2020 Podcasts

308: Fresh-Pressed Olive Oil: For Fasting, For Your Microbiome, and for Cellular Health

Episode 308: Fresh-Pressed Olive Oil: For Fasting, For Your Microbiome, and for Cellular Health

Today I welcome back one of our most popular guests – the ‘Olive Oil Hunter' himself – TJ Robinson.

TJ's last visit here was all about discovering his special first-harvest, fresh-pressed olive oils. They are magic for fasting, for the appetite, and especially for your cellular health.

Today's episode will be filled with actionable intelligence that will help you optimize your health on the cellular level by harnessing the incredible power of Fresh-Pressed Olive Oil. So get your olive oils ready for tasting and join us! No olive oils? No problem! Check out the link to join the club below at a special price for my CHTV audience.

More about TJ Robinson:

T.J. Robinson is one of the world's most respected authorities on all matters olive oil.
Known for his “platinum palate,” he is one of the few Americans invited to serve as a judge in prestigious Italian olive oil tasting competitions.

He is dedicated to importing rare fresh-pressed olive oil, the most flavorful and most healthful extra virgin olive oil on the planet, until now virtually impossible to obtain year-round in the US. All his oils are independently lab tested and certified for 100% purity.

Show notes:

Pay $1 for a $39 bottle of premium olive oil by signing up at www.PompaOliveOil.com

Episode 295 with TJ Robinson

CytoDetox: total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level.

Order Dr. Pompa's Beyond Fasting book!

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
One of my favorite episodes in all of Cell TV is about olive oil. Can you believe it? Look, we discovered a lot about this first-harvest, fresh-pressed olive oil. You can only get it one place. We talk about that in this episode.

We‘ve learned that it is this magic for fasting. It’s magic for controlling appetite and it’s magic for the cells. We discuss that again with expert, TJ. He’s like the wine sommelier, but he is the olive oil som. These experts, they know taste, they know olive oil like they know wine. He brings some really amazing information about the benefits of these particular oils.

Alright, we’re going to talk about Italian oil this time and also some other ways that you may not have thought about for using olive oil. This episode brings it all to life and even why I believe that these oils need to be part of your cooking obviously but part of your health. Stay tuned for a great episode.

Ashley Smith:
Hello, everyone. Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith. Today, we welcome back one of our most popular guests, the “Olive Oil Hunter” himself, TJ Robinson. He is back to discuss and taste a very unique batch of olive oils with Dr. Pompa. This episode will be filled with actionable intelligence that will help you optimize your health on the cellular level by harnessing the incredible power of fresh-pressed olive oil. Get your olive oils ready and let’s welcome back to CHTV, TJ Robinson, and of course, welcome Dr. Pompa.

TJ Robinson:
Thank you.

Dr. Pompa:
Awesome, actionable intelligence, I like that Ashley. That is no doubt what we’re doing—

Ashley Smith:
I didn’t write it actually; TJ’s [00:02:14]. She’s amazing. Thank you

TJ Robinson:
You’re very welcome. No, I think it’s really true. You’re amazing with fats and the detox level. I can’t wait to share a lot about olive oil. I think there is a lot of action that you’ll be able to take after hearing these thoughts.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, and this is one of my favorite episodes. Why? Because I actually get to ingest these amazing oils. The three we’re going to talk about today, I haven’t tasted, so I will be tasting them with you all for the first time.

We did the last show, and Ashley will put out the link, and I want to dive in a little deeper on this show. I think we need to—you need to watch both shows because I’ve done some Facebook Lives and Instagrams about the olive oil. Some things since the last show that we discovered, one of which, we have a lot of people that are intermittent fasting and trying to fast. We’ve discovered that these oils because they’re, you’ll find out why, because they are so high in something called polyphenols, they seem to curb appetite. People just with a tablespoon of these oils are able to go on in their fast much longer.

We even have what we call a fat fast where we don’t just pure water fast, where we utilize fat is a fasting mechanism. It’s one of the fasts that you can actually do, is what you call a partial fast really, but we call it a partial fat fast. What we know is even in daily fasting, people that just sound like, gosh, I want to go longer in my fast, we’ve learned to use these olive oils. The polyphenol has an effect on a hormone called ghrelin that controls appetites. We learned that. Maybe it was something that you said on the last show, so thank you for that.

TJ Robinson:
You’re welcome.

Dr. Pompa:
We’re also learning just the other benefits since we’ve been using your oils. We’ve been getting a lot of amazing feedback. We have a lot of people who give comments.

TJ Robinson:
Oh, good. That makes me really happy. I’m so honored and just so appreciate your helping us be an ambassador for fresh-pressed olive oil. It’s been a product I’ve devoted the last decade of my life to getting the word out about the healing power of fresh-pressed olive oil. I’m actually an ex-chef and got my start in the kitchen. It was only at culinary—I only thought of it in the beginning in 2004 as a culinary item.

Of course, I thought, olive oil is healthy for you, blah-blah-blah, but I just really had no idea as science started to catch up with this ancient tree that was so special and had such unique healing properties for millennia. Science is catching up with that. There are great studies coming out related to the polyphenols, for the health benefits for the gut biome, for the brain, for a high level of satiety. It just goes on and on. It’s folks like you who helped us get the word out about the healing power of olive oil. We appreciate it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and you’re doing something unique; hence, your nickname, the “Olive Oil Hunter,” which for our new viewers, I want you to explain that name. You can’t get fresh-pressed olive oil in the store. There’s a reason for that; I want you to tell the reason. That plays into why you’re called the “Olive Oil Hunter” and why I think everyone should join the club because obviously these health benefits you’re only getting in this fresh-pressed, first-pressed olive oil. Explain the name and explain why that ties into this question of why these oils, why these.

TJ Robinson:
Yeah, absolutely. Olives are a fruit. They need to be treated as a fruit, a beautiful fresh fruit. Fresh-pressed olive oil is very much like fresh fruit juice.

My job, I’m basically an olive oil sommelier and an olive oil concierge. It gets people access to best olive oil in the world. I travel the plant following the seasonal harvest which is in the Mediterranean in our fall, a northern hemisphere fall. Then I also travel to the southern hemisphere in May and July looking for—July, August, depending on mother nature, looking for southern hemisphere oils which are also fresh.

My club members get four harvest-fresh oils each year. We’re a quarterly club. I’m the “Olive Oil Hunter.” I land in country; I taste about 100 olive oils. I find the farms, the microclimates that are producing the best fruit. In Italy alone, there are 550 olive variety, so just searching through, finding the most flavorful, finding the ones with polyphenols, finding the microclimate that did—where it didn’t rain too much so it preserves the polyphenols in the fruit so they’re bursting with flavor and I can produce oils with master millers who make great oil. We can go further into that as we go on.

Essentially, yeah, I’m the “Olive Oil Hunter.” I travel around; I found the world’s greatest olive oil. I put it on a jet and I send it directly to my club members. There’s no middleman in the middle to muck up anything. It’s not on a slow cargo boat. It’s not sitting on a shelf getting fluorescent light.

It’s not on the top shelf in the supermarket where it’s getting a lot of heat. It’s in a dark glass bottle. There’s a lot of different—basically, we cut all the mistakes you can make with olive oil by working directly with the producer and me being there on the ground. Yeah, I’m very blessed to have 16,000 members now across the US that every quarter, they get three bottles of amazing fresh-pressed olive oil.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, we love it. On this episode here, I really want to focus on my favorite country. That’s Italy and not because it’s my favorite country honestly. I’ve been there several times. Most of the oil that we’re getting this quarter is from Italy, at least two of the three are from Italy that I’m seeing here; one is from Greece.

TJ Robinson:
That’s right.

Dr. Pompa:
Italian olive oil, that’s my heritage right. I want to pull into this region because if you join, and I hope you do, I know we have an amazing deal. It’s if you join, if you go to pompaoliveoil.com, you’ll join actually your club, but you’ll do it through me. That’s awesome.

TJ Robinson:
That’s right.

Dr. Pompa:
Anyways, they get the first bottle for a penny, correct?

TJ Robinson:
A dollar.

Dr. Pompa:
A dollar, darn.

TJ Robinson:
The bottle’s free, the dollar’s shipping.

Dr. Pompa:
[00:09:22] I guess, sorry.

TJ Robinson:
Yeah, no worries. Absolutely, because when we taste these oils, you’ll see—when you hear us talk about these oils as a listener and you see the color and just how much flavor we’re receiving from this amazing oil and fruit, you’re going to want to taste it yourself. What I typically invite people to do is take the oil out of their pantry that they’re currently consuming and do a side by side taste test. That’s why we do it. We’re educating pallets.

We have a big mission and a lot of people to reach. We send out 4,000 sample bottles every quarter for a dollar to try to educate pallets and to train people how to test olive oil, how to compare it, how to analyze it, and see the health benefits for themselves. That’s exactly what you’re offering. I appreciate you helping us get the word out.

Dr. Pompa:
Again, I want people to understand. You can go to a Whole Foods, your grocery story, you can get some decent olive oils, but there is a difference. Before we go on, I want you to reexplain the difference of this oil. You did a little bit there, but there is a difference of this first-pressed oil that most of the families keep for themselves. Obviously, the polyphenols are way higher. The reason you can’t get it in your store is because most of the families keep it for themselves. Explain why this fresh-pressed. Now, you actually had to start this club.

TJ Robinson:
Sure, well, I feel in love with it in Sicily myself. I’m a southern boy. I didn’t grow up around olive trees. Most olive oil in the US is imported by boat and then distribution. I started this mission back in about 2004 and founded the club after that, slightly after that.

Really, it was my first time in visiting Sicily. I was invited to a harvest party with this family. They said, come, harvest fruit with us. We’ll take it to the mill. Then we’ll have dinner after. The moment when I saw the passion, and care, and love that these members of the family were putting into this fruit that belonged to their great-great-great-great grandparents, these trees and how they were treating their fruit so gingerly and beautifully, kept it out of the sun, covered it with leaves, they took it immediately to the mill and pressed it immediately, this level of love and care was really just amazing.

Then for the first time, I actually stood in front of the press and tried fresh oil from a very early harvest fruit. We can talk more about early harvest, but that was when my life changed. I had never tasted this product before as a professional chef, and a wine writer, and travel writer. I’d never had the opportunity to try fresh oil.

The moment I tried it, I immediately took some home to my friends and family and chef friends in New York. They flipped out over it. I think we were sheltered as Americans. We were only growing about 3% of our US consumption back in those days. Now, we’re up to maybe 7, 8% of our consumption. We’re still importing very high levels of it. Around that time, there were also a lot of studies coming out around fraud in olive oil.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, lots. There’s been a lot there.

TJ Robinson:
Yeah, there’s a great book by a wonderful writer, Tom Mueller is the author, a book called, Extra Virginity. He really follows this trail of fraud in olive oil all the way back from Roman times. The Romans were responsible, even Spanish olive oil, there’s the south of Spain in this area of [Heian]. The Romans actually planted most of those trees. They were for the Roman empire. In Rome, there’s actually a hill that’s built with Anfora clay pots that olive oil was brought from Spain back to Rome. There’s a massive hill in Rome that’s all made out of clay pots.

The Italians have been involved with olive oil for a long time. A lot of times as American consumers, we buy things with an Italian flag on the front. They’re very deceptive in marketing sometimes, but when you look at the back of the label, you see it’s from ten different countries of origin. That’s bulk low love olive oil versus a highly curated fresh-pressed oil that starts with a very green fruit.

That’s the first step. The fruit itself is harvested when it’s super green. In fact, the Italians, people used to have this assumption that Tuscans made the best olive oil. One of the reasons—and you know the geography of Italy pretty well, Dr. Pompa, but for example, in Tuscany, which is more central, northern—

Dr. Pompa:
Northern-central.

TJ Robinson:
Central-ish is definitely colder than it is in Sicily. The people in Tuscany were picking their fruit off the trees when it was not quite ripe. It didn’t get as ripe up in Tuscany as quickly as it did in—so they needed to catch it before the frost. They would pick it very green. They started making this really green olive oil that the world just fell in love with.

Tuscan trees, in general, are small; they don’t get very large like they do in southern Italy. It’s a lower yield, but it created this we’ll call it a style of olive oil, this early harvest style that some boutique producers all over the world follow. It’s like a protocol we’ll call it that just happened naturally in Tuscany. Then around the world, people started to appreciate this flavor profile. They could feel it’s more flavorful and healthy for them. It’s trickled around the rest of the world.

Even with producers I work in Spain—I work with in Spain, or Australia, or Chile, they all are very early harvest. It has a very low amount of oil inside the fruit, about 10% yield versus if you let that same fruit hang on the tree for another say two months. It could get up to 30% oil for the same individual fruit. People that are bulk buyers and sellers, they’re in the market of let the fruit hang on the tree. Let it get more oil.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s all about money.

TJ Robinson:
More money. The health-promoting qualities, the polyphenols, obviously go down. They don’t have harvest costs. They let it fall to the ground. They vacuum it up. They make oil, then send it to a refinery to strip out all the defects. It’s a very slippery business to say the least.

Dr. Pompa:
Slippery, yeah. You’re right about that, too. Okay, all of those, if you managed to get 100% olive oil product, all of those factors are still factors. The product you’re getting even if it’s organic, blah-blah-blah, very little low polyphenols because it’s not coming from the first-pressed to your point.

Now, the other thing is that they’re getting cut oil. Most of the oils, even in health food stores, are being cut. That’s the other issue obviously; you breezed across that. To get real olive oil today is hard, let alone these high polyphenol oils from the first fresh-press.

TJ Robinson:
That’s right. You have to be a detective because it will say olive oil in big letters, but if you look, it will say, blended with other oils and especially in the restaurant industry.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, it’s terrible.

TJ Robinson:
Oh, that is a mess because they get—because it’s so price-oriented. They go for the lowest cost. They’ll be supplied with real “olive oil,” but then a lot of times, things are mixed in and it will be a blended oil. I know you and Merily are very particular about the oils you consume. You talked about that a little bit last time, but please expand on that.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, we pound them. When we go to dinner, we will not make exceptions; as a matter of fact, we use the word allergic. My wife is allergic to canola oil and vegetable oil, so we make sure, is your olive oil pure? We got that because you use the word allergic, then they take it very seriously.

TJ Robinson:
That’s really smart.

Dr. Pompa:
If you say, hey, we want fresh, oh, yeah, we use olive oil. I can tell by the smell, the color, and the taste right away if you get a real good oil. It is very tough. We know our restaurants well. We know the questions to ask.

TJ Robinson:
Yeah, that’s really smart.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, the reason why I’m such a stickler here is because these bad oils come in. There was just a great article recently talking about canola oil. It’s rapeseed oil, but it is the most inflammatory of all oils. You literally ingest it. It makes its way right into your cell membranes, which is critical for detoxing. Your hormone health, your health in pure, how you feel, your energy, brain fog, all of that comes from your membranes of your cells. These bad oils make their way into the membranes and create dysfunction for 132 days on average.

TJ Robinson:
Wow.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s why I don’t screw it up. When I see very sick people, one of the first things we have to fix is their membrane health. You can’t fix it if they’re ingesting bad oil. We have to get rid of vegetable oil, canola oil, and again, a lot of the olive oils, especially in restaurants, are being cut. Now, there’s a rumor too that a lot of the Italian oils are coming over because the mafia’s taking over, they’re cutting their oils with some of these things. It’s bad.

Let’s say you get the perfect oil, olive oil that is. Let’s say you get an uncut olive oil. You’re still not getting the polyphenol levels high enough to really have that health benefit again to protect those cell membranes and to have all those effects that you said. That’s the point of your club is you have to travel different hemispheres to get these fresh first-pressed oils. I want to make a point here because the reason is—and people would say, well, can’t I just buy a bunch from you and just keep them in my closet? No, because the polyphenols drop in half in six months. You want to [00:20:04].

TJ Robinson:
You’ve got it. Honestly, you took the words right out of my mouth.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, you want to ingest these in six months. That’s why four times a year, you’re traveling to different places on the Earth. Okay, so the question I have now is where I’m at and why Italian and Greece right now?

TJ Robinson:
Italy and Greece, they experience—Sicily started probably late September. It’s still going on in some places in Italy actually. They’re in the middle of harvest; well, it’s just past probably. In October, November, I was in Italy. I always go there. It’s one of my favorite places to visit.

Dr. Pompa:
I saw your pictures by the way; they look spectacular.

TJ Robinson:
We have a lot of fun. For me going back to Italy every year, most of the producers I work with, it’s a relationship game. To get access to the best stuff, I have to maintain those relationships. I see them in good years; I see them in bad years. They know that my palette will be—my parameters, my palette, my profile for the club of the oils has to be meet before I purchase.

I’ve worked with them for many years. For us to go and be with our friends—our friends now because I’ve been working with most of these people for over 10 years. I leveraged those relationships to get the very best fruit and make the grade oil. Then I place it on a jet and I fly it back to America. I cut out all those things that you were talking about in the middle there where things get—potential fraud happens.

Sixty-Minutes did a great expose on olive oil fraud in the last couple of years. Actually, since the last time we talked, Wall Street Journal published in late November, they said, “Don’t sleep on this game-changing ingredient. When it comes to olive oil, the younger, the better, vibrant, flavorful, Olio Nuovo or nuevo,” because olive oil we’re talking about, “is a pantry pick me up you should purchase pronto.” It’s nice to see that in the Wall Street Journal.

The New York Times recently said, “The world of olive oil is murky.” That’s a good headline. “Here’s help for the home cook. Don’t try to parse every word on the label. The key to good flavor—or sorry. “The keys to good flavor are seeking out the freshest oil and using it generously. Olive oil should be poured lavishly and used up quickly. Experts say that freshness more than color, price, place of origin determines it’s quality.”

Thank goodness, major media, for years they’ve been reporting on all the fraud and all the issues with bulk, low-quality olive oil. They’re finally catching on to this freshness. Our mission, what you’re helping—the word you’re helping get out there on the street is just really helpful. We appreciate you because it’s paying dividends. We appreciate it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, absolutely. I have a lot of people, health seekers. Real olive oil that we’re talking about this first-pressed, young oil is the magic, these polyphenols. You have to understand that the Omega-6 is this pivotal fat in the membranes. I’ve heard people say, yeah, but this monosaturated fat isn’t one of the main fats in the membranes. It’s true; however, the fact is that these high polyphenols protect these membranes, protect the fats.

As a matter of fact, we even—like I said, my wife and I bring our olive oil when we go out to eat a lot of the times. If you do get exposed, it actually even had a protective effect there to your cell membranes. It has an effect on the membrane. It downregulates this oxidative stress, even toxic input that creates inflammation to the cell. It has many other benefits as we mentioned at the top of the show.

Okay, let’s pull this conversation into Italy here, my favorite place. What other advantages does Italy have? Because again, maybe I’m biased, but I just love these Italian oils.

TJ Robinson:
Yes, I do, too.

Dr. Pompa:
Are there some other advantages that they have that they put out some of the best oils in the world?

TJ Robinson:
Most of the best machinery for producing olive oil, high-quality olive oil—let’s focus on high-quality in Italy. Most of the great equipment for processing olive oil from transforming it from the tree into pressing it into the oil itself, most of that equipment, at least the high-level stuff was designed in Italy. You have people who are responsible for building the Ferrari. These are Italians; they’re into their machines. They know, they’re really good at this kind of tech. What they do, they have over the years continued to step up and be on the forefront and the frontier of trying the next thing. Let’s make sure our fruit—maybe I should step back a little bit and just talk about the how olive oil is made and then we could understand a little bit more?

Dr. Pompa:
Yes, to your point we are going to make is, okay, not getting the right oil at the wrong times, that’s a pitfall, cutting the oils, all that.

TJ Robinson:
Yes, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
Now, many pitfalls are how they make the olive oil. You can make a great oil bad, right?

TJ Robinson:
Oh, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
It could be over oxidation. That’s what you’re going to talk about.

TJ Robinson:
Exactly; and I’ll talk about best practices. Ideally, you have trees that were well loved and well cared for the whole season. You’ve taken care of them. You don’t just walk in on harvest day and expect good stuff. It usually doesn’t work. You have people that take really good care of their orchard. Olives are fruit; they need to be treated as that.

This fruit is picked and placed in small bins. Again, this is an Italian way. They use very small bins. They don’t use industrial systems or whatever, so these small bins.

Usually, when they’re picked around away, handed with sticks or with cones, which take the olives off the tree on these nets. When they fall to the nets, they put them in these bins. They normally put them in the shade because sun and heat will start to deteriorate the fruit. Then they rush them directly to their mill.

I do single-estate oils. Everyone I work with has their own mill; well, there are examples here or there where they don’t, but complete control over the mill they’re using. They have them, onsite mills. They rush them to the mill.

In the milling process, first the olives are washed. Then the fruit goes through what’s called a—the actual mill itself is called the crusher. Think of the crusher as being a food processor. They take the whole fruit. They run it through this crusher. They’re different kinds of crushers they can use to get different aromas, and different flavors, and different mouthfeel on the fruit. This crusher is Step One.

Then it flows immediately over to this thing called a malaxer. I like to think of the malaxer as this stand mixer in the kitchen, the KitchenAid stand mixer. What’s happening in there, the olive paste is just turning. During that time, an enzymatic breakdown happens between the parts of the fruit. There’s nothing added here, but while this malaxes for approximately 20 to 40 minutes depending on the fruit, a lot of things can happen in there if the mill’s not clean, if they use too much heat, if there’s too much oxygen inside. Things can not keep the antioxidant levels where you want it. They’re very protective over that. They keep the malaxing time short.

Then the third phase is simply a centrifuge. This paste, looks like pesto, is placed into a centrifuge, which separates that paste into three different parts. There’s the water, and waste, there’s the oil, and then there’s the pits essentially that are ground up at that point. It essentially separates that into three parts. This fresh oil, you get about 10% oil at a very early harvest. You get about 10% oil out of the fruit. Literally, if you see a bottle of olive oil, it takes ten—a high-quality olive oil, it takes ten times as many olive fruits in volume to produce this bottle.

Dr. Pompa:
Give me an idea bucket-wise. If I picture a bucket of olives, how many buckets does it take to produce this?

TJ Robinson:
I would guess at least a five-gallon bucket to do that one bottle. Yeah, it’s a lot.

Dr. Pompa:
You picture that on a tree. That's a darn—it's a small olive tree, maybe, that it produced, or half of an olive tree. I don’t know. That’s a lot.

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, it's a lot. These characters around the world that I work with, I'm very blessed to have these relationships with the top producers around the world. Many of them follow the practices that were started in Italy of this higher quality oil. Yeah, differences of the milling equipment, a lot of the science keeping the oxygen out of the process that reduces oxidative stress on the oil itself to keep the aromas and flavors and polyphenols intact.

Machinery is key, microclimates with really special fruit. In Italy we talked about 550 varieties of olives there. It's what I talked about in the pressing report. Some of them are used for curing to make table fruit. Some are used for olive oils of the 550. Some are used for both. Really, these are very special heritage, old varietal, and old varieties of olive fruit all around Italy that have adapted very specifically to those microclimates.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that's awesome. Are there disadvantages, I should say, in Italy. I mean climate-wise. I mean when you look at different regions and you've seen them, obviously, all the different regions. What are some of the disadvantages you see there?

T.J. Robinson:
I mean there is definitely—people, it's really sad. There's some places in Sicily. In fact, I was just talking to my family about this yesterday. You see those ads where you can buy a house in Italy for one Euro. There are places in Sicily, for example, where these—many people, many local Italians who grew up in these remote villages, they leave for the larger cities. They actually have quite a bit of abandon olive groves in Italy.

To see this in Sicily—there's a family I worked with there that is rescuing groves, essentially, leasing them from other people who basically abandon them, and are producing incredible olive oil. They are definitely things that are happening in the culture where their—it's hard to get a lot of Italians that want to harvest olive oil. They're having to bring in more immigrants to help with that.

There are definitely things happening in the culture, but in general it's a very special place for olive oil. It's very deep in the culture. They celebrate that harvest. They understand new oil, and the freshness of new oil, and how good it can be if you're trying to follow a Mediterranean style diet, or you're trying to get the benefits of the Mediterranean diet. Probably the ultimate would be Mediterranean keto if you could go in that direction to try to get all the benefits of both those amazing diets.

Dr. Pompa:
You can. It's easy to stick to the higher fat foods. Listen, so let's jump into this. You can probably answer some of these questions when we're actually tasting. I can't let these oils sit here [00:33:30] about tasting.

T.J. Robinson:
I know.

Dr. Pompa:
There's two Mediterranean regions here, Greece and Italy. One of the questions that are going to answer at some point is the difference. I've had amazing oils, olive oils from Greece, that I thought were absolutely incredible. What are some of the differences that you can cover that as we taste them? Where are we starting with this tasting?

T.J. Robinson:
We’re going to start with the Greek oil, the no N oil. This oil is from a single—it's a single varietal oil made from an olive variety called Amfissa, A-M-F-I-S-S-A.

Dr. Pompa:
It means one variety of olive.

T.J. Robinson:
That’s right, one—

Dr. Pompa:
Sometimes wine is a blend of three different grapes like in olive oil.

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, you're such a great teacher. I appreciate you adding explanations because that really helps. Thank you, but yes, absolutely. Before we taste, I might want to pour all three. The first one we're going to be pouring up. We have these small tasting cups, or I have these little three white Solo cups. Doctor Pompa has great little espresso cups. That's perfect.

Noen is going to be the first one and the second one I want to pour up in this lineup. This is a great way to assess different oils is when you try them together. When you get a sample bottle at home, when you try the offer, you want to line up your olive oil against these, or against your fresh pressed oil so you can really appreciate the differences and see, immediately, the quality. I've poured up all three.

Noen’s in the first position, Coley’s in second, and Hermes is in the third. Color is not a great way to judge olive oil, but as I look down, I see how vibrantly green and beautiful the oils are. It tells me it's most likely from very green fruit, which is ideal. I'd like to just do a quick smell across all three, the first one being the Greek. Let's get a sense of that. That's the mild one from the quarter. It's still quite grassy and quite fresh with things like romaine and that lighter greens, butter lettuce.

The Coley, I'm going to smell that one next. I'm kind of warming it up in the palm of my hand. This tablespoon of oil, I just swirl it around in the bottom of my cup. That warms the oil. That brings all the aromas out in the oil. This one's definitely a little deeper green color. Then the last one—and aroma as well. The last one, the Hermes, I just want to smell that.

Dr. Pompa:
Now, the middle, the Coley.

T.J. Robinson:
Coley, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
What region of Italy is that from? That’s actually from—just north, it’s Lazio is the region, just north of Rome. This area is where the Etruscans were settled. They predate the Roman Empire. It's really cool. When they're digging in the fields around these trees, and working in the fields, they come across a lot of Etruscan pottery pieces. It's really cool to hang out with these families and see these thousands of year-old pieces of pottery from the Etruscans.

We'll start with Noen, the Greek one. This variety—so there was an Austrian family who bought a piece of property in the Pillion Peninsula which is right between Athens and Thessaloniki. It's this little peninsula that sticks out. This family from Austria bought a vacation home there. There's great skiing, and there's beautiful watersports as well. It's a beautiful Peninsula. There were some olive trees on their property. They didn't really know what to do with them, being Austrian, but they took – they decided to go talk to the local miller about olive oil in the area, and when to pick it, and all that stuff. They struck up a great friendship.

They produced some olive oil together. This family, Austrian family, went on to develop an olive oil brand, which is only sold in Austria, and Germany, I believe, and maybe Switzerland other than my personal selection for the club. Essentially, they created a small co-op. They have 30 producers they work with who bring them beautiful green fruit. This Amfissa olives, these are massive olive fruits. They're also used in table olive production.

They're beautiful green. They look like little granny smith apples. They produce a very food friendly oil. You'll see when we taste that. Just to walk through the tasting again, the way we taste, professionally taste, olive oil. First, we're looking at the aromas even before we taste it. We take a nice whiff of the oil. It should be green, and fresh, and vibrant. It should be grassy and and—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, this one actually, I mean, has a grassy, really grassy nose to it. What's the polyphenol in this olive oil?

T.J. Robinson:
I printed those out. I knew you were going to ask. That's right at 300, 297, so right at 300. That's the mild selection. For this variety, like I said, it's a table fruit, but they made olive oil out of it. It’s a very low yield. This Austrian family, they work with a great miller there who makes this oil. Step one is smell, step two is taste. When we taste the oil, when you're assessing the quality of olive oil, you're looking for bitterness. That tells you the oil—the fruit was actually picked when it was very green. Bitterness is very important, and then a little spiciness as well.

Dr. Pompa:
Which you see on the back.

T.J. Robinson:
Exactly, a little pinch in the throat, which you'll get as we go in the—up higher in polyphenols.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that's the polyphenol test is the cough test.

T.J. Robinson:
That's right.

Dr. Pompa:
It was one cough, two cough, three coughs. When it gets you in the back, that is that engage of polyphenols.

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, so that's a hallmark of fresh oil. Again, that really dissipates in the first six months. That's why we fly it in by jet. Let's try this Amfissa. In the glass, I mean, it is very grassy, like you were saying.

Dr. Pompa:
[00:40:14]

T.J. Robinson:
You already started, oh gosh. That's good. Yes, wonderful aroma coming out of the glass, of green apple, banana. It's very nice. It's very artichokes and almonds. Then I'm going to take a small sip.

Dr. Pompa:
It tastes higher phenols than 300 to me.

T.J. Robinson:
It does.

Dr. Pompa:
Doesn’t it?

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, it totally does. The mouthfeel is so beautiful. It’s just a soft entrance and then just really opens up and blooms in the mouth.

Dr. Pompa:
It's not too overpowering. Even though the polyphenols feel high to me, in the front of my palate, it's not overpowering.

T.J. Robinson:
That the beauty of Amfissa. It's got this lemon meringue pie flavor to it. It's sweet, and spicy, and green, a little lime zest, a touch of arugula or bitter greens in there like radicchio. It's a very special oil that is really well made, well cared for by the producer. Yeah that one was—Italy, in some ways, had a tough season this year. In the spring, there was some frost that killed some of the buds.

Certain varieties, this year, because most producers, when they have a field, they don't produce all one varietal because for cross pollinization, and just historically that's the way it's been planted, they’ve planted in a way so that they can rotate the harvest. Not everything's ripe all at once. Some varieties this year, that were the late bloomers, they survived. The early bloomers, they got hit with the frost. There were no fruit on those trees, no fruit—no flower, no fruit.

It's a finicky plant, but at the same time it really can be prolific. The olive tree produces—it's an alternate bearing tree like most fruit trees. What happens is one year they have a bumper crop; the next year less, much less. It's one of those tricky trees, but thank goodness this year, in Greece, the Amfissa tree gave a lot of fruit because last year they had zero olives. Last year zero olives, but this year an abundance. What God took away last year—

Dr. Pompa:
That business got a labor of love.

T.J. Robinson:
It is, it totally is. Anyway, that's the Greek one. We can move on to the two Italians because that's where we're going. This Coley that—

Dr. Pompa:
I’m going to Italy, here, folks.

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, we're on our way to Italy. This Coley—

Dr. Pompa:
Now we’re [00:43:08] little central Italy right now.

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, that's right, central Italy, the Etruscan area of Italy, just a little north of Rome. This oil, I mean the color is just so impressive. You can't really –

Dr. Pompa:
It’s actually the darkest of the three, wouldn’t you say?

T.J. Robinson:
It is.

Dr. Pompa:
Not by much, the last one is pretty darn dark. Again, you’re not judging it by the color completely.

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, that's right. In fact, professional tasters, we taste out of blue cups because we don't want the color to trick our brains into thinking it's more green harvest fruit.

Dr. Pompa:
However, I will say this. At a restaurant, I can tell by sight whether it's been cut. I mean because it's ridiculously light. I mean, on these orders you don’t judge it by the color, but when you cite that like just that really gold color.

T.J. Robinson:
No, not touching it. Let’s do a nose test on the Coley, see what we come up with.

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, I learn well, folks. You see me in between; I'm doing a little bit of green apple. He told me that's what I should use, green apple.

T.J. Robinson:
Absolutely, it's perfect. That's what us professional tasters do. The nose on this one, it's green and sweet. This one has a lot of sweet aromas. I like a little marzipan, a little almondy, definitely a little bit of romaine. It's also grassy, a little bit of lime zest. It's a beautiful just green. I think of herbal things with this one. I think of basil and rosemary. I think of green – if I've just had fresh herbs, and rubbed them in my palms, and smelled my palms, that's what I get on this oil, on the nose.

Dr. Pompa:
The first ones actually smelled grassier. This one smells, to your point, a little bit more herbally I would say.

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, herbally, yeah, I agree.

Dr. Pompa:
I do pick up fruit tones in there. Again, I'm used to smelling wine more than olive oil.

T.J. Robinson:
Right, well they do – wine—people have this association. They think that olive oil ages like wine. It does not age at all.

Dr. Pompa:
[00:45:28]

T.J. Robinson:
I’m going to take a sip of the Coley real quick. Immediately, you can feel the—this oil’s richer, heavier. You feel more bitterness.

Dr. Pompa:
I have more on the front of my palate.

T.J. Robinson:
There it is. That one said—319 is the polyphenol count on that one. Yeah, I'm probably going to get a little cough, here, too. That oil has a very long finish. This oil I really like with foods that are bitter on their own, like arugula salad or radicchio. I love bitter foods in general. I've heard people talk about bile production related to eating foods that are more on that bitter spectrum. Can you explain that to me?

Dr. Pompa:
It helps actually push bile from the liver, which bile, if it stays in the liver, can actually become more and more toxic. We call it hepatic, meaning liver, biliary bile, sludge, meaning toxic. We want to move bile from the liver, and bitters is a way of pushing bile out, which is a very healthy thing to do to for it to be recycled and cleansed.

T.J. Robinson:
We’ve come up with a lot of interesting things that we would like to do some research on anytime I'm on a call with you. It would be really interesting to see the effect of bitter olive oil having on bile production. I don't know how we can figure out a way to test that.

Dr. Pompa:
You know what, you just struck something with me. I’ve never done this before. You would have to tell me which is one of the most bitter oils that you've come across. I do something called the bile push. What we do is we take bind, that's a binder that sits in the gut. Its job is it pulls the toxic bile complex out, which is a really big issue for people as far as opening up their detox [00:47:29].

We take the bind, we take three or four of this product called bind, B-I-N-D. It has four different binders in it that only stay in the gut. It acts as a catcher's mitt to grab this toxic bile complex. We take that. Thirty minutes later, we ingest a fat. Now, we typically use ghee because it's very fatty. It dumps the bile. You're right. We would be able to use the fat of the olive oil to dump the bile because you need bile to digest the fat. The bitter component would actually help dump more bile than, say, even the ghee that we use. [00:48:07]. I'm going to use one of the higher bitter olive oils for this flush. We're going to try it.

T.J. Robinson:
I love it. I'm going to stay tuned because I want to know how that works. My theory is that it would help with bile production. No, that’s super cool. The third one I want to taste is – and the last one we tasted by the way, the Coley is also a single varietal oil. It's kind of special to have two single varietal oils in this. Normally I have more blends because I'm a chef. I like to make sauces. I consider fresh olive oil to be a sauce that mother nature made for you, one of her best products.

Anyway, this last one is actually a blend of one farmer who has a large grove. Not large, it’s probably, I don’t know, 20 acres. He has different olive varieties on the farm. The main one, about seventy percent of this, is from a variety called Dritta. It rhymes with Rita, but it's called Dritta, D-R-I-T-T-A, I believe. It's a great olive variety from Abruzzo, which is just on the other side. If you're in Rome and went directly east, you would go to Abruzzo. It's a beautiful region, undiscovered. People don't seek out Abruzzo. It's not a big tourist place, but oh, it’s a beautiful spot on the planet and only about a couple hours from Rome.

This guy—actually, all the producers I work with are great producers. This guy, there's an Italian guide called Dom Brio Rosa and they route—it's one of the ranking guides of producers, olive oil producers. Last year he won Olive Mill and Olive Miller of the year for the Italian Guide for olive oil. His name is Claudio, a very super nice family. You would love being at his house. He takes everything from his garden. I mean the whole family gets involved. I know how family-oriented your company is.

I love when they get the family involved to produce all these different things, whether it's the oil, or whether it's the salumi that they make, or the cured meats, or anything, whether the yearly tomato sauces they're producing. I love how this this is very family oriented, so this oil is the bold. The polyphenol level on it is a 451, so it's a very bright oil as you'll see when we taste it, but yet it is still very calibrated.

This guy was very frustrated with the system, the local mill that he would take his beautiful fruit to, and it would get destroyed. About ten years ago is when he started his own mill. When he did it, he said, “I want to do it right. I want to find the best machinery in Italy I can buy.” He went up to Tuscany and met with Giorgio Mori who is a producer of great equipment whose real history was in wine but now is working in olive oil as well.

Giorgio produced beautiful small boutique machines where he can make really high-quality oil himself and have complete control from the tree all the way to the bottle. Anyway, Giorgio Mori has a big hand in this oil as well, producing great machinery. That, as you'll see when we smell it, it's fairly abundant in aroma. Giorgio produced a very special crusher that crushes the fruit in a way that really brings out the aromas in the oils.

You'll see that in the mouthfeel as well. On the nose of this one, it's definitely greener, arugula, definitely more spicy, radicchio. This one's definitely stronger on the nose. Then on the palate, you're going to get increased bitterness and increased spiciness. I'm going to take a taste of that as well.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, definitely, yeah, oh my God, yeah, wow.

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, there's a polyphenol. That oil is so luscious. Bitterness, I love it. It's kind of like a fine whiskey. It’s got a little afterburn.

Dr. Pompa:
That strong of an oil, bitter, bold. You're the chef. What would you do with that one? The other one I can see on salads, raw. This could almost overwhelm certain things, right?

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, I would pair it with arugula because it's one of those oils that—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, [00:53:04]. That’s a good plan.

T.J. Robinson:
Exactly, so I say of this oil in my Pressing Report. I’ll hold up a copy. Every quarter I send out –

Dr. Pompa:
You get that when you join the club, which is awesome.

T.J. Robinson:
That's right. It's a 16-page newsletter. It's all about the challenge of the season, why I'm in Italy, or wherever I am in the world, and what my challenges to where, how I overcame them, and how I met with—and I introduce you to the three producers. I give you tasting notes. For this last one, I'll just read you – I know your wine guy as well.

My tasting notes, and my tasters, and myself, here's how we describe this last oil, this Hermès. We said, “Beautiful green color, bright and aromatic on the nose. We caught aromas of chopped baby greens, fresh-cut grass, kale, snipped culinary herbs such as thyme, oregano, and mint along with celery, Asian pear, and tomato leaf, a hint of cinnamon and black pepper. This oil is sophisticated, verdant, and exciting on the palate with hints of rosemary, lime zest, Tuscan kale, radicchio, hazelnuts, dark chocolate, and black pepper.

On the finish, anticipate the bitterness and spiciness of arugula,” —sorry, “the spiciness of arugula and the hallmark sign of abundant polyphenols, a mouth warming, tingling sensation that lingers.” In fact, my mouth is still tingling now after that small taste. I said, “Inspired pairings with this bold, well balanced, and remarkably food friendly oil include hearty winter soups, stews and braises, salads with sturdy greens, especially if they include nuts or fresh citrus.

Generously splash this oil on white beans, chickpeas, lentils, and grains. Drizzle on bruschetta, hearty tomato-based pasta dishes, or grilled or roasted meats including pork, beef, and lamb; also, cruciferous vegetables, aged cheese's, oily fish, kale, chicory, baked hams, and roasted eggplant. Drizzle over vanilla ice cream or pair with dark chocolate. That bitterness of dark chocolate and the bitterness of this oil are really interesting together. If you have some really nice dark chocolate later, dip that—

Dr. Pompa:
You didn’t prepare me for that, darn.

T.J. Robinson:
Dip it, yeah, dip it, do a little dip. Yeah, we wax poetically about olive oil. It's fun sitting around the table, and people are yelling out descriptors. It's a fun little battle. Those are those are the three oils of the quarter that I was really lucky to get on a jet plane and get those back to the members. Yeah, we're up to about 16,000 members now, and every one of them—

Dr. Pompa:
Wow, let’s add some thousands to that.

T.J. Robinson:
Yes, well, it's really—olive oil, really fresh olive oil, it's like the difference in dried herbs and fresh herbs. The fresh oils are like fresh herbs. They’re filled with essential oils. They're filled with aroma and flavor. They're not dead and dried the way most you know bulk—

Dr. Pompa:
Look, you go to a fine restaurant. Good restaurants are really—they're good because of the freshness of the ingredients. The herbs and the olive oil is key. I've walked out of restaurants just because they literally can't find a non-cut oil or a fresh oil. I'm gone. I've been in Italian restaurants that are considered good. They don't even have real olive oil. I mean, this is remarkable to me.

The key to the ingredients is the freshness. The key, as you know, as a chef, is using the good oil. We use this for everything that we do. One of the things that we talked about last time is this actually takes the heat better because it's protective because of its nature. We just absolutely love it. I’ve turned so many people onto it. It'll change your health. It'll change your cooking, and your pleasure, and happiness on us. Yeah, so that’s why we love oil.

T.J. Robinson:
Yeah, well, people, they really use it. Again, I'm training them to use it like a sauce that mother created, Mother Nature created for them. They really use it as a backbone flavor ingredient. Like most olive oil you'd think of as more of a lubricant, as to keep things from sticking and that sort of thing. You don't really think of it as like this major flavor enhancer.

There are so many—I think I may have mentioned to you that Dr. Andrew Wells, my brother-in-law, and his wife Katie, they're both working their way through your detox book right now. They're actively seeking great healthy fats, ways to stay this high level of satiety the olive oil, especially with the polyphenols, can give them. It's actually a really good, all-around ingredient. It's an easy change. It's a really easy change.

It's not something—you don't have to go to the gym for another hour. You just have to drizzle from the bottle, lift one hand. It is an easy change. I like how you realized—and I know your wife loves to cook. It's very like simple cooking. You don't have to buy 20 ingredients of low quality. Buy five of super high quality. A bottle of olive oil, most of my club members use about a bottle a month. If they cook at home, and they travel some, they—

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, that’s—it’s easy.

T.J. Robinson:
It's about a bottle a month. A bottle is around 30 bucks. I can spend that on a bottle of wine at a restaurant and a meal quite easily for a bottle wine to have with my meal and it be gone in 20 minutes. I can literally improve hundreds of plates of food, over the course of a month, with this lovingly made you know hand curated trio of oils. I think it's a no-brainer, honestly.

Dr. Pompa:
It's a hidden biohack. It really is. It's the most affordable of all, like you said. I mean, $30 for a bottle wine, one just in one meal this last, like you said, a month. I mean, we’re pouring it liberally.

T.J. Robinson:
Awesome.

Dr. Pompa:
Honestly, I don't put my mouth on it, but I just pour it into my mouth. I do. I do that. At least once a day my kids can see me just dowsing it. I do that. That's what I do. I use it on everything that I cook. I mean, everything, including my eggs. My wife and I actually use it on our skin. We actually do, especially when we're getting a lot of sun. We use it on our skin.

T.J. Robinson:
That’s fantastic. The antioxidants are really good for—they use a lot of—if you'll see skincare products, they will use olive oil extracts and olive oil polyphenols in skin care products and some high-end skincare lines.

Dr. Pompa:
I would argue that they're probably denatured. They're not getting the fresh press, the first press like this with the polyphenols. The polyphenols is where the magic is, and all the matrix of proteins and fats that are in there. My gosh, anyways, yeah, that's why we use it. I mean, you can just put it on and put a lotion on top of it just to take the oil glaze down if you need to. If it's added to a product you have, it's probably denatured. That's why add it to your product is my suggestion. Ingest it daily on everything you do. We're out of time. This was a great show as always. We love you.

T.J. Robinson:
That’s a fact. We love you, too. Don't spoil any more shirts. Last time I saw Marilee, and you were together, and you grabbed the bottle and chugged it, she's like, “Don't get olive oil on another one of your shirts. Don't ruin another shirt.”

Dr. Pompa:
I do it all the time.

T.J. Robinson:
Be careful, now. You’re going to get us both in trouble if I continue to be your olive oil sommelier.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, you are our olive oil sommelier, here, on Cellular Healing TV. We love you and appreciate you for that. Join pompaoliveoil.com, pompaoliveoil.com, join the club, man. Take your health to the next level, and your cooking. TJ, thank you.

T.J. Robinson:
Hey, a pleasure, thank you, look forward to next time. Thank you, my friend, big hugs, ciao, grazie mille, ciao.

Dr. Pompa:
Ciao, arrivederci.

T.J. Robinson:
Ci.

Ashley Smith:
That's it for this week. We hope you enjoyed today's episode. This episode was brought to you by Cytodetox. Please check it out at buycytonow.com. We'll be back next week and every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv. Please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review, and sharing the show with anyone you think may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.

307: Detoxing From Addiction and Trauma

Episode 307: Detoxing From Addiction and Trauma

Addiction takes on many forms. And even if we are we not addicted to the obvious things, most of us are addicted to something. Many addictions can be rooted in stored trauma in our bodies, and they can present themselves physically, emotionally, and even chemically.

I'm proud to say today's guest is part of my own HCF family of Platinum Doctors. But more than that, he's an expert in the field of applying our unique multi-therapeutic approach and cellular detox to patients who are struggling with addiction. From breathing, yoga, and IV therapy, to simply getting away from the grind and retreating; this is practical advice that I am sure everyone can benefit from.

More about Dr. Nick Jensen:

Dr Nick has been practicing in Vancouver BC, Canada for over 10 years with his wife and business partner Dr Sonya Jensen.

As a result of both Dr Nick and Sonya wanting to be on the leading edge of this health movement, they’ve always known to seek out the best mentors they can find, like Dr Dan Pompa! With this search they’ve received advanced training in detoxification, Addictions/Recovery, Hormone replacement therapy, IV therapy, Brain Neurofeedback and more. They are Parents, Kundalini Yoga Teachers, Podcasters (The Doctor Dads, Women N Wellness), Speakers and run yearly retreats (Naturally Brave Retreats) to take people on a Wellness Holiday and immersion experience.
Dr Nick is also Medical Director of the Agora Regeneration Clinic helping individuals through their brain health and addictions recovery journey using the best protocols available.

They recently opened a Dr Pompa inspired “Longevity Lab” in their clinic allowing patients to access some of the top tools in the world of Biohacking and Longevity.

Show Notes:

Naturally Brave Retreats

Attend this winter's retreat! Feb 25-March 1, 2020 Code “CELLTV” for $50 off

The Doctor Dads Podcast

Divine Elements Naturopathic Family Wellness

Order Dr. Pompa's new release, Beyond Fasting!

CytoDetox: Total detoxification support where it matters most – at the cellular level.

Transcript:

Dr. Pompa:
Addiction, you realize that most of us are addicted to something that actually comes from traumas earlier in life. However, the solution is not just trauma. It can be chemical. It could be emotional. It can be physical. I interview a doctor who is an expert in this area who brings the multi-therapeutic approach in cellular detox that I’ve been teaching for years. He puts it all together in this show and talks about some unique answers, even gives you how to breathe and a really amazing strategy that you should apply and need to apply every day. I’m telling you, this is a great show with just some real practical advice about some things that will change your world. If you don’t think you’re addicted, you just might be, but there’s an answer. Stay tuned.

Ashley:
Welcome to Cellular Healing TV. I’m Ashley Smith, and today we welcome Dr. Nick Jensen who is a naturopathic physician, yogi, husband, father, biohacker, speaker, and podcaster on his own show called The Doctor Dads. He is here to discuss implementing a multi-therapeutic approach to addictions and recovery with a focus on IV therapy, yoga, and emersion, and you’ll hear about how you can work with Dr. Nick in person at a very special retreat that he hosts. Let’s get started and welcome Dr. Nick and, of course, Dr. Pompa. Welcome, both of you.

Dr. Jensen:
Hello, thank you for having me.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, Dr. Nick, well, let’s start here. You’re more than special than all that. You’re one of ours. You’re one of the platinum doctors of cellular detox. You’ve trained through this multi-therapeutic approach. Today’s topic is how you use this with one of your expertise areas, and that’s addiction.

Yeah, let’s open it up here. Addiction is something that could be a lot of things. I mean, we think of it as drugs, but obviously, it could be food. It could be addicted—many types of addiction. You obviously apply this cellular detox that we all love and share, but you also do some other things like mindset. Gosh, you call yourself a yogi. What does that mean? Yeah, we’ll get into that. Anyways, tell your story first of all. How did you end up getting in this area of recovery from addiction?

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, well, I mean, it’s funny how different things in life draw us into our niche. It’s not the only thing that we focus on, but when Sonya and I got our first job, we actually were…

Dr. Pompa:
Sonya and I, that means your wife.

Dr. Jensen:
That’s my wife. That’s my amazing wife.

Dr. Pompa:
I know that.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, you know that.

Dr. Pompa:
They don’t that.

Dr. Jensen:
Dr. Sonya Jensen, who’s my wife and also an elite doctor with me, and nothing would get approved if it didn’t run by her first, as you know with Merilee as well. Our first job position was actually to work at a multidisciplinary retreat center in Costa Rica, and Sonya and I, after we finished naturopathic school, we traveled the world and taught English in Taiwan. We had a big love and passion for seeing different aspects of the world, and it didn’t work out. We didn’t get a chance to fulfill that dream, but here we are ten—I guess it was ten years later so that we got back into this world of recovery through the lens of yoga, through the lens of IV therapy, and nutrition, of course, and all those tools. I was experimenting with my own biohacking. I experienced with fasting, whatnot.

We stumbled across you, and I saw you on a post on Facebook at some point. I said, Sonya, we’ve got two options. We go see Tony Robbins, or we go see Dan Pompa, and Dan Pompa seems right up our alley. Let’s go check him out.

When we went to go see you, I mean, the amount of heart that you bring, Dan, is what drew us to you. You’ve got so much passion for what you do, and it really hooked us in. It made us realize that you can bring so much heart and science and research into what we do. It was a perfect missing piece in our protocols for helping people through this world of recoveries as you were speaking to it.

Yeah, there’s different types of recovery. There’s different types of addictions. I really like what one of my dear friends—or how he speaks about addiction recovery. This makes it a little less triggering for people and that is any substance, any environment, any scenario that’s repeated over and over that leads to a negative outcome is technically an addiction. We can draw conclusions to food, to relationships and, obviously, prescription medications and other nonprescription medications, alcohol, technology. I mean, we’re surrounded by triggers that put us into a world of a downward spiral where we feel so dependent on these things, and we lose ourselves in it. It’s a universal problem, I think.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it really is. I don’t know. They say anywhere between three and five percent actually break the addictions permanently in their life. I mean, I believe cellular detox becomes a big part of that, especially when you’re dealing with certain addictions. I think what you bring, that full scope of it—because it’s not just a chemical aspect of things. There is a mindset part of this, right?

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, absolutely.

Dr. Pompa:
The patterns still exist, and you have to change those patterns of thinking. Again, those patterns of thinking get hard to change when the chemical parts of things are still there. Again, it really becomes a multi-therapeutic approach to this answer. Let’s start there; unfold that. If you don’t deal with all of those areas, then you’re going to fall victim again to the addiction, so peel that apart where you start with somebody.

Dr. Jensen:
I mean, obviously, we always want to—not obviously. It’s not obvious to the person that’s going through it, but where we always want to start is to work on some aspect of mindset. The way that you bring it too is that you remove the obstacle and let the body heal itself. If we can apply that model to recovery, part of removing the first obstacle is what can we do to change our attachment to the addiction, to the substance and whatnot? If we don’t address it through the multi-therapeutic approach that you teach us from a biochemical point of view as well as a mindset point of view, we’re missing the piece. As you know, it’s like, when our hormone of insulin is on overdrive, that’s the hormone of addiction right there. It’s like, if we don’t calm that insulin overload and do something to fix the metabolic processing within the body, we’re fighting this mindset against a biochemical onslaught that’s so hard to engage.

I think, from a mindset point of view, what’s that—as you taught us, what’s that person’s reason for wanting to get better? If they have a good enough reason that’s bigger than the thing that’s keeping them attached to their addictive substance, then great. There’s an opportunity for progress. At the same time, can we unhinge some of that hormone overwhelm with this craving cycle of over addiction to even just sugar so sometimes just calming down the sugar and getting people open to the mindset that there are absolutely tools that can get you back into a space for healing should you get rid of those obstacles? Those are the two starting points, I think, for…

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, let’s unfold that a little bit more. When you’re dealing with the mindset, if you don’t get upstream to the causative factors, then everything else downstream is not going to work, anything lasting anyway. As far as addiction goes, Dr. Nick, what do you find are some of the big upstream issues? For example, when I talked about chemical stuff, the three hidden ones that I call the three evils, mold, people miss it. Metals, people miss it, hidden infections. Those three are the ones that are missed. Is there something similar you’d say to mindset? Meaning we go back into someone’s childhood, it’s this, this, or this are typically where we find those clues.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, absolutely. I think the biggest thing it comes down to is to attachment and connection. When we lose that connection to our tribe, our community and that’s early childhood when we don’t feel that love and tenderness from maybe a parent, or maybe there’s abuse or violence, or we see these patterns that are passed down through the lineage of our DNA and our environment, I think the first reach for everybody is how do I feel connected to something? Sometimes that’s connected to community, but it’s also maybe connected to something greater than themselves. I think a lot of young people in this day and age too are looking to different party drugs and things like that to just help them feel a little more connected to something bigger than themselves, and so I think that lack or loss of connection or the perceived or the illusion of disconnection is part of where that starts. I’d say that’s definitely one.

Dr. Pompa:
Let’s stop right there. Then what do you do about that, meaning that we can’t go back to someone’s childhood and create love necessarily? What do you do about that? How do you deal with a patient that’s sitting in front of you, and you identify that as one of the root problems?

Dr. Jensen:
I mean, first of all, for most people is that they’re not really paying attention to how they got to where they got to. They may have an awareness that maybe growing up was a little bit rough, but I don’t think most people really understand the depth of how this trauma, this emotional trauma sinks into our being. I mean, if you looked at the work of say Bruce Lipton in The Biology of Belief and understanding that the neurochemical processing that’s happening from our perceived threats and our environment are such a strong problem for us getting out of this fight or flight response. Just bringing awareness is obviously the first step. Listen, I’m sorry you grew up in such a challenging environment. That must have been extremely traumatic, and no doubt, it’s a big part for why you looked for a tribe outside or your family net or your family circle. You’re wanting to belong and feel connected to something. Is there another way to reframe this so that you can see that there’s other ways to connect with yourself? There’s other ways to connect with community that maybe doesn’t involve substances. First step is just bringing that attention in, bringing in the awareness. There’s something more here that you can tap into.

Then, basically, the next step is what are some of those traumas? We understand that, working with our emotional system, there is no such thing as time. When we perceive a memory, we’re getting on the physiology of it, and so sometimes it’s reframing. You came into this experience. You had that experience. The first way to look at it was that was bad, and that molded and shaped you. We label it as a trauma, and we label it as something really hard to overcome that we subdue that feeling with a substance, or a drug, or anxiety medication, whatever the thing may be.

Until we allow ourselves to get into that feeling again, it’s—I like Dr. David Hawkins process of letting go, so it’s all about feeling what we’re feeling, allowing ourselves to feel that instead of push it away. I encourage all our patients to go through this program. Find a way to invite these feelings back in so you can reframe your connection to them and see that it’s a part of your unfolding. It’s a part of your journey. You talk about this all the time. From paint to purpose to promise, it’s like your pain becomes a catalyst for your growth instead of your pain is a statement of who you are for the rest of your life, and so that’s awareness and then reframe and surrendering to.

Dr. Pompa:
Is the addiction often times us not wanting to experience those feelings again?

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, man.

Dr. Pompa:
In other words, why does the addiction—why is that our brain’s answer to the problem? It’s not a good answer, but why is that? What is it that we end up going to addiction because of a trauma, or this lack of identity, or this lack of connection?

Dr. Jensen:
I mean, the root thing is that we’re programmed for fight or flight. It’s like the limbic part of our brain that is telling us there’s danger here. How do we get away from it? Either flee and run away, and we can do that with our emotions. That’s just escaping our emotions or trying to escape our emotions, or we suppress our emotions. We can suppress them with drugs, alcohol, or some other form, or we try to distract ourselves. Maybe we create a different attachment, or addiction to TV, or become a recluse, and we just totally distract.

Those are three different ways I think that we deal with it. Try to escape and run away, flee. Try to suppress, whether it be another type of drug or addiction, prescription or otherwise. Then the next one would be to just try to—what do I say? Basically, well, suppress, escape, or distract and so we’re all stuck in some form of that, and that’s why we reached for things to try to calm that pain own in our system instead of allowing ourselves to feel that emotional…

Dr. Pompa:
Right, so I mean, subconsciously, I’d be saying—or consciously I’d be saying, oh, I don’t fear that emotion. Yet, subconsciously you do, so you avoid it at all cost. How do you help the person get there? You said Step 1 was going it’s okay to feel that, and I’m going I don’t have a need to feel it. I don’t care. It doesn’t bother me, but yet, it does. How do you deal with that, man?

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, I mean, this is why Dr. Sonya and I realized that sometimes the easiest way to do this is to bring people into an immersive setting. When we’re constantly surrounded by our triggers or fight or flight response, our phone, our social media, the distractions, or we’re in the environment of suppression or whatever that may be, sometimes we need to be plucked out of our environment and put into—this is why we run a program that’s basically 15, 20 to 8 days long where they’re with us constantly. They’re totally removed from their environment, or we take them on to a retreat where they’re surrounded by a loving community where they’re learning tools to reframe, to release. We teach this through breath work and yoga and mindset conditioning and all sorts of other things. Sometimes we have to be pulled out of the environment in order to allow for these processes and these healings to happen.

I don’t know about you, but when you’re a dad, or a mom, or whatever your job is, you’re busy doing your work. You’re trying to make sense of the world and get moved through your reality. You don’t make time to look at those underlying traumas. You don’t make time to eat the right food sometimes or do what you need to do, so sometimes we need to be removed from our environment, put into an immersive setting. That’s why there are some real benefits to people going into recovery at some of these different facilities, right? It’s sometimes the only way to get out of that space.

Dr. Pompa:
Again, I will have—when’s your next retreat? I agree with you. I think that’s really important. I mean, if you don’t take people out of the environment, they’re just not going to get there. However, the other fails will come. They’ll go to one of these things, but then they’re not dealing with the toxic issues at the cellular level. Obviously, that’s part of what we do. It’s a multi-therapeutic approach. Let’s keep forwarding it back here.

If we don’t change their mindset—you made the argument pulling people out of their environment is critical. Getting them to experience what they’re really afraid of. Experience is the first part of healing. Maybe we should go to the second part. I don’t know, or we can move on to some of these other places where, if you don’t hit these areas, you’re not going to get through this.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, I think one last thing on mindset I would say is that we’re creatures of doing, and we’re constantly I got do this, or I got to do that. I got to that. One of my mentors in the world of yoga says it’s effort to give, but it’s relax to receive. When we’re constantly in a space of doing, doing, doing, giving, giving, giving, we forget about that space of receiving. The way I relate to that in our world of naturopathic medicine, alternative health, or whatnot is to create space for contemplation, meditation, prayer. Get in touch with something greater than yourself that can feed that part of you.

When we’re constantly in a space of doing, we’re so linear in our thinking. We don’t realize that the creation and opportunity and the manifestation and all the more intuitive aspects of who we are as spiritual beings having a physical body is that we can tap into these other resources when we’re not constantly in a space of doing. This is why I love—I don’t care what it is for you, prayer, reading the Bible, deep in meditation, contemplation, reflection, but you got to create space for that so that you can be in a place of be instead of a do. That’s like, I guess, the cap on the mindset.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah and another argument for a retreat or something to force you out of your day-to-day. In the day-to-day, yeah, it’s very difficult. I mean, unless you already have that habit, it’s very difficult to get there.

Dr. Jensen:
For most, it’s not the case, and we’ve all been there. I mean, I’m not talking from a pedestal. I had to learn a lot too. We all have our childhood traumas that we’ve had to move through and challenges that we perceive to be the biggest deal in the world at the time that we’re going through it.

Dr. Pompa:
Mine was dyslexia, and again, I always looked at mine as going, yeah, that’s not even a trauma. Look at these poor people who’ve been raped, etc., etc. Yet, what I didn’t understand is that, my subconscious, it was—again, you can never make comparisons, but to my subconscious, it was like this is horrible. It was like you were afraid of this. You were afraid of being made fun of. You were made fun of, da-da-da-da. It was like of course you set up the same compensations around your life to protect you, and again, I had to break those down.

You brought up Bruce Lipton. There’s these neurological patterns that are set up to protect us is we’re talking about. What people have to understand is that, those patterns, that sends wavelengths to your cell, and Lipton has shown that it drive cellular inflammation. If we could change those patterns, change our thoughts, the thoughts send a different wavelength. This is science. This isn’t woo-woo. Those wavelengths change our cells differently. It either becomes toxic, toxic thoughts, or healing thoughts. I hope our viewers and listeners understand what I just said. Again, we talked a little bit about how we change that, but give our viewers and listeners some other tips on how we change our thoughts that change our cells and, ultimately, our lives.

Dr. Jensen:
After getting into thoughts and mindset, which is maybe a little bit more ethereal or outside of our control or it’s a mindset thing, then I think the next level of information that we can discuss which you brought up is the nervous system tone. HeartMath, I love that company. It’s amazing to see how they’ve brought all the research into understanding the coherence field of the heart. When you dial into a breath rhythm where you’re actually coordinating a heart-brain connection, you create this phenomenon called heartrate variability, which the greater the heartrate variability the better the parasympathetic tone or the vagal tone in the brain. That is the communication space that we need to be in in my mind for a place of being and for a place of moving through our trauma. In getting in touch with these emotional pains, we’ve got this—we’ve got these big feelings, and now we have to surrender to the feeling and create a healing mechanism within the body through this heart coherence breath, which is one of many different ways that people can get into a relaxed nervous system tone, but it’s one that’s measurable. It’s one that we use in our clinic.

Dr. Pompa:
Describe it. Give us more description.

Dr. Jensen:
Basically, it’s a biofeedback tool. You’ve got a little sensor ear clip you put onto your earlobe, and basically, there’s just two aspects. One, there’s a reading. There’s a diagnostic look to see how your heart rhythms are changing over time, and then the other piece is the teaching tool. It’s teaching you how to breathe in order to create a better coherence rhythm. I’ve hooked people up with serious cardiovascular dysfunction, valvular—I want to say valvular atrophy and really serious heart conditions. These people have such little variability in their heart rhythms. It’s crazy. It’s almost like a flat line.

Basically, a healthy system, you might go from 90 beats per minute in 1 second down to 70, and that’s a nice deep range. Where the people with more complicated issues or constantly in that fight or flight state, it’s almost like a flat line. They may be moving between 81, 82, 79 up to 82. It’s very, very linear. We tested our boys, our two young boys. They’ve got a massive rhythm change, and they can quickly get into that state. It’s a really great subjective, inexpensive—or sorry, objective, inexpensive tool that tells you about your nervous system tone and tells you how to get into a space of relaxation. I think it’s [00:22:44].

Dr. Pompa:
I noticed you have an Oura Ring on, which…

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, thanks to you.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and it measures a heartrate variability. It is one of the things if you’re recovering or not. I mean, you can look—you get to know your variability, when it’s good, when it’s bad, what makes it worse. I mean, again, something that’s objective. You can track and look at. You start to then get a feel for, wow, when I get stressed out, I start flat-lining.

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, totally. You see that in yours too, right?

Dr. Pompa:
Absolutely.

Dr. Jensen:
If you go to bed late, or eat a late meal, or just jetlag, I mean, that’s a perfect one. It’s a real struggle to get that deep sleep and then the nice big change in that heartrate variability, yeah.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, when you can measure something and then you can start doing things to actually fix it.

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, totally.

Dr. Pompa:
I travel too much. I’ve got it down. Anyways, an Oura Ring, yeah, we should put the link up for people. That is a way of knowing what your variability is, and the heartrate variability is, again, an indicator of being locked in this sympathetic dominant state which so many people are. Then it affects your digestion. Then that affects your immune system. That affects your all-around health. It affects your detox. I mean, it goes on and on.

Dr. Jensen:
This is one of the things I love about you, Dan, is that you gave me a green light in our practice to look at these tools for biohacking and measurement and whatnot. It’s allowed me to convince Sonya to bring some of them into our practice. There’s so much value in being able to have these objective measurements and especially if you can look on yourself on a daily basis. I mean, it’s just—it’s simple information. Actually, David and I talked about this on our podcast the other day. It’s around 350 some odd dollars for a ring. That’s a dollar a day for the year, and you’ve got it paid off.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly.

Dr. Jensen:
We’re not plugging Oura Ring here. It’s just something that we—I learned from you, and I love it.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, it’s just a measure—something to measure some of these things that are so important. We’re talking about heartrate variability as a measure of your mindset, if you will, to some degree and how important that is to change. Okay, I mean, we get the fact that our thoughts affect our cells, and obviously, there’s ways to change that. Before we leave that topic and move on, what else do we need to know?

Dr. Jensen:
I think, in connection to that nervous system tone, I would look at the next level down. I’d look at the exercise or matrix and the connective tissue and the fascia and all these networks that we don’t really usually refer to as the nervous system, but it’s intimately connected to our nervous system, whether that’s someone who’s suffered an injury, or a trauma, or again, a drug overdose, or accumulation of biotoxins, and the cells have basically just spit out inflammatory markers into the surrounding spaces. That’s getting into that connective tissue, affecting the nervous system tone. This is what I love about what you’ve been doing and teaching us is that, if we’re not going to look at this from a multi-therapeutic approach, we have to also change the environment around these cells, which is connected to that nervous system. It just helps to deepen the layers to show just how connected everything is.

As we’re working on our mindset and the breath work or whatever your practice is to get into a deeper parasympathetic state, now we can start talking about how do we start to get movement happening through our body, moving your physical body? Not that we had to really look all that hard, but movement is one of the most powerful tools to get the BDNF and rise in brain function and just feeling good about ourselves again. That comes through movement, and if we’re not moving, we’re not vacillating and pumping all that stuff through our exercise or matrix that’s moving between our cells.

Dr. Pompa:
Movement brings deeper breaths.

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, yeah, totally.

Dr. Pompa:
It ties in what you’ve just mentioned. Breathing and focusing, there’s nothing magical about it in a good way. I mean, there’s something magical about it and what it does. We talked about that sympathetic-parasympathetic balance. That’s huge for our health, but breathing is—it works. It brings us more of that balance of sympathetic-parasympathetic, and the more you do it, the easier it becomes. Exercise is a very similar—it puts you into a different state, deep breath, and it sets you up for that parasympathetic. You just gave us—that’s why you love yoga, right? It forces you into that breathing, basically, focused state that we don’t do enough of and exercise. Really, you’re taking about two solutions here.

Dr. Jensen:
With that, I mean, we don’t give the diaphragm enough credit. I mean, with the contraction and relaxation of the diaphragm, we’re really—we’re charging every organ below on our deep breath in or deep inhale. Our deep exhale, we’re charging the heart and everything else on the way out. Exercise does this, yoga, intentional breathing, anything that’s engaging a full capacity breath. If we’re sitting on the coach or we’re stuck on our medication in our homes or alcohol, we’re not really moving around a lot. Guaranteed you’re an upper chest breather. You’re not maximizing that full proprioceptive effect of getting full breaths into your body which, again, influences the lymphatics, the exercise, the other matrix, everything that we were just talking about.

It’s a huge part of the recovery piece. I mean, actually, if we dive in a little bit deeper into some of the early plant medicine people that were experimenting with LSD and mushrooms and different things to get people in an altered state of consciousness to get off their medications, these things were happening in Europe decades ago. When they brought them to the US eventually or North America, they eventually shut that down for many different reasons. What some of these early researchers did was they started to bring in holotropic breathing, which is a very specific breath pattern, and it creates different gas exchange within the brain that puts you into altered states of consciousness, much like you would say meditation, or yoga, or contemplation, or prayer, or being in whatever your version of divine connection may be. When you start to tap into these altered states of consciousness through breath and whatnot, you start to see things a little differently.

In yoga, we talk about changing perspectives by changing our angles. When we’re in a very linear body type movement and we don’t bring your head below our heart and bow to something bigger than us or maybe do some inverted positions, we change blood flow in our body. We change our perspectives by changing our angles, and it allows us to see things more clearly. I can’t say there hasn’t been a single time where I haven’t finished a yoga class, a spin class, a good set at the gym, or whatever it is and you start just feeling better.

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, always. I mean, take a 20 minute walk in your day and watch what happens. It forces you to breathe differently.

Dr. Jensen:
There you go.

Dr. Pompa:
Yes, but hey, if you’re out of shape, you’ll breathe even deeper. With that said, that’s what you’re talking about here. Give us an example of how to breathe. I challenge people. If you have the ring—you know what I’m saying? You have an objective way of measuring this that we’re talking about here, heartrate variability, and there’s a lot more there. If you do this for 21 days, you will come out a different person. You get the ring just to prove it, number one. You’ll see the improvement so exercise, but talk about the breathing that they could just add in.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, well, I think just because there’s so much research backing the heart breath coherence technique, I mean, I think that’s the simplest place to start. Just by virtue of how many people we’ve tested over the years, it doesn’t take long to get there. The tool is helpful because you’re getting that feedback, of course. Basically, it’s a deep inhale to capacity, deep exhale to fully release. That’s Step 1, just breathing fully. Ideally, we get people that place their hand on their belly, so they’re actually not in this place of what’s called paradoxical breath where when you’re breathing in your tummy is actually moving back towards your spine. This happens for so many people in that fight or flight state. This is actually Step 1.

Step 1, make sure when you’re taking a deep inhale your belly is actually expanding outwards. Yeah, I would tie that with the heartrate—or sorry, the heart coherence breath work. It’s deep inhale, deep exhale, deep inhale to full maximal in breath, exhale to full maximal out breath. Make sure that the belly is expanding on the inhale. That’s Step 1.

Dr. Pompa:
How long do you do that for?

Dr. Jensen:
You could literally do that for three minutes or less depending on age, toxicity burden, the mindset, or whatever it is, but for most people, just switching out of that paradoxical breathing is enough to stimulate that vagus nerve, which is phenomenal. Breath work takes minutes.

Dr. Pompa:
Your vagus nerve runs your organ system. That’s what runs that parasympathetic that so many people lack when we’re looking at that heartrate variability.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, that rest, digest, and healing state, it’s so important. That’s Step 1, just full breaths in, full breaths out. Much like you would get if you were doing a class, or exercise, or what have you. Step 2 according to the heart coherent breath work is, I mean, you can bring your eyes to a close, and you’re imagining that breath moving through your heart. There’s something about our physical bodies that when you bring attention to a certain area of the body it stimulates the electrical system. It’s like you could be sitting on a chair, and you’re not paying attention to your feet. All of a sudden, you’re like, oh, I’m wearing socks. I got shoes on, and I can feel the floor beneath me. Now I’m paying attention to that area. It’s just you’re bringing information, nervous system information, whatever to the area, same thing with the heart, so Step 2 is imagining all the breath as you’re expanding your belly is coming in and out of your heart. That’s Step 2.

Step 3 is find an emotion, a feeling, a memory, someone special in your life that makes you feel an elevated sense of emotion, a sense of love, and getting us out that cortisol dominant state, that stress dominant state by releasing oxytocin and all these neuropeptides like serotonin and dopamine that are allowing us to feel a state of love. That’s essentially part three, and that gets us into that space. Steven Kotler in his book, Stealing Fire—and he wrote one other one I can’t remember right now, but he talks about the state of flow. The state of flow is this space that we get into where we have the perfect secretion of all the neurochemicals: anandamide, serotonin, dopamine, adrenaline, and there might be one more, oxytocin. It’s like these five or six chemicals all get released at the right proportions all at the right time, and that’s when you hit the next level of what this breath is doing in our body.

That’s that altered state that we get into where we start seeing the world a little bit differently. It’s like the state you get into when you’re—that runners high, or like you, I know you love biking in the mountain. You get into this space where you’re just so zoned in. It’s all these neurochemicals that are getting released, and it’s through that connection in the heart. You can do that with this type of breath.

Dr. Pompa:
What do you recommend someone starts? People watching this are like, okay, I need this. I mean, how much do they have to do to benefit? Is there a better time than others?

Dr. Jensen:
The best time is probably when you were in the middle of that—or maybe at the tail end of that stress response. We don’t know what to do with ourselves. We’re going to go to our substance of choice. Maybe it’s food. It’s our phone. It’s something that we know is leading to a negative outcome.

Dr. Pompa:
You know what you did? My next thing is pulling us back to the addiction.

Dr. Jensen:
There you go. Yeah, that’s the time to do it. You got to re-pattern your brain for how do I move through this recovery process, or this addiction, or this negative outcome that I found myself in neurochemically, emotionally, everything, physically? That’s the time to reprogram. Then we’re desensitizing ourself to this chronic result of that trauma, that exposure, that whatever. I mean, that’s the perfect time. Are you going to get that right off the bat (probably not)? If you can remember that at those points in time, it’s fantastic.

Otherwise, it’s all about—I mean, you talked about this too. It’s all about linking behaviors. You can’t just bring a new habit in. I’m going to wake up at 4 o’clock every morning or 5 o’clock every morning, do my breath work, and magically get on with my day. It doesn’t work like that. Maybe every time you brush your teeth, right at the end you take a minute and do it or right before you get out of bed. Right before you get out of bed you just, okay, I’m going to take a minute or two. I’ll set my timer. Maybe that snooze button you press is the time where you get into that heart coherent breath, and then eventually it becomes part of your life.

It doesn’t take long, I’ll tell you. We say 40 days to change a habit. If you can lock yourself even for those first five, you start to feel a different set point. Your resiliency, your adaptability to your environment, your reaction that you may be in in a typical scenario, you might just see that it’s a little bit lessoned.

Dr. Pompa:
I heard you say two things. Link it to something you do every day anyway, brushing your teeth was an example, right?

Dr. Jensen:
Mm-hmm.

Dr. Pompa:
Also, the second thing is link it to when you feel like you’re trying to break that addiction. You feel that craving or whatever it is. Link it into that. Just doing those two things—if you say, oh, yeah, I’m going to do a half hour of breathing every day, you’ll probably end up as a fail.

Dr. Jensen:
That’s never going to work.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s not going to work.

Dr. Jensen:
I’ve tried that.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, exactly, we all have. If you link it to either one of those two things, your chance of success go up dramatically.

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, considerably, yeah. This is the magic that you bring, Dan, with looking upstream for root cause issues, root cause obstacles. I think the next level of this journey after understanding just some of the basic mechanisms to get into that vagal tone and deep relaxation have tools to get out of a state of crisis and trauma is like, well, what about the cellular environment? What about the cell membranes, the cell health, the cell energy, all the stuff that you teach? This is why we’re so grateful for what you brought. Being able to insert TCD and the principles of the elite coaching that you deliver for us, we’re able to take people, bring in all of our own uniqueness and blessings that we give to people, but then we’re also able to teach them how to detox properly. When you get in that space, I mean, a lot of this other stuff becomes a whole lot easier because you’ve got more faculty at your feet.

Dr. Pompa:
I think, doing one without the other, it’s a setup for failure there. Again, I’ve been on the other side where I was really sick, and I can tell you that breathing and those things that help the other people didn’t help me. My cells were that dysfunctional because of neurotoxicity. However, as my cells got better, these things become easier. However, once even I got my cells healthy, I still had neurological patterns in sympathetic. There were certain things—even the smell of a chemical would still put me in this sympathetic state. I had to change that pattern.

My point is this is that you have to—again, it’s a multi-therapeutic approach. You can’t do this without this or this without this. Many people are teaching breathing, teaching this, but they’re not teaching the cellular detox of why someone doesn’t feel well in the beginning. Putting it all together, right, Nick?

Dr. Jensen:
Oh, totally.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, this is the balance that we have found.

Dr. Jensen:
We love the yoga community and a lot of the movement towards more spirituality and thinking bigger and whatnot, but this is a piece that’s so missing. People get so fanatical about what it is that they’re doing for their emotional system. They get locked in there. I mean, one of the communities that I’ve got the blessing to be a part of is my dear friend, Tommy Rosen. He’s got a massive online community called Recovery 2.0, and it’s a yoga community; learning yoga to overcome addiction and move through this recovery process. The challenge for these people and part of what I’ve been bringing to teach them is this. It’s like, if you’re not changing that cellular environment, if you’re not getting rid of those drug residues, those neuropathways, and all those things that got them there in the first place—we’re putting all our eggs in the basket of breath work and yoga and stretching, which is extremely powerful, of course, but we got to change everything else too. It’s not just one thing.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I think it’s so worth saying. It’s so important that I’m going to say the same thing again differently. I said it. You said it. Now I’m going to say it again. That’s how dang important this is, and I will use my own story as the example. I was neurotoxic, and my life as I knew it ended. I couldn’t sleep. I was anxious. I was sympathetic. My digestion went, I mean, all of these things gonzo, life different.

I tried so many of the mindset things. Because I was so anxious, I couldn’t get it, and it was a fail. I start focusing. I realize, oh, I have this neurotoxin. Okay, I start doing the right things, those things that we do in our practices to get the neurotoxins out of my cells, out of my brain. Then I go, okay, I have energy again. I can actually sleep through nights. However, I still have some anxiety. I still sniff a chemical and have these reactions, so there was this neurological component.

Then I started changing the way I thought. These things we were talking about, right? Then, all of a sudden, I had to go through this process of reprogramming my nervous system. Now it started working. The point is is that, if you can lower the toxic load, you can change your nervous system. Doing it together is the magic, and so few people are putting it both together. You need to put it all together. Your body doesn’t know the difference of physical, chemical, or emotional stress, so yeah, empty the bucket of stress, man.

Dr. Jensen:
No one teaches that better than you. It’s because you’ve gone through the experience yourself. Every patient that comes into our clinic, we know what they need to do. They don’t yet what we know, which is the conundrum, of course. We know that it’s going to be a journey for them too. One of the things that we’re grateful too that Dr. Sonya and I learned from you is that we got to make this into a journey for people. It’s not going to happen after one session of breath work, after one detox program, especially not after a juice cleanse or whatnot. This is a journey, and people have to move into this energy of this culture of understanding this multi-therapeutic process. I always get excited when I see someone coming. I’m like you don’t even know what’s coming.

Dr. Pompa:
It’s true.

Dr. Jensen:
Not everyone’s ready for it.

Dr. Pompa:
I mean, the old days—we have so many stressors today from childhood traumas to existing traumas and stress to chemical traumas or chemical traumas from childhood, existing chemical traumas. It’s in the EMF components to things. The old days of just change your diet and you feel better, those are gone. It’s like this multi-therapeutic approach is now, really, the answer, so what I want to say is this—you know it. You hear me say this all the time. We can’t just treat people anymore. We have to teach people the process, so they can do it long enough to actually make a lasting difference.

To go into a clinic and just get treated and leave, that is so done and old that it’s—you’re wasting people’s time and money and your own. If we take the time, to your point, and teach the person everything that we know through this process, man, their lives will change, and they’ll change forever as opposed to, hey, I feel better for a month, a week, a couple months, whatever it is. Yet, two months later, they’re going I’m back where I was. Darn it. Then they keep losing hope. That worked, and then it didn’t. It worked and it didn’t. The process is we have to teach people what we’re talking about here.

Dr. Jensen:
Essentially, this is the movement of recovery. There’s a need for it. I mean, there’s a lot of people on prescription medications. I think I just looked at the Canadian statistics. There’s 435 million prescriptions. That’s 14 prescriptions per Canadian. We’ve got a lot less people up here, of course. I mean, it was well over that for the US, of course, with more people.

Just looking at prescription medications alone, I mean, these people are on so much stuff. The recovery journey of just drug residue, nutrient depletion, all those things that have been going on for decades, people need to know that there’s a lot of work to do. Like you said, it’s not just the days where you could change a diet and magically everything goes away. I’ve tried that on myself. It doesn’t work.

Dr. Pompa:
The sad part is is people are still just searching, watch a YouTube video. They’re still looking for the darn single nutrient, that one exercise, the one breathing thing. Again, if it were only so darn simple, if it were only so simple, and it’s not. I mean, if you want a different life, you’re going to have to learn a different way. You don’t have to learn it all at once, but connect into clinics like Dr. Nick’s and his retreat. Learn this. I mean, putting it all together is in fact the magic.

You look at this, Nick. It’s like, kids today, they’re on Adderall, creating already an addiction. The reason they’re on Adderall is because they literally don’t have the focus to study. They quickly learn that they can take Adderall, and they can study and learn. Man, that made their life better. What did they just learn there? They learned in their biochemistry, hey, this affects this. They’ve learned an emotional lesson of, hey, I can win with this. Then that doesn’t work, and then they end up on another drug and another drug. Oh, and then because they’re doing all these stimulants, now they can’t sleep, so then they end up on another drug to sleep and then another drug.

This is the generation Nick. I mean, when we talk about addiction, they’re being trained on Adderall addiction, THC addiction, and you can keep going down the list. Where are we going to be 20 years from now? Where?

Dr. Jensen:
You know what’s interesting is that—I mean, yeah, the top—so the top three most abused medications are the opiates, the CNS depressants like the benzodiazepines, and then the stimulants. Like you just said, I mean, you use a stimulant to wind yourself up and then a depressant to take yourself down. It’s not looking good. Then as kids get older, as socially—I mean, let’s look at alcohol for a second. Alcohol is one of the most socially accepted addictions around. There was actually a recent trend for 2020; something called sober curiosity. That’s this movement to see people in social circumstances, finding things to do that don’t involve alcohol.

I think that there’s—I mean, amazing, absolutely amazing. I can think of myself growing up, going through college, or going to the hockey game. Alcohol is constantly involved. There’s some things, just like prescription medications, they are so acceptable, like 14 prescriptions on average for every Canadian. Some of these things are so socially acceptable including alcohol, that we have not found our way out of this trauma and this crisis, but there is a movement. There’s people realizing that, hey, we can actually do some things with other people like maybe activities or going to sports, doing a healthy vacation, like a retreat or whatever it is, that doesn’t involve having to check out of life.

I think that, as more time goes on, as more people understand more of this multi-therapeutic approach, there will be a movement towards understanding that you know what? Biohacking has gotten really cool. Not drinking is going to get real cool. Getting off prescription medications, looking for alternative therapies, some of these things are becoming more on trend as are tech gadgets and everything else.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, no, I think we’re way ahead on this. I mean, when you look at light therapy, photomodulation has become this big thing. Why? We’re being exposed to lights that are negatively affecting us. All of this stuff that we’re discussing, breathing, pulse electromagnetic fields, PMF, I mean, all of it is in our world, but it’s becoming more and more mainstream and will become more and more mainstream. Why? 5G is coming. All the EMF, the bad light, the bad—I mean, the more toxins we are—I mean, gosh, hopefully, there’s a time where everybody—cellular detox is more of the norm.

I mean, it’s like—but the point is is that people are going to be forced to reach out to these different biohacks. They’re being biohacked, and they don’t realize it. To take control of your life, we better look at some of these things. How do we change our mindset? How do we get rid of the stored traumas and toxins that we’ve been exposed to? We need to empty our stress buckets, man. The stress around us is too much, and the lower you get it, the better, more you can endure.

Nick, I love the example. You have one glass that’s very full, right near the edge. A little bit of stress, it spills over, symptoms, all that stuff that we don’t like, headaches, lack of energy, brain fog, can’t sleep. That’s the water spilling over. Then if empty one down halfway, we can stress it a lot more without symptoms, without spilling.

Dr. Jensen:
I love that. That’s a great analogy.

Dr. Pompa:
Here’s the thing, that glass is filled with physical, chemical, and emotional stressors. How do we empty it? We have to empty all of those stressors out. That’s what you’re talking about, changing our mindset, the breathing, obviously getting rid of the chemicals at the cellular level. Everything you preach and teach, man.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, thank you. You’ve shown us the way, and it’s amazing what—I think it was not too long ago that a patient reached out and just gave me, so much thanks for taking her through this journey. I went, well, you know what? It’s because we got a chance to learn from the best and learn from Dan, and so it’s like all those people that you—or all the doctors that you train, we’re training our patients. In comes back out. The fact that you’re helping us pave the way forward, it’s a real testament to the legacy that you’re leaving, Dan. We’re so grateful.

Dr. Pompa:
I can only reach a few, right? If we train more of us, we can reach thousands and millions that are doing the work. Hopefully, there’s practitioners watching. We need more. We need more of you. Dr. Nick, I want to thank you and your wife Sonya. Man, you guys are doing amazing work. One of the things too I think I want to point out about your practice—you can tell the where you are, when your next retreat is, but you also do a lot of the IV therapies, right?

Dr. Jensen:
Right.

Dr. Pompa:
We get these people who their digestion is so wrecked that IV therapies can be such an amazing biohack. Talk a little bit about that and also, like you said, where your clinic is.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, thank you. I mean, yeah, IV therapy we’ve been doing since we’ve opened our clinic just because—I mean, I had suffered from what seemed like Crohn’s illness, Crohn’s colitis. My mom had it when I was growing up. Digestive dysfunction was a big part of my health history, and so we saw the need because I saw the need for myself. When you’re bypassing that digestive system, I mean, you’re getting 100% absorption into your circulatory system through the IV, but it’s allowed us to explore. I mean, we’re doing some really fun IVs that—like NAD and phosphatidylcholine and glutathione. I mean, you’ve had an NAD IV now, haven’t you?

Dr. Pompa:
Oh, yeah.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, I mean, it’s a whirlwind, and it’s amazing to see the kind of effect that people have, even just after a few. I mean, speaking of…

Dr. Pompa:
By the way, NAD and their new research on addiction, to bring it full circle, it’s huge.

Dr. Jensen:
That’s in our protocol, actually. I mean, our 15, 20 day protocol for getting—I mean, we get people off benzodiazepines, not everybody, but sometimes within two to three days of just getting that NAD in there. We know that it’s binding to those opioid receptors in the brain, and when you unhinge that chemical trauma in the brain, you can start to see the cravings come down massively. It’s been used for decades for addiction. That’s a big one in the recovery world that we use in our facility. That’s a daily IV. Sometimes people are hooked up for five, six hours because we have to put really big doses of NAD into the system. We found it to be such a powerful tool. The whole biochemical restoration that happens with amino acids and the other things to replete those neurotransmitter deficits as a result of the medications, the drugs, alcohol, whatever it is, I mean, it’s just—it’s such a powerful tool.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, and you’re doing a lot of other amazing biohacks in your clinic. Yeah, it’s a great place to be. Tell them where you’re at and when they can find you.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, so we’re in Vancouver, British Columbia, and we’re in a little area of Vancouver called Kitsilano, which is the health hub of Vancouver. Our clinic’s called Divine Elements Naturopathic. Because of your inspiration, we’re just about to launch our longevity lab, which has the hyperbaric chamber, the red light, the iron cleanse footbath. I mean, this is what I was saying before. If it wasn’t for you, I don’t think I would’ve got my dream of having a biohacking lab.

Dr. Pompa:
Hey, listen, that’s a health center of the future, man.

Dr. Jensen:
Yeah, that’s right.

Dr. Pompa:
All those things you just mentioned, this is what I do, right? This is what I do. This is what you’re bringing in your clinic. That’s a health center of the future, so thanks for bringing it.

Dr. Jensen:
I mean, these are things that are in your home, and so we got to try them out.

Dr. Pompa:
I do them every day, man, although every day I can. I’m traveling a lot.

Dr. Jensen:
It’s funny. Just in our setup, we’ve got all the stuff at our home right now. It’s like we move from the red light to the hyperbaric to the BEMER to whatever. I mean, it’s just—it’s a lot of fun.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, I do every one of those, man. Thank God they can go to your clinic and not my house. Anyways, well, listen, hey thanks for being on CellTV and bringing your wealth of knowledge in this area of addiction. This is a big problem. Share this episode folks because people need to hear this information, and Dr. Nick, thank you.

Dr. Jensen:
Thank you so much and if I could plug our retreat one last time.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah.

Dr. Jensen:
If you don’t mind, that’s the other way to reach us, naturallybraveretreats.com. We’re leaving for Baja February 25 to March 1, so join us. There’s a discount code for CellTV listeners too.

Dr. Pompa:
That’s it. Hey, man, I’m a big believer in the retreat. We started with that point, right? You have to get out of your environment, and it’s powerful. I’m looking to do one myself. I love it, Nick. I so appreciate you doing it. Thank you.

Dr. Jensen:
It’s the model that you’re teaching us too in our group dynamic with—the only way that we learn as doctors is by being in an immersive environment with you and everything you brought.

Dr. Pompa:
Yeah, it’s beautiful, yeah, all right, Nick.

Dr. Jensen:
Thank you.

Dr. Pompa:
Thank you, man, appreciate it.

Ashley:
That’s it for this week. We hope you enjoy today’s episode. This episode was brought to you by CytoDetox. Please check it out at buycytonow.com. We’ll be back next week and every Friday at 10 a.m. Eastern. We truly appreciate your support. You can always find us at cellularhealing.tv, and please remember to spread the love by liking, subscribing, giving an iTunes review and sharing the show with anyone you think may benefit from the information heard here. As always, thanks for listening.