| name | Health & Nutrition Expert |
| description | Apply cutting-edge 2025 nutrition science on longevity, metabolic health, gut microbiome, and evidence-based dietary patterns for optimal vitality and disease prevention |
| version | 1.0.0 |
Health & Nutrition Expert
Purpose
Provide evidence-based nutrition guidance grounded in the latest 2025 research on longevity, metabolic health, gut microbiome optimization, and nutrient-dense eating for peak human performance.
Core Nutrition Principles (2025 Research-Based)
1. The Longevity Framework
Latest Research Findings (2025):
- Harvard dietary patterns study (Nature Medicine, May 2025) links specific eating patterns to 20+ year lifespan extension
- Blue Zones research confirms plant-forward, minimally processed diets as key longevity factor
- Caloric restriction mimetics (fasting, time-restricted eating) activate cellular repair pathways
- Polyphenol-rich foods activate longevity genes (sirtuins, AMPK, mTOR pathways)
The Longevity Diet Pattern:
FOUNDATION:
- Predominantly plant-based (80-90% of plate)
- Whole, minimally processed foods
- High fiber intake (40-50g daily)
- Omega-3 rich sources (fatty fish, flax, walnuts)
- Polyphenol-rich foods (berries, green tea, dark chocolate, olive oil)
MODERATE:
- Legumes and beans (daily)
- Nuts and seeds (1-2 oz daily)
- Whole grains (if tolerated)
- Fermented foods (daily for gut health)
MINIMAL:
- Animal protein (optional, <10% of calories)
- Refined carbohydrates and sugars
- Processed foods and seed oils
- Alcohol (if consumed, <1 drink/day)
AVOID:
- Ultra-processed foods
- Added sugars
- Trans fats
- Excessive sodium
2. Metabolic Health Optimization
2025 Research Consensus:
- Insulin sensitivity is the master lever of metabolic health
- Continuous glucose monitoring reveals individual food responses vary dramatically
- Meal timing and composition matter as much as total calories
- Metabolic flexibility (ability to burn fat and carbs) predicts longevity
Metabolic Optimization Protocol:
Blood Sugar Regulation
STRATEGIES:
- Protein first at meals (30-40g stabilizes glucose)
- Fiber with every carb source (slows absorption)
- Vinegar before high-carb meals (acetic acid improves insulin sensitivity)
- Post-meal movement (10-minute walk reduces glucose spike by 25%)
- Meal sequencing: Vegetables → Protein → Carbs
GLYCEMIC TARGETS:
- Fasting glucose: 70-85 mg/dL (optimal)
- Post-meal peak: <120 mg/dL
- Glucose variability: <30 mg/dL range
- HbA1c: <5.4% (longevity range)
Insulin Sensitivity Enhancement
EVIDENCE-BASED TACTICS:
- Time-restricted eating (12-16 hour daily fast)
- Resistance training 3x/week (muscle is glucose sink)
- High-fiber intake (40-50g daily feeds beneficial gut bacteria)
- Omega-3 supplementation (2-3g EPA/DHA daily)
- Magnesium adequacy (400-500mg daily, crucial cofactor)
- Quality sleep (7-9 hours, poor sleep = insulin resistance)
3. Gut Microbiome Revolution
2025 Breakthrough Research:
- Gut microbiome controls 70% of immune function
- Microbial metabolites (SCFAs, secondary bile acids) regulate inflammation, mood, metabolism
- Diversity of gut species predicts health outcomes better than any single marker
- Fermented foods > probiotics for microbiome diversity (Stanford study 2025)
Microbiome Optimization Framework:
Feed the Good Bacteria (Prebiotics)
HIGH-PREBIOTIC FOODS (consume daily):
- Resistant starch: Cooked & cooled potatoes, rice, green bananas
- Inulin: Chicory root, Jerusalem artichoke, garlic, onions, asparagus
- Pectin: Apples, citrus peels, berries
- Beta-glucan: Oats, mushrooms, barley
- Diverse fiber: 30+ different plant foods per week
TARGET: 40-50g total fiber daily
Seed Beneficial Species (Probiotics)
FERMENTED FOODS (consume daily):
- Yogurt (live cultures, unsweetened)
- Kefir (highest probiotic diversity)
- Sauerkraut (raw, unpasteurized)
- Kimchi (spicy Korean ferment)
- Kombucha (fermented tea)
- Miso (fermented soy)
- Tempeh (fermented soy, high protein)
PROBIOTIC SUPPLEMENTS (when indicated):
- Multi-strain formulas (10+ billion CFU)
- Saccharomyces boulardii (for antibiotic recovery)
- Lactobacillus + Bifidobacterium blends
- Soil-based organisms (spore-forming strains)
NOTE: Whole foods > supplements for most people
Remove Microbiome Disruptors
AVOID:
- Artificial sweeteners (damage beneficial bacteria)
- Emulsifiers in processed foods (thin gut lining)
- Excessive antibiotics (nuke diversity)
- Chronic stress (cortisol alters microbiome)
- Ultra-processed foods (feed pathogenic bacteria)
4. Protein Optimization (2025 Research Update)
Latest Findings:
- Protein needs higher than previously thought, especially for longevity
- Leucine threshold model: Need 2.5-3g leucine per meal to trigger muscle protein synthesis
- Protein distribution across day matters more than total
- Animal vs plant protein: Quality and timing considerations
Optimal Protein Strategy:
Daily Targets
MAINTENANCE (sedentary):
- 0.8-1.0g per lb bodyweight
- Example: 150 lb person = 120-150g protein/day
MUSCLE BUILDING (training hard):
- 1.0-1.2g per lb bodyweight
- Example: 150 lb person = 150-180g protein/day
LONGEVITY OPTIMIZATION (active aging):
- 1.0-1.1g per lb bodyweight
- Emphasize leucine-rich sources
WEIGHT LOSS:
- 1.0-1.2g per lb goal bodyweight
- Higher protein preserves muscle in deficit
Protein Distribution
OPTIMAL PATTERN:
Breakfast: 30-40g
Lunch: 30-40g
Dinner: 30-40g
Snack (if needed): 20-30g
RATIONALE:
- Each meal reaches leucine threshold (~2.5-3g)
- Maximizes muscle protein synthesis across day
- Prevents late-day protein loading (suboptimal)
LEUCINE CONTENT (per serving):
- Whey protein (25g): 3g leucine ✓
- Chicken breast (6oz): 3g leucine ✓
- Greek yogurt (1 cup): 2g leucine
- Lentils (1 cup): 1.3g leucine (combine sources)
Protein Quality
COMPLETE PROTEINS (all essential amino acids):
Animal: Eggs, chicken, fish, beef, dairy
Plant: Soy, quinoa, buckwheat, hemp, chia
INCOMPLETE PROTEINS (combine for completeness):
- Legumes (beans, lentils) + Grains (rice, oats)
- Nuts/Seeds (almond, pumpkin) + Legumes
- Example: Rice & beans = complete protein
2025 CONSENSUS:
Both animal and plant proteins build muscle equally
when leucine threshold is met per meal.
Choose based on preference, ethics, and health goals.
5. Healthy Fats Revolution
2025 Fat Science:
- Omega-3/Omega-6 ratio matters more than total fat
- Saturated fat nuance: Source and context matter
- Trans fats: Still toxic, avoid completely
- Monounsaturated fats (olive oil, avocado): Universally beneficial
Optimal Fat Framework:
The Fat Hierarchy
TIER 1 - CONSUME LIBERALLY:
- Extra virgin olive oil (high polyphenols)
- Avocados (monounsaturated + fiber)
- Fatty fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel - EPA/DHA)
- Nuts (walnuts, almonds, macadamia)
- Seeds (flax, chia, hemp - ALA omega-3)
TIER 2 - MODERATE AMOUNTS:
- Coconut oil (saturated but MCTs)
- Grass-fed butter/ghee (if dairy tolerated)
- Dark chocolate (70%+ cacao - polyphenols)
- Pasture-raised eggs (choline, omega-3)
TIER 3 - MINIMIZE:
- Conventional animal fats (grain-fed = high omega-6)
- Seed oils (canola, soybean, corn - inflammatory when heated)
TIER 4 - ELIMINATE:
- Trans fats (partially hydrogenated oils)
- Highly processed vegetable oils
- Margarine and fake butter spreads
Omega-3 Optimization
TARGET INTAKE:
- EPA + DHA: 2-3g daily (from fish or algae oil)
- ALA: 1-2g daily (from flax, chia, walnuts)
BEST SOURCES:
High EPA/DHA (per 6 oz serving):
- Wild salmon: 3-4g
- Sardines: 2-3g
- Mackerel: 3-4g
- Anchovies: 2g
Plant ALA (converts to EPA/DHA at ~5-10%):
- Flaxseed (ground): 2.3g per tablespoon
- Chia seeds: 2.5g per tablespoon
- Walnuts: 2.5g per 1 oz
SUPPLEMENTATION:
- Fish oil: 2-3g EPA/DHA daily
- Algae oil: 1-2g EPA/DHA (vegan source)
- Take with meals for absorption
6. Carbohydrate Intelligence
2025 Carb Science:
- Not all carbs are created equal (shocking, right?)
- Glycemic impact varies by individual (CGM reveals truth)
- Carb timing matters for performance and body composition
- Fiber is the most important carb metric
Smart Carbohydrate Strategy:
Carb Quality Spectrum
TIER 1 - NUTRIENT-DENSE CARBS:
- Sweet potatoes (vitamin A, fiber)
- Quinoa (complete protein + fiber)
- Oats (beta-glucan, heart health)
- Berries (low glycemic, high antioxidants)
- Legumes (protein + fiber)
- Non-starchy vegetables (unlimited)
TIER 2 - WHOLE FOOD CARBS:
- Brown/wild rice (resistant starch when cooled)
- Whole grain bread (sprouted preferred)
- Potatoes (cooked & cooled = resistant starch)
- Fruit (whole, not juice)
- Winter squash
TIER 3 - PERFORMANCE CARBS (context-dependent):
- White rice (post-workout recovery)
- Pasta (al dente = lower GI)
- Sourdough bread (fermentation lowers GI)
- Honey (pre-workout fuel)
TIER 4 - MINIMIZE/AVOID:
- Added sugars (soda, candy, pastries)
- White bread and pastries
- Fruit juice (sugar without fiber)
- Ultra-processed grains
Carb Timing for Performance
PRE-WORKOUT (1-2 hours before):
- 30-60g carbs (energy substrate)
- Low fiber (easy digestion)
- Example: Banana + honey, white rice + fruit
INTRA-WORKOUT (endurance >90 min):
- 30-60g carbs per hour
- Fast-absorbing (glucose, maltodextrin)
- Maintains performance
POST-WORKOUT (within 2 hours):
- 0.5-1g carbs per lb bodyweight
- Replenish glycogen
- Pair with protein (3:1 or 4:1 carb:protein ratio)
- Example: Rice bowl with chicken
REST DAYS:
- Lower carb intake (prioritize fat/protein)
- Focus on non-starchy vegetables
- Save carbs for training days
7. Hydration Science
2025 Hydration Research:
- Even 2% dehydration impairs cognitive and physical performance
- Electrolyte balance matters more than pure water volume
- Individual needs vary dramatically (sweat rate, climate, activity)
- Chronic low-grade dehydration is epidemic
Optimal Hydration Protocol:
Daily Water Targets
BASELINE:
- 0.5-1 oz per lb bodyweight
- Example: 150 lb person = 75-150 oz daily
ADJUST FOR:
+ Exercise: Add 12-16 oz per hour of activity
+ Hot climate: Add 20-40 oz
+ Caffeine/alcohol: Add 1:1 replacement
+ High protein diet: Add 20-30 oz
TIMING:
- Morning: 16-32 oz upon waking (rehydrate from sleep)
- Pre-workout: 16-20 oz (1-2 hours before)
- During workout: 7-10 oz every 10-20 min
- Post-workout: 20-24 oz per lb lost in sweat
- Throughout day: Sip consistently
Electrolyte Optimization
KEY ELECTROLYTES:
- Sodium: 3000-5000mg daily (higher if active/sweating)
- Potassium: 3500-4700mg daily
- Magnesium: 400-500mg daily
- Calcium: 1000-1200mg daily
BEST FOOD SOURCES:
Sodium: Sea salt, miso, olives
Potassium: Avocado, sweet potato, banana, coconut water
Magnesium: Pumpkin seeds, dark chocolate, spinach, almonds
Calcium: Dairy, sardines, leafy greens, fortified plant milk
WHEN TO SUPPLEMENT ELECTROLYTES:
- Intense exercise (>60 min)
- Hot/humid conditions
- Low-carb/keto diet (increased sodium loss)
- Fasting (electrolyte depletion)
DIY ELECTROLYTE DRINK:
- 32 oz water
- 1/2 tsp sea salt (sodium)
- 1/4 tsp potassium salt (NoSalt)
- Juice of 1 lemon (flavor + vitamin C)
- Optional: 1-2 tsp honey (carbs if training)
8. Supplements Worth Taking (Evidence-Based)
2025 Supplement Science:
- Most supplements are unnecessary if diet is optimized
- A few have robust evidence for health/performance
- Quality and form matter enormously (bioavailability)
- Personalize based on testing (bloodwork reveals deficiencies)
Tier 1 - Nearly Universal Benefit:
Vitamin D3
WHY: 40% of population deficient, crucial for immunity, mood, bone health
DOSE: 2000-5000 IU daily (test and adjust to 50-70 ng/mL)
FORM: D3 (cholecalciferol) with K2 for synergy
TIMING: With fat-containing meal
Omega-3 (EPA/DHA)
WHY: Anti-inflammatory, brain health, heart health
DOSE: 2-3g EPA/DHA combined daily
FORM: Triglyceride or phospholipid form (better absorption than ethyl ester)
TIMING: With meals
QUALITY: Third-party tested for purity (mercury, PCBs)
Magnesium
WHY: 50% of population deficient, crucial for 300+ enzymatic reactions
DOSE: 400-500mg elemental magnesium daily
FORM: Glycinate (best absorption, calming), Threonate (brain health), Citrate (digestion)
TIMING: Evening (promotes sleep)
Creatine Monohydrate
WHY: Muscle strength, cognitive function, cell energy production
DOSE: 5g daily (no loading needed)
FORM: Creatine monohydrate (most studied, cheapest, effective)
TIMING: Anytime, with or without food
NOTE: Increases water retention (normal and beneficial)
Tier 2 - Targeted Benefit (based on need):
Protein Powder
WHEN: Difficulty meeting protein targets through whole food
WHEY: Fast-absorbing, high leucine (post-workout ideal)
CASEIN: Slow-absorbing (bedtime protein)
PLANT: Pea + rice blend (complete amino acid profile)
DOSE: 20-40g per serving to reach daily protein goals
Probiotics
WHEN: Post-antibiotics, digestive issues, immune support
FORM: Multi-strain (10+ billion CFU)
STRAINS: Lactobacillus + Bifidobacterium blend
NOTE: Fermented foods > supplements for most people
B-Complex
WHEN: Vegan/vegetarian (B12 especially), high stress, older adults
FORM: Methylated B vitamins (better bioavailability)
KEY: B12 (methylcobalamin), Folate (methylfolate)
Vitamin K2 (MK-7)
WHY: Bone and cardiovascular health (directs calcium properly)
DOSE: 100-200 mcg daily
SYNERGY: Take with Vitamin D3
Tier 3 - Performance Enhancement (optional):
Caffeine
WHY: Ergogenic aid, mental performance
DOSE: 3-6 mg per kg bodyweight (200-400mg for most)
TIMING: 30-60 min pre-workout
NOTE: Cycle off periodically to maintain sensitivity
Beta-Alanine
WHY: Buffers lactic acid, improves high-intensity performance
DOSE: 3-6g daily (split doses)
NOTE: Causes harmless tingling sensation
Citrulline Malate
WHY: Increases nitric oxide, blood flow, endurance
DOSE: 6-8g pre-workout
TIMING: 30-60 min before training
9. Time-Restricted Eating & Fasting
2025 Fasting Science:
- Autophagy (cellular cleanup) activated after 14-16 hours fasting
- Metabolic switching (glucose to ketones) improves metabolic health
- Not for everyone (women, high stress, hard training = caution)
- Consistency matters more than perfection
Time-Restricted Eating Protocols:
16:8 (Most Popular)
PATTERN:
- 16 hours fasting (includes sleep)
- 8 hour eating window
- Example: Eat 12pm-8pm, fast 8pm-12pm
BENEFITS:
- Improved insulin sensitivity
- Fat oxidation
- Cellular autophagy
- Simplified meal timing
WHO:
- Most adults (healthy, not underweight)
- Goal: Metabolic health, fat loss, longevity
14:10 (Gentle Approach)
PATTERN:
- 14 hours fasting
- 10 hour eating window
- Example: Eat 8am-6pm, fast 6pm-8am
BENEFITS:
- Similar benefits to 16:8, more sustainable
- Works well for women (less hormonal disruption)
- Easier social flexibility
WHO:
- Beginners, women, high activity levels
12:12 (Minimum Effective)
PATTERN:
- 12 hours fasting (minimum for benefits)
- 12 hour eating window
- Example: Eat 7am-7pm, fast 7pm-7am
BENEFITS:
- Digestive rest
- Circadian rhythm alignment
- No hunger/stress
WHO:
- Starting point for anyone
- Pregnancy, breastfeeding
- High training load
Extended Fasting (Advanced)
24-HOUR FAST:
- Once per week or month
- Dinner-to-dinner approach
- Autophagy, mental clarity
48-72 HOUR FAST:
- Quarterly deep reset
- Maximum autophagy
- Medical supervision recommended
- Electrolytes crucial
WHO:
- Experienced fasters only
- Not for: Underweight, eating disorders, pregnant, high stress
10. Anti-Inflammatory Nutrition
2025 Inflammation Research:
- Chronic low-grade inflammation drives aging and disease
- Diet is primary inflammation modulator
- Omega-3/Omega-6 ratio crucial (target 1:4 or better)
- Polyphenols are anti-inflammatory superstars
Anti-Inflammatory Food Framework:
Most Powerful Anti-Inflammatory Foods
TIER 1 - DAILY CONSUMPTION:
- Fatty fish (salmon, sardines, mackerel)
- Berries (blueberries, strawberries, blackberries)
- Leafy greens (kale, spinach, arugula)
- Extra virgin olive oil (high-polyphenol)
- Turmeric (curcumin with black pepper for absorption)
- Ginger (gingerol compounds)
- Green tea (EGCG)
- Dark chocolate (70%+ cacao)
TIER 2 - REGULAR INCLUSION:
- Nuts (walnuts, almonds)
- Avocados
- Tomatoes (lycopene)
- Garlic and onions (sulfur compounds)
- Mushrooms (beta-glucans)
- Fermented foods (gut microbiome)
- Herbs and spices (oregano, rosemary, cinnamon)
MECHANISM:
Polyphenols → activate Nrf2 pathway → reduce oxidative stress
Omega-3 → resolve inflammation via SPMs (specialized pro-resolving mediators)
Fiber → feeds gut bacteria → produce anti-inflammatory SCFAs
Most Inflammatory Foods (Avoid)
TIER 1 - ELIMINATE:
- Trans fats (partially hydrogenated oils)
- Refined seed oils (corn, soybean, heated)
- Added sugars (soda, candy, pastries)
- Ultra-processed foods (additives, emulsifiers)
TIER 2 - MINIMIZE:
- Refined carbohydrates (white bread, pasta)
- Excessive alcohol (>1 drink/day)
- Processed meats (high AGEs)
- Conventional grain-fed meat (high omega-6)
Practical Nutrition Protocols
The Longevity Plate Template
EVERY MEAL SHOULD CONTAIN:
50% NON-STARCHY VEGETABLES
- Leafy greens (spinach, kale, arugula)
- Cruciferous (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts)
- Colorful vegetables (peppers, tomatoes, carrots)
25% PROTEIN
- Fish (fatty fish preferred)
- Poultry (organic/pasture-raised)
- Legumes (beans, lentils)
- Eggs (pasture-raised)
- Plant protein (tempeh, tofu)
25% SMART CARBS
- Sweet potato
- Quinoa
- Brown rice (cooked & cooled)
- Oats
- Legumes (double as protein)
HEALTHY FATS (added):
- Extra virgin olive oil (drizzle)
- Avocado (1/4-1/2)
- Nuts/seeds (1-2 oz)
FLAVOR BOOSTERS (anti-inflammatory):
- Turmeric + black pepper
- Garlic, ginger
- Herbs (cilantro, parsley, basil)
- Lemon juice, vinegar
Sample Day of Eating (Longevity-Optimized)
UPON WAKING (7am):
- 16-32 oz water with pinch of sea salt
- Optional: Green tea
BREAKFAST (8am) - 12-hour fast complete:
- 3 eggs (scrambled with turmeric, black pepper)
- Sautéed spinach and mushrooms in olive oil
- 1/2 cup berries
- 1/4 avocado
- Black coffee or green tea
MACROS: 30g protein, 15g carbs, 25g fat
LUNCH (12pm):
- Large salad base (mixed greens, arugula)
- 6 oz grilled salmon
- Quinoa (1/2 cup cooked)
- Chickpeas (1/2 cup)
- Olive oil + lemon dressing
- Walnuts (1 oz)
MACROS: 45g protein, 40g carbs, 30g fat
SNACK (3pm - optional):
- Greek yogurt (1 cup, unsweetened)
- Chia seeds (1 tbsp)
- Blueberries (1/2 cup)
- Almonds (1 oz)
MACROS: 25g protein, 20g carbs, 15g fat
DINNER (6pm):
- 6 oz grass-fed beef or chicken thigh
- Large portion roasted vegetables (broccoli, Brussels sprouts, carrots)
- Sweet potato (1 medium)
- Side salad with olive oil dressing
MACROS: 40g protein, 45g carbs, 20g fat
EVENING (7pm-8pm):
- Herbal tea (chamomile, tulsi)
- Optional: 1-2 squares dark chocolate (85%+)
TOTAL MACROS:
Protein: 140g (30%)
Carbs: 120g (30%)
Fat: 90g (40%)
Calories: ~2000
SUPPLEMENTS:
- AM: Vitamin D3 (5000 IU) + K2 (200 mcg), Omega-3 (2g)
- PM: Magnesium glycinate (400mg)
- Post-workout: Creatine (5g)
Pre/Post Workout Nutrition
Pre-Workout (1-2 hours before):
GOAL: Fuel performance without digestive distress
OPTION 1 (Carb-focused):
- Banana + almond butter
- Oatmeal + berries + protein powder
- Rice cake + honey + pinch salt
OPTION 2 (Mixed):
- Greek yogurt + granola + fruit
- Sweet potato + eggs
- Smoothie (protein, banana, oats, berries)
HYDRATION:
- 16-20 oz water
- Electrolytes if training >60 min
Intra-Workout (during exercise >90 min):
- 30-60g carbs per hour (sports drink, gels, fruit)
- Electrolytes (sodium, potassium)
- Sip water (7-10 oz every 10-20 min)
Post-Workout (within 2 hours):
GOAL: Replenish glycogen, repair muscle
PROTEIN: 30-40g
CARBS: 0.5-1g per lb bodyweight
RATIO: 3:1 or 4:1 carb:protein
OPTION 1:
- Protein shake (whey/plant) + banana + oats
OPTION 2:
- Chicken + rice + vegetables
OPTION 3:
- Salmon + sweet potato + greens
HYDRATION:
- 20-24 oz water per pound lost in sweat
- Electrolyte replacement
Common Nutrition Mistakes (2025 Edition)
1. Fearing All Carbs
MYTH: "Carbs make you fat"
REALITY: Excess calories make you fat. Carbs fuel performance.
FIX:
- Choose nutrient-dense carbs (sweet potato, quinoa, oats)
- Time carbs around training
- Prioritize fiber content
- Individual tolerance varies (CGM reveals truth)
2. Neglecting Protein Distribution
PROBLEM: Eating 100g protein at dinner, 10g at breakfast
CONSEQUENCE: Suboptimal muscle protein synthesis
FIX:
- Distribute protein evenly across meals
- Aim for 30-40g per meal
- Reach leucine threshold (~2.5-3g) each meal
3. Chronic Low-Calorie Dieting
PROBLEM: Perpetually eating <1500 calories
CONSEQUENCE: Metabolic adaptation, hormonal disruption, muscle loss
FIX:
- Reverse diet slowly back to maintenance
- Prioritize protein (1g+ per lb)
- Incorporate diet breaks (2 weeks at maintenance every 12 weeks)
- Focus on nutrient density, not just low calories
4. Overcomplicating Nutrition
PROBLEM: Obsessing over meal timing, macros, supplements
CONSEQUENCE: Paralysis, stress, disordered eating
FIX:
- Master fundamentals first (whole foods, protein, vegetables, hydration)
- 80/20 rule: 80% nutrient-dense, 20% flexibility
- Consistency > perfection
- Simplicity wins long-term
5. Ignoring Micronutrients
PROBLEM: Hitting macros but eating same foods daily
CONSEQUENCE: Nutrient deficiencies, poor health markers
FIX:
- Eat the rainbow (diverse colored vegetables)
- 30+ different plant foods per week
- Organ meats occasionally (nutrient-dense)
- Consider multivitamin as "insurance"
Special Populations
Women's Nutrition Considerations
MENSTRUAL CYCLE NUTRITION:
Follicular Phase (Days 1-14):
- Higher carb tolerance (insulin sensitivity better)
- More intense training supported
- Increase complex carbs
Luteal Phase (Days 15-28):
- Lower carb tolerance
- Increase protein and fats
- More calories needed (100-300 more)
- Magnesium for PMS symptoms
PREGNANCY/POSTPARTUM:
- Increase calories (+300-500)
- Emphasize folate, iron, choline, DHA
- Avoid fasting
- Prioritize nutrient density
MENOPAUSE:
- Protein needs increase (maintain muscle)
- Calcium + Vitamin D for bone health
- Phytoestrogens (flax, soy) may help symptoms
- Resistance training crucial
Athletes & Hard Trainers
INCREASED NEEDS:
- Protein: 1.0-1.2g per lb bodyweight
- Carbs: 2-4g per lb bodyweight (sport-dependent)
- Hydration: Add 12-16 oz per hour training
- Electrolytes: Sodium 3000-5000mg, potassium 4000mg+
NUTRIENT TIMING CRITICAL:
- Pre-workout: Fuel (carbs + protein)
- Intra-workout: Replenish (carbs + electrolytes if >90 min)
- Post-workout: Recover (protein + carbs within 2 hours)
SUPPLEMENTS TO CONSIDER:
- Creatine (strength/power)
- Beta-alanine (high-intensity endurance)
- Caffeine (performance enhancement)
- Tart cherry (recovery, sleep)
Aging Adults (50+)
PRIORITIES:
- Higher protein (1.0-1.2g per lb to preserve muscle)
- Calcium + Vitamin D (bone health)
- Omega-3 (cognitive function, inflammation)
- B12 (absorption decreases with age)
- Leucine-rich foods (counter sarcopenia)
- Resistance training (non-negotiable)
CHALLENGES:
- Reduced appetite (prioritize protein)
- Medication interactions (consult doctor)
- Digestion changes (may need digestive enzymes)
Testing & Tracking
Essential Blood Markers (Annual)
METABOLIC PANEL:
- Fasting glucose (70-85 mg/dL optimal)
- HbA1c (<5.4% longevity range)
- Fasting insulin (<5 µIU/mL)
- Triglycerides (<100 mg/dL)
- HDL cholesterol (>60 mg/dL)
- LDL particle size (large particles preferred)
INFLAMMATION:
- hs-CRP (<1.0 mg/L)
- Homocysteine (<10 µmol/L)
HORMONES:
- Testosterone (men: 500-900 ng/dL)
- Vitamin D (50-70 ng/mL)
- Thyroid panel (TSH, Free T3, Free T4)
NUTRIENTS:
- Vitamin B12 (>500 pg/mL)
- Magnesium (RBC magnesium, not serum)
- Omega-3 Index (>8% target)
- Iron panel (ferritin 50-150 ng/mL)
Continuous Glucose Monitor (CGM)
WHY: Reveals individual food responses
DURATION: 2-week experiment minimum
INSIGHTS:
- Which foods spike your glucose
- Optimal meal composition/timing
- Sleep quality impact
- Stress effect on blood sugar
TARGETS:
- Fasting: 70-85 mg/dL
- Post-meal peak: <120 mg/dL
- Variability: <30 mg/dL range
Body Composition Tracking
METHODS (best to worst):
1. DEXA scan (gold standard, measures bone + muscle + fat)
2. Bod Pod (air displacement)
3. Scale + measurements + photos (most practical)
FREQUENCY:
- Monthly for active changes
- Quarterly for maintenance
METRICS:
- Body weight
- Body fat %
- Lean muscle mass
- Waist circumference
- Progress photos
Final Principles
1. Nutrient Density Over Calorie Counting The most nutrient-dense foods per calorie win. Focus on quality first, quantity second.
2. Personalization is Key Your optimal diet is discovered through experimentation (CGM, blood work, how you feel). No one-size-fits-all.
3. Gut Health is Foundation Optimize microbiome through diverse fiber, fermented foods, and minimal processed food. 70% of immune function lives here.
4. Protein is Non-Negotiable Especially as you age. Muscle is longevity. Protein preserves it. Aim for 1g+ per pound bodyweight.
5. Consistency > Perfection The "perfect" diet you can't stick to is worse than the "good enough" diet you do consistently.
6. Food is Information Every meal sends signals to your genes, hormones, and cells. Choose foods that send the right messages.
7. Eat for Longevity, Not Just Performance Short-term performance hacks may compromise long-term health. Play the infinite game.
8. Whole Foods First, Supplements Second You can't out-supplement a poor diet. Build foundation with real food, then supplement strategically.
9. Mindful Eating Matters Chew thoroughly, eat slowly, savor meals. Digestion begins in the mouth. Stress while eating impairs nutrient absorption.
10. Flexibility Prevents Obsession 80/20 rule. Mostly whole foods, some flexibility for life. Orthorexia (obsession with healthy eating) is its own disorder.
Nutrition in 2025 is personalized, evidence-based, and focused on longevity optimization. Eat to nourish your body, fuel your performance, and extend your healthspan.