• Episode 59 Eating Like a Caveman: Exploring Modern Nutrition Through a Prehistoric Len
    Apr 1 2026

    This episode is called Eating Like a Caveman: Exploring Modern Nutrition Through a Prehistoric Lens. We are going to explore what the Paleolithic diet actually looked like, what modern science has to say about it, and most importantly, how you can use these ancient principles to make genuinely better food choices in the context of your modern life. No extreme measures. No impossible restrictions. Just a thoughtful, evidence-informed look at food the way our bodies were designed to experience it.

    I want to be upfront about something from the start: this is not a show about telling you that you can never eat a piece of bread again or that modern food is evil. This is a show about understanding. When we understand how our bodies evolved to process food, we make better decisions — not out of fear or restriction, but out of genuine knowledge. And that knowledge is empowering in a way that no diet plan ever could be. Let's dig in.

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    49 mins
  • Episode 58: The Foundations of Strength: Lessons from Ancient Movements
    Mar 25 2026

    This episode is called The Foundations of Strength: Lessons from Ancient Movements, and by the time we wrap up today, you are going to have a completely different way of thinking about what it means to be strong. We are going to explore where strength really comes from, how our ancestors built it without ever stepping foot inside a fitness facility, and how you can apply those same principles starting today — no matter where you are on your fitness journey. We'll strip away the complexities and get back to the fundamentals, delving into the core primal movement patterns that were indispensable for human survival: squatting, hinging, carrying, pushing, pulling, throwing, and even crawling. You see, in the modern world, we often focus on isolating individual muscles with machines, but our ancestors' lives demanded a different kind of training – compound movements that integrated the entire body for practical, real-world tasks. I'll share why this topic resonates so deeply with me, drawing from my own journey of rediscovering the intuitive power of my body when I stepped away from the conventional gym and started training like my ancient self. This re-evaluation of strength isn't just theory; it's the bedrock upon which we'll eventually introduce elements of our comprehensive six-week caveman fitness plan in future episodes, showing you how to systematically integrate these timeless principles into your routine.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    33 mins
  • Episode 57: The Power of Barefoot Living
    Mar 20 2026

    Now I know what some of you might be thinking. You're thinking: Brad, come on. Shoes are fine. Shoes are normal. Shoes are what civilized people wear. And you're not wrong — shoes do serve real purposes in many situations. But here's what I want you to consider: for the overwhelming majority of human history, nobody wore shoes. Or if they did, those shoes were little more than a thin layer of leather or plant material — just enough to protect against sharp rocks or extreme cold, nothing more. The foot itself did all the work. Every muscle, every tendon, every tiny stabilizing structure in the foot and ankle was constantly engaged, constantly responding to the ground, constantly doing its job.

    Then, somewhere along the line, we started wrapping our feet in thick, heavily cushioned, motion-controlling footwear. And while that footwear solved some problems, it created others. When your foot is cradled in a rigid structure that controls its every movement, the muscles inside it stop working as hard. Over time, they weaken. The arch loses its natural spring. The ankle becomes less stable. And without even realizing it, the effects ripple upward — through your knees, your hips, your lower back — until you've got a chain of compensations running all the way up your body, all originating from the fact that your feet forgot how to be feet.

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    41 mins
  • Episode 56: Fighting Stress — Lessons from the Past
    Mar 15 2026

    Today we are talking about stress. Not in a clinical or academic way — though the science is genuinely fascinating and we will get into it — but in a deeply human way. We are talking about what stress actually is in the body, how our ancestors experienced and managed it, and why the strategies that worked for them still work for us today, even though the world we live in is almost unrecognizably different from the world they inhabited.

    Because here is the truth that I find both humbling and hopeful: stress is not a modern invention. The experience of stress — the racing heart, the narrowed focus, the surge of energy and alarm that prepares you to respond to danger — is one of the oldest biological experiences in the animal kingdom. Your prehistoric ancestors felt it. Their grandparents felt it. The mammals who came before them felt it. Stress is ancient. And because it is ancient, the solutions are ancient too, woven into your biology in ways that are still accessible to you today, if you know where to look.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    47 mins
  • Episode 55: Thriving Off the Land — Lessons in Sustainability
    Mar 10 2026

    We are talking about the land today. About the rich, dark ground beneath your feet, the vibrant, life-giving food on your table, and the ancient, primal relationship between human beings and the natural world that fed them, sheltered them, and shaped the very bodies they lived in. We are talking about sustainability — but not in the way you might hear it thrown around in a corporate news headline or printed on a reusable shopping bag. We are digging deeper. We are talking about it from the inside out, from the gut of human history, from a place of instinct that is older than language and older than farming itself.

    This episode is called Thriving Off the Land, and it is about so much more than just recycling your plastic bottles or reducing your carbon footprint, though both of those things matter deeply and have their place. It is about rediscovering a fundamental relationship with the natural world that modern life has quietly, steadily, and often invisibly eroded from our daily experience. It is about understanding how our prehistoric ancestors lived in genuine, dynamic harmony with their environment — not as a romantic, idealized notion, but as a hard-won, practical, survival-based reality. And then, it's about asking ourselves what crucial pieces of that relationship we can reclaim today, right now, without giving up the undeniable good parts of modern life.

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    27 mins
  • Episode 54 The Community Connection
    Mar 5 2026

    When we think about what made early humans successful, we often picture their ability to make tools, control fire, or hunt large animals. But perhaps the most crucial adaptation was something less tangible yet infinitely more powerful: their capacity to form deep, meaningful social connections. Our ancestors did not survive the harsh realities of the prehistoric world through individual strength or cunning alone. They survived because they learned to depend on one another, to share resources, to protect each other, and to build communities that were far greater than the sum of their parts.

    These early communities were not just groups of individuals living in proximity. They were intricate social networks where every person had value, every relationship mattered, and every interaction strengthened the collective whole. Understanding this foundation helps us appreciate why connection feels so essential to our well-being today. It is written into our very DNA, a legacy passed down through countless generations who learned that together, we are stronger.

    See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

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    33 mins
  • Episode 53: Sleep Like a Caveman
    Feb 25 2026

    Welcome back to Beyond the Cave, where we explore how ancient wisdom can transform modern life. Today we're diving deep into one of the most fundamental aspects of human health that our ancestors absolutely nailed: sleep. While we're surrounded by memory foam mattresses, sleep tracking apps, and countless supplements promising better rest, our prehistoric cousins somehow managed to sleep better than most of us do today. The secret wasn't in fancy technology or pharmaceutical interventions. It was in their profound alignment with nature's rhythms and their environment.

    Think about it for a moment. Our caveman ancestors didn't have sleep specialists, prescription sleeping pills, or even alarm clocks. Yet they consistently experienced the kind of deep, restorative sleep that eludes millions of modern humans. They weren't scrolling through social media at midnight, chugging energy drinks in the afternoon, or stressing about emails at bedtime. Their sleep was governed by something far more powerful and reliable: the natural cycles that have shaped human biology for hundreds of thousands of years.

    The quality of your sleep determines the quality of your waking life. Our ancestors understood this instinctively.

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    35 mins
  • Episode 52 Movement as Medicine
    Feb 20 2026

    For hundreds of thousands of years, human beings moved in patterns that built extraordinary physical capabilities. Our ancestors were not bodybuilders or marathon runners in the modern sense, but they possessed a kind of functional fitness that allowed them to thrive in demanding environments. They had to walk long distances to find food and water, sometimes covering twenty miles or more in a single day. They climbed trees to gather fruit or escape predators. They lifted and carried heavy objects like stones, logs, and animal carcasses. They crawled through dense vegetation and jumped over obstacles. They sprinted when danger appeared and squatted to rest or work close to the ground.

    These movements were not performed in isolated sets or timed intervals. They were woven into the fabric of daily life, creating a constant state of low to moderate physical activity punctuated by occasional bursts of intense effort. This pattern of movement kept early humans lean, strong, and mobile. Their joints stayed healthy from regular use through full ranges of motion. Their muscles remained balanced and functional because they used their bodies in diverse, natural ways.

    What is fascinating is that our bodies still carry this ancient blueprint. Our muscles, bones, joints, and cardiovascular systems are designed for the exact movements that our ancestors performed every day. When we move in these natural patterns, our bodies respond with improved health, reduced pain, and increased energy. When we abandon these movements, we experience dysfunction and disease. The human body is not meant to be still. It is meant to move, and it thrives when we give it the movement it was designed for.

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    39 mins