How Your Gut Microbiome Powers Your Daily Energy
Most women blame their schedule for their exhaustion. Science is pointing somewhere else entirely.
The connection between gut health and energy is one of the most underappreciated stories in women's wellness. And the research is finally catching up to what many women already feel intuitively: when the gut is off, everything is off.
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Reading’s great, but sometimes it’s nice to just listen in. So we turned today’s blog into a conversation. Our two AI sidekicks, Max and Chloe, break down today’s blog so you can listen on the go!
Your Gut Bacteria Are Literally Making Your Energy
Here's something most people don't realize: your gut bacteria aren't just passive passengers along for the ride. They're actively producing compounds that your body uses as fuel.
When you eat fiber—vegetables, fruit, whole grains—your gut bacteria ferment it and produce short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), primarily acetate, propionate, and butyrate. A landmark 2025 study published in Cell by Stanford researchers quantified just how meaningful this is: SCFAs from gut fermentation can account for up to 10% of total daily energy in people eating fiber-rich diets. The human body absorbs more than 90% of what's produced. These aren't trace amounts — they're a genuine fuel source.
Butyrate, in particular, is the primary energy source for the cells lining your colon. Think of it as premium gasoline for your gut lining. Without it, the barrier weakens. But SCFAs also travel through the bloodstream to influence your mitochondria, the tiny power plants inside almost every cell in your body, essentially telling them to run more efficiently and produce more energy.
When your gut bacteria aren't thriving, SCFA production drops, and your cells are left running on outdated software. You feel it as brain fog, fatigue, and that constant need for more caffeine just to function.
The Leaky Gut–Energy Drain Nobody's Talking About
Your intestinal lining is essentially airport security: good stuff gets through, bad stuff gets stopped. But when that lining becomes compromised, a condition commonly called leaky gut, or increased intestinal permeability, the security system breaks down.
When undigested food particles and bacterial byproducts slip through into the bloodstream, your immune system mounts a defense. That response requires enormous amounts of energy.
A 2024 review published in PMC documents how this cycle of dysbiosis → barrier damage → systemic inflammation is linked to conditions ranging from fatigue and brain fog to metabolic disorders and autoimmune conditions.
Chronic low-grade inflammation is like having a dozen apps running in the background of your phone at all times,constantly draining your battery, even when you're not actively using them.
This is why supporting your gut lining isn't just about digestion. It's about energy management.
What This Means Specifically for Women in Perimenopause
There's a reason so many women in their late 30s and 40s suddenly feel like their body has betrayed them. It's not just hormones. It's that hormones and gut health are deeply intertwined — and both are shifting at the same time.
A 2025 review in Frontiers in Endocrinology confirms that as estrogen declines during perimenopause, gut microbiome diversity drops alongside it. Beneficial bacteria like Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium — key producers of SCFAs — decrease, while less helpful bacteria increase. Research published in the International Journal of Women's Health further notes that declining estrogen may also lead to increased gut barrier permeability, setting off the very inflammatory cascade that drains energy.
In January 2025, ZOE scientists presented findings from a study of 70,399 peri- and postmenopausal women — the first of its kind to directly link menopause symptoms to gut microbiome quality. Women with poorer gut health reported worse fatigue, brain fog, and vasomotor symptoms. The gut isn't just a bystander during perimenopause. It's a central player.
The Iron Connection: When Gut Health Steals Your Oxygen
Here's a loop that doesn't get nearly enough attention. Iron absorption happens in your small intestine. If your gut lining is compromised or inflamed, even a diet rich in iron won't deliver adequate amounts to your cells. Without sufficient iron, your body can't produce hemoglobin efficiently — and hemoglobin is what carries oxygen to every cell in your body. Cells need oxygen to produce energy.
A 2024 meta-analysis reinforces that iron deficiency is often linked to gut health issues — it's not always a matter of not eating enough iron. Sometimes your gut simply isn't absorbing it. Poor gut health → poor iron absorption → low ferritin → fatigue and brain fog. No amount of coffee is going to break that cycle.
What You Can Do: Building the Infrastructure for Sustainable Energy
There's no single fix here, but there is a clear framework, one that works with your biology rather than against it.
Prioritize fiber diversity. The more varied your fiber sources (vegetables, fruits, legumes, whole grains) the more diverse your gut bacteria, and the more robust your SCFA production. Aim to eat across 30 different plant foods per week. It sounds like a lot, but herbs, spices, nuts, and seeds all count.
Support your gut lining with collagen. Collagen is the structural scaffolding of your intestinal barrier. Research published on PMC shows collagen peptides may help maintain gut barrier integrity and reduce permeability. Bone broth, slow-cooked meats with connective tissue, and organ meats like beef intestine are particularly rich sources.
Use soothing botanicals when needed. Herbs like slippery elm, marshmallow root, and yarrow have a long history of calming gut inflammation and protecting the mucosal lining — and modern research is beginning to validate what traditional medicine has long known. These aren't aggressive interventions; they're supportive allies.
Don't forget absorption enhancers. Even the cleanest diet falls short if your body can't absorb what you're eating. Black pepper extract (piperine) has been well-documented to increase bioavailability of numerous nutrients by slowing metabolic processes that would otherwise excrete them too quickly. A little goes a long way.
The Bottom Line
Sustainable energy — the kind that carries you through the day without a crash — doesn't come from caffeine or willpower. It comes from cellular infrastructure. Your gut is the foundation of that infrastructure. When it's functioning well, your bacteria produce fuel for your cells, your immune system isn't in constant firefighting mode, and the nutrients you eat actually make it where they're needed.
Coffee masks the problem. Addressing the gut solves it.
💡 Key Takeaways
Gut bacteria produce short-chain fatty acids that are a direct, measurable source of cellular energy backed by real science.
A compromised gut lining triggers chronic low-grade inflammation that silently drains energy reserves all day long.
During perimenopause, declining estrogen reduces gut microbiome diversity, making gut health especially critical for women in midlife.
Iron deficiency fatigue is often a gut absorption problem, not just a dietary one. Fix the gut, fix the loop.
Fiber, collagen, and botanical support give the gut the raw materials it needs to build steady, sustainable energy.
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(AI-generated conversation and transcript)
Your_Gut_Microbiome_Powers_Your_Daily_Energy
[00:00:00] Chloe: You know that, um, that specific feeling, right?
[00:00:03] Max: Oh, I know exactly what that,
[00:00:04] Chloe: well, it's like two three 0:00 PM You've had your morning coffee. Honestly, let's be real. You've probably had a second one around 11
[00:00:10] Max: minimum,
[00:00:10] Chloe: right? And you slept okay and not great, but you know, not terrible either, but you are just completely done,
[00:00:17] Max: just wiped out.
[00:00:18] Chloe: Yeah. And I don't mean the, uh, the, I could use a 20 minute power nap kind of done. I'm talking about that heavy lead blanket sensation, or your brain just feels like it is wading through wet cement.
[00:00:30] Max: It is the universal modern condition, isn't it?
[00:00:32] Chloe: It really is. You try to push through it, you grab a sugary snack, or maybe you just sit there and stare blankly at your inbox,
[00:00:38] Max: which never helps.
[00:00:38] Chloe: Never. It's like pouring water into a bucket that has a massive hole in the bottom, and I think for the longest time, the advice we get for this is just stuck on a loop.
[00:00:48] Max: Go to bed earlier. Manage your stress.
[00:00:50] Chloe: Exactly. Manage your stress, whatever that actually means in the real world. Or check your thyroid
[00:00:55] Max: and look, those are valid points.
[00:00:57] Essential even.
[00:00:58] Chloe: Hmm.
[00:00:58] Max: But for a lot of people listening [00:01:00] right now, they've done all that. They've bought the blackout curtains,
[00:01:02] Chloe: they're meditating, their blood work looks perfectly normal and they are still exhausted. So what if we've been looking in the wrong place entirely? What if the answer isn't in your calendar and it, uh, it isn't in your sleep tracker?
[00:01:16] What if the actual battery that powers your life is located somewhere completely different, specifically in your gut?
[00:01:23] Max: That is exactly where our source material is taking us today. And I have to say, it's a bit of a paradigm shift for how we understand human biology.
[00:01:31] Chloe: It really is. So our mission for this deep dive is to explore that exact biological link
[00:01:36] Max: because we usually think of the gut as just plumbing.
[00:01:39] Chloe: Just pipes. Food goes in, nutrients get pulled out. Waste goes away.
[00:01:43] Max: Exactly. But the research we have in front of us today is specifically some landmark studies from 2024 and 2025 is Recategorize the gut. Entirely. It's not just plumbing, it is an active energy production facility,
[00:01:56] Chloe: an energy production facility, which is a massive claim.
[00:01:59] So we're gonna break [00:02:00] that down and we've got a stack of research here, including a massive data set from ZOE and papers from Stanford,
[00:02:07] Max: all connecting the microbiome directly to your daily energy levels.
[00:02:11] Chloe: Right. We're gonna talk about how your gut literally creates fuel, how it can drain your battery if things go wrong, and why this is incredibly crucial for anyone navigating perimenopause.
[00:02:22] Max: And we're gonna look at why that extra cup of coffee might actually be masking the problem rather than fixing it.
[00:02:27] Chloe: So let's just start with that production facility concept.
[00:02:30] Max: Mm-hmm.
[00:02:30] Chloe: I think most of us understand the basic math. I eat an apple, my body digests the apple. I get energy. But you're suggesting the bacteria themselves are involved in that manufacturing process?
[00:02:41] Max: They are. They aren't just bystanders,
[00:02:43] Chloe: like they're actually doing the work.
[00:02:44] Max: They are the essential workers in the factory.
[00:02:47] Chloe: Yeah.
[00:02:47] Max: Here's where it gets really interesting. When you eat fiber, so vegetables, fruits, whole grains, your human cells actually can't digest that fiber.
[00:02:58] Chloe: Wait, really?
[00:02:59] Max: Really? [00:03:00] No. We lack the enzymes to break it down so it.
[00:03:03] Passes through the stomach, through the small intestine and lands in the colon, and that is exactly where your gut bacteria are waiting.
[00:03:09] Chloe: Okay, so they're waiting for the leftovers.
[00:03:11] Max: Exactly. They get to work and they ferment that fiber
[00:03:14] Chloe: fermentation, like, uh, like making sourdough or beer, but inside your stomach
[00:03:18] Max: precisely like that.
[00:03:19] It's a metabolic process, and the byproduct of that fermentation is these incredible little molecules called short chain fatty acids, or S CFAs.
[00:03:28] Chloe: Okay. S CFAs.
[00:03:29] Max: Yeah. The big three are acetate, prop, and butyrate. Now listen to this stat from a 2025 study published in cell by researchers at Stanford.
[00:03:38] Chloe: Okay?
[00:03:39] Max: They found that in people eating fiber rich diets, these s CFAs produced by bacteria can account for up to 10% of a person's total daily energy.
[00:03:49] Wait,
[00:03:49] Chloe: hold on. 10%.
[00:03:51] Max: Up to 10%. Yeah.
[00:03:52] Chloe: That seems incredibly high for something that's just happening in the background.
[00:03:56] Max: It is massive. Yeah. Think about your daily energy expenditure. If you're burning, say [00:04:00] 2000 calories a day.
[00:04:01] Chloe: Yeah.
[00:04:01] Max: 200 of those are coming directly from the work of these microscopic organisms.
[00:04:05] Chloe: Wow.
[00:04:06] Max: And the body is incredibly efficient at using this fuel too. We absorb over 90% of what they produce.
[00:04:11] Chloe: So lemme play devil's advocate here for a second. If I'm just ignoring fiber entirely, if I'm living on processed food. Protein bars and takeout. Mm-hmm. I'm basically leaving 10% of my battery charging capacity on the table.
[00:04:24] Max: Exactly. You are running at 90% capacity at best. Right From the jump
[00:04:29] Chloe: that explains so much,
[00:04:30] Max: but it gets even more specific than just raw calories. Take butyrate, for example,
[00:04:36] Chloe: one of the short chain fatty acids you mentioned,
[00:04:38] Max: right. Butyrate acts as a premium gasoline specifically for the cells lining your colon.
[00:04:44] It provides about 70% of their energy needs,
[00:04:46] Chloe: 70%. So if you don't have enough butyrate because you aren't feeding the bacteria fiber,
[00:04:51] Max: those cells are literally starving.
[00:04:53] Chloe: Man, that is wild.
[00:04:55] Max: But it goes way beyond the gut. These CFAs enter your bloodstream and they travel straight to your [00:05:00] mitochondria.
[00:05:00] Chloe: The powerhouse of the cell.
[00:05:02] I remember that much from high school biology.
[00:05:04] Max: The famous powerhouse. Exactly. But here is the nuance that we missed in high school. These fatty acids don't just burn as fuel. They actually act as a signal.
[00:05:14] Chloe: A signal, like an instruction.
[00:05:16] Max: Yes. They basically signal the mitochondria to run more efficiently.
[00:05:20] They tell the power plant to ramp up oxidative phosphorylation.
[00:05:24] Chloe: Okay, so when your bacteria aren't thriving, that signal just drops.
[00:05:27] Max: The signal drops and your cells are left running on what I like to call outdated software.
[00:05:31] Chloe: Outdated software. That makes perfect sense. And you feel that as brain fog sluggishness and that heavy fatigue, we talked about it at the start of the deep dive.
[00:05:40] Max: Absolutely.
[00:05:41] Chloe: It's not just that you lack the calories, it's that the instruction manual for creating energy is just missing pages.
[00:05:47] Max: That's a great way to put it,
[00:05:49] Chloe: but okay. That's the production side of the equation. Our sources today also talk heavily about a massive energy drain.
[00:05:55] Max: Yes. This is the other side of the coin.
[00:05:57] You can be producing energy, but [00:06:00] if you're leaking. You're still gonna be tired.
[00:06:02] Chloe: Great.
[00:06:03] Max: And this brings us to the concept of the intestinal barrier,
[00:06:06] Chloe: the leaky gut. I feel like I see this term literally everywhere on social media right now. Is it a real medical concept or is it just like marketing fluff to sell supplements?
[00:06:16] Max: Oh, it's very real though. Scientifically, we prefer the term increased. Intestinal permeability
[00:06:21] Chloe: rolls right off the tongue.
[00:06:23] Max: I know. But think of your intestinal lining, like airport security.
[00:06:26] Chloe: Okay.
[00:06:27] Max: Its job is to let the good stuff, the nutrients, the water pass through to the gate, which is your bloodstream, but it has to stop the bad stuff.
[00:06:36] Chloe: Mm.
[00:06:37] Max: The toxins undigested food. Particles. Bacteria.
[00:06:40] Chloe: So when that barrier is compromised, the security system fails.
[00:06:45] Max: Exactly. Undigested food and bacterial byproducts just slip right into the bloodstream,
[00:06:49] Chloe: and the body does not like that.
[00:06:50] Max: Not at all. Your immune system is constantly patrolling the bloodstream.
[00:06:54] It sees these intruders and says, whoa. You're not supposed to be here,
[00:06:57] Chloe: right?
[00:06:58] Max: So it launches a defense attack, [00:07:00] and here is the key takeaway for energy. An immune response is expensive,
[00:07:05] Chloe: energetically speaking.
[00:07:06] Max: Exactly. Inflammation costs an absolute fortune.
[00:07:10] Chloe: I love the analogy of the source material used for this.
[00:07:12] It's described chronic low grade inflammation, like having a dozen apps running in the background of your phone.
[00:07:17] Max: Yes. The background apps,
[00:07:19] Chloe: you might not be using them, you might not even know they're open, but they are draining your battery down to 20% by noon.
[00:07:25] Max: It's a perfect metaphor. Yeah, because we only have a limited amount of a TP or energy currency every single day,
[00:07:31] Chloe: right?
[00:07:32] Max: If 30% of that currency is being spent fighting a low grade war in your bloodstream, because your gut barrier is leaky,
[00:07:39] Chloe: that is 30% less energy you have for your brain, your job, your kids,
[00:07:43] Max: precisely. A 2024 review in PMC documented this cycle explicitly dysbiosis leads to barrier damage, which leads to systemic inflammation.
[00:07:54] Chloe: That inflammation is directly linked to fatigue, brain fog, and metabolic disorder. It's
[00:07:59] Max: a direct line
[00:07:59] Chloe: [00:08:00] that puts a whole new spin on unexplained fatigue. You aren't tired because you did too much. You're tired because your body is chronically distracted.
[00:08:07] Max: Distracted and drained.
[00:08:09] Chloe: Now I wanna pivot to a specific group of listeners because the research here is practically screaming for attention.
[00:08:14] Max: Yes. The perimenopause data,
[00:08:16] Chloe: right? If you are a woman in your late thirties or forties and you feel like. Your body has suddenly betrayed you, like the energy crashes harder, the brain fog is way thicker. This next part is absolutely for you.
[00:08:30] Max: This is such a critical intersection, perimenopause, and the gut,
[00:08:33] Chloe: because we usually just blame hormones, right?
[00:08:35] The doctor says it's just your estrogen dropping.
[00:08:37] Max: It is hormones, but it's not just hormones in a vacuum. It's that your hormones and your gut health are shifting simultaneously and they feed off each other.
[00:08:46] Chloe: Okay. How so?
[00:08:47] Max: Well, a 2025 review in Frontiers in endocrinology confirmed that as estrogen declines during perimenopause, the overall diversity of the microbiome drops alongside it.
[00:08:57] Chloe: So as estrogen goes down, the good bacteria, the [00:09:00] workforce we talked about. Yeah, they go down too.
[00:09:01] Max: Yes. Specifically the ones we just talked about.
[00:09:03] Chloe: Okay.
[00:09:03] Max: Lactobacillus and bifidobacteria.
[00:09:05] Chloe: The major SCFA producers.
[00:09:07] Max: Exactly. The energy makers decline and at the exact same time, unhelpful bacteria tend to increase.
[00:09:13] Chloe: Talk about bad timing
[00:09:14] Max: and to make matters even worse. Research in the International Journal of Women's Health Notes that declining estrogen is directly linked to increased barrier permeability.
[00:09:23] Chloe: Oh, so it causes the leaky gut,
[00:09:25] Max: right? Estrogen actually helps keep those tight junctions in your intestinal lining tight.
[00:09:30] Chloe: So let me get this straight. Just as you lose the bacteria that make the energy, your gut becomes leakier, causing you to drain more energy via inflammation.
[00:09:38] Max: It's a double whammy.
[00:09:40] Chloe: That is incredibly unfair.
[00:09:41] Max: It really is, and we have massive data to back this up now. In January, 2025, ZOE Scientists presented findings from a study of over 70,000 peri and postmenopausal women,
[00:09:52] Chloe: 70,000.
[00:09:54] That is a serious data set.
[00:09:55] Max: It's unprecedented. And is the first study of its kind to directly link [00:10:00] menopause symptoms to gut quality.
[00:10:01] Chloe: And what did they find?
[00:10:02] Max: They found that women with poorer gut health reported significantly worse fatigue, worse brain fog, and worse vasomotor symptoms.
[00:10:10] Chloe: Vasomotor meaning hot flashes and night sweats.
[00:10:13] Right,
[00:10:13] Max: exactly. The gut isn't just a bystander during perimenopause. It is a central player in how severe your symptoms are.
[00:10:19] Chloe: That has to be incredibly validating for anyone feeling crazy right now. It means there's a biological mechanism you can actually look at and address.
[00:10:27] Max: Absolutely. It's nodding your head.
[00:10:28] It's in your gut.
[00:10:30] Chloe: But speaking of mechanisms, there is one more we really have to touch on, and I think this is honestly the most surprising one in all the sources. The notes call it The Oxygen Thief.
[00:10:41] Max: Oh, the Iron Connection. This is the one that really connects the dots for people who constantly feel breathless or weak.
[00:10:46] Chloe: Right? And I know so many people, especially women who struggle with low iron, they eat the spinach, they eat the steak, they take the heavy supplements, but their ferritin levels just never budge. Why is that?
[00:10:59] Max: This is the [00:11:00] fascinating part. Iron absorption happens in the small intestine, but the body has a master regulator for iron called hepcidin
[00:11:08] Chloe: hepcidin, okay?
[00:11:09] Max: Think of hepcidin as a gatekeeper when your body is inflamed. Remember that background app inflammation we just discussed?
[00:11:15] Chloe: You have a leaky gut alarm.
[00:11:16] Max: Exactly,
[00:11:17] Chloe: yeah.
[00:11:17] Max: When that alarm is ringing, your liver produces more hepcidin.
[00:11:20] Chloe: And what does hepcidin actually do?
[00:11:22] Max: It locks the door. It physically blocks the channels that allow iron to move from your gut into your blood.
[00:11:28] Chloe: Why would the body do that though? That seems completely counterproductive. If you need iron for energy,
[00:11:33] Max: it's actually a brilliant ancient defense mechanism. You see bacteria love iron.
[00:11:38] Chloe: Mm.
[00:11:39] Max: They need it to grow and replicate.
[00:11:41] Chloe: Oh, I see.
[00:11:41] Max: So when the body senses inflammation, it interprets that as an infection.
[00:11:46] And it tries to starve the potential invaders by hiding the iron. It basically says, Nope, nobody gets any iron until this war is over.
[00:11:54] Chloe: So I could be swallowing an expensive iron pill every morning, but my body has barricaded the door because my [00:12:00] gut is inflamed.
[00:12:00] Max: Exactly. You are literally washing that expensive supplement right down the toilet.
[00:12:05] Chloe: Wow.
[00:12:05] Max: And without iron, you can't produce hemoglobin efficiently. Hemoglobin carries oxygen to your cells, and your cells need oxygen to produce energy.
[00:12:14] Chloe: So the chain reaction is poor gut health leads to inflammation,
[00:12:17] Max: which triggers hepcidin,
[00:12:19] Chloe: which blocks iron absorption, which leads to low oxygen transport
[00:12:22] Max: and low oxygen transport equals bone deep exhaustion.
[00:12:25] Chloe: A 2024 meta-analysis in our source notes reinforced this exactly, stating that iron deficiency is often a gut health issue, not a dietary lack.
[00:12:35] Max: And there was a crucial quote from the expert notes on this. No amount of coffee breaks this cycle.
[00:12:41] Chloe: That is a chilling sentence. No amount of coffee breaks this cycle.
[00:12:44] You literally cannot caffeinate your way out of oxygen deprivation.
[00:12:47] Max: You really can't.
[00:12:48] Chloe: Yeah,
[00:12:48] Max: you're just revving an engine that has absolutely no fuel.
[00:12:51] Chloe: Okay, so we've established that our battery is leaking, our generator is offline, and we aren't getting oxygen. It sounds a bit grim
[00:12:58] Max: a little bit,
[00:12:58] Chloe: but we promised [00:13:00] actionable solutions.
[00:13:01] The source material outlines a framework to rebuild the infrastructure,
[00:13:05] Max: and infrastructure is exactly the right word. There is no magic pill here, but there are four clear steps to rebuild the system.
[00:13:13] Chloe: Step one seems to be the foundation. Fiber diversity.
[00:13:16] Max: Yes. The goal here is to restart that SCFA production.
[00:13:20] We talked about the recommendation is to aim for 30 different plant foods per week.
[00:13:25] Chloe: Okay. I have to be honest, 30 sounds like a lot. I'm thinking about my regular grocery shopping and I get maybe bananas, apples, spinach, carrots. That's four,
[00:13:33] Max: right?
[00:13:34] Chloe: Getting to 30 feels like a part-time job.
[00:13:36] Max: It sounds intimidating until you realize what actually counts.
[00:13:39] It's not just big servings of vegetables. It is anything from a plant. Herbs, spices, nuts, seeds, legumes, they all count toward the 30
[00:13:48] Chloe: wait spices count.
[00:13:49] Max: Absolutely they are packed with polyphenols that feed those good bacteria. So let's say you have morning oatmeal. That's Oats one. Okay. You had cinnamon two.
[00:13:58] Walnuts. [00:14:00] Three blueberries, four, maybe some chia seeds. Five. You just got five points in one bowl.
[00:14:06] Chloe: Oh, okay. That feels much more doable. So the diversity is the key, not necessarily eating a pound of each.
[00:14:10] Max: Right. Different bacteria like different foods. If you want a diverse workforce, you need to offer a diverse menu.
[00:14:16] Chloe: Love that. Okay. Step two is about fixing the leak collagen scaffolding.
[00:14:21] Max: Right? Collagen is essentially the structural glue of your intestinal barrier.
[00:14:25] Chloe: Yeah.
[00:14:26] Max: Research published on PMC shows that specific collagen peptides can help significantly reduce that permeability
[00:14:33] Chloe: and the sources for this. Well, one of them really caught my eye bone broth.
[00:14:37] Sure. Slow cooked meat. Sounds delicious. And then. Beef intestine.
[00:14:43] Max: I know. I know. It's not exactly on the menu. At your local cafe,
[00:14:47] Chloe: I'll have the vanilla latte and a side of trite please.
[00:14:50] Max: But biologically, it makes perfect sense. Mm-hmm. It's the principle of like support, like organ meats, specifically intestine contain the exact amino acid profile.[00:15:00]
[00:15:00] And building blocks needed to repair your own intestine.
[00:15:03] Chloe: Okay, I see the logic,
[00:15:04] Max: but look, if you can't stomach the idea of beef intestine, which is completely fair, bone broth is a fantastic and much more accessible source of those exact same collagen peptides.
[00:15:14] Chloe: I think I'll definitely stick to the bone broth for now, but I respect the commitment to the science.
[00:15:18] Max: Fair enough?
[00:15:19] Chloe: Okay. Step three, soothing botanicals. This is about calming that fire, right.
[00:15:23] Max: Exactly. We need to lower the background inflammation so the hepcidin drops and the iron can actually get in. The source highlights things like slippery elm, marshmallow root, and yaro.
[00:15:34] Chloe: I have to say, these sound like things you'd find in a wizard's apothecary eye of newt and marshmallow root.
[00:15:40] Max: It does sound a bit magical, doesn't it?
[00:15:41] Chloe: Yeah,
[00:15:42] Max: but modern research is strongly validating what traditional medicine has known for centuries.
[00:15:47] Chloe: How do they work?
[00:15:48] Max: These plants produce mucilage. It's a gelatinous substance. When you drink it as a tea or take it as a supplement, it physically coats and soothes the lining of the gut.
[00:15:58] Chloe: Oh, like putting aloe vera on a [00:16:00] sunburn,
[00:16:00] Max: exactly like that. But for your insights, they aren't aggressive pharmaceutical drugs. They are gentle, supportive allies for the tissue.
[00:16:09] Chloe: And finally, step four absorption enhancers, because this is about making sure we actually get the good stuff from what we eat.
[00:16:17] Max: Right. Even a pristine diet falls short if you aren't actually absorbing it. The specific tip here is black pepper extract or piperine.
[00:16:25] Chloe: Piperine.
[00:16:25] Max: Yes. It's incredibly well documented to slow down the metabolic processes that excrete nutrients too quickly. It vastly increases bioavailability.
[00:16:34] Chloe: So fresh cracked pepper isn't just a garnish.
[00:16:37] It's basically a biohack
[00:16:39] Max: in a way. Yes, it helps you hold onto the nutrients long enough to actually use them. It essentially tells the body, wait, don't flush this out yet. We're still using it.
[00:16:47] Chloe: So what does this all mean for the person listening right now who is currently reaching for that third latte we mentioned at the beginning,
[00:16:54] Max: it means we desperately need a philosophy shift, sustainable energy, the [00:17:00] kind that carries you through the entire day without a crash.
[00:17:03] It doesn't come from willpower, and it certainly doesn't come from caffeine,
[00:17:07] Chloe: right?
[00:17:07] Max: It comes from cellular infrastructure. Your gut is the literal foundation of that infrastructure. When it works, you have abundant fuel. When it's broken, you're just running on fumes.
[00:17:18] Chloe: The source material had a really great line that sums it up perfectly.
[00:17:21] Coffee masks the problem, addressing the gut solves it.
[00:17:25] Max: That's the bottom line. You have to fix the engine, not just put a new coat of paint on the car
[00:17:29] Chloe: before we wrap up. You always have a way of leaving us with something to chew on. What's the final thought for today based on these sources?
[00:17:36] Max: Well, thinking back to that 10% energy stat from the Stanford study, it raises a really provocative philosophical question.
[00:17:42] Chloe: Oh, I like these. Lay it on me.
[00:17:44] Max: If up to 10% of our daily energy comes entirely from non-human organisms living inside us, are we truly fueling ourselves or, or are we just maintaining a vehicle for them?
[00:17:56] Chloe: That is slightly terrifying, but also deeply fascinating.
[00:17:59] Max: [00:18:00] Right. And if we started treating our fatigue as a genuine request for repair, like a check engine light
[00:18:05] Chloe: mm-hmm.
[00:18:05] Max: Rather than a weakness or need for more stimulation.
[00:18:09] Chloe: Mm.
[00:18:09] Max: How would our entire approach to daily life change? Maybe that two point 30 nap isn't laziness. Maybe it's mandatory maintenance.
[00:18:16] Chloe: Are we the vehicle or the driver? That is definitely gonna stay with me. Thank you so much for joining us on this deep dive and breaking this all down.
[00:18:22] Max: A pleasure as always.
[00:18:23] Chloe: And to you listening, thanks for being here. Go eat some diverse fiber, maybe swap the third coffee for some bone broth, and we'll see you next time.