The Habit Healers

Laurie Marbas, MD, MBA

Welcome to The Habit Healers Podcast—where transformation starts with a single habit. Hosted by Dr. Laurie Marbas, this podcast is for anyone ready to break free from chronic health struggles, rewire their habits, and create lasting healing. Through powerful stories, science-backed strategies, and real-world tools, we dive deep into the micro shifts that lead to massive health transformations. You’ll learn how to heal beyond prescriptions—how to nourish your body, reprogram your mind, and build the habits that make vibrant health effortless. Whether you’re looking to reverse disease, boost energy, or finally make health a way of life, this podcast will show you how. Because true healing isn’t about willpower—it’s about design. And you’re always just one healing habit away. drlauriemarbas.substack.com

  1. Did Your Brain Accidentally Train Itself to Be Anxious?

    4 HRS AGO

    Did Your Brain Accidentally Train Itself to Be Anxious?

    Anxiety isn’t a willpower problem. It’s a habit loop your brain learned, and the thing that actually breaks it is curiosity. In this episode of The Habit Healers Podcast, I walk you through the neuroscience of why chronic worry feels impossible to stop, and why the usual advice of “just push through” or “think positive” tends to fail at the exact moment you need it most. Drawing on the research of neuroscientist and psychiatrist Dr. Jud Brewer at Brown University, I explain how anxiety follows the same trigger, behavior, reward cycle that drives stress eating, phone-checking, and other everyday habits. I’ll share why your prefrontal cortex goes offline under stress, what brain imaging reveals about the posterior cingulate cortex and rumination, and how a simple ten-second practice called the Curiosity Pause can begin to rewire the loop. We also talk about why perimenopause and menopause can make worry feel harder to manage, and when it’s time to bring in professional support for anxiety, panic attacks, or depression. What you’ll learn in this episode: * How the anxiety habit loop forms in the brain and why willpower can’t override it * Why trying harder to stop worrying often makes rumination worse * The four steps of the RAIN technique (Recognize, Allow, Investigate, Note) * How curiosity acts as a “bigger, better offer” for your brain’s reward system * Why women in perimenopause and menopause may notice rising anxiety and worry * When to seek professional help for generalized anxiety disorder or panic Dr. Marbas’s Substack Article:https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/p/did-your-brain-accidentally-trainA Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    13 min
  2. What If You’ve Been Peeling Away the Best Part of Your Asparagus?

    1D AGO

    What If You’ve Been Peeling Away the Best Part of Your Asparagus?

    Subscribe to Chef Martin Oswald’s Healing Kitchen Substack. Right now, across Austria, something is happening that most Americans have never seen. Farmers are pulling thick white asparagus spears out of mounded soil, each one grown entirely in the dark, never touched by sunlight, never given the chance to produce chlorophyll. They are as fat as a thumb and pale as bone. And for the next few weeks, they will dominate menus from Vienna to Munich the way lobster dominates a New England summer. Chef Martin Oswald brought a pile of them to today’s live session, and the first thing he did was hold one up next to his pinky finger. It dwarfed it. These are not the thin green stalks you snap at the grocery store. White asparagus is its own vegetable, really, with a milder flavor, a different nutritional profile, and a texture that can go from tender to woody in the space of a few inches. That texture difference is the whole reason most cooks peel them. The lower portion of a white asparagus spear has a tougher outer layer, and the standard European approach is to strip it off with a peeler before boiling the spears in water spiked with sugar, lemon juice, and bay leaf. It works. But it throws away the part of the vegetable where the minerals are most concentrated. Martin’s argument is simple. The minerals in any vegetable travel from the soil upward through the stem. The highest concentration sits in the outer layers. Peel those away and you are discarding the very thing that makes asparagus worth eating in the first place. So he does not peel. Instead, he borrows a technique from a completely different vegetable. He cooks his asparagus the way you cook onions. Think about a raw onion. It is sharp, almost aggressive on the palate. But cook it slowly in a pan, let it sweat and soften and eventually take on a golden color, and all that harshness transforms into sweetness. The French built an entire soup around this principle. Martin applies the same logic to asparagus. He cuts the spears in half lengthwise, adds just enough olive oil to coat the pan (he estimated about 40 calories’ worth, roughly a third of a tablespoon), and lays them flat side down over medium heat. The key is patience. You are not blasting them with high heat. You are watching for a light golden color on the cut surface, something that takes roughly three to four minutes per side, though Martin does not watch the clock. He watches the pan. “If your pan is hotter, the time is not going to help you,” he told me. When the heat is right, the natural sugars in the asparagus caramelize gently, and the bitterness that lives in the unpeeled skin fades the same way it fades in a slowly cooked onion. There is a word for the first stage of that process, and Martin taught it to us today: “suer,” a French culinary term for sweating an ingredient at low heat until it turns translucent. Push past that stage, let the color deepen to gold, and you cross into caramelization territory, where bitterness gives way to sweetness without ever adding sugar. The restaurants add sugar. Martin does not need to. This same technique works with green asparagus. In fact, when you do it with green spears, it is called blistered asparagus. And it works on the grill, too, as long as you keep the heat at medium. Crank the grill to high and you are back to bitterness, plus the added problem of charring, which creates the kind of compounds you do not want on your food. Martin also shared a grilling trick worth remembering as the weather warms up. Instead of drizzling oil over the vegetables and watching it drip through the grates and flame up, take a folded paper towel, dip it in oil, and wipe it directly onto the grill grates. The asparagus goes on dry. It does not stick. It does not flame. Your eyebrows survive intact. (I told Martin he might have already lost a few of his. He did not disagree.) Once the asparagus was golden and tender, the session turned into a salad build. Martin tossed pine nuts into the same pan, letting them pick up a light toast. He added strips of radicchio, which wilted and lost much of their raw bitterness from the residual heat. Then came capers, which I pointed out are one of the richest food sources of quercetin, a potent anti-inflammatory compound. He sliced thin strips of organic lemon rind (not zested, but cut with a knife into little ribbons) and tossed those in too. A scatter of fresh parsley. A sprinkle of hemp seeds for protein. The dressing was crushed strawberries with lemon juice. That was it. No added oil in the dressing. The sweetness of the berries balanced the residual bitterness of the asparagus and radicchio, and the capers pulled the whole thing back toward savory. Martin’s philosophy came through clearly in that moment: whatever you cook, you are always looking for balance between sweet, sour, and bitter. The strawberry dressing was not decoration. It was the counterweight that made the dish work. He plated the warm asparagus mixture over a bed of raw white radicchio leaves and tasted it on camera. The verdict: the capers made it. The asparagus was sweet from the early-season harvest and the slow caramelization. The strawberries were almost too sweet on their own, but the capers and lemon rind pulled everything back into balance. For anyone who wants a heartier meal, Martin suggested building a base layer of cooked lentils or a quick white bean hummus (pureed white beans loosened with their own cooking liquid, seasoned simply) and piling the asparagus salad on top. That turns a light appetizer into a full lunch. We also talked about two bonus ingredients worth seeking out. Radicchio, Martin explained, is extraordinary when grilled. Quarter a head, skip the oil entirely, lay the quarters cut-side down on a medium grill, and let them caramelize without burning. The bitterness fades, a rich sweetness develops, and you end up with something that belongs on a summer table. The Italians, he noted, handle radicchio bitterness differently for risotto. They chop the bitter white base fine and cook it into the rice, where the bitterness disappears entirely, then scatter the red leaves on top raw for color. And then there were the stinging nettles. Martin held up a sad-looking bunch and dared me to touch one. I declined. (I have been stung on runs before. It is not fun.) But once blanched or steamed, the sting disappears immediately, and what you are left with is a green that tastes and cooks like spinach. Martin’s move is to puree blanched nettles into a potato-leek-fennel soup. The color is stunning, the flavor is clean, and the whole thing is built from ingredients you can forage or find at a farmers’ market. If stinging nettles are not available where you live, spinach with garlic makes a fine substitute in the same soup. One more thing about asparagus that caught my attention today. Asparagus is rich in inulin, a type of fermentable fiber that functions similarly to resistant starch. It travels through the digestive system intact until it reaches the colon, where it feeds beneficial gut bacteria. So when Martin talks about keeping the skin on for the minerals, you are also keeping all that prebiotic fiber intact. That is a lot of nutritional value to throw in the compost bin. There was a larger point underneath all the cooking today, and Martin made it without belaboring it. In Europe, people still go out and pick stinging nettles in the spring. They forage for wild asparagus and elderflowers and mushrooms. It is not trendy or unusual. It is just what you do when the season turns. Somewhere along the way, most of us stopped paying attention to what is growing right outside. Maybe the asparagus is a good place to start paying attention again. Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    37 min
  3. If Your Labs Are Creeping, Read This Before Your Next Prescription

    2D AGO

    If Your Labs Are Creeping, Read This Before Your Next Prescription

    Can the same plate of food lower your blood sugar, reduce your cholesterol, and bring down your blood pressure? If your doctor has flagged rising glucose, elevated LDL, and borderline blood pressure, you might be dealing with one problem showing up in three places: insulin resistance. On this episode of The Habit Healers Podcast, I’m Dr. Laurie Marbas, and I’m walking you through the cardiometabolic diet, an eight-pillar food framework built on randomized trials and large-scale research. Instead of treating each number with a separate plan, this approach targets the shared metabolic root that connects them all. I’ll explain how insulin resistance damages your arteries through the same signaling failure that raises your fasting glucose, why post-meal blood sugar spikes may cause more vascular harm than consistently elevated levels, and how specific foods can restore what’s broken. From the meal sequencing trick that costs nothing to the single seed that rivals blood pressure medication in clinical trials, each pillar hits a different part of the same system, and they stack. What you’ll learn in this episode: * How insulin resistance drives high blood sugar, elevated LDL, and high blood pressure through one mechanism * The food order strategy proven to lower post-meal glucose spikes without changing what you eat * Why ground flaxseed may be the most powerful single food for blood pressure and cholesterol * How to stack three types of soluble fiber for maximum LDL and blood sugar reduction * The nitrate-rich vegetables that bypass broken blood vessel signaling to lower blood pressure naturally * Why 30 different plants a week matters more for your gut microbiome than any single dietary label Link To Dr. Marbas’s Substack Article: https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/p/if-your-labs-are-creeping-read-thisA Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    16 min
  4. What Can Three Strangers Do for Your Health?

    APR 24

    What Can Three Strangers Do for Your Health?

    Social isolation raises your risk of dying from any cause by 32%, putting loneliness in the same mortality category as smoking. But the daily habit that fights social disconnection is far smaller than you think. In this episode of The Habit Healers Podcast, I walk you through the research behind what I call the three-stranger habit, and why a few seconds of real human connection each day could be one of the most important things you do for your health. I break down the commuter experiments that proved talking to strangers actually feels good (even though we all predict it won’t), the coffee shop study that showed a brief genuine interaction boosted both mood and sense of belonging, and the neuroscience of why your brain treats a stranger’s smile as a reward. We also go deeper into emerging research on oxytocin, DNA methylation, and biological aging, and what it suggests about social connection as molecular maintenance for your body. This isn’t about becoming an extrovert or filling your calendar with social events. It’s about showing up differently in the moments you’re already in. I’ll give you the exact habit: who to talk to, what to say, and why it works across every personality type. What you’ll learn in this episode: * Why social isolation carries the same health risk as smoking, and what the Surgeon General’s advisory means for you * The three-stranger habit: a simple daily practice to rebuild social connection in under a minute * What commuter and coffee shop experiments reveal about the benefits of talking to strangers * How your brain’s reward system responds to micro-interactions, even with people you’ve never met * The emerging science linking oxytocin, gene expression, and biological aging to social bonds * One question to ask yourself once the stranger habit feels easy is to reconnect with the people who matter most Link to Dr. Marbas Substack Article: https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/p/what-can-three-strangers-do-for-yourA Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    10 min
  5. What If Your Doctor Is Wrong About Aging?

    APR 22

    What If Your Doctor Is Wrong About Aging?

    In this episode, I take a closer look at something most of us accept without question. I feel more tired, I recover more slowly, my numbers start to shift—and I’m told, “that’s just aging.” But what if that explanation is missing the most important part? I break down the science that’s changing how we understand aging entirely. Not as a single, inevitable decline—but as a set of specific biological processes that can be measured, tracked, and in some cases, slowed or even reversed. I walk through the twelve hallmarks of aging—the actual mechanisms happening inside my cells—and what the research says I can do about each one. From inflammation and mitochondrial function to gut health and cellular repair, this isn’t theory anymore. These are processes I can influence with what I do every day. I also explore one of the biggest debates in medicine right now: is aging a disease… or something else entirely? And more importantly, does that distinction even matter for how I live my life? This episode changed the way I think about getting older. Because aging isn’t just something that happens to me—it’s something I’m participating in, whether I realize it or not.Dr. Marbas Substack: https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/ A Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    27 min
  6. What If Ten Habits Could Slow Every Way Your Body Ages?

    APR 17

    What If Ten Habits Could Slow Every Way Your Body Ages?

    Most people trying to do something about aging are working from an incomplete picture. They hear about a supplement worth trying, or a fasting protocol, or a stress management app, and they keep adding items to a list with no clear organizing logic. What they rarely hear is which specific biological changes are happening inside their body right now, and which daily actions actually affect them. In this episode, Dr. Laurie Marbas breaks down the 2023 framework of the Twelve Hallmarks of Aging, the biological processes that drive every age-related decline we can measure. From DNA damage to cellular recycling, these hallmarks are the “why” behind getting older. But more importantly, they are points of entry that respond to what you do each day. We are counting down the ten habits that cover all twelve of these processes. Not most of them. All of them. In this episode, we discuss: * The “Zombie Cell” Secret: Why your waist measurement is a hidden aging accelerator and a better indicator of health than the scale. * The Power of Diversity: Why eating 30 different plants a week is the magic number for your gut microbiome. * Metabolic Timing: Why a 15-minute walk after your largest meal is the single most impactful way to calibrate your body’s “growth vs. repair” switch. * The Brain’s Nightly Rinse: The specific fluid-based cleaning system that only activates during deep sleep to flush out waste proteins. * The Ultimate Intervention: Why exercise targets more aging hallmarks (seven in total) than any other single action. Dr. Laurie Marbas also introduces the “Tiny Healing Habit” approach, the smallest effective starting points for each protocol to help you build a sustainable routine that actually shifts your biology. Stop guessing and start targeting the science of you.Link Dr. Marbas Substack Article: https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/p/what-if-ten-habits-could-slow-every A Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    29 min
  7. What If the Secret to Weight Loss Was Already in Your Pantry?

    APR 15

    What If the Secret to Weight Loss Was Already in Your Pantry?

    Every Wednesday at 10 AM we go live. Join next week’s Substack Live with Chef Martin Oswald here. Half a cup of red lentils costs about thirty cents. That’s what Chef Martin Oswald held up on our live today before turning it into something I’d never seen before, a homemade lentil tofu. He didn’t need any special equipment or hard-to-find ingredients. Just lentils, water, a blender, and a stockpot. Martin and I have known each other for over a decade now. We first met in 2012 at a dinner in Colorado hosted by another physician, where Martin was catering and sharing the story of his shift toward health-focused cooking at his restaurant in Aspen. We became fast friends, did a research project together, appeared on local TV, and eventually built what is now the Habit Healers community. He lives in Austria and I’m in the U.S., but every week we show up on screen together because the combination of clinical science and real culinary skill is something neither of us can do alone. Today’s session was built around a single question. How do you make a meal that’s low in calories, high in protein, and actually satisfying enough that you don’t raid the kitchen two hours later? That question matters more than most people realize. Why Protein and Satiety Matter During Weight Loss When you’re losing weight, whether through caloric restriction or with the help of a GLP-1 medication, the body doesn’t just burn fat. It can break down muscle, too. And muscle is your metabolic furnace, the thing that keeps your resting energy expenditure high and protects against frailty as you age. The way you prevent that comes down to two things. You need adequate protein intake, and you need resistance training. Even twice a week is enough on the resistance side. But the protein piece trips people up, especially when appetite drops on GLP-1 medications. If you’re eating less overall, every meal has to carry more nutritional weight. That means whole foods instead of processed fillers, and it means learning how to cook meals that deliver real protein, fiber, and micronutrients in a form your body can use. This is also where visceral fat enters the picture. That fat sitting around your organs is an active endocrine organ in its own right, pumping out inflammatory molecules that travel through the portal vein straight to the liver. Over time, the liver becomes inflamed and fat-infiltrated, and it stops responding to insulin the way it should. Blood sugar starts creeping up, the pancreas compensates by working harder, and eventually you’re looking at a type 2 diabetes diagnosis. Losing visceral fat reverses a lot of that damage. But the process has to be done in a way that preserves muscle and provides real nutrition, which brings us back to Martin’s kitchen. The Lentil Tofu Martin has been developing this recipe across five different lentil varieties, and he recommends starting with red lentils because they’re the most affordable and the most forgiving. The method is simple, even if the result looks like something from a professional kitchen. Soak half a cup of red lentils overnight. Don’t cook them. Just let them sit in water. The next day, drain and rinse them, then add the soaked lentils to a high-powered blender with fresh water (or vegetable stock for more flavor) and blend until very smooth. Pour the mixture into a stockpot and bring it to a boil on high heat, stirring constantly with a flat metal spatula. This part is critical because if you stop stirring, the bottom burns. As it cooks over the next ten to fifteen minutes, the proteins begin to coagulate and the mixture thickens to the consistency of a thick soup. Once it reaches that point, pour it into glass containers about halfway full. Tap them on the counter to release air bubbles. Let the containers cool to room temperature before putting them in the fridge, because the condensation from hot liquid will cause problems. Then refrigerate overnight. By morning, you have a homemade lentil tofu. Martin showed us the finished product on camera, and the texture was remarkable. Firm enough to slice but soft enough to melt in a soup. And because you control the entire process, you can season the liquid however you want before it sets. Think curry powder, smoked paprika, Cajun spice, miso, or anything that fits the meal you’re building. The flavor possibilities are wide open. Compared to store-bought tofu, Martin’s version is significantly cheaper, fully customizable, and made from ingredients you can see and name. The Carbohydrate Ladder Martin pulled out a visual demonstration today that I think is worth bookmarking. He lined up his pantry staples from highest to lowest carbohydrate content per 100 grams and walked through each one. White rice and sushi rice sit at the top with 78 grams of carbohydrates per 100-gram serving. Black rice and red rice are close behind at around 72 to 78 grams. Barley and buckwheat come in at 71, soba noodles drop to 66, and freekeh (roasted green wheat berries) and quinoa land at 64. Amaranth is slightly lower. Then comes the real shift. Lentils drop to around 40 grams of carbohydrates per 100 grams. Chickpeas and white beans, including gigante beans, fall to 15 to 17 grams. Lupine beans win the legume category at just 13 grams, with high protein and high fiber on top of that. I put lupini bean flakes in my oatmeal every morning and Martin says they can be used in everything from lasagna to bolognese. At the very bottom of the ladder sit konjac noodles, which have zero carbohydrates. Martin doesn’t recommend them as a permanent staple because they lack the nutrition of whole legumes, but he sees them as a useful transitional tool for someone who’s just starting to get their blood sugar under control. The point of this exercise isn’t that rice is bad. Martin still cooks with it for certain dishes. But if you’re managing blood sugar, knowing where your staples fall on this ladder lets you make smarter swaps without giving up satisfaction. And fiber plays a major role in all of this. When you eat whole grains and legumes with their fiber intact, glucose absorption slows down. Your blood sugar rises more gently and your gut microbiome gets the fuel it needs. Stripped grains like white rice don’t offer that same buffer. The Thai Soup That Ties It All Together Martin’s final demo was a Thai-style broth soup designed to be ultra-low calorie but genuinely filling. The base was a fragrant broth made with kaffir lime leaf, galangal, ginger, red Thai curry paste, lemongrass, and vegetable stock. He built it strong on purpose, because the rest of the bowl is intentionally light. Into the broth went konjac noodles, sautéed vegetables like shiitake mushrooms, leeks, broccoli, and red pepper, and cubes of his homemade lentil tofu. The reason this works comes down to viscosity. A clear broth on its own can taste good, but it doesn’t fill you up. You finish the bowl and you’re still hungry. When you add silken tofu, or Martin’s lentil version, it changes the body of the soup. It creates a creamy, substantial mouth feel that your brain registers as a real meal, giving you protein and fiber and volume without the caloric load. There’s a timing benefit too. Because soup takes longer to eat than most meals, your satiety hormones have a chance to kick in. It takes about twenty minutes for your stomach to signal your brain that food is arriving, and a bowl of broth soup naturally slows you down enough for that signal to land. Martin pointed to Japanese miso soup as the original model for this approach. A culture with roughly 5% obesity rates has been doing this for generations, building meals around light broth, silken tofu, vegetables, and slow eating. A Quick Note on Veggie Stock One of our viewers, David, asked whether you can make stock from vegetable peelings and end bits. Martin said absolutely, and that’s what he does at home. He keeps a pot going with trimmings, adds bay leaf, thyme, coriander seed, a dried porcini or shiitake mushroom for umami depth, tomato paste or a whole tomato, and cabbage as the backbone. If you don’t have time to make your own, a clean veggie stock powder with no MSG, no added sodium, and no oil works as a shortcut. The Habit Healers Community with Chef Martin If today’s session is the kind of content that makes you think differently about your kitchen, I want you to know this is what we do every single week inside the Habit Healers community on Skool. I run live coaching every Tuesday at 4 PM Pacific for ninety minutes. We work through one science-backed concept, I give one small habit challenge for the week, and we come back together to talk about what worked and what needs adjusting. Real coaching, real accountability, and a group of people who are actually showing up. Martin has an entire cooking school inside the community with videos, recipes, and the kind of practical kitchen wisdom you saw today. If you are looking for a welcoming community to take one habit at a time, one week at a time, join us here. Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    51 min
  8. What If the Most Important Thing About Your Meal Isn’t What You Eat, But How You Eat It?

    APR 15

    What If the Most Important Thing About Your Meal Isn’t What You Eat, But How You Eat It?

    In this episode, I explore a small shift that completely changed how I think about meals. Same plate. Same food. Same calories. But depending on what I eat first, my body responds in a completely different way. I walk through the science behind why starting with protein and fiber—like vegetables, beans, or lentils—can significantly reduce blood sugar spikes, sometimes to a degree that rivals medication. And the best part? I don’t have to give up the foods I enjoy. I just change the sequence. I break down what’s actually happening inside my body—from the physical effects of fiber slowing glucose absorption, to the hormonal response driven by GLP-1 (the same pathway targeted by popular weight-loss drugs). I also unpack some of the newer, more surprising science around gut hormones like GIP, and why the old “good vs. bad food” narrative doesn’t hold up. Most importantly, I make this practical. What does this look like at breakfast? At dinner? What do I do when everything is mixed together on one plate? This episode isn’t about restriction or perfection. It’s about using biology to my advantage—with one simple habit I can start today. Same food. Different order. A completely different outcome. Dr. Marbas Substack: https://drlauriemarbas.substack.com/ A Big Thank You To Our Sponsors: If you want the best supplement to help you on your plant-based journey, you have to try Complement: https://lovecomplement.com/?aff=62 Get full access to The Habit Healers at drlauriemarbas.substack.com/subscribe

    11 min
4.5
out of 5
13 Ratings

About

Welcome to The Habit Healers Podcast—where transformation starts with a single habit. Hosted by Dr. Laurie Marbas, this podcast is for anyone ready to break free from chronic health struggles, rewire their habits, and create lasting healing. Through powerful stories, science-backed strategies, and real-world tools, we dive deep into the micro shifts that lead to massive health transformations. You’ll learn how to heal beyond prescriptions—how to nourish your body, reprogram your mind, and build the habits that make vibrant health effortless. Whether you’re looking to reverse disease, boost energy, or finally make health a way of life, this podcast will show you how. Because true healing isn’t about willpower—it’s about design. And you’re always just one healing habit away. drlauriemarbas.substack.com

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