Chapter 1: What does Caitlin Sinclair say about beauty pressure and personal choice?
If you're doing something because it makes you feel good and you feel like it enhances your natural beauty or whatever you want to embody, then do it.
Chapter 2: How does Caitlin's health journey relate to the MAHA movement?
If it makes you feel happy. But for some of these girls that were messaging me, Sean, it was because they felt pressured.
Chapter 3: What cultural shift is happening around women's health and agency?
Because they felt like they had to be like other girls.
Chapter 4: Why are infertility and chronic illnesses becoming more common?
And the only reason I feel like I need it is because society's telling me, oh, you're almost 30. Of course you need Botox.
Chapter 5: What are the flaws in the traditional medical system?
All the girls have.
Especially in your industry. Exactly.
But no, for me right now, that's not the right thing because I would only be doing it because society is telling me to do it.
Okay, guys, got Caitlin Sinclair here. She just spoke this morning about Maha. How was the conversation? You said it was packed?
Packed. The momentum in this Maha movement is incredible. So I have a personal health journey, and I'll tell you and your listeners, I've been in this MAGA world, conservative movement, for six, seven years now. Worked in media, Trump campaign. I just kind of shifted over to the Maha side because of my health story last year when this all came onto the national stage.
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Chapter 6: How is social media influencing young women's self-image?
And it was actually Charlie that asked me last year, can you share your health story at one of our events on stage? And I was like, I don't think anyone's going to care. But sure. Instead of talking about my journey as a conservative, I'll tell my health story. I was blown away.
I could not believe how many people related, came up to me, messaged me afterwards saying, not only did it mean so much to them that I was sharing something so personal, but they related.
Wow.
So that's kind of what we spoke about today, right? Just being... Don't underestimate how powerful your one voice is. And this health movement, it has affected so many people to be able to have these conversations that for I was having like seven years ago talking about what's in our water, natural deodorant. I was called like a crazy. Yeah, exactly. People thought I was crazy.
And now to have these conversations on a national scale, it's so powerful, so full circle for me. But it was not just me.
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Chapter 7: What health changes can women make without feeling overwhelmed?
Everyone in the room had a story. So the speech went amazing. I'm so excited for where this movement's headed.
I love it. Times are changing. I feel like people really value health now.
Yes. It's like, okay, health is the new thing. Wealth, right? If you have time, you are spending it at the gym. Saunas, the sober curiosity movement, all of this is blowing up. Wellness social clubs everywhere. I live in New York and you... Spending time on the weekends at a bar, for example, is like so passe.
The new cool thing to do, the new way to show that you're an affluent person is actually investing in your health, having the cold plunge, the sauna in your home. So this really is the future. And I'll tell you, I was fortunate enough to travel with Charlie across these college campuses last year. And the media wants to tell us that young people are lazy. They're disenfranchised.
Chapter 8: How can women reclaim their health and challenge societal norms?
They don't care. No, the young people actually care so much about their health. And you know what's been so amazing to witness as a female is the women, the women reclaiming agency over their health, asking about hormonal birth control. What the heck am I putting in my body? It's just these norms that we've been told, questioning women. our medical institutions.
I think if COVID taught us anything, it's that having blind trust in our healthcare system is the actual dangerous part. That silence is dangerous. Asking questions is actually what we should be doing. So it's like this beautiful revolution that's not only about health, but it's like the spiritual awakening that we're having.
I can see that.
And the young people on college campuses, they're all about it. They're all in. They want answers. They're trying to make healthier decisions. They're trying to have families. They're actually asking, why is my generation more sick, anxious, more depressed, suffering from higher levels of metabolic dysfunction, autoimmune conditions, infertility, than any of the previous generations.
What the heck is going on? So we're finally bringing those questions to a national stage. And it's really the younger cohort of voters that cares the most, actually.
Yeah, the infertility one scares me a lot.
It's insane.
People in their 20s.
People in their 20s. I was having this conversation with my girlfriend last week about how many men are having to take things like Viagra in their young 20s. What's going on? This was not happening a decade ago. Our parents' generation was not suffering from these insane levels of infertility. And it sounds... fringe and cliche to talk about this, but it truly is the inflammation, right?
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