Dr. Lili Wagner is a Licensed Psychologist in California with almost 20 years of experience. Using a wide range of evidence-based therapeutic techniques and strategies tailored for each client, she believes that given the right skills and tools, people are more capable and powerful than they often feel. She takes on a holistic approach and utilizes Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Integrative Psychology, Interpersonal Therapy, EMDR (Eye-Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing), and utilization of eco-Psychology by getting her clients out in nature via walk-n-talk sessions. She also provides Health & Behavior Coaching nationally and internationally online as she is an Integrative Nutrition Health Coach, a Certified Primal Health Coach, a Certified Autoimmune Paleo Coach, and has a certificate in Nutritional Psychology.
She has presented internationally, provides wellness programs and lunch & learns for various companies and corporations, including first responders.
Due to her own battles and challenges with three autoimmune diseases, she particularly likes helping those with autoimmune diseases regain their joy and vitality for life.
She loves nature, photography, cooking nutrient-dense meals, traveling, dancing, spending time with her nieces and her adorable co-DOG-tor, Chicken the dog. She enjoys helping others achieve love, health, and joy.
Show Notes:
ABOUT DR. LILI
I am a licensed psychologist in the state of California
I am also a health and behavior coach nationally as well as internationally. I do online sessions and I can also have a one on one sessions here and there
My motto is, “I give your brain hugs, not drugs. I provide skills, not pills.”
I am in California, Santa Clarita area
I worked at a company/clinic and I did a lot of work with patients who have severe trauma and did wellness, training, presentation and all sorts of fun stuff
As a psychologist, basically when I was a little kid and we would drive around, as we are passing houses, I always wonder what’s going on in that house
I have that curiosity of how things work and then I start learning about the brain
I originally wanted to be a medical doctor, a brain surgeon and I did some work in an ER and I did not like how things were done and I wasn’t into blood so much
And so, I asked myself how can I get into people’s brain without cutting down and touching them in any ways, so I decided to be a psychologist
The brain is such a fascinating organ
No matter how much we’ll learn about it, there is so much more that we know and we don’t know at the same time
Just how each individual is so different on how they interpret things makes in fascinating
I have a lot of experience with Alzheimer’s because I do a lot of work with the elderly – ton of experience personally, as well as with my patients
As getting in into the health aspects, I don’t believe that we are just a brain, the body goes along with it, so you can’t ignore it
You have to be holistic and integrative
When I talked to certain practitioners who are just about psychology, psychiatry, or just about the brain and they ignore the rest of the body, I think that’s a disservice and we need to look at everything
Recently I also got into gut health, because I personally have my own issues and that lead me to get more into the mind-body relationship versus just the brain
There is definitely what I like to call, the disconnect. That is a complete disconnect of the mind, brain and the body
I have also met people that are too cognitive, too much into their brain versus their body and they see zero connections
Because they are not doing anything to help themselves physically and sometimes they are so disconnected that they think it has nothing to do with it
So, if they have a high stress job they don’t believe that, that is affecting them physically and that there are some things that they can do with it
One of them is definitely being mindful of how your body feels and how your body is responding to things
We need to use the brain to be aware on what is going on with our body
How the brain and gut talk together is either through the immune system, blood stream – there is a variety of communication system that happens that makes us a whole being
What you eat affects your own gut and your brain
If you don’t enough of a certain kind of protein to help your gut make a neurotransmitter serotonin that goes to your brain, then you might not be as happy
90%-95% of your serotonin is made in your gut
We need to start to paying attention to how we feed ourselves
We have to eat right for our body and everybody is different because we all have different microbiome
That depends on genetics, how we were born whether if we were C-section or natural birth, if we were breastfed or not breastfed, if we had a happy childhood or sad childhood, if there was a lot of trauma when we were kids, if we had a lot if antibiotics used and how that affected our gut microbiome
That plays a huge factor in how the health and diversity of our gut is
We have to look at what food and diet what works for us
Once we figured that out, then we get into the lifestyle factors
Sleep also affects everything. Sleep is a nutrient
And then, we get into the other lifestyle factors on how can we reduce stress. Stress is a huge factor
Stress affects our gut microbiome, stress affects our brain, stress affects everything and people do not pay enough attention to their stress levels
So, what an elimination diet entails are trying to get rid of the most common food allergies
We have dairy, gluten, eggs, nuts, seeds and some other vegetables
Once we eliminate specific foods, we want to see what is causing our trigger
A lot of the reasons why there’s trigger is because of the years of eating certain things now we may have a leaky gut
Do a one at a time reintroduction to see what the actual culprit is
When the gut is healed, you can maybe go back on to eating the certain food that you had a hard time with
The main thing is to get rid of the junk food, cut back on sugar, all the grains and that is just the start
AIP is the autoimmune paleo protocol
It is an elimination diet
If you got some stuff going on, you might want to attempt the AIP
FODMAPS are small carbohydrates that a lot of people can’t digest
To reduce inflammation, we have to eat right, reduce our stress levels, exercise, and we may want to consider having some probiotics
If you have had having antibiotics as a young kid then, your gut health may be compromised
ADVICE
We have to move
I don’t care if you don’t like it. I don’t like it sometimes, but I have to move
Movement is important, exercising is important, and getting that oxygen into our brain is important
I am not saying that’s what causes because I think Alzheimer’s has a multiple problem that creates this
Movement is so vital, because not only movement allows oxygen to got to our brain, but also allows a variety of good chemicals to bunk in the brain
Another thing exercise does is the coordination which is a huge factor in building those neural pathways and it so important
Even if you don’t like exercise, the goal should be, “how do I want my quality of life to be when I am older?”
Exercising is a key factor
Sugar is so bad for our brain because it causes inflammation
And now we are thinking that depression as a cause of brain inflammation
If you reduce that depression, then you’re going to have that energy and you want to do the things that you should be doing in order to be in the healthy state
One of the ways and the most underutilize anti-depressant is exercise
Once you exercise you are actually switching the gears in your brain
Make sure we get enough quality sleep
I want people to turn off their devices off
Meditation has shown through centuries to be helpful to our brain and wellbeing
If you can throw in 10 minutes a day of meditation, you are already doing your brain a whole lot of good and that reduces stress levels
Reducing our stress is a huge deal that we can help ourselves in order to age better
Another thing is to have fun
If we could just go out and learn things, read and listen to thing that’s improving your brain function