"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...
The health and wellness industry is saturated with complex, highly marketed frameworks promising to optimize your physiology. However, when we apply rigorous academic skepticism to these protocols, we frequently discover a fundamental flaw in their logic: the trap of the "false variable." This psychological trap occurs when a diet successfully improves your health, but incorrectly identifies why it worked. To understand how to audit these claims and protect your cognitive baseline from flawed science, we can examine one of the most pervasive examples in modern diet culture: The Blood Type Diet. The Example: Dismantling the Lectin Hypothesis Popularized in the 1990s, the Blood Type Diet claimed that your nutritional needs were dictated by the evolutionary history of your blood antigens. The core physiological mechanism it proposed was the "lectin hypothesis." A legume lectin monomer The theory stated that lectins - proteins found in certain foods - would react viole...