NOTE: This is the first edition of a daily email outlining tangible health ideas from my work launching True Medicine and writing a book on metabolic health. If this resonates, sign up here:
In a recent podcast interview, astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson gave his reason for not trying psychedelics: “I have always valued objective reality. I don’t want anything interfering with my understanding of what is actually happening in front of me.“
This statement shows a blind spot that is relevant for everyone: We are all on drugs that are highly interfering with our brain’s ability to process objective reality. We should not be outsourcing our analysis of what is a “good” or “bad” drug – or our definition of what constitutes a drug in the first place.
Is a drug an addictive substance that causes damage to society?
- Alcohol, caffeine, sugar, porn, social media: these produce dopamine triggers in the brain and dependency that are almost indistinguishable from drugs like cocaine and heroin – and can lead to bad societal outcomes. These substances are neurodegenerative and unquestionably “interfering with our brains” – unlike psychedelics which nearly all available science points to being brain regenerative.
Is a drug something that reverses or prevents disease?
- By this measure, statins and antidepressants (the two most prescribed drugs in America) should not count. We spend $1 trillion worldwide on statins a year, and they have been shown to increase life expectancy 5 days. 25% of adult Americans take an antidepressant medication, but the FDA’s own studies show that SSRI’s are no more effective than a placebo and the underlying science backing the medication has been called into question.
Is a drug a substance that has a physiological impact on our body?
- If this is true, then the environmental toxins (in our home, air and water), pesticides in our food, and lack of sleep should be considered some of the most destructive drugs in society. These factors are wrecking our microbiome – the trillions of bacteria cells in our gut that regulate 95% of our serotonin (and thus mood).
The institutions that are defining what is a “good” or “bad” drug – or what a drug even is – are not worthy of our trust. And these institutions have continually, repeatedly been wrong:
- Adderall, a drug 10% of high school seniors take, was created by Germans during World War II to make Nazi soldiers more effective (it was discontinued for spurring mass psychosis among the troops).
- We were told that prescription opioids were not addictive, but 80% of fentanyl/heroin addicts today became addicted from a legal prescription.
- Heroin was created by Bayer (the aspirin people) and was a top-selling drug for American babies (to cure fussiness) in the late 1800s.
- Also in the late 1800s, the U.S. Surgeon General recommended cocaine to cure depression.
- Psychedelics – long stigmatized – have been shown to produce longer remissions of depression (with lower side effects) than any other treatment studied.
The more I have dug into this, the more I am convinced we think about drugs completely backwards:
- We have convinced younger Americans that rampant fatigue, obesity, anxiety, depression and infertility is a normal part of daily life that can be cured with drugs – instead of warning signs of larger cellular dysfunction that can only be cured by root cause solutions.
- 95% of medical spending goes to drugs and interventions after people get sick but nutritional/lifestyle interventions (which can actually prevent and reverse disease) are put into a niche lifestyle buckets.
- Psychiatry has been completely taken over by pharmaceutical treatments that numb patients, instead of tools to help get to the root cause of trauma and increase our sense of awe for the world.
- We spent 40 times more on pharmaceutical cures to cancer versus ways to prevent cancer – even though cancer is a preventable disease.
- Alcohol was considered so destructive to American society that we passed a Constitutional amendment banning it. But now leading scientific figures like deGrasse Tyson don’t even consider it a brain-altering drug.
Our brains and bodies are what perceives reality, and they are under threat like never before. Understanding and optimizing the “drugs” (substances or ideas that produce a physiological change) that enter our bodies is the highest-leverage thing we can do.
I am writing a book and starting a company to put food and lifestyle habits (not band-aids like pills and surgical interventions) at the center of how we think about healthcare.
During this journey, I have been exposed to research, people, companies, and ideas that have changed my life and how I think about the health and development of my new son. This email shares one of these insights each morning:
I’m not one to go the doctor much. But over the last ten years, I once went for depression and the other time for stomach/digesitive issues.
Both times, they prescribed me meds.
I took them for very brief time periods, but the ultimate cures were lifestyle changes.
For the stomach issues, I changed my diet, went on keto, lost 20 lbs and the issues went away. Not only that, but I feel better, eat less, have more energy. I have been living a keto lifestyle now for about five years.
For the depression, I hated the side effects of the anti-depressant and began practicing meditation. It took 9 months before I had a breakthrough healing.
I’m the rare person that is on NO meds. I don’t drink alcohol either. I DO drink coffee and love social media…..
But the larger point is that my experience can affirm that the medical community is overprescribing pharmaceuticals. A lifestyle change wasn’t even suggested when I went to the doctor.
Calley Means, you got it going. Your very wise thinking and convictions harmonize with brilliant predecessors (hidden in history), the likes of Dr. Max Gerson, Dr. N.W. Walker, Dr. H.E. Kirschner, Dr. John T. Richter, etc. etc. Let God be magnified!
I’m so glad you’re talking about this. I have a bachelors degree in nursing and 36 years of nursing experience. The way we do healthcare in the US is so backwards!
Just heard you on Glenn Beck. I am interested in ways to improve my health.
Heard you on Glenn Beck and fell in love with your ideas and work, thank you!
Totally agree with your views on big pharma and how they have been negatively been affecting our society. Great interview on The Glen Beck show! thanks!
The medical cartel and all its evil appendages have hijacked our health and “health care” system to be a disease care system thru patentable drugs and surgeries to remove the diseased organs and body parts.which these failed solutions cure no one…
I’d like to be able to share your daily email with friends in a variety of ways besides forwarding it by email. Is there a way to do that?
Saw you on “The Next Revolution” last night. Not surprised and very interested in what your research finds.
Thank you Calley for such profoundly true info. Hope some day we might discuss how sensory communication gets humans into state of iatrogenic illness. Our defunct health care system. Thank you. Al Robinett
I’m so excited that I found you, Calley! You are the real deal and are inspiring me to get off my medications and eat right and move more. I’m not overweight, but I’m definitely not as healthy as I could be. You are a breath of fresh air. I can’t wait to read your book.
I love the bullet about medical spending and “niche lifestyle buckets.” Everyone wants to buy the new iPhone for $1200 but won’t invest in their wellness. I’d rather buy a sauna or something. Was discussing the other day how we need to invest more in our health now so we are around to enjoy the pension etc later.