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Six Keys to Optimizing Your Health, Longevity and Well-Being

Six Keys to Optimizing Your Health, Longevity and Well-Being

Want to optimize your overall wellness? This Special Report provides a systematic way to address six key drivers of better health.

Key takeaways:

  • Focus on five lab tests to assess your current health.
  • Movement breaks and "exercise snacks" can be surprisingly effective.
  • Close, authentic relationships are vital.

It’s pretty safe to say that everyone wants to experience optimal health, energy and well-being. It’s also pretty safe to say that most of us know the steps we should be taking to enjoy those benefits—but that we too often don’t bother.

Enter Shawn Wells, a leading nutritional biochemist and dietician who has patented nearly 1,000 supplements aimed at boosting health.  His book, The Energy Formula, lays out six critical steps (what he
calls “life changing ingredients”) that can potentially help people gain focus, be more productive, live longer and unleash their full potential.

The really good news is that Wells has framed his advice in a way that makes it easier to both remember
what to do and implement the actions:

  • Experiment
  • Nutrition
  • Exercise
  • Routine
  • Growth
  • Your Tribe

Wells stresses it is more important to have greater life in your years than years in your life. It’s about
quality over quantity—but, of course, it’s best to have both.

Here’s a closer look at each of the six components of ENERGY.

Experiment

On a biological level, we are all different—often in significant and functionally determinative ways. Therefore, achieving optimal health and energy should begin with a rigorous exploration of how you are
uniquely put together and how you function.  Such information empowers you to know your ideal diet,
what (if any) supplements to take, the best exercises for you and how to efficiently handle stress.

Put differently: Until you scientifically track something, it’s very difficult to know how you are doing (generally and specifically) and whether any changes you make are providing positive results.

Step one begins with a series of lab tests to assess your mitochondria—the energy factories of the human
body.  Wells notes that nearly every disease and perhaps even aging itself is tied to mitochondrial health
and function. He therefore recommends that everyone have three important blood biomarkers tested:

  • hsCRP (highly-sensitive C-reactive protein), an inflammation test (since inflammation harms
    mitochondria)
  • HbA1c, which gives a snapshot of your blood glucose levels (since poor glycemic control
    contributes directly to mitochondrial dysfunction)
  • oxLDL (oxidized low-density lipoprotein), which tests for oxidation (which damages mitochondria)

Additionally, Wells suggests two more lab tests that, along with the first three, can give you a strong
general baseline to gauge future progress:

  • Vitamin D, which is actually a hormone that not only supports the immune system and prevents infection but also is related to many other body functions
  • Lipoprotein(a), which is correlated to cardiovascular disease risk and is superior to other heartrelated
    tests like those for HDL, LDL and total cholesterol

Step two involves making use of a “wearable” that tracks your sleep quality, heart rate variability and
other important data points.  Examples include the Oura Ring, WHOOP Strap, Apple Watch and Fitbit.  The best of these devices will not only provide you a baseline of important metrics but can also track the
duration and quality of your sleep—including how much time you spend in each of the four sleep stages—
and how recovered and ready you are to take on intense physical activity or stress.  The result: cumulative
data and specific readouts of exactly where you currently stand.

Nutrition

To keep things simple on the diet front, Wells emphasizes some “back to basics” pointers to help you stay
on track.  First, the best diet is something that you will be able to stick to for the rest of your life.  It’s not
some newfangled fad that you adopt because it is fashionable, but rather a way of life and looking at what
you take into your body that will energize you, keep you healthy and help you do your best.

Second, a diet focused on whole foods—with as little processing and as few additives as possible—is
essential.  That is, most of what we eat should be real, actual foods that grow in nature versus those made in a lab.

Armed with this foundational view, your own bio-individuality and preferences can help point to which
kind of whole-foods-based lifestyle diet is best for you.  Three healthy options that Wells discusses are:

  • The ketogenesis (or “keto”) diet, which is 0–10 percent carbohydrates, 20–25 percent protein and
    65–75 percent fats
  • The Mediterranean diet, which is 10 percent meats and sweets, 10 percent poultry and eggs, 10
    percent seafood, and 70 percent vegetables and fats
  • The Paleolithic (or “paleo”) diet, which is 15 percent nuts and berries, 15 percent fruits with a low
    glycemic index (ones that don’t spike blood sugar), 30 percent meat and seafood, and 40 percent
    vegetables

As for what to eliminate from our diets, Wells highlights a few key bad actors:

  • PUFAs, or polyunsaturated fatty acids.  These are among the most dangerous elements in our food
    supply—the way they are processed renders them carcinogenic and inflammatory—but they are
    found in nearly all processed foods and canola, sunflower, safflower and peanut oils.
  • Carbohydrates with a high glycemic index, such as high-fructose corn syrup, sucrose, agave and
    white refined sugar. These spike insulin, raise blood sugar levels and increase the propensity to
    store calories as fat.
  • Gluten, which for some people is inflammatory.
  • Food with artificial colors, sweeteners, and flavors. All of these increase the risk of cancer and
    hyperactivity.

Finally, Wells is a proponent of the supplement berberine, which helps lower glucose levels.  Similar to the
diabetes wonder-drug metformin—which lowers glucose levels, inflammation and oxidation levels while
improving mitochondrial function and cellular energy—berberine does not require a prescription.

Exercise

One of Wells’ primary goals is combating “sitting disease” or “sitting syndrome”—the rise in all-cause
mortality associated with lengthy uninterrupted sitting (and lack of movement generally).  For example,
Wells notes that each additional hour of daily sitting increases all-cause mortality rates by about 2 percent!

One solution is movement breaks and “exercise snacks.”  The idea is that if you have only one hour a day
to dedicate to movement and exercise, you are better off breaking that up into 12 five-minute segments
than doing it all at once.  Just as it’s important to rest your eyes by looking away from your screen, it’s
crucial to get up and move your body throughout the day.  You can walk or run inside or outside, do air
squats, do planks, climb stairs, bounce on a mini-trampoline, jump rope or do anything else that is fun
and at least moderately raises your heart rate.

Routine

For starters, we should seek to align our bodies with our circadian rhythms and do whatever else is
necessary to get sufficient sleep.  Health, healing, exercise, mood, performance, disease resistance and
longevity itself have all been shown to be directly related to sleep.

The second routine focus—which follows from good sleep—is starting our days the right way.  You want
to own your day, not let your day own you, as Wells puts it.  How we wake up each day sets the tone for
everything that will follow and determines whether we are setting ourselves up for success or stagnation.  Wells recommends waking up 30 minutes earlier than you normally do so you can take your time and
engage in the following types of activities:

  • Take in bright light early in the day.
  • Meditate, or do a mindfulness or breathwork practice—such as deep breathing through the nose
    with slow exhales.
  • Stretch and take a short walk.
  • Hydrate and eat a high-quality breakfast.

The upshot: By staying conscious and improving the routines you follow—especially at the beginning of
the day and at the end of the day when you’re preparing for sleep—you can position yourself to potentially
enhance and sustain your energy daily.

Growth

Growth refers to having a growth mindset—whether it is with regard to your body, your mind, your business or career, or your inner emotional and spiritual life.  For example, to get your body to the next
stage of wellness, one very powerful and increasingly popular tool is intermittent fasting.  Likewise, for
developing our inner lives, Wells suggests considering the Japanese concept of “ikigai,” which translates
to “reason for being”—or, as Wells puts it, your “reason to jump out of bed in the morning.”  A sense of
purpose and a growth mindset go hand in hand.  To be fully energized, we have to discover for ourselves
what works at every level of our bio-individuality, from the physical to the spiritual.

Your tribe

75-year Harvard study looked at many factors (such as money, race and occupation) to see what was
most important for healthy aging. Ultimately, the most critical factor for leading a healthy, happy and
long life was the quality of our close relationships.

The key, however, is not necessarily having a lot of friends or even being in a long-term relationship.  What really matters is whether there are others in your life with whom you can be vulnerable and authentic—especially when you are down, are in a crisis or need help.  Knowing we can rely on others relaxes the nervous system, helps keep the brain healthy, and reduces both physical and emotional pain.

Conclusion

Some of this advice may be new and surprising to you, and some of it you may have already known for
a long time.  But by having it put together in an organized way that connects the dots, you may find it
easier to turn insights into action steps that bring you closer to living your best life.

VFO Inner Circle Special Report
By John J. Bowen Jr.
© Copyright 2022 by AES Nation, LLC. All rights reserved.

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