Oraganic4me
Member
- Joined
- Jun 21, 2019
- Messages
- 51
I am not a scientist and I don’t play one on TV. I am trying to find answers to my health problems. Google search introduced me to the work of Ray Peat. I read and listened to him. A lot of things he says make sense and a lot just sound crazy to me. I continually look to other health experts to maybe give me some clues...
today I was listening to the Drive by Peter Attia and he had this doctor on , this guy mentioned a few things that I heard Ray Peat talk about like maybe excess glucose might be a good thing for fighting Cancer and the other point that blew my mind was towards the end Peter Attia asked this doctor “what would be your dream study?”
He said studying how “thin air” can cure chronic illness. I can’t remember exactly how he said it but I think he was referring to altitude of 6,000 feet.
Do you guys think that bag breathing is a benefit to chronic illness like Ray says?
I’m confused... I wish I understood science lingo..
If anyone else listened to it can you tell me if that is what he means?
The Peter Attia Drive: #66 - Vamsi Mootha, M.D.: Aging, type 2 diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease – do all roads lead to mitochondria? on Apple Podcasts
today I was listening to the Drive by Peter Attia and he had this doctor on , this guy mentioned a few things that I heard Ray Peat talk about like maybe excess glucose might be a good thing for fighting Cancer and the other point that blew my mind was towards the end Peter Attia asked this doctor “what would be your dream study?”
He said studying how “thin air” can cure chronic illness. I can’t remember exactly how he said it but I think he was referring to altitude of 6,000 feet.
Do you guys think that bag breathing is a benefit to chronic illness like Ray says?
I’m confused... I wish I understood science lingo..
If anyone else listened to it can you tell me if that is what he means?
The Peter Attia Drive: #66 - Vamsi Mootha, M.D.: Aging, type 2 diabetes, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease, and Parkinson’s disease – do all roads lead to mitochondria? on Apple Podcasts