How the Carnivore Diet Completely Healed My PTSD | Chad Myers
Chad Myers, known as Combat Carnivore, shares his profound transformation from a military veteran suffering from severe PTSD, panic disorder, and brain fog to complete recovery through the carnivore diet. After nearly dying from anaphylactic shock during military service, Chad experienced a decade-long decline including debilitating panic attacks, chronic fatigue, and suicidal ideation that left him unable to drive or be alone. Despite visiting countless doctors and specialists, traditional medical interventions including SSRIs provided minimal relief, with studies showing only 30-50% of patients seeing any improvement.
Dr. Anthony Chaffee explains the underlying mechanisms behind Chad's recovery, focusing on how mitochondrial dysfunction and chronic inflammation from processed foods severely impact brain function. The brain's neocortex runs preferentially on ketones, requiring specific nutrients like DHA, EPA, and B12 that are exclusively found in adequate amounts in animal products. Processed foods and military rations create a perfect storm of nutrient deficiencies and toxic exposures that damage cellular powerhouses, leading to the epidemic of veteran suicides - with 22 veterans dying by suicide daily compared to only 7,000 combat deaths.
The discussion reveals how the shift from traditional whole foods to processed convenience meals in the 1980s-90s parallels rising mental health issues. Chad's complete recovery came through eliminating all plant foods and processed ingredients, focusing on grass-fed, grass-finished beef which provided even greater energy and mental clarity than grain-finished meat. The conversation emphasizes that PTSD and depression aren't character flaws but metabolic disorders that can be reversed through proper nutrition, sleep optimization, sun exposure, and high-intensity exercise like Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu.
Key Takeaways
- Eliminate all processed foods, seed oils, and carbohydrates to reduce chronic inflammation and restore proper brain function through ketosis
- Prioritize grass-fed, grass-finished beef over grain-finished meat - the yellow fat indicates higher nutrient density and can provide dramatically increased energy levels
- Supplement with adequate B12 levels above 400-500 pg/mL, as most people test deficient despite being in the 'normal' reference range which represents averages of malnourished populations
- Get morning sunlight directly in your eyes to stimulate BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor) which promotes hippocampus growth and new neural connections
- Engage in high-intensity exercise like Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu, weightlifting, or sprinting to optimize hormones and increase BDNF production for brain repair
- Maintain ketosis consistently to enable autophagy - the cellular cleanup process that recycles damaged mitochondria and is blocked by elevated insulin levels
- Consume adequate DHA and EPA from animal sources, as 20% of brain tissue consists of DHA and these omega-3s cannot be adequately obtained from plant sources like flax seeds
- Prioritize sleep quality as the primary time when neurons repair daily damage and the brain clears metabolic waste products
- Veteran PTSD and Mental Health Crisis - Chad Myers Story
- Military Trauma and Panic Disorder Development
- Chronic Symptoms - Brain Fog, Digestive Issues, and Medical System Failures
- Discovering Carnivore Diet and Paul Saladino
- Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Complete Mental Health Recovery
- Veteran Suicide Statistics and Military Diet Problems
- SSRI Limitations and Chemical Imbalance Theory Problems
- 1980s-90s Food System Changes and Generational Health Decline
- Brain Stress Response - Amygdala, Hippocampus, and BDNF
- Mitochondrial Dysfunction and Ketogenic Diet Benefits
- PTSD as Brain Insulin Resistance and Type 3 Diabetes
- Recovery Protocol - Carnivore Diet, Sun, Exercise, and Sleep
- Reconnecting with Food - Touching, Cooking, and Digestion
- Grass-Fed vs Grain-Fed Beef - Energy and Nutrient Differences
This is an auto-generated transcript from YouTube and may contain errors or inaccuracies.