Transcript generated automatically by AI and may contain errors.
Chapter 1: What is the main topic discussed in this episode?
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome back to another exciting episode of McUnplugged. And today we're joined by a transformative force in leadership and personal development. He is a true pioneer in blending peak performance with a holistic well-being approach. I am truly honored to join a guy whose parents live just 45, 50 minutes away.
So please join me in welcoming the insightful, the groundbreaking, the incomparable, my guy, Mr. Boomer Anderson.
You're listening to Mick Unplugged, hosted by the one and only Mick Hunt. This is where purpose meets power and stories spark transformation. Mick takes you beyond the motivation and into meaning, helping you discover your because and becoming unstoppable. I'm Rudy Rush, and trust me, you're in the right place. Let's get unplugged.
Boomer, how are you doing today, brother? Nick, I'm doing so great.
Chapter 2: What pivotal health diagnosis changed Boomer Anderson's life?
But like that introduction was fantastic. I thank you for putting a smile on my face ear to ear. It's going to really, really bring out my chipmunk cheeks today.
That's what I am here for. I promise you. And ladies and gentlemen, I also have to let everyone know Boomer is going to be an expecting father like literally any moment now. So if this episode is only three minutes, it is because I am making him get off and go tend to his wife who might be screaming in the background.
But Boomer, bro. I hope that doesn't happen, but if it does and I sprint out, you'll know why. So, Mick, again, thank you so much for having me here. It's going to be a lovely conversation.
Bro, I'm the honored one. Boomer, you know, on this show, I always start by asking my guest about... Their because that thing that's deeper than your why I call your because your true passion, your true purpose, and it changes from time to time, right? We all have different seasons. And so if I were to say, boomer right now, you know, early 2026, what is your because brother?
The through line for everything that I do is challenging the process. And if it's okay, I want to elaborate on that for a second. Absolutely. So if you read into my background, you'll see that I grew up the son of both a yoga teacher and a person who worked in operations and finance. Went into investment banking and then had one of these hockey stick type careers in investment banking.
I decided at the age of 30, looking around and seeing everybody doing my job was 60 years old, that I wanted to do something else. Left, and ironically, as soon as I resigned, was serving out my resignation period and went in for a series of health tests.
And at that moment, which was sort of the pivotal moment in the transition into this health world, I found out that I had cardiovascular disease at the age of 30, which is actually the leading preventable cause of death in the world. And what the doctors at that time asked of me was to take a statin, which again, I have nothing wrong. There's nothing wrong with the current healthcare system.
I think it does some things well. I think health as its core is something that like true health is not something that does well, but they asked me to take a statin and come back in 10 years. And that just didn't sit well with me and actually set me off. on this exploration for what is health.
And so that is really how the whole through line of challenging the process is kind of carried over from finance into health.
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Chapter 3: How does the concept of a 'stress bucket' impact health?
Doctor clearly hasn't looked at it because I'm usually the patient that like a doctor can skip over because they know everything is fine. Right. And so he opens it up and he starts going through the test results. OK, OK, OK. And then that page comes up and. So I'll bleep myself here, but his reaction, his name's Dr. Stephen Tucker. He's still a good friend and he runs a great clinic in Singapore.
Opens it up, flip him through. Okay, okay, okay. Looks at him, he's like, grabs his hair and looks at him and goes, holy, you know, expletive, you have calcium. And so for those people who aren't aware of this test, it's a coronary CT scan for calcium.
cardiac CT scan for calcium basically what it is is a picture it's a picture of your heart and you're looking for the presence of calcium in your heart which means that you have basically pierced the artery and caused an inflammatory reaction that has hardened over time and has narrowed your artery right and so the technical term for this is atherosclerosis and so
When he grabs his hair like this, and at that time I had hair, Mick. So it was like, I did one of these things where I was like, oh no.
You followed what he's doing, right?
Yeah. And so I don't know if people have ever experienced this feeling. I hopefully, if you've experienced this feeling, it's been in a good way, like going skydiving. But when the floor drops out and like everything kind of goes black in your peripheral vision and you're like, whoa. oh my God, what just happened here? And my initial reaction was like, how is this possible? Right.
Because I was doing everything that society told me to do. Right. I was exercising. I'll get into why that might've been a problem. I was following whatever the diet of the day was. And if you follow men's health magazine, which don't get me wrong, like it keeps people interested in health and I'm grateful that they publish it. But if you follow the diet and exercise, that's health right there.
And how did this happen? Floor drops out, peripheral blinders go on. And for the next almost six months, I want to say, I just went into anything and everything that I could find, starting with cholesterol and then kind of winding my way around health. It actually led me to actually start a podcast because I started a podcast at that time, it was called Decoding Superhuman.
And in all fairness, Mick, I started that podcast because I didn't want to pay for consults, but I wanted to ask people all these questions, these experts around the world who are doing this cutting edge research to try and figure out what went wrong. Because to me, nothing made sense. And that was really that moment for me.
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Chapter 4: Why is sleep considered a crucial factor for cognitive performance?
No, I can't tell you that. That's, unfortunately, like that would be the single worst health advice that anybody could give you is to like not exercise anymore. Because exercise itself has so many benefits, especially for mental health. It's one of those things that for depression and for particularly like I sit in the entrepreneur entrepreneurial world. A lot of my friends are entrepreneurs.
Entrepreneur level mental health is a very big discussion that needs to see the light of day more. And that would be the worst recommendation in the world is to say don't exercise. But I was exercising too much. So everybody who's listening to this, you can picture a bucket, right?
And the bucket, you can pick your size of bucket and the size of the bucket is ultimately determined by your resilience, right? But it's the stress bucket and you put in some stress, right? Stress can come from job. Hopefully it doesn't come from a relationship, but it can. It can come from the types of foods you eat, the environment that you live in, that boss you have, et cetera.
And your job is to manage that bucket so that it doesn't overflow, right? Exercise is also a stressor. And so it creates an inflammatory reaction in the body, generally speaking, a good one. But if your bucket is already full, and at this time, Mick, I was having panic attacks and... issues that really showed that my stress bucket was more than full. It was actually broken.
And if your stress buckets overflowing, then things like exercise become a different discussion. So ultimately one of my good friends, Marcus Philly, he, he, Talks to people about, you know, actually the recovery equals the stimulus. And so one of the things that I wasn't doing well, then diet exercise was fine. Wasn't sleeping well. I was out drinking five nights a week.
I was traveling all around the world. Switching time zones is certainly a stressor to the system. Yeah. And so when I add on to that CrossFit high intensity interval training six times a week, You can see how very quickly my adrenals, my poor adrenals were like throwing the white flag way before this cardiovascular disease came up.
Yeah.
Crazy brother. Crazy. But everything is OK now, right?
Everything's fine. Yeah. So the interesting thing about cardiovascular disease is that I now have a marker that I can point to. And with cardiovascular disease, if you get calcium, it generally progresses at 15 to 20 percent per year if you do nothing.
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Chapter 5: What does true health mean beyond the absence of disease?
And that's a good progression. I'm stable at the levels where I was on that day. And so what that means is, is that I've sort of halted it. Cardiovascular disease is very, very hard to reverse. And so I'm working with some of the cutting edge scientists, researchers in the world to do that, but I've halted it.
And I've now kind of rebuilt my life around the idea that the recovery equals the stimulus.
That's great, brother. Well, again, learning a lot from you. And now I want to talk about Boomer Anderson, the leader, the change maker, all the great and amazing cool things that you're doing out here in the world. So Boomer, like you're known for dissecting, and this is why I love you so much, dissecting complex ideas into actionable insights, right?
I think today a lot of people look to be a thought leader and it stays in thought. But you are a person who can take thought leadership, take ideas and then give them out to people as actionable insights. Could you take a moment and just share a few things about the work that you do, the work that you're doing and why it's important for everybody that's watching or listening?
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Sure. So it goes back to that question that we talked about earlier, that sort of cruise that I've been on since of what is health. And that... podcast that I mentioned that I started, it led me to meet a couple of doctors, Dr. Ted Achikoso, Dr. Scott Scherr. And around that time, they were putting together some things and it looked all really interesting and ultimately became our nonprofit.
So our nonprofit is Health Optimization Medicine and Practice. There, we teach doctors and healthcare practitioners how to optimize for health rather than treat disease. Mm-hmm. One thing I said earlier was that healthcare itself right now is pretty good, but it's really good at disease management.
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Chapter 6: How can optimizing cellular health improve overall well-being?
And so hormone replacement therapy is a huge thing right now. But we take your hormones and we look at the entire hormone pathway rather than something like testosterone. And we take those levels and we try and bring you back to those optimal levels between the ages of 21 to 30. We do the same thing for other processes in the body and nutrients. So your vitamin B, C, D, all of that.
And so what that does is it allows for your cell, and we're just made up of trillions of cells, to be optimized and balanced. And so then what actually happens is if you get the basic cell right, everything else that we call symptoms tend to fall away. And so that's really where health starts is by getting that basic cell right.
But in order to do that and to work with a home hope practitioner, health optimization medicine and practices home hope, we usually say it takes about six to nine months to reach that level in the most diligent of patients. But Mick, if I tell you it takes six to nine months to reach those optimal levels, and then you say like, hey, boomer, I'm stressed today. What do I do?
Or I can't sleep today. What can I do? We needed a solution for that too. And so that's how we started Troscriptions. And so what Troscriptions does, aside from being the number one donor to our nonprofit, you know, nonprofits need a support, right? Troscriptions actually builds products that solve common issues that come through healthcare practitioners door.
Stress, sleep, focus, who doesn't need help with focus these days. Immune system function. And so what we're doing at Transcriptions is providing you that point in time solution so that you can work with your practitioner over those six to nine months to make the behavior changes and some of those nutrient changes that are needed so that you can live that more healthy, more health optimized life.
So that's really the sum of what I do. I also see clients on the side because over this journey, I've had a lot of friends. I call them the three F's, right? Friends, family, and freaks that have asked me like, hey, you've done this to yourself. Can you help me too? And, you know, I love taking a really complex topic like biochemistry or even my previous life finance and saying, okay, All right.
You want to talk about the DVO one of a swap, which is just an esoteric term that finance traders like to use. Well, here, let me break that down for you into something that's a little bit more digestible. And so that's really become my life's work.
Amazing, brother. And so proud of the work that you're doing, but more importantly, the impact that you're making. I don't want to gloss over that. I love giving people. their kudos and their flowers when they're deserved and when they're earned. And you definitely have earned that, man, because you're a trailblazer in this.
There's a lot of people that talk about, you know, what I'll call business wealth and business health, but you're someone that's making sure that it's there. And so I've wanted to ask you this question and I was gonna send it to you on social media, but I knew that we were gonna have a conversation soon. And it's for me, but it's also for entrepreneurs and CEOs like me.
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Chapter 7: What role does exercise play in managing stress levels?
This is actually something that Dan Sullivan teaches, right? That actually happened throughout the day. Five good events. And you may say to yourself, like, hey, I can't think of five good events. Sure you can.
right you're still breathing that's one um at number two there's probably look around your house there's probably an object there that you worked your tail off for and was a reward you know you have this beautiful background make like that is something that you worked your tail off for that room that you're sitting in right you're grateful for that room
um we can go through another like another three pretty easily the place that you live in the fact that you might have good relationships the meeting that you had that day something that you checked off your to-do list that day and there you have five because why do i start with stress because you start with stress an hour before time and all of a sudden i'm in a positive mindset going into sleep now here's the roi component of this
They did a study a couple of years ago about the benefits of sleep and cognitive performance. You know, an entrepreneur is essentially a cognitive ninja or a cognitive athlete, right? And they looked at the cost of sleep deprivation versus somebody drinking beer. And so they looked at the brainwaves of these two people. And it wasn't two people. It was actually done across a number of people.
But they looked at the effects of sleep deprivation versus drinking beer. Getting six hours of sleep a night versus eight is the cognitive impact of drinking two to three 12-ounce beers. Imagine what that does to you. For certain people, it actually unleashes a little bit of creativity. But if I take that all the way down to an all-nighter, I didn't get to sleep last night, just as an example.
That's the equivalent of drinking 10 to 12 12-ounce beers. Now, There might have been a time in college where I could have done that, but I certainly wasn't functional and I certainly wouldn't want to run a business in that manner. So why do we as entrepreneurs sacrifice our sleep so easily?
So if you can see the two recommendations that I'm making, it's actually this positive mindset going into sleep and then the recommendation on the back of the science. So you now see the ROI from a cognitive standpoint of getting sleep. If I want to have my best brain, I need to dedicate those eight hours. So the actual recommendation around sleep is let's flip your schedule around.
In the sense that your day doesn't start with when you wake up in your morning routine, it actually starts with your evening routine actually called the sleep anchoring technique. And so putting into your schedule, this is my hour wind down time. It starts with this gratitude. I perhaps mix in some chamomile tea. Maybe I take some Trozy with this. Maybe I'm reading a book that is not super, um,
cognitive load, like you're not studying quantum physics at night, you're reading something that's more fiction and you're using that to anchor your day. And then your day really starts with sleep. You get those eight hours and then you as the entrepreneur go out and just absolutely rock the world because your brain is at its best performing state.
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Chapter 8: How does Troscriptions address common health challenges?
For sure, everyone, check out the socials. Check out YouTube. There's a lot of really cool, valuable information that Boomer is sharing with his doctor, with Dr. Scott. It's an amazing channel. You're going to take notes, I promise you. But more importantly, you're going to put things into your life immediately because it's all about action. Boomer, brother, more than you know, I thank you.
I'm honored. And I will definitely see you in October. And hopefully I see you before that in the Carolinas. Thank you, Mick.
I really appreciate all the work that you're doing in the world and really bringing these points, these thought leaders and people who are really just on the cutting edge, doing great things and sharing it with your audience because it means a lot. Thank you.
I appreciate you, brother. And to all the viewers and listeners, remember your because is your superpower. Go Wembley.
That's another powerful conversation on Mick Unplugged. If this episode moved you, and I'm sure it did, follow the show wherever you listen, share it with someone who needs that spark, and leave a review so more people can find their because. I'm Rudy Rush, and until next time, stay driven, stay focused, and stay unplugged.
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