4.6 • 621 Ratings
🗓️ 17 June 2025
⏱️ 33 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
🧾️ Download transcript
Inspiration: Outlive + Good Energy
Dr. Peter Attia challenges the idea of “inevitable decline.” He argues we don’t die of old age, we die from preventable chronic diseases (heart disease, Type 2 diabetes, frailty, neurodegeneration).
Dr. Casey Means says our modern environment is biologically mismatched. Much of what we consider aging—fatigue, brain fog, joint stiffness—is inflammation caused by neglected lifestyle choices like ultra-processed food, lack of movement, and poor sleep.
Reframe:Â What feels like aging might be:
Muscle loss from underuse (not just age)
Joint stiffness from inactivity, not age
Brain fog from poor metabolic health, not "just getting older"
Peter Attia’s Point: “Functional Longevity”
You don’t train to live long—you train to live well long.
His "Centenarian Decathlon" concept: What physical feats do you want to do at 80 or 90? Train now for those.
Action Steps:
Start a Zone 2 cardio routine (walking uphill, light cycling). Great for mitochondria and long-term energy.
Add stability and grip strength work—these are major predictors of longevity.
Stretch daily or do mobility work 10 minutes/day. Lack of flexibility is not inevitable—it’s just unused tissue.
Moving your body regularly improves cellular health and lowers inflammation, which protects against many “aging” diseases.
Good Energy: “You are what you metabolize.”
Modern food is driving chronic inflammation, which accelerates what we mistake as aging: skin issues, joint pain, fatigue, insulin resistance.
Ultra-processed food hijacks energy systems and causes mitochondrial dysfunction.
Action Steps:
Prioritize whole foods: protein, fiber, omega-3s.
Avoid “glucose roller coasters” — balance meals with fat/fiber/protein to avoid energy crashes.
Try time-restricted eating: not for weight loss, but to support metabolic flexibility.
Attia promotes a low-carb or carb-conscious diet to control insulin and prevent the slow creep of pre-diabetes that goes unnoticed.
Poor sleep mimics aging in the brain. One bad night of sleep can spike blood glucose and disrupt hunger hormones.
Chronic stress leads to cortisol overload—breaking down muscle, weakening immunity, and inflaming joints.
Action Steps:
Prioritize 7–8 hours of sleep in a dark, cool room.
Wind down early with no screens—melatonin is suppressed by blue light.
Practice stress recovery: deep breathing, journaling, cold exposure, or sauna.
These are early signs of neglect that can be reversed:
Needing caffeine to function
Losing strength when lifting groceries or kids
Taking longer to recover after activity
Feeling “foggy” or irritable most mornings
Waking up feeling stiff every day
Attia and the Means both emphasize:Â These are signals. If you listen to them now, you can slow or even reverse them.
Give listeners a 5-part challenge:
Move 30 minutes every day (combine walking + strength 3x/week)
Eat one full day of unprocessed meals
Cut sugar and seed oils completelyÂ
Stretch for 10 minutes in the morning and before bed
Walk after meals to stabilize glucose
This isn’t about avoiding age—it’s about owning your energy.Â
When we treat aging like a slow collapse, we give away our power.Â
But when we understand the difference between aging and neglect and add and remove habits, we change the game. Our mind and body will thank us now and even more when we’re 80 and 90.
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
0:00.0 | The craziest thing I've learned in the last year of reading and rereading aging and longevity |
0:05.8 | books is that much of what we think is natural aging is actually neglect. My goal in this |
0:12.8 | episode is to reframe what we assume or have been told is natural aging or just getting older |
0:19.6 | and show all the small things we might be neglecting |
0:22.9 | over time. This whole concept is so empowering. Rather than feeling like we aren't in control |
0:29.6 | of how we age, we realize that we are actually in control of so much of it. Focusing on all the |
0:36.5 | tiny things we can do daily to keep our strength, |
0:39.8 | our flexibility, our energy, and sharpness over time. If you don't use it, you lose it, |
0:45.2 | and that is not the game plan. Let's go. You're listening to the How to Be Awesome at Everything |
0:50.7 | podcast, where we're obsessed with life hacks that make your life more awesome. |
0:56.1 | Your host, Lindsay Dick Hout, is an entrepreneur and business owner, a mom and wife, |
1:01.1 | and someone who wants to do things over the top at all times. |
1:04.9 | This concept started as a collection of things Lindsay has learned that she was documenting |
1:09.3 | to give to her kids one day. And now it's a podcast. |
1:12.5 | Join us on this journey where we talk about how to be awesome at everything we do. |
1:17.2 | Here's Lindsay. |
1:21.2 | There are two books that completely open my eyes to this whole idea of what is aging and what is neglect. Before reading |
1:32.9 | these books, I love health, wellness, longevity type books. And I think a lot about, you know, |
1:39.7 | my life as I age and the people around me. And it wasn't until I really read these two books, |
1:47.0 | like, and listened to interviews of the authors that I was fully awake to this whole concept. |
1:54.7 | And it's been a game changer, honestly, in my days. The two books are Outlive and Good Energy. |
2:20.1 | Both of them, Outlive is by Peter Atia and Good Energy is by Dr. Casey Means. So these two books, I think there's lots of great longevity books that I think have great points. These two to me are the best of the best. They're big. They cover lots of topics depending on your specific, you know, issues or interests or focus. But in this episode today, |
... |
Please login to see the full transcript.
Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Lindsay Dickhout, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.
Generated transcripts are the property of Lindsay Dickhout and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.
Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.