Uncommonly Remarkable

Artis L Beatty, OD, MS

Uncommonly Remarkable is a health and wellness show focused on understanding how the body works and how everyday choices shape long-term health. The show is published in two formats: authored monologues that explore core ideas around health, resilience, and human biology, and In Conversation episodes featuring long-form discussions with clinicians, scientists, and founders. Rather than chasing trends, the show focuses on systems, signals, and long-term trajectory. Hosted by Artis Beatty.

  1. Why People Keep Falling Off the Wagon

    6D AGO

    Why People Keep Falling Off the Wagon

    Send us Fan Mail If you have ever tried to change how you eat, how you train, or how you take care of yourself, there is a moment that almost always shows up where it feels like you have stopped or fallen off. In this episode, I look at that moment more closely. Most people interpret it as a break in consistency, but it is often not a break at all. It is part of the pattern. The expectation that consistency should feel smooth, continuous, and controlled does not match how routines actually unfold in real life, where interruptions, shifts in structure, and changes in energy are normal. Over time, the role of novelty becomes more apparent. What initially feels engaging and purposeful becomes familiar, and that familiarity is often misinterpreted as a loss of discipline or motivation, even though it is a natural transition into repetition. From there, it becomes easy to assume that something has gone wrong, when in reality the experience has simply changed. This episode explores why that shift happens, why willpower is often misidentified as the problem, and how routines are shaped not only by intention but also by environment and underlying biological signals. When you look at the full pattern, consistency is not defined by the absence of disruption, but by what continues through it. Key ideas from this episode: Why the feeling of “falling off” is often part of the pattern, not a break from itThe difference between how consistency is expected to feel and how it actually shows upThe role of novelty and why repetition feels different over timeHow boredom and changes in structure are often misinterpretedWhy willpower is often incorrectly identified as the limiting factorThe role of environment in supporting or disrupting routinesThe emerging understanding of how biological signals may influence patterns of behavior••Why consistency includes disruption rather than avoiding it Uncommonly Remarkable℠ is a health and wellness show focused on understanding how the body works and how everyday choices shape long-term health. I’m Artis Beatty, a doctor of optometry and Chief Medical Officer at MyEyeDr. While my professional background informs how I think, the perspectives shared here are my own.

    7 min
  2. You Can’t See Your Own Health Clearly

    MAR 23

    You Can’t See Your Own Health Clearly

    Send us Fan Mail Last time, I talked about how the visual standard for the human body has changed over time, and how what looks strong or healthy today would have looked unusual just a few decades ago. But even if you understand that those standards are distorted, there’s a deeper problem: most people still can’t accurately evaluate their own health. In this episode, I explore why that happens. The tools people rely on—what they see in the mirror, what the scale shows, how they feel day to day—are constantly changing, which makes the signal unstable. At the same time, the reference point people compare themselves to has shifted, often toward highly curated or unrepresentative examples. When both the signal and the reference point are unclear, the evaluation never settles. From there, behavior starts to change. People adjust constantly, respond to short-term feedback, and end up misreading whether what they’re doing is actually working. The result isn’t a lack of effort or discipline. It’s a measurement problem. This episode looks at how that problem develops, and why the signals people rely on most are often the least reliable over time. Uncommonly Remarkable℠ is a health and wellness show focused on understanding how the body works and how everyday choices shape long-term health. I’m Artis Beatty, a doctor of optometry and Chief Medical Officer at MyEyeDr. While my professional background informs how I think, the perspectives shared here are my own.

    6 min
  3. FEB 23

    Protein Isn’t the First Question

    Send us Fan Mail Protein dominates health conversations — but are we focusing on the wrong lever? In this conversation, Carson and I unpack muscle preservation, hormones, fiber, and where peptides actually fit into long-term health. Protein is one of the most talked-about nutrients in modern health culture. But true protein deficiency in the United States is rare — while other foundational elements of health are often overlooked. In this conversation with Carson, we step back from the macro-counting mindset and look at the bigger physiological picture. We discuss: • Why protein deficiency is uncommon — and why fiber deficiency is not • The real drivers of muscle preservation as we age • Resistance training vs. macronutrient obsession • Sleep, endocrine balance, and recovery • The difference between exogenous hormones and peptide stimulation • Growth hormone modulation and long-term risk • Short-term performance vs. long-term healthspan This episode is less about how many grams you’re eating — and more about which levers actually move the needle. If you care about strength, recovery, metabolic health, and longevity, this conversation reframes where your attention might belong. Uncommonly Remarkable℠ is a health and wellness show focused on understanding how the body works and how everyday choices shape long-term health. I’m Artis Beatty, a doctor of optometry and Chief Medical Officer at MyEyeDr. While my professional background informs how I think, the perspectives shared here are my own.

    39 min
5
out of 5
13 Ratings

About

Uncommonly Remarkable is a health and wellness show focused on understanding how the body works and how everyday choices shape long-term health. The show is published in two formats: authored monologues that explore core ideas around health, resilience, and human biology, and In Conversation episodes featuring long-form discussions with clinicians, scientists, and founders. Rather than chasing trends, the show focuses on systems, signals, and long-term trajectory. Hosted by Artis Beatty.