This guy is a great source of food information. He does videos on YouTube and has a great social media presence! He’ll even teach you how to make your own ketchup to avoid buying junk.
Search for “Bobby Approved” to find him.
This guy is a great source of food information. He does videos on YouTube and has a great social media presence! He’ll even teach you how to make your own ketchup to avoid buying junk.
Search for “Bobby Approved” to find him.
Found a couple of videos from Dr. Rhonda Patrick to illuminate the problems with and sources of microplastic exposure.
These are long but very worthwhile.
Warning: These are “Eye of Sauron” videos that may overwhelm you. Take breaks! I had to…
Takeaways:
Explore her videos for more info on health and microplastics… including how to hasten their excretion from the body. Hint: sulforaphane, fibrous diet, etc.
Soooo, yeah, we are eating and inhaling plastic. Little bits are being found in people’s brains… half a percent on average! π¬
Microplastics are even clogging up arteries, adding to obstructive artery problems, heart attacks and the like. Ugh.
Is it a problem? Yes.
Does it have a connection to cancer? Yes.
From what I’ve gathered, it can work in the same way an oyster creates a pearl. A bit of sand finds its way into the oyster, the oyster is irritated, the immune system reacts, and it coats the sand with layer upon layer of mucus or film until the irritating grain of sand is smooth.
In our bodies, foreign items are attacked by our immune system, too. It usually involves redness, swelling (inflammation), and mucus. Because the plastic isn’t going to break down, the immune response continues. This creates a “locus” or location around which cells may stop functioning properly due to prolonged inflammation.
This is why talcum powder causes ovarian cancer.
This is not to even mention the chemicals that leach from the plastic as it accumulates in our bodies, β οΈ β£οΈ or leach into our food as we microwave items in plastic or in cheap steamer bags…
So anyway, if you are looking for a resolution today, New Years Day 2025, I recommend going through your kitchen cabinets and throwing out all the plastic, especially the thin stuff that comes from take-out containers.
Only drink from glass, metal, or pottery.
Get rid of any plastic cutting boards, which can break down as they are being used, with little plastic shavings going right into your food.
And please, get rid of any coffee maker that brews boiling water through plastic. Those Keurig and Nespresso cartridges are so dangerous!! I’m sure you can find an after-Christmas sale on a French press or a coffee maker with a steel grounds holder.

Storage containers and canisters should be changed out for glass. It’s healthier and looks good too.
A lot of food, even organic food, is sold in plastic. So, when you get home from the grocery store, spend time moving the food to glass storage, rather than leaving it in the original plastic.

Little steps. Let’s all take these little steps in the new year for our health, and for our families.
π£
And what does it have to do with cancer, or the risk of cancer?
There have been many theories about how cancer originates in the body.
Dr. Thomas Seyfried of Boston College published the theory that cancer begins with chronic metabolic dysfunction — that is, mitochondria within a cell not being able to create good energy for a prolonged period of time — which causes them to begin creating energy through a fermentation process rather than through oxidative phosphorylation, often called OxPhos (Seyfried & Chinopoulos, 2021).
This is the key difference between healthy cells and cancerous cells: healthy cells use oxygen to create energy, while cancerous cells have reverted to an easier, ancient way to create energy (possibly from before Earth had a proper atmosphere) through fermentation of glucose (sugar) and an amino acid called glutamine.
This difference in mitochondrial function links all cancers together, regardless of which organ it appears within.
We have known this for a while. Did you know that PET scans, widely used to seek out and image cancerous activity in the body, are taken after a person ingests a sugary dye? The sugar (glucose) goes straight to the hungry cancer cells, carrying the dye that is visible to the scanner.
Why does mitochondrial dysfunction happen?
One reason why mitochondrial dysfunction happens is simply the presence of too much sugar and simple carbohydrates in a person’s diet.
These need very little digestive breakdown and go straight to the mitochondria as glucose molecules.
The mitochondria become overwhelmed with the amount of glucose they are being asked to process. They bog down and ask for help from the pancreas and insulin. They push the remaining glucose out into the blood as a sticky residue.
Have you ever felt tired, sluggish, and slow after a big meal or too many carbs? Food coma?? That is an indication that your cells are overwhelmed. You’re in a glucose storm, and your body is suffering.
This leftover glucose in the blood sticks to your hemoglobin, or red blood cells. This is the residue measured by a Hemoglobin A1C test.
I had a checkup the other day and saw these on my doctor’s wall. How many times have you seen something like this?
There’s so much good info here. But prior to my diagnosis, I would have taken a little glance and not thought about it again. Now I’m pouring over them, matching this up with my own new patterns and habits.





These are the notes I took while reading Good Energy and watching Dr. Casey Means discuss her new plan for optimally healthy meals.
She (and many other doctors and nutritionists) wants us to ditch the food pyramid, which pushed carbs as the staple food, and move to something like this 5-slice pie above.
If we could design each meal to include one element from each section, we would be healthier in terms of our mitochondrial function.
I put it on the fridge so I see it every day, at every meal.
So I’m not eating Cheerios anymore, or really anything from the cereal aisle (if we’re being truthful, it’s more of a candy aisle).
But I still like oats! If you can find an organic source, here’s a tasty and quick breakfast recipe — and it is loaded with fiber, aka post-biotics.

These Woodstock Oats are great. Yuka gives them an excellent rating, 100 out of 100.
So I fill up a little jar about 50% full of the oats, then add a heaping spoonful (each) of milled flax seeds, hemp seeds, and chia seeds. These are all organic, purchased at either Trader Joe’s or Aldi.
Add a couple sprinkles of cinnamon if you like, then stir everything up. Add the milk of your choice and stir again.
If you want to add honey or maple syrup, add it after you stir, and don’t stir any more because it will get sticky and your spoon will get coated. Just put it on top.
Pop on the lid and put it in the fridge. Let it soak overnight or at least for a few hours.

When you’re ready to eat, add some chopped apples, raspberries, or blueberries. You’ll probably also want to add a little more milk as the oats really soak it up!
Pro tip: Check your teeth after eating, because these seeds get stuck everywhere, and you may look a little crazy π€ͺ after eating!
Bon AppΓ©tit!

Sulforaphane is a phytonutrient compound found in cruciferous vegetables. Regular consumption is connected with an overall lower risk of cancer, and many studies show that it fights active cancer, too.
Here’s a quick list of cruciferous veggies:
The food that has the most sulforaphane is actually the broccoli SPROUT, which are delicious in a salad. The sprouts can have 10 to 100 times the amount of sulforaphane than the mature vegetable.
I’ve definitely upped my intake this year, and I’m regularly eating sprouts & microgreens now.
Here are some interesting videos if you want to learn more. Dr. Eric Berg below points out that it has been studied a lot, more than 35 times.
In the video below, Dr. Moss shares that this research is very controversial, because most chemotherapy drugs do not kill cancer stem cells, but this common, inexpensive vegetable DOES.
Learn more about these veggies: https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/edible/vegetables/vgen/cruciferous-vegetables.htm
Ok, we all know fiber is supposed to be good for us, but what is it really, and what does it do that’s so beneficial?
What It Is
First off, fiber is a material from plants that WE can’t fully digest, but our microbiome buddies CAN. They love it. It feeds them and makes them feel good, which in turn makes US feel good.
Fiber is actually a form of carbohydrate, but it doesn’t convert to glucose in our bloodstream like other carbs.
Our microbiome buddies actually ferment the fiber to break it down. Then they send out beneficial by-products (called post-biotic short chain fatty acids) into our bloodstream, which do great stuff such as:
β Reduce inflammation
β Regulate metabolism
β Regulate mitochondria
β Improve insulin & glucose levels
β Regulate hunger & appetite
β Protect and repair the lining of the gut, which allows the gut to better protect itself from toxins.
Where to Get It
Ok, I want it! I’m convinced! How do I get it?
I’ve learned a lot from Dr. Casey Means, through watching her interviews on YouTube, reading her book Good Energy, and taking her online class called “Eating For Good Energy and Healthy Metabolism.”
She recommends doubling the paltry USDA guideline of 25 to 30 grams per day. To be healthy, shoot for 50 to 60 grams of fiber daily.
Here are the sources she recommends:
Here are a few others:
To Sum it Up
So, when you eat fermented foods (probiotics) you are actually bringing in new, good bacteria. New microbiome buddies.
When you eat fiber, you are feeding your microbiome buddies, and they ferment that fiber inside you to create post-biotics.
Interesting Fact
Dr. Means also points out that our microbiome creates our neurotransmitters. Did you know that schizophrenia and depression can be diagnosed by analyzing a person’s microbiome? Huh!