Practice what you preach, or shut up

A 2025 review subject was sulforaphane and brain health. This paper was the latest in a sequence where the retired lead author self-aggrandized his career by citing previous research.

He apparently doesn’t personally do what these research findings suggest people do. The lead author is a few weeks older than I am, and has completely white hair per an interview (Week 34 comments). I’ve had dark hair growing in (last week a barber said my dark hair was 90%) since Week 8 of eating broccoli sprouts every day, which is a side effect of ameliorating system-wide inflammation and oxidative stress.

If the lead author followed up with what his research investigated, he’d have dark hair, too. Unpigmented white hair and colored hair are both results of epigenetics.

Contrast this lack of personal follow-through of research findings with Dr. Goodenowe’s protocol where he compared extremely detailed personal brain measurements at 17 months and again at 31 months. He believes enough in his research findings to personally act on them, and demonstrate to others how personal agency can enhance a person’s life.

It’s every human’s choice whether or not we take responsibility for our own one precious life. I’ve read and curated on this blog many of this paper’s references. Five years ago for example:

So do more with their information than just read.

https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/17/8/1353 “Sulforaphane and Brain Health: From Pathways of Action to Effects on Specific Disorders”

Year Five of Changing to a youthful phenotype with sprouts

1. I’ve continued daily practices from Year Four to experience another year without being sick! I’ll get a set of Labcorp tests in a week to see if anything is sneaking up on me.

Really think that Brassica clinical trials should last years, not weeks. Once people get over the fact that broccoli, red cabbage, and mustard sprouts will never taste good because their compounds are plants’ defenses against predators, they’ll overlook that in favor of health benefits. Avena sativa oat sprouts don’t have a palatability problem.

2. Daily supplements have changed a little:

  • Started taking a quercetin supplement suggested in a comment to Year One as helpful for seasonal allergies (it doesn’t do that for me). Repeatedly rinsing and soaking the salt out of capers for quercetin content became too much of a nuisance, and the results didn’t always taste right;
  • Stopped taking Prodrome supplements because of unsustainable high costs;
  • Started taking Ovega 3 algae oil DHA 420 mg/EPA 140 mg twice a day in their place;
  • Substituted flax oil 1400 mg once a day for Balance oil;
  • Started taking 2 g magnesium L-threonate;
  • Upped taurine intake from 5 to 6 grams;
  • Upped D3 by 25 mcg to a daily 4400 IU;
  • Reduced chondroitin sulfate by 1.8 g since my joints are doing fine;
  • Stopped soy lecithin in favor of eating three raw eggs.

3. I injured my left shoulder in May 2024 by overdoing upper body exercises, and stopped seven months to recover. Gained thirty pounds during that layoff, and have worked off ten pounds with new routines since then.

I’m no longer dogmatic about aerobic exercise / beach walks. I’ll go over to the beach before sunrise when it isn’t raining or windy, or wait until the afternoon for weather to improve, rather than walk 30 minutes a day irregardless.