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Mikki Williden on what to eat daily to look and feel better | Runners Only! Podcast with Dom Harvey

October 27, 202201:06:35
00:00:00
hello and welcome to Runners only with
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dom Harvey on this episode Mickey
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willarden you know like we are
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Hoodwinked when it comes to nutrition
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there are so many things that people
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believe as truisms which are just not
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true what do you mean can you give us
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like a like an easy example yeah like
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red meat
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right right like we should be eating
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five plus Breads and cereals a day we
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should all be having trim milk set
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treaded fat causes heart disease you may
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already be a fan of Mickey or you may be
00:00:29
hearing her name for the first time but
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let me give her a brief introduction
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Mickey is a badass Runner she's run a 2
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hour 55 Marathon she is also one of the
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most respected nutritionists in the
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country with a PhD in food and nutrition
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as a souvenir of her nine years of study
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nine years Mickey literally spent about
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the same time at Uni as what I spent in
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school she's now turned herself into a
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brand and has a huge online community
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and her own podcast Wikipedia the
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objective of this episode was to
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introduce you guys to Mickey and her
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work or allow followers of Mickey to
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learn more about the person behind the
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food facts in the first half we'll get
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to know Mickey then we get into a bit of
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a q a about soft drinks supplements and
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all things food also in this episode
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Mickey and I take some of your questions
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from Instagram and we share our love of
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a supplement called currants for Muscle
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Recovery Karen's about
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c-u-r-r-a-n-z and in this episode Mickey
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shared her discount code so if you're
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Keen to use it after listening to it go
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to currans.com NZ and use the discount
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code Mickey in my kki and you'll save 25
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on your first order all right let's get
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into it
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hey this is
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slow and steady anywhere you coming just
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wanna connect for everyone who loves
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running this is
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fast paced slow and steady anyway you
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coming coming just wanna connect for
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everyone who loves running hey Runners
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only with dom Harvey Runners only with
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dom Harvey and the Queen the nutrition
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Queen Mickey Willard g'day John thanks
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so much for having me it's great this
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correct me if I'm wrong but this is the
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first time we've met IRL
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you've been on my podcast but that was
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obviously over the interwebs so yeah
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this is first time in the Dom Harvey
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Studio yeah so you mentioned I've been
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on your podcast um for anyone that's not
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familiar with that by the way it's
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called Wikipedia it's a great name I'm
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just a big fan of like wordplay and
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almost like a dad joke in a way you've
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been and the podcast came for a long
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time right when did you how long have
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you been doing Wikipedia well Wikipedia
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is just on two years wow so uh during
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the first sort of second part of 2020
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with the lockdown and stuff funny how we
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now will always refer back to this time
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as
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that's a time stamp for everyone I think
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it is a so usually when I listen to your
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podcast it's like useful nutritional
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tips for people people froth over that
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but there's probably a lot of Mickey
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Willard and fans that don't actually
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know like a lot about the the backstory
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so I thought I thought we could get into
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that yeah and then um in the second half
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of the the later part of this podcast
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um I've got some questions and we can
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talk nutrition and stuff like that
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awesome sounds great so who are you
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where are you from you're from Dunedin
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right yep from Dunedin a born and bred I
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uh born 4th of July 1977 which is only
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worth mentioning because I'm a twin and
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it's also foursquare's birthday and my
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mum got like she won a competition and
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got 720 cans of baby food and nappies
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and a dryer which was amazing
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um so anyway yeah so why 720 that's a
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random number I isn't it like no no
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three six five plus three six five is
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enough for yeah a Year's Worth right
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for two of us so your twin brother or
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sister twin sister identical nah very
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different right yeah very different uh
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so I grew up in ravensborn and it was a
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bit of it was the place love ravey but
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it was sort of one of those
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um that's where all the young parents
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went because it was cheap to live etc
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etc grew up in Dunedin I studied and I
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went to Logan Park studied at otago
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University uh so I studied a BSC in
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science in human nutrition and also phys
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Ed as well when you're studying in
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Dunedin were you living at home or did
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you get the uh the full Dunedin student
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experience
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half and half so I moved out when I was
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18 but lived with my boyfriend because
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that's what you know Bogan couples do
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when they're teenagers
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what's what is I I don't know the um the
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suburbs of um Dunedin that well why were
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you a bargain I it literally because it
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was a bit of a Bogan suburb you know and
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my brother was a Bogan my sister was a
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Bogan it was sort of like rare it was
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genetic it runs in my bloodline uh so uh
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it's only they had a chance yeah exactly
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okay
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um so um so but it was only I started so
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I moved out when I was 18 but I got a um
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I got into phys Ed in my third year of
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uni and I think that's when I really
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started having that sort of uh more
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classic University experience I didn't
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burn couches though because I am a bit
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of a geek so I was sort of like you're
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the worst Bogan ever I know like a fake
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Burger I know it was a poker funny story
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which I thought was funny in that year
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we did go to a Bogan party where you had
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to dress up as a Bogan
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well we dressed up as bogans because by
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that time I had sort of you know yeah
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exactly
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um went to this party we were one of
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about the couple of us and we were one
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of about six people who we appeared to
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be dressed up as bogans we were like oh
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it's a bit stink next day saw those
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other people still wearing Bogan outfits
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they were clearly just bogans
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Henry were the only ones they were
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dressed up quite funny but anyway so
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yeah I did have that sort of
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um experience as a student but as a geek
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I never then went on and went to do an
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OE or or didn't go to London like
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everyone seemed to
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um I stayed on and did my masters in
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nutrition but then was super unhappy and
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thought I sort of stuck it out for 18
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months and then went ah no I think I'm
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gonna have to quit this
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um interesting though when I chatted to
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my advisor at the time amazing man
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Professor Jim Mann in fact and uh and he
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said making no one ever quits PhD and
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then I leave and then I realized that 50
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of people quit their phds what was he on
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about them oh he had no idea well or he
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was using some sort of reverse
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psychology type you know but happily
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made that decision and that I think I
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might have been about 24 at the time and
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then had to find a job so I found it
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what year are we talking now was
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Nutrition a big thing you know it feels
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like it's exploded in the last decade or
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so but yeah I feel it has exploded it
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wasn't a big thing necessarily I mean
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you had your Nicky hearts
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uh it was Nikki heart in hellermann's in
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Dr Cliff Harvey
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yeah
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the market covered I know they're
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unsaturated it's totally in fact like I
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was even on Instagram yesterday and I
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come across this guy in New Zealand who
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has got like a gazillion followers never
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heard of him yet a nutritionist so
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you're absolutely right I probably
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bought them bought some parts from India
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or whatever so so now you and I are a
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similar sort of age so what what was
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your like food like growing up and I
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suppose average ordinary middle class
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Dunedin household were you like lunch
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and sandwiches on white bread and jelly
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Crystal sandwiches on a treat day oh if
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great question so it wasn't luncheon for
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us it was Belgium what's Belgium it's
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actually luncheon but for whatever
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reason we called it Belgium Belgium and
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tomato sauce sandwiches right yum you
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did have that yeah you most noticed so
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by the time lunch rolls around that that
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tomato sauce it's a soggy mess it really
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is however what I used to do we didn't
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get to treat jelly crystals but I had a
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friend who had chocolate chip sandwiches
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so her parents were from Holland and
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that she had them every day and for
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whatever reason she hated them so we
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used to swap but no my food was very
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standard kiwi it was weet-bix or
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porridge margarine because it was
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cheaper than butter we had bournvita and
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not Milo and my dad was actually
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interested in cooking and and my mum was
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terrible cook
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interesting though Dom so I sort of came
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to running as a probably a third former
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what I used to I Remember by the time I
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was 17 or 18 it was just really dead in
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me at home everyone else had moved out
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my parents had split um and my sister
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was 50 50 my young sister and what do
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you mean she was 50 50. with mum oh okay
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and were you were you solely with dead
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right was that well my mum interested so
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she her my parents split up but she
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didn't say this at the time she was just
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like oh I'm going to go look after this
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because she was worked at a rest home in
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a war Veteran's Home and she became
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close to and he became like our Granddad
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this this gentleman he was lovely and he
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wanted to move out of the war Veteran's
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Home so she said I'm going to look after
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Dusty full time so I'm leaving home
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basically no that was when I was 17. do
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you think your parents at least yeah
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good question I think I wonder how many
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parents do you know I think that they
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from probably separated in their heads
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well before they actually separated you
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know I mean they were working shift work
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dad was early mum was late was that kind
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of yeah ships on the night absolutely so
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um they still got on fine but we're
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living quite Separate Lives yeah yeah
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yeah so yeah I bring that up because it
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was a similar thing for for mine so I'm
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one of one of four I'm the second from
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oldest and uh mum and dad like hated
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each other it was a really unhealthy
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relationship there was a lot of fighting
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in our house a lot of shouting and you
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grew up thinking that's sort of a normal
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relationship and then when you when you
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go up and develop your own you realize
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huh you can actually have a you know
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um but mum mum said for years and years
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and years as soon as Charlotte's old
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enough I'm leaving your father
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okay whatever and then sure enough when
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Charlotte was old enough mom and dad
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broke up no interesting see there was no
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declaration like that
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it wasn't I mean there was a time that
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uh my dad left mum and Timaru um on our
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way back from Blenheim when we were
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young like they just had an argument or
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a fight or whatever I mean he picked her
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up about 200 meters
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that is a weak protest yeah I know I
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know but um so it was it wasn't a
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surprise but it sort of was at the same
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time and um and for a while I I had I
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felt like mum had sort of abandoned us
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to be honest and so but I'd always been
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as well
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um my dad's girl you know like a lot of
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like my my siblings were much more sort
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of like my mum and Mum and I I mean we
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absolutely love each other but we are
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alike in ways which make us sort of
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friction yeah yeah yeah whereas dad and
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I are just sort of alike and it's much
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more easier yeah but um in terms of food
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like we used to do on a Saturday night
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it was very I'd go out for a bike ride
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of about 20 kilometers and then I'd come
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in and we would literally split you know
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those 500 Grand packet of spaghettis oh
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you're one of the long one of the long
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ones oh yeah did you used to eat them
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raw sometimes ah no there was two minute
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noodles it was an easy lunch as a
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teenager um we would split we'd have
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half each like a whole packet but also
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we'd get one of those French rolls from
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the supermarket and have garlic bread
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and we'd have half of that each
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fit that much food in I do not know yeah
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that sounds delicious it actually was
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like I'm thinking about it now and it is
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taking me right back to being like 17.
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yeah now how are your parents now living
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separate lives but they still get on
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okay they are like best mates
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oh I love that I know so lucky that my
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mum has had
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um another husband and now she has a
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companion would you call it uh and my
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dad just has happily sort of Gone Gone
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on you know sort of as a single man uh
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but they're everyone's in Dunedin and we
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all they always get together for sort of
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family get-togethers every Fortnight and
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oh that's so cool yeah they always look
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out for each other which is lovely so I
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had um uh Nikki K on the podcast
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recently the former uh Deputy leader of
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the national party and who her parents
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broke up when they was when she was
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seven she said I've maybe spoken two or
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three times since then do know Tom I
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have friends in similar situations who
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have parents who just have this absolute
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hatred for each other and it's called so
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much family friction
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um and for the children well I suppose
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the kids feel like they can't say they
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can't say anything positive about the
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other people they just want to avoid it
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all together because I know and then
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also you hear the stories of the the
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parents who try and put their children
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against each other as well and it's sort
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of it's I mean it only ever ends one way
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and that's that the children then feel
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resentful to the parent who tried to you
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know bad mouth the other one you know
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like it just never it's just all this
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bad energy yeah Life's too short for
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that eh mate yes yeah yeah so why did
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you decide to do nutrition
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yeah so I was always interested from a
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uh sort of teenage years and I guess
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because I was a chubby teenager growing
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up I was about so my my mother yeah yeah
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although that's handy in Dunedin Winters
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isn't it
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oh yeah particularly with no insulation
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in the houses totally oh yeah right
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um so so I was yeah and I was not
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interested in activity at all we would
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always go on diets and so I be I was
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really what age uh 12 and 13 probably
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was was sort of the younger 12 13
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well it didn't feel it at the time was
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your mum a yo-yo Dieter or oh completely
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oh okay yeah completely
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um although actually looking back at
00:14:14
photos she was never overly large like
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isn't that interesting like at the time
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we were both like oh we're so chubby and
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because my sister meanwhile was very she
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was like a little weed growing up and
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she was into rugby and she had a milk
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run and I did just have a pamphlet run
00:14:30
um
00:14:32
it was great but you know different
00:14:34
you've said you're a geek but you've
00:14:36
also said you're a Bogan did you I think
00:14:38
this is the true test did you ever dump
00:14:40
the pamphlets no
00:14:48
yeah I know okay I'm sort of like on the
00:14:51
cusp you've really turned yourself into
00:14:52
a brand like you've done
00:14:54
[ __ ] well like you've got a good
00:14:56
amount of Instagram followers podcast is
00:14:58
humming you're well respected well liked
00:15:01
so things that you do like selling your
00:15:03
diet plans and uh your meal plans and
00:15:05
things like that is it rewarding
00:15:06
financially yeah it is it is rewarding
00:15:09
and it has and part of it is because I
00:15:13
think I've well you deserve it oh well
00:15:15
thank you but no no more than anyone
00:15:17
else would would deserve if they work
00:15:19
hard in a job that they you know nine
00:15:21
years of study oh yeah yeah so suddenly
00:15:24
your meal plans are looking very cheap
00:15:26
well it's it's funny because I I feel
00:15:29
like a lot of the stuff that I know that
00:15:32
everyone should know yeah you know like
00:15:33
we are Hoodwinked when it comes to
00:15:35
nutrition like there are so many things
00:15:37
that people believe is truisms which are
00:15:40
just not true what do you mean can you
00:15:42
give us like a like an easy example yeah
00:15:44
like red meat is bad for you right right
00:15:46
like we should be eating five plus
00:15:49
Breads and cereals a day
00:15:52
that we should all be having trim milk
00:15:54
saturated fat causes heart disease now
00:15:57
I'm not saying that as a particular
00:16:00
statement if you look at an individual
00:16:02
case that this might not be true I
00:16:05
suppose these are these are big things
00:16:06
which on a population basis are actually
00:16:09
not true when you dig down a sort of a
00:16:12
little deeper so I just feel really
00:16:13
fortunate that there are also things
00:16:16
that I do that people also want to pay
00:16:17
for by the way now's probably a great
00:16:18
time to get a plug-in like what's your
00:16:20
what's your website or where do people
00:16:21
like learn more about you and learn more
00:16:23
about these plans if they want to buy
00:16:24
them Instagram I'm most active on at
00:16:27
Mickey willarden also of course I'm on
00:16:30
Facebook as well and my website is
00:16:33
mickeywillidan.com
00:16:34
and that's where you can do a one-on-one
00:16:37
consult we can book a call book a plan
00:16:40
you can just purchase a one-off plan you
00:16:42
can hook into one of my online plans and
00:16:45
in fact what I had I did develop in May
00:16:49
of last year which I'm building now
00:16:52
which which just excites me so much as
00:16:54
my Monday's matter plan so it's a fat
00:16:57
loss plan but it's more than that
00:16:59
actually it's like a program of sort of
00:17:01
Education it's there's a lot of
00:17:04
psychology there is information on
00:17:05
movement I bring people in to sort of
00:17:07
chat to the group about different
00:17:09
aspects of lifestyle that are important
00:17:11
because Dom like it's it's eight weeks
00:17:14
but you can never transform someone
00:17:16
someone physically in eight weeks but
00:17:19
you can certainly transform the way they
00:17:21
think about food and how they feel about
00:17:23
it and how they feel about themselves
00:17:25
and
00:17:27
um there's a really great Facebook
00:17:28
community that comes with with the plan
00:17:30
yeah what's a massive community that
00:17:32
you've formed isn't it and you must be
00:17:33
so proud of that I I am and and it's and
00:17:36
it's you know I am one small element of
00:17:38
it it's the people that are in the
00:17:40
community are what make the community
00:17:41
and that's what I love so much it's like
00:17:44
you and your podcast you know like
00:17:45
you've gone from DJ to Dom Harvey and
00:17:49
and you were like that was thousands of
00:17:51
followers who absolutely love you and
00:17:53
what you do it's terrifying though at
00:17:55
the beginning isn't it yeah yeah yeah
00:17:57
yeah and um I'm still like learning so
00:18:00
much and it's overwhelming at times but
00:18:02
I'm loving I'm loving the journey I'm on
00:18:04
it's great yeah awesome so um so what
00:18:07
was your diet like um at University
00:18:09
because I'm guessing like most most
00:18:10
people that go to say otago University
00:18:12
for example it's their first experience
00:18:14
being away from home they probably eat
00:18:16
[ __ ] you're starting University but
00:18:18
you're doing a nutrition paper yeah um
00:18:20
at what point do you realize oh [ __ ]
00:18:22
this is terrible what we're doing every
00:18:23
weekend yes so great question so because
00:18:26
of my Weight Watchers background I
00:18:29
didn't eat a lot of junk food except in
00:18:31
the weekend and in fact
00:18:33
um I mentioned that I um was a complete
00:18:35
Bogan moved in with my boyfriend and we
00:18:37
would have this like plan of like Monday
00:18:39
to Friday we'd just eat what we would
00:18:42
term well which is just no junk food
00:18:44
really but it was looking back it was
00:18:45
way too much like I had like you know
00:18:48
toasty baked bean toasty pies very low
00:18:51
fat but I would have four of them uh oh
00:18:53
way too much airs and portions yeah
00:18:55
portion size yeah yeah like really sort
00:18:57
of like totally
00:19:00
um and then but come the weekend where
00:19:02
you would just like have been complete
00:19:03
junk food fiends because we'd had the
00:19:05
weekend off you know that's standard
00:19:06
price
00:19:08
um so when I went into uh nutrition in
00:19:12
my sort of fourth year I'd I'd that had
00:19:16
changed someone in fact for a good
00:19:17
couple of years I completely was
00:19:20
um with the opposite direction so I was
00:19:22
I had lost like 15 kilos and was too
00:19:25
skinny and was too obsessed with eating
00:19:28
very little so it always like many
00:19:31
people sort of Swang in roundabouts if
00:19:33
you like and it probably took me a good
00:19:36
um five or seven years to reconnect with
00:19:40
what was good for me I suppose yeah to
00:19:42
reach a balance where it's been balanced
00:19:45
are you good are you good now like I I
00:19:47
follow you online and uh I see what
00:19:48
you're doing I've seen some interviews
00:19:49
with you where you talk about what you
00:19:50
and you almost seemed like um a little
00:19:53
bit of a like a badass or Renegade when
00:19:55
it comes to nutritionists like you're
00:19:56
not like a you're not like a massive
00:19:58
massive Punisher like you still drink
00:19:59
wine you still like chocolate and some
00:20:02
junk food yeah like you don't completely
00:20:04
deprive yourself of all life's Joys
00:20:07
and then life's Joys absolutely now I
00:20:10
have reached a a good balance now you
00:20:13
know and part of it is Barry so husband
00:20:17
um because he and I think when when you
00:20:21
are solely focused on if you're single
00:20:24
like I was single for a good nine years
00:20:26
you know through your 20s 30s us 30s
00:20:29
Yeah Yeah by choice or busy focusing on
00:20:33
your own work no no more that like I'd
00:20:36
split from my long-term boyfriend lovely
00:20:39
lovely guy and how long were you guys
00:20:41
together we for about nine years
00:20:43
probably so through the twenties how did
00:20:46
you not end up getting married proposal
00:20:48
never came up or well there you go right
00:20:56
um I think we both like really loved
00:20:58
each other but we were both we're just
00:21:00
different people you know and in your
00:21:02
20s you sort of either grow together I
00:21:04
think or you might you know because
00:21:06
you're still developing as an adult and
00:21:09
and I think we just sort of probably
00:21:11
stayed together maybe a bit too long
00:21:12
yeah like convenience or do you think
00:21:15
you both knew that it wasn't going to be
00:21:16
forever but it was just well no I think
00:21:18
we were both happy enough sort of
00:21:19
coasting along and then suddenly I
00:21:21
wasn't happy coasting along and you sort
00:21:23
of want Direction and and there was none
00:21:25
sort of
00:21:27
um offered so I'm like well if this
00:21:29
isn't going anywhere then what are we
00:21:30
even doing and so
00:21:32
um was was part of that um because at
00:21:34
that time this might be really invasive
00:21:37
um but it was part of it at that time in
00:21:39
that age
00:21:40
um like worry about your biological
00:21:41
clock and oh yeah the fear of that I I
00:21:44
know that's a thing for it no yeah no
00:21:46
more that everyone else around us was
00:21:48
getting engaged and married and there
00:21:50
was still we were still like renting an
00:21:51
apartment in ponsonby just sort of
00:21:55
living like you would when you were 25
00:21:57
but we were like 31 you know and I know
00:22:00
that might not seem different in age but
00:22:02
at that age it is quite different yeah
00:22:04
yeah yeah so then I spent
00:22:06
um a good sort of seven or eight years
00:22:09
single and not by I mean I of course had
00:22:12
a smattering of of boyfriends but never
00:22:15
any that really I was interested in
00:22:18
enough to
00:22:19
you know they were just fizzled
00:22:21
basically um and then met Barry
00:22:24
um through you know modern technology
00:22:27
oh find it find someone find someone
00:22:29
yeah cool yeah yeah it was great what
00:22:31
was um who who like I don't know how
00:22:33
fine someone Works who clicked on who
00:22:35
who finds out how fine someone works I
00:22:38
don't know I've never never sort of
00:22:39
experienced um when because well I mean
00:22:41
I was married to JJ and then um like
00:22:43
Tinder came along so a lot of my friends
00:22:45
were on Tinder and I'd ever play around
00:22:46
swiping on their phones thinking [ __ ] if
00:22:49
I was single I'd be caning it out there
00:22:52
um and then uh JJ and I we broke up and
00:22:55
I thought I'm going to try this Tinder
00:22:56
thing and I I set up um a profile and I
00:22:59
was on it for like 10 minutes and then I
00:23:00
thought this just isn't for me like I
00:23:02
was like swiping through women going nah
00:23:05
nah nah nah and then I thought oh [ __ ]
00:23:08
these women out there who are going to
00:23:10
be doing exactly the same thing to me
00:23:11
which is just Soul destroying actually
00:23:14
you know so I agree with you actually
00:23:16
like the the feeling you get when you're
00:23:18
doing something like find someone or
00:23:20
Tinder it's in part it can be sort of
00:23:22
exciting like the way that you've just
00:23:24
described but also you get this sort of
00:23:26
feeling in the pit of your stomach
00:23:27
you're like oh my God is this is this
00:23:29
what I'm I've been um is this what this
00:23:32
has come to you know really like window
00:23:35
shopping yeah totally but um so bears
00:23:38
and I met initially on find someone in
00:23:40
2014. I met him up and I'm sure you
00:23:42
won't mind me telling the story
00:23:44
um or whatever but we met up in um you
00:23:48
know that funny old bar on duvoice road
00:23:50
yeah that's the only one that I could
00:23:52
remember I could think of to sort of
00:23:54
meet him at because he lived in Howick
00:23:55
and I had my wine and I um sat down and
00:23:59
then he came in and grabbed a wine so I
00:24:00
immediately went oh this guy gets wine
00:24:03
um he's a mess he loves craft beer but
00:24:05
you know he he got a wine he sat down
00:24:07
and he started talking and I'm I'm like
00:24:09
oh it's like I'm talking to someone from
00:24:10
Coronation Street
00:24:12
um was he very English he's English yeah
00:24:14
yeah
00:24:14
um but we just got on great but at that
00:24:16
time I was living in Birkdale
00:24:19
and he was out in Howick and I think it
00:24:23
was more me than him because I was like
00:24:25
I don't know he's a nurse he's got kids
00:24:28
he lives in Howick like all of these
00:24:30
barriers because I'd been to Howick
00:24:32
twice and cried both times because I
00:24:33
couldn't get out like he didn't love the
00:24:36
suburb um and it was like on brief
00:24:39
meetings I'm like how am I gonna handle
00:24:40
having a you know a boyfriend out there
00:24:43
um so after about six weeks Pedro was
00:24:45
cheap back then yeah that's true it's
00:24:47
true but have you ever been out east
00:24:49
like it's just it's like you're going to
00:24:51
Hamilton you know yeah it's a long way
00:24:53
it is uh so um I called it quits after
00:24:56
about six weeks
00:24:58
um but I had always sort of subsequent
00:25:00
and there was no reason and then
00:25:02
subsequent to that were you just been
00:25:04
busy you think creating you know what
00:25:06
you have now no was that part of it that
00:25:08
you just had that single-minded Focus no
00:25:09
no I think what it was I was frightened
00:25:12
to because I wasn't sure that it was
00:25:14
going to go anywhere and I wasn't like
00:25:16
I'd seen lots of friends just stay in
00:25:19
relationships for too long because they
00:25:21
were scared to be single yeah and I
00:25:22
suppose you'd already been through that
00:25:24
in your 20s but that other long
00:25:25
relationship yeah yeah you think
00:25:27
subconsciously you're like I'm not going
00:25:28
to do that again I think so because it
00:25:30
always might been my my thing was like
00:25:32
well there's no point just I'm not gonna
00:25:34
um pursue something that doesn't feel
00:25:36
really real yeah so there's no point but
00:25:39
we sort of kept in contact for you know
00:25:42
um just over a random text or whatever
00:25:43
and I was thinking oh he's a nice guy
00:25:45
it's a shame it didn't work out because
00:25:48
I was
00:25:49
certainly closer to the city yeah
00:25:52
yeah but then I moved to Dunedin for
00:25:55
about
00:25:56
um nine months in 2016. and then
00:25:58
realized Dunedin is not the place for a
00:26:00
single girl in her late 20s so the
00:26:03
Hightower back to Auckland and then um
00:26:06
and then I was back on Tinder and then
00:26:09
so was Barry and but I didn't know this
00:26:12
at the time until he sent me a message
00:26:13
saying Mickey I super liked you on
00:26:16
Tinder because apparently that's what
00:26:17
you do when you know someone
00:26:19
um and you know prior to this we'd had a
00:26:21
couple of messages you know maybe six or
00:26:22
seven months earlier and I was like ah
00:26:25
and I went back on Tinder and I saw the
00:26:27
picture that he had hit up terrible
00:26:29
picture and I'm like this is great he's
00:26:32
no one is gonna swipe on this guy
00:26:34
because this is the worst picture I've
00:26:36
ever seen of you
00:26:37
um and so I just said hey shall we catch
00:26:39
up for a drink within two minutes of
00:26:41
just chatting to him I'm like oh no this
00:26:42
is this is just well it just felt
00:26:44
comfortable or just I don't know I just
00:26:46
felt right I'm like oh this is cool he
00:26:49
is cool
00:26:50
and then he had the tarawera he was
00:26:52
pacing a mate of his Jesus has he always
00:26:55
been into running yeah
00:26:57
why did you break up with him in the
00:26:58
first place I can tell you guys are
00:27:00
destined to be together I know I know
00:27:02
but it was my head right you've got to
00:27:04
be in the right headspace right and so
00:27:05
he's like look I'm going down to
00:27:07
tarawera do you want to come with me and
00:27:09
I'm like I've got nothing to lose so I
00:27:10
did and then yeah then that was it so
00:27:13
we've been together since 2017 married
00:27:15
in 2020 yeah so I think that he really
00:27:19
has helped me relax around
00:27:22
the things that you set you know the
00:27:24
joys in life like it actually you know I
00:27:27
love craft beer like I will go and sit
00:27:30
in a brewery and have a tasting paddle
00:27:32
you know like I'm not a big drinker per
00:27:34
se but I will probably have a drink four
00:27:36
nights of the week which might be more
00:27:38
than what I suggest you might drink or
00:27:40
clients of mine might drink I drink four
00:27:43
nights a week do you mean I drink
00:27:44
because when I say to my doctor I drink
00:27:47
I never mean I drink no I know yeah no
00:27:50
generally speak like like one one to
00:27:52
three but if I have three that would be
00:27:54
a big night yeah right and it would it
00:27:56
would be once in
00:27:58
um one or two weeks you know so I'm not
00:28:00
uh I'm not a booze egg no and I actually
00:28:03
I think I'm really lucky like that
00:28:04
because I never went through University
00:28:06
having the Thursday Friday Saturday
00:28:08
night on the booze type scenario like I
00:28:11
mean of course I had some big nights but
00:28:13
I've got this real internal thing which
00:28:16
means that as soon as I know I've had
00:28:18
enough like it just is so unappealing to
00:28:20
drink anymore and also has made
00:28:22
non-negotiables and this was what I say
00:28:24
to clients as well is that you know when
00:28:26
you're drinking often there are drinks
00:28:28
you just really enjoy and then sometimes
00:28:30
you just drink for the sake of it yeah
00:28:32
even within the same evening so I love
00:28:35
having a drink before dinner and I'm 50
00:28:38
50 on whether or not I love it with
00:28:40
dinner I'm so not interested in drinking
00:28:42
after dinner whereas I know for other
00:28:44
people they love having dinner then
00:28:46
sitting down with wine so it's a matter
00:28:48
of figuring out what your
00:28:49
non-negotiables are because you can't
00:28:51
just go through life always denying and
00:28:54
depriving themselves of what they truly
00:28:56
love and I'm not suggesting everyone
00:28:57
should drink but you've got to figure
00:28:59
out what it is that you really love in
00:29:01
terms of food and drink and then find a
00:29:03
way to make it work yeah well it seems
00:29:05
like you've got a healthy relationship
00:29:06
with alcohol then yeah I think so yeah
00:29:08
yeah we're very lucky that we've got
00:29:10
little creatures just down the road
00:29:13
I love garage project in fact I think
00:29:15
they send me personal messages every
00:29:16
week
00:29:17
but it does sound like an alarm Bell if
00:29:20
someone's got an alcohol problem no I
00:29:22
know actually there's just like mate you
00:29:25
don't have to buy every time they send
00:29:26
you an email and then when you do buy
00:29:28
you don't have to buy six of them and
00:29:29
you mentioned before you love like a
00:29:31
like a like a fat chip oh yeah like how
00:29:34
many like a like a bowl yeah I like just
00:29:36
with beer yeah I like I love to share so
00:29:38
win bears and I so Thursday nights we're
00:29:40
down at Little Creatures we enjoy a
00:29:43
glass of wine or a beer and we have
00:29:45
their makiki fries do you get people
00:29:47
that um they see you eating eating or
00:29:49
drinking and they recognize you and
00:29:51
they're like yes oh bloody Mickey the
00:29:54
nutritionist well you know as a
00:29:56
nutritionist you always get the people
00:29:58
who are self-conscious around around you
00:30:01
about what they eat or they will comment
00:30:03
on what you eat as you've just sort of
00:30:05
said or actually they don't care
00:30:07
whatever but it's funny because I always
00:30:10
I sort of preface it by saying hey
00:30:13
unless you're paying me I don't care
00:30:16
what you eat so don't even worry but it
00:30:18
always it sort of grates on me a little
00:30:20
bit when people are like oh the
00:30:22
hilarious ones are like when you have a
00:30:24
salad and they're like oh that looks
00:30:25
healthy
00:30:27
hello it is healthy yeah and it's you
00:30:30
know but everyone's different as to the
00:30:33
amount of you know things that they can
00:30:35
include and continue to be healthy yeah
00:30:37
and that's what I always strive for with
00:30:39
my clients like it's not
00:30:41
um maximum deprivation it's about it's
00:30:44
almost minimum effective dose what can
00:30:46
you get away with but when people get
00:30:48
fundamentals right they figure out or we
00:30:50
figure out together that they can
00:30:52
probably get away with a lot more than
00:30:54
what they think if they do some key
00:30:57
things right yeah and it's then just
00:30:59
figuring out what that looks like in
00:31:01
their life yeah so I guess um now we can
00:31:04
do some maybe some questions about just
00:31:06
general just the stuff that you spent
00:31:07
nine years studying so we can learn from
00:31:08
you know I put this on Instagram I got a
00:31:10
bunch of questions my big thing would be
00:31:12
like say someone comes to you and they
00:31:13
want to lose light which basically means
00:31:15
in Brackets a diet how does someone lose
00:31:18
weight fast before then going on to like
00:31:20
a healthy sustainable you know lifelong
00:31:22
plan great question Dom so yeah so
00:31:25
just weight loss is often locked on as
00:31:28
being detrimental for a host of reasons
00:31:30
but actually if you look at research
00:31:32
around it it can be as effective it
00:31:35
might almost be more sustainable than a
00:31:38
slow steady drop because people get
00:31:40
those quick ones and are quite motivated
00:31:42
I think it always has to be couched in
00:31:45
education or a plan which allows you
00:31:48
tools that show you how to eat in that
00:31:50
sort of forever approach that's how I
00:31:53
sort of do it so if someone comes to me
00:31:55
for weight loss it's figuring out
00:31:57
whether they need or can sustain like a
00:32:01
a quite a big overhaul for a short
00:32:03
period of time or whether or not they do
00:32:05
need to make small changes so a big
00:32:07
overhaul for a period of time what was
00:32:09
it how drastic is it yeah usually it
00:32:11
will be more protein and more vegetables
00:32:13
less carbs and for some people it's
00:32:16
eating more food because so like I said
00:32:19
so just like plaque an average day say
00:32:21
what would breakfast morning snack lunch
00:32:23
um usually there would be no snacks
00:32:27
unless of course you're an active person
00:32:29
then maybe you do need to eat four times
00:32:31
a day right but you probably don't need
00:32:33
to have your toast and jam before you
00:32:35
run you don't need to come back to
00:32:37
scrambled eggs and toast into milky
00:32:40
coffees and then a muffin and then Sushi
00:32:43
and then some protein barro and then you
00:32:47
know continue so it's it's usually going
00:32:51
to look like a lot of the meals I
00:32:53
suggest to people are very similar
00:32:54
depending on what they like uh it might
00:32:57
be two eggs and a protein shake and the
00:32:59
protein shake might have some vegetables
00:33:01
included it doesn't have a lot of fruit
00:33:03
in there why because of the sugar yeah I
00:33:06
say that but it does depend like if
00:33:09
you've gone out for a run then yes
00:33:11
absolutely have carbohydrate in your
00:33:13
meal when you come back because that'll
00:33:14
help your muscles replenish right but if
00:33:16
you haven't then actually that sugar in
00:33:19
fruit or cereal or toast when I say
00:33:22
sugar I mean sort of more carbohydrate
00:33:24
that is broken down down into sugar
00:33:26
it'll just spike your blood glucose and
00:33:29
that will then subsequently lead to a
00:33:31
crash later on in the morning so your 10
00:33:33
a.m snack is sort of governed a little
00:33:35
bit by the fact that your blood sugars
00:33:36
have crashed and not necessarily that
00:33:39
you need calories so we always sort of
00:33:41
start with good protein and
00:33:43
um a bit of fat and fiber like vegetable
00:33:46
fiber usually
00:33:48
and I have like breakfast bakes that I
00:33:51
suggest people make I have like protein
00:33:53
smoothie Bowls because I I love the
00:33:57
convenience of protein powder and a
00:34:00
shake type thing yeah but texture is
00:34:03
really important so you choose something
00:34:05
so your brain gets that signal that
00:34:07
you've eaten something
00:34:09
so I like to have like a smoothie bowl
00:34:11
that has a bunch of other sort of like
00:34:13
might have zucchini if they're not 18 a
00:34:15
kilo or it might have carrot or pumpkin
00:34:18
or something like that in it or
00:34:19
cauliflower oh that sounds disgusting
00:34:21
have you tried it I know I haven't I
00:34:24
haven't tried it you should I should
00:34:25
challenge you to a week of Mickey eating
00:34:27
yeah all right I'll give it a go yeah
00:34:29
okay awesome there is that saying don't
00:34:30
knock it till you try it yeah it's
00:34:32
saying that's 100 true and in fact when
00:34:34
I sort of talk people through the the
00:34:36
type of dietary approach the response is
00:34:38
not too dissimilar to yours but all it
00:34:40
takes is to try it to see how different
00:34:42
you can feel so then lunch would be
00:34:46
um it's nothing it's not rocket science
00:34:47
I'm sure you could probably tell me what
00:34:49
lunch is like salad protein maybe a
00:34:52
piece of fruit maybe not when you say
00:34:54
protein what do you mean you'd want
00:34:55
either uh chicken or beef or pork or
00:34:59
lamb or eggs and you'd want a good sort
00:35:02
of 150 grams cooked right of those
00:35:05
particular Foods or three eggs it's
00:35:07
because of the protein quantity and
00:35:09
quality that you get in those Foods so
00:35:12
but you know 130 grams of chicken is
00:35:16
about 40 grams of protein okay and as we
00:35:19
age Dom our brain like we start to need
00:35:22
more protein at each meal to get the
00:35:25
signal that we've got enough of those
00:35:27
amino acids on board to help stimulate
00:35:29
muscle protein synthesis and to produce
00:35:31
neurotransmitters and a whole host of
00:35:33
things
00:35:34
so protein and vegetables would be my
00:35:36
sort of lunch go to and most people
00:35:38
would would probably understand why that
00:35:41
is and then
00:35:42
um dinner wouldn't be too different to
00:35:45
be honest
00:35:46
uh I generally Advocate a lower carb
00:35:49
approach for most people because that's
00:35:52
because most people default back to
00:35:54
carbs because they're really convenient
00:35:55
so it takes work to do things
00:35:57
differently
00:35:59
but also you know you have to recognize
00:36:01
that it's what you do typically that
00:36:02
makes a difference yeah what you do most
00:36:04
of the time yeah yeah so when you know
00:36:06
so yeah I have chips and I drink beer
00:36:09
and I enjoy chocolate and things like
00:36:11
that but you know 80 of the time I'm
00:36:13
eating the way that I've sort of just
00:36:15
described to you yeah yeah okay so let's
00:36:17
get to you do a drastic diet like that
00:36:19
for a while and then you can resume a
00:36:20
slightly more normal one well okay so
00:36:22
and that's what's got to change as well
00:36:24
so it's the mindset because you've just
00:36:26
said that that's a drastic diet
00:36:29
and actually no Dom that's not a drastic
00:36:33
diet I feel like I've been told off
00:36:34
right now I know that's it like 10 years
00:36:38
of being a lecturer I'm so sorry
00:36:43
you get that the way yeah so so all the
00:36:47
while so it's more than just the diet
00:36:48
and this is what I do with the clients
00:36:50
it's actually it's a mindset shift and
00:36:53
you've got to think about why you're
00:36:54
doing it and the great thing is though
00:36:56
is that when you eat the way that I
00:36:58
describe suddenly you don't feel like
00:37:00
you need a snack I mean you could eat
00:37:02
but you no longer desperate for it
00:37:04
because your blood sugars have just
00:37:05
crashed your recovery from training is
00:37:08
so much better because you've upped your
00:37:10
protein significantly
00:37:12
your you feel more satisfied with your
00:37:15
food and but you do have to do things to
00:37:19
make it tasty because all of the
00:37:21
processed food in the supermarket you
00:37:22
know they've got
00:37:24
um uh people designing the flavor I
00:37:27
can't remember what they call those
00:37:28
people but they get paid millions of
00:37:30
dollars to create the exact flavor and
00:37:33
texture that signals to your brain that
00:37:35
you just want more of it yeah I think
00:37:36
flavor flavors uh what they call them
00:37:38
yeah there you go there you go one thing
00:37:41
that we um we didn't really discuss is
00:37:43
you like you're running pedigree you're
00:37:45
a bloody good runner like you you're
00:37:46
you're you're faster than what I I'll
00:37:48
ever be and you've done you've got a
00:37:50
number of marathons under your belt how
00:37:51
many sub threes did you do oh I've only
00:37:53
done two two Sydney and Auckland oh just
00:37:56
the one on one and done baby oh yeah but
00:37:58
I think your sub three was better than
00:37:59
mine no 257. oh okay so anyway
00:38:02
comparison is the effect of Joy
00:38:04
we're both getting our makeup Toadies
00:38:07
yeah you're right but my point is um
00:38:11
going to this next question like you're
00:38:12
a very good runner so it's not like
00:38:13
you're just giving barking out advice
00:38:15
from nine years of study you've actually
00:38:16
been out there on the on the footpath
00:38:18
and on the right so for runners like why
00:38:21
should we be eating for training yeah
00:38:23
what should we be getting before a race
00:38:24
similar age to you my mum was running in
00:38:27
the 1980s and it was all pasta parties
00:38:30
totally I have a pastor party the night
00:38:32
before the running event and the idea
00:38:33
was you'd pay five bucks 10 bucks
00:38:35
whatever go along and eat as much pasta
00:38:38
as you could oh mate yeah I mean yum
00:38:40
sort of but yeah
00:38:43
it was funny actually so for the Rotorua
00:38:46
Marathon
00:38:47
um which was my first uh sort of uh good
00:38:50
result at a marathon it wasn't a sub
00:38:52
three actually but it did win on the day
00:38:54
um the guy one of the guys that I was at
00:38:56
that um I was traveling down with he was
00:38:59
also head started carbo loading five
00:39:01
days beforehand and gained five kilos so
00:39:04
on the Saturday of the event that's not
00:39:06
helpful is it so so I think how many
00:39:09
kilos of pasta do you have to eat to
00:39:11
gain five kilos of actual body weight
00:39:12
quite a lot quite a lot but I think I
00:39:15
think my point is is that some of of the
00:39:17
messages around things like what
00:39:19
nutrients are really important are often
00:39:22
misconstrued by Runners like some of
00:39:24
that sort of 1980s Sports Nutrition
00:39:25
Dogma is still exists today and I'm not
00:39:28
saying that carbs aren't important
00:39:30
because they are but it's just that
00:39:32
again protein is the thing which a lot
00:39:34
of people are not eating enough of and
00:39:37
even those that are cognizant they need
00:39:39
to eat more probably still aren't eating
00:39:41
enough so for a runner I mean if you
00:39:43
think about all of the micro tears that
00:39:45
occur even when you're on an easy jog
00:39:47
you need to have the nutrition on board
00:39:49
to support the recovery and repair there
00:39:51
and that's not carbohydrate carbohydrate
00:39:54
is used as energy it is protein that you
00:39:57
need for that so
00:40:00
um for things so depending on the goal
00:40:03
in the session like end the so with the
00:40:06
goal the shorter the distance the more
00:40:08
important it is to support your training
00:40:10
with carbohydrate that's for sure so how
00:40:13
much how much do you think um diet had
00:40:15
to do in you being the good runner that
00:40:17
you that you are that you're worth that
00:40:19
you are ah like a 255 that's um that's
00:40:22
phenomenal that'll put you in the top
00:40:24
top one percent of female Runners oh
00:40:26
amazing I should look at that actually
00:40:31
it is quick but oh look I don't doubt
00:40:34
that nutrition
00:40:36
um plays A nutrition absolutely plays a
00:40:38
role right
00:40:39
I think that training is probably
00:40:42
if I had if someone had put a knife to
00:40:44
my head and said you know what is it not
00:40:47
a knife a gun is it training or is it
00:40:49
nutrition I mean it's a training no no
00:40:50
four again
00:40:52
to be fair yeah
00:40:55
um okay so for you the morning of um
00:40:57
like a big long training run or a
00:40:59
marathon event what would you be what
00:41:00
would you be eating how many hours
00:41:02
beforehand yeah cool so
00:41:04
um for a so I'm getting up and doing a
00:41:06
26k run tomorrow morning a bit of
00:41:07
marathon effort so I will in fact have
00:41:10
ketones
00:41:12
so do you have you tried ketones Dom
00:41:14
ketones I've got no idea what you're
00:41:16
talking about oh mate I should give you
00:41:18
some
00:41:18
um are you running yet no I've got a bad
00:41:20
name we're going to be talking about
00:41:21
that shortly is there anything I should
00:41:22
be eating to fix my knee okay well we'll
00:41:24
talk about that yeah yeah so um ketones
00:41:27
are a type of supplement so it's sort of
00:41:29
like a carbohydrate gel but in fact it's
00:41:32
fat so I'll have some Ketone sachet
00:41:36
and then I'll also have MCT powder in my
00:41:38
coffee MCT what does that stand for
00:41:40
medium chain triglyceride right have you
00:41:43
heard of Bulletproof Coffee
00:41:45
I'm sorry how do you remember all these
00:41:47
things cheapest it's my brain it's
00:41:51
because I don't remember other really
00:41:52
important things like Barry's birthday
00:41:54
exactly
00:41:55
um who's Barry so MCTS are a type of fat
00:41:58
that your body can't store so it's a
00:42:01
readily available fuel source so that'll
00:42:03
be what I have before I go out on my run
00:42:05
and then come race day I will again have
00:42:08
ketones for the MCT
00:42:09
huh
00:42:11
and you know probably Chuck like a
00:42:14
banana or something right just for
00:42:16
something in my stomach really yeah yeah
00:42:17
yeah and then what about during the
00:42:19
event I I [ __ ] hate gels there's
00:42:22
um some there's a company called Pure
00:42:24
that do some which I find uh you're
00:42:26
shaking your head I know because I know
00:42:28
a lot of people love them yeah great
00:42:30
and and they're great yeah I don't
00:42:32
particularly love them myself just a
00:42:34
personal thing yeah yeah I like you can
00:42:36
what's that uh it is it's a carbohydrate
00:42:39
gel and again Dom if you haven't tried
00:42:41
these
00:42:42
you need to be I need to get out a bit
00:42:44
more yeah you do mate you just need
00:42:46
better nutrition
00:42:47
anyway but they're a type of carb which
00:42:50
is um very quickly sort of um digested
00:42:54
uh out of your into your stomach out of
00:42:57
your stomach and then it's released
00:42:59
slowly from the small intestine and you
00:43:01
need less of them than you would of your
00:43:03
usual sort of go type gels or other
00:43:06
brand gels so that's what I have during
00:43:08
my my event and I'll do it tomorrow as
00:43:11
well this might be a terrible analogy I
00:43:14
mean tell me if it is what the average
00:43:16
Runner is doing versus what you're doing
00:43:17
is that like the difference between say
00:43:18
putting 91 in your car versus the more
00:43:21
expensive sort of petrol
00:43:23
yeah it's not a bad analogy to be honest
00:43:26
but I'm not saying that what people are
00:43:28
doing is are wrong but we're missing a
00:43:31
lot of people miss that fundamental
00:43:33
piece of the puzzle is that your
00:43:34
carbohydrate stores are your limiting
00:43:36
factor in the longer events uh and look
00:43:40
we need carbohydrate for anything
00:43:41
shorter than a marathon and of course
00:43:44
longer as well but we can then rely on
00:43:46
other things sort of the longer you go
00:43:49
for really good sort of endurance
00:43:51
adaptations your body needs to have a
00:43:53
period of time where it can encourage
00:43:56
fat burning and rely more on what it's
00:43:58
got sort of stored in less on what
00:44:01
you're putting in it because the more
00:44:02
you rely on those gels every 45 minutes
00:44:04
the less opportunity you've got to use
00:44:06
your own sort of fuel stores yeah and
00:44:09
look a lot of people happen upon running
00:44:12
and find and expect to improve their
00:44:14
body composition lose body fat and end
00:44:16
up gaining weight and they wonder why
00:44:18
and often it's the fueling aspect of it
00:44:20
is that the um the saying you can't run
00:44:22
away from a bad diet you can't outrun a
00:44:24
bad diet yeah a little bit yeah yeah
00:44:26
okay so I've got this knee injury at the
00:44:28
moment I'm rehabbing hard out it's it's
00:44:31
made me realize
00:44:32
um and I suppose this is a positive it's
00:44:34
made me realize how I've taken for
00:44:35
granted running pain-free for so many
00:44:37
years so when I'm back running again I'm
00:44:39
going to definitely not neglect the
00:44:41
things I've been neglecting like
00:44:42
strength training and whatnot but is
00:44:44
there anything I should be eating or
00:44:45
doing to a first of all help myself
00:44:47
recover and then make sure it doesn't
00:44:49
happen again from a nutrient macro
00:44:51
standpoint definitely looking at your
00:44:54
protein Dom that would first and
00:44:55
foremost because you need that the
00:44:57
building blocks to help restore your you
00:45:01
know musculoskeletal tissue so if you're
00:45:03
currently eating less than I would say
00:45:06
because you're in recovery two grams of
00:45:09
protein per kilogram body weight a day
00:45:12
Dean that is one area to improve upon so
00:45:15
that's first and foremost injury
00:45:17
specific you take 20 grams of collagen
00:45:19
and about 50 milligrams of Vitamin C
00:45:22
which is super easy you just like have
00:45:24
one of those like tabs yeah yeah uh you
00:45:26
have an hour before doing any of your
00:45:29
Rehabilitation work that has been shown
00:45:32
to help accelerate repair and recovery
00:45:34
so you can buy collagen peptides super
00:45:37
easy but my point is that's what you
00:45:39
should be doing and if you're not doing
00:45:41
it now you need to start
00:45:43
and it needs to be about an hour before
00:45:45
your exercise because that amino acids
00:45:48
will Peak into your bloodstream and go
00:45:50
so that that's one thing
00:45:53
glucosamine and chondroitin I'm sure
00:45:55
you're all over that
00:45:57
well I don't know what you just said oh
00:45:58
my God okay supplements which we know
00:46:01
helps with it helps more with sort of
00:46:03
osteoarthritis type conditions
00:46:06
um but you're old you might have some
00:46:07
arthritis in there so well you know that
00:46:09
is what I've got osteoarthritis I had a
00:46:11
physio there see that to me and uh it
00:46:14
felt like a punch in the gut when you
00:46:15
hear the word arthritis and then I said
00:46:17
what does it mean she was like well I
00:46:19
don't know if it hurts to run then don't
00:46:20
run
00:46:21
um so I fired her and got it and what
00:46:24
man the physically I'm with now Chris
00:46:25
she was like she goes she goes the
00:46:27
amount of like patients I see that are
00:46:29
over 40 that have osteoarthritis she
00:46:31
goes it's not a death sentence totally
00:46:32
agree um okay so what was the thing you
00:46:34
said I got to write this down yeah
00:46:35
glucosamine and chondroitin I'm never
00:46:37
going to spell that no that's right I'll
00:46:39
email it to you okay it's easy
00:46:41
um and so um so there have been studies
00:46:43
to show it helps osteoarthritis pain but
00:46:46
finally two other things one is fish oil
00:46:49
or more particularly something called
00:46:52
spms which are specialized
00:46:57
pro-inflammatory resolving mediators or
00:47:00
something you've got the most boring
00:47:01
acronyms
00:47:02
I'm talking like [ __ ] is this really
00:47:04
boring
00:47:06
um and back curcumin as well so spms and
00:47:08
curcumin and particularly on days where
00:47:11
you feel more inflamed you take them
00:47:13
that's good to know and not just
00:47:14
selfishly for me but I suppose for
00:47:15
anyone else that's um dealing with um
00:47:17
running or recovery injuries I I uh put
00:47:20
on my Instagram page that you were
00:47:21
coming around here for a chat and uh
00:47:23
there were so many people that had
00:47:24
things they wanted to ask you one of
00:47:25
them in particular from my friend Benny
00:47:27
he said I've heard Mickey say that
00:47:29
Runners should be taken creatine what
00:47:31
are the benefits so many benefits so
00:47:34
from a running perspective helps with
00:47:36
recovery helps your bones helps your
00:47:39
muscles it helps with sort of producing
00:47:42
power and strength so as Runners we need
00:47:46
to be strong as you've said to get back
00:47:47
into strength training so it will help
00:47:49
us in the gym and then from our brain
00:47:51
helps with our brain function helps with
00:47:55
our cognition helps prevent depression
00:47:58
so much right yeah everyone should be
00:48:00
taking it Runner or not right another
00:48:02
one for mum beanie the creatine guy he
00:48:05
said um same question but about the
00:48:06
supplement currents I I'm familiar with
00:48:09
currents as well what are your thoughts
00:48:11
on them I love currents and in fact my I
00:48:14
sort of happened upon them when I had a
00:48:16
friend of mine reach out about three
00:48:18
years ago and he was like Mickey have
00:48:20
you heard about these currants I started
00:48:22
taking them because I've got hay fever
00:48:24
his hay fever completely resolved after
00:48:26
taking currents and then we know when I
00:48:30
posted about this on Facebook all of
00:48:31
these people see the same thing the the
00:48:34
current supplement is made from black
00:48:36
currants that are sort of they're grown
00:48:39
in New Zealand and it's a particular
00:48:41
thing in the climate whereby we have
00:48:43
super cold
00:48:45
um Winters but really hot summers
00:48:47
um and they sort of increase the amount
00:48:49
of this phytochemical called
00:48:51
anthocyanins and that's what makes them
00:48:53
good it's this phytochemical which helps
00:48:56
improve our antioxidant capacity improve
00:48:59
our ability to resolve inflammation
00:49:01
improves our neutrophil function
00:49:03
particularly in athletes they show that
00:49:06
you know you take a capsule of currants
00:49:08
for seven days and it improves our
00:49:12
ability to recover from like a 30 minute
00:49:14
exercise so you've got that so it helps
00:49:17
improve your neutrophil function or your
00:49:19
immune function which is super important
00:49:21
because if you can't consistently get up
00:49:24
and train the way that you need to then
00:49:27
you're never going to get to the start
00:49:28
line as fit as you can be yeah but if
00:49:30
you can take supplements or and arrange
00:49:33
your diet in such a way that you recover
00:49:34
properly and you're able to hit those
00:49:36
sessions the way that you want then
00:49:39
you're always going to perform better
00:49:40
right yeah absolutely so my experience
00:49:42
with currents um they they just sent me
00:49:44
like a free few packs I I did this
00:49:46
charity charity event maybe four years
00:49:48
ago three four years ago where I ran
00:49:49
five marathons in five days yes and in
00:49:51
the lead up to that they just sent me a
00:49:53
package out of the blue saying hey you
00:49:54
should try these they might help so I
00:49:56
thought whatever I'll give anything a go
00:49:58
yeah so so I tried them I got through
00:50:00
the the five marathons in five days
00:50:02
which is like 210ks over five days I I
00:50:04
got through the five days fine actually
00:50:06
like it was it was [ __ ] hard I'm not
00:50:08
gonna lie yeah but I got through it fine
00:50:09
and there was no way of knowing really
00:50:11
if the currents had nothing to do with
00:50:12
that or not but I've been taking them
00:50:14
ever since and um for long runs and
00:50:16
stuff they definitely help they did what
00:50:18
they do and I'm I'm a skeptical prick
00:50:20
when it comes to a lot of like
00:50:22
supplements and things like that and I
00:50:23
reckon there's Placebo effects so if I
00:50:25
take something and there's not a
00:50:27
noticeable difference I assume it hasn't
00:50:29
worked which is probably quite a
00:50:30
negative way of looking at it but with
00:50:32
Karen's I found it's a tangible
00:50:34
difference on me anyway yeah well that's
00:50:36
interesting so the you know I talk about
00:50:38
uh research around it and and there are
00:50:41
clinical trials you know these are
00:50:43
studies that have been done in actual
00:50:44
both athletes and people who aren't
00:50:46
athletes and so in addition to that
00:50:50
um like recovery response they show that
00:50:53
so for that one study which I just
00:50:54
mentioned a follow-up study for that was
00:50:57
they continued to take the currents for
00:50:59
a month and then continue to see
00:51:01
improved like recovery from it compared
00:51:03
to not taking the supplement there have
00:51:06
been just so many different ways with
00:51:08
which they impact your physiology that
00:51:11
sometimes when you talk about the things
00:51:13
that it does it almost seems like how
00:51:15
can one supplement do so much because it
00:51:17
impacts on our um
00:51:19
anti-oxidant system and our
00:51:21
anti-inflammatory system and also on our
00:51:24
ability to burn fat you know I was
00:51:26
saying just before that that is a real
00:51:27
limiting factor for us endurance
00:51:29
athletes in part because our modern diet
00:51:32
that isn't set up to encourage it
00:51:34
anything we can take and strategies we
00:51:37
can employ through training that help us
00:51:40
improve our fat oxidation is only going
00:51:42
to help with our with our performance
00:51:46
but also our recovery and into another
00:51:49
benefit of the currents that sounds like
00:51:51
an ad
00:51:52
um oh I know this is um this is this is
00:51:54
very authentic actually it's annoying
00:51:56
just to prove it's not an ad so they
00:51:57
they sent me some free ones before I did
00:51:59
the five and five and as I said I like
00:52:01
them and I I got through it okay so I
00:52:04
thought maybe this had a part because it
00:52:05
was anything I was taking so since then
00:52:07
I've sort of got me hooked no no I buy
00:52:10
my own [ __ ] now yeah yeah yeah no and
00:52:12
they've got a customer out of me yeah
00:52:14
totally and I I just it's um they you
00:52:18
know some of the studies looking at fat
00:52:19
oxidation again both in females and
00:52:22
males show that it can enhance fat
00:52:24
oxidation during steady state endurance
00:52:27
exercise so if you have something which
00:52:30
allows you to to burn more fat you're
00:52:33
going to create less free radical damage
00:52:35
you're going to go for longer and you're
00:52:37
going to enhance the impact of that
00:52:39
session like I'm like you Dom I'm a bit
00:52:41
of a skeptic in part because often I've
00:52:44
taken supplements and not really noticed
00:52:46
any change but I've definitely
00:52:49
um benefit from taking currents as well
00:52:51
oh snap yeah yeah well if anyone's
00:52:54
curious it's um currents c-u-r-r-a and
00:52:57
then NZ like New Zealand yeah yeah and I
00:52:59
post about them all the time
00:53:01
yeah I am and but anyone that follows me
00:53:04
would know that I'm not just an
00:53:07
influencer out there promoting loads of
00:53:09
things like I promote what I really
00:53:11
think people benefit from right so go to
00:53:14
Karen's and the discount code Mickey 15
00:53:16
no no no just a second just Mickey
00:53:18
actually
00:53:27
oh well you save uh 25 off your first
00:53:30
order so hey you're probably out of that
00:53:32
now because I want me to set up a fake
00:53:33
email address yeah so Karen's
00:53:36
c-u-r-r-a-n-z and you what's your
00:53:38
discount code and make it you like kki
00:53:40
in my kki yeah right all right get a
00:53:42
magazine someone uh Holly Griggs says uh
00:53:45
why all the hype around protein lately
00:53:47
ah so I think I've missed this what's
00:53:50
the hyper bit around protein in that how
00:53:52
important protein is but I feel like
00:53:54
protein's always been yeah and and it
00:53:56
has but I do actually feel like often
00:53:58
there's this you know there's this um
00:54:01
there are two camps either eat your
00:54:02
carbs or don't eat carbs eat fat
00:54:05
um and then protein was missed for a
00:54:06
long period of time I think uh but I
00:54:09
think one of the Hypes around protein is
00:54:11
that we're often told we eat too much
00:54:13
protein but one of the things Dom is
00:54:15
that if you look at the recommended
00:54:16
dietary intake for protein it's set at
00:54:19
0.8 grams per kilogram body weight which
00:54:21
is a minimum amount to survive
00:54:24
essentially all of the protein
00:54:26
researchers suggest at least double that
00:54:28
which would be 1.6 grams per kg body
00:54:30
weight it helps regulate appetite it
00:54:32
produces neurotransmitters like dopamine
00:54:34
serotonin it helps uh stabilize blood
00:54:39
sugar keeps you Fuller for longer it
00:54:42
takes more energy to burn protein and it
00:54:44
all of lots of factors which people who
00:54:47
want to improve their body composition
00:54:49
improve their recovery from training
00:54:51
does so much so that's probably Holly
00:54:53
why there's so much hyper around protein
00:54:55
Amber Clyde she said she wants to know
00:54:57
about the effects of sugar-free drinks
00:54:58
and weight loss ah well if you currently
00:55:02
are having sugared versions of these
00:55:04
drinks if you swap them out then you're
00:55:06
saving a bunch of calories that will
00:55:08
help with weight loss
00:55:10
um what are you what are your thoughts
00:55:11
because I I love soda I I've like Coke
00:55:14
Zero Coke no sugar yeah I love it I have
00:55:16
maybe one a day one to a day yeah am I
00:55:19
evil no not evil actually you know
00:55:22
there's a ton of research around this
00:55:23
and you get people in different camps
00:55:25
when I was a nutrition seller about nine
00:55:27
years ago I would say don't have it
00:55:29
because it'll cause cancer
00:55:31
um because the aspartame aspartame yeah
00:55:33
aspartame and actually that's one of the
00:55:36
most well-studied constituents of the
00:55:38
diet in science and the most recent
00:55:41
research would suggest like across the
00:55:43
board for weight loss it's helpful which
00:55:46
makes sense right because you're not
00:55:47
having the same equivalent sugar
00:55:51
calories one thing I would say though is
00:55:53
that if you're someone who drinks it and
00:55:55
it gives you a sweet palette and it
00:55:57
makes you crave more sweet food then
00:55:59
that's maybe where you might want to
00:56:01
look at it and also
00:56:03
drink water
00:56:04
if you're needing to hydrate and then
00:56:07
have fun and drink Coke Zero check out
00:56:10
um bio lane or Lane Norton he's got
00:56:12
great information on Instagram all about
00:56:14
the the sugar-free soft drinks okay and
00:56:17
how much water do you drink because you
00:56:19
know people say eight glasses a day or
00:56:20
whatever what are you what are you what
00:56:21
are you getting down here yeah I forget
00:56:23
about
00:56:25
um I would say about three liters but
00:56:26
it's not plain water so I love the
00:56:28
newest good green stuff
00:56:30
and so I have that with some aminos in
00:56:33
some creatine so that's about a liter I
00:56:35
make it in a liter bottle then I also
00:56:37
have this electrolyte called element and
00:56:39
it's sugar-free so it's got Stevia but
00:56:41
it's got a lovely flavor uh and
00:56:44
um so I probably have another two liters
00:56:46
like that sort of and you're pissing all
00:56:49
the time no because the electrolytes you
00:56:51
don't right right yeah yeah but also
00:56:53
you're tiny that is a lot of a lot of
00:56:55
fluid it is it is but I talk a lot so I
00:56:57
get dry mouth yeah and I do love I love
00:57:00
like the soda like how lovely yeah yeah
00:57:02
how good um someone wants to know are
00:57:04
there any special nutritional needs that
00:57:06
us 50 plus Ultra endurance athletes
00:57:08
should consider creatine
00:57:10
protein amino acids if you're a
00:57:13
vegetarian
00:57:14
fish oils and I think that would
00:57:16
probably they're the ones that
00:57:18
immediately spring to mind really yeah
00:57:20
okay oh that's amazing that's going to
00:57:21
be me next year hitting the 5-0 and I
00:57:23
feel like I'm just getting started on
00:57:24
myself yeah yeah well you are Dom you're
00:57:26
sort of like you've got years ahead of
00:57:28
you as long as you follow my nutrition
00:57:32
so many drastic changes I need to make
00:57:34
well do you know what though because the
00:57:36
thing with diet is that you can get diet
00:57:39
overhauls by making changes to habits so
00:57:42
you know if your problem is that you eat
00:57:44
lots of fast food it's your The Habit
00:57:47
you need to change is just to prepare
00:57:49
more food you know that's a one habit
00:57:50
change but it has so many flow-on
00:57:52
effects to diet and that's often what I
00:57:54
find now the the thing is with me like
00:57:56
if you if you tell me what to eat I'll
00:57:57
I'll just [ __ ] eat it I'm boring and
00:58:00
I I think I'm slightly aspergersy or so
00:58:04
I just eat the same thing every day I I
00:58:07
like I'll get up and I'll put two
00:58:09
bananas in a smoothie with a bit of milk
00:58:10
and some ice cubes and have that I have
00:58:12
like what
00:58:14
nothing oh you just gave me a look I
00:58:16
know hey look at Sanders or something
00:58:18
then at lunchtime I've got a new world
00:58:20
next door and I'll get like a maybe a
00:58:21
bit of ham and cheese baguette or
00:58:23
something from the display case then in
00:58:25
the evening every night I could have
00:58:26
like just broccoli and something else
00:58:27
broccoli and salmon or broccoli and
00:58:29
steak yeah yeah I hear that Dom and I
00:58:33
just think there's so much opportunity
00:58:34
for you how great is that so much
00:58:36
opportunity to improve and ensure you're
00:58:39
running Excellence heads into decades
00:58:42
yeah a lot of people when they get to
00:58:43
sort of our age like your late 40s 50s
00:58:46
they're sort of winding down the clock
00:58:47
and I heard a podcast with um garyvee
00:58:50
who's a real motivational guy who I
00:58:52
really really like and he was like
00:58:54
imagine a sports team when they get to
00:58:56
half time they're not like just winding
00:58:58
down the second half they're just
00:58:59
gearing up for the second half and
00:59:01
that's the way you've got to reframe it
00:59:02
yeah you do everything in life has to be
00:59:04
reframed as what opportunities are out
00:59:07
there you know like my mum love it a bit
00:59:10
and I hope she doesn't listen to this
00:59:12
but she's one of the chance yeah you're
00:59:14
right actually I remember her saying to
00:59:16
me adamantly last year that she wanted
00:59:17
to live to 103. how old is she now 67
00:59:20
right why why 103 because we have an
00:59:23
uncle that did okay yeah yeah and I just
00:59:26
I can see where the competitive Street
00:59:27
comes from exactly but I sort of felt a
00:59:30
bit sad because I wondered whether her
00:59:32
wanting to live to this ridiculous old
00:59:33
age because to me that's way old like I
00:59:35
don't want to live until I'm 103. you'll
00:59:37
be so important we wake up every morning
00:59:40
going oh I'm still here again I think my
00:59:42
Nana was like that she mine was as well
00:59:44
she's like 86.87 and yes every time I
00:59:47
said goodbye to Aaron Levin but I'll see
00:59:48
you next time nana and she'll be like
00:59:49
God willing Dom but she was ready to go
00:59:52
she was at peace yeah my mine and it was
00:59:55
the same but I sort of wondered whether
00:59:57
in part she sort of made those comments
00:59:59
because she felt she hadn't really lived
01:00:01
the life she wanted you know and and
01:00:03
also you need to make the most of your I
01:00:05
don't know your late decades I think I
01:00:07
feel like I'm gearing up now and I I
01:00:10
felt sad that my mum sort of was like I
01:00:12
really need to live for this extended
01:00:14
period of time because I haven't really
01:00:16
done what I really wanted to do in my
01:00:17
life for the first 40 years so I need
01:00:19
another 40. if someone's made like some
01:00:23
quite unhealthy lifestyle choices
01:00:24
through their lives and they're sort of
01:00:26
in their 40s now or whatever is it too
01:00:27
late to make a change
01:00:29
Never Too Late that's encouraging yeah
01:00:32
like if you like the great thing with
01:00:33
Instagram right is there are so many
01:00:35
illustrations of people or examples like
01:00:38
Joan who are like 85 and they are
01:00:40
gunning it in the gym and they are just
01:00:43
killing it crushing it in life and yes
01:00:46
there are things that you can't change
01:00:49
um you can't you know you can't undo I
01:00:51
don't know damage for a a host of things
01:00:55
let's say but you can always improve and
01:00:57
there are always examples of of
01:01:00
making change and feeling better doing
01:01:03
better being stronger and more fit and
01:01:05
more capable and more confident you just
01:01:08
you know until you die
01:01:10
then it's probably too late yeah yeah
01:01:12
well it is yeah my mum she was a smoker
01:01:16
loved her Diaries until about maybe I
01:01:19
want to say 55. and then um pressure
01:01:21
from the grandkids got her to stop now
01:01:23
she's 71 and there's seems to be no
01:01:25
adverse effects whatsoever I'm still
01:01:27
running marathons and that's amazing and
01:01:28
I think that like the research shows
01:01:30
that the you know you're lying your lung
01:01:32
capacity and and stuff actually does
01:01:35
like it takes some years but you can
01:01:37
really recover from from
01:01:40
um you know however many years of
01:01:41
smoking that that occurs yeah we'll wrap
01:01:44
this up now but the best way to like
01:01:47
follow you engage with you would be um
01:01:49
Instagram probably at Mickey willarden
01:01:51
yeah uh and then and you've got a link
01:01:53
tree there as well haven't you so yeah
01:01:55
you can follow your meal plans and do
01:01:57
whatever you want exactly because you've
01:01:59
done so many years of research and so
01:02:01
much work and we can all like benefit
01:02:02
from the stuff that you've learned oh
01:02:04
thank you Dom and the great thing is
01:02:06
information is so available eh so anyone
01:02:08
could be sitting in this chair have done
01:02:11
exactly loads of people are like me yeah
01:02:12
yeah but loads of people also like man
01:02:14
just get our information off Facebook so
01:02:16
yeah well Don thank you so much for
01:02:19
having me I really appreciate it yeah
01:02:20
thanks Mickey great to finally meet you
01:02:22
and I was sorry you mentioned earlier
01:02:24
one last thing you've got a 26k run
01:02:25
tomorrow what are you training for
01:02:27
what's your event Queenstown Marathon I
01:02:29
want to do a Boston qualifier so for
01:02:31
yours you're 45 now what's yours what
01:02:34
demographic are you on 45 to 49 yeah
01:02:36
yeah it is and um and actually it's 350
01:02:39
so I'll do the qualifier but I want to
01:02:41
try and get between 320 and 3 30 which
01:02:44
for me right now means I have to train
01:02:45
because I don't want it to be on the
01:02:47
cusp of I have to rely on the fact that
01:02:50
no one faster will will take all the
01:02:52
spots so yeah because it's like a
01:02:54
priority queue yeah it is have you done
01:02:55
Queenstown before yeah love it yeah done
01:02:58
it twice it's amazing you go to the
01:03:00
airport you wait by the baggage carousel
01:03:02
and there's those signs saying
01:03:03
Queenstown Marathon flat out beautiful
01:03:06
I know I love the way they do that I
01:03:09
read that in my life joke yes yeah flat
01:03:12
out spectacular and I'm like people are
01:03:14
gonna think it's flat so not flat well
01:03:16
there's there's one Hill there I think
01:03:18
it's on the The Edge just as you're
01:03:20
leaving Lake Hayes and it's um not a
01:03:21
Long Hill but it's the steepest [ __ ]
01:03:23
thing
01:03:24
you might as well walk up at a conserve
01:03:26
a bit of energy now haven't they taken
01:03:28
that out have they didn't they so I've
01:03:30
done
01:03:32
and I remember seeing the sign and it
01:03:35
said you lucky bastards we've taken this
01:03:37
out you just go this way this year or
01:03:39
something like that and I'm like oh
01:03:40
thank God but no I uh I'm looking
01:03:42
forward to it because it's always such a
01:03:44
great event it's a fun weekend yeah and
01:03:46
where will people find you afterwards
01:03:48
are you eating your duck fat chips and
01:03:50
yes any bagos yeah
01:03:53
search like Brewery oh you have got a
01:03:56
place oh yeah I do it's like so many
01:03:59
great micro breweries down that area
01:04:00
yeah amazing and then okay so assuming
01:04:03
you qualify for Boston then you'll go to
01:04:05
Boston 2024 2024 yeah then in between
01:04:08
times I I just decided last night I'll
01:04:10
do the 20 mile at the wild because
01:04:12
that's easy
01:04:14
it's fun I'm not saying it's an easy
01:04:16
thing
01:04:18
I don't know I know um but tarawera 102
01:04:21
is my next big one after 102ks yeah wow
01:04:24
when next year uh yeah February yeah and
01:04:27
then there's a double Dom at the Gold
01:04:29
Coast you can do a half and a marathon
01:04:32
on the same weekend so I think I want to
01:04:35
do that too is it the half Fest in the
01:04:37
marathon the next day or yeah
01:04:40
that's interesting yeah my mates they
01:04:42
did it this year and this sounds like a
01:04:45
great weekend really
01:04:47
to some people it sounds like a
01:04:49
nightmare yeah
01:04:50
yeah absolutely yeah you know there's so
01:04:53
many so many good events out there and
01:04:55
some of the good experiences you can
01:04:56
have all right Mickey you need to help
01:04:58
me fix my knee and then I'll see you in
01:04:59
the goldie yeah awesome all right hey
01:05:01
thanks so much great to finally sit down
01:05:02
with you love you thanks Tom thanks so
01:05:04
much
01:05:05
thanks very much for listening to
01:05:06
another episode of Runners only with dom
01:05:07
Harvey I really appreciate having you
01:05:10
along for the journey I'd like to think
01:05:11
it's getting better
01:05:12
there's the occasional week where I
01:05:15
think it's gone back a bit you know two
01:05:16
steps forward one step back but I
01:05:18
appreciate your persistence as I learn
01:05:20
the ropes with this podcasting game also
01:05:22
if you don't already hit the Subscribe
01:05:24
button um because apparently most people
01:05:26
don't and I don't know what difference
01:05:28
it makes but it does make a difference
01:05:29
thanks to all of you who have left
01:05:31
reviews online or given the podcast a
01:05:33
five-star rating honestly a [ __ ] ton of
01:05:36
work goes into this and because I'm
01:05:37
still learning the ropes there are days
01:05:39
and weeks when doubt Creeps in and I
01:05:42
wonder if I'm doing the right thing on
01:05:43
those days reading those comments and
01:05:45
reviews it really does mean a lot and it
01:05:47
snaps me out of my imposter syndrome uh
01:05:49
like here's one that was left on the um
01:05:51
the Apple platform love this podcast and
01:05:53
I'm not even a runner Dom is a great
01:05:55
interviewer and even the guests I know
01:05:57
nothing about are so interesting keep up
01:05:58
the great work
01:06:00
um thank you very much to the person
01:06:01
that left there if you want to message
01:06:02
me anytime my email is Dom Harvey NZ at
01:06:05
gmail.com or you can message me on
01:06:07
Instagram Dom Harvey NZ is my Instagram
01:06:09
handle all right thanks for being here
01:06:10
and hope to see you next week on Runners
01:06:12
only with dom Harvey

Podspun Insights

In this episode of Runners Only, Dom Harvey welcomes the dynamic Mickey Willarden, a nutritionist and accomplished runner, to debunk common myths about nutrition that many believe to be true. The conversation kicks off with a light-hearted exploration of Mickey's background, including her journey from a chubby teenager to a marathon runner with a personal best of 2 hours and 55 minutes. As they delve into the world of nutrition, Mickey shares her insights on everything from the misconceptions surrounding red meat to the importance of protein for recovery.

Listeners are treated to a mix of personal anecdotes and practical advice, as Mickey discusses her own experiences with food during her university years and how they shaped her approach to nutrition today. The episode features a Q&A segment where they tackle listener questions about supplements, soft drinks, and the role of diet in running performance. Mickey even shares her love for a unique supplement called currants, which she believes can enhance recovery and overall health.

With a blend of humor and expertise, this episode not only educates but also inspires listeners to rethink their relationship with food and exercise. Mickey's passion for nutrition and running shines through, making it a must-listen for anyone interested in improving their health and performance.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 85
    Most inspiring
  • 85
    Best performance
  • 80
    Most satisfying
  • 80
    Best overall

Episode Highlights

  • Nutrition Myths Debunked
    Mickey shares common nutrition myths that many people believe are true.
    “We are Hoodwinked when it comes to nutrition.”
    @ 00m 06s
    October 27, 2022
  • Meet Mickey Willard
    Mickey is a badass Runner and respected nutritionist with a PhD in food and nutrition.
    “Mickey is a badass Runner she's run a 2 hour 55 Marathon.”
    @ 00m 31s
    October 27, 2022
  • Transforming Mindsets
    Mickey emphasizes the importance of changing how people think about food and themselves.
    “You can never transform someone physically in eight weeks, but you can transform their mindset.”
    @ 17m 14s
    October 27, 2022
  • Finding Balance in Life
    After years of struggle, I finally reached a good balance in life and nutrition.
    “Now I have reached a good balance.”
    @ 20m 10s
    October 27, 2022
  • The Challenge of Dating
    Navigating relationships in your 30s can be tricky, especially with societal pressures.
    “Everyone else around us was getting engaged and married.”
    @ 21m 41s
    October 27, 2022
  • Healthy Relationship with Alcohol
    I enjoy craft beer and wine, but I know my limits and what I truly love.
    “I think I’m really lucky like that.”
    @ 28m 03s
    October 27, 2022
  • Carbohydrate Myths
    Misconceptions about carbs persist, but protein is essential for recovery.
    “Comparison is the effect of Joy”
    @ 38m 02s
    October 27, 2022
  • The Importance of Protein
    Protein is crucial for recovery and muscle repair, yet many runners overlook it.
    “Protein is the thing which a lot of people are not eating enough of.”
    @ 39m 34s
    October 27, 2022
  • Nutrition and Running
    Diet plays a significant role in running performance and recovery.
    “Nutrition absolutely plays a role.”
    @ 40m 38s
    October 27, 2022
  • Nutrition for Ultra Endurance Athletes
    Key nutritional needs for athletes over 50 include creatine, protein, and fish oils.
    “Creatine, protein, amino acids if you’re a vegetarian.”
    @ 57m 08s
    October 27, 2022
  • Reframing Life's Opportunities
    Life should be viewed as gearing up for the second half, not winding down.
    “Imagine a sports team when they get to half time...”
    @ 58m 52s
    October 27, 2022
  • It's Never Too Late
    You can always improve your health, regardless of past choices.
    “Never Too Late that’s encouraging.”
    @ 01h 00m 29s
    October 27, 2022

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Family Dynamics13:27
  • Mindset Transformation17:14
  • Single Life20:24
  • Hydration Tips56:03
  • Life After 5057:20
  • Nutrition Overhaul57:32
  • Running Goals1:02:27
  • Podcasting Journey1:05:11

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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