Boost Your Brainpower: Prevent Dementia & Skyrocket IQ

Peter Rogers is a Stanford, Northwestern, Harvard educated MD, expert for improving performance in school, sports, and health. He was a Stanford Athlete of the Year & consistently scores no less than 99% on his medical board exams.

To raise your IQ and to prevent dementia he recommends:

His new book is:

Poor man’s way to prevent dementia & raise IQ: How to keep your brain & your boner https://a.co/d/06CIK9P

To sample, you can listen to audible book previews here, or watch videos at you tube channel “Peter Rogers MD,” with 85 videos as of January 2022.

The way to become great at most things is study what the experts do, and then apply this to yourself.

The average chump looks for the “standard” way. The great achiever looks for the “best” way.

Why settle for the way of the 50th percentile, when you can take the path of the 99.999th percentile?

High school varsity athlete starters are 99% in performance. To excel at the college level 99.9 or 99.99% performance. Pro 99.999%.

To achieve excellence it helps to pursue perfection. Lots of performance secrets are discovered in studying the difference between 99 and 99.999% level performance.

By aiming for optimal performance, you usually get A level performance.

Most students focus on “grades” and they end up frustrated with B’s and C’s. Best students focus on “learning,” and the grades take care of themselves.

If you want to get an A+ in biology, yes of course, you need to memorize stuff; everyone does that. You should explore what it’s like to become a biologist. When you tell yourself that you might want to become a biologist, you remember more. Talk to people who know the subject. Read about controversies in the field. Go birdwatching.

It’s like learning Spanish. If you just memorize grammar questions, you will never learn Spanish. If you try to learn how to understand the language, by reading bilingual fairy tales, listening to self help audiobooks, or converse with a friend; this will seem like a lot of work at first. However, you will acquire the language, and dominate the subject. You will far surpass all the other students.

Imagine you are attracted to a lady, and you call your friend to talk about her; you describe how she looks, how she talks, how she interacts with others, how she thinks.

Try to feel that kind of emotional attraction to a science class, and you will be great at it!

Best students have conversations about topic, and can articulate nuance.

Average students just memorize for tests and never develop deep understanding or ability to converse.

Fast ways to improve life for yourself or someone you care about:

1. Great study skills are worth 30 IQ points for academic performance. It’s easy to increase IQ if you focus on the individual components.

2. We are smartest in the morning because the glymphatic system cleans our brains at night. Neurons pump out their waste products like Victorians emptying their chamber pots. Blood brain barrier permeability is increased and CSF rinses away the waste. Ghrelin also makes you smarter. A hungry animal needs to be smart to find food.

3. We are stupidest at night after a big dinner. A well fed animal does not need to be smart.

4. Exercise, sleep, time management, dedicated effort and plant based diet improve cognitive performance.

5. The best fuel is starches because takes time for gut to remove fiber which leads to a GRADUAL absorption of glucose. Keeps blood glucose in normal range for a prolonged time so you feel good; energetic and mentally sharp. Starches include oatmeal, potatoes, sweet potatoes, rice, beans, whole grain bread, whole grain cereal, squash.

6. Spunk and bite me is just a warm up. Advanced writing skills include rhetoric, understanding joke anatomy, punctuation pacing, phonetic features, metaphor, seduction, sentence variety. Only 1 in 10,000 persons knows how to write well.

7. Secret of foreign language learning is communication, not grammar. No one learns L2 from a grammar approach.

8. Best weight lifting exercises are high rep squats (like Tom Platz) with safety squat bar in a squat rack. The high reps optimizes use of ATP, creatine, anaerobic glycolysis and muscle glycogen. Getting older does not have to mean fatter, weaker and stupider.

9. Vegan diet optimizes bodyweight, cognitive function and potency and prevents diabetes and atherosclerosis (heart attacks, strokes, degenerative disc disease, ischemic spine disease, vascular cognitive impairment, HTN). Super agers = plant based diet, daily exercise, help others…

10. Sweet foods like bananas and beet juice are good for a preworkout meal before lifting weights. However, sweets tend to lead to rebound hypoglycemia which the body senses as starvation and releases triglycerides (fats) into the blood. Cognitive performance is impaired. Persons often respond by drinking caffiene and eating more sweets leading to a roller coaster blood glucose curve resulting in obesity. Other than for preworkout meal, sweets should be avoided.

Students should be trained in academics like athletes are trained in their sport and performance on standardized tests is an indicator of how well an academic athlete is trained.

“Straight A at Stanford and on to Harvard” is relatively unique in that it helps you to develop the skills of learning and thinking. Methods for increasing the speed of learning and retention of information are discussed.

Peter started out as one of the worst students in all his classes at Stanford and went on to become one of the best. He studied the methods of the best students,read all the books on memory and learning techniques and developed his own methods.

In this book, he summarizes 30 years of experience in academic performance optimization.

Peter was recruited to Stanford as an athlete and then got injured and recycled himself into becoming a great student. His coaches were the World and Olympic Champion Schultz brothers, Mark and Dave who are featured in the new movie Foxcatcher.

Peter analyzed what makes athletes great and then adapted this to academics. Dr. Rogers is also a neuroradiologist and has incorporated his knowledge of neurophysiology into optimizing academic performance.

Peter earned the Student Athlete of the Year Award as a college student at Stanford and then went on to earn 99% board scores while at the University of Illinois Medical School and again 99% while a resident at Northwestern.

He then did an imaging guided surgery (interventional radiology) fellowship at Harvard and a neuroradiology fellowship at Rush.

He has been diligently studying the science of learning, memory, brain processing speed, teaching, nutrition, and performance optimization for the past 25 years.

Each individual method makes you a a little bit better student, but in aggregate, they make you a much better student.

Dr. Rogers clinical work and teaching includes neuroscience, atherosclerosis, prevention of dementia, treatment of back pain, nutrition, weight loss, and optimization of cognitive performance and of athletic fitness.

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Day 284 of Year 9 Low-SOS Vegan Plan

EXERCISE:
* Jog 5k outdoors (pre-meal)
* Lift (pull day @ home on total gym, post-meal)
* Vibration platform standing w/ squats

WATER:
(2) Ă— (32) = 64 oz (+)

EATS:
* rolled oats & grapenuts simmered in water w/ fresh pomegranate & splash of almond milk
* Ezekiel sprouted grain toast w/ combo burger, single-ingredient unsweetened cherry preserve w/ McDougall fatfree corn butter
* 2 leftover baked potatoes topped w/ bbq’d jackfruit (2nd recipe at link) & mushrooms
* steamed carrots & brussel sprouts w/ garlic powder & 3 raw almonds


… SUN HAS SET …

How a Plant-Based Diet Helped Beat Stage 4 Cancer: Dr. Ruth Heidrich’s Story

Discover the inspiring journey of Dr. Ruth Heidrich, an 89-year-old cancer conqueror, celebrated Ironman triathlete, and whole food plant-based diet advocate, in this enlightening podcast episode. Diagnosed with stage four breast cancer at 47, Dr. Ruth defied conventional medical treatments, choosing instead a path less traveled. Embracing a whole food plant-based diet, she not only achieved remission but also propelled herself into a world of athletic triumphs, becoming the first vegan to complete the Ironman Triathlon and setting multiple world records. 

In this episode, Dr. Ruth shares her compelling story, from the shocking cancer diagnosis to her struggles and eventual victory over breast implant illness. She delves into the transformative power of her dietary choices, which played a pivotal role in her recovery and exceptional athletic performance. Her daily diet, rich in fruits, vegetables, seeds, and nuts, underscores the profound impact of nutrition on health and well-being. Join us as we explore Dr. Ruth’s remarkable resilience and dedication, which have not only reshaped her life but also offered invaluable insights into the benefits of a plant-based lifestyle. Whether you’re seeking motivation for a healthier life or curious about the impact of diet on chronic diseases, this episode is a treasure trove of wisdom and inspiration. 

Day 283 of Year 9 Low-SOS Vegan Plan

BOUGHT THESE VEGGIES FROM COSTCO

EXERCISE:
* Lift (leg day @ gym, pre-meal)
* 45 minutes on mini-trampoline/vibration-platform squat combo

WATER:
(2) Ă— (32) = 64 oz (+)

EATS:
* rolled oats & some grapenuts cooked in water, then added pomegranate & almond milk
* raw Sweet Kale & Mediterranean Crunch Chopped salads (broccoli, cabbage, kale, chicory, brussel sprouts, romaine, cauliflower, red cabbage, celery, carrots) w/ tomato & best vegan ranch dressing made w/ soy-almond yogurt & no tahini!
* baked potato w/ cabbage, mushrooms, few dollops of the best ranch, bbq’d (airfried)  soycurls, steamed carrots, broccoli & cauliflower
* fresh sliced apple & some fresh cherries

… SUN HAS SET …

* open-faced combo burger on one Ezekiel toast w/ single-ingredient unsweetened cherry preserve w/ McDougall corn butter

Day 282 of Year 9 Low-SOS Vegan Plan

EXERCISE:
* Lift (push day @ gym, post-meal)
* Tested new vibration platform 10 minutes

WATER:
(2) Ă— (32) = 64 oz (+)

EATS:
* grapenuts w/ pomegranate & almond milk
* leftover Moroccan stew (w/ sweet & white potatoes, garbanzo & red lentil beans, onion, garlic, brussel sprouts, red cabbage, Ethiopian seasoning, fresh lemon juice w/ added pinto & white beans, sauerkraut & edamame), served w/ multi-grain sourdough toast (dry)
* sliced apple w/ unflavored dairy-free yogurt
* leftover salsa-potatoes reheated in waffle iron served w/ mustard/ketchup dip
* steamed broccoli & cauliflower w/ low sodium chili-con-limĂłn

… SUN HAS SET …

* celery stick

Day 281 of Year 9 Low-SOS Vegan Plan

EXERCISE:
* Jog 5k outdoors (pre-meal)
* Jog 20 minutes to gym (post-meal)
* Lift (leg day @ gym)
* Various types of squats @ home

WATER:
(2) Ă— (32) = 64 oz (+)

EATS:
* fresh sliced orchard apple dipped in unsweetened dairyfree yogurt
* grapenuts w/ blueberries & almond milk (very filling)
* potato tacos w/ side of saltfree pinto beans & steamed brussel sprouts sprinkled w/ low sodium chili con limĂłn
* rolled oats w/ pomegranate, splash of almond milk & a piece of multigrain sourdough toast w/ single-ingredient cherry preserves

… SUN HAS SET …

THE INDOCTRINATED BRAIN WITH DR. MICHAEL NEHLS

Jan 12, 2024

Del Bigtree sits down with physician and molecular geneticist, Dr. Michael Nehls to discuss his latest book, The Indoctrinated Brain, which delves into the intricacies of brain mechanisms, emphasizing the critical role of maintaining hippocampal health. This goes beyond safeguarding against diseases like Alzheimer’s; it extends to fortifying the mind against indoctrination.

POSTED: January 12, 2024