someone who's been to emergency for the same reasons i can agree that mental health treatments have not worked as much as they could have. But with hope and faith that life will change it got better!

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +11

      I worked in Psych Emerge as a Psychiatric RN for 6 years.
      It was the most heart breaking experience to support suicidal kids and their bewildered parents.
      Many of them would come in overdosed on their prescribed psychiatric medications.
      2nd leading cause of death for youth between the ages of 14-24 is suicide.
      How is that possible?
      Our kids are thoroughly confused and lost.
      Parents have never had to deal with this level of distress in their kids in previous generations.
      This is absolutely unprecedented.
      I share my experiences on RUclips on Confessions of a Psych Nurse/Neseret Bemient.
      You are correct about treatment options. Kids are put on the same cocktails as adults on their developing brains.
      It does not address the root cause issues.
      It's an absolute disaster.

    • @eriamhsl3841
      @eriamhsl3841 7 месяцев назад +7

      Screens, absent parents and processed foods, minimal exercise is 1 recipe for disorders.

    • @Gesundheit888
      @Gesundheit888 7 месяцев назад

      It's due to nutritional imbalances and poisons, ultra processed, toxic food....

  • @chrislee-anneminturn5111
    @chrislee-anneminturn5111 7 месяцев назад +21

    The raw emotion, empathy and sincerity is just beautiful. Thank you Dr Palmer.

  • @Ncaa67
    @Ncaa67 Месяц назад +4

    When questioned about what your experience as a child with your mom was like I heard the most honest compassionate and qualified answer, maybe the most I’ve heard in my life. I felt your experience to my core. That said, your experience is the catalyst for your strength and the hope you are giving to others. Along with the despair I felt to my bone came a flood of freedom or hope and happiness that YOU bring. What makes you so wonderful is who you are and the hope you bring . Thank you to this incredible channel for bringing the beautiful soul, Chis Palmer, to the world. I can’t imagine that you haven’t already introduced guests to each other but if you haven’t then maybe invite 2 or 3 at a time. “The community of a CEO” might just be a way to not only connect like individuals but imagine a show with Chis Palmer and Kamala Harris having a discussion about health reform, the what we need and how to support it views!!!!

    • @sandrar8172
      @sandrar8172 Месяц назад

      I hope Kamala is not just talking about for campaigning purposes ......happens all the time🤦‍♀️

    • @Ncaa67
      @Ncaa67 28 дней назад

      Hope is a start

  • @serenitybeauty
    @serenitybeauty 7 месяцев назад +76

    I am so grateful I’ve come across Dr Palmer’s video with Dr Huberman last year. I suffered from anxiety and depression for 3 years because of so much trauma I experienced with my family and I’ve watch his video last year and started chaging my diet. I never thought I could go back to my normal self, where I feel joy and peace again and not have the feeling like I’m drowning every single morning everytime I wake up. This video is so powerful and even without the data in science I believe this study with food and how it affects our mental health to be true because I experienced it. This interview with Steven is more easy to digest and he is asking questions that an average person can easily understand. This is one of the most powerful interviews Steven had that I’ve watched. I cried at the end when he thanked Dr Palmer for saving a lot of mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters because I was one of them♥️ Dr. Palmer your Mom is definitely proud of you.

    • @crafter_4966
      @crafter_4966 6 месяцев назад +3

      Me too. I teared up.

  • @cathy3951
    @cathy3951 6 месяцев назад +7

    My stepfather called me in desperation one day and begged me to take my mother to a doctor, saying in all sincerity he swore that whenever she ate a candy bar she almost always immediately had a volatile angry attack. He was on to something. His voice was scared and shaky. Unfortunately, we didn't have this information back then. So grateful to have it today. Thanks so much for caring enough to make a huge difference.

  • @hayLossss
    @hayLossss 7 месяцев назад +59

    Wow! What a powerful interview with an incredible human. Out of the depths of personal despair and hell, he is a shining light of hope for 93% of the population. Bravo to both of you for this gentle yet compelling podcast ❤

    • @autisticdan6151
      @autisticdan6151 7 месяцев назад +3

      He is not a light of hope, how is encouraging devolution as he’s suggesting hopeful?

    • @Ladybelladhd
      @Ladybelladhd 7 месяцев назад

      I concur every single word you say! He’s an inspirational human❤️

  • @Peaceful93754
    @Peaceful93754 4 месяца назад +65

    I am so impressed with this doctor's wonderful heart. As a teacher for 30 years i appreciate what the good doctor reveals

    • @TheDiaryOfACEO
      @TheDiaryOfACEO  4 месяца назад +3

      Really glad this one resonated with you! ❤️

    • @user-oq8dj6do8v
      @user-oq8dj6do8v 2 месяца назад

      A wonderful heart wouldn't talk about the autistic and ADHD students you likely had so hatefully.

  • @Cher1924
    @Cher1924 7 месяцев назад +54

    I agree with Dr Palmer 100%. I have been on very low carb keto for 8 months and it’s miraculous. I’m off all diabetic meds that includes insulin ozempic and 2 other pills. I have lost24 lbs. my mood is brighter and my clarity is out of this world. Life is fabulous.

  • @LizzieStuff
    @LizzieStuff 6 месяцев назад +48

    My brother was diagnosd with bipolar disorder and put on drugs by a psychiatrist. He became more and more ill. He became reclusive and had tremors so bad he couldn't even function. He was on that medication for 10 years and as a family we could see the medication was making him sick but were scared to push him or even say much about him going off it because we were afraid that we would be giving him advice that could be harmful. Afterall shouldn't the doctors know what they are doing. His lack of motivation and reclusivity lead to extreme weight gain and heart disease. His heath deteriorated drastically. Finally one day he told them he was no longer taking the medication. His mood and disposition improved. He still is recovering because he was isolated for so long and his health is so bad now but his mental health has improved drastically. It's so sad to me how he could be abused by the medical system in such a way. Watching this videohas affirmed many things for me.

    • @ClaireCelticMystic
      @ClaireCelticMystic 4 месяца назад

      Please see Dr. Peter Breggin (book: Your Drug May Be Your Problem) + Dr. Kelly Brogan (vital Life Project, Community to heal with SUPPORT!!!) + Dr. Hyla Cass' work ( amino acids to heal root cause of imbalanced energy and health), as they are holistic and address our root needs on all levels to empower us and dissolve mental issues, truly!!!

    • @FebFour
      @FebFour 16 дней назад

      I hope he ll get better! Sadly, Doctors in the US are only taught to remember whats in the books - very few learned how to critically think and question their knowledge. Now, I go to dr for like an advice but still do my research. Multiple, innumerable times I questioned what I was told at the doctors office and researched it myself. My auntie got serious liver problems, no insurance. The treatment cost in the us was over $3000. I just researched the chemical components and we were able to to ship it from abroad for only $600, exactly same thing. The other time I almost pulled out a completely healthy tooth, front one!!! But I was able to to reverse root infection with antibiotics and essential oils rinsing. So I decided to never blindly trust “ an expert “ in any field

  • @thuggineternal
    @thuggineternal 7 месяцев назад +64

    For some of us, righteous anger is the fuel that drives us to change the world. Thank you for everything Dr. Palmer.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +3

      It is what drives me to get on RUclips and share such vulnerable part of my life.
      So much was taken away from me going through the mental health system.
      I was a Psych RN and even then I couldn't effectively advocate for myself.
      I've witnessed so much needless suffering too.
      It's a disheartening experience.

    • @marvanbee
      @marvanbee 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@NeseretBemientsome of the sickest people I know are in healthcare. That should be a massive red flag for the world. I hope you are doing better now.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@marvanbee Unfortunately I'll have to agree with you. Thank you. I am doing so much better.

    • @SideB1984
      @SideB1984 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@NeseretBemientsubscribed! I’ve read some of your extremely thoughtful comments and had to send some love back to you. 🤲🏽💗

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 6 месяцев назад

      @@SideB1984 Thank you so much:) I appreciate it

  • @CalleyWalsh
    @CalleyWalsh 5 месяцев назад +110

    As a person with at least 50 years of depression and anxiety, with a mother who was bipolar and a father who was a narcissist; I am so happy to hear an alternative view of mental illness. I have had limited relief from antidepressants, a horrendous experience from a mood stabilizer and the expectation of dementia in the fure. I did not get married nor would I have a child, I did not wish to inflict the pain I had lived with on a partner nor on a child. I feel like I have wasted my life. Whether this persons ideas prove to be true or not, he is stating the obvious! The system for mental health is not working. As much as I hate the thought of giving up sugar I am prepared to try the ketogenic diet to attempt to have peace in this latter partof my life. Thanks.

    • @Arielforsklein
      @Arielforsklein 5 месяцев назад +9

      I resonate with everything you’ve said.

    • @lindaanderson1016
      @lindaanderson1016 4 месяца назад +10

      The Gospel of John has been an encouragement to me.

    • @laraoneal7284
      @laraoneal7284 4 месяца назад +4

      God bless u Calley.

    • @mztwixed
      @mztwixed 4 месяца назад +2

      Amen. Me too.

    • @Ecstrah
      @Ecstrah 4 месяца назад

      ❤️

  • @sheilasmith1109
    @sheilasmith1109 7 месяцев назад +22

    The comments are outstanding to this interview! There's so much to learn from THESE as well as from the wonderful guest!

  • @peaceemezue
    @peaceemezue 7 месяцев назад +14

    Steven is helping me recover from all my illness. Now I understand why I have anorexia and depression and anxiety had so much to deal with. This conversation has helped me so much. Thank you steven

  • @mslemons7520
    @mslemons7520 7 месяцев назад +40

    I stopped antipsychotics last summer, I had been on them ten years and they didn’t help my bipolar at all but my cholesterol was 9.2 and I lost 1/3 of my life. (Due to side effects) I was recommended this guys books and so nice to hear an interview with him. Thank you dr Chris ✌️❤️

    • @Christian_Princess
      @Christian_Princess 7 месяцев назад +1

      @mslemons7520 how are you feeling after stopping meds?

    • @mslemons7520
      @mslemons7520 6 месяцев назад

      @@Christian_Princess pretty mixed to be honest but the meds never completely ‘fixed’ my mood really big difference now is a lot less sleep

    • @janpowell7536
      @janpowell7536 6 месяцев назад

      @@mslemons7520 most of the population is deficient in Vit D K2 ( you can buy them together) deficiency of Vit D causes low mood anxiety depression ect you should start taking 10,000iu a day untill summer then lower the dose to 5,000iu a day then up it again in September when the summers finished, you can also take Ashwagandha a natural herb for the same symptoms. I’ve heard many people say this herb has helped them. Stay away from processed food & sugar if you can. Hope this helps you 🧡

    • @intherockies
      @intherockies 6 месяцев назад +2

      You probably need a different combination of meds. I wouldn't recommend anyone stopping their meds. My adult kid stopped her meds and ended up in a mental hospital. Most people who stop their meds don't realize how bad things get, but other people do notice the negative difference.

    • @madmagdelena
      @madmagdelena 6 месяцев назад

      ​@intherockies my friend stopped her meds to "detox" from them and ended up killing both of her children and then herself so I'm vary wary of being off meds being always seen as the goal or a good thing.

  • @cmst6408
    @cmst6408 4 месяца назад +14

    History of his mother and the inspiration for what he does has me crying. Thank you

  • @Dive-Deeper
    @Dive-Deeper 7 месяцев назад +14

    Man, what a powerful interview. I'm very thankful for this video. I hope to share it with many people who I've been telling for years that bad foods are drugs and that good foods are the best kind of medicine.

  • @peacefulisland67
    @peacefulisland67 7 месяцев назад +15

    Feeling "safe" in the world requires a foundation of knowing one's inherent and unconditional value; one's connection to the bigger picture and the availability of internal love that never runs dry.

    • @bettinazwerdling9158
      @bettinazwerdling9158 6 месяцев назад +1

      Yes, so agree. And it brings up two forms of trauma or somatic psychotherapy...IFS (Internal Family Systems) and Refined Hakomi therapy. You might research...IFS has been covered on many podcasts. Best wishes.

    • @peacefulisland67
      @peacefulisland67 6 месяцев назад

      @@bettinazwerdling9158 perfect.
      Yes, I'm familiar with both .

  • @Ayy_Addie
    @Ayy_Addie 7 месяцев назад +24

    If there's one thing I've learnt from this podcast is the importance of a healthy gut. As someone working through some gut and hence mental issues I can honestly say cutting off gluten and sugar has really helped me who used to be the queen of anxiety...

  • @georgianabodoiu59
    @georgianabodoiu59 3 месяца назад +12

    I truly believe that what happened is the way our society changed. Less people work on farms, which we know is hilghly therapeutic. More cars traffic, danger, which made our children less likely to go outside and play.. Media which has absolutely disabled us socially and mentally... So I would say at a collective level everything changed..

  • @LG-bi1sr
    @LG-bi1sr 7 месяцев назад +10

    Yet another important episode. It often surprises me how good of an interviewer you are Steven. Idk how aware you are about what you do, but somehow you manage to bring the best out of the guests every single time.

  • @creatoratplay
    @creatoratplay 7 месяцев назад +14

    This is so powerful. Dr. Palmer's vulnerability, knowledge, and offering hope to so many. I've personally experienced the power of these metabolic interventions as a caregiver. Thank you for spreading awareness.

  • @quickcinemarecap
    @quickcinemarecap 7 месяцев назад +96

    00:03 Metabolic health is the missing piece in curing mental health epidemic.
    02:18 Struggle with mental illness and its impact on life.
    08:02 Current treatments are not effective for everyone
    10:37 Some people with eating disorders are labeled as terminally ill
    15:55 Many patients with major depressive disorder do not achieve remission after multiple levels of treatment.
    18:31 Misconception on rise in mental health disorders
    23:21 Metabolic health is a crucial factor in mental health disorders and rising suicide rates.
    25:26 Metabolic disorders are causing mental health symptoms.
    30:09 Mitochondria plays a key role in mental health.
    32:27 Mitochondria play a crucial role in cellular functions and human evolution.
    37:13 Mitochondria dysfunction can lead to exhaustion and health issues.
    39:18 Traumatic events can lead to physiological reactions impacting metabolism and causing mental health disorders.
    44:07 Patterns of trauma create learned responses
    46:25 Unresolved trauma can lead to mental health disorders.
    51:06 Trauma triggers biological response for self-defense.
    53:39 Disrepair in cells can lead to mental disorders.
    58:44 Diet change improved mental and physical health
    1:01:10 Ultra-processed foods with man-made compounds can cause mitochondrial dysfunction
    1:05:20 Ultra processed food linked to higher risk of mental disorders.
    1:07:38 Metabolism is the common thread in mental health disorders, including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and Alzheimer's.
    1:12:22 Ketogenic diet resulted in full remission of schizophrenia symptoms and dramatic weight loss.
    1:14:35 The ketogenic diet has proven effects on epilepsy and mental illness treatment.
    1:19:02 The metabolic changes and mitochondrial changes are crucial for mental health improvement
    1:21:02 Fasting and the ketogenic diet can have a positive impact on mental health.
    1:25:38 Caffeine stimulates metabolism and brain function, but overdoing it can cause oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction.
    1:28:01 Balancing the use of substances for cell metabolism is crucial for mental health.
    1:32:39 Obesity and diabetes can increase the risk of autism due to metabolic problems in parents, which can be passed on to children.
    1:35:17 Limiting screen time and establishing a bedtime routine can help improve sleep quality.
    1:39:11 Long-term despair can lead to numbness and self-harm
    1:41:59 Chris Palmer's book provides solutions and hope for mental health
    1:46:00 Dr. Palmer recommends a diet linked to improved mental health.

  • @laraoneal7284
    @laraoneal7284 4 месяца назад +44

    When a parent or both parents betray us as a child it is soul murder. My story is too long to go into here but having 20 years of a proactive recovery process I’m still not over it. I was also the scapegoat in my family. I went no contact over 29 years ago. My life is like climbing Mt Everest incrementally on a daily basis. I’m only now trying to get me off the cliff of fight or flight syndrome that I’ve had forever. Ty for bringing this to the fore.

    • @Sunnyfield323
      @Sunnyfield323 3 месяца назад +2

      Well i oh wish you luck ! Bringing down that alarm feeling and feeling safe is the most important. Maybe there something new you can add in. I’m retrying Fast EFT tapping . I was triggered last night and raised my voice. I walked away and still felt my heart pumping then I was also mad at myself . I tapped the sequence a few times and ended with an exhale … I did feel better it seemed to discharge the emotion and apparently it breaks the association

  • @carlosf3421
    @carlosf3421 5 месяцев назад +150

    This dude is legit. Very heartfelt. He is on a Mission! God bless you Dr!

  • @fishbone9159
    @fishbone9159 7 месяцев назад +12

    I just need to say that: I LOVE your channel! It become kind of natural to have all these new and valueble information for free since youtube and the internet evolved that way but it's still ppl like you that make it so easy for everyone to access them. And I really wanna thank you for it and for the great curation of interesting topics and ppl! This channel really is a gift. So grateful I found it! And of course thankful for ppl like Chris Palmer and other scientists that try to make their work accessible to a broader audience.

  • @carolginsberg662
    @carolginsberg662 7 месяцев назад +21

    I have so much respect and appreciation for Dr Chris Palmer. He is amazing❣️

  • @lanne2525
    @lanne2525 Месяц назад +3

    OMG what an incredible and inspirational guest! One of your best episodes Steven, thank you. Very impactful and important lifesaving information.

  • @kated3165
    @kated3165 7 месяцев назад +87

    Growing up as an autistic girl, all of my autistic traits were constantly being seen by teachers (and other adults) as defiance/maliciousness/whininess and generally me just being a weird solitary kid. Heck my own parents had no idea I was autistic. I remember looking up mental disorders, trying to figure out what was weird with me, and while the definition of autism really struck a chord... I absolutely did not fit some of the required criteria at the time (like struggling academically). No one ever picked up on my father and brother being autistic either... and their traits were much more ''typical'' and visible than mine. They just didn't fully fit the labels people previously associated autism with either.

    • @SENSEF
      @SENSEF 7 месяцев назад +36

      TRUTH! Autism has "increased" because the diagnosis criteria finally includes GIRLS and their different array of symptoms. My daughter wouldn't have gotten diagnosed if she had been born 5 or 10 years sooner. Her diagnosis has been critical in understanding her "difficult" symptoms and working WITH her, instead of against her (typical parenting and schooling approaches are all WRONG for her!!!).
      BTW, after her diagnosis it became obvious Daddy needed to be evaluated, too. Autistic! He "failed" kindergarten yet NEVER got the help he needed in life because he didn't fit the old criteria from 30+ years ago. It's so sad!!! Especially looking at all the hardships he has endured through his whole life that would've been helped if he had that diagnosis to navigate what actually works WITH him instead of trying to shove his square peg self into a round hole to appease ignorant teachers.

    • @JezaGaia
      @JezaGaia 7 месяцев назад +20

      @@SENSEF Exactly, 40% increase they say ? well around 50% of the population are women so it fits.
      Also from what I've seen on average autistic people seem to be relatively fit, so while I can't say about diabetes I don't believe that obesity has anything to do with MAKING people autistic. Note that I live in France where obesity is way less prevalent than in the US.
      However after having cut out every food I react to and this includes all cars so sugar and grains I can attest that autistic traits can become more or less acute depending on your metabolic health and as such more obvious and easy to diagnose perhaps. But I certainly was autistic before my health went south and am still autistic after getting healthy I just have more control and my mood is more stable.

    • @etcwhatever
      @etcwhatever 7 месяцев назад +8

      There are different "flavours" of autism so to say. Current diagnosis criteria are evolving.

    • @christinaurbarbieUkRapper
      @christinaurbarbieUkRapper 7 месяцев назад +1

      💯🎯same

    • @dawn-from-the-lab
      @dawn-from-the-lab 6 месяцев назад +14

      Same for girls and ADHD. To this day, my dad denies I have it because I managed to get a college degree. I’ve also wrecked every single vehicle I’ve ever driven and cannot focus on a conversation to save my life, but I got that diploma so I can’t possibly have it. 🤦🏽‍♀️🙄
      I only got diagnosed at 33 after my twin daughters were diagnosed at 5 because they couldn’t stay seated in class no matter how hard the teachers tried and they gave up on nap time with them after a couple days too. 🤣

  • @isabelleBeaulac
    @isabelleBeaulac 7 месяцев назад +130

    I have been working in schools for 30 years. I concur with Dr. Palmer. I’m so sad for our children.

    • @Yankeeswaper
      @Yankeeswaper 6 месяцев назад

      Obese mothers caused their kids autism it's not true or scientifically backed up. Yeah diet can help but it ain't preventing a autism diagnosis.

    • @MsElke11
      @MsElke11 6 месяцев назад +5

      Me too.....but I feel that principals ganging up on teachers instead of phones tik tok and disrespectful behavior is what has made our role as effective teachers sink.

    • @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked
      @ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked 6 месяцев назад +2

      We see eczema go away with plant-based diets, in 3 to 4 weeks (sometimes longer) usually diet related cancers (most cancers) reverse on a plant-based diet, 3 to 4 weeks (sometimes longer) diabetes is reversed on a plant-based diet, etc.

    • @gosimons
      @gosimons 6 месяцев назад

      @@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked its what happens when lowering insulin, the issue you will find is many in that state are on highly refined foods.

    • @hypnopompicstate9910
      @hypnopompicstate9910 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked Rubbish.

  • @Edge1588
    @Edge1588 7 месяцев назад +122

    Seeing Dr Chris Palmer as a guest gives me great joy.
    This guy is the first stepping stone to the reduction of this epidemic.

    • @PacoBear
      @PacoBear 7 месяцев назад +8

      Imagine if #RobertFKennedyJr and Dr. Palmer joined forces when Mr. Kennedy wins the presidency? Mr. Kennedy has fought these issues for 40 years as an environmental lawyer.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +9

      Likewise, as a Psych Nurse I've worked with many Psychiatrist. This guy is Dr. of Truth. It's a breath of fresh air to listen to him.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@PacoBear Long road to freedom:) I believe that's the title of Nelson Mandela's biography. Likewise, similarly here.

    • @PacoBear
      @PacoBear 7 месяцев назад +3

      Thank you for your perspective. To think of all the unnecessary suffering that has been caused by corporate greed. @@NeseretBemient

    • @autisticdan6151
      @autisticdan6151 7 месяцев назад

      @@NeseretBemient
      Not Mr. Truth, he was very insulting towards us, why is it a risk for autistic people to exist? Why is it a risk to give birth to someone with Down syndrome? He is blowing the dog whistle for ableist eugenics.
      We are not demons to eradicate.

  • @tippieyanez8289
    @tippieyanez8289 2 месяца назад +1

    Just finished watching and i am in tears. Thank you Dr. Palmer for your devotion to your mother. To humanity. Thank you Steven. Your podcast will grow to 20 million, I have no doubt.

  • @jakebullet64
    @jakebullet64 7 месяцев назад +86

    Ive shared this episode with my partner who works with clients with a dual diagnosis in a forensic setting. She askes..
    "If the Canadian government are supporting peoples' requests for euthanasia due to a serious, enduring mental illness, have they even got the capacity to make the decision to end their life?"
    Prayers to everyone battling mental illness.🙏

    • @jorschu
      @jorschu 6 месяцев назад

      The Liberal-NDP government is showing us we are the carbon they need to reduce.

    • @minitea4315
      @minitea4315 6 месяцев назад

      She got it in one. How indeed can a mentally Ill person make a decision of such magnitude and permanence?

    • @silram7742
      @silram7742 6 месяцев назад

      This will first be clarified with psychologists.

    • @blutamis7697
      @blutamis7697 5 месяцев назад +2

      No they don't and most medical workers in Canada will support any request for MAID

    • @northernfox6420
      @northernfox6420 4 месяца назад

      Trudeau is part of a master plan. (And other Commonwealth countries unfortunately.)

  • @artandculture5262
    @artandculture5262 7 месяцев назад +11

    He was on Chatterjee. That’s why I was confused about why I thought this was a repeat. This is a real human. Bless him. Bless his soul.

  • @franyoung5182
    @franyoung5182 7 месяцев назад +87

    As someone with autism and suffering with chronic mental health since childhood (that was also failed by the system) to now having two small children of my own on the spectrum (one of which is now starting his journey through that same system) I am so intrigued. Just watching the intro gave me shivers. Just starting now and I'm excited! X

    • @ruthhorowitz7625
      @ruthhorowitz7625 7 месяцев назад +15

      I find it offensive

    • @EliaszPimpicki
      @EliaszPimpicki 7 месяцев назад

      @@ruthhorowitz7625 me too! very much so

    • @TypeRking76
      @TypeRking76 7 месяцев назад

      @@ruthhorowitz7625explain

    • @Ownmoon2
      @Ownmoon2 7 месяцев назад +4

      @@ruthhorowitz7625 Ruth can you please expand on what it is that offends and why… genuinely asking.

    • @ruthhorowitz7625
      @ruthhorowitz7625 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@Ownmoon2 read my comment

  • @JeffRage
    @JeffRage 4 месяца назад +11

    I've watched many videos on Metabolic syndrome. I've watched many videos on ADHD. I didn't realize how these 2 things were so related until watching this video.

  • @lemunbalm3731
    @lemunbalm3731 7 месяцев назад +22

    For those just beginning to listen, don’t give up waiting for his answers to the problem. (He spends an hour explaining the problem, but does begin to share his answer at 1:00)

    • @JustMe-gs9xi
      @JustMe-gs9xi 7 месяцев назад +1

      good,,, im waiting

    • @BendyLilZebraBabe
      @BendyLilZebraBabe 5 месяцев назад +1

      Misconstrued a lot of information completely warps bits of others and the wholesale lies about the rest I don't think he means to lie I just think he means to sell a book

  • @murielmathebula5128
    @murielmathebula5128 7 месяцев назад +30

    Thanks a lot for this kind of content Steven. They are changing not only our lives but lives of ppl close to us as well. Blessings upon you.

    • @NeseretBemient
      @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад

      It's so special to create this kind of sacred space and a container for people. What a gift!

  • @christinabrown706
    @christinabrown706 7 месяцев назад +19

    Thank you Chris. I am now 4 years Carnivore - yes I only eat meat, fish, shellfish, eggs - and now I realise I am even better on just fatty beef. My depression, anxiety, bi polar all gone. I can now face my paperwork, my brain is not confused. The brain fog has lifted. Also my alzhiemers has disappeared. 8 years ago I got into my car and literally knew the key, my feet and the peddles were to do something but I did not know what !
    For 50 years I ate low fat, processed foods, lots of veggies, lots of bread, pasta, pizza and sadly used margarine and I avoided red meats - this is a total tragedy as I lost so much of my life.

    • @gegelast
      @gegelast 5 месяцев назад +1

      that doesn't work for everyone and not all mental conditions though. Like autism can't be gotten rid of and if it was it wouldn't be fully positive. I'm glad it helps some but how is speaks is harmful to others

  • @sugansugan56
    @sugansugan56 4 месяца назад +5

    Prayers going up for Chris Palmer - I can relate to you Chris - my mom suffered with mental illness too and the children - thank you for your work

  • @Lipolimtown
    @Lipolimtown 7 месяцев назад +13

    The last 14 years of my life explained in one interview. I’ve lost everything to the bipolar anhedonia, the marijuana use, the chronic mild stress, the social abuse situations in college, it led to more serious disorders out of nowhere. It’s beyond accurate and there really are no solutions in psychiatry. This stuff wasn’t being talked about even 10 years ago and although rare, I imagine many similar if not identical situations as mine. The guy is brilliant, grounded, matter of fact, meticulous, and going where no other doctor has really gone

  • @aatt3209
    @aatt3209 7 месяцев назад +103

    As a pre-diabetic, I will stay on a lifestyle based on ketogenic diet + OMAD + fasting for the rest of my life. When I was a child, I was fed a high-carb + sugar diet, because it was convenient and cheap. I am forever grateful to my doctor who introduced me to the keto diet to stay strong and healthy.

    • @JH-pv6rd
      @JH-pv6rd 7 месяцев назад +13

      You don't have to move to keto diet in order to stop eating sugar or grains. Eat more vegetables and less processed food and problem will be solved.

    • @suzanne2650
      @suzanne2650 7 месяцев назад +2

      Question: Im planning on doing the Keto Diet long term (it has helped me tremendously). Do you have tips on preventing deficiencies and do you follow a specific plan? I am mainly worried about magnesium ald Potassium..

    • @JH-pv6rd
      @JH-pv6rd 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@suzanne2650 how about fiber?

    • @sschreck08
      @sschreck08 7 месяцев назад

      Keto in the long term is dangerous!

    • @annmarieknapp
      @annmarieknapp 7 месяцев назад +2

      Keto is good. Carnivore works for me.

  • @andreafrancis4292
    @andreafrancis4292 6 месяцев назад +37

    Steven has done podcasts mentioning the MTHFR gene mutations. It's worth noting that folic acid has only been added to enriched grains for 25 years, and 40% of the population has at least one allele of these mutations. I've had horrible symptoms of ADHD, anxiety, and the rest mostly because my life has changed, and I no longer have the time to cook my own food or exercise. Since there was a good chance statistically that I have this mutation, I just gave up wheat for a week (I don't eat other enriched cereals). At the end of that week, I was back to my old self. One other time I gave up wheat, barley, and dairy for about three months. I've never been so clear-headed (and clear-skinned) in my life. But it's difficult to maintain due to social pressures around food. You can buy unenriched flour and do your own baking, which will probably help a lot, if you're not ready for keto.

    • @11allamericangirl
      @11allamericangirl 5 месяцев назад +3

      I have that mutation and didn’t know that wheat or grains affected people with those! Thanks for the information! Is there a specific diet/foods we are supposed to eat when someone struggles with that mutation?

    • @AndreaFrancis-wu1uv
      @AndreaFrancis-wu1uv 5 месяцев назад

      @11allamericangirl Just be a label reader. Folic acid is added to non-whole grains and foods made with them, as well as most vitamins. You can get vitamins with methylated forms of folate, though. Opt for whole grains and organic grains and foods made with them, but don't trust the description. Read those labels! King Arthur unbleached, unbromated flour doesn't list any vitamins added. You can opt for nut flours or oatmeal for baked goods. It only takes a week of avoiding folic acid to notice a difference.

    • @jennierussell7439
      @jennierussell7439 4 месяца назад

      I dont think it's wheat or grain we are supposed to avoid, it's the folic acid that is added to enriched food products. Probably worth googling it and finding out for yourself

    • @AndreaFrancis-wu1uv
      @AndreaFrancis-wu1uv 4 месяца назад

      I shared my experience. Everyone is different because of their different genetic makeup. My father ate a diet that would give any normal person high cholesterol, but his has always been on the low end of normal. I mentioned wheat because it is almost always enriched in processed foods. It's easy to give it up for a week to see if you have this mutation of the MTHFR gene. You can buy pastas and rice without folic acid, you just have to look for them.

  • @kimcalder388
    @kimcalder388 2 месяца назад +2

    ❤ omg I'm the autistic chronically anxious depressed psychotic mother, poor & still smoking myself to die, drove my daughter to shut down, self harm, and cutting me off completely thirteen yrs ago. I couldn't understand until now. Chris, thankyou into infinity. I believe in change and now I have hard core tools, thankyou 😢

  • @CharmSanchez
    @CharmSanchez 7 месяцев назад +13

    The ketogenic diet essentially bypasses the mitochondria because we get our energy from fat instead of sugar (the mitochondria is where we break down glucose to use as energy).
    A few more things to consider that weren't mentioned in this interview;
    • We all know fat around our organs is bad. Yet when we use glucose as our main source of fuel we store fat on our liver and when we are in ketosis we don't, in fact we clean the liver and use that fat as fuel instead.
    • When we have alcohol our body prioritizes it for energy before glucose, in the same manner glucose is prioritised before fat.
    • What is a poison? "a substance that is capable of causing illness or death"
    • The number 1 killer in the world is cardiovascular disease, which we now know is caused by prediabetes (high blood sugar) we don't know to what extent yet.
    • Number 2 killer is cancer - cancer cells use ATP (glucose) to grow, they are unable to effectively use ketone bodies for energy.
    • 3 and 4 COVID + Accidents
    • 5 Stroke, 6 Respiratory diseases - both caused by inflammation (glucose is inflammatory, fat isn't)
    • 7 Chronic liver disease (fatty liver) 8 Alzheimer's (also known as Diabetes type3) 9 Diabetes (high blood sugar)
    See a pattern?
    Also keep in mind;
    • There's no such thing as an essential carbohydrate, our body makes it when it needs it. We do however need essential fats and essential proteins.
    • When we eat a non ketogenic food our bodies immediately send out far too much insulin into our blood stream so it can get the sugar out the blood quickly, if it didn't do this then it would damage our insides and we would have seizures much like a type 1 diabetic would, after this it causes a dip in blood sugar levels since we sent out too much insulin which causes us to faint if don't get more glucose in our blood.
    So if we are supposed to eat mainly carbohydrates then why haven't our bodies got a better hang of this yet? When we have fat as fuel there is no such issues. We just use the fat for energy while cleaning up the mess that glucose made 🤷🏼‍♀️

  • @eglebutkutyte9410
    @eglebutkutyte9410 7 месяцев назад +6

    As a close relative of someone fighting a bipolar disorder for many years with little success, I am watching this episode with tears in my eyes. We need more episodes like that with Chris Palmer and other guests as briliant as him. Mental health of our society's been declining, thus the topic itself deserves a close look in order to understand why we are becoming mentally ill.
    What are we eating? What kindof jobs do we do all day so that we feel so tired and drained? Do those jobs give us enough meaning? How do our relationships look these days? Are we able to make and cherish our friendships and family relationships? What do we do in our free time? Does that give us enough meaning... And then it comes to social media, it's another extremely broad topic which relation to the society's declining mental health should be explored again and again.
    I can't thank you enough @TheDiaryofACEO for this podcast.

  • @charmainepriestman915
    @charmainepriestman915 7 месяцев назад +28

    Mental illness can be worse than the worst prison and many times others cannot perceive the torment experienced by the sufferers

    • @anthonyybarra621
      @anthonyybarra621 7 месяцев назад +4

      Very true. I feel like my family who doesn't understand think I'm lazy. Nobody willingly wants to suffer.

    • @deborahritchie3912
      @deborahritchie3912 7 месяцев назад +3

      There is a book in prison called we are all doing time.

    • @stephieg.2580
      @stephieg.2580 5 месяцев назад +1

      I know..54 yrs of torment on this earth ..robbed me of my whole life

  • @nicktsoulli1796
    @nicktsoulli1796 3 месяца назад +5

    I've have personally had a massive improvement in my ADHD simply with an improved diet that has more of the base things that are needed by my body to create more or most of the hormones. the Hormone and nutrient tree is really important. It's clear that A lot of this is imposed on us with our poor modern diets , sure some people are more predisposed to ADHD, autism , bi-polar but diet is a huge factor and most likely the most important and regulating it.

  • @melinachessex961
    @melinachessex961 7 месяцев назад +12

    I love this man! So knowledgeable and so human. We need more doctors like him!

  • @NeseretBemient
    @NeseretBemient 7 месяцев назад +10

    Bipolar disorder and schizophrenia and any other "serious mental health disorder" does not necessarily have to be a "chronic life long" illness.
    I was able to put a 13 year long absolute nightmare, antidepressant induced bipolar disorder into remission through metabolic therapies including the ketogenic diet.
    It was a 7-year journey, but it was worth every step because it saved my life.
    I felt like I was among the walking dead.
    Today, I no longer struggle with suicidal ideation.
    This gave me my life back - my energy, creativity, passion and zest for life, my connection with my daughter and partner.
    I'm at my ideal weight, I have tons of energy, I can focus (no more brain fog), and I can enjoy reading and writing again.
    I am also a psychiatric RN with 17 years of service in the conventional system.
    I have never come across this type of powerful intervention in all my years.
    It's life changing and I am so excited to share this with others.
    I feel like I finally have something of value and substance to share with my clients.

  • @rupertrivett3961
    @rupertrivett3961 7 месяцев назад +32

    Having felt depression and lets say low mood I realise it's definitely diet that affects my mood. Eating as natural as possible is the best way forward

    • @kimlizotte694
      @kimlizotte694 7 месяцев назад +2

      Totally agree! I never believed in the psychiatric "explanation/diagnosis" but I could always see the connection between behaviors/state of mind and environment/lifestyle & diet. There's sooo much society can tap into for health, both mental & physical but for whatever reason society doesn't.
      This video is very illuminating!

    • @fractal4619
      @fractal4619 6 месяцев назад

      Also check out The Mood Cure by Julia Ross. Targeted amino acid supplements target depression and other symptoms.. She has a fascinating YT channel demonstrating the effects

  • @mmoklah
    @mmoklah 4 месяца назад +27

    Forty years ago I read about a Russian study where mental patients were put on a fast - sometimes a 2 and 3 week fast - water only - and their mental illness was cured which proves diet plays a big part.

    • @Emi_72
      @Emi_72 2 месяца назад +1

      Source?

  • @fiennesite
    @fiennesite 7 месяцев назад +18

    The biggest change in the past 50 years is environment. The world has become more stressfu🎉l from the perspective of trauma, break down of family support structures even in collective cultures, lack of access to good psychiatry, and a shortage of mental health professionals. The demands of the 21st century workplace with healthcare non-existent for some, and getting worse even for middle classes (managed care providing less and less), contribute to an environment that makes managing symptoms, getting downtime, or emotional support from family and friends nearly impossible. There is no safe environment to heal or exist that allows relief of stress...the environment turns on stress responses even in people who were once resilient. I have seen severely mentally ill people off their meds function fine in protective environments....but those scenarios just don't exist for most people.

    • @stevenpace892
      @stevenpace892 15 дней назад

      I would say that 'stress' has not increased as it has changed. My grandfathers lived through the great depression, and one of them lost one wife, his house, and two children, was robbed, in a hurricane, etc. You could say they had a LOT of stress. But I think we are not designed for these new stresses.

  • @pathos9864
    @pathos9864 7 месяцев назад +16

    My mom suffered schizophrenia for about 35 years. We, as a family, all went through numerous circles of hell. Actually, there was no more family as all the connections/relationships were broken. I hardly remember the days of bright clear and involved mind of my mom. Most of the times, it was a sequence of procedures of her being hospitalized, getting out, refusing the medication and then going back to the hospital. Nothing worked. At my age of being 11-12yo my mom experienced a close to death condition. She started practicing Bragg’s ideas he put in his book The Miracle of Fasting. Even though, I agree that the principles of fasting are great for human body but at that time it almost took my mom’s life. She is not obese, doesn’t eat sugar and other processed foods, but nothing actually works anymore. As if someone or something completely took over her and her mind is dominated by smth else. It’s great that some people may heal and see better results and it’s sorrowful to see that nothing works for the others. It leaves an immense heavy burden in the hearts of beloved ones.

    • @teresaalbert5518
      @teresaalbert5518 6 месяцев назад

      I tried so many prescribed antidepressants until a functional doctor gave me GABA - not gabapentin - and it saved my life. I don’t take it daily but when needed. Cost me lots of money but I can see why I never was helped by RX drugs. I have PTSD, anxiety and depression. All of them are regulated by the GABA, liquid vitamin D, anti-anxiety drops. But the GABA is the big game changer. There is help but big Pharma won’t allow it. Insurance doesn’t cover natural healing supplements. It’s wrong and evil.

  • @leilap2495
    @leilap2495 7 месяцев назад +23

    I saw signs of autism in my child. His symptoms were significant. I first started with testing for toxins. He tested positive for jet fuel among other things. I later found out that the ground water in my area was contaminated by a rocket manufacturer. I wonder if I had stayed in the neighboring city, where the water supply is known to be excellent, would my second child be verbal like my first.
    I since found out that ADHD and autism run in my family, and I was sincelate diagnosed myself. I try to not have regrets or assumptions about the chemical exposures, as I can’t turn back time. I try to think of my son’s differences to others as being more random than that, like how I was lucky enough to have relatively better vision than my brother and mother, but had difficulty focusing mentally and was heavily bullied for being different, unlike them. Being different shouldn’t be a reason to be mistreated. I am happy to see that my children are surrounded by positivity at school. I became particularly vigilant to ensure that my kids have a supportive environment at school and home. Having differently functioning minds benefits society, so I am not sad to be part of the neurodivergent population. I am sad that I wasn’t identified and provided the environment that would help me and my children have the best chance of thriving.

    • @kiwio3o387
      @kiwio3o387 5 месяцев назад +1

      @@smz9570You missed the point of their comment… the contaminations weren’t the cause of any of it, and wasn’t the focus of their comment in the long run.

  • @rmil4531
    @rmil4531 5 месяцев назад +6

    This is one of my favourite videos. You have totally explained so much for my past work, family and now influenced my future. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. We need so many more people like this.💕

  • @clarereynolds9607
    @clarereynolds9607 7 месяцев назад +5

    Thank you both, my mum had a miserable existence for a huge chunk of her life due to this kind of problem and died too young last summer, its left me gutted but i want to make sure no one else in my family and friends circle ever go down the same road..this has helped me, bless you both.

  • @zanetpieterse7933
    @zanetpieterse7933 7 месяцев назад +14

    When my boy was diagnosed with Autism 10 years ago at age 4 the pediatric neurologist told me that it was in no way my fault, and I did nothing wrong. It was the worst experience because I literaly had to 'bury' the (normal) life I hoped for my child. I grew up and worked for more or less 40 years in a very toxic and carcinogenic petrochemical and mining environment, so I thought his autism was due to the environmental factors. Today I realize my metabolic illness probably caused my child's autism. I feel devestated by this awareness. May the Grace and Mercy of God be with me in dealing with this.
    Kind wishes from Namibia

    • @ruthhorowitz7625
      @ruthhorowitz7625 7 месяцев назад +3

      He's wrong, stop blaming yourself

    • @zanetpieterse7933
      @zanetpieterse7933 7 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@ruthhorowitz7625Thank you for your kind words... people really have no idea how challenging this is

    • @ruthhorowitz7625
      @ruthhorowitz7625 7 месяцев назад +2

      @@zanetpieterse7933 I'm autistic, I know. The world sees us as defective as a disease. We're not defective, just different. Most of science and technology was done by autistics. Be proud of your son.

    • @suzannehodgkins7197
      @suzannehodgkins7197 6 месяцев назад +1

      No, he acknowledged the impact of forever chemicals, viruses, microplastics...ASD is multifactorial, but the injury to the mitochondria is the constant. You didn't do anything wrong, and eating poorly is because we followed the USDA recommendations...a failed experiment!

  • @mettacognatus5849
    @mettacognatus5849 7 месяцев назад +23

    I also suffered a lot at the hands of mental health professionals who, despite all the adverse effects that medication had on me, continued to insist that I had to take it. I took responsibility for my own path and became a psychologist. My approach was already greatly focused on lifestyle changes (I know what that did for me), but now I have even more confidence in intervention. This theory is revolutionizing our field. Since I saw the first podcast, I haven't stopped learning a little more every day... I've read the book, and my enthusiasm grows every day. Thank you, Dr. Chris Palmer.