The Psychology of Hunger | Dr Jason Fung
Finding Mastery with Dr. Michael Gervais
Dr. Michael Gervais
4.6 • 1.8K Ratings
🗓️ 8 April 2026
⏱️ 84 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Why do diets so often fail... is it discipline or biology?
Dr. Jason Fung is a physician, nephrologist, and one of the most influential voices challenging how we understand metabolism, obesity, and chronic disease. He is the bestselling author of The Obesity Code, The Diabetes Code, and his newest book, The Hunger Code, which explores a deceptively powerful question: what is actually driving hunger, and what does the answer tell us about why so many people struggle with their weight?
In this conversation with Dr. Michael Gervais, Dr. Fung explains why the standard advice of "eat less and move more" isn't just ineffective, it's missing the point entirely. The real question isn't how much you eat. It's why you eat. And the answer, he argues, is far more complex, and far more interesting, than anyone has told us.
At the center of the conversation is Dr. Fung's framework of three distinct types of hunger: homeostatic hunger, driven by hormones and biology; hedonic hunger, driven by pleasure and reward; and conditioned hunger, driven by environment and learned behavior. Each has its own cause, its own pattern, and its own solution. And until we understand which type of hunger we're dealing with, we'll keep solving the wrong problem.
Dr. Fung also digs into the science of insulin, explaining why it is the master switch of fat storage and release, why ultra-processed foods are designed to spike it in ways that leave us hungry again almost immediately, and why intermittent fasting can be one of the most powerful tools available for driving insulin down and letting the body do what it's built to do.
The conversation covers a lot of ground: the GLP-1 debate, the gender differences in fasting, what perimenopause does to appetite, how food order affects insulin response, why walking after a meal can reduce your insulin spikes, and why the cultural food environments of Italy and Japan offer a compelling blueprint for what sustainable health can actually look like.
In this conversation, we explore:
- Why "eat less, move more" fails to address the root cause of weight gain
- The three types of hunger and how each one requires a different response
- How ultra-processed foods hijack biology, behavior, and environment all at once
- Why insulin, not calories, is the key metabolic variable to understand
- How intermittent fasting works, who it's for, and how to do it well
- What perimenopause does to hunger hormones, and what to do about it
- Why the Italian and Japanese food environments produce radically different health outcomes
Your hunger isn't a character flaw. Learn what's actually behind it.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Why do people get fat? Because we've been sold this idea that it's just math, calories in calories out, but it's completely untrue. |
| 0:08.7 | Why do diets often fail? It's not because people lack discipline, but because they're fighting their own biology. |
| 0:14.3 | People were saying that type 2 diabetes was a chronic and progressive disease, and there's nothing you could do about it, but take your drugs. |
| 0:20.8 | It's a big lie because every doctor knew that if you lost weight, your diabetes |
| 0:25.8 | would either get better or go away. Welcome back or welcome to the Finding Mastery podcast. I'm |
| 0:31.6 | your host, Dr. Michael Jervais. A high-performance psychologist named Michael Jervais, who Pete Carroll |
| 0:36.8 | brought into work with the Seahawks. |
| 0:38.8 | Famous for his work with Felix Baumgartner when he jumped out of space in the Stratos Project. |
| 0:43.6 | Olympic athletes depend on something more than just training and talent. |
| 0:47.0 | They have to stay mentally tough. |
| 0:49.3 | Today I am stoked to sit down with Dr. Jason Fung, physician, nephrologist, and one of the leading voices |
| 0:55.0 | reshaping how we understand metabolism, obesity, and chronic disease. He is the author of several |
| 1:00.9 | influential books, including the obesity code, the diabetes code, and his latest book, The Hunger |
| 1:06.0 | Code. When you say, okay, why is somebody gaining weight? The answer is because you're hungry. So why are you hungry? And there's actually at least three different types of hunger. I mean, you know, psychology is actually a hugely important part of what drives behavior. |
| 1:19.9 | 100%. If you have a heart issue, you're going to want to pay attention. If you want to lose weight, then definitely pay attention. But if you look at overweight and obese, it's somewhere around, you know, 70% of American adults. Other countries are often like 30%, 40%, right? The question |
| 1:34.7 | is, why? It's not the person. It's not the culture. And if you have type 2 diabetes or you're on the |
| 1:40.3 | path to it, you are going to love this conversation. I think if you're really struggling with the weight loss, the main thing I would say is that |
| 1:48.6 | with that, with that, let's jump into this week's conversation with Dr. Jason Fung. |
| 1:59.1 | Jason, I'm really excited to sit down with you because you've got your arms around something |
| 2:04.4 | that is really important for all of us. |
| 2:08.3 | And so can you first talk about your background just a little bit to set the stage? |
| 2:12.8 | And then I'm going to want to transition into why the current study and why the current |
... |
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