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PODCAST · health

Feeling Good Feels Good

Feeling Good Feels Good is a weekly wellness podcast hosted by Philadelphia chiropractor Dr. Zachary Tripp.Making feeling good feel simple. Making health and wellness accessible, interesting, and genuinely fun.Every episode finds the wonder and power in everyday items and habits — the foods you already eat, the habits you already have, the body you already live in. Some episodes uncover lesser known facts that will completely change how you see something ordinary. Others take topics that have been overcomplicated by the medical and wellness industry and strip them back down to what actually

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  1. 25

    Ep. 25: Why Does My Whole Body Hurt? — Wellness Mysteries | Feeling Good Feels Good

    Ricky D. Yang is 38 and his whole body hurts. Every single day. Not his back. Not his knee. All of it.He has seen the doctors. He has the lab results. He is even on a medication for it. And he keeps getting worse.But there are clues in Ricky's story. His name. His company. The snacks in his drawer. The way his whole day is structured. Even his lab work is pointing somewhere — if you know how to read it.Find out why a man in his prime cannot get out of bed before noon. Why his muscles stopped working the way they should. Why a medication that was supposed to help made everything worse. And why the answer was hiding in plain sight the entire time.Play along. See if you can solve it before the reveal.Making feeling good feel easy.(0:00) Meet Ricky — A Mystery Begins(5:14) The Clues Are Everywhere — Can You Solve It?(11:40) Solving the Mystery(13:21) The Science Behind the Answer(17:22) The Deep History Behind the Answer(22:46) Getting Ricky Better(28:09) How Ricky's Story Can Help You

  2. 24

    Ep. 24: Eating Healthy at Home — How to Save Money, Cut Inflammation, and Never Spend Hours in the Kitchen | Feeling Good Feels Good

    The average American spends nearly $11,000 a year eating out. Most home cooked meals cost under $6 per serving. This episode gives you the system to change that without spending hours in the kitchen or following complicated recipes.Find out how cooking at home literally built the human brain 1.9 million years ago — and what that still means for your body today.Find out why the oil you cook with is one of the most important health decisions you make every single day — and why most restaurants never use the right one.Find out why eating something sweet first thing in the morning sets your cravings and energy for the entire rest of the day before it has even started.Find out the exact breakfast, snack, lunch, and dinner system Dr. Tripp uses personally — two cooking sessions a week, one pan, no recipes required.Find out which personality type you are in the kitchen — and why most people who hate cooking are just using the wrong approach for how their brain actually works.Find out why dishes are the real reason most people avoid cooking — and the simple fix that eliminates that obstacle entirely.Making feeling good feel easy.(0:00) Introduction (1:00) The Cost of Eating Out (4:55) The History of Cooking (8:00) The Health Case for Home Cooking (9:25) Cooking Oils Matter (10:28) The Breakfast System (12:34) Smart Snacking (16:16) Lunch and Flexibility (17:31) The Dinner System — One Pan Method (18:29) Spices as Medicine (21:19) Baker vs Chef Personality (23:09) Time Saving Formula (25:12) Closing Thoughts

  3. 23

    Ep. 23: Raspberries: How This Little "Berry" Is So Powerful and So Different From Other Fruits | Feeling Good Feels Good

    Most people throw a handful of raspberries in their yogurt without thinking twice. This episode will change that.Find out why raspberries are not actually a berry. And what they really are botanically will surprise you.Find out how Paleolithic cave dwellers used them. How ancient Greeks explained why they are red. How Roman soldiers used them on military campaigns across Europe. How Traditional Chinese Medicine has been prescribing them for fifteen hundred years. And how George Washington used them at Mount Vernon.Find out why one cup of raspberries has more fiber than most protein bars and less sugar than almost any other fruit — and what that combination does to your blood sugar first thing in the morning.Find out what ellagitannins are, what your gut does with them, and why a fifty dollar supplement is just an expensive version of something sitting in your freezer aisle for two dollars.Find out why frozen raspberries are often more nutritious than fresh ones. And why that changes how you should be shopping.Making feeling good feel easy.(0:00) Introduction (3:17) What Is a Raspberry? (4:44) History and Origins (8:45) Ancient Medicine and Raspberry Leaf (11:53) Nutrition and Science (15:46) Practical Tips and Shopping Smart (18:24) How to Use Raspberries (20:31) Closing Thoughts

  4. 22

    Rotator Cuff: Why You Might Not Need Surgery and the Fascinating Way It Was Designed to Work | Feeling Good Feels Good Ep. 22

    The rotator cuff is one of the most commonly injured parts of the body and you don't have to be an athlete to hurt it.Four small muscles quietly handle some of the most complex movements your body performs every single day. Reaching for a coffee mug. Putting on a jacket. Washing your hair. All rotator cuff.Most people only think about these muscles when something goes wrong. But the rotator cuff is far more remarkable than most people realize.It is a high tech system that played a key role in humans evolving into what we are today. In many ways we have to thank our rotator cuffs for modern society more than we ever realize. And like most high tech systems, that sophistication makes it incredibly useful and also vulnerable to breaking down.Understanding how it works, how it gets injured, and how to rehab it is more vital to everyday life than most people appreciate.In this episode we cover the anatomy and origins of these four muscles, the evolutionary story behind your shoulder, and the most common injuries including tears, tendonitis, and impingement. We break down how to recognize them and how to tell them apart from other shoulder problems. Then we get into recovery. Most rotator cuff injuries do not require surgery. We cover what non-surgical rehabilitation actually looks like including physical therapy, chiropractic care, and acupuncture, and what the full progression from early recovery to complete function feels like.Whether you are dealing with shoulder pain right now, recovering from an injury, or just want to keep your shoulders healthy for life — this episode is for you.Find Feeling Good Feels Good on YouTube and all major podcast platforms.Making feeling good feel easy.(00:00) Introduction: Why the Rotator Cuff Matters (02:43) What Is the Rotator Cuff? Anatomy and Origins (04:23) The Rotator Cuff and Human Evolution (09:24) Common Rotator Cuff Injuries and Impingement (15:09) Healing and Recovery Without Surgery (18:03) Clinical Insights and Final Thoughts

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Feeling Good Feels Good is a weekly wellness podcast hosted by Philadelphia chiropractor Dr. Zachary Tripp.Making feeling good feel simple. Making health and wellness accessible, interesting, and genuinely fun.Every episode finds the wonder and power in everyday items and habits — the foods you already eat, the habits you already have, the body you already live in. Some episodes uncover lesser known facts that will completely change how you see something ordinary. Others take topics that have been overcomplicated by the medical and wellness industry and strip them back down to what actually

HOSTED BY

Dr. Tripp

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Feeling Good Feels Good have?

Feeling Good Feels Good currently has 4 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Feeling Good Feels Good about?

Feeling Good Feels Good is a weekly wellness podcast hosted by Philadelphia chiropractor Dr. Zachary Tripp.Making feeling good feel simple. Making health and wellness accessible, interesting, and genuinely fun.Every episode finds the wonder and power in everyday items and habits — the foods you...

How often does Feeling Good Feels Good release new episodes?

Feeling Good Feels Good has 4 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Feeling Good Feels Good?

You can listen to Feeling Good Feels Good on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Feeling Good Feels Good?

Feeling Good Feels Good is created and hosted by Dr. Tripp.
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