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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 Gray Matter of Fact

When you receive a diagnosis of combined presentation ADHD at the age of five, the behavioral model of psychology becomes your default reality. For decades, the prevailing medical narrative has framed hyper-reactivity and inattention as "software glitches" - failures of executive function to be managed through discipline, masking, or behavioral intervention. This paradigm is especially damaging when dealing with the intense emotional dysregulation that frequently accompanies the combined presentation. We are often told that emotional volatility is a lack of psychological resilience. A recent landmark study published in JAMA Psychiatry unequivocally proves that this is a hardware reality, not a personal failing. The Topological Map The medical community is finally transitioning away from subjective behavioral checklists. Researchers recently analyzed the brain scans of over 1,100 individuals utilizing an advanced metric called "morphometric similarity networks." In...

Down the Rabbit Hole

In an enterprise IT infrastructure, if you do not implement Quality of Service (QoS) protocols, low-priority background applications will silently consume all available network bandwidth, choking out critical systems. The human brain operates on the exact same architectural principle. Cognitive bandwidth is a strictly finite resource. Every decision, emotional regulation, and deep-dive into complex information draws from the same biological battery. Today, we are auditing how that bandwidth is allocated, specifically focusing on the mechanics of hyperfocus and the danger of unregulated passive inputs. The Mechanics of Hyperfocus Hyperfocus is often misunderstood as a deliberate, superpower-level of concentration. In reality, it is a state of intense, sustained attention that is notoriously difficult to regulate. Neurologically, it is driven by the brain's reward center seeking stimulation. When the brain finds a subject that provides a steady, engaging drip of dopamine, it locks on...

No Sugar-Coating It

The landscape of alternative sweeteners is currently undergoing a massive shift in the scientific literature. Compounds that were widely accepted as biologically inert just five years ago are now facing rigorous academic scrutiny. When you are strictly managing insulin and optimizing a fasting window, understanding the exact biochemical mechanism of your chosen sweetener is not optional - it is a structural requirement. Here is a biological audit of the sweetener spectrum, from the most toxic metabolic disruptors to the cleanest, plant-based alternatives, and how to mathematically calculate your daily exposure. The Baseline: The Metabolic Disruptors High Fructose Corn Syrup (HFCS) & Sucrose: These are the baseline toxins. They require no in-depth analysis here beyond stating that they cause immediate, aggressive insulin spikes, drive hepatic insulin resistance, and directly degrade the endothelial lining of your blood vessels. They have no place in a functionally optimized human ...

Breaking the Ice

The most common failure in a clean ketogenic kitchen is attempting to make ice cream. If you simply replace the sugar in a traditional recipe with a standard keto sweetener, you will pull a solid, impenetrable brick out of your freezer 24 hours later. The problem is not your ice cream maker. The problem is a misunderstanding of physical chemistry. Traditional ice cream relies on sugar for more than just sweetness; it relies on it for structural engineering. By understanding the mechanics of Freezing Point Depression , you can swap the correct molecules to create a frozen dessert that remains smooth and scoopable without triggering an insulin response. The Physics of the Freeze Pure water freezes at 0°C, locking into a rigid, solid ice crystal lattice. However, when you dissolve a solute (like sugar) into that water, the sugar molecules physically get in the way of the water molecules. They disrupt the formation of the ice lattice. This means the temperature must drop significantly lowe...

Starch Enemy

You can perfectly execute a 22-hour fast, but if you break it with stealth carbohydrates hiding in your pantry, you are actively sabotaging your metabolic baseline. A clean ketogenic lifestyle is not just about eliminating the obvious sugars, like sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup . It requires a systemic defense against the highly processed ingredients that food manufacturers use as cheap fillers and thickeners. These ingredients are technically starches, which allows companies to legally label their products as "Sugar-Free" or "Keto-Friendly," despite the fact that they trigger massive insulin spikes. Here is the tactical framework for auditing your pantry and identifying the metabolic disruptors hiding in plain sight. The Loophole of "Net Carbs" The front of a package is a marketing billboard designed to sell you a product; the ingredient list on the back is a legal document. Many processed foods boast low "net carbs" by utilizing sugar al...

A Hard Nut to Crack

An 18-month clinical trial known as the DIRECT PLUS study recently provided compelling MRI evidence regarding brain aging. The researchers tracked a specific pro-inflammatory protein called Galectin-9 (Gal-9), which is heavily associated with a larger "Brain Age Gap" - meaning the brain physically appears older than the person's chronological age. The study demonstrated that a high intake of polyphenols significantly reduced Gal-9 levels, effectively slowing the biological aging of the brain. The primary delivery mechanisms utilized in the trial were seven portions of walnuts per week and three to four daily cups of green tea. While the underlying science of polyphenols is sound, the specific delivery vehicles used in the study present significant biological and pharmacological conflicts for a strict, clean ketogenic protocol. The Flaw in the Vehicles The Omega-6 Payload of Walnuts Walnuts are extremely high in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), specifically Omega...

Firing on All Synapses

In the world of computer science, there is a long-standing joke that the ultimate test of any new hardware is whether or not it can run the 1993 first-person shooter, Doom . Recently, a company called Cortical Labs achieved exactly that , but their hardware was not made of silicon - it was made of roughly 200,000 living human brain cells. This is not simply a quirky technological stunt. It represents a fundamental shift in machine learning, moving away from artificial neural networks and toward Synthetic Biological Intelligence (SBI). Here is a look under the hood at the architecture of a biological computer. The Pong Precedent To understand the significance of the Doom experiment, we have to look at the baseline established by Cortical Labs' previous work . In earlier iterations, researchers proved that a monolayer of living cells (dubbed "DishBrain") could be taught to play Pong . While impressive, Pong is fundamentally a 2D game of predictable physics with a direct ...