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  • Running from the Dead Sea to Everest: Why Charlie Engle Does Hard Things on Purpose
    2026/03/30

    Dr. S continues a conversation with ultra-runner Charlie Engel about addiction as part of human evolution, the loss of identity and belonging that can come with quitting substances, and the need to develop skills for grief, transition, and loneliness rather than numbing out. Engel describes getting sober on July 23, 1992 by committing to an AA meeting and a run every day, taking sobriety one day at a time, and how this helped him become a father and husband, though he later divorced amicably. He explains how endurance running taught him to avoid catastrophizing, focus on the next “aid station,” and make clear-headed decisions rather than quitting in emotional moments. Engel recounts running across the Sahara for 111 consecutive days at two marathons per day, learning to detach from outcomes, and he previews a planned expedition from the Dead Sea to Mount Everest as a metaphor for life’s peaks and valleys, emphasizing integration over constant self-help consumption and prioritizing basic movement like walking for longevity.

    00:00 Welcome Back Part Two
    01:13 Beyond Shame and Numbing
    02:27 Identity After Quitting
    05:48 Meetings and Running Daily
    09:57 Running as Mind Training
    16:21 Ultra Performance Questions
    19:12 Sahara Run and Mindset
    22:16 Travel Trust and Humanity
    27:15 Everest Metaphor Peaks Valleys
    33:25 Integration Over Consumption
    36:09 Longevity Basics and Walking
    37:44 Closing Reflections Thanks

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
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    41 分
  • From Addiction to Matt Damon: The Reinvention of Charlie Engle
    2026/03/24

    Dr. S interviews ultrarunner and author Charlie Engle about addiction, wellness, and the choices people make in response to hardship. Engle recounts his years of crack cocaine and alcohol addiction, prison time, and later extreme endurance running, and discusses how “healthy” addictions can still be criticized due to others’ fear of losing belonging. He traces contributing factors to insecurity, loneliness, and early life experiences, describing how alcohol initially brought comfort but led to predictable cycles of destruction and attempted resets. He explains the codependent dynamics with his first wife, argues ultimatums don’t work, and emphasizes caregiver self-care, avoiding enabling, and letting consequences land. Engle lists prior attempts to change (AA, church, a shaman, meditation) and describes a final binge after his son’s birth that led to a sincere prayer to stop feeling his inner burden. He advises asking how a behavior is serving you rather than debating labels.

    00:00 Meet Charlie Engle
    03:38 Addiction and Wellness
    06:29 Fear and Tribe Dynamics
    11:35 Roots of Addiction
    19:15 Wiring and Binge Patterns
    22:01 Codependency and Enabling
    29:02 The Moment of Sobriety
    32:35 What He Tried Before
    36:57 Ask the Right Question
    39:17 Part One Wrap Up

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
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    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    41 分
  • Gut Testing and Smart Supplementation: Budget-Friendly Strategies and Personalized Protocols (Part 3 with Hayley Paul)
    2026/03/17

    In the final episode of a three-part series on gut health, Dr. S and guest Haley Paul discuss preferred gut tests, how to choose them based on clinical needs and budget, and principles of supplementation. Hayley compares tests including GI 360 Complete (noting add-ons like H. pylori), GI-MAP as a more cost-effective but less replicable option that includes markers such as calprotectin, secretory IgA, enzymatic markers, H. pylori, and an IgA reaction to wheat, and GutID for deeper microbiome profiling that currently lacks functional digestion data. She shares a case where GutID identified an overgrown commensal bacteria linked to the client’s homeland exposure, helping reduce longstanding severe diarrhea (up to 12 explosive bowel movements daily) to three normal bowel movements within four months, alongside bile acid support. They also mention GI Effects and Vibrant’s Gut Zoomer, and note Haley often pairs gut testing with hormone analysis (including cortisol) and an organic acids test. On supplements, both emphasize food and lifestyle first—diet, exercise, and sleep as foundational (with sedentary behavior and ≤6 hours sleep associated with lower microbial diversity)—and describe supplements as temporary tools to address gaps and fast-track recovery rather than lifelong regimens. Haley supports baseline supplementation for highly stressed city professionals, advocates food-based, low/slow dosing when possible, highlights widespread magnesium insufficiency, suggests non-oral options like Epsom salt baths, discusses winter low serotonin and SAD with preference for light therapy over supplements (though 5-HTP may be used), and recommends vitamin D support in the UK typically from October to March based on testing. They underline personalization, strategic use of adaptogens ahead of predictable stress (noting they may take up to six weeks), and the goal of patient autonomy. Haley shares how to find her (Haley Paul on Dr. Phi), her clinic Habitude, and her practice locations and consultation options (HCA Outpatients on Wimpole Street, Portland Hospital privileges, in-person Thursdays and online on other days). The episode closes with encouragement to start small with practical steps like adding apples, chia and flax (soaked), and focusing on hydration.

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    27 分
  • Gut Health Series Part 2: Constipation, Diarrhea, Reflux, Hormones, and What a Gut Protocol Looks Like
    2026/03/10

    Part two of Dr. S’s three-part gut health series with guest Hayley Paul focuses on common digestive issues and practical, individualized approaches. They discuss constipation and why it’s not always just a lack of fiber or water, emphasizing experimenting with different fibers (ground flaxseed, soaked chia seeds, stewed apples for apple pectin, beetroot, and careful low-dose psyllium with plenty of water). They cover reasons constipation can persist despite dietary changes, including structural factors, psychological factors (anxiety, depression, trauma), bowel retraining, medications, and methane SIBO, which is strongly linked to slow transit and can be a “game changer” when treated. They also discuss chronic diarrhea patterns, often linked to overgrowth, and the importance of assessing triggers like dairy (lactose intolerance) and fatty meals (including bile acid malabsorption), with stool characteristics as clues. For reflux, they explain how low stomach acid can cause heartburn through slowed digestion and fermentation pressure, note common trigger foods, caution against long-term OTC antacid/PPI use without investigation, and recommend GP testing for Helicobacter pylori, which is common in the UK and can suppress stomach acid while increasing ulcer and stomach cancer risk. The episode then explores how gut bacteria influence hormone activation, recycling, and elimination via beta-glucuronidase (affected by certain bacteria and high-protein diets), and how shifts during perimenopause/menopause can affect symptoms; they also describe emerging research linking gut dysbiosis, reduced microbial diversity, and increased inflammatory bacteria with PCOS and endometriosis (including interest in Fusobacterium). Finally, they outline what a clinician-led gut protocol can look like: starting with dietary fundamentals (including “crowding out”), then using accredited comprehensive stool testing beyond standard GP pathogen-focused tests to assess microbes, enzymes, inflammatory markers, and zonulin. They describe the protocol phases (Remove, Replace, Re-inoculate, and sometimes Repair), including possible supports like bitters, betaine HCl (with caution), ox bile, lactase, pancreatic enzymes, targeted probiotics (including Saccharomyces boulardii), retesting after pausing probiotics, and leaky-gut supports such as L-glutamine (with caution for excitatory symptoms), marshmallow root, and zinc carnosine, mentioning specific supplement brands used in practice. They close by stressing personalization, avoiding supplement guesswork, and previewing part three on testing and protocols.

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    47 分
  • Gut Health 101: Where to Start (Part 1 with Hayley Paul)
    2026/03/03

    Dr. S introduces a three-part gut health series on the Master Stress podcast with guest Hayley Paul, a nutrition and functional medicine practitioner trained in root-cause analysis. Hayley shares her background, including her own gut health struggles during a high-stress marketing career, and explains why gut health is foundational and interconnected with the brain, immune function, inflammation, detoxification, hormones, mood, and energy. The episode reviews what “normal” bowel function can look like (frequency ranges, but stool form as a more reliable marker), ideal goals (aiming for one healthy daily bowel movement), and key stool indicators such as consistency and typical medium-brown color linked to bile metabolism; persistent abnormal colours (pale/yellow/green, red/black) or alarm symptoms (unexplained weight loss, persistent nausea/vomiting, blood in stool, nighttime bowel movements, sudden changes) should prompt medical evaluation. For those without alarm signs, they recommend starting with diet and small habit-based changes, highlighting the “three R’s” in a food-first way: remove/reduce processed foods (linked to advanced glycation end products/AGEs that can damage the gut lining, increase permeability, drive inflammation, and raise food allergy risk), replace with gut-supportive foods (more vegetables/plant intake) and adequate water away from meals, and re-inoculate with fermented foods (kefir, sauerkraut, kimchi, pickled vegetables) in small amounts. They discuss practical substitutes for common processed breakfast items (e.g., bircher muesli or chia seed pudding) and emphasize not changing too many things too quickly. Hayley cautions against rushing into food sensitivity testing and extensive eliminations without addressing underlying drivers like microbial imbalance and leaky gut, describing how restrictive diets can spiral into increasing reactivity and fear around food; she and Dr. S emphasize personalisation, rotation-style eating (e.g., reintroducing foods like gluten/dairy every 3–4 days rather than daily overexposure), and exceptions such as celiac disease. They also note fermented foods and probiotics are not suitable for everyone, especially those with bacterial overgrowth (e.g., SIBO), and worsening symptoms should be treated as information. The conversation begins addressing bloating as a common concern, noting potential microbial imbalances and high-FODMAP intolerance, defining FODMAPs as poorly digested carbohydrates that can fuel bacterial fermentation and gas, and explaining that symptoms can depend on cumulative “FODMAP load” and portion combinations; they suggest professional guidance and testing can save time compared with trial-and-error. The episode ends by previewing part two of the series.

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    41 分
  • Personalised Gut Health: Why One-Size-Fits-All Fails
    2026/02/24

    In this episode of Master Stress with Dr. S, the focus is on where to begin with gut healing and why a personalized approach matters because there is no universal gut, immune system, or nervous system. Dr. S explains that common symptoms are not always normal, and that widespread gut advice, supplements, and competing diet trends can be confusing and sometimes harmful if followed blindly or without structure. The episode emphasizes that two people can eat the same foods or follow the same protocol and have completely different outcomes due to individual variability shaped by genetics, epigenetics, early-life exposures (birth mode, antibiotics, diet, environment), stress history, hormones, immune sensitivity, and nervous system tone. Dr. S discusses how many food reactions are state-dependent and often temporary when the gut is inflamed, using gastroenteritis as an example, and cautions against over-reliance on intolerance testing during active inflammation. She differentiates intolerances (often enzyme-related, predictable, dose-dependent) from sensitivities (more immune- or nervous-system-mediated, sometimes inconsistent), while stressing that the practical focus is restoring gut function and regulation first. Testing can be valuable when symptoms persist despite solid foundations, patterns are unclear, or targeted intervention is needed, but many tests vary in accuracy and can be misleading if misinterpreted, treated in isolation, or used without symptoms and full context; history and symptom patterns remain the most important diagnostic tools. Dr. S outlines a sequencing mindset: start with safety and nervous system regulation, then support digestive capacity and the microbiome, pursue targeted interventions when needed (e.g., infection or malabsorption), and build resilience, noting that protocols that ignore nervous system regulation are incomplete. She shares her own experience with KBMO testing and restrictive eliminations that did not resolve underlying inflammation, reinforcing the need for restoration alongside any elimination. The episode closes by describing what healing can look like (fewer reactions, improved tolerance, stable energy, reduced food anxiety, more predictable digestion), the need to pivot when approaches don’t fit, and the reminder that testing should support—not override—the body’s story.

    00:00 Gut Health Series Kickoff: Why Regulating Your Gut Comes First
    01:36 Why “One-Size-Fits-All” Gut Advice (and Diet Trends) Backfires
    04:48 Individual Variability: Same Food, Totally Different Outcomes
    06:15 What Shapes Your Microbiome: Genetics, Early Life, Stress & Hormones
    09:53 Food Reactions Explained: Context, Inflammation, Sensitivity vs Intolerance
    15:01 When Gut Testing Helps (and When It Misleads)
    18:51 The Right Order to Heal: Nervous System Safety → Gut Support → Targeted Fixes
    22:51 What Progress Looks Like + Why You May Need to Pivot
    24:48 Final Takeaways: Listen to Your Body, Personalize the Plan, One Breath at a Time
    26:05 Real-Life Lesson: My KBMO Test, Elimination Diets & the Restoration Missing Piece

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    30 分
  • The Gut Brain Connection: Mental Health and Beyond
    2026/02/17

    In this episode of 'Master Stress with Dr. S,' we delve into the profound connection between gut health and mental health. Dr. S explains why digestion, mood, anxiety, and burnout are biologically inseparable, emphasizing the bi-directional communication between the gut and brain. The discussion covers various communication modalities such as the vagus nerve, immune signaling, and microbial metabolites. Practical tips for improving gut-brain health include mindful eating, consistent meal timing, and reducing cognitive load around food prep. Dr. S also highlights the emerging field of nutritional psychiatry and the importance of personalized gut health testing. This episode underscores the significance of treating gut issues to alleviate mental health symptoms and vice versa.

    00:00 Introduction to the Mind-Gut Connection
    02:35 Understanding the Gut-Brain Axis
    03:18 The Role of the Vagus Nerve and Communication Pathways
    06:00 Impact of Gut Health on Mood and Cognition
    11:09 Practical Strategies for Gut-Brain Health
    17:20 The Importance of Personalized Gut Health

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    20 分
  • Recognising Gut Symptoms: Common Doesn't Always Mean Normal
    2026/02/10

    In this episode of 'Master Stress with Dr. S,' we dive into the importance of gut health and its foundational role in overall well-being. Dr. S discusses the common yet often misunderstood symptoms such as bloating, constipation, and fatigue after meals, highlighting that while these may be common, they are not necessarily normal. The episode covers essential aspects of healthy digestion, typical symptoms of dysfunction, and when to seek medical help. Dr. S also emphasizes the significance of addressing gut issues through lifestyle changes and understanding the mind-gut connection. Stay tuned for future episodes featuring experts on various facets of gut health.

    00:00 Introduction to Gut Health Series
    02:03 Understanding Normal vs. Common Gut Symptoms
    03:21 Key Indicators of Healthy Digestion
    06:31 Common but Abnormal Gut Symptoms
    14:38 When to Seek Medical Help
    17:16 Conclusion and Next Steps

    Connect with Dr Safia Debar

    Dr Safia Debar
    Speaker / Coach | Medical Doctor | Breathwork Facilitator

    One of Tatler's "Top 21 private doctors in Britain" 2020
    www.drsafiadebar.com
    contact@drsafiadebar.com
    IG: @drsafiadebar
    Tiktok: drsafiadebar

    Find our free resources here: www.drsafiadebar.com/resource

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    22 分