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Optimizing Daily Habits: Snacking, Movement, Light Exposure, and More Wellness Hacks LIFE Network: RAW Podcast #3

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What I Discuss in RAW:

  • How these episodes pull directly from my experiences and lessons (not always shared elsewhere), and my aim to create deeper personal and community transformation…00:31
  • Mastermind event was an opportunity to witness not just public, but private habits—brushing teeth, eating styles, recovery practices, and more—providing a rich foundation for actionable insights…o3:09
  • Even so-called “good” snack choices, like beef jerky, coconut water, and nuts, can derail major health goals without careful attention—adding significant calories…04:54
  • Hidden stimulants in drinks, and the importance of careful label reading and scheduling to maximize recovery and avoid sleep disruption…09:37
  • Airplane mode as a daily habit, and proactively managing each phone setting for optimal exposure control, especially when not using your device…11:09
  • Anti-radiation pads, sharing my routine of using these pads throughout my home and with family members for safe laptop use…13:11
  • Ignoring the expectation to be sedentary—instead, standing, stretching, and foam rolling in places like meetings, airports, and waiting rooms…17:55
  • How brief movement (five minutes) post-meal dramatically benefits blood sugar regulation and metabolic health…20:27
  • My morning mobility routine, Ben Patrick's ATG for Life program, and Elastiboy's additional resources, plus the “momentum of mobility” for keeping the body young, pain-free, and ready to thrive…22:01

Welcome to RAW—my unfiltered solo podcast (hosted on LIFE Network), where you get the real, behind-the-scenes version of my life: the biohacking experiments I’m running on myself, the protocols I’m building and breaking, the tools and tech I’m stress-testing before anyone hears about them, the ideas in physiology, performance, and longevity I’m diving into, the beliefs I’m questioning, the routines I’m refining, and the unconventional stuff I’m actually doing day to day—no gloss, no script, just a direct line into what I’m thinking, testing, discovering, and living in real time.

In this episode, I peel back the curtain on a mastermind weekend at my home, where I observed over 20 high-performing men up close: I'm talking morning routines, meal habits, biohacking practices, tech usage—you name it.

What did I see?

Even the “healthy” folks slip into patterns that sabotage fat loss, disrupt sleep, tank metabolic health, and kill mobility.

In this show, I break down the silent habits and hidden stressors shaping your health—how “healthy” snacking can quietly spike your calorie load, how late-day stimulants derail deep sleep, what actually matters when it comes to EMFs and laptop exposure, why post-meal movement is a metabolic game-changer, and the daily mobility routine that keeps my body performing at its peak.

If you want to sharpen your habits, upgrade your energy, and take control of your biology instead of letting it run you, you won’t want to miss this episode.

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Upcoming Events:

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Join me in Tucker, Georgia, at CREATE 26, a high-level gathering of founders, creators, and leaders focused on building scalable businesses, powerful networks, and aligned lives. This immersive multi-day experience blends strategy, leadership, and personal optimization with real-world execution and high-impact connections. You’ll also have the opportunity to join me for select sessions and a special Health Panel Q&A on Thursday, January 29. If you’re serious about growth in both business and life, this is a room you want to be in. Grab your ticket here

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Ben Greenfield [00:00:00]: Welcome to a special Raw episode. What does Raw mean? Well, within the Life network@join lifenetwork.com I pop on every once in a while and just release solo. So conversations with me, myself and I. Today is one of those Raw episodes. We've handpicked episode three from the Life Network in which I talk about snacking habits, EMF and light exposure mitigation, non exercise activity based thermogenesis, lower back pain tips, and plenty more. So this is going to be@join lifenetwork.com.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:36]: If you want to check it out. Welcome to the let's start that over.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:45]: We're here to talk about awkward, edgy, controversial content. Nothing is off limits and you're going to learn a lot. Welcome to the Raw podcast.

Ben Greenfield [00:00:57]: Hey, what's up? Welcome to Raw episode number three. And boy, do I have a doozy for you today. Hopefully not too of a, I suppose judgmental doozy. But let me lay the background for today's Raw episode for you. You know, this is a chance for me to talk about stuff that I sometimes don't have a chance to voice or need to voice, sometimes a little bit more gently or without as much controversy on the main Ben Greenfield Life feed. But what I want to talk with you about today is based upon the fact that I just had around 20 guys staying at my house for the past four days as part of a health and business mastermind. Meaning these gentlemen flew in from all over the world. And I've done this at my home in Spokane, Washington, probably, oh, seven times now, you know, bringing a bunch of folks together.

Ben Greenfield [00:02:02]: They have, you know, mealtime Q&As with me, morning workouts. They use all of the biohacks on the property. We have afternoon roundtable masterminds to field questions. And a mastermind would typically be like, you know, one person gets one to two minutes to share a problem they're having or an issue that they're experiencing in business and health and relationships, etc. And then the rest of the group is given anywhere from 5 to 10 minutes to kind of popcorn style share their own perspective and responses on that. And often it's recorded for the benefits of the people involved. And a lot of times people are taking notes profusely throughout. And then, you know, we have, you know, evening campfire sessions and games.

Ben Greenfield [00:02:49]: We bring in a chef. We kind of really make it a cool weekend, you know, not partying and drugs and alcohol and, you know, and the like, but instead just a really beneficial weekend, almost like a sleepover in this case for Adult, entrepreneurial men who want to ferment in each other's wisdom and make each other better people. And so I'm kind of like the ring pack leader for that or the ringleader for that, and, and lead everybody on these adventures and chats and masterminds and workouts, et cetera. And so by the nature of hanging out with a whole bunch of people at my home for four days, I get a chance to watch people, to observe them in an environment that goes beyond just the way that you might see people at work or, you know, at a conference or in a setting where you don't see them as intimately involved in everything from brushing their teeth and, you know, doing their morning routines, to the way that they eat meals, to the way they live their day, to the way that they operate after a workout or after a meal or before a meal to what they eat. So I have a chance to kind of observe, observe human biology in action on a very intimate level for several days. And I noticed some things and had some takeaways that I wanted to share with you that will hopefully make your life better, your health better. And there are things to think about that I think are patterns that I saw that you may want to, well, not to get negative, but avoid, and things that I realized a lot of people, both men and women, are doing that they should be doing. They want to optimize their health.

Ben Greenfield [00:04:32]: So I'm going to share with you. I probably have about 10 different takeaways that I got from watching this group, interacting with them, answering their questions, and seeing how people, even people who think they're being healthy, live and eat and move. So I'm just going to go through this list with you for today's raw episode of some things that I noticed during this event at my house, in no particular order of importance. So number one, snacking and drinking calories mindlessly. So you're no doubt familiar with the benefits of intermittent fasting. Giving the gut a break, the cellular cleanup and cellular autophagy that takes place when, you know, in most men, you fast for about 12 to 16 hours a day. Most pre menopausal women, to make sure the hormones don't take too much of a hit, fast for about 10 to 12 hours a day. And then postmenopausal women are kind of similar to men, 12 to 16 hours a day.

Ben Greenfield [00:05:34]: But there's another form of what you might call fasting that occurs in between meal times, meaning if you're eating in between meal times, your goal is body composition, fat loss, Metabolic efficiency, et cetera, then you're kind of suppressing that with snacking. And something that I noticed over and over again was we had, you know, we did have snacks around. Like there were beef jerky sticks and plantain chips and you know, healthy pork rinds from Epic Foods and coconut water and all manner of different snacks that were technically available. I don't personally snack in between meals, but yet the nature, bringing a bunch of people together, they kind of expect for there to be things available. Now this is the equivalent of having like you know, the, the bowl of almonds that might be in your office or you know, the snack bar station or you know, the healthy drink station. Now I was shocked at, at the amount of snacking that occurred between meals in guys who were sharing that one of their primary goals was to lose this extra bit of fat around their waistline. And yet it was pretty rare for me to walk past someone and not see them with a bag of plantain chips in their hand or sipping that 80 to 100 calorie coconut water or just having a handful of macadamia nuts. You know, all healthy snacks.

Ben Greenfield [00:07:12]: We're not talking about like Cheetos and Doritos and you know, beer, but I would estimate that just about every person there was probably consuming somewhere between 300 and 600 extra calories from liquid calories or so called healthy food in between each meal. The reason I'm telling you that is this. I think that people especially want to optimize body composition. Don't either look at labels or think enough about calories consumed in between meals, which can add up to over a thousand total calories throughout the day of excess calories. Do I personally quote snack unquote in between meals? Yes. My snacks are gum, sparkling water with stevia in it, sometimes Zevia, which is zero calorie stevia flavored sparkling water. Sometimes these energy drinks that are called update energy drinks that are also zero calorie and ketones, which technically have calories in them but really don't cause any type of glucose spike and don't cause the same issue as eating actual calories or drinking actual calories. So the first thing I noted was people who have access to healthy snacks eat them a lot.

Ben Greenfield [00:08:29]: It's the so called Trader Joe's phenomenon, right? I shop at Trader Joe's, I got a pantry full of healthy stack foods and I'm just hitting those over and over again throughout the day. Bad move. If your goal is body composition, I would say the only person who might get away with that would be like a professional athlete who's training multiple times per day, you know, a recreational triathlete who's training throughout the day or like a rapidly growing, say adolescent boy or girl who's, you know, have, has multiple practices during the day. A rampant metabolism, fast growing body. Like I don't tell my own 16 year old sons not to snack mindlessly. Of course the snacks that we have around are very healthy, you know, primal beef sticks and healthy bars and relatively low sugar, no added vegetable oil foods, non sugary drinks. But the idea here is most adults need to be snacking far less, especially adults who have healthy snacks around the house and justify to themselves that it's okay to snack because they're healthy snacks. So that's the first thing I notice is just kind of snacking because stuff's healthy and surrounding when the meals are providing adequate calories and it improves metabolic efficiency to not snack between meals.

Ben Greenfield [00:09:37]: Next thing I noticed was there were a lot of drinks that we had around the house. You know, we had everything from ketone alcohol alternatives called keto hulls made by Ketone Aid, which are great because we weren't drinking any beer or wine or mixed drinks or anything. We had coconut waters. But then we also had energetic compounds, right? Like energy compounds such as, you know, update energy drink, which is great. Coffees, mushroom cheese with caffeines in them. A lot of people, a lot of people were complaining about their sleep scores. They're like, oh man, I only got six hours last night, I was up late, I had difficulty sleeping, I woke up at 2, etc. Etc.

Ben Greenfield [00:10:17]: And yet in the evenings and even in the later afternoons, I would see people just, you know, grabbing an extra cup of coffee, throwing back a couple energy drinks because they were around, not looking at the label to see what kind of stimulants something had in it. And I realized, gosh, a large portion of the population relies upon stimulants and sometimes says, well, I'm not going to have a cup of coffee after dinner. But they're doing a lot of things that contain energetic stimulants in them after 4pm My own cutoff, unless I plan to be out late, is limiting stimulants after 4pm and being aware of things that actually have stimulants in them. So that's number two is be careful with stimulants after 4pm I notice a lot of guys having stimulants after 4pm all right, the next one, we're going to move on to technology. Even though my whole Home is hardwired. We with metal shielded cats have an ethernet cable. It's very low EMF environment. I've had building biologists come through and test the home.

Ben Greenfield [00:11:20]: When there are 20 cell phones inside the house, there's still a large amount of radio frequencies bouncing around. Now, when guys had their phones on the tables, when we would have conversations and they'd take out their phones to take notes, I do little sideways glances and I check. Not only was I shocked at the number of people who did not have their phone in airplane mode, even though they weren't surfing the Internet or talking on their phone or doing anything that required a connection, but also the number of times both WI Fi and Bluetooth were activated. Folks, because you have a phone does not mean that it needs to be on. I'm recording this for you right now with my phone in airplane mode. My phone is in airplane mode about 80% of the day. Okay? About 80% of the day, my phone is in airplane mode because why would it not be if I'm not using it to engage with content or be on the phone or do research or check social media or anything else, right? Or download a podcast or an audiobook, right? I have YouTube Premium and I use Castbox to listen to podcasts. I download everything.

Ben Greenfield [00:12:32]: I don't stream anything on the phone. YouTube Premium. I get a video, I download it, I engage it in offline mode, right? But this is another thing to think about, right? These are all the little things that take you from good to great. The phone is in airplane mode if you are not using it to access the Internet or the online world or make a phone call. And furthermore, when it is out of airplane mode, unless absolutely necessary for connection to a device or some other reason, WI Fi and Bluetooth are disabled. Okay? So that's the third thing to think about. And I'll review all these at the end of this raw episode, by the way, for your. For.

Ben Greenfield [00:13:11]: For your convenience. The next is a lot of guys have laptops, right? And laptops obviously also produce radio frequencies. You know, my own laptop always has WI Fi disabled and Bluetooth disabled. But. But a laptop will produce a lot more EMF than a phone, even if those are disabled and it's not connected to the Internet when we're sitting around talking, doing masterminds, et cetera. Again, shocking the number of guys who had their laptop placed on their thighs or in their lap without anything underneath it. This is easy to fix. There are companies like defendershield or Hara Pad Hara Pad who sell pads that go underneath the laptop to block EMF frequencies from doing things like causing muscular inflammation, inhibiting recovery in the legs post workout, causing a decrease in sperm count, causing a decrease in both men and women in the function of the gonads.

Ben Greenfield [00:14:08]: But I think it's because they're called laptops that people put them in their laps and assume they're safe. And I don't think anybody there, despite the easy affordability and accessibility to laptop pads, had their laptop on a pad when it was in their lap. I have laptop pads spread all over the house. My sons both have laptop pads we don't like. For us, it's like totally, again, second nature to even think about a laptop being in contact with the surface of the body unless there's a pad underneath it to block the radiation. And I realize a lot of this stuff, again, might sound judgy, nitpicky, etc, but I'm trying to help you guys go from good to great. And this is another thing I thought, gosh, if there's this many guys and nobody's using a laptop pad, then I'll bet I've got some listeners and other people listening in who may not realize that they should be doing this right. So kind of similar to having the phone in airplane mode.

Ben Greenfield [00:15:04]: Laptops always have a pad in them and they don't touch the body. Okay, next evening light exposure. There are apps like One Tap Zap. There is the shortcuts function that you can download to your phone if you have an iPhone that allows you to switch it into red light mode, switch location services off. Which by the way, if your phone is in airplane mode but the location services are still on, it's producing more EMF than if location services are on. And finally, these apps will decrease the amount of blue light produced by the phone far better than the native iOS mode will. But again, when I'm talking to guys glancing at their phones or taking stuff out, showing photos, I think maybe 5% of the guys had any dimming function whatsoever and barely any of them had at night. Red light mode on, airplane mode on, WI fi off, Bluetooth off, and location services off.

Ben Greenfield [00:16:01]: I use. You can Google this, the iPhone red light trick to suck all the blue light out of my phone as soon as the sun sets in whatever area of the world I happen to be in, it's three clicks on the side button on the phone, whatever that one's called, and automatically the phone goes to red light mode. It's a very simple color filter setting in the show notes for this raw podcast I'll include one tap, zap the red light, disable location services, put it in airplane mode, turn off WI fi, turn off Bluetooth sleep function for the iOS shortcut, and also the red light iPhone trick. But basically, again, it's something you have to think about if you want to optimize sleep. Don't complain about sleep architecture, about not being able to get to sleep at night, about waking frequently, about feeling drained in the morning. If you're not controlling evening light exposure, including from your device. And it's very simple to hack your device to do this, you just have to do it. And just like brushing your teeth, remember to do it or schedule for it to be done on a regular basis.

Ben Greenfield [00:17:05]: So evening light exposure is another one. And again, even at night, I would flip on our red incandescent bulbs, take off the led, turn off the overhead fluorescent lighting, and a lot of guys would be like, why is it so dark in here? Why does it seem like red light feel? Why is it like a campfire? And for a lot of people it was a total pattern interrupt. Why isn't the house lit up at night? Why isn't the wall lit up at night? Because we're supposed to be preparing our circadian rhythms for sleep. And light suppresses melatonin and decreases sleep drive. So don't just go through your phone, go through your monitors, go through your house, decrease light. For many of you, I'm preaching to the choir. You've heard this before, but there's a difference between knowing it and doing it, so be strict with it. It'll have a huge impact on sleep.

Ben Greenfield [00:17:55]: Okay, the next thing is when you're having masterminds, meals, etc. There is an option to sit. And us humans, whether we are waiting for an airplane or a bus or an Uber, whether we're waiting at the doctor's office, whether we're in a meeting, whether we're in a Mastermind. We sit because there's chairs and we're expected to socially. And it's weird not to. I started standing during Mastermind, stretching, sitting on the floor, foam rolling, using a little ball in the hips, standing, doing toe raises. And by the time the week was over, about half of the guys were doing that because they realized, oh, hey, just because we're in a circle talking, or just because we're in a meeting or just because we're waiting for something to happen, we can be engaged in so called non exercise activity thermogenesis, burning more calories by doing something other than sitting. So if there's an option not to sit, don't sit.

Ben Greenfield [00:18:57]: And I was surprised at the number of guys from. That was a pattern interrupt. Oh, wait, you're right. I'm in a meeting. But there's no rule that you have to sit in a meeting. Now when you stand and start moving, a whole bunch of other people start standing and moving and you still get the same amount of work done. You know, while I'm recording this for you, I'm walking. I might take 4,000 steps while I'm just walking and talking to you.

Ben Greenfield [00:19:14]: And that's a perfect example. Okay, so the time to sit would be when you're eating, you want to engage the parasympathetic nervous system. You want to rest and digest. You don't need to stand and stretch when you're eating. But unless you're eating or you're really tied down, like on an airplane at a window seat and you just can't get up, try to move a lot more than you might currently be moving and defy these societal expectations to sit just because there's chairs and you walk into the doctor's office. Like when I walk into a doctor's office and they have, they say, have a seat. I say, I'm good, thanks. When I walk into the doctor's actual room and they say, have a seat.

Ben Greenfield [00:19:53]: Unless they're taking my blood pressure, I say, I'm good. And I stand and stretch while I'm waiting for the doctor. Right. So again, you don't even have to sit if a secretary tells you to sit. Just realize that. All right, next up, after meals, after meals, postprandial activity is clunch to regulate your body composition, regulate your metabolic rate, and regulate your blood glucose. There were many meals where we were scheduled to go into a mastermind, go into a meeting, go sit and meet. And I would say, hey guys, let's all go outside and go for a quick walk.

Ben Greenfield [00:20:27]: When we'd finished dinner, and I'd say, hey, we're going to take the 15 minute walk back to the parking lot that's two minutes away to lower our blood sugar after this meal and increase our metabolic rate. If you program into your life after every meal, the idea that you're going to move, I mean, even after dinner, when I go like, turn on the alarm in the garage, I do 50 jumping jacks and then I go up and down the stairs and I get stuff done and I do a little bit of cleaning, I don't go straight from mealtime into bedroom or mealtime into reading or mealtime into sitting and playing the guitar, right? So you should have a rule in your life again as a Life Network member, somebody who really values their health, who's on this transformational journey. You have a rule. After every meal, no matter what, breakfast, lunch, and dinner, you figure out how to move. It's a walk. It's walking back to the car, the rest from the restaurant, but taking the long way. It's getting up for breakfast. And before you go down to the office.

Ben Greenfield [00:21:22]: You know, if you have to sit in the office, that's fine, but do some movement first, even if that means cutting breakfast short or cutting lunch short so you actually can engage in movement. Doesn't have to be long. Research has shown as little as five minutes can do the trick. And sometimes if I don't have the area or space to go for a walk, I'll just do some toe touches, some stretches, some jumping jacks, a few little movements, some mobility exercises, and then get back to work. But it needs to be in your vernacular that after every meal, you move. These are all the little things that stand up or that add up, right? Not sitting for long periods of time and choosing not to sit even though there's chairs there. Having a rule that you move after meals. Engaging in some of the other things I'm about to tell you.

Ben Greenfield [00:22:01]: Okay, so I got two more for you. The next is that a surprisingly high amount of the guys there had back pain, particularly low back pain. Now, if you have shortened hip flexors and weak glutes, back pain almost becomes inevitable. And I've got great [email protected] about different ways to biohack low back pain. But I can tell you probably the top two things I do to cut straight to. You know, if you want to call it Occam's razor, the 80, 20, or whatever a, I follow that rule about not sitting unless I absolutely have to, and that's huge. And number two, I do Stuma Gill's big three for the low back every day, which is the bird dog exercise, the curl up exercise, and the side plank. That doesn't take me long.

Ben Greenfield [00:22:49]: I actually take a quick siesta after lunch, and when I get up from that siesta, I spend five to ten minutes waking my body back up, activating my glutes, and lengthening my hip flexors using Stuma Gill's big three exercises, which you can Google, which are totally free to find just about anywhere. But you know, when I look at posture and I look at guys who are complaining about low Back pain. And I see the amount of sitting, there's a direct correlation. And again, simply not sitting and doing Stu McGill's big three. That's like low hanging fruit for back pain. And you know, I would, I'd teach mobility to this group. And you know, I observed the number of people sitting. I was just shocked at the amount of low back pain and how much that correlates to sitting a lot and not doing specific mobility exercises.

Ben Greenfield [00:23:38]: And this really leads to the last piece, which is mobility. Right? Mobility. What's it mean? Well, think of it. Mobility equals movement ability, right? I like to think of it that way. It's not flexibility, it's not being a stretchy yoga person. It's literally ability to move. Now here's how I optimized mobility. And, and my body feels like it's 16 years old.

Ben Greenfield [00:24:00]: I have very little aches and pains every morning. I make sure that I get out of bed early enough to allow the time for 15 minutes of mobility every day, right? So I'm getting about 75 to up to 90 sometimes minutes of mobility every single week. This is not like a warm up for a workout. That's part of my workout routine, not a cool down. It's literally starting off every single day with what I call the momentum of mobility. And that can include leg swings, stretches, you know, Stu McGill's big three, foam rolling, hip work, you name it. But again, when I was with these guys, we were talking about morning routines and man will be like, hot tub, cold plunge. Hot tub, cold plunge, stand in the sauna.

Ben Greenfield [00:24:46]: When I started to do my own mobility routine, guys like, what are you doing? Are you gonna work out? Like, no, this is just how I wake up, how I wake up the body, how I engage in active mobility. And I got a great juicy share for you if you want to see. I would say the two best examples of the type of mobility exercises that you could or should be doing every morning. Check out Ben Patrick and his ATG for Life tiny little book you can get on Amazon dirt cheap. It's got a ton of fantastic yet little known mobility exercises in there. Specifically many that lengthen the hip flexors and strengthen the glutes. And then the other guy to check out is Elastiboy. A great handle, Elastiboy on Instagram.

Ben Greenfield [00:25:35]: He's got these little mobility snacks that he demonstrates and they're fantastic. They're little mobility exercises. But if you want to wrap your head around the type of exercises I'm doing every morning, check out the ATG for Life by Ben Patrick or the Elastiboy Instagram channel. And you really understand this idea of movement ability, what it actually looks like, and how to do it. Okay, so next 15 minutes every morning, do it. It'll change your life. So let's review. We've got snacking and drinking calories mindlessly in between meals.

Ben Greenfield [00:26:10]: Even if they're healthy snacks, just cut it. No need to do it. Next, stimulants late in the day, after 4pm, inspect labels. Know what you're consuming. If you're having sleep issues, cut those out. Number three Phone is in airplane mode with Wi Fi, Bluetooth and location services disabled. And if you do need to have it on, at least WI Fi, Bluetooth and preferably even location services are disabled unless you're using them. Next, if you got to have your laptop in your lap, get an anti radiation pad from Defender Shield or Harapad or even Amazon.

Ben Greenfield [00:26:43]: If you look up Amazon anti radiation laptop pads, they have them. Next, program your phone to reduce evening light exposure wherever the show notes are. For this raw podcast, I'll include the One Tap Zap, the iPhone Red Light trick, and the Shortcuts function for putting your phone to sleep. Wi Fi off, Bluetooth off. Red light on. Location services off. Airplane mode on one click of a button right when you go to bed. Easy phone shortcut.

Ben Greenfield [00:27:10]: I know some of those exist for Android as well. I'm just saying the iPhone ones because that's the iOS that I use or the operating system I use. Next, if there's any option other than sitting, don't choose the sitting option. Okay? Simple concept. Sometimes people look at you weird because you're the one person standing as you're waiting for the airplane to leave while everybody sits and eats their burritos. But you want to be the pattern interrupt if you want to be that person who defies the risk for chronic disease that we see in westernized societies. Next, every meal move 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15 minutes max move after every meal. Non negotiable, doesn't matter.

Ben Greenfield [00:27:48]: Figure out a way to do it, even if it means decreasing your meal time. Next, try doing Stuma Gill's Big three every day while sitting. Less lengthening the hip flexors, strengthening the glutes. And you will not be one of those all too common people who fall into the category of low back pain. And then finally, try to program 15 minutes of morning mobility in and check out programs like Ben Patrick's Knees Over Toes and the Elastiboy on Instagram to see examples of what I mean So I don't know how many that was nine or ten. I lost track. But that's what I learned by living with 20 people who are trying to be healthy but still making common mistakes that healthy people make. And I hope this really helps open your eyes as to changes you can make that are low hanging fruit but that are going to change your life, change your sleep, change your health, and change your mobility.

Ben Greenfield [00:28:39]: Hit subscribe Leave a Ranking Leave a review. If you got a little extra time, it means way more than you might think. Thank you so much.

Ben Greenfield

Ben Greenfield is a health consultant, speaker, and New York Times bestselling author of a wide variety of books.

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