All protocols
4,984 protocols across every category, most recommended first.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsTake Methylene Blue Three Times Per Week
His personal frequency recommendation/preference; notes some people may need it more often.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo an NAD Loading Dose of 5 Treatments in 10 Days
Recommended initial protocol for IV NAD.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsDo Monthly NAD Maintenance Infusions
After loading dose, average maintenance recommendation is once per month.
- ▶ 1SupplementsSubcutaneous NAD
Alternative to IV NAD; 100 mg subcutaneously, 5 days on and 2 days off. May cause some stomach cramping.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsInject NAD Subcutaneously 5 Days On, 2 Days Off
Protocol for subcutaneous NAD: 100 milligrams subcutaneously, five days on and two days off.
- ▶ 1ToolsUse a Blank Photo Frame for Future Generations
Keep a blank photo frame alongside family photos as a visual reminder of future children or grandchildren and to guide present decisions.
- ▶ 1ToolsAge-Progressed Photo of Yourself
Create or print an age-progressed image of yourself using an app or filter and place it somewhere visible, such as a bathroom mirror; spend a few seconds looking at it daily to improve future-oriented decision-making.
- ▶ 1ToolsCeramic Mug
Reusable non-plastic vessel recommended for water or hot beverages; also useful for transferring coffee out of paper cups.
- ▶ 1ToolsGlass Bottle
Reusable non-plastic vessel recommended for water, including taking filtered water with you when leaving the house.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsRemineralize Reverse Osmosis Water
If using reverse osmosis, add minerals back because the process also removes key minerals from water.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsFill Reusable Bottles With Filtered Water
If using a home reverse osmosis system, fill glass or stainless steel bottles with that water and take them when leaving the house.
- ▶ 1DietUse Non-Marine Salt Instead of Sea Salt
Use salt from non-marine sources, such as pink Himalayan salt, instead of sea salt to reduce exposure to microplastics and nanoplastics.
- ▶ 1DietAvoid Canned Soup
Avoid canned soup due to BPA and related contaminants from can linings. If consuming canned soup, prefer products explicitly labeled BPA-free, though this may only be a partial safeguard because other endocrine disruptors may still be present.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsAvoid Paper Cups for Hot Drinks
Avoid drinking hot liquids from paper cups because the lining can leach BPA, BPS, microplastics, and nanoplastics, especially with hot liquids.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsTransfer Hot Drinks Out of Paper Cups Quickly
If forced to buy coffee in a paper cup, pour it into a ceramic mug as soon as possible.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsAvoid Drinking Through Plastic Lids
Reduce frequency of drinking hot liquids through plastic lids on takeaway cups.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsBring Your Own Travel Mug
Bring a reusable mug when buying coffee to avoid paper cups and plastic lids; use ceramic, stainless steel, or another vessel that does not contain BPA or BPS. Some places may also offer a discount.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsLightly Cook Cruciferous Vegetables
Lightly cook broccoli and cauliflower rather than overboiling them to preserve sulforaphane while improving tolerability; use a light boil, steam, or pan-cook instead of turning them into a mash or leaching nutrients into the water.
- ▶ 1ToolsCast Iron Cookware
Use cast iron cookware instead of nonstick pans, and choose cookware that is BPA-, BPS-, and PFAS-free.
- ▶ 1ToolsCeramic Cookware
Use ceramic cookware instead of nonstick pans, and make sure cookware is free of BPA, BPS, and PFAS.
- ▶ 1DietChoose Lower-PFAS Carbonated Water or Avoid It
If drinking carbonated water, prefer Perrier or San Pellegrino over Topo Chico based on the cited PFAS analysis; alternatively avoid carbonated water altogether to minimize exposure.
- ▶ 1DietAvoid Packaged Food, Especially Plastic-Packaged Food
Reduce consumption of packaged food, especially food packaged in plastic, to lower microplastic and nanoplastic exposure.
- ▶ 1ToolsFarmer's Markets
Recommended as a source of produce to reduce plastic packaging exposure; bring your own bags or baskets.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsBring Your Own Bags or Baskets When Shopping
Bring your own bags or baskets to farmer's markets or grocery stores to reduce plastic packaging exposure.
- ▶ 1BehaviorsReduce Clothing Purchases and Reuse Clothing Longer
Buy fewer clothes and keep using them longer instead of replacing them frequently to reduce microfiber and microplastic pollution from clothing production, disposal, and washing.
- ▶ 1ToolsGuppy Bag
Laundry bag recommended to trap microfiber shedding from clothing in the wash; described as low cost and easy to find online.
- ▶ 1ToolsWashing Machine Microfiber Filter
Filter that can be installed in specific washing machines to capture microfiber shedding from clothing; noted that some places now require these.
- ▶ 1DietAvoid Microwave Popcorn
Avoid because the bag lining is likely a rich source of microplastics, nanoplastics, and endocrine disruptors.
- ▶ 1DietTooth Tablets
Recommended instead of toothpaste in plastic tubing; he likes tablets in a glass jar for convenience and reduced plastic exposure.
- ▶ 1ToolsNitrile Gloves
Recommended for people who handle receipts frequently at work to reduce BPA exposure; specifically nitrile, not latex, gloves.