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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

Without Missing a Beat

The bathroom scale is a fundamentally flawed tool for tracking health because it only measures one thing: gravity. It cannot differentiate between water retention, muscle mass, or bone density. If you want a true, objective measurement of how your body is handling the physiological demands of life, fasting, and training, you have to look at Heart Rate Variability (HRV). While the scale measures physical mass, HRV measures systemic stress. It is the most accurate real-time indicator of your Autonomic Nervous System (ANS). Here is the biology of how the microscopic space between your heartbeats dictates your metabolic state, and how a clean ketogenic protocol alters the math. The Autonomic Tug-of-War Your Autonomic Nervous System operates completely outside of your conscious control, managing everything from digestion to pupil dilation. It is divided into two competing branches: The Sympathetic Branch: This is your "fight-or-flight" mechanism. It is activated by physical str...

Going Nuts

On a clean ketogenic protocol, nuts are often viewed as the ultimate convenient snack. They are high in fat, relatively low in carbohydrates, and provide a satisfying crunch. However, when we look at the biochemistry of their lipid profiles, we quickly realize that not all nuts are created equal. In fact, many popular choices can actively work against an anti-inflammatory lifestyle. If we want to optimize for cellular health, there is an undisputed king of the category: the macadamia nut. Here is the academic breakdown of why macadamias are the optimal choice for clean ketosis. The Problem with the Popular Nuts To understand why macadamias are superior, we first have to understand the flaw in almonds, walnuts, and peanuts (the last of which which are technically legumes). The issue comes down to Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids (PUFAs) , specifically Omega-6 linoleic acid. While we need trace amounts of Omega-6 to survive, the modern diet provides it in massive, toxic quantities. When Omega...

All You Knead to Know

Baking without wheat flour is fundamentally an exercise in structural engineering. When you transition to a clean ketogenic lifestyle, you quickly realize that traditional baking recipes cannot simply be adapted by swapping one powder for another. Almond flour behaves completely differently than all-purpose wheat flour because it lacks the biological scaffolding required to hold baked goods together. Here is the chemistry of why almond flour crumbles, and the specific binders we must use to replicate the texture, rise, and "chew" of traditional bread. The Missing Scaffolding: Gluten In traditional baking, wheat flour provides a protein composite known as gluten . When gluten is mixed with water and kneaded, it forms an elastic, web-like matrix. This matrix does two critical things: Traps Gas: When baking powder or yeast releases carbon dioxide, the elastic gluten web traps those bubbles, causing the dough to rise. Provides Structure: As the bread bakes, the protein web set...

The Missing Links

Golf is not an arm-swinging exercise; it is a violent, rotational transfer of energy that requires a flawless kinetic chain. Here in Nova Scotia, February means the golf season is still a couple of months away. But what you do right now dictates whether you will be playing pain-free in April or nursing a lower back injury by May. I have been focusing heavily on my pre-season mobility routine, and here is the biomechanical reason why flexibility is non-negotiable. The Science of the Kinetic Chain To generate clubhead speed without destroying your joints, your body relies on a specific sequence of movement known as the kinetic chain. Power does not originate in your shoulders. It is generated in this exact physiological order: The Ground: Your feet push against the earth to create ground reaction forces. The Pelvis: The hips rotate to clear space and transfer that ground energy upward. The Thorax: Your upper torso fires next, multiplying the rotational speed. The Arms and Club: Final...

Making Scents of the Label

Cleaning up your diet is only the first half of the metabolic equation; the second half is cleaning up your environment. Over the last few weeks, I have been conducting an audit of the cleaning and personal care products in my home, systematically replacing them with non-toxic alternatives. The goal is not to be an alarmist, but to be an academic about what we expose our bodies to daily. Many conventional household products contain Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs). These chemicals silently interfere with the very hormones we work so hard to regulate through diet, exercise, and fasting. Here is the science behind EDCs and how to identify them on a label. The Science of Disruption Your endocrine system is a delicate communication network. Glands release hormones (like insulin, testosterone, thyroid hormones, and cortisol) that travel through your bloodstream to specific cellular receptors. They act as chemical messengers telling your body whether to store fat, build muscle, or man...

A Real Glass Act

Humanity is generating data at an exponential rate, but our current methods for storing it are remarkably fragile . Most digital archives rely on magnetic tapes or hard disk drives that degrade within a few years, requiring constant, expensive data migration . However, a recently published study from the Microsoft Research Project Silica Team details an end-to-end system that solves this by writing data directly into glass . Sidebar: Just How Much Data is Out There? If the amount of digital information in the world is something that enters your consciousness, you might want to sit down for this. The global "datasphere" is expanding at an unprecedented rate, currently estimated to be over a staggering 175 zettabytes . To truly visualize the sheer scale of 175 zettabytes, consider these mathematical comparisons: The Baseline: A single zettabyte is the equivalent of one trillion gigabytes . The "sweet spot" for the hard drive in a modern computer is 1 terabyte.  It w...

Fixer Upper

For much of my life, I have operated as a "fixer" in my relationships. If someone I cared about came to me with a problem, a frustration, or a point of friction, my immediate biological response was to rapidly formulate a solution. On the surface, being a fixer sounds like a positive trait. It feels helpful. It feels supportive. But clinical psychology offers a different perspective: constantly stepping in to solve other people's problems is often less about helping them, and more about soothing our own internal anxiety. The Mechanics of Rescuing When we see someone we care about in distress, it creates emotional discomfort within us. For those of us with hyperactive or anxious mental baselines, that discomfort is intolerable. Source:  Shutterstock In psychology, there is a model called the Karpman Drama Triangle , which maps out destructive social interactions. The "Rescuer" (the fixer) is a classic role. The rescuer intervenes to fix the situation, which tempo...