Listen to Oz Garcia featured on Lyme360 discussing the anti-aging movement.
Anti-Aging Expert and Celebrity Nutritionist Oz Garcia give us his daily routine and gadgets he uses to bio-hack his health and optimize his brain. These hacks are handy for chronic Lyme patients to improve:
- Sleep
- Learn to optimize lung capacity through breathing
- Destress through his meditation practice
- How to Optimize brain function through neurofeedback
- Learn his Morning routine to set you up for the day
- What he eats to optimize his health
- Intermittent fasting
If you want to learn how I detox and check out my detox for Lyme checklist, go to lyme360.com/detoxchecklist. You can also join our community at Lyme 360 Warriors on Facebook, and let’s heal together.
Mimi MacLean:
Oz, thank you so much for coming on today. I really appreciate it.
Oz Garcia:
Absolutely thrilled, Mimi. Thank you.
Mimi MacLean:
We’ve known each other for a long time; I think over 20 years.
Oz Garcia:
I believe.
Mimi MacLean:
It was before I think I even had kids. But you are the go-to person for gadgets and anti-aging and biohacking, which is great for people who have Lyme because we’re trying to outsmart our immune system and get it optimal. So I’m excited to talk to you today about that and what things we could be doing to helping the damage that … I know I’ve worked with you closely about this, helping the damage that Lyme has caused. I think you gave me an analogy once of Lyme is almost like termites, like even once it’s gone, it is left damage. And so, just trying to correct that damage and optimize your health.
Oz Garcia:
Right. As I recall, it’s like termites invade your house. You get to exterminate as they come in. You get rid of the termites, but you wouldn’t think to go up the stairs. It is that accrued damage that you now need to undo.
Mimi MacLean:
Right. And that’s what I want to talk to you today, about, like even if your Lyme is gone or even if it’s not, but just to correct the damage that it’s causing for the rest of the body.
Oz Garcia:
No question about it. One of the mistakes we often make is thinking that we live somewhat outside of the natural order of things. And we know we’re animals, we’re primates, we’re subject to all the laws of nature. We are born like animals, and we will die just like everything organic that passes through. So like any animal that can get wounded in the wild, let’s say, even though we’re civil to the extent that we are, if you do go out in the woods, if you do go out to different areas of Long Island and the northeast and now parts of the Midwest, you can pick up any kind of illness that any insect is carrying and certainly Lyme’s.
So it’s confounding because we think that because we’re human and we’ve got such a sophisticated institution of medicine, it can be solved. And what we find out is that like many things that are occurring certainly now in time, it’s not that easy to solve after all. Some of us may be able to get over a tick bite and get on doxycycline. And in two weeks or a month, it’s over. For many people, that’s just the beginning of the horror story. From there on end, you’re often dealing with how Lyme’s triggers different mechanisms within our body that should turn off, but they don’t.
Inflammatory System, Antibiotics, and Lyme Disease
Oz Garcia:
Inflammatory systems, inflammation within the brain, inflammation within our organs, and inflammation within our joints can go on for extended periods. So the suffering continues way after the Lyme has been controlled. Or many people not. So the solutions are, typically, if you go through the medical funnel, let’s say, you’re going to wind up with potent combinations often of antibiotics to try and get at every level of infection within your body. Sometimes it works, and sometimes it doesn’t.
So for many people who do get chronic Lyme, it’s, well, what am I dealing with here? Do I still have Lyme? We do know, it’s not like we now know, but we’ve known for quite a while that the cure is sometimes itself can then leave in its way a tremendous amount of damage to doxycycline, which is the drug of choice for dealing with primary Lyme infection, is also known to cause its own inflammatory damage in the aftermath of using it. And often go on the second course of doxycycline, and then another antibiotic may be added on. And it’ll continue in that way.
Oz Garcia:
FSo you want to mention deep sleep. Or anybody interested in actually dealing, let’s say, with Lyme, in convalescence, from just about any illness at all, you have to have a way to measure. Is your sleep actually working for you? And that’s a really tough one too. Most people don’t know that within the eight to nine hours of sleep that they get, a certain portion of that has to be deep sleep, a certain portion has to be REM, rapid eye movement. That’s where we consolidate memories, we’re doing a lot of our dreaming, and then the rest of it is like sleep.
The thing about the Oura Ring that I like is that actually shows you your body temperature, HRV, REM deep, how many times you’ve been moving in your bed. So, if your day has not been an especially good one, it’s going to show up in quality of sleep when you get out of bed in the morning, whether or not you’re well rested and prepared for your day. So measuring what’s going on with your sleep has become a superpower, separate from the quality of sleep itself. You need to be embedded a certain time, almost the same time every day. Our rooms have to be almost like a bear cave, everything darkened out, no lights, everything has to be taped over. If you’ve got any kind of devices where little lights are on, all of that blacked out. I also tend to wear a mask, and that helps me go into my space. I like to listen to stories at night. So sometimes I’ll have an appearance, I’ll have my Alexa app, just tell me a nighttime story. And typically, it’s a book from Audible. I’ll fall asleep somewhere in there.
The Importance of Sleep For Overall Wellness
Many people ahat have difficulty sleeping or staying asleep, I wohighly recommendghly this particular device, and it looks a little clunky, but it’s called an Ebb. Now, Ebb goes onto your forehead like this, looks almost like one of the virtual devices, but it gets extremely cold and fall asleep with it or it’ll turn off by itself. Now what happens is it cools down the frontal cortex. So for people with anxiety, if you have difficulty falling asleep or staying asleep, the cooling down of the frontal cortex, the front part of the brain actually will induce deep sleep, will calm me down.
Oz Garcia:
Sometimes for different people that I work with, I’ll recommend it if they’re having an anxiety attack, if they’re having anxiety. You can put it on, do a meditation, put your ear buds on, listen to something while you’re cooling the frontal cortex. And within about 20 minutes, half an hour, you’re out. You don’t even remember what you were anxious over. So sleep, I think, is absolutely critical to healing and being able to get back. We do know what a battle that’s been at times in terms of getting better, right?
Mimi MacLean:
Yeah, especially for Lyme. That’s one of the, I think, symptoms that people have a hard time, staying asleep in the middle of the night from 3:00 to 5:00. I spent the last six years a week.
Oz Garcia:
Unbelievable. That’s the worst of all.
Mimi MacLean:
It’s awful. You had another device you were showing me before we jumped on, that was the PEMF for sleeping.
Oz Garcia:
Yes. Let me grab that one. It’s called Welltiss. Now, Welltiss looks like a headband, and it’s a PEMF device, pulsed electromagnetic force. And it charges up by taking the little unit out that comes inside the band itself, runs off nap, and it gives you different settings. So for sleep, for quiet mind, for reducing cortisol. During the day, especially if I have a very demanding long day, I’ll just put it on for reducing stress. Now, just put it right around my neck like that. And I’m aware that I’m a lot clearer and a lot calmer at nighttime.
Oz Garcia:
And that could be easily 20 minutes to 45 minutes of my morning. After that, it’s exercise. So you have to have your exercise routine, whatever it may be. I’m a little bit older now, used to be that I would run.
Mimi MacLean:
Yeah, you run a lot.
Oz Garcia:
Yeah, a lot. A lot of races, a lot of marathons, a lot of ultra-marathons. You’re going to run for 40 years. So now what I’m doing is, as I’m rebuilding my back on my sports injuries, I’ve got like a home Equinox setup. And every day, I do different ways of working out so that the focus that I had for many years, and just it being aerobic, it’s like people fall into two camps. It’s like, aerobic, do weights, this is the only way to go and runners suck. Or runners have the whole other point of view, which is ike, peowhothat are using the machines in the way it’s just muscle has and what do they know hey don’t get the endorphin. Well, actually, it’s not true. By doing breathing exercises every morning, I get the endorphin hit that I want. These are different chemicals that you produce in your brain that actually keep it cool and calm, clearheaded, and they’re related to cannabinoids, interestingly enough.
The body itself, the human body, in fact, most mammal bodies, but certainly primate bodies have a cannabinoid system wrapped around the nervous system itself, which is equally as sophisticated as the nervous system, probably why it is that we do so well with CBD and different compounds that are found in cannabis. So that’s a podcast for another time. But certainly, when you do get into exercises where you’re doing a lot of deep breathing, you’re triggering that part of the cannabinoid system that keeps you very clear, focused and reduces anxiety.
This is really important if you’re dealing with Lyme, if you’re recuperating from Lyme. Once I finished my exercise routines, then it’s debatable whether I’m going to do an ice bath or not. I’d say about three, four mornings a week, I either do cryo. So cryotherapy is where you step into a big tank. There may be different cryotherapy destinations, just about every major city, Equinox in the city has some. There’s a couple of them not too far from my home. So you step into something that looks like a big giant beer can and your whole body goes into it.
The temperatures dropped to minus 200 degrees for three minutes with nitrogen gas. And when you come out, it’s like the greatest rush on Earth. There’s a lot to be about in controlling inflammation, how it improves brain functions. A lot of evolutionary that seems to indicate that periodic exposure to extreme cold seems to make the brain develop itself a little bit more. There’s an enzyme that we produce called BDNF, brain-derived neurotropic factor. And it’s also dendrite nootropic factor. These are enzymes that make you build more brain, more neurons, healthier neurons. And so, cold seems to precipitate the production of BDNF. So if you want to think better, cryotherapy periodically. I’ll do an ice bath. This is not the easiest thing in the world.
Mimi MacLean:
Do you do that in your apartment?
Oz Garcia:
I do it in my house. I’ll go down to the local drugstore, I’ll go to the supermarket, I’ll get 40 pounds of ice, sounds like a lot. I throw them to the tub, fill it up with a little bit of water. And then I’ll get in, I’ll get in from anywhere, from 1 to 20 minutes. Whew. It takes years to build up to that. But I got to tell you, in terms of recovering from exercise, when you’re really down, if your mood is just in the dumps and you can’t pull out and maybe your supplements are not working, if you’re on a medication, an SSRI med, and that’s not kicking in probably. The extreme cold makes a phenomenal difference as, as extreme heat. There is a brilliant podcaster, Rhonda Patrick, she’s got a terrific show called FoundMyFitness. And you’d have to like cycle back to an episode, probably about a year ago, where she interviews a really great thinker. And I can’t think off the top of my head which university is associated with where they study the effects of extreme heat, saunas, infrared or regular saunas on depression.
Where you’ll do sauna every day for about an hour with breaks, 20 minutes break, 20 minutes break, and so on over the course of several weeks. And they can actually measure the improvement in serotonin, melatonin, quality of sleep, the kind of questionnaires that they use so that they can measure what’s going on with you emotionally and how you score think Saunasink are terrific for controlling inflammation, certainly, inflammation within the brain that may lead to depressing addition, poor quality thinking. Alright.
Oz Garcia:
So then if you mix them both up, if you do extreme cold and extreme heathen, you’ve got a remarkable bundle in terms of how you can control what’s going on with your brain. So there are different centers here that have infrared saunas with cryo, or you can go to a traditional Russian bathhouse on a Sunday afternoon where I’ll meet my buddies. You sit in the banya, which is essentially an oven. It’s set at about 200 degrees Fahrenheit, sweat for 15 minutes, run out of there, go into the ice cold plunge, and then go sit down and catch your breath. You’ll have the best day of your life. And for days after that, the inflammatory control is remarkable, improvement in sleep, control over anxiety, moods, et cetera. It’s pretty spectacular.
Gadgets for Anti-Aging and Optimal Health
Mimi MacLean:
That’s great. So I know you had a couple other like there’s a ball there that I saw you bring in. What other gadgets do you have there that we haven’t talked about?
Oz Garcia:
So this is Hyperice. Hyperice is a company that makes different kinds of devices that actually cause very extreme pulsing deep tissue massage without getting a massage therapist. So once this turns on, it’s pulsing at about 30,000 times per minute and it becomes its own massage machine. , Also when you’re dealing with recovery, you can’t get a massage therapist to come to you; you’re aching all over, using this particular device is reaite remarkable.
Oz Garcia:
For peowith chronic backache oronic neck pain, you can put this on your couch and just lean your neck into it or your back into it. Hyperice makes rollers besides this, and it also makes a pulsing gun. And I’ll show you that one too. These are really critical hack in biohacking devices. The pulse one … It’s a gun, looks like a gun. We haven’t seen this one. Same thing. This isn’t a massage gun. This is a pulsing device. Sounds ridiculous. It’s like, well, what’s the difference? The pulsing itself is extremely deep. And in terms of recovery, sometimes in the morning, this walso ill be part of my morning roualso. So after I do my exercise and/or before my ice bath, I’ll do every square inch of my body with the gun.
Mimi MacLean:
What’s that brand?
Oz Garcia:
This is also Hyperice, and it’s called Hypervolt. Alright. So for anybody who’s in recovery, going through treatment protocols, getting blood flowing is critical. And if you’re not going to do an ice bath using the Hyperice volt called the Hypervolt, I think, is critical in terms of getting adequate massage that you give yourself. The other thing that I would recommend, there’s so many things you and I could spend another hour or two here very easily, are the Kokoon headsets. Now, these are my favorite.
Oz Garcia:
Because if I’m doing a meditation with Muse, I’ve got Muse on my forehead, and then I’ll listen to it through this headset. Thing about Kokoon is it fits beautifully against your head, it’s got little readers on the inside that can tell when you fall asleep. So you can use this for meditation. You can use this if you want to go to sleep and you want to listen to a story, you want to listen to a podcast. Audible, it is amazing in that you don’t feel it at all. And like I said, it will turn off the app once it knows that you’re asleep. So it knows when you fall asleep. [crosstalk 00:36:55]
Mimi MacLean:
This is cool.
Oz Garcia:
Very, very cool. It’s spelled K-O-K-O-OOne, one of the things that happens often when you’re in recovery are you begin to lose the energy you suffer a lot because of that. There’s damage is sent to the mitochondria, in your cells. Mitochondria are engines that burn sugar, glucose, and fat to produce fuel, ATP, part of what’s called the Krebs cycle. Every little muscle cell has thousands of mitochondria. Mitochondria, by the way, interestingly enough, were bacteria that migrated into human cells way before there were human beings and created a symbiotic relationship where they would get fuel food from the organism that it invaded.
At the same time, it would then process that particular fuel to produce energy for the organism that was housing it. So this tells you the damage that antibiotics can cause also to energy systems within the body. Mitochondria will not fire off properly. So we’ll talk about a couple of quick products here that I think should be taken to actually improve mitochondrial function. So that as you’re dealing with the drag on your energy, just from Lyme, just from being sick, or a flu, and so on, what can you take to actually maintain energy levels?
Oz Garcia’s Advice for the Lyme Community
One of the things that I recommend is immediately get on a protocol to build your lungs and maintain good lung power, so that you’re not losing oxygen to your muscles and yourselves. Alright. That’s where the breathing exercises coming in the morning. This is a device called Airofit. Alright. You can get this on Amazon too. This is used primarily to make an athlete stronger. Again, an NFL player last longer. It looks like a mouthpiece from NASA, looks like that. Turn it on. There’s a little green light go on. It goes in your mouth. And then it has different settings on either side.
Oz Garcia:
And then runs off an app. So this will test your lung capacity. So I can do a long test every day, morning, afternoon, before workout, after workout. I’ve got a good idea as to more or less what I’m capable of doing at this point. So my lung capacity is not all that far off from where it may have been about 30 years ago. But the device will also take you through different exercises, beginner, intermediate, expert. And it mimics the kind of breathing that you would have to exert if you were throwing a football, if you were jogging, if you’re bicycling, if you’re bicycling uphill, if you were running, if you were running on a flat surface, if you were going through a parcourse, and so on.
Oz Garcia:
So you can set the device to actually do that, and it also has the capacity to rebuild brain function and ways that I never would have bet on. So I really missed a day where I don’t use it. So I’ll do five minutes. And some days, I’ll do five minutes in the morning, five minutes at night. You do sleep better with it. It also calms you down tremendously. So not that it calms you down that you can’t work, but it calms you down so you can actually think better. Alright, in that regard. So this is another biohacking device. I did want to point that. And we’ve gone through about a half a dozen of them, yes. And then I’d love to talk about some supplements and some other things that I think are really important in the morning.
Mimi MacLean:
Yeah. I was gonna ask you, I know you love doing shakes and stuff like that in the morning.
Oz Garcia:
Sure.
Mimi MacLean:
If you could talk about that. You usually add some good stuff for the brain.
Oz Garcia:
I’m going to share right now. Alsowantedwant to say that journaling is critical, probably writing five minutes in the mor anding, five minutes in the evening. If it’s hard for you, I would download the Five-Minute Journal and get the app. And it’s primarily a gratitude journal. So it will ask you, what will you be grateful for today? And at the end of the day, what are you grateful for what happened today? Just doing that every day and then looking back over a year is a mind blower.
Oz Garcia:
But to get you to focus on any number of practices that you may not do regularly also has profound effect on shaping your neurochemistry, what’s also referred to as neuroplasticity. So how you shape your brain to your advantage is turned by how well you practice gratitude, gratefulness, forgiveness, letting go, lovingness, meditation. But you can journal this and you’ll be aware of the fact that after a while, if you do stick with the practice, you’re much less prone to be anxious, fearful.
You can let go of stuff a lot quicker, and get back on what’s relevant in the subject matter right now. So, that I want to point that. That actually does take up about 20 minutes of my morning too. In terms of supplementation, so I don’t drink coffee, I do like caffeine. So I’ll have tea or I’ll have in a smoothie to begin with, matcha DNA green tea. So if I don’t have it in a cup of hot tea with, let’s say, stevia, this goes into my blender, UltraClear, in all standby. This is made primarily from rice and pea flour. So, it tends to be more on the vegetarian side. One scoop of this goes into the blender. There’s a very important chemical that you and I need, so that we have power in our muscles too. I wish I would have known more about it a while ago. It’s called nitric oxide. Nitric oxide is very rich in beets, arugula. And so, what it does, is along with the energy produced by mitochondria, it then enforces that energy within the muscle cell, so you’ve got greater power. I use beet root powder that goes into the smoothie. This increases nitric oxide levels very quickly.
Then, is a combination of citrulline, which is an amino acid made from watermelon, and arginine, that also increases nitric oxide. So when I mix these together, I’ve got a power smoothie. I’ll put in a handful of blueberries. I’ll put probiotics into this smoothie too, some ice. I may use coconut water. And that’s my morning power up. I may use some MCT oil, typically, it’s medium-chain triglyceride in order to get good power with an exceptional fat. I’ll give my medium-chain triglyceride from coconut oil.
Mimi MacLean:
And do you need to keep that refrigerated?
Oz Garcia:
No. I’ve got like three containers, so I keep two refrigerated. But if I’m going to use it, I’ll keep it out. I mean, I’ll take it out because it gets hard as stone.
Mimi MacLean:
Yeah, and then not cold.
Oz Garcia:
But it’s a terrific fat in order, again, for you to have adequate levels of fat in the morning, something that your body can burn through and sustain you throughout your workouts throughout your day and so on.
Mimi MacLean:
That’s good.
Oz Garcia:
So, that’s the morning smoothie. My diet tends to be, for the most part, extremely easy. I tend to usually skip lunch. It may be a soup, could be squash soup, could be bean soup. Dinners are on the early side, around 6:00, and they tend to be seafood, roasted vegetables, a really good carbohydrate, yam, squash, quinoa, handful rice. I’m getting hungry talking to you. I may throw in a handful blueberries too. So …
Mimi MacLean:
So there’s only one meal a day, pretty much?
Oz Garcia:
Pretty much so, yeah. So it’s a smoothie, something light in the midday, and a light dinner. I do intermittent fasting where I’ll just do fluids from, let’s say, breakfast till the next day. I may do 20 to 24 hours, at least once a week. And then there are days where I’ll have a smoothie, I’ll have a lunch, but I won’t have a dinner. So essentially go to bed on an empty stomach. And that’s terrific. Same thing, that causes your body to create an effect called autophagy.
Oz GarciAutophagy and the flipside of that is called apoptosis. a:
Where, in autophagy, you’re replacing a lot of sick cells and just dumping them, then replacing them with new healthy cells. And same thing, these are events that occur where you’re building new cells and you get you’re placing dead old cells, sometimes referred to as zombie cells. If you’re dealing with Lyme’s, I would definitely consult with your doctor to see if you should be doing intermittent fasting, but I can’t recommend it enough. Because turnover in terms of getting rid of old bad cells you healthier cells is dlly quite dramatically by doing intermittent fasting, by reducing the amoof foodthat you eat.
Mimi MacLean:
This is great. So much good information. I love this. Thank you so much for your time.
Oz Garcia:
I can’t wait to hear it.
Mimi MacLean:
Yes, you always have new stuff, every time I talk to you.
Oz Garcia:
Curiosity, it’s a superpower.
Mimi MacLean:
Yes, this has been … You boiled it down and made it sound so simple and broke it down for everybody. So this is great. Anyway, well, thank you so much. I really appreciate it.
Oz Garcia:
Welcome, sweetie. I’ll talk to you real soon.