쉐도잉 연습: Gut Detox: How To Repair & Clean Your Gut Naturally - YouTube로 영어 말하기 배우기

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Your gut bacteria are currently starving,
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Your gut bacteria are currently starving,
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and because they have nothing to eat, they've started eating you.
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That's not a metaphor.
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It is a biological reality.
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When you starve your internal ecosystem of the right environment,
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those trillions of bacteria stop processing your food and start digesting the protective lining of your own intestines.
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This internal cannibalism is the hidden trigger behind the brain fog you can't shake,
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the stubborn bloating that ruins your clothes,
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and the chronic fatigue that makes 3 p.m feel like midnight.
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In this video, I'm giving you five scientifically backed natural methods to flush out the bad bacteria,
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heal your gut lining,
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and finally reactivate your internal street sweeper to unlock a level of physical energy and mental clarity you haven't felt in years.
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First, let's begin with a mechanism that is almost entirely ignored by the wellness industry,
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yet it is arguably the most important cleaner you possess.
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It is called the Migrating Motor Complex, or MMC.
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To understand why this matters,
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we have to correct a major misconception about how digestion works.
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We tend to think of the gut as a continuous conveyor belt.
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You put food in, and it pushes food out.
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But the small intestine actually has two distinct modes,
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eating mode and cleaning mode.
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When you are eating, your gut is mixing and absorbing nutrients.
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But the deep cleaning cannot happen during this phase.
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The deep cleaning can only happen after the last breakdown of food is complete.
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This is where the MMC comes in.
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Think of it as your internal street sweeper.
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It is a powerful wave of movement that sweeps through your small intestine.
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Its job is to push undigested food and cellular debris down into the colon where it belongs.
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But here is the critical rule.
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The street sweeper only comes out when the street is empty.
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It requires your stomach to be empty for roughly 90 minutes to 2 hours before it even begins its cycle.
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Once it starts, the cleaning cycle itself takes about 90 minutes to complete.
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If you eat anything, even a handful of almonds or a specialized detox drink,
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the moment calories hit the stomach,
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the cleaning cycle stops immediately.
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In the modern world, we are grazing constantly.
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We eat breakfast, then a mid-morning snack,
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then lunch, a sugary coffee,
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dinner, and a late night treat.
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Because we never stop eating,
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the cleaning crew never comes out.
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This has a disastrous effect.
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When the street sweeper doesn't run,
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bacteria are allowed to stagnate in the small intestine.
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This leads to fermentation, bloating,
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and a condition called SIBO—small intestinal bacterial overgrowth.
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Essentially, the trash piles up because the sweeper never gets a shift.
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The fix isn't a pill.
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It is the reintroduction of space.
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Research suggests that spacing meals by 4-5 hours,
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without snacking in between, allows this cleaning wave to complete a full cycle.
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It's about doing nothing.
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When you hear your stomach rumble and you aren't starving,
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that isn't always a cry for food.
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Often, that is the sound of the street sweeper doing its job.
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By simply closing the kitchen between meals,
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you allow the system to self-repair.
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Second, the garden ecosystem.
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Once we understand that the system needs time to clean,
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we have to look at the residents living inside the system.
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We are hosts to trillions of bacteria.
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For a long time, we thought of bacteria as enemies.
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Now, we know they are more like the soil in a garden.
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If the soil is barren, nothing grows.
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If the soil is rich, the plants thrive.
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The mistake most people make is trying to fix their gut by taking a generic probiotic capsule.
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This is often ineffective because you're throwing a few seeds onto concrete.
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If the environment isn't right, they won't take hold.
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The single most effective way to enrich this environment is through diversity.
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There was a fascinating study where researchers swapped the diets of rural South Africans with African Americans.
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The rural diet was very high in fiber and low in fat.
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The American diet was the opposite.
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Within just two weeks, the Americans eating the rural high-fiber diet saw a massive reduction in inflammation.
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Why?
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Because fiber is the fuel that good bacteria eat.
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When you eat plant fibers,
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they pass into the colon,
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where your good bacteria ferment them.
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This process creates incredible compounds that lower inflammation and heal the gut lining.
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But here's the catch.
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Different bacteria eat different things.
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Some species like the fiber in onions,
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others prefer the fiber in walnuts,
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others need the fiber in raspberries.
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The American Gut Project, a massive study,
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found that the single strongest predictor of a healthy gut was the number of different plant species consumed.
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They found that the sweet spot was eating 30 different plants per week.
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This sounds like a high number,
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but it includes herbs, spices, nuts, seeds, and fruits.
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It is about the width of your diet, not just the volume.
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If you eat a huge bowl of broccoli every day,
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you are feeding only the broccoli-eating bacteria.
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But if you eat a smaller amount of broccoli,
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plus carrots, pumpkin seeds, cilantro,
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and black beans, you are feeding a diverse ecosystem.
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By expanding the variety of plants you eat,
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you build a resilient garden that crowds out the weeds, bad bacteria.
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Now, moving to mechanism number three,
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we have to discuss the timing of the gut.
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We often focus entirely on what we eat,
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but when we eat is just as important.
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Just as your brain has a sleep-wake cycle,
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your digestion has a rhythm.
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We tend to think of digestion as a factory that runs at the same speed 24-7.
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It doesn't.
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Clinical research shows that your body processes food much better earlier in the day.
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Your insulin sensitivity and digestive enzymes are at their peak in the morning and afternoon,
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and they drop off significantly after dark.
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Think of it like a factory shift.
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The day shift is fully staffed and ready to work.
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The night shift is a skeleton crew.
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When you eat a heavy meal at 9pm,
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you are dumping a huge workload onto the night crew that has already gone home.
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Because the body is less efficient at night,
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the food sits in the stomach longer.
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Blood sugar stays elevated for longer periods,
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leading to greater fat storage and inflammation.
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Furthermore, digestion takes a lot of energy.
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If your body is spending energy digesting a late meal,
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it cannot spend energy on deep sleep or cellular repair.
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There is also a fascinating link between your gut bacteria and your sleep.
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Certain bacteria help produce the chemicals that regulate sleep, like serotonin and melatonin.
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When we eat late at night,
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we disrupt their rhythm, which disrupts our sleep.
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It becomes a vicious cycle.
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Poor sleep leads to sugar cravings,
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which leads to poor gut health,
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which leads to worse sleep.
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To break this, we look at time-restricted eating.
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This isn't about starving yourself.
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It is about metabolic rest.
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Try to confine your eating window to 10 or 12 hours.
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For example, eating only between 8 a.m and 8 p.m.
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This simple change aligns your food intake with your body's active phase.
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It allows the gut lining to regenerate overnight without the interference of active digestion.
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It signals to your body that it is time to repair,
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not time to process.
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4. The On-Off Switch Mechanism number four takes us away from food entirely and looks at the wiring of the system.
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You can eat the perfect,
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diverse diet and space your meals.
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But if this one wire is frayed, digestion will halt.
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We are talking about the vagus nerve.
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The gut and the brain are physically connected by this nerve.
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It's a two-way superhighway.
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But the traffic flow is dictated by your stress.
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Your nervous system has two primary modes,
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fight or flight, stress, and rest and digest, relaxation.
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You cannot be in both at the same time.
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Biologically, if you are running from a tiger,
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or more likely, stressing over an email,
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your body perceives a threat.
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In response, it sends blood flow away from the gut and towards your muscles to help you run.
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Digestion is considered a luxury.
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Survival is the priority.
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This means if you eat while you are anxious,
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rushing to a meeting, or scrolling through stressful news,
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you are effectively eating with the power turned off.
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Your stomach acid decreases and gut movement slows down.
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This stagnation causes food to sit and rot rather than digest,
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causing gas and bloating.
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We have to understand that digestion begins in the brain, not the mouth.
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We must manually toggle the switch to rest and digest before we eat.
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The longest living populations often treat meals as a slow, relaxing time.
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This isn't just tradition, it's physiology.
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A practical way to hack this is through breath.
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Before you take your first bite,
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simply take three slow, deep breaths.
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Make your exhale longer than your inhale.
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This physically stimulates the vagus nerve.
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It sends a signal from your body to your brain that says, we are safe.
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The brain then turns the power back on for digestion.
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It takes 30 seconds, but it changes how your body processes that meal.
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Fifth, this is where we have to look at what we are inadvertently adding to the system that sabotages our efforts.
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We often focus on what to add.
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More kale, more water, more supplements.
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But in biology, subtraction is often more powerful than addition.
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We are currently exposing our guts to chemicals that act like bombs to our microbiome.
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I am referring specifically to the overuse of unnecessary antibiotics and environmental toxins like pesticides.
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Antibiotics save lives.
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In a crisis, they are miraculous.
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But when we use them for every minor sniffle,
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or when we consume them passively through non-organic meats,
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they act like a forest fire.
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They burn down the bad bacteria,
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but they also burn down the good forest.
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It can take months for the diversity of the microbiome to recover.
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But it's not just medication,
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it's the chronic exposure to pesticides on our food.
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Many crops are sprayed with chemicals designed to kill weeds and bugs.
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When we consume these residues on our food,
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they can have a similar effect on our gut bacteria.
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We are essentially swallowing small doses of weed killer that disrupt our internal garden.
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Additionally, we must look at our water.
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Tap water is often chlorinated to kill bacteria in the pipes.
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That is good for public safety,
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but if you drink chlorinated water all day,
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you are introducing a mild antibiotic into your system constantly.
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The strategy here is defensive.
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It is about choosing organic for the dirty dozen,
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the fruits and vegetables that absorb the most sprays,
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like strawberries, spinach, and grapes.
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It involves using a simple filter for your drinking water to remove chlorine.
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It is about stopping the daily chemical assault so that the other four mechanisms we discussed can actually do their jobs.
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This brings us to a unified philosophy of gut health.
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Think of your body as a house.
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You cannot keep the house clean if you are constantly tracking in mud,
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if you never give the cleaners time to work,
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and if the electricity is constantly short-circuiting.
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To genuinely repair the system,
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we don't need a detox tea.
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We need to respect the operating instructions.
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Respect the cleaning crew.
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Space your meals by four to five hours to let the street sweeper work.
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Enrich the soil.
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Eat a wide variety of 30 plus plants per week to feed a healthy garden.
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Align with the clock.
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Stop eating late at night to let the night shift do repairs.
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Fix the wiring.
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Breathe and relax before eating to turn on digestion.
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Stop the attack, filter your water,
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and wash your produce to reduce the toxic load.
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The beauty of the gut is that it is incredibly forgiving.
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The cells of your lining replace themselves every few days.
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Most people wait for a diagnosis to start caring about this.
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They wait until the bloating is unbearable or the fatigue is chronic.
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But the true power lies in prevention.
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It lies in the quiet,
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daily decisions that nobody sees.
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It's the decision to wait that extra hour before eating,
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to choose the variety over the convenience,
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to take a deep breath before lunch.
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These small actions build a resilience that allows you to age not just with a longer life,
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but with a life that feels good to live.
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If you found this breakdown helpful and want to dive deeper into how these systems connect to your overall health,
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make sure you are subscribed there is a lot more to uncover.
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I'd love to hear in the comments,
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which of these five mechanisms is your weakest link right now?
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Let me know, and I'll see you in the next video.

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