Bioengineered Foods: The Real Truth

Bioengineered Foods: The Real Truth

I was standing in the cereal aisle the other day.

Holding a box of Honey Nut Cheerios like it was some kind of moral dilemma.

“Contains bioengineered ingredients.”

Sounds intense.

Like I’m about to eat something cooked up in a lab by a guy in a hazmat suit.

And it got me thinking…

Are we looking at one of the greatest achievements of human ingenuity?

Or are we slowly poisoning ourselves?

Is Bioengineered Food Good or Bad?

Depending on who you ask, it’s either:

A scientific breakthrough that feeds the world

Or a corporate experiment gone wrong

You’ll hear talking points from both sides:

“Bioengineering has been happening forever.”

“It’s a small change—completely harmless.”

And then:

“It’s humans meddling with nature again.”

“It causes cancer.”

Strong claims.

But here’s the problem…

Almost anyone can say anything. That doesn’t make it true.

If you want real answers, you have to look at the actual science.

What Bioengineered Food Actually Is

“Bioengineered” (formerly GMO) simply means:

We modified a plant’s DNA to give it a specific trait.

Usually for things like:

  • Pest resistance
  • Herbicide tolerance
  • Better yield or shelf life

That’s it.

No glowing apples. No sci-fi mutations.

Just targeted changes to make crops more efficient.

The Real Truth (Cutting Through the Noise)

Here’s what matters:

Major scientific bodies like the World Health Organization, National Academy of Sciences, and the FDA have found that approved GMO foods are safe to eat.

No solid evidence showing:

  • Increased cancer risk
  • Hormonal disruption
  • Long-term toxicity

So no…

You’re not slowly dying because you ate cereal.

But Here’s Where It Gets Murky

The real concerns aren’t the genes…

They’re the systems around them.

  • Some crops are paired with heavy herbicide use.
  • Many GMO ingredients show up in ultra-processed foods.
  • Industrial agriculture has trade-offs.

So when people say “GMO food is bad”…

They’re usually reacting to the modern food environment—not the genetic modification itself.

How the Builder Operates

You don’t build a strong mind and body by obsessing over labels.

You build it with:

  • Real food
  • Plenty of protein
  • Healthy fats
  • Micronutrients and fiber
  • Discipline
  • Consistency

Would it be ideal if everything was organic and perfect?

Sure.

But that’s not the world we live in.

A mix of organic and conventional works.

A bowl of cereal once in a while? Fine. Going out to eat? Fine. Dessert? Fine.

Brickwall’s Way

Yeah…I’ll still crush a bowl of Honey Nut Cheerios with whole milk.

Because I understand what it is.

And more importantly…

I control how it fits into my life.

Mostly real, whole food meals.

Some organic. Some conventional.

The cereal? Ice cream? Pizza?

That’s relief—not the foundation.

In the End

Bioengineered food isn’t the enemy.

Confusion is. Fear is. Lack of discipline is.

Don’t get distracted by buzzwords.

Focus on what actually moves the needle.

Build your body. Build your health.

Brick by brick.

Reading Is Training for the Mind

Most people think reading means novels or textbooks.

They think it has to be hours with a book in hand.

But reading isn’t about format—it’s about feeding your mind.

Sure, it can be a book. It can also be a blog. A magazine. A newspaper. Even AI summarizing something for you, if that’s what you like.

The point is this: reading is resistance training for thought.

Every sentence you absorb forces your mind to wrestle with ideas, perspectives, and clarity.

Skip it, and your mind gets flabby and weak.

Do it daily, and your thinking grows muscular and strong.

It doesn’t take hours—fifteen focused minutes beats fifteen distracted scrolls.

Read something that builds you, every day. Books, blogs, or briefs—just make it weight, not fluff.

The Busy Trap

Being busy feels productive. It gives the illusion of forward motion.

But busy doesn’t always equal progress.

You can work 10 hours a day and still wake up a year later in the same spot—burned out, frustrated, wondering where all your effort went.

The trap?

You confuse doing things with building something. You confuse urgency with importance. You confuse motion with mission.

Ask yourself:

  • Is what I’m doing right now building my future—or just reacting to someone else’s priorities?
  • Will this task leave a legacy—or vanish in a cloud of digital dust?
  • Am I adding bricks to the wall—or just chasing dopamine hits from moving things around?

Cut the fluff. Don’t just check boxes.

Sunday Sendoff #41: Ups and Downs

Brickwall's Sunday Sendoff

I played a little blackjack the other night.

Not for real money—just for fun.

But I couldn’t stop watching my chips.

Sometimes I was up.

Sometimes I was down.

Stacks high…then suddenly gone.

And it hit me:

This is life.

Sometimes you’re riding high.

Everything’s clicking. Money’s good. Body’s strong. Energy’s up.

Other times?

You’re scraping.

Low energy. Setbacks. Doubt creeping in.

Chips disappearing faster than you can stack them back up.

And in both moments—you’re faced with a choice.

When you’re up…

Do you stay disciplined?

Or get reckless and lose it all chasing more?

When you’re down…

Do you fold?

Or stay in the game and fight your way back?

Because here’s the truth, brother:

Nobody stays up forever.

And nobody stays down forever either.

The only thing that matters…

Is that you keep playing.

Smart when you’re winning.

Steady when you’re losing.

And relentless through both.

Because the man who stays at the table—

The man who doesn’t panic…

doesn’t quit…

doesn’t go on tilt…

That’s the man who builds something real.

Ups and downs are part of the game.

But quitting?

That’s the only guaranteed loss.

Stay in it.

Builder Principle

You’re going to win. You’re going to lose. How you handle both is everything.

Something to Ponder

What kind of streak are you on right now? Are you up? How can you keep it that way? If you’re down, what are you going to do to start winning?

See You In the Arena

This week is just about over. Next week is just about here. Let’s keep building.

Brick by brick.

-Brickwall

No Radio Edit: Why You Need to Run the Full Track

No Radio Edit: Why You Need to Run the Full Track

The full version is the only way to listen to “When Doves Cry”.

Why?

Because the radio edit cuts the best part of the song…

the ending.

The harmonizing. The guitar. The synth. The…screams. 🤣

I could listen to that ending on repeat forever.

And it’s not just with music.

It’s with everything.

How many people want the radio edit version of life?

How many people cut the work? Cut the struggle? Cut the moment just before the breakthrough?

They just want the payoff.

It doesn’t work like that.

You cut the end…you cut the meaning.

You cut the struggle…you cut the strength.

You cut the process…you cut the result.

The full version hits different because of what’s built before it.

But you don’t get the ending you want without the beginning and the middle.

Same with your body. Same with your relationships. Same with your wealth. Same with your life.

You don’t get to cut your way into being a Builder.

You don’t get to skip the reps and keep the presence.

Listen to the full version…or don’t listen at all.

Do the full work…or don’t do it at all.

Half measures give you half-built men.

And brother…

we don’t build half men.

We build the full thing.

There is no “radio edit” path to a strong life.

Respect the full process.

Turn off the shortcuts.

Run the full track.

Do the full work.

Brick by brick.

Do Important Things Early

Willpower isn’t infinite.

It’s like a battery. Full in the morning, drained by night.

That’s why you don’t save the most important work for later—you do it early.

Work early. Train early. Bond early.

Because by night, the bricks get heavier and your resolve gets weaker.

Now, this doesn’t mean you have to wake up at 5 am.

No, it simply means doing important things first, whenever that is for you. It’s about using your best energy for your most important things.

So do it early, and stack the best bricks because the battery is full.

Start Where Things Actually Start

Most people try to fix life at the surface.

Change the routine.

Change the job.

Change the habits.

Change the outcomes.

They go straight for the symptoms.

But everything downstream is just an echo of what’s upstream.

If your thoughts are frantic, your actions will wobble.

If your words are careless, your results will be too.

If your inner voice is undecided, your life won’t know where to go.

Real change begins earlier than you think.

Not with the habit. Not with the plan. Not with the action.

It begins with the moment before the moment—the thought you choose, the frame you set, the story you tell yourself before the world ever sees a thing.

The play is to shape the upstream.

Steady your thoughts.

Speak with clarity.

Choose actions that match who you’re becoming.

Let your habits follow automatically.

Build…quietly at first, then all at once.

A small upstream correction can reroute an entire life.

Start where things actually start.

Buckets of Water

If you took one bucket of water from a small pond, it really wouldn’t make that much of a difference.

But hundreds or even thousands of buckets?

Now you’ll be making a difference.

Likewise:

One bad performance doesn’t erase many good performances.

Missing something once doesn’t erase being there every other time.

Being undisciplined once doesn’t erase being disciplined every other time.

If you’re consistent most of the time, these blips just won’t matter. They won’t happen often enough to even matter.

The key is that they’re infrequent, though.

If these little blips become regular, well then now it’s going to start to matter.

Keep them infrequent and you’re fine when they do happen.