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Want to Start at the Beginning?

"Are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll begin."

"Hello There"  My name is Chris. I'm 53 as I write this in October of 2025, and I'm a gamer, a golfer, and a guy who's been (and continues to be) on a serious health journey. After losing and then gaining over 190 pounds and facing significant cardiac events, I thought I was doing everything right by following a 'keto' diet. I was wrong. I discovered I was eating 'dirty keto'—my 'health foods' were full of inflammatory oils, hidden starches, and artificial sweeteners that were working against me. 'The Path is Too Deep' is my personal blog about ditching the marketing and discovering the power of a Clean, Anti-Inflammatory, Whole-Food Ketogenic Lifestyle. I'll be sharing what I've learned about reading labels, my ongoing journey with weight loss, my strategies for managing mental health (ADHD/dysthymia), and my thoughts on gaming, golf, and technology. It's my personal rulebook for taking back control. "Not all those...
Recent posts

The Walking Dead

The human body is an inherently efficient organism. When food is abundant, it prioritizes growth and cellular division. However, this constant state of growth comes at a biological cost: the accumulation of cellular waste. When you push a fasting window out to the 22-hour mark, you deliberately flip a metabolic switch. By completely depriving the body of external amino acids, you force it to look inward for the raw materials it needs to survive. This initiates a profound biological recycling process known as autophagy - literally, "self-eating." Here is the precise mechanical breakdown of how your body identifies and dismantles damaged, aging cells to sustain itself during a strict fasting window. The Biological Trigger: AMPK and mTOR To understand autophagy, we must look at two opposing nutrient-sensing pathways in the body: mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin) and AMPK (adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase). mTOR (The Builder): When you consume protein, the...

Changing the Rules

Many of us began our tabletop journeys in the 1970s and 80s, sitting around a living room table with a classic Parker Brothers or Milton Bradley box. Titles like Monopoly , Clue , and Risk are cultural touchstones, forming the foundation of what most people picture when they hear the term "board game." A 'Meeple' (a contraction of 'my people', being used in the game that coined the term, Carcassonne. However, the tabletop hobby has undergone a quiet but profound renaissance over the last few decades. The design philosophy has matured dramatically, transitioning from games driven primarily by chance to sophisticated experiences centered on strategy, resource management, and player agency. If your experience with board games ended with the mass-market titles of the past, here is an introduction to how the landscape of tabletop gaming has evolved. The Era of Roll-and-Move To appreciate modern game design, it is helpful to look at the historical foundation. Class...

The Shadow of a Doubt

The human brain is, at its core, a highly advanced prediction engine. Its primary biological directive is to keep you alive, and it does this by constantly scanning your environment, recognizing patterns, and generating narratives to predict potential threats. However, this engine is profoundly flawed. When dealing with high-friction interpersonal dynamics, complex professional projects, or unexpected variables, the brain frequently generates worst-case scenarios and presents them to your consciousness as absolute truth. If you passively accept this internal monologue as objective reality, you become a hostage to your own threat-detection hardware. Here is the cognitive behavioral framework for treating your internal narrative with academic skepticism, transforming intrusive thoughts from accepted facts into testable hypotheses. The Illusion of Objectivity The most dangerous cognitive distortion is the belief that because you thought it, it must be true. When a negative assumption ente...

Streaming Consciousness

We meticulously track our macronutrients, audit our biomechanical mobility, and strictly regulate our fasting windows, yet we frequently leave our most critical input entirely unmanaged: our data stream. The human brain metabolizes information in much the same way the digestive system metabolizes food. If you are fueling a highly optimized physical chassis with a steady diet of digital garbage, you will inevitably experience cognitive lethargy, anxiety, and a degraded attention span. Here is the neurological framework for auditing your digital consumption, treating your downtime inputs with the same rigorous standard you apply to your physical nutrition. The Neurology of Sensationalism (Digital Sugar) To understand the necessity of an information audit, you must recognize how commercial algorithms manipulate your neurochemistry. The vast majority of modern media platforms are optimized for engagement, not accuracy. They utilize overly dramatic, sensationalist, and often misleading narr...

Catch of the Day

Most nutritional audits of wild-caught salmon focus entirely on the lipid profile - specifically the high concentration of EPA and DHA Omega-3 fatty acids. While these structural fats are critical for cellular health and inflammation management, they are only half of the equation. They do not account for the biological superpower of the Sockeye species. If you look at a fillet of wild Sockeye salmon, it is not pale pink; it is a deep, vibrant crimson. That color is not just an aesthetic trait; it is a highly functional marine carotenoid called astaxanthin. Here is the biochemistry of why this specific antioxidant is one of the most powerful structural upgrades you can provide your cellular engine. The Pigment is the Payload Astaxanthin originates at the very bottom of the marine food chain. It is produced by microalgae as a biological defense mechanism to protect their own DNA from harsh UV radiation. Krill consume the algae, and wild salmon consume the krill, bioaccumulating massive ...

Meat Your Match

When dealing with tough, highly exercised cuts of meat like flank or skirt steak, the standard culinary approach is to submerge the protein in an acidic liquid. We have been taught that soaking tough meat in vinegar, wine, or citrus will break down the tissue. Biochemically, this is a flawed premise. Relying on acid to tenderize thick muscle fibers usually results in a piece of meat that is gray, mushy on the outside, and structurally tough on the inside. To truly alter the physical texture of a complex protein, you must stop relying on acid and start utilizing biological scissors. Here is the biochemistry of enzymatic tenderization . The Acid Illusion (Denaturation) Proteins in meat are composed of long chains of amino acids tightly coiled together. When you introduce a strong acid (like lemon juice or vinegar), you drop the pH of the environment. This sudden shift in pH causes the proteins to destabilize and uncoil - a process called denaturation . While this uncoiling does allow the...

Staying Current

  The Electrolyte Engine: Mastering Cellular Hydration on a Ketogenic Baseline When you transition to a clean ketogenic architecture and implement a strict fasting window, the most immediate biological threat is not a lack of energy; it is a catastrophic loss of electrical conductivity. We are frequently told to "stay hydrated" by drinking more water. Biologically, pure water does not hydrate you. Water is simply the solvent; electrolytes are the solutes that actually make the system run. If you are experiencing cognitive fog, muscular cramping, or lethargy on a low-carb protocol, your diet is not failing. Your internal battery is simply out of battery acid. Here is the tactical breakdown of what electrolytes actually do, why ketosis actively depletes them, and how to engineer a proper replenishment protocol. The Biological Spark Plugs Electrolytes are essential minerals - primarily sodium, potassium, and magnesium - that carry an electrical charge when dissolved in fluid. Yo...