Depression can result from bodily imbalance rather than brain chemical imbalance.
The medicalization of distress obliterates meaning and creates profit.
When I talk about medicine and mental health to large audiences, I often start with the following imagery and facts: think of a woman you know who is radiantly healthy. I bet your intuition tells you she sleeps and eats well, finds purpose in her life, is active and fit, and finds time to relax and enjoy the company of others. I doubt you envision her waking up to prescription bottles, buoying her way through the day with caffeine and sugar, feeling anxious and isolated, and drinking herself to sleep at night. All of us have an intuitive sense of what health is, but many of us have lost the roadmap to optimal health, especially the kind of health that springs forth when we simply clear a path for it. The fact that one in four American women in the prime of their life is dispensed medication for a mental health condition represents a national crisis.1
Humans have used mind-altering substances to try to dull and deaden pain, misery, sorrow, and suffering since time immemorial, but only in the last few decades have people been persuaded that depression is a disease and that chemical antidepressants are the remedy. This is far from the truth. Many of my patients have been to multiple doctors, bumping up against the hard ceiling of what conventional medicine has to offer. Some have even tried integrative medicine, which aims to combine both traditional medicine (i.e., prescriptions) with alternative treatments (e.g., acupuncture). After all, they are told that there are great natural complements to all the wonders pharmaceutical products have to offer. But the reason they canât find a solution is because nobody has asked why. Why are they unwell? Why are their bodies creating symptoms that manifest as depression? Why didnât they stop to ask this important and obvious question the first time they experienced a flat mood, anxiety, insomnia, and chronic exhaustion?
Before I even get to the answers, let me be the first to tell you that the only path to a real solution is to leave the medical world you know behind. This, the journey I will take you on, is not just about symptom suppression, itâs about health freedom. First let me tell you that I was once a typical doctor, not to mention a typical American who loved pizza, soda, birth control, and ibuprofen. My message is from a personal journey and thousands of hours of research that has compelled me to share the truth about prescription-based care: weâve been duped.
Yes, my entire training was based on a model of disease care that offers patients only one toolâa drugâand never a shot at true wellness. Weâve handed over our health to those who seek to profit from it, and weâve been buying into a paradigm based on the following notions:
Fear is an appropriate response to symptoms.
We need chemicals to feel better.
Doctors know what they are doing.
The body is a machine requiring calibration (via drugs). A little too much of this, too little of that.
I call this collective set of notions the Western Medical Illusion. It sets up a vicious system that ushers you into lifelong customer status, dependent and disempowered.
As you can likely guess by now, I love to rant. But I do so with the best evidence science can offer, and thereâs a lot we know today about the real root causes of depressionâand how to treat the condition safely and successfullyâwithout a prescription pad. If thereâs one lesson I will drive home, itâs this: shed the fear, take back your inner compass, and embrace a commitment to your best self, medication free. Even if you donât already take a prescription drug, I bet you still doubt living the rest of your life prescription free and reliant on your own inner intuition to know whatâs best for you. The idea of supporting your bodyâs innate wisdom may sound quaint at best, or like dangerous hippie woo-woo at worst. From now on, I want you to embrace these new ideas:
Medication treatment comes at a steep cost.
Optimal health is not possible through medication.
Your health is under your control.
Working with lifestyle medicineâsimple everyday habits that donât entail drugsâis a safe and effective way to send the body a signal of safety.
How can I make these statements, and what do I mean by lifestyle medicine? Youâre going to find out in this book, and Iâll be presenting the scientific proof to answer questions you may have and to satisfy the doubtful. When I meet a woman and her family, I speak about how to reverse her anxiety, depression, mania, and even psychosis. We map out the timeline that brought her where she is and identify triggers that often fall under one or more of the following categories: food intolerances or sensitivities, blood sugar imbalances, chemical exposures, thyroid dysfunction, and nutrient deficiency. I forge a partnership with my patient and witness dramatic symptom relief within thirty days. I do this by teaching my patients how they can make simple shifts in their daily habits, starting with the diet. They increase nutrient density, eliminate inflammatory foods, balance blood sugar, and bring themselves closer to food in its ancestral state. Itâs the most powerful way to move the needle, because food is not just fuel. It is information (literally: âit puts the form into your bodyâ), and its potential for healing is a wonder to me, every single day.
Achieving radical wellness takes sending the body the right information and protecting it from aggressive assault. This isnât just about mental health; itâs about how mental health is a manifestation of all that your body is experiencing and your mindâs interpretation of its own safety and power. Itâs also about how symptoms are just the visible rough edges of a gigantic submerged iceberg.
Note that none of these concepts connects with substances in the brain that might be âlow.â If you had to define depression right now, before reading further, chances are youâd say something about it being a âmood disorderâ or âmental illnessâ triggered by a chemical imbalance in the brain that probably needs to be fixed through a medication like Prozac or Zoloft that will lift levels of brain chemicals associated with a good mood. But you would be mistaken.
So many patients today who are being shepherded into the psychiatric medication mill are overdiagnosed, misdiagnosed, or mistreated. Indeed, they have âbrain fog,â changes in metabolism, insomnia, agitation, and anxiety, but for reasons only loosely related to their brain chemicals. They have all the symptoms that are mentioned in a Cymbalta advertisement that tells them to talk to their doctor to see if Cymbalta is right for them. But itâs like putting a bandage over a splinter in the skin that continues to stir inflammation and pain. Itâs absolutely missing an opportunity to remove the splinter and resolve the problem from the source. And itâs an iconic example of how conventional medicine can make grave mistakes, something the pharmaceutical industry is more than happy to encourage.
In holistic medicine, there are no specialties. Itâs all connected. Hereâs a classic case in point: Eva had been taking an antidepressant for two years but wanted to get off it because she was planning to get pregnant. Her doctor advised her not to stop taking the drug, which motivated her to see me. Eva explained that her saga had begun with PMS, featuring a week each month when she was irritable and prone to crying fits. Her doctor prescribed a birth control pill (a common treatment) and soon Eva was feeling even worse, with insomnia, fatigue, low libido, and a generally flat mood dogging her all month long. Thatâs when the doctor added the Wellbutrin to âpick her up,â as he said, and handle her presumed depression. From Evaâs perspective, she felt that the antidepressant helped her energy level, but it had limited benefits in terms of her mood and libido. And if she took it after midnight, her insomnia was exacerbated. She soon became accustomed to feeling stable but suboptimal, and she was convinced that the medication was keeping her afloat.
The good news for Eva was that with careful preparation, she could leave medication behindâand restore her energy, her equilibrium, and her sense of control over her emotions. Step one consisted of some basic diet and exercise changes along with better stress response strategies. Step two involved stopping birth control pills and then testing her hormone levels. Just before her period, she had low cortisol and progesterone, which were likely the cause of the PMS that started her whole problem. Further testing revealed borderline low thyroid function, which may well have been the result of the contraceptivesâand the cause of her increased depressive symptoms.
When Eva was ready to begin tapering off her medication, she did so following my protocol. Even as her brain and body adjusted to not having the antidepressant surging through her system anymore, her energy levels improved, her sleep problems resolved, and her anxiety lifted. Within a year she was healthy, no longer taking any prescriptions, feeling goodâand pregnant.
I require my patients and I implore you to think differently about health-care decisions and consumerism. Part of my motivation in writing this book was to help you develop a new watching, questioning eye that you can bring to every experience. For my patients to be well, I know they will need to approach their health with an extreme commitment to the integrity of their mind and body. Personally, I have no intention of ever returning to a lifestyle that involves pharmaceutical products of any kind, under any circumstances.
Why?
Because we are looking at the body as an intricately woven spiderwebâwhen you yank one area of it, the whole thing moves. And because there is a more powerful way to heal.
Itâs so simple that it could be considered an act of rebellion.
You might think of yourself as averse to conflictâsomeone who wants to keep the peace, keep your head low, and do whatâs recommended. To be healthy in todayâs world, however, you need to access and cultivate a reliance on yourself. And youâre going to do that by first shifting your perspective forever. Look behind the curtain and understand that medicine is not what you think it is. Drug-based medicine makes you sick. I will go so far as to say that hospital care makes you sick; though estimates vary, itâs reasonable to say that hospital care claims tens if not hundreds of thousands of lives annually due to preventable medical mistakes such as wrong diagnoses and medications or surgical errors, infections, and simply screwing up an IV.2 The Cochrane Collaboration, a London-based network of more than 31,000 researchers from more than 130 countries, conducts the worldâs most thorough independent analysis of health-care research. Based on data from the British Medical Journal, the Journal of the American Medical Association, and the Centers for Disease Control, it has found that prescription drugs are the third leading cause of death after heart disease and cancer.3 And when it comes to psychotropic drugs, the Cochrane Collaborationâs conclusions are compellingly uncomfortable. In the words of the Collaborationâs founder, Dr. Peter Gotzsche, âOur citizens would be far better off if we removed all the psychotropic drugs from the market, as doctors are unable to handle them. It is inescapable that their availability creates more harm than good.â4
By and large, doctors are not bad people. They are smart individuals who work hard, investing money, blood, sweat, and tears into their training. But where do doctors get their information? Whom are they told to trust? Have you ever wondered whoâs pulling the strings? Some of us in the medical community are beginning to speak up and to expose the fact that our training and education is, for the most part, bought.
âUnfortunately in the balance between benefits and risks, it is an uncomfortable truth that most drugs do not work in most patients.â5 Before I read this quote in the prestigious British Medical Journal in 2013, I had already begun to explore the evidence that there really isnât much to support the efficacy of most medications and medical interventions, particularly in psychiatry, where suppressed data and industry-funded and ghostwritten papers hide the truth. Another 2013 study published in the equally respected Mayo Clinic Proceedings confirmed that a whopping 40 percent of current medical practice should be thrown out.6 Unfortunately, it takes an average of seventeen years for the data that exposes inefficacy and/or a signal of harm to trickle down into your doctorâs daily routine, a time lag problem that makes medicineâs standard of care evidence-based only in theory and not practice.7 Dr. Richard Horton, the editor in chief of the much-revered Lancet at this...