Episodios

  • 232 | The Forbidden Science of Water: Dr. Gerald Pollack on EZ Water, Energy & the Future of Healing
    Jun 17 2025

    What if everything you’ve been taught about water was wrong? In this paradigm-shifting episode, Dr. Gerald Pollack—the groundbreaking scientist behind “The Fourth Phase of Water”—takes us on a journey into the electric mysteries of water. This is not just another conversation about hydration—this is a challenge to mainstream biology, physics, and medicine.

    We explore how sunlight and grounding charge the water inside your cells, why structured water may be key to vitality and disease prevention, and why your muscles and brain may not work properly without it. From Nobel feuds to suppressed cancer treatments, Dr. Pollack’s story is both radical and rigorously evidence-based.

    TIMESTAMPS:

    00:03:30 – Challenging Sir Andrew Huxley’s Nobel-winning theory of muscle contraction

    00:12:48 – The myth of water as just a “background” molecule

    00:17:45 – Why drinking water may directly increase energy

    00:22:30 – Discovering structured water inside our cells

    00:30:23 – The shift from structured to unstructured water during muscle contraction

    00:36:35 – Exclusion Zone (EZ) Water acts as a battery

    00:38:15 – Infrared light grows EZ Water—just like plants

    00:44:00 – Saunas, red light therapy, and building cellular energy

    00:50:20 – Is vortexed or “spun” water really structured?

    00:53:00 – Grounding, negative charge, and water’s role in inflammation

    01:00:10 – Nature as the ultimate biohack: grounding + sun exposure

    01:07:30 – Can water really have memory? (The Jacques Benveniste controversy)

    01:16:05 – Masaru Emoto, structured crystals & the power of intention

    01:18:00 – Luc Montagnier’s Nobel research on DNA memory in water

    01:23:30 – Spontaneous cancer remission, structured water & emotional healing

    01:28:05 – Spring water, deuterium depletion, and the “best” water to drink

    01:32:50 – Positive charge, radiation, and EZ-depleting forces

    01:35:40 – Could negative charge reverse cancer? The Nordenström experiments

    01:39:50 – Scientific stagnation: why revolutions get suppressed

    01:46:00 – Teaser: Pollack’s upcoming book Charged

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    1 h y 32 m
  • Brent Pella: Punchlines, Psychedelics & The Pursuit of Joy
    Jun 3 2025

    Comedian and creator Brent Pella (@brentpella) joins Richard and Joseph for a hilarious, unfiltered, and thoughtful conversation about satire, spiritual charlatans, and the surprising power of breathwork. Brent offers a rare blend of humor and heart while opening up about his creative process, psychedelic journeys, and why he believes we can store joy in our cells just like trauma.

    Topics

    – Satire, censorship & comedy’s role in an outraged world

    – From ketamine to ayahuasca: Brent’s psychedelic path

    – Conscious Connected Breathwork vs. plant medicine

    – The charlatan problem in the healing space

    – The neuroscience of joy, trauma, and creativity

    – Biohacking water, BPA receipts, and microplastics

    – Brent’s secret Bernie Sanders impression

    Timestamps

    00:02:45 – Learning to suck at something again: Brent on picking up piano and why challenge equals joy

    00:05:52 – Storing joy in your cells: Can our bodies hold more than just trauma?

    00:12:15 – SNL, Daily Show, and political bias in comedy

    00:19:30 – Satirizing the psychedelic scene: Manipulation, ego, and false prophets

    00:25:10 – Psychedelics & creativity: Brent’s journey from microdosing to macro insights

    00:33:01 – Why Brent won’t do ayahuasca (yet)

    00:39:45 – The wine glass metaphor for trauma healing

    00:45:00 – Punching down vs. satire with integrity

    00:52:20 – Leah Thomas joke: Finding the line without crossing it

    00:55:42 – Pella or Propaganda: Brent plays the parody vs. real news game

    01:03:00 – Deep breathwork & energy surges: Brent’s experience with CCB

    01:09:30 – From Venice Beach smog to Austin skies: Nervous system reset

    01:14:58 – Water hacks, raw milk mafias & BPA paranoia

    01:21:45 – Receipts, Lululemon, and slow-drip toxicity

    01:26:30 – Mercury in retrograde & the astrology placebo

    01:32:20 – The burden of manifesting everything vs. surrendering to chaos

    01:35:10 – Brent on legacy: Why joy matters more than justice

    STAY CONNECTED

    Brent’s Instagram

    Brent’s Website & Tour Dates

    Liability Note

    Psychedelics discussed in this episode are illegal in many jurisdictions and are not suitable for everyone. Conscious Connected Breathwork can induce intense physiological and emotional responses and may be contraindicated for those with epilepsy, cardiovascular issues, or during pregnancy. Always consult a healthcare provider before participating in altered state practices.

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    1 h y 3 m
  • 230 | Dr. Jason Sonners: Can Oxygen Make You Younger? Inside the Hyperbaric Study Biohackers Have Been Waiting For
    May 27 2025

    In this eye-opening episode, Joseph and Richard sit down with Dr. Jason Sonners—functional medicine expert and hyperbaric innovator—to explore the cutting edge of hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBOT), biological aging, and the future of integrative health. Fresh off completing his PhD in molecular biology, Jason shares the results of a groundbreaking study comparing soft and hard hyperbaric chambers, uncovering surprising findings that could reshape the industry.

    From cytokine signaling to mitochondrial function, Jason breaks down his clinical experience, personal practices, and research-backed insights on optimizing recovery, cognition, and biological age. This conversation is essential listening for anyone interested in evidence-based biohacking, functional medicine, and using oxygen as medicine.

    Key themes:

    • Surprising benefits of soft-shell vs. hard-shell hyperbaric chambers
    • How hyperbaric therapy impacts aging, inflammation, and cognitive function
    • When more pressure is not better—and how hormesis plays a role
    • The synergistic effects of HBOT with fasting, nitric oxide, methylene blue, and more
    • What physicians are missing about post-surgical recovery and non-drug therapies


    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    • Jason’s research shows both soft (1.3 ATA) and hard (2.0 ATA) chambers reduce systemic inflammation, but affect different cytokines—proving both have distinct therapeutic uses.
    • Lower pressure chambers impacted cytokines like TNF-α and IL-6 more strongly—key for autoimmune and chronic inflammatory issues.
    • High pressure chambers had stronger effects on markers like myeloperoxidase—making them more useful for cardiovascular inflammation and long COVID.
    • Cognitive improvements were statistically significant for memory in both groups, with higher pressure showing stronger effects.
    • Both pressure types reversed biological age, but in different ways: low pressure affected Gen 1 clocks early, while high pressure impacted Gen 2 clocks after a delay.
    • Stacking HBOT with fasting, nitric oxide boosters, and methylene blue may enhance results—but combining with antioxidants like glutathione too early could blunt benefits.
    • Biohackers often overdo hormetic stress; more isn’t always better. Stacking intelligently (and seasonally) is key.
    • Jason encourages practitioners to move away from dogma and explore physiology-based decision making—matching tools to pathways, not diagnoses.
    • Clinical logic matters: HBOT has decades of research on wound healing, so why isn’t it used for surgical recovery?
    • Methylene blue is safe and effective for many, but not necessary for everyone. Use should be based on goals, tolerance, and context—not trendiness.

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    1 h y 15 m
  • 229 | Escaping Your Comfort Zone: The Hidden Power of Failure on the Path to Self-Discovery
    May 13 2025

    In this deeply personal and thought-provoking episode of RUNGA Radio, Joseph Anew and Dr. Richard Blake explore the ancient ritual of Misogi—a deliberate undertaking of hardship to meet your truest self. Joseph shares his raw, emotional journey through a 52.4-mile ultra-endurance race he signed up for just 26 days before, using it as a gateway to spiritual and psychological growth. Richard reflects on his own experiences with failure, masculinity, and naked vulnerability (literally) at a Tantra retreat. Together, they challenge our collective obsession with comfort and performance, offering listeners a new framework for transformation.

    • Why failure is the most underrated tool for transformation
    • The ancient roots of Misogi and its modern relevance
    • Joseph’s physical and emotional unraveling during a 52.4-mile race
    • How suffering reveals hidden parts of the psyche—“the cast of characters”
    • Peptides, breathwork, and recovery tools for extreme endurance


    KEY TAKEAWAYS

    • Failure isn’t a detour—it’s the path. Modern comfort has robbed us of our psychological resilience.
    • Misogi is an ancient Japanese ritual of purification through hardship. The modern interpretation is choosing something with a 50% chance of failure to meet yourself more deeply.
    • Joseph completed 40 out of 52.4 miles in an ultra-race, confronting pain, rage, shame, and even the “cheater” within him along the way.
    • True self-awareness often requires stepping into discomfort where the “cast of characters” within you emerge—victim, critic, avoider, cheater, etc.
    • Peptides like BPC-157 and TB-500, along with BioRegenics Cream, can play a remarkable role in recovery when the body is deeply stressed.
    • Time is a false god—Joseph explains how we use it as an excuse to avoid the work we need to do.
    • Suffering is unavoidable; the choice is whether you confront it on your terms or let life impose it upon you.
    • Physical hardship creates transformation faster than therapy in many cases because of its intensity and immediacy.
    • Misogis should be challenging but not reckless. The right threshold is something with a high risk of failure—but not guaranteed collapse.
    • Richard shares how leaving a Tantra retreat due to discomfort and returning years later transformed his relationship to shame, intimacy, and the body.

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    1 h y 12 m
  • 228 | Laura Fullerton: Rethinking Cold Exposure, Ice Baths & Biohacking for Women
    May 6 2025

    Laura Fullerton (@laurafullerton) is the founder of the high-performance ice bath brand Monk. In this episode, Richard (@the_breath_geek) and Joseph (@therungaguy) dive into:

    • How cold exposure uniquely benefits women (and what week of your cycle to plunge)
    • Why temperature matters way less than you think
    • The secret link between trauma, PTSD recovery, and the cold
    • The biggest myths about ice baths (and why “harder” isn’t always better)

    Get ready to rethink what you know about cold therapy, stress resilience, and performance.

    TIMESTAMPS:

    00:01 – Meet Laura Fullerton: founder of Monk Ice Baths and unexpected ice bath enthusiast

    00:44 – Laura’s first (reluctant) plunge and life-changing breathwork experience

    03:49 – Why the more afraid you are, the bigger the dopamine reward

    04:18 – How the menstrual cycle affects cold tolerance: when women should (and shouldn’t) plunge

    08:37 – Should you plunge when sick or hungover? (spoiler: probably not)

    09:44 – Ice baths and inflammation: how plunging helped endometriosis symptoms in a pilot study [Liability Note]

    11:07 – Does cold exposure blunt muscle growth? Here’s the real nuance

    14:37 – When cold plunging boosts athletic recovery and endurance pre-cooling

    16:14 – Carnivore Aurelius says cold plunges are bad? Here’s why that’s misleading

    17:23 – Gender differences: how men vs women experience the benefits of cold

    19:54 – Is cold therapy a lasting health trend—or just a stepping stone to something bigger?

    24:03 – Joseph’s near-death hypothermia story (and accidental DMT experience)

    26:00 – Swearing during cold plunges: surprising science about pain tolerance

    28:47 – Laura’s #1 ice bath myth she wishes would disappear

    33:26 – Behind the scenes: building Monk, hardware + software in the biohacking space

    38:36 – Monk’s vision: syncing cold therapy with your biometrics

    40:08 – How cold plunging could help PTSD and mental health for veterans

    48:55 – Cold immersion, menstrual cycles, and psychedelics—new research insights

    53:46 – Why women’s health research is finally (slowly) catching up

    57:45 – How to find Monk, Laura, and what’s coming next

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    59 m
  • 227 | Therapy vs. Exercise: What’s the Real Antidote to Mental Health Struggles?
    Apr 30 2025

    In this episode, Dr. Richard Blake (@the_breath_geek) and Joseph Anew (@TheRUNGAGuy) go deeper than the usual therapy vs. fitness debate — questioning whether traditional therapy is even the best first-line treatment for many people.

    We explore:

    Why SSRIs might not be the magic bullet we were promised
    – How exercise could act as the “missing ingredient” in emotional healing
    – The dangers of weaponizing “intention vs. impact” culture
    – How plastic surgery affects mental health
    – The real reason social connection predicts longevity
    – Why men’s mental health needs movement, not just talking circles

    With honest reflections, real studies, and no sacred cows, this conversation is a much-needed reality check for anyone navigating modern mental health culture.

    Ready for a true mind-body-soul upgrade?
    Join our RUNGA Intensive — a 12-week coaching journey to unlock your next level of health and freedom.
    Learn more & apply

    TIMESTAMPS
    00:00 – Facelifts: The new PED for biohackers?
    04:17 – Plastic surgery and its unpredictable impact on mental health
    06:56 – Why your perception shapes your reality more than you think
    08:32 – How outrage culture is making us miserable
    13:05 – Does therapy really work? A harsh look at the evidence
    19:45 – The dangers of therapy if you don’t actually need it
    24:15 – Exercise, SSRIs, and therapy: Which one wins for mental health?
    37:31 – Why men might need exercise even more than women
    43:34 – Longevity and friendship: It’s not what you think
    48:10 – New Age spirituality and narcissism: a slippery slope
    55:06 – SSRIs: The dirty secrets no one talks about
    01:08:04 – Why therapy needs to integrate sleep, food, sunlight, and fitness

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    1 h y 16 m
  • 226 | Tony Wrighton: Is Wellness Making You Sick?
    Apr 22 2025

    Mold, EMFs, Histamine & the Biohacking Rain Barrel

    Tony Wrighton was once a high-energy presenter on Sky Sports. Now? He’s the guy who walks into a café wearing EMF shorts, uses tapping to help his 5-year-old poop, and might just be the most nuanced voice in biohacking right now.

    In this refreshingly honest and surprisingly funny conversation, we explore how Tony’s years of mysterious gut issues and burnout turned out to be histamine intolerance… caused by mold exposure in his student housing decades earlier. We also get real about the biohacks that don’t work, parenting in the digital age, EMF fails, and why the best hacks are still free.

    Tony’s also the host of the popular Zestology podcast.

    Topics We Cover

    • Mold, histamine intolerance & post-viral fatigue
    • EMFs, sleep canopies & tech that might be doing nothing
    • Parenting without iPads (and why tapping helps with constipation)
    • Biohacking fails: TSA trauma, shrinking shorts, and placebo pants
    • Full-body MRIs, metabolic testing, and the future of diagnostics
    • Why Gabor Maté and Esther Perel were Tony’s most important teachers
    • Social media’s role in health anxiety — and what to do about it

    Key Moments
    00:00 – Mold vs. EMF: Why we’re not all reacting to the same triggers
    03:18 – What histamine intolerance really feels like
    07:11 – The “Plinko” theory of chronic illness
    21:00 – Tapping for kids, parenting in the age of addiction
    33:00 – EMF blocking fails, radiation fears & airport scanners
    43:29 – What’s actually exciting in health: testing, not tech


    Tools & Resources

    • Dirty Genes by Ben Lynch
    • SiPhox Home Testing
    • Quicksilver Scientific – use code RUNGA for 15% off
    • Dr. Khan – Austin Regenerative Therapy


    RELATED EPISODES

    • Amy Piper – The Science of Tapping & Becoming Your Own Healer
    • Huberman’s Dangerous Advice


    LIABILITY NOTE

    EMF sensitivity is not recognized as a formal diagnosis by most medical institutions. However, some individuals report reproducible symptom relief from mitigation strategies.

    Histamine intolerance remains a controversial and poorly defined diagnosis. Symptoms may overlap with other conditions. Always consult with a medical professional.

    Airport scanners in the U.S. use millimeter wave technology. These scanners are banned in the EU based on precautionary principles.

    EFT (Tapping) may be effective for emotional regulation but should not replace professional mental health care when needed.

    FOLLOW US ON INSTAGRAM

    @the_breath_geek | @TheRUNGAGuy | @tonywrighton

    If your “rain barrel” feels full, this one’s for you.

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    1 h y 1 m
  • 225 | The Viral Post That Exposed the Therapy Industry
    Apr 15 2025

    Dr. Richard Blake responds to 3 million views, 3,000 comments, and a mental health system under fire. Last week Dr. Richard Blake (@the_breath_geek) posted a reel that challenged the foundational assumptions of modern therapy — and it exploded: 3M+ views, 100K shares, and thousands of comments.

    In this episode recorded live from the Health Optimization Summit, Richard, therapist-in-training Natalia Blake, and co-host Joseph Anew unpack the firestorm. They address accusations of manipulation, the limitations of talk therapy, and the rise of therapy culture that may be doing more harm than good. This is a raw, honest, and timely conversation that asks big questions about how we heal, what’s keeping us stuck, and what a more empowered, integrated path forward might look like.

    The Limitations of Traditional Talk TherapyWhy many people feel stuck in therapy, and how the field is still influenced by outdated frameworks and models of the mind.
    The Rise of “Therapy Culture” – A critical distinction between therapy as a tool and the growing cultural identity around being in therapy, working on trauma, or identifying as broken.
    Personal Agency and the Path to Real Healing – How movement, community, breathwork, and lifestyle interventions can create the transformation many are seeking—but not finding—in conventional care.
    Conscious Connected Breathwork (CCB) as a Therapeutic Alternative – Drawing from his PhD research, Richard shares why CCB may offer a more embodied and effective route for emotional processing and nervous system regulation.
    Rethinking the Mental Health System – From ghosting therapists to the limitations of insurance-based models, the conversation explores what’s not working—and what could work better.

    Liability Note
    This episode includes a critique of therapy culture, outcomes, and common practices. Listeners are reminded that not all therapy is ineffective, and many benefit from mental health support when well-matched with a trained professional. This podcast does not offer individualized clinical advice. Always consult a licensed provider for mental health needs.

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    1 h y 22 m