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CONSISTENT by Primal Potential

1341: Increasing Your Body's Natural GLP-1 Production & Release

CONSISTENT by Primal Potential

Elizabeth Benton

Money, Self-improvement, Inspiration, Transformation, Motivation, Affirmations, Health & Fitness, Mindset, Selfhelp, Weightloss, Education, Loseweight, Goals, Nutrition

5 • 2.6K Ratings

🗓️ 6 September 2025

⏱️ 30 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Episode focus: What GLP‑1 actually is (your body already makes it), when/where it's released, why food noise exists, and practical ways to nudge the same mechanisms without a prescription.

Listen for: simple definitions, meal/lifestyle plays that boost satiety signals, and a week‑by‑week experiment plan.


Quick Summary

  • GLP‑1 (glucagon‑like peptide‑1) is a peptide hormone your gut releases after you eat. It helps meals feel calmer by slowing stomach emptying, supporting insulin only when glucose is high, and signaling the brain to turn down cravings.

  • Release is biphasic (two waves): a quick early wave soon after food hits the upper small intestine, and a later, longer satiety wave 30–120+ minutes after—especially when meals include protein, some fat, and fermentable/viscous fiber.

  • Food noise is multi‑factor: hyperpalatable foods, fast eating/liquid calories, sleep debt and stress, microbiome shifts, and environment/cues. Meds mute it fast; habits keep it quiet.

What it is: a gut‑made peptide hormone that coordinates the after‑meal response.

Where it's made: special gut cells called L‑cells (mostly in the ileum and colon).

When it's released:

  • Early wave: minutes after you start eating.

  • Late wave: 30–120+ minutes later as nutrients and fiber fermentation products reach the lower gut.

What it does:

  • Slows the stomach so fuel trickles in (you feel fuller, longer).

  • Supports insulin only when glucose is high (smaller spikes, gentler landings).

  • Signals the brain via the vagus nerve to turn down "keep eating" urges.

Why meds feel stronger: prescription GLP‑1s are engineered to last much longer than your natural hormone. Food/lifestyle can raise your own signals but won't extend them like a drug.

Why Food Noise Gets Loud (and Stays Loud)

  • Hyperpalatable foods (sweet+fat+salt+crunch) keep reward circuits fired up. Removing them for 7–14 days usually turns the volume down.

  • Sleep debt & stress: more ghrelin (hunger), less leptin (satiety), and higher reactivity to cues.

  • Meal speed & form: soft/ultra‑processed textures and liquid calories outrun gut signals.

  • Microbiome: low‑fiber patterns → fewer short‑chain fatty acids → weaker late satiety wave.

  • Environment: visual cues, routines, social context, alcohol, and easy access keep the cycle going.

Food Levers (Evidence‑Aligned, Practical)

1) Protein‑forward meals (especially breakfast)

  • Aim ≥30 g protein. Whey (if tolerated) is a strong pre‑meal option: 20–30 g, 15–30 min before a carb‑heavy meal.

  • Why it works: raises satiety hormones (including GLP‑1 and PYY) and lowers "hunt for more" at the next meal.

2) Viscous & fermentable fibers

  • Viscous (slows the meal): oats/barley (beta‑glucan), legumes, chia/flax, okra, eggplant.

  • Fermentable (late‑wave satiety): beans/lentils; cooked‑then‑cooled potatoes/rice (resistant starch); green bananas/plantains; Jerusalem artichokes/asparagus (inulin).

  • Supplements (optional, measured):

    • Psyllium 5–10 g in 12–16 oz water 10–15 min pre‑meal (start with 2–3 g).

    • PHGG (partially hydrolyzed guar gum) 5–10 g/day (gentle fermentable fiber).

    • Glucomannan or inulin/FOS (build slowly; watch GI tolerance).

3) Some fat with meals

  • Sources: eggs, salmon, olive oil, avocado, nuts/seeds.

  • Why it works: helps release bile and triggers fullness signals; supports slower stomach emptying when paired with protein and fiber.

4) Bitter & spicy nudges (optional)

  • Bitter greens (arugula, radicchio), citrus pith, dark cocoa.

  • Capsaicin (chili peppers) or capsinoids (non‑pungent pepper extracts). Start small to check tolerance.

5) Meal order & pace

  • Water/salad/broth first, then protein + veg, then starch.

  • Minimum 15–20 minutes per meal; chew well.

  • Optional: 1–2 tsp vinegar in plenty of water before higher‑starch meals (skip if reflux or enamel sensitivity).

Lifestyle Levers (That Amplify Satiety Signals)

  • Vigorous exercise windows: hard sessions can suppress appetite acutely for 1–3 hours; follow with protein + viscous fiber to extend satiety.

  • Sleep 7–9 hours: normalizes hunger/satiety hormones and reduces cue‑reactivity.

  • Early time‑restricted eating: a daytime 8–10 hour window often eases appetite even at similar calories.

  • Environment design: strip hyperpalatables, reduce visible cues, pre‑portion foods, limit variety within a meal.

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

If you want to be more consistent, you're in the right place. I'm Elizabeth Benton. Welcome to

0:07.1

Consistent, a podcast by Primal Potential that is for all of you who feel frustrated by your lack of

0:13.3

progress or overwhelmed by all the change that you want to make in your life. Here, we stop frantically

0:20.5

chasing new habits and start

0:22.6

strategically building a structure of consistency. Let's get into it.

0:29.1

Hello, everybody, and welcome back to the primal potential podcast. I am Elizabeth Benton,

0:35.3

and you might be surprised that we are going back into

0:38.6

GLP1 conversation after last week but we are because I've found that there is a lot

0:46.7

of confusion about what GLP ones are that we can clear up and there is a lot of allure to this idea of reducing the food noise.

0:59.2

Most of the people who come to me, and I get these messages every single day from people who are

1:03.5

like, look, I don't want to go the prescription med route, but I'm hearing these things or

1:10.0

I'm seeing these things and it's really attractive

1:12.2

to get rid of the food noise. And the truth of the matter is, a lot of folks don't know that your

1:18.1

body already produces and secretes GLP1. But more importantly, what folks don't know is that

1:25.4

it's circumstantial, not in if it is produced, but how

1:29.6

much it is produced. And so there are things that we can do from a lifestyle standpoint to increase

1:36.8

our body's production of GLP1s. Now, it is not the same as a pharmaceutical. and we'll talk about some of the differences there.

1:47.6

One is just a concentrated dose.

1:49.2

It's significantly more than what your body produces.

1:51.9

But there are some other key differentiators that I want to talk about.

1:55.4

But the truth is, it is 1,000 percent possible to increase your body's natural production of GLP-1s and get some of those

2:09.0

benefits, get more of those benefits than you're currently getting of things like increased

...

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