A few years ago, I was your typical office-worker: stressed out, uneven energy, overweight, and inconsistent complexion. Now I'm just your typical 28-year old urban hunter-gatherer on a quest to be healthy, and having a few adventures along the way. See my full bio.
Wild, Domesticated, Industrial: A simple way to understand health
Health should be simple. Too often, it's not. I hate reading most health articles. The author, who always fancies himself an expert, latches on to some macronutrient (fat, carbs, protein), micronutrient (Vitamin D, zinc, iron), or superfood (acai berries, pomegranate) -- and then offers a recommendation that goes something like this: If only you avoid [macronutrient], supplement with [micronutrient], and eat lots of [expensive organic superfood that I sell], then you will be healthy!! The problem is, the recommendation changes every year.
Here is a simple way to understand how to be healthy. This is the shortest history of humanity you'll ever read (three words): wild, domesticated, industrial.
- Wild: Humans lived as hunter-gatherers in the wild (~1-2 million years, including recent ancestors)
- Domesticated: Humans domesticated plants and animals during the Agricultural Revolution, and lived as farmers and herders (~10k years)
- Industrial: Humans built the industrial food system and started eating processed foods (~100 years or fewer)
Nearly all conventional health authorities recommend that you move from an Industrial Diet (processed foods, soda, Pop Tarts) to a traditional Farmer's Diet (whole grains, dairy, organic). It's a good first step. I'm simply recommending that we go one step further back in time, to a Hunter-Gatherer Diet.
And that's it! Really, that's it. It needs to be no more complicated than that. Remove processed foods. Remove farmer foods. DONE.

Note: If this were drawn to scale, you wouldn't even be able to see the Industrial phase, and the farming phase would be a small sliver
You can apply this simple framework (Wild, Domesticated, Industrial), not just to food, but to all lifestyle aspects related to health. I'll be using this framework in my book -- it's not original to me, it's a standard way to look at human history in anthropology.
A few additional points:
- The reason why I advocate a hunter-gatherer diet is that humans tended to be physically healthy living as hunter-gatherers in the wild. We'll review some of that evidence in future posts.
- To eat a traditional Farmer's Diet, you don't need to live on a farm and be a farmer. Similarly, to eat a hunter-gatherer diet, you don't need to live in the wild and be a hunter-gatherer. You need to replicate the key aspects of the diet and lifestyle.
- There are beneficial foods and technologies from modern times (duh) -- let's take the best of the old with the best of the new.
- We can argue all day long about what the "true" paleo diet is. How much saturated fat, how much seasonal eating, how much meat. Blah, blah, blah. The historical reality is that there were many hunter-gatherer diets. This is the difficulty of creating a single set of food guidelines for the Paleo Challenge. The more important point is that you adopt a hunter-gatherer diet, not the hunter-gatherer diet (there isn't one).
There are tons of resources to explore how to get started: PaNu, Paleo Intro, Paleo Diet, or CrossFit NYC. Or buy one of these books -- it doesn't really matter which one:
- The Paleo Solution by Robb Wolf
- The Primal Blueprint by Mark Sisson
- The New Evolution Diet by Art De Vany
- The Paleo Diet by Loren Cordain
And you know what, pick any of these approaches for the Paleo Challenge. But you have to pick something and stick to it. Fundamentally, they all boil down to a simple recommendation:
Step 1: Don't eat processed foods
Step 2: Eat wild
Pretty simple, right?

Comments
That's a great summary, John.
That's a great summary, John. From now on, if someone asks me about my "caveman" diet, this post is one of the things I'll send him or her.
Aloha John! Just checking
Aloha John! Just checking in...finished off the basmati rice and chicken curry, the homemade bread and irish butter....oh and the Prosecco. Ready to be on point with my anti-inflamatory experiment ,paleo style in the morning. 30 days and ready!
"The author, who always
"The author, who always fancies himself an expert, latches on to some macronutrient (fat, carbs, protein), micronutrient (Vitamin D, zinc, iron), or superfood (acai berries, pomegranate) -- and then offers a recommendation that goes something like this: If only you avoid [macronutrient], supplement with [micronutrient], and eat lots of [expensive organic superfood that I sell], then you will be healthy!! The problem is, the recommendation changes every year."Yes--there's a lot of variation in what different people can tolerate, what they need, and how much they need to fine-tune their diet. And I find it hard to believe that we all need some exotic substance to be healthy.
Aloha John! Great post! I am
Aloha John! Great post! I am just finishing Art Devany's book should be done today or tomorrow. Have read Sisson and Cordain and am diggin' Art's style . Hope everyone gets a chance to fead a few of these it will make for great discussion here!!!I LOVE the sea turtle btw :)
Thanks! I love the sea
Thanks! I love the sea turtle too -- it's a great picture.
Turning out better than i
Turning out better than i thought. As a restaurant worker for many many years, i thought I would have to say bye to a lot of things i love. Not true. Tonight's menu: Brook trout, eggs, and wild greens with lemon and horseradish. Thanks John for changing the way I eat and live. Exercising much more and efficiently.
Sounds mouth-watering. There
Sounds mouth-watering. There are so many good real foods out there. Keep sharing any good meals you come up with!
I still have a few questions
I still have a few questions about how much carbs I should be eating. I'm a runner and I'm not sure how a protein rich diet is going to affect my long runs of 15 miles or more.
Well, to start, you could
Well, to start, you could switch to healthier carbs. Sweet potatoes, yams, roots, and tubers. Try to get off gluten in particular. There are pacific islanders who were quite healthy, by all measures, and ate a fairly decent proportion of carbohydrate. Most runners go way over-board in carbo-loading, far beyond what is required to re-fill your muscles with glycogen. And often by eating junk food (potato chips, pretzels, pasta).
ok, fair enough. although
ok, fair enough. although hunter-gatherers didn't have to deal with so much fluoride or antidepressants in the water, industrial pollution, dirty rivers, depleted soil, etc etc. That's why sometimes, especially if you are already sick, eating low-carb food at chipotle is not enough to get better, and organic foods might help.
Agreed
Agreed
Here's three more words that
Here's three more words that get you a pretty good start on things: "Eat Real Food."
I know, I know, supermarket
I know, I know, supermarket food is the best that can be done for most people, but honestly, do we have to call that garbage "Real Food"?Farmers don't grow the crops that have the highest nutrional value. They don't grow the crops that have the best taste. They grow for drought tolerance, Blight resistance, Anti-fungal properties, and most importantly, shipping damage resistance. They're not farming because they love you - they're farming because that's how they make money. The crops that survive the growing season and make it to market with the highest survival percentage are the crop seeds that farmers are going to buy.Yes, there are Farmer's Markets. Yes they sell crops slightly better for you. 10,000 years of Agrarian Selection, however, works it's Vile Agrarian VooDoo upon even the tastiest strains of cantelope.I put on the table the term "Agrarian Food". Because that's what it is. It's not Natural Food (which would be Real Food), but it's what we have.-WisskiIrrationally obsessive about proper names. Sorry.
Yes, very simple! Looking
Yes, very simple! Looking forward to your book. Caraprimroseandpaleo.wordpress.com
Brilliant! But I'd really
Brilliant! But I'd really like to see some attemp to scale the graphic. I think it woud be MUCH more powerful and persuasive...Still, nicely done! Makes me want to send this post to all my friends and family--the ones who get that glazed look in their eyes when I try to explain why I suddenly stopped being vegan after 17 years...
Wow, 17 years -- quite a
Wow, 17 years -- quite a journey.
I tried to scale it, but couldn't read the text. Let me try something else...
Quite a journey, indeed!
Quite a journey, indeed! With a rather abrupt U-Turn! ;-)Yeah, a second graphic to scale... the first graphic could be an enlargement of just the right-most part of the first...