Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard - Rachel Zoffness (on pain)

Episode Date: April 15, 2026

Rachel Zoffness (Tell Me Where It Hurts: The New Science of Pain and How to Heal) is a psychologist, pain scientist, and author. Rachel joins the Armchair Expert to discuss why she was drawn ...to pain in her early neuroscience studies, the most pressing question regarding pain being made in the brain, and how a pain psychologist is like a used car salesman. Rachel and Dax talk about the biopsychosocial factors that contribute to pain, definitive psychological origins of phantom limb syndrome, and the sensory map on our brain called the cortical homunculus. Rachel explains the tale of two nails, compelling evidence that pain and physical damage are not the same, and why data we give the brain that amplifies danger will also amplify pain.Take printer ink off your to-do list with HP Smart Tank | hp.com/SmartTankCheck Allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds: https://www.allstate.com/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Welcome, welcome, welcome to armchair expert experts on expert. I'm Dan Shepard. I'm joined by Lily Padman. Hi. We have a guest today with the cutest last name, perhaps we've ever had, Rachel Zoffness. Yeah, this was a great episode. I just love that last name. It's a good last name.
Starting point is 00:00:16 It's a little misleading because this isn't a Zoff episode. Although it is in also another way. I guess. She is a leading pain psychologist and neuroscientist. You guys, this episode is so incredible. I think it's one of the best of the year. It's so many of us know, as you learn in here, there's 1.8 billion people in the world suffering from chronic pain, and there's 100 million Americans, and we don't understand how we experience pain, truly.
Starting point is 00:00:45 Yeah. And this is an incredible explanation of how it actually works. And it's quite an empowering take on it. It is. Yeah, so her book is called Tell Me Where It Hurts, The New Science of Pain and How to Heal. I have already sent it to two people who I know who suffer from chronic pain. This is a great one. Please forwarded it to anyone in your life who's experiencing chronic pain.
Starting point is 00:01:08 Please enjoy Rachel Zoffness. This podcast is brought to you by Squarespace, the all-in-one website platform designed to help you stand out and succeed online. From websites and online stores to marketing tools and analytics, Squarespace gives you everything you need to build and grow your presence, one place. When we first got the armchair expert website up and running, WobbyWob used Squarespace. And honestly, it made sense right away. It looked polished. It was easy to navigate. And it didn't feel like we had to become web designers just to make something good. What I like about Squarespace is
Starting point is 00:01:43 that it gives you a lot of flexibility without making things complicated. You can start with one of their beautiful templates and customize it so it actually feels like you. Whether you're building a portfolio, a business, or just finally making the thing you've been meaning to make. And once it's live, Squarespace also has built-in analytics, which is great because you can actually see what people are engaging with instead of just guessing. So head to Squarespace.com slash Dax for a free trial. And when you're ready to launch, use code Dax to save 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. It's such a pleasure to me. Are you a hugger?
Starting point is 00:02:37 Yes, let's do it. Monica, you must know how this started. This is terrifying for me. I'm like a library mouse bookworm. I'm like not a public facing person. Okay, well you're already so warm feeling. But listen what happened. I saw robbed by the staircase when I left the house.
Starting point is 00:02:54 So by the time I got out and went up the stairs to grab my drink, I saw that he was in the bathroom. And I go, Jesus, what are you taking a shit in there? It was Rachel. I was like, don't you wish I was? Oh, no. Is that terrible? It's funny.
Starting point is 00:03:11 Oh, my God. Did you get really scared? No. That's awesome. Good Lord. What a nice friend. I know where I am. Come on.
Starting point is 00:03:20 Even for me. Yeah, even for you. You would not do that. We have a friend in common also. Who? Do you see the person who wrote the endorsement on the top of the book? Who did? Who did?
Starting point is 00:03:28 Who did? Who did it? Oh, I did see that. Yes. I'm obsessed with her. Oh, yes. She's the reason I teach at Stanford. Well.
Starting point is 00:03:34 Addiction medicine and pain are best friends. Yeah, that's right. So you're down presumably from San Francisco. Do you live there? Yeah, I'm in the Bay Area. But I'm originally a New Yorker, which is why I have an attitude problem, and I wear too much black and I curse all the time. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 00:03:47 I feel like I'm in good company. Those are good attributes. I thought you said you were like a church mouse. Library mouse? Very, very different than church mouse. Yeah, super different. Library? People are perved.
Starting point is 00:03:58 Oh, dang. They're like in the nurse category. What's happening? Oh, what's happening? Yeah, no. I was like the kid who was shy it. and quay, quiet and quiet and shy. And was in the library reading all the time.
Starting point is 00:04:13 Books for my friends. Oh, different than a church mouse. That is different. You're right. How has teaching been for you? Because that requires a ton of get up in front of people and speak. What's funny is that during the pandemic, this thing happened where I was supposed to give all these talks and I was actually doing that because it was partially a treatment for
Starting point is 00:04:29 my own performance anxiety and public speaking anxiety. The treatment is exposure therapy, right? Like if you never do it, you never get through it. So I had all these talks planned and then everything got canceled. I was like, okay, what do I do now? So I started planning virtual talks and I started cold pitching podcast hosts. And I pitched a couple of people who actually had really big platforms and I didn't realize it at the time. As I started doing more and more podcasts, I think I did like 42 of them.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Wow. And like Ezra Klein came calling. And by the time I did that one, I had done so many that I felt pretty secure in what I wanted to say. And I feel very passionate about the topic. and I keep my patience in my mind when I talk about the topic. So I'm sweating through my clothes. Well, that's also because it's 500. I'm so hot.
Starting point is 00:05:14 It's also 90 degrees. I never have. You can also take off your sweater. I'm considering it. It's not going to happen. It's a cute outfit. Yeah, it's not going to happen. She would be dying of heat exhaustion.
Starting point is 00:05:23 And we'd say, can we remove the sweater? I don't know. No, it's a cute color. I'll die doing what I love. Later. Being in this cute sweater. Okay, so you're originally from New York. You really could write a book on Universities of America, probably.
Starting point is 00:05:35 You mean because I've been to so many? Yeah, you've been so many. Did I tell you I was a nerd? I think I did coming in here. You started at Brown, yeah? Yeah, yeah. You were biology? Yeah, I was brain and behavior. I couldn't decide what I wanted to study when I was at Brown. I loved neuroscience. I loved human biology. I thought psychology was so interesting. I couldn't decide if I wanted to research or clinical work or teach kids. So human biology, brain, and behavior was sort of an amalgamation of everything.
Starting point is 00:06:01 And then when I learned about pain in my first neuroscience class, it lived at the intersection of everything I thought was so rad. Because why? It just depends on how far down the rabbit hole you want to go. I've heard you say that you were drawn to it because you were so afraid of pain. And that's another reason. Pain scares the shit out of me. And it should, right? Pain is designed to be averse if it's designed to save your life. If it doesn't grab your attention and get you to stop doing the thing you're doing, there's a chance you could hurt yourself slash die. So that's pain's job. But I always found pain to be very scary. Physical pain. Well. Oh. My friend.
Starting point is 00:06:36 Well, my friend. Fasten your seat. That's the number one question I get, especially because I study pain psychology. So to answer your question very briefly, guess where pain is made? It's not in your bad back and it's not in your aching knee. In the brain. And the parts of your brain that make emotions also make pain. Like your amygdala and your limbic system are a critical part of the pain machinery.
Starting point is 00:06:59 And we all know that our bodies feel worse during times of stress and duress. Of course they do. But does anyone ever tell you? that at any point in your effing life? Yes. And we're going to march to that granularly. But her question still stands because prior to you understanding that there is no difference between psychological pain and physical pain in one regard.
Starting point is 00:07:18 Were you someone that was afraid you were going to get physically hurt or were you afraid you were going to get emotionally hurt? It is a fair and good question. And yes, physical pain is what I was scared of. But of course, no one likes emotional pain either. Yeah. I don't know. Some people.
Starting point is 00:07:32 And some people like physical pain too. Like there's a whole BDSM community where pain is pleasurable and there's a reason for that. And maybe we'll even get to that. But it all goes back to pain being made in the brain. Were you sheltered? Were they a very nervous kind of parents? I would say I had very overprotective parents. And by nature, I was a shy, quiet.
Starting point is 00:07:52 Indoor cat. Library mouse. So I was self-protective. Like my sister and brother would be running around playing sports, hitting each other with lacrosstics. I was in the backyard reading books by myself. Self-directed. No one told me to do that.
Starting point is 00:08:04 It wasn't because my parents were like, you're going to get hurt. Were you the older? I'm the oldest. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because they get crazier. We can't have the library mouse at the end. Yeah, no. It's got to be at the beginning.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Yeah, it kicks the party off. Okay, so after Brown, you go to, is it San Diego State? Columbia. Columbia next. And we do teaching masters there. I got a master's in psychology. I was interested potentially in education. like teaching psychology or maybe being a professor one day.
Starting point is 00:08:37 Like I really couldn't decide what direction to go. I mentioned I was a science teacher at the Bronx Zoo. I was like, I love biology. I love animal behavior. Do I go that route where I'm a science educator? I was a science writer at Natural History magazine. Oh, cool. Out of the Museum of Natural History in New York City,
Starting point is 00:08:53 I was like, that's rad. You're science writing. You're learning so much stuff. You're translating complicated science for the lay public. Do I want to do that? I realized it was just me with my computer. and that wasn't satisfying enough. So for me, the education piece,
Starting point is 00:09:07 I am also a glutton when it comes to information, especially science. So I was like, what can I do where I can consume the most amount of science over the course of my life? So I just went to school for as long as I could. Yeah, were your parents that all getting frustrated? Like, we got to figure out what direction, or they were just supportive? No, I was working really hard and I'm very self-driven. They were not at any point worried about me.
Starting point is 00:09:30 Okay. I think they were probably worried because I was so stressed down. out, figuring out your life path is not a casual thing. And it can feel scary and intimidating for as long as you're wondering that. And you can be on this journey for forever. Hopefully we'll all have different points in our career where we pivot and do different things. But for me, I've been on this path from the beginning. Like, I knew I wanted to help people. I knew I thought neuroscience was amazing. I knew that I wanted to do something with medicine. It really just naturally led me here. I did my honors thesis at Brown on the neuroscience of pain, and I studied with a pain
Starting point is 00:10:01 neuroscientists there. We studied endogenous neurochemicals that regulate pain. Okay, so those are ones that eminent from your body. They're not exogenous, right? It's your body's pharmacy kit. You got it. It's chemicals that are made by your body's pharmacy. And what was the most fascinating aspect of that? I love telling people that like when you take a drug, the drug itself isn't the thing that's giving you this sensation. It's either regulating uptake or down. It's just letting the chemicals in your body go crazy. And it's binding to receptors that your brain has because your brain all already makes those chemicals. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:10:34 Which is why you adjust. It's in you. It's not whatever you're putting in. Right. So like if you're taking a drug for a very long period of time, your brain does a thing where it down-regulates. You probably have heard this term from the other science nerds you've had on where your brain stops producing as much of that thing. So if you're taking chronic opioids, for example, your brain doesn't need to produce as many
Starting point is 00:10:52 because you're giving them from an external source. So you down-regulate you don't have as many. Now, nerve transmitters in your brain and the receptors are just picking up what you're giving it instead of like the homemade ones. Take me to San Diego State. Take me there. We're still an education journey. This is hard for me, by the way.
Starting point is 00:11:08 I hate talking about myself. I guess what I'm trying to figure out when I asked about your parents and you, I guess there's two versions of this. One is I have anxiety. I'm afraid to pick. I don't really know what my calling is. I'm scared. Another one is I'm at this salad bar and I just can't stop going up to it and trying something new.
Starting point is 00:11:26 It was the latter. Yeah. And also I really wanted to make sure I was going in the right direction because it's a lot of time when you go to school for that long. Like you really want to be sure of shit that this is the right direction. So I just kept honing it and honing it. So San Diego State, UCSD was where I went for my PhD. And I studied clinical psychology because I decided I wanted to work with patients.
Starting point is 00:11:46 And I really was fascinated by the brain body overlap. I still feel this way. I felt like if I had gone to med school, I would have gotten like one slice of the pie. And if I went for my PhD in psychology, I would get another. And I wanted to. at the intersection, and I had to kind of go get that on my own, to be perfectly honest. Yeah, we just had Michael Pollan on last week. I just saw him at a diner.
Starting point is 00:12:09 He lives in my neighborhood. I almost went up to him, and I was like, that's rude. I'm not going to do that. Oh, he probably would have liked it. That must be so annoying. Oh, I don't think so. It's only annoying if you go and tell him about your shroom trip. Like how people come up to me and tell me their pain story.
Starting point is 00:12:22 Yeah, yeah, yeah. I actually don't mind that much because I'm like, oh, my God, tell me everything. Right, more data. Yeah. Okay, so at what point do you start seeing pain? patients and specialize in pain psychology. I wanted to hang up a shingle right away. I did the PhD because I wanted to get really good at research.
Starting point is 00:12:39 Like if you're a real nerd, you want to make sure that the papers you're reading are high quality, the data is good data. So in my PhD program, I got that. I got what I was looking for. But I really wanted to work with patients, and I was obsessed with the science of pain. People think I'm a masochist when I talk about how much I'm interested in pain. But I'm not saying that I enjoy inflicting it or receiving it. Just the science is mind-blowing.
Starting point is 00:13:00 So I wanted to treat patients right away. And, you know, I had been teaching a bit at UCSF and at Stanford. And I just told my colleagues, like, I'm opening my doors. I want to specialize in chronic pain. I got the hardest patients. I want to say this clearly. Absolutely no one wants to see a psychologist for pain. I am like the used car salesman of pain medicine, right?
Starting point is 00:13:21 Of course not. The stigma attached is like, you're saying it's all in my head. You're saying it's just emotional. It's not real. It's not real. Yes. I just want to see a medical doctor. 96% of our medical schools have zero dedicated compulsory pain education.
Starting point is 00:13:36 I'm going to say that one more time. 96% of med schools in the United States and Canada have zero dedicated compulsory pain education. The real pain science is out there and it exists. It's just not being taught in med school. And of the 4% that have it, the total is in the 4 to 6 hour range or something, right? It's very small. And check this shit out. We're going to talk about this, I'm sure.
Starting point is 00:13:57 The current model of understanding and treating pain is the biomedical model. It means when we talk about pain and when we treat pain, we talk about anatomy and physiology and bones and body parts. And yes, that's important. But neuroscience has known for 65 effing years that pain is this word, it's biopsychosocial, which means, yes, there's biocomponents, there's also cognitive and emotional components, there's also social components. But it makes me crazy.
Starting point is 00:14:25 I had to study pain on my own for 700 years to really distill down like, what is this and what are we getting wrong? And how has this happened in pain that we've created an opioid epidemic? And we're still doing it today. So Michael Pollan was in and his new book is On Consciousness. And similarly, it's riddled with the same challenges in that Renee Descartes broke the mind and the body into two things for us 300 years ago. And we are stuck in that paradigm where there's two different things. things, there's your thoughts and emotions and then your physiology or your physicality. More and more, we now know there's no such thing as a division in any one of these components.
Starting point is 00:15:05 This is one complex system that's talking at all times with itself and it's integrated and there's no division that can be made. And to put a super fine point on what you're saying, because I'm currently dealing with it with a loved one, to say that it's more than just the physical pain is not to say it's not real. it's 100% real and the question is what's contributing to it right it's very relevant how are we getting to this pain which is a thousand percent real and anyone who's listening to preventing the defensiveness it's real real real no one is suggesting that the pain is not real so to your point the patients you're getting have generally gone through years in some cases of exploring every single
Starting point is 00:15:50 medical option for their pain. What are some examples? MRIs. That was sort of what triggered when you asked me about opening the private practice. I was getting the patients who weren't getting better. So I have this patient who lives in my brain. And of course, I'm changing names and personal details because that's what you're supposed to do. And it's very important for patient privacy. But I have this patient in my mind and I still see him all the time when I talk about pain. One of the chronic pain patients that really sticks in my mind is Sam. It was really Samuel. Sammy.
Starting point is 00:16:20 He had been in bed for four years, and he had been on 40 medications. He had seen 14 specialists, and I want to describe him to you because I see him in my mind's eye every time I talk about him. He had long unwashed hair, and his skin was pasty and pale, and he was rocking himself back and forth on my couch with pain. What's funny is I remember thinking to myself, who do I think I am? This kid had been to Stanford. So the punchline is this person who's been bedridden for him.
Starting point is 00:16:50 four years is only 17? Correct. Oh my God. And at 17 when you've missed four years of life, that is really significant. Like those are all the milestones. You really only get those once. But I did have imposter syndrome. I absolutely was like, who do I think I am? So we talked about my training and how I'm a nerd and studying pain neuroscience and endogenous brain chemicals that make pain and pain psychology and biology. But I really think of myself as a pain detective. And when someone comes to my office, it's my job to figure out all of the factors that are contributing to the pain, that are amplifying the pain and are perpetuating the pain cycle. So when I assessed Sam, I had his records. Like, yes, family history of migraine, diagnosed with migraine and diffuse
Starting point is 00:17:33 amplified body pain of unknown etiology, meaning he was riddled with pain all over his body. No one knew where it was coming from. He had had a million tests. He had been on all the drugs. So when I assess my patients, yes, I want to know your medical history. If you haven't had all the tests and the scans, I'm going to send you. I want to know that your blood and body parts are okay. Then I want to know about the rest of you. We use this word biopsychosocial. That means that there are a lot of factors contributing to pain in any given moment all the time. Sam was depressed and suicidal. Shocking. He had been in bed for four years. He had no friends, no life, no hope. He left in seventh grade. He detaches from playing soccer, from having friends.
Starting point is 00:18:14 But what happened? The first thing is he had a migraine? He had crippling, migraines. Okay. In his seventh grade, he had crippling migraines and then diffuse, amplified body pain. So severe body pain, all the tests, no one knew it was going on. He couldn't go to school. His loving parents were like, what are we supposed to do? He was like, I can't go to school. So he stopped going. And that just never ended. Oh, my God. You would be surprised by how common this is in the pain world. So I started getting all those patients. But I want to tell you would happen with Sam. Yeah, yeah. He was depressed and suicidal. He was socially anxious, like crippling social anxiety. Couldn't talk to kids. His pain was always worse Sunday nights and
Starting point is 00:18:53 Monday mornings. So there's a pattern to the pain. He was on a white food diet. Oh, like rice and bread. He didn't like fruits and vegetables. Pasta fries. I doubt he was in dinner. Pizza, pasta, chips, bread. Oh. You would pray for rice, I think, for Sam. Well, rice is white. I mean, like, that's not uncommon for a big chunk of the American pediatric population. Like, she just don't like fruits and vegetables and so don't eat them. If they're saying they can't eat or they're too sick to eat, then yeah, your parents can be like, fine, just eat these chips, I guess, eat something. And his only activity at this point was reading books.
Starting point is 00:19:27 And playing video games. Playing video games. So he's up till 4 in the morning playing video games. His sleep hygiene was all. So in order to help Sam, I knew I needed to help him look at the whole recipe and fix the whole recipe. So we changed his nutrition, how to come to Jesus talk with mom and dad. We were like, how is his body supposed to fight this thing?
Starting point is 00:19:44 If he's not getting appropriate nutrition, put him on a sleep hygiene protocol, he had to wake up at like 10 instead of like two in the afternoon. Oh, this is... Peeling it back. Exactly. I like how small you started. You had really tiny steps for him to take. I think the first one was to go outside.
Starting point is 00:20:02 It's called a pacing protocol. It's one of the most fundamental parts of a pain plan for people with chronic pain. So week one, he was standing outside in the sun on his porch and texting just one friend. Week two, he was walking to the corner mailbox and mailing a letter. His mom would actually give him bills she had to pay. Week three, he was taking his dog to the dog park and having a conversation and we scripted it. Cute dog. Remember, paralyzing social anxiety, isolated, stuck at home. By the way, that will amplify pain. All of these ingredients, he got a tutor, started catching up in school, went for his first haircut. When that kid came to my office
Starting point is 00:20:37 after his first haircut, he also had gone and bought a backpack. He was a child transformed. That was like one month in, one month in. Some sunlight, some social exposure. By the way, the more he did, the more he realized he could do, mood started going up, stress and anxiety started going down. And oh, shit, the brain's connected to the body. When stress and anxiety started going down and mood started going up, all these things started changing.
Starting point is 00:21:00 His pain started changing too. The virtuous cycle or the destructive cycle is spinning. So the one he was in was just going to get worse and worse and worse until probably suicide or something else was on the table. And just the notion that one thing's feeding into another and then slowly it's all gaining momentum. And the fact that he was happy when he came to your office with a haircut and a backpack. His face was shining. Yes.
Starting point is 00:21:20 And he spoke at his graduation. He returned to school. I love that he had an impact on you. I still think about him. He graduated from high school and he walked across the stage and he said, if you had told me four years ago, I'd be graduating high school. I never would have believed you. I may be cried. That kid got asked to prom by two girls, not by one when he went back to school.
Starting point is 00:21:39 And he went with both somehow. I would love to talk to him how he juggled that. Oh. Oh, that was at the same problem. I'm like, how did Sam? I still hear from his parents. Aw. I have to tell you.
Starting point is 00:21:50 He saved his life. Very selfishly. You did. It changed my life. I'm not joking. That kid, I was like, I'm never doing anything else. When I met that kid, he was on opioids and thorazine. I also worked on an inpatient psych unit.
Starting point is 00:22:05 If you're homicidal or suicidal, you will go to an inpatient psych unit where they lock the doors. and if someone's having an acute psychotic episode, they will shoot you full of Thorazine and knock you the F out. This child was on opioids and thorazine for his pain because we tell people that pain is a purely biomedical problem that requires a purely biomedical solution.
Starting point is 00:22:25 I want to say clearly. I am not a magician, but that kid got out of bed and back to life. He will never again be the kid who's in bed for four years. That will never happen to him again. What are we doing to people in pain? It makes me crazy. Yeah, well, you've seen it.
Starting point is 00:22:39 It's not beyond anybody's understanding. Yeah, so let's talk about, first of all, the subjectivity of pain. You've got a lot of different great examples of how we can illustrate that it's not just the broken bone, although that is definitely part of it. But I think a good place to start is amputee phantom limb pain. I'm obsessed with phantom limb. Explain. Explain phantom limb pain.
Starting point is 00:23:02 Only if I got to hear after my Monica's obsessed with phantom pain. I'm kind of obsessed with pain. Well, not pain. Oh. But I'm a little bit. bit of what Dax would say a hypochondriac. I don't identify that way, but he identifies me that way. So, you know, I am hyper aware of what will cause distress and pain. I avoid those things pretty much at all costs. So in a psychology class, we learned about a phantom limb, I was like,
Starting point is 00:23:27 what? That's horrifying. Okay, so we have all been sold a big, fat lie about pain and what it is. So pain is the body's warning system. It's our danger detection system. However, we have been told that pain lives exclusively in our body, in the part that hurts. You have back pain, you see 762 back doctors, and you probably get back surgery, and maybe you get a prescription. You have chronic knee pain. You see 40 million knee specialists. Maybe you have surgery. Maybe you take medications. Now, I want to say clearly, surgeries are important and useful. Medications are important and useful. They are not the only treatment for pain and they are not the best treatment for chronic pain, not by a long shot. It's really important because we're going to primarily be talking about chronic
Starting point is 00:24:14 pain. And acute pain is pain that lasts three months or under. And that is your stomach hurts, you might have gotten food poisoning. So great. Broken bone, acute illness, yes. So anything that persists for longer than three months. Now we're under the chronic pain category. And this is where we really want to focus. So I am going to be talking about the definition of pain across the board, but you are right. Generally speaking, God, my language is so bad. The fuckery comes when we talk about chronic pain. I'm so sorry for people who are listening, but I know where I am. So hopefully the audience is okay. But the chronic pain world is where we really screw people. But this is true for acute pain, too, just the basic science of pain. So we've all been told pain lives just in our body part that
Starting point is 00:24:54 hurts. One of the reasons we know pain isn't constructed just by the body part that hurts. is because of this thing called phantom limb pain. Phantom limb pain is when someone loses a limb, an arm or a leg, and they continue to have terrible pain, Monica's knocking on wood, they continue to have terrible pain in the missing body part. Debilitating pain. If you can have terrible leg pain in a leg that is no longer attached to your body,
Starting point is 00:25:21 that tells us pretty definitively that pain cannot live exclusively in the body part that hurts. I had a patient with phantom hand pain who has, had lost his hand and his arm in a terrible firework accident. Mateo. Another young boy. Mateo. He felt like his hand was constantly spasming, cramping. The notion of cramping.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Oh, my gosh. Sometimes it was picking things up. So if you can have hand pain in a hand that is no longer attached to your body, that tells us pretty definitively that pain is constructed somewhere else and that somewhere else is the brain. And we said before that the parts of the brain that make emotions also make physical pain. Yeah, so the nervous system is kind of mapped in your brain. You have a neural network that knows where all the nerve endings are and it's communicating. And it's interesting, this phantom
Starting point is 00:26:11 limb pain is an outgrowth of the fact that your brain believes you still have the same nervous system you had before some of it was removed. And it takes a while to update it. That's right. I mean, that's mind-blowing, isn't it? It's like it has a map of what it's supposed to have and it hangs on to the map long after a piece has been removed. So Mateo, what did you do with Mateo? Yeah, what you're talking about is you have a map of your body that lives in your brain. It's called the homunculus. Actually, when I teach this, I see patients of all ages, adults, and kids. But when I teach kids, I ask them what they think a homunculus might look like, and they draw me pictures. And I used to have a whole wall full of drawings. I see like a triceratops with an elephant's trunk. See? Oh, yeah.
Starting point is 00:26:51 It's a homoculus. It's a pachydro. It's a pachydro. Sure. Definitely a pico. Yeah, that's a back of arms. Yeah, you're good. Yeah, right. And it's a really cool map. So, like, if I tell you right now, without doing anything, to sense into your right foot, like, what is your right foot doing? Can you feel it?
Starting point is 00:27:07 Can you feel it on the table? Is it warm or cold? You can do that. And the reason you can do that is because of your homunculus. It's like a sensory and motor map. With phantom patients, there's a treatment called mirror therapy. And with mirror therapy, there's a lot of books on this. It's so interesting.
Starting point is 00:27:21 You erect a mirror. So they have their functional arm and the damaged arm. and you put a mirror up, they hide the damaged arm, and the good arm stays up, and there's a mirror reflecting back to the brain, the undamaged arm doing things. So they engage in activities and exercises, and it feeds back to the brain an image
Starting point is 00:27:39 of two healthy arms. And it helps update the out-of-date brain map. It's kind of counterintuitive. Your left arm's hidden. Your damaged left arms are behind you. But your brain sees your left arm and your right arm doing things together. Like Dax said, the map in your brain just hasn't caught up with the damage that has occurred.
Starting point is 00:28:00 That arm is gone. Like, it's not in danger anymore, but pain is the body's danger system. So your brain is going to continue making... Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's not to trick your brain into thinking... It's like I'm plugging the association with your left damaged arm by seeing your right damaged arm in its place. Yes, yes, that makes sense.
Starting point is 00:28:19 It's quieting the danger alarm. That's the whole trick with pain is pain is the body's danger system. So credible evidence of danger. will amplify the alarm, credible evidence of safety will lower the alarm. So, like, one of my favorite examples of this is if you get slapped and bitten when you're having sex with a hot partner and you want it, it will feel good. If you get slapped and bitten when you're getting mugged, you bet your ass that is going to feel completely different to your danger alarm.
Starting point is 00:28:44 Because pain is biopsychosocial, which means it takes into account bio-information, but also contextual and social information, and also emotions. and where you are in the moment and who you're with and what's happening. An intention. Safety. Safety. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:03 Think of a massage. There's so many great examples. A massage, which would otherwise be painful, is like euphoric because you have put it in this framing. You're there on purpose. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:14 You desire it. You're paying the person to do this to you. You have some notion that it's medicinal. I mean, I always think, oh, they're getting the knot out. No, I don't know. Physiologically, that's even true. But I think we're making
Starting point is 00:29:24 progress towards my health. Yes. Some control over it. That is huge. When you think about safety, control is a big part of that, right? Yeah, enjoying capsacin, like eating hot, hot foods. Dissan, the winner of the hot ones. Yeah, we enjoy that pain.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Tattoos, MMA fighting. What are you kidding? There's a million examples of enjoying pain on purpose. It's expectations. It's your context. It's emotions. It's predictions. Stay tuned for more Armchair,
Starting point is 00:29:54 If you dare. We are supported by Allstate. Checking Allstate first could save you hundreds on car insurance. That's smart. Not checking your phone's battery before heading out. That'll get you every time. Of course, your phone dies on the way to meet someone, leaving you wandering around quietly panicking about being in the wrong spot.
Starting point is 00:30:15 Yeah, checking first is smart. So check Allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds. You're in good hands with Allstate. Potential savings vary subject to terms, conditions, and availability, all state North American Insurance Coen Affiliates, Northbrook, Illinois. We want to think it's a subjective thing. It sends a signal. The signal itself is pain.
Starting point is 00:30:39 No, the signal's not. It goes into the computer, and the computer interprets and comes to a conclusion. If I could give you a grade, you would get A plus plus. Oh, thank you. But that's the thing we don't know. Even now, if you Google what a nociceceptor is, a nociceceptor are the neurons that live in your body, in your tissues, and your skin, your organs. and they feed information about potential danger to your brain.
Starting point is 00:31:01 Potential danger. But if you look it up, you're going to be told that it's a pain receptor. It makes me crazy. That is sensory data. Sensory data isn't pain until it reaches the brain and the brain uses all available information to decide whether or not to make pain and how much. So it isn't a pain receptor.
Starting point is 00:31:21 It's like temperature, it's touch. It's reflex. So you touch a form. flame, a hot burner, nociceception makes your body move before you even think about it or process it. You have an instinctual reaction to that. And I learned all this from Ed Young's book, immense world. So all these different animals have noceception. Yes.
Starting point is 00:31:41 But they don't necessarily have pain. Some do, some don't. We're figuring out which ones do. But all animals have this. Nociceception. Yes. So what happens is those danger detectors in your skin organs, send data first to your spinal cord.
Starting point is 00:31:53 And your spinal cord initiates that automatic. instant response. Again, there's a lot of animals that demonstrate constantly they have these survival reflexes. Yes. But they don't have any of the other signatures for pain. So we are somewhat unique in how sophisticated our interpretation is. Yeah, it's true. Okay, I think now's a great time to talk about a tale of two nails. Sometimes things are so interesting that I'm reading about that they make it to my dinner table. So last night, I had to tell my daughters about this. So let's see. Let's talk about our first construction worker. So I was reading these great papers.
Starting point is 00:32:30 There was this one from, I believe it was like 1995 in the British Medical Journal. And they wrote about this construction worker who had been on a job site, and he jumped off a plank straight onto a seven-inch nail. So he was in terrible pain. They rushed him to the emergency room. They gave him really good drugs. He was in terrible pain. They gave him a bunch of opioids, and fentanyl was one of them.
Starting point is 00:32:50 He got all the good stuff. And when the good doctors removed his boot, they discovered that a miracle had occurred. the nail had passed between the space between his toes. No. There was no puncture wound. There was no tissue damage. Everything was gruel. No blood.
Starting point is 00:33:06 But his pain was real. How is that possible? Wow. His brain, aka his danger detector, used all available information to decide whether or not to make pain and how much. Pain is your body's danger alarm. It exists to save your life. So it used knowledge of his dangerous work environment,
Starting point is 00:33:28 memories of past pain experiences and injuries on the job site. It used the horror of the construction worker's faces, his friends around him, the visual data of this crazy nail, and his brain perceived potential danger, and it made pain to protect him. Tale of Nails number two. Second construction worker, most dangerous job, apparently, ever, on a job site using a nail gun.
Starting point is 00:33:52 nail gun misfires. He sees a nail shoot across the room, Barry in the wall. Cross from him. Nail gun ricochets backwards, clocks him in the jaw. He hits himself in the chin with the nail gun, which hurts.
Starting point is 00:34:03 Shoot across the room. And he has mild jaw pain, mild toothache, mild headache, continues on with work in life for six days. At the end of six days, he says to his wife,
Starting point is 00:34:14 you know, maybe I'll check out this tooth. Yeah, I can still feel this tooth a little bit. Goes to the dentist. It gets an x-ray. And Rob, please put up the x-ray of him. Okay, so listener. Much to both men's surprise, they discover a four-inch nail embedded in his face.
Starting point is 00:34:30 I spoke with Dr. Seth Reneer on the phone. That's how big of a nerd I am. I was tracking down this photo. I wanted it so bad for the book. He said, this is the luckiest guy ever. And for the listener, so the nail has entered the top of his jaw and it has passed all the way through his zygomatic, everything all the way up into the frontal lobe.
Starting point is 00:34:50 the brain is spanning from his upper jaw into his brain. Yes, and the whole story and the picture is also in the book for people who can't see it. Yes, yes. This guy has an enormous chunk of metal in his face. And I want to say clearly, very real damage, very little pain. Now, if pain were a reflection of how much damage we have to our body, gentleman number two with the giant nail in his face should be in crippling, excruciating pain. gentleman number one who has a nail in his boot
Starting point is 00:35:21 but not his foot should actually be fine. We have all had experiences like this. This is a stark example. If you've ever gotten into the shower and you have black and blue marks on your body, you're like, how did those get there? That's evidence of damage to your body
Starting point is 00:35:36 without the pain. We know that pain and damage are not the same thing, but we continue to get sold that lie. Okay, so now, and this is the area that I'm constantly, saying on here out loud because I heard it from Lane Norton, but I'm relieved to hear. Lane Norton is a buddy of mine. Oh, is he's the greatest? I talk about this one often, but you have two examples of it,
Starting point is 00:35:57 but now I have the precise numbers, which I'm grateful for, which is there's been two incredibly compelling studies because back pain's among the most common pains. Like 80 to 85% of people develop chronic back pain at some point. Chronic back pain, yeah. So they scanned 3,000 healthy individuals, meaning people who have zero back pain, no reported back pain. And nearly all of the individuals scan 90% of subjects ages 60 to 69 and 80% of subjects aged 50 to 59 had bulging discs, disc degeneration, and other anatomical abnormalities with no accompanied pain. I want to reiterate that. Yeah. Almost all of us with no back pain are wandering around with slipped and bulging discs and we don't know it. You want to know why we
Starting point is 00:36:46 don't know it, we don't have pain, so we've never gotten our back scanned. However, if you have chronic back pain and you go to get your back scanned and they find a boulding disc, guess what you will be told is causing your pain. They think they have a smoking gun, but you can't have a smoking gun of 90% of us have the same smoking gun. But then that's why when they do those full body scans, what's it called? Per Nouveau. Yes. The brand of one I got. That's tricky to do because it will tell you, oh, you have a bulging disc here, and then you might be like, oh, fuck, and then your brain will probably have you done that. Please don't do that.
Starting point is 00:37:18 Hold on, I did. I don't want her to do it. No, there will be my third argument I have about this. I want to hit the second one though. Yeah, yeah. So there was another study too, 1,200 healthy subjects who had no pain. Nearly 90% of them had bulging this. So this is enormous.
Starting point is 00:37:31 Less than 5% of back pain is from structural issues. Right. And that is not unique to back pain. Those are similar results when you study the hip, the pelvis, the jaw, the uterus, the wrist, the knee, and neck. pain. I went so far down that rabbit hole. There are study after study after study showing that pain and damage the things we find on scans, that's what we're blaming pain on. But there seems to be very little relationship between the abnormalities found on scans and chronic pain. It's the ultimate
Starting point is 00:38:04 correlation, not causation. Yes. But are people listening going to be like, oh, okay, well, when I have chronic back pain, I'm not going to go. That's the thing. Because of this thing we're sold, which is that pain and are the same. It's a really, really hard relationship to break. So I'm going to tell you a quick story. 30 years ago, there was a little kid growing up in Jamaica, and he loved to run. He was really fast. And as he grew, something strange was happening to his spine. It started twisting into an S-shaped. Scoliosis. And he was diagnosed with scoliosis. But it didn't stop him. He didn't get surgery. He wasn't in terrible pain. He kept running. He was faster and faster and faster until he was fast enough to qualify. for the Olympics.
Starting point is 00:38:47 And by the time he qualified for the Olympics, his body was so twisted, his spine was so abnormal, and his body was so asymmetrical, that his right leg was, I believe, half an inch shorter than his left. And his left leg could only put down 14% as much power as the right leg.
Starting point is 00:39:08 He won not one Olympic gold medal, but eight of them. Do you want to guess the name of this gentleman who has, extremely severe scoliosis but has never been treated for it and has very little pain. Usain Bolt. And still holds the world record and the 100, the 200 and the four by one. Usain Bolt is the fastest man alive.
Starting point is 00:39:27 You should see this man's spine. It is absolutely gnawley. It's a bowl of spaghetti. And so if the lie was true that damage and pain are the same, that gentleman should be relegated to a hospital bed. He should not be the fastest man alive. and in fact, we are often told that asymmetry is the cause of our pain. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:39:48 I will say again, he's so asymmetrical that his right leg is happening shorter than his left. You would think that would affect a run. Well, check this out. He's run like lightning. The scientists who study his biomechanics have discovered or believe that it is his very asymmetry that helps him go faster. Listeners, do not chop off some of your leg just to be faster. It's not going to make you use a stable. Now, here's where we get to my own personal story, which is I did the Pernovo scan.
Starting point is 00:40:18 And I'm going through the different categories. They do heart. They do lungs, all this stuff. And I get to skeletal system and I have abnormalities. I'm like, oh, what's this? And yeah, I have significant scoliosis. At the top of my back, my spine curves to the right pretty dramatically. I went, oh, my God, all the times my mom was yelling at me like, you always drop.
Starting point is 00:40:43 your left shoulder in photos and we had no explanation other than it was my laziness i guess come to find oh yeah i've had scoliosis significantly it's visible in photographs now that i have seen the x-ray but yeah i have zero issues up there i've had lower back pain but nothing where the scoliosis is at all no issues wild and the same thing i'm like oh yeah if i were in pain and i went and got the x-ray it would be definitive i think this is the complexity of it is yes biological factors matter yes of course you can of pain with scoliosis. It's just not the only factor that matters. Biosyncosocial. It means biological factors matter. Cognitive and emotional factors matter. Social and environmental factors matter too. And together, those create the pain we feel. Does it work the opposite way though? So often do people go
Starting point is 00:41:29 and they're like, oh wow, oh my God, I have scoliosis. Yeah, my back. Then does the brain start sending the signal because you're aware now of it? There's a story in the book called how cancer cured a kidney Stone. I should say, should I say that I wrote a book? I wrote a book. It's called Tell Me Where It Hurts. That's why I'm here. It's called Tell Me Where It Hurts. I took sort of like the most fascinating patient stories and put them in because pain is gnarly and it generates these incredible and counterintuitive stories. So one of the stories I put in the book is called How Cancer Cured a Kidney Stone. So I had a patient who had regular kidney stones and they appeared like clockwork. She would have a six out of ten pain, abdominal pain. There would be a host of accompanying symptoms. And the stone would be.
Starting point is 00:42:10 pass within, I can't remember exactly, I think a max of like a couple of weeks, and then the pain would go away. She would be fine. So she was having the normal constellation of symptoms. Her pain was a six out of 10. Her father had recently died of cancer. She was having a pain flare, and her husband said to her, are you still having pain? It has been like six weeks. Are you sure this is a kidney stone and not something else? And she immediately thought to herself, shit, I have cancer. too. Right. I think we all think we have cancer, at least once a week. If you're a normal, healthy human being, yeah, yeah. And I think her dad had died of maybe abdominal cancer, something like this. So she, yeah, the knocking on the wood. I understand. I didn't want you to see
Starting point is 00:42:55 it. Sorry, I won't call it out next time. You need your own little. You should do it. Do it. Do it on your chair. I did it on my handle. I did it small, but you still got it. Sorry, I can't help it. I observe behavior all day. So she had the thought, maybe this is cancer pain and she shared that with her husband, they both freaked out. Her pain went to an 11 out of 10 per report. She fell to the floor screaming. Oh my God. Her husband called 911. She got rushed the emergency room. They did a scan. They found the kidney stone. Her pain went back down. Oh, my God. Don't remember the number. Three out of 10. And she went home and the kidney stone passed. Pain is the brain's danger alarm. It's subjective. It thrives on data. Any data we give the
Starting point is 00:43:39 brain that amplifies danger will amplify pain. Data we give the brain that makes us feel safe, will lower the brain's danger alarm. So that story to me was so revealing. The things we think, the images our brains feed us, the images we get from our doctors, they are going to affect the brain's pain alarm. And of course they should. It is adaptive and evolutionary for our brain to use all available information. Why should we only use data from the body part? We should use all available data, right? Now let's explore these three. pillars that attribute to our experience of pain. So the first one's biometric.
Starting point is 00:44:15 We understand that one. I think we all understand your bones broken. You have the flu. Yes. Yes. So let's talk about the psychological and how it impacts. Can I add to the biodomain of pain? Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:44:28 Okay. So like you said, it's the obvious stuff. It's like tissue damage, system dysfunction, genetics, like Sam's family history of migraine. It's also diet, sleep, and exercise. And I like putting them there because those are biological imperatives. The reason I'm going to go into this is because what I want everyone listening to remember is that you have so much more control and agency over pain in your body than anyone has ever told you. If sleep and diet and exercise affect your body, you maybe can't change your genetics.
Starting point is 00:44:59 You can change your sleep. You can change your nutrition protocol. You can change your sleep hygiene. I'm always sort of keeping in mind. Like pain is terrifying. It's overwhelming. it feels unmanageable and uncurable. So if I can help people feel like,
Starting point is 00:45:14 oh, there's actually 72 things I can do maybe starting today. If I can cede some hope, I have done my job. So that's the biodomain. That's the biodomain. And let's talk about psychology now. Yeah. So I want you to imagine that there's a Venn diagram with three overlapping circles. And I should have said this at the very beginning.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Of course, the first circle is the bio circle, the one we just talked about. Then we've got the psych circle, psychological factors. and the social or the sociological domain of pain. So pain lives in the middle of these three circles in our Venn diagram. Okay. So you asked about bio, covered. In the psych domain of pain, this domain of pain is so full of stigma and misunderstanding. So I really front load with just the science.
Starting point is 00:45:57 So in the psych domain of pain, we have emotions. We said at the beginning, the limbic system, our amygdala, the parts of our brain that make emotions also make physical pain. So our bodies hurt more during times of stress and duress. We know that's true. Anxiety and depression will amplify the brain's pain alarm. There's like 4,000 papers on that. Our emotional health affects our physical health.
Starting point is 00:46:24 And we're in a broken paradigm, which is it's either physical or mental. So if it's physical, go see a doctor. If it's mental, go see a psychologist. Yes. That's not a real distinction. I feel so much gratitude. Like this is the line that I go around. repeating in Western medicine, we're told either your pain is physical and you need to see a physician
Starting point is 00:46:44 or your pain's emotional. You should go see a psychotherapist, but pain is both physical and emotional 100% of the time. You can't separate them out. That's just not how the brain works. Right. When we're treating chronic pain, I actually want us to be thinking about our emotional health. And I am not saying it's all in your head. I am not saying it's all psychological. You just can't deny that the brain is connected to the body. Yeah, it's part of the recipe. I want to talk about some of the specific things within the psychology domain, which would be thoughts, attention, distraction, and emotions. So we said emotions. Let's talk about thoughts, attention, and distraction. Yes. We tend to think that thoughts are just these air bubbles that appear in our head,
Starting point is 00:47:22 you know, in the space between our ears. But thoughts trigger a neurobiological cascade of events in the human body. Right now, I want you to think about your to do list. All the things you have to do and haven't gotten done. Maybe your taxes. That's true for me. How does your body feel? When we think stressful thoughts, our body has a physiological response.
Starting point is 00:47:45 Our muscles get tense. We bump cortisol and other stress hormones. Heart rate goes up. Heart rate goes up. Intimplomation goes up. Thoughts don't just live in your head. Thoughts affect your body 100% of the time. And then we have in there also, like you said,
Starting point is 00:47:58 attention. That's a cognitive factor. So what we know about pain is that when we think about pain and talk about pain and focus on pain what happens to the brain's danger alarm. It magnifies the pain response. And of course, the opposite's also true. So if you have to give a kid a shot, for example,
Starting point is 00:48:16 you shove a screen in front of their face, and they will be distracted and laughing, and they will not cry and they will not scream. We all know this, even as grown-ups, if you've ever been so absorbed in some pleasurable activity that you didn't notice your pain or you briefly forgot about your pain, which happens to everyone, that's not magic.
Starting point is 00:48:33 That's just your brain's danger alarm, right? So attention changes pain too. Yeah, maybe even think about why opiates work. Oh, dude. As I was reading all this, because I have a very well-known issue with opiates at one point. They certainly cure the physical pain, but I think for me, they're only curing the physical pain because they distract me from the mental pain. By the way, that is a known thing.
Starting point is 00:48:57 Yeah, it's like it's not sending anything that's making the inflammation go away like N-Sed wood or something. That's right. It's binding to the opioid receptors and you have a disproportionate amount in your brain's emotion centers. And opioids medicate not just physical pain, but emotional pain. And that's why they're so dangerous and that's why they're so addictive. Yeah, you think they're addressing this physical pain. For me, they're not. They're affecting the angst and discomfort of my emotional life. Yeah, they're muting everything. By the way, what are we doing to people in pain? Especially people with a history of addiction. It's like handing people a loaded gun when they already have a genetic loaded gun. To me, it feels unfair. unsafe and I hope we'll talk about that. Yeah, I was curious in this psychological pillar. I often think of identity as having a lot to do with this. So my identity is that I'm indomitable. I have reasons why I've
Starting point is 00:49:46 made that my identity. I believe if I appear to be indomitable, you will not try to take advantage of me. And so in order to service this identity I have, Monica will tell you, that's why I had no business on opiates. My shoulders in four pieces. I got to wait a week to get the surgery because I'm still filming and I go film an episode in a sling racing a rally car with one hand and jumping. And I can do that. I don't know why I can do that. I don't have an explanation. I don't think I was born with that thing where I don't feel pain, but it's not on the table for me to be outwardly vulnerable. And so I do think I've willed my way out. I've been yelled at by my wife for carrying things while I just had surgery, right? And I'm like, you know, I can still fucking carry.
Starting point is 00:50:30 The notion that I can't carry it is the most painful thing. The pain's not the painful thing. And so I just feel like I have really reformatted my relationship with pain. And my only explanation is that it's this identity thing that I will not threaten my identity by experiencing this pain. Or if I get tattoos, I don't give a fuck. So what do we think about our identity and how can that play a role in there? I feel like every once in a while someone brings an ingredient to me that I haven't thought about
Starting point is 00:50:54 before. So the way I frame this is like a pain recipe. Like there's a recipe for brownies. there's always a recipe for pain. And there's biological ingredients in there. There's psychological ingredients. There's sociological ingredients. And I feel like I spend a lot of time with each one of my patients, like mapping out the
Starting point is 00:51:09 ingredients. Like what are the things in this recipe of yours that's amplifying your pain? And what can I do to help change those ingredients to help you lower pain volume? And one that I have absolutely till this moment never thought of is identity. Anecdotally, it's so present in my best friend from childhood, Aaron Weekly, who also grew up around a lot of violence and being vulnerable was not an option. I see it in my sister and my brother. My mother has it.
Starting point is 00:51:34 We don't give a fuck about that. And then somehow some magic happens where I'm not experiencing it. So I think I'm lying to myself or fighting it. It's like, I don't care. I don't think you're lying to yourself. I think it's adaptive for you in some way. It's like a survival tool for you. I don't know you well enough to know why,
Starting point is 00:51:49 but it has been adaptive for you throughout your life. And that's why you've been using it. And that's not a flaw. That's not a character flaw. It has helped you get where you are. I think it's fascinating. It has a tail to the head of that coin. It does go somewhere.
Starting point is 00:52:02 It goes into emotional distress that then needs medication. Whatever that medication is, whether it be drugs or whatever it is. Or adrenaline. It's not just like it's magically, oh, I don't have pain. It's that it gets funneled into somewhere else where people don't see it necessarily. Yeah, it has pros and cons. And then that's not good either. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:23 I hear you. Okay. So let's talk about sociological because I think you probably have a lot of interesting statistics. And I'm sure things differ in these different categories of sex, gender, race, ethnicity, socioeconomic status. How are these factors evident in people's experience with pain? Yeah. So when I was first studying pain as this little library mouse, not church mouse, F round. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:52:46 With this pain neuroscientist, I was like, yeah, pain's biological. Feels pretty intuitive that there's an emotional component. but what is this social shit? Like pain is social? What does that even mean? So I really went down that rabbit hole and I wanted to examine that. So I'm going to give a couple of examples
Starting point is 00:53:01 and I hope they're resonant and you can ask me questions about it. So among the worst punishments you can give a human being is solitary confinement. What does it say about human beings that one of the worst things you can do to us is isolate us from others?
Starting point is 00:53:16 Being social is biologically adaptive. It helps us survive. It's so fundamental to our very, very survival, that our brains evolved a mechanism to reward us for engaging in it. When we are social, our brains bump out serotonin, which bumps our mood, dopamine, pleasure and reward and motivation, and endorphins are endogenous, homemade pain killers. When we are with other people, pain volume goes down. The opposite is also true. When we are isolated and lonely and alone, especially in solitary confinement, all of those good chemicals crash.
Starting point is 00:53:55 And we feel terrible not just physically, not just emotionally, but both because it's connected. This made me think of the weirdest thing while I was reading about this. When I worked for my mom and I worked with all of my friends in my early 20s and we would drink way, way too much on work nights. And we'd stay up to three in the morning and we'd be out in the parking lot at 6 a.m. to fucking wash cars. but because all eight of us were hungover, there was some bizarre joy in sharing that state. And I think people can relate to this on vacation with friends. When you're with a group of people and everyone's hungover
Starting point is 00:54:31 versus you're by yourself in your apartment dealing with a hangover. Those are totally different experiences, aren't they, Monica? I think so. I never cared about a hangover when I was with my friends. And when I was a solitary drinker, they were insufferable. There's this old saying that when you share your joy, you double it. When you share your pain, you cut it in half. And that is definitely true for me.
Starting point is 00:54:51 Like, if I'm suffering, my friends will tell you, I will burden them. And for them, they seem to be able to carry it. You can tell me your stuff all day, I'll be fine. You know, like I can carry anyone's stuff. When I share my stuff, it definitely reduces my pain. Yeah. So that's one example of how pain is social. So when people are isolated in their pain, obviously, that's going to make it go up exponentially.
Starting point is 00:55:12 It's going to feed that. So that was another data point that was so fascinating to me. So former U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy. Yes, we love him. We've had him. Yeah, he's all about ending loneliness. He did that amazing study, like hundreds of thousands of people, where he showed, by the way, he wasn't the first to show this, but he gathered all the scientific data to show that when we
Starting point is 00:55:34 are lonely and isolated and alone, it actually is a predictor of a whole host of chronic illnesses and also chronic pain. That are worse outcomes than smoking a pack a day, which is the craziest comp. I don't know how bad smoking a pack of day is, but being alone is worse. Not just emotionally, just to make that clear. Loneliness is bad for our physical health. It is a predictor of disease and pain. Yeah, that's so wild.
Starting point is 00:56:02 I know. So like all of these data points to me, I was like, oh, yeah, pain is social. Social medicine is real, but that's not being prescribed and most of us roll our eyes. Like, yeah, I have chronic pain, blah, blah, blah. Don't tell me and it's just hang out with more friends. And I want to say clearly, it's not that simple. It's one of the things. It's one of the levers you can pull.
Starting point is 00:56:19 It's one of the ingredients in the recipe. Yeah. So we should probably be done with timeouts, right? For kids. There are a lot of psychologists who are anti-timeout. Although there is a version of it, which is it is our baked in learning mechanism. Because we're a social primate, being excluded from the group is insanely powerful. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:37 So is there a version of it that is... Not too terrible, right? Yeah. It's all about degrees of it, I think. Yeah. But yes, in general, when your kid is dysregulation, and you send them a way to deal with their dysregulation by themselves, maybe not a great idea, right?
Starting point is 00:56:52 Yeah, it's not going to work, really. Yeah, and the goals should be probably to first regulate, then teach the lesson. I think that's also a good order of events. So I wasn't a big timeout person, but there were a couple of occasions where it felt appropriate. Totally. What do we see with pain is it applies to gender?
Starting point is 00:57:11 How is it differ with socioeconomics? I have my guesses, but what do we know about? And redheads. That's physiological, though. What is that? I had to look that up. Someone asked me that on a previous podcast. I was on this podcast called Ologies, which is a science podcast, and she has red hair.
Starting point is 00:57:26 And she was like, is that true? So there is some data to suggest that redheads do experience more pain. It's still very new science. And I would not say it's definitive. But there is some research suggesting that it is tied to, like, our sensitivity. This is the most fascinating thing. So all of us, as part of our recipe, have pain thresholds. and some people, and this may be true for you,
Starting point is 00:57:47 have higher pain thresholds than other people. And like everything else to do with humans, it is on a spectrum. Some of us are very sensitive. And some of us are less sensitive. Don't look at me like that. I can handle a good amount of pain. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:58:04 Well, it's very, very clear to me. If you choose it, you can endure a ton. So your role as a cheerleader, you endured pain that you wouldn't otherwise be able to endure because you wanted to be a cheerleader. But you also cut your finger, and it is a very, very big deal. Well, hold on. Both things are true.
Starting point is 00:58:24 I open to cana worms. Listen, the finger cutting is not a big deal because it hurts. It's a big deal because I'm alone. That's a huge part of it. Then I'm calling people and sending pictures like, is this okay? And as soon as they're like, oh no, whatever they say.
Starting point is 00:58:43 The connection with another person, person is helpful. You're saying that loneliness amplifies the pain alarm and social support lowers the pain alarm. And it's like, oh, what if I bleed out? It's about that. It doesn't hurt. You just proved to the point. When we are alone, we feel like this is just biological. We're more at risk of death because we don't have people. We're more vulnerable. That's the word. And the second you have social support. I love that example. I wonder if your proximity to us is going to lower or up your pain threshold because you're now across the street. Well, I have a good example. This isn't really pain, although sort of, I guess,
Starting point is 00:59:17 but my parents were in town recently, and the alarm went off in the middle of the night. Oh, so scary. Yes. If I was by myself, oh my God, I would have been so panicked. Cut to a week later, my doorbell rang in the middle of the night. I was by myself.
Starting point is 00:59:33 And I was like, oh, I'm dead. I'm dead. I don't know what to do. Do I call? Like, I didn't know. But when I was with my parents, I was just like, it's fine. I had no idea what was going on.
Starting point is 00:59:43 Someone could have literally been dead. A door blue open. Yeah. But she didn't even care. But if you're by yourself, it's definitely a guy with a huge knife entering in a ski mask. It's scream. It was fine when there were people around and I assumed it was something bad when I was by myself. I know, but we forget about how that affects our bodies.
Starting point is 00:59:59 We just forget. This is like one of the many ingredients in these why married people live longer. This is one component of it. You're not having the cortisol dump. It's easier on your body. Yes. Stay tuned for more armchair. If you dare.
Starting point is 01:00:23 Did we interrupt your mid-thought? I don't know. I actually have no idea, and I don't care. I keep asking how sex and race and socioeconomic. I'm curious how those, yeah, yeah. We've got loneliness covered. So there's a lot of data on socioeconomic status and gender and race and ethnicity. So something that comes to mind is a disproportionate number of people living with chronic pain are women. However, this one really got me.
Starting point is 01:00:48 80% of pain research has been conducted on men and male mice. There's also been a lot of pervasive racism and medicine. Like, this is well known. This is not my opinion. This is just what the research says. In general, over the years, there has been this myth, and there's a name for it. I'm forgetting the name of it.
Starting point is 01:01:04 It's like the hero myth or something. It's like that black people feel less pain than whites because they have thicker skin. Oh, my God. Yeah, it's a holdover from the slave trade. Yes. And so in general, blacks are prescribed, something like 50% less pain medications in the emergency room.
Starting point is 01:01:21 And the women are believed the least amount about their pain assessment. Black women, if they tell you it's innate, the person immediately cuts that in half. Right. And that leads to this other thing that happens with women and minorities is not being believed or the suggestion that you're histrionic. That word has somehow just found its way into modern medicine or it's psychosomatic. So that's still happening. But let me ask you this.
Starting point is 01:01:43 We're going to try to punch from every angle at the risk of offending someone. Is it not conceivable that women in general are more vulnerable physically? You're going to die by the hands of a man more than I'm going to, unless I go to war. There's an objective threat because of the sexual dimorphism that feeling vulnerable, you get in an elevator with a guy that's six, too. You have a different experience than when I get in an elevator, right? So the feeling of vulnerability, if we're acknowledging that that's part of pain, couldn't that be in the recipe?
Starting point is 01:02:14 It sure could, but there isn't data to suggest in general that women are more sensitive to pain than men at a biological genital. Oh, I don't think they are at all. They're giving birds. I would argue they have a higher threshold. That's what makes it so complicated is like because there's all these ingredients and they're always interacting, is it cultural? Is it sociological? Is it learned? Is it biological?
Starting point is 01:02:38 What is the recipe that's creating this thing? And then are poor people experiencing more or less? Yeah, also. access to care is in this recipe too. Can we talk about insurance companies? So many of the treatments we're talking about aren't affordable. So like you can have 42 surgeries and take 72 medications, but like if you want to come see me, it's not reimbursed by insurance companies.
Starting point is 01:02:59 It's really crazy. So access to care, being able to afford treatment, access to healthy foods, there's a lot that's stacking up against people who are economically disadvantaged. And so, of course, that affects their pain too. Okay. Okay, so we have a sense of all the things now that are contributing to this, again, phenomenal logical experience of pain. Yes.
Starting point is 01:03:20 But you don't stop there, luckily. The last third of the book, Tell Me Where It Hurtz, is dedicated to addressing these things. Other than the three you mentioned in the bio under that umbrella, not a lot you're going to do about your genetics or your tendon strength. No. But there's a ton of stuff that you can do in the pain protocol. So how do you identify and track your pain recipe?
Starting point is 01:03:45 Yes, part three is a pain protocol. And my mission in life is not only to change the way we talk about pain and the way we understand it, but also the way we treat it. Because we are completely effing people living with chronic pain by telling them that the only solution is a pillar procedure. So if you came to my office, part three is the pain protocol. And it's exactly what I would do with you. And you'll see in the pain protocol that we walk through, like, what are the things in the bio-domain of pain that you have the power to change? And what are the strategies and tools that I can offer you to help walk you through that in a very approachable, digestible, not overwhelming way? Because it can feel so overwhelming.
Starting point is 01:04:27 A quick part of a lot of people's pain recipe will be like, the pain starts when I've been sitting for a while. Yeah, totally. Right? So what does it make common examples? I'll say my pain recipe. My pain recipe is like sitting for too many hours staring at my screens, not getting up and stretching and moving my body, not drinking water and just like being extremely dehydrated. Eating a crap diet. Sure.
Starting point is 01:04:50 When I'm hungry eating chips or something. Poor sleep. Thank you so much. I really appreciate you very much as I talk about my pain recipe. Do you have chronic back pain? I don't, thank God. But I'm aging and so like my body. It hurts.
Starting point is 01:05:02 Yeah. So crop diet, sitting too long, not moving my body, poor sleep. Like I am someone who has insomnia on and off. So like if I have a bad night of sleep, my body will hurt more. Not protecting time to exercise. I don't exercise to lose weight. I exercise because if I don't, my body feels terrible. My mood is shit. Those things for me are sort of like fundamental. Oh, and stress. Stress is so fundamental to my pain recipe. Like if I have too many things to do, which is all the time and I'm not protecting that and I'm not like managing my stress well and I'm doom scrolling at night or watching the news. Yeah. So all those things to do. together will come together for me and create a high pain recipe. Yeah, you got to be aware of what your self-medication is because it's often a part of why you're suffering. Right. You mean like scrolling.
Starting point is 01:05:46 We all have a lot of ways to regulate ourselves. Yeah. And many of them make us worse. In the same way that drugs do, it's like they temporarily relieve your discomfort, but at a much bigger cost. Like I'm a workaholic. That's one of my. And that's a distraction.
Starting point is 01:06:01 And distraction is a good tool. But when you overwork, you're overstressed. Yes. You're sitting too long. Your body feels worse. But so just as there's a recipe for high pain, there is always a recipe for low pain. And like this high pain recipe I just outlined,
Starting point is 01:06:16 the cool thing is that it has an opposite. I know poor sleep is going to mess up my body, make my pain feel worse. So I know I have to put myself on a sleep hygiene protocol. I have been doing this for like 25 years now. My sleep hygiene protocol is like dimming my lights a couple hours before bed, not doom scrolling.
Starting point is 01:06:34 Sometimes that means I have to put, my phone in another room and I will do it because insomnia messes me up. It means getting out of bed after about 20 minutes if I'm not sleeping so that I'm not lying in bed being like, why are I sleeping? This is so annoying. And then stress goes up, anxiety goes up, likelihood of sleeping goes down. So I know what my high pain recipe is. I know what my low pain recipe is and I know how to get there. That's actually what part three is. So sleep nutrition, movement, activity, functioning. How about strategies targeting emotional health, including brain-based treatments known to adjust pain volume? So can I ask, what are things that you guys do for emotional health that's
Starting point is 01:07:13 helpful? I have a bonkers. I'm like the most creature of habit-y. I have such a routine every single day. And mine is like exercises number one. Meditations, very important. Journaling's very important. My diet's very important. Sauna's very important. It's embarrassing how much time I put in to prevent me from being in pain. Embarrassing in that, I can't believe it takes this much shit. But I don't care because I am not in pain. It's admirable. I've had a bunch of motorcycle accidents. I work out like crazy and I am not in pain. And I am generally very stable emotionally and mentally. And these are, I know, because I've lived without these routines and I've lived in flaring my arthritis with the foods I'm allergic to. And I've done all the things that were
Starting point is 01:08:01 miserable and now I am just very, very regimented about my schedule. Great. So you have figured out your low pain recipe. Other than I can't hack sleep, but whatever. There's going to be some categories that suck. I have forgiveness for myself. Yeah. Good. So you're taking care of your emotional health and by the way, also your physical health with that routine. Can I ask you too? You don't have to answer. Yeah, of course. Yeah. I think for me the main thing is being social. I like really make time for that. I try to do that daily. Like hang out after work with people. There was one period of time where two of my friends who I hang out with a ton were both gone.
Starting point is 01:08:36 And I was like, I'm going to die. I don't know what to do. I need these people. Social medicine is real. Yes. Obviously, if I exercise, I feel better. I'm not as regimented as dad. That's okay.
Starting point is 01:08:47 Is that at it? I'm also 12 years older. If I'm in a good routine, I use exercise all the time. So if I'm in a good routine, yes. But I think the social medicine is a huge one. I want to add, I don't want to pat myself in the back. You do what you have. to do.
Starting point is 01:09:02 Yeah. You're humming along. Again, you're 12 years younger than me. I do what I have to do to not be miserable. If I got to do less and not be miserable, I would do it. I had to go to A because I was going to die. I didn't go because I wanted to go. Like I also think you can look at someone else's routine and feel some kind of shame that you're not executing all this stuff.
Starting point is 01:09:23 But you should only be doing what you have to do. This is what I have to do. That's true. Like there are moments from like, I have to go on a walk. go on a walk. My body and brain know that I just maybe need to do it on the same frequency or I don't know, whatever. But yeah, mainly that. Fonatical schedule. Well, no, I didn't say that. I found your low pain recipe and I think it's really amazing. And you guys listed all the things that I would put, like, taking care of emotional health other than when I think of emotional health support,
Starting point is 01:09:49 I actually think it's great to talk to someone. And there's so much stigma around that still. It's like 20,000. And here we are and we're still talking about like, it's so shameful to have. have to see a therapist. So like, I want to see if I can frame this differently. Sorry, I can't believe I didn't say that. I can believe I didn't start with that. I'm in therapy. Yeah, yeah. And it's everything. It's hard to find someone who's available at the times you want, who's qualified, who you like and trust and want to talk to. So I'm not saying it's easy, but research shows it can be extremely, extremely helpful. Just as we go to the gym all the time to exercise our bodies and make our bodies stronger, why would we not engage in some form
Starting point is 01:10:28 of brain exercise for our emotional health. When I think of therapy, that's what I think of. We're going to a trained professional who's helping us with our emotional health, with our history of trauma, with our fucked up relationships with our families. Doesn't everybody need that just as much as we need to go on a jog? How much better a place would the world be if we were all engaging in as much brain exercise as body exercise?
Starting point is 01:10:50 So I think about that also. Yeah, I think my reservation there a little bit is I am always conscious, I think, because of where I came from, with how lofty a lot of these are, if you have two jobs and you have two kids and you're a single parent, A, I don't have the money for therapy. And I don't have the free time to exercise like you're saying. These are all real, real pressures. But even to that, I would argue, like, A is free. There's a lot of different groups that are free.
Starting point is 01:11:18 You can actually engage in group therapy in a lot of ways for free. I would also argue that to prioritize 20 minutes of movement in the day, you could go for five. You'd really be shocked how much time that buys you the rest of it. Because you're no longer in that destructive cycle. You're in the virtuous cycle. So you might be shocked with how taking more time for that thing ends up adding time. I think it's a fair and a good point.
Starting point is 01:11:44 And the affordability piece is a really huge one. And I think there are a lot of resources out there. There are even workbooks that can help with certain things like depression and anxiety. That's why I like your book. Someone can get your book and go through this. The purpose of writing the book was sort of like to put the power into hands of anybody who wants to understand it and treat it. You have techniques for modifying negative thoughts. True story.
Starting point is 01:12:04 That's great. Social medicine, we just talked about that. Some things that could help that will weirdly downriver affect pain as like better boundaries, creating healthy social connections, healing trauma. These things all impact your experience with pain. Yep. My other curiosity was, again, I brought up AA. A.A. has abysmal success numbers.
Starting point is 01:12:23 Is that true? Oh, yeah. It's in the like 30%. But... I didn't know. Relative to the other treatments, it's an absolute miracle. You can look at it one of two ways. If you want to go like, only 30-some percent of people who go there end up getting long-term sobriety. Sure.
Starting point is 01:12:39 But versus the alternative is like single digit. People don't just quit. I mean, very few people just white-knuckle it for the rest of their lives. So I'm curious, we know how abysmal the outcome of chronic pain treatment is with doctors. It's in the low, you know, it's under 50%. What kind of success would you say you were experiencing with this more holistic? Oh, this is going to sound like a jerk. Okay.
Starting point is 01:13:04 Like a brat. Let's be a brat. Here's why I'm sitting here on your couch despite performance and public speaking anxiety. Yeah. My patients get better. They get out of bed and they go back to life. I am not saying that their pain disappears completely all of the time. of the time. That would make me a liar. Sam continued to have pain flares, but he knew what to do.
Starting point is 01:13:26 They didn't paralyze him and they didn't keep him bedridden. He knew what to do. If he needed to rest, he would rest. But he wasn't on the white food diet. He wasn't socially isolating. He wasn't not moving his body. The treatment for chronic pain is known. There is always hope for treating chronic pain. It just isn't told to our doctors. It's not told to us. The treatment for chronic pain is identifying your pain recipe with all of the ingredients and mapping them out hopefully with someone else, but you can also do it on your own and then figuring out what you need to do
Starting point is 01:13:59 to change the ingredients in your pain recipe. There is always hope for treating chronic pain and it makes me crazy because like if you Google the treatment for fibromyalgia, it will tell you there is none. I can't tell you how many of my patients were told that there's just no treatment for their pain, they've been through all the medications. In fact, in medicine, if you've had four back surgery,
Starting point is 01:14:19 and you still have back pain, you will get diagnosed. Check me. With failed back surgery syndrome, as if you failed the treatment instead of the other way around. There is always a treatment for chronic pain. The treatment exists. It's looking at the recipe and figuring out what we can do to lower pain volume, and there's a million things we can do. The great challenge to me still seems like asking patients for behavioral modifications
Starting point is 01:14:45 versus pills or procedures is, Is it a tall order. Getting people to change their behavior is really, really hard. I agree with you. I would say it's a combination of things. I am not telling people to go off their pills. Absolutely not. Like pain medications are a godsend.
Starting point is 01:15:00 We're no longer biting on wooden spoons. Thank God for good drugs. Think of Ulysses S. Grant dying of throat cancer for months. Like, what was that experience? I can't do it. You know, yeah. No, and I want to say also that opioids are appropriate for post-surgical pain and end-of-life care and cancer pain. I just feel like we are screwing people.
Starting point is 01:15:21 Can I ask a question? Oh, yeah, you can ask. Did it start with an injury? Yeah. So I had been eight years sober when I had a motorcycle accident. I was prescribed. I asked my sponsor, am I allowed to take this? Oh, boy.
Starting point is 01:15:35 I took it. It was completely fine, very misleading. I filed it as a mental note. I'm like, oh, that's weird. That was a drug that I was fine. I didn't take them all. Still did my shit. So that was a very bad data point.
Starting point is 01:15:48 And then over the years, I had more injuries. And then what really set it off to the races was, yeah, I had back-to-back hand shoulder surgery and this bullish, arrogant view that this was a drug that didn't seem to affect me in the way that cocaine or alcohol did. And that this was kind of a manageable thing. And then, yeah, I was off to the racism. But, I mean, I want to take 90% of the responsibility for it. I also was open to the idea that there was still something I could do that wasn't the other things I had admitted I couldn't do. I ask a question. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:27 Would it be fair for me to say, like I don't prescribe, but I observe and I see patients with pain all day. It makes me angry that this is what we're doing to people who have a history of addiction. So my question for you is, do you feel like it's inappropriate for me to say, like maybe we can recommend different pain, medications for people with a history of addiction than opioids. Do I have a leg to stand on? It's tricky because I'll give you an example. Like what screen bullshit to me about the James Frye book, which I loved, was he did not have all that dental work without anesthetic.
Starting point is 01:17:02 That doesn't happen. No one does that. No one should be expected to do that. Attic shouldn't be expected to do that. I don't love putting the responsibility on the doctors, if I'm being honest. But I'm in an addict community. The responsibility is mine to say to the doctor, hey, I'm an addict. The pills should go to my wife.
Starting point is 01:17:20 This happens in the program all the time. People are responsible for other people's pills. As long as you take it as prescribed and as you're supposed to, you're fine. So that's on me going in to go, like, I should never be holding the pills. If there's some range of how long someone should be on these pills, I should be on the shorter end of these pills. But I don't think it's fair for the surgeon to take on and understand your level of addiction. My dad died 28 years sober. had many different bouts of being on opiates. It never got him. There wasn't a thing for him.
Starting point is 01:17:49 They were in his house. He didn't care. He self-administered. He never abused them. I don't know why. That's what version of addict he was. And then I was this version. So I think it's too much to ask the person that's supposed to be really great at reassembling your bones to also be somehow an addiction specialist who can evaluate. I think that's on us addicts, to be honest. I totally disagree. I want to hear your opinion. Well, for one, we know that the doctors were part of the whole opioid epidemic to begin with. So they do have a responsibility, in my opinion. I agree with you that ultimately it's the addict's responsibility.
Starting point is 01:18:24 But when you're in your addiction... Yeah, that's the problem. As soon as I had the pills in me, the game plan went out the window. Exactly. When you're sober, you can say, hey, so my wife needs the pills. If you're in your addiction, you're not doing the whole point is to get hot. So I do think doctors should have to ask before they prescribe, What's your history with addiction?
Starting point is 01:18:44 Ask you straight up. They still might lie, but at least it's there. And if the answer is, oh, I have a history, then I think they need to say, well, what's our plan then? That's correct. I agree with you a million percent. We need to acknowledge because I've had surgeries and all the errors, right? So when the Sacklers were running, I mean, if there is a true villain in it,
Starting point is 01:19:04 it is the Sackler family who had a very well-financed campaign to convince doctors who hadn't studied pain. Less than a 1%? Yeah, so they don't know. And they're seeing all this data that was bullshit data that the Sacklers had come up with. So again, I can't expect them to like go specialize in pain medicine if they're a thoracic surgery. They have to rely on studies and stuff.
Starting point is 01:19:26 So they were the victims of a very good campaign by a very well-funded dark-ass family. And so there was a period. I talk about this. Most of my friends are stuntmen. They all have crazy injuries. Most stuntmen have a kit of opiates. at their disposal. That doesn't exist anymore.
Starting point is 01:19:45 The damn shut. It's not what it was. So I also don't think we need to overreact to a situation that no longer exist to large degree. You're not walking in with a toothache and walking out with two weeks of percocet anymore. But I think a lot of in reaction. So that's good. Oh, yeah. But they've slammed the door on it.
Starting point is 01:20:03 So I don't know that it's the same issue as it was 10 years ago. I respect both of your positions. I find myself landing in the middle because I feel like as a provider, you bet you're asked it's my responsibility to assess my patient. And I absolutely need to educate myself about my patient's history. That is my job. My oath is to do no harm. Every doctor takes that oath.
Starting point is 01:20:26 And I, having studied pain for like 35 years, I am doing harm if I am prescribing opioids to someone with a history of addiction. Because what happened to you could happen to anyone. It didn't happen to your dad and bless. But why would I put you in that position? If I'm a good doctor, I am trained to ask that question. You don't have to be trained in addiction medicine to ask. We also might lie to you.
Starting point is 01:20:46 That is 100% on you. That's 0% on me. But I did my job. Yes, exactly. I asked you, do you have a history of addiction? Am I putting you in harm's way by giving you this particular medication? Because as a doctor, a trained MD knows, there are alternative pain killers out there. It doesn't have to be the most addictive one.
Starting point is 01:21:03 So someone could have given you a friendlier, less dangerous drug, and could have saved you the fuckery that you found. yourself in. Wouldn't that have been nice for you? Just to say, you're not going to like this answer, but I mean, I had to go through that. You had an important life experience and I'm not, and I am in no way discounting it or minimizing it. But had I died, yeah, had I OD. You came out on the other and a lot of people don't. I didn't end up shooting dope downtown. A lot of people end up shooting dope downtown. So like I think there's definitely the responsibilities on the patient to be honest, to disclose, and even to bring it up, if you feel comfortable, for people who don't feel comfortable, the Onus is on the doctor. We as health care providers have to do our due diligence. We have to get to
Starting point is 01:21:43 know our patients just a little bit. Can we do that? If you're a health care provider and you're listening, spend three minutes. I literally just did this. I put like a pain assessment on my website because I don't think we assess pain properly. And one of the questions we need to be asking, do you have a history of addiction? It's very simple. You don't have to be trained in addiction medicine. You don't have to do anything. You have to treat the person for addiction. Just ask. I would expect every doctor to ask I feel so strongly about that. Have you seen so many nightmares? I was really honored when you invited me on because I have listened to your episodes
Starting point is 01:22:14 where you talk about opioids and pain. And I teach the Addiction Medicine Fellows at Stanford, the next generation of MDs, because they don't learn very much about pain and pain and addiction in America, our best friends. Our mutual friend Anna Lemke runs like a pain and addiction center. Well, this is really great. It's in the book. We are, I think, 4.5% of the world population. in this country consumes 80% of the opioids on planet Earth.
Starting point is 01:22:42 Crazy. That is crazy. I mean, that number is probably fallen in the last couple years, but still, there's a point where 4% of the population was consuming 80% of the opioids. And I think it was specifically like oxycontin. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's like similar numbers, probably to guns. Two things that kill everybody.
Starting point is 01:22:59 Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I think we could just do a better job. Yeah. I think we can all agree that we can just, like, do a better job, you know? Well, Rachel, this was awesome. The book is called Tell Me Where It Hurts, The New Science of Pain and How to Heal. It's awesome. It was worthy of a conversation at dinner. I think you'll find that to be the case as well. And the cutest last name ever, Zoffness. It's almost softness. It's like softness with a speech impediment.
Starting point is 01:23:23 But with the hardest letter. Yeah. Zoss. Mixed might have been a little harder, but yeah, yeah, Zoffness. What a cute name. Okay, thanks for coming. I enjoyed this. For having me. Thanks to you both. I really appreciate it. Yes. Thank you. Stay tuned for the fact check. It's where the parties at. So I think I have a fun and ironic update. Okay, let's hear it.
Starting point is 01:23:49 About our debate. Oh. About skin marks? No, my arms. Oh, okay. With waving the flag. Okay. If you recall...
Starting point is 01:23:59 I think you needed to tell people. Yeah, so I was saying I was in a bit of a pickle because I wanted to both work my arms out in case I wave the flag. flag at the MotoGP race. And also my arms don't fit in my suit. Exactly. So I was really, Sophie's Choice didn't know what to do. Uh-huh. You were really urging me to skip Arm Day.
Starting point is 01:24:18 Yes, I was. For the safety of the riding. Yes, I was. Big debate. Red carpets came into, high heels got invoked. What did I mean? I was pointing out that you're uncomfortable on high heels. Oh, during our debate.
Starting point is 01:24:31 Yes, yes, yes, yes. Just bringing back all the details. Yes, yes, yes. So I went to Austin with that on the table. And the question was, what was I going to do? Heed your advice, be responsible, or be vain. But you made very clear to me that it wasn't a safety hazard. No, I wasn't.
Starting point is 01:24:51 You could move that I was overreacting. It's uncomfortable. So I chose vanity. Okay. Definitely worked my arms out on Saturday. And they did not ask me to wave the flag. Right. So.
Starting point is 01:25:05 So that's funny. So that right there is a win for you. That's like a win. No, it's not. Well, it is in a funny way, which is like I did this thing, which I shouldn't have done. And then I didn't even get to do the thing. Maybe I won't use the word win. I'll just say that's a funny mark in your category.
Starting point is 01:25:20 And then we'll get to the mine, which was, so I did. I got my arms all pumped up and vascularized. Yep. Didn't wave the flag. They didn't even ask me. Yeah. You did. I don't know.
Starting point is 01:25:32 I don't know. It's funny you don't pay as much attention when you're not the one waving the flag. Which then goes to show how many people are paying attention when it's you. I did have someone last year text me and go, oh my God, you're waving. I mean, another MotoGP fan. Sure. Notice I was waving the flag. Anyways, I did not wave the flag.
Starting point is 01:25:48 I wasn't asked to wave the flag. I was like, well, that was for nothing. But then, and here's the irony, the ironic twist. Yeah. Went to the track on Monday. I don't know because it was so hot in Austin, whatever. Arms weren't tight. You were fine.
Starting point is 01:26:02 No issue. I know. So both things happened in reverse. That's right. That's how I feel like it's a win for both of us. It's a win for me if you're safe. That's all I care about. I'm not against you having big arms on a flag wave.
Starting point is 01:26:20 Only if it comes at the risk of your safety, which you assured me it didn't, but I didn't believe you. And also you rely to me. It was just a hilarious outcome. Yeah. Harrison Barnes waved the flag this year. He's a NBA player for the San Antonio Spurs. Okay, great. Okay.
Starting point is 01:26:38 So we have a San Antonio Spurs. And good, because presumably he was very tall. Six, seven. Six, seven, get that flag up in the air. Six, seven. In fact, I might have to go back on my DVR and watch him wave the flag. That's nice. And I want to see how his arms.
Starting point is 01:26:50 You know, these NBA players have really nice arms. I'd probably like to check out his arms. Okay. Yeah. Okay. I was just talking side note. Oh, yeah. Great.
Starting point is 01:27:00 Great, great, great. Rob just put a picture up. And great delts. And he's got some vascularity in his delts, or in his left delts. He looks handsome. Yeah. He looks like he's screaming in that photo. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:27:10 Yeah. Of happiness. Victory was his, I think it says that's when he found out he was going to wave the flags. Oh, that probably makes sense. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Okay. Okay.
Starting point is 01:27:20 So I was talking to Ricky Glassman yesterday. Oh, great. And it was ostensibly he called for advice, which is always so flattering. I love this role I get to have in Ricky's life. It's very, yeah. really cherish it. So we're talking about business stuff and everything. And I don't know how we got on the topic of muscles. But we just went off. And he's like, yeah, I don't know how to explain it. I guess because I grew up watching Swartz and Nigger and Sylvester's son. And I'm like,
Starting point is 01:27:48 that must be it too. And he's like, I just love them so much. And then we were talking about like, to what extent do we love them? And I'm like, you know, I want to squeeze them and stuff. Like where is this line? This is very weird. Homorotic. Where is that line? You're attracted to it in a... Like there's layers.
Starting point is 01:28:10 In an aspirational way. Yeah. Oh, I'd like to look like that. Exactly. Yeah. But I also want to feel them. Like, I want to squeeze the biceps. But you don't want to feel their dick, do you?
Starting point is 01:28:21 No. We went through like, well, how far does it go? I would definitely want to squeeze Schwarzenegger's biceps. And I'd like to feel... I'd even like to run my hands across Brad Pipp. it's abs in fight club. Okay. Right?
Starting point is 01:28:34 I'd like to feel that. What do you want to feel? All the definition and the ridges. Uh-huh. Yeah. Can you relate to that? Um. Would you like to run your hand over his abdomen?
Starting point is 01:28:45 No, but I'm straight. Yeah. Yeah. You know, what I don't want to do is rub my hands over like Kristen's arm muscle. Right. I have zero. I know. This is why it was worth us discussing.
Starting point is 01:28:58 It's like we're on some trajectory. We're on some spectrum on the Kinsey scale. I don't think it's like. Where we like want to touch and feel. That's like that's interesting. Well, because I think it's still like you want to touch and feel it so you can kind of see like. What it would feel like if I could rub their own. It's still about you guys.
Starting point is 01:29:17 You think so? Yeah. I mean, I mean, women have, I have this all the time like with other women. Do you want to feel any women's boobs or anything? No. But I do hear that from other women that are straight. Yeah, they're like, oh, I want to squeeze those boobs. And they're straight.
Starting point is 01:29:31 Okay, well, I've never ever wanted to squeeze. You've never had a friend of yours ask if they could touch your boobs? No. Never. Even drunk? No. You could want to squeeze them without being sexually attracted. No, I guess.
Starting point is 01:29:46 But like, whatever. I don't know. I can't speak on behalf of anyone other than me. We've got a sidetracked. Yeah. I have no desire to touch anyone, squeeze anyone's boobs or touch their genital parts. touch? Yeah. Like if you saw a big, buoyant butt, you don't want to squeeze it to see what it feels like in your hand? No. Oh, wow. I might want to be, I might want to say like a female. Yeah, yeah. Yeah. I might be like,
Starting point is 01:30:13 oh my God, that person has such a nice body. Like, I wish my body looked like that. Uh-huh. But I don't need to touch it. You don't want to squeeze it. I don't need to touch it to know that. I just like, I'm like, oh, they have like great X, Y, or Z. I wish I had that. And then, you know, then you hate yourself for a little bit. Okay. And then, um. What do you chomping on over there? Oh, I have some lozenges. Oh, okay. I'm still sick.
Starting point is 01:30:36 Oh, and I have a sick spray. Oh, fun. I almost brought it since the both have sprays. No, it's like natural. Oh, okay. So it's pageantry, for show. I mean, I'm not better. It's just an activity to do.
Starting point is 01:30:51 Well, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Okay, so no desire to touch. Okay, I have no desire to touch, but I definitely have admiration, a lot of admiration for a lot of female bodies. But it's still about me. It's still like, I wish I looked like that.
Starting point is 01:31:06 It's never outward really towards them. Yeah. It's like, how can I look like that? And I think, I think that's what's happening with you guys too. But maybe the feeling is like, it's still about that.
Starting point is 01:31:19 It's like, what does it feel like to have that? I want to feel the heft of things too. You know, the weight of things and the heft. Right. Mm-hmm. Yeah. But let me ask you something.
Starting point is 01:31:31 Yeah, ask me. So you, so you want to feel it. Squeeze and prod. Yeah. Touch. You want to get your physical hands on it with their consent. Yeah. And, but do you want to do that for females?
Starting point is 01:31:46 Like when you see abs on a female, are you like, ooh, I want to, I like, I want to touch that. Not really. No, but I regularly see butts in spandex or something. Or boobs. And I do want to like, I want to squeeze it. Yes, but that's sexual. Those are the sexual parts. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:32:06 Like, that's different than what you're feeling towards these men and their abs. That's true. Goes to show if you're not wanting to touch the female abs, it's not about muscles. Exactly. No, it is a, it's about actual muscles. Okay. On the men and how you can get them. Mm.
Starting point is 01:32:25 Or like how you can relate to them or something. Yeah. I think most people. out in the world are aware of other people's faces and bodies and whatever, sexually or not. Yeah, they're probably seeing the ones, whatever one they want. Exactly. That's my whole point. That is your point.
Starting point is 01:32:43 Or if whatever they feel sexually, their sexual orientation, they might see, you know, like if you're straight, you're going to see the opposite sex a little with more curiosity sexually. Of their erogenous zones. Exactly. Because when you're attracted to someone, it could be really random things you're attracted to on their body. Absolutely. Not just their erogenous zones, you know? Mon's pubis, a shoulder blade. That's an erogenous.
Starting point is 01:33:16 That's the clear erogenous zone. But, you know, I really like hands. Mm-hmm, mm-hmm. And so I do tend to look at men's hands a lot. This is so fascinating. Again, very anecdotal. I have no idea what the granddad I would say. But certainly I'm aware of so many men who have foot fetishes.
Starting point is 01:33:35 Right. I don't really know any women that do. I've never heard a woman talk about. This is so interesting. This just came up on Elizabeth and Hage. Oh, really? Uh-huh. But I know many women who are super into hands.
Starting point is 01:33:46 Mm-hmm. And I don't know a ton of guys who are super into hands. Right. What is going on? Why would one sex? Well, I know why women do. Hands are a huge. huge part of sexual interaction?
Starting point is 01:34:01 Interaction? Because they're going to be all over you. Yeah. They're all over you. They're in you, potentially. Sometimes they're in you. They're on you. They're in you. Yeah. They're in charge of all the action. Exactly. Yeah. So that's why I think women can be attracted to. So do you think these guys with foot fetishes want to be manhandled by their feet? Well, that's what I don't. Probably I've seen pornography where guys are getting jerked off with a woman's feet. What? Yes, I have That seems very hard to do. For her, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:34:31 Yeah, you got to really be coordinated. And how can you do that like gracefully? It feels like you'd look so weird. The woman. Yeah, also how do you gently bring up like, hey, are you coordinated with your feet? Like, if that's a huge thing for you, that's like your ultimate, like the guy we interviewed for Armchair Anonymous. Yeah, Kings. Who liked his toes played with.
Starting point is 01:34:52 Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm. So it's like it's, he wants, this is an important thing to have. Yeah. is this foot job, we'll call for sake of time. Okay. How do you suss out whether that partner is going to be able to do that? Because I'd imagine there would be a lot of gals that were fully up for it.
Starting point is 01:35:10 And they just can't do it. And they just can't do it. Yeah, I feel like most people can't do that. It's so important. If I try to, man. Yeah, forget that. I mean, also, the amount of leg strength you'd have to have. That's what I'm saying.
Starting point is 01:35:20 It's actually a lot more than the foot. You also have to be flexible depending on. Those guys should be, they should be more generous and just be like, can you lay down on your back and I'll hump your feet? Okay, so are they putting the penis... Between their feet. This, like this? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:35:38 Oh, okay. That requires a lot of quad and ad and core. I imagined it like that. That could be fine, too. But that's hard. Yeah, that would work too. Actually, I'm not even sure of the way I said the first one. I think that feels more natural what you just did, whereas the inside of your feet.
Starting point is 01:35:57 And then that also is hard on the legs. On the IT ban. Yeah, you have to be like out of one of these, you know? Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay, I hope nobody asked me to do that because I just, I'm going to look, I'm just going to look bad. What if you said? Give me a couple days of practice on a banana or something to see if I can even do that. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:36:14 In concept, I'm fine with it. And I, like, there's nothing wrong with that. In theory, thank you. Uh-huh, uh-huh, uh-huh. Um, but I think, well, in this. Circle. So we got a circle back? No, this, like, is more evidence to it.
Starting point is 01:36:29 Like, why the hand and the foot fetish. And like I said, I think the hand makes sense. Sure. I think people who have foot fetishes, I think women's feet, like, remind them of the vagina. I don't understand why. Really? Maybe because the bottom part's so soft. What are you basing that on?
Starting point is 01:36:48 Have you heard someone say that? I just know it. It's just you're leaping to that. No, I just know it in my heart. Oh, you do. Should we call Eric? Yeah, we can. I mean, just to find out if it that.
Starting point is 01:36:57 Remember, we've talked to him about this, though, and his is we're just weirder. His is not like... It doesn't, it's not as conventional. I don't think so. Also, we should say, Eric's not the kind of person who's buying photos off the internet. Exactly. Yeah, yeah. I think it's like, I think it's a low grade.
Starting point is 01:37:10 He just appreciates the aesthetic a lot, and especially because he worked in women's shoes. As a young boy. But he does, he's never said like he wants to, like, suck any toes or anything. So I don't, so his... He didn't suck your toes at one point? No. Oh, he just cheese graded them. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:37:27 He just manicured them. You know, like, again, like, he wanted aesthetically. Yeah, I guess he wouldn't have sucked your toes. No. Oh, my God. That would have crossed the line. But if anyone, if we would let anyone, it be Eric. Yeah, but, like, I don't think, well, I don't, I don't know.
Starting point is 01:37:40 That seems, that is intimate. Well, by the way, toe sucking is a sexual thing. Sure. Standard biz. Yeah. And I think it's because it's sensitive. Your feet are very sensitive, just like your vagina. Oh, okay.
Starting point is 01:37:57 Okay. I think that's what it's about. Having no draw to the feet, I can't begin to figure out what's going on. I can't relate. I think you cracked it. I really do think I cracked it. I just think it's interesting that you think the foot looks like the vagina. Of all the body parts, like if that's the argument, then I think people would be way more into armpits.
Starting point is 01:38:15 Not looks. There's just something about it that I think for these people. Is vaginal? Yeah, like the softness, the sensitivity. The coarseness. Well, if you have good feet, they're soft. Uh-huh, uh-huh. But if you have bad feet, they're great for you.
Starting point is 01:38:31 The toenails. They're like, yeah, they're manicured in a way that, like, a lot of vaginas are. Okay. Kempt, as we talked about last time. Kempt or unkempt. Sean Kempt? Yeah, so I just, I think that's what it is. And if you have a foot fetish, please weigh in.
Starting point is 01:38:50 Let us know. On whether or not I'm right. Although you might now want to do it in public on the comments. People also, they don't know what it is. Like, I just decided that about hands, and I think that's right. But that's not what's happening when I'm, like, at the grocery store and I see someone have nice men with, like, a strong hand. I'm not like, oh, I want that on me.
Starting point is 01:39:10 It's just like, it's a visceral thing where I'm just like, oh, that's hot. Yeah. Something about that is a PQ. Yeah, you get a PQ. Yeah, you get a little bolt of electricity. And some people, I think I actually don't get it. from a lot of things that a lot of people get it from. Like?
Starting point is 01:39:28 Well. Like what do you hear friends talking about? And you're like, oh, I can't even relate. For me, it's like, I have a friend that talks about ankles and talks about feet. Oh, really? And I'm like, what are you talking about? What the ankles? Because it's skinny?
Starting point is 01:39:41 What is that? I don't even want to go into it. But there are guys with things with ankles. And I'm just like, how could, of all the things to look at, why is that even where you would be focused on? You've got eyes, lips. The obvious ones. Different body parts. I'm okay, I just, I'm on fire.
Starting point is 01:40:02 Wow, you're really solving a lot of mysteries, age-old mysteries. I think I now understand the ankles. Okay. Because conventionally, you don't really, they're covered up. Okay. Mine are. Yeah. People wearing socks.
Starting point is 01:40:17 They're wearing pants, shoes, whatever. So it's kind of like, oh, I'm seeing something I'm not really supposed to be seeing. And I have that, like with certain things if I see that normally are like, okay, like I really like necks. Okay, those are always on display. Not always because people have jackets and shirts. You think everyone's wearing turtlenecks? Jackets and shirts and like hats. Okay, that one's a little more of a pretty.
Starting point is 01:40:44 On display. Yeah. Okay, that's probably right. But it still just feels like. No. It's not that they're not on display. play, you just like them. Well, it feels like it's not like right in front of me. It's not eyes or lips or something. But do you mean specifically the back of the neck? Oh, that's different. Yeah, back of the neck.
Starting point is 01:41:03 Okay. I'm with you. Front of the neck. You're, you're getting as much front of the neck as your face. I don't care about it. I don't care about front of the neck. That's, that's the back of the neck. Yes. And it's like, what are you looking for in the back of a neck? I don't know. It's just like, I know when I see it. I know when I see it. And I do think it's like, oh, I'm not really supposed to be looking. at that. Oh. Because, like, they can't see me looking at it maybe. Like, there's some stuff.
Starting point is 01:41:26 There's some stuff in there. Okay. Now, back to the what your friends, do you find that you hear your friends talking about specific body parts in men that you're like, I don't get it? Well, I'm never like, I don't get it because no one is saying anything weird. But, like, yeah, like, if you're, like, at a grocery store, this is all the stuff's happening at the grocery store. Yeah, your, it's just hilarious because you. I never know that's a grocery store. You order all your groceries, but yeah.
Starting point is 01:41:56 Oh my God. It's like you're doing an improv about it. It's like, we need a location. Grocer, you're always going, grocery store. No, because when I... Can we get a location that these brother and sister would be in grocery store? No, it's just where most, like, strangers are all together. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:42:12 And you're in lines and you're... Exactly. You're behind people. So if someone's at the grocery store, oh, Jess calls this something, okay? So whenever he sees anyone wearing a shirt that's like kind of cropped or like right at the pants. Yeah. He calls that marinera. Oh, interesting.
Starting point is 01:42:33 Because when you go to grab in his, when you go to grab the top of the shelf, you grab the mariner. Which in his mind isn't always mariner. It's mariner. Okay. It exposes the stomach. Arrows. Yeah. And the arrows and like abs. Arrows are really powerful.
Starting point is 01:42:48 Arrows are powerful. They are powerful. Yeah. I feel like there are, of the many things a man could have, arrows are like really high up on the list. Now, do you like arrows on a woman? Yeah. Yeah. Well, arrows are literally arrows.
Starting point is 01:43:02 They're pointing to your genitals. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it's funny. And it's not that I'm like an ab person. So it's not like I need a six-pack. But yeah, even arrows on a gal, you're like. Definition.
Starting point is 01:43:14 I think there's something that we know that we don't know about. about the arrows. And this goes for a lot of different fitness things, which is like arrows are really hard to get. You're really athletic if you have arrows. Oh. And so somehow your body knows evolutionarily, like that person's very fit.
Starting point is 01:43:33 Oh, interesting. And then there's other things where it's like every guy does bench press and has a big chest. You're just like, yeah, yeah, yeah, guys. It's like doesn't really say anything. I think it's more that it's pointing to the jealous. I think that's why butts too are really powerful. So I don't have a thing for butts.
Starting point is 01:43:49 At all. Really? When you watch an NFL game, you're not like mesmerized by... I'm not a butt girl. Yeah. But anyway, marinara. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 01:43:58 So if someone is marinara, I... Sometimes it's intriguing to me, but I think most women, that's very intriguing. Okay. And I'm like... It's a push for you. Hit or miss. Not always. even if it's like really nice.
Starting point is 01:44:18 Okay. I'm just like, I like more random things. Uh-huh. Hands, necks, earlobes. Sometimes I just like I'll see something random on someone's body,
Starting point is 01:44:30 like their forearm or something. And I'm like... And you get a chill. I get PQs. Wow. Oh, wow. Stay tuned for more armchair expert. If you dare.
Starting point is 01:44:51 Knee cap ever? No. No. I've never been attracted to anyone's kneecap. Me either. But you know, I remember we had we had Hussin on. Uh-huh. And he said, and I thought this was interesting, he said like he's really attracted to like,
Starting point is 01:45:08 specifically Indian women. The little hairs, that one. He did talk about that. But he talked about that in a woman's arm, an Indian woman specifically, like armpit. There's often like extra fat right here. More folds. I have it. And I like, I despise it. Oh, you hate it. Oh, my God, I hate it. Okay. But I remember him specifically talking about that.
Starting point is 01:45:31 But he loved it. And that he liked it. And I was like, oh, you know, there really is like, there is a lid for every pot. And I ask for every seat. There really is. Like, you never know what people are attracted to. And you just decide on no one likes this. And then, and then you will confirm that. Exactly. And you're missing out on like. You see it all the time. We see people that are paired up and you're like, wow, that person clearly has all the options in the world and that's who they picked. That's interesting. And it should be comforting.
Starting point is 01:46:04 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, it should be. It should be comforting. It's like someone will like this. Yeah. But also it's like, I don't know, I go back and forth, I guess, because, you know, I don't like that skin, fleshy, fatty part of my arm. Arm-pit. It's like, it's not really the pit. Well, I guess it is the pit, sort of, but it's more like on the side.
Starting point is 01:46:27 Anyway, I hate it. And I guess I could be like, well, somebody will like this. Like, that's, but I don't like it. And I think it's okay. It's like, I should probably just care about what I like. I don't like it. So I don't need to find someone who like it. It's a better rule of thumb to be making decisions for yourself and know what others will like about you in general. Yeah. But then you really got to ask you to say, well, why don't you? You like it. My hunch is you don't like it because you think other people don't like it. Probably. You know? Because it's not on the bodies of the women that I look at and I'm like, oh, I want to look like that. Yeah, but don't want to touch or squeeze.
Starting point is 01:47:02 I just don't want to touch, like, their armpit. You don't ever want to poke a big butt to see, like, what the consistency is? Never. Wow. The thing is, when we talk about this with Nikki, whoever you're attracted to. Yeah. They like it, man. You like, you like all the parts.
Starting point is 01:47:16 Yes, totally. Totally. Totally. You like it all. Yep. So great. I have a little compliments. That's why personality is real.
Starting point is 01:47:24 Like having a good personality and being someone, somebody wants to be around and hang out with. Like, once you're that person, I mean, I say this as someone with no boyfriends, once you're that person. And I'm pretty strict. God, does that mean I have a bad personality? Why? Because I'm saying if you have a good personality, you can get people.
Starting point is 01:47:44 No, I think this is the, what's funny is I think you're giving yourself this advice. What do you mean? I think you might be a little. to what's the word? Picky's the word, I guess. You got to go with who's got a good personality and then see if you get attracted to them after that. You don't know anyone with the good personality?
Starting point is 01:48:01 The people I know who have good personalities are my friends. Right. And they're all married or they're Jess. Yeah, you're not at the grocery store. I don't go to the grocery store enough. Yeah. I'm not going to get their personality really from the grocery store.
Starting point is 01:48:14 It's funny, you're out a lot. I am out a lot. Yeah. I know you're out a lot. So I'm a little confused. Can I be, I not to be, this, good personalities are few and far between. Are they? Yeah, they really are.
Starting point is 01:48:28 Across the board, women and men. Good personalities. I'm so misled. Well, I'm misled. That's the problem. My friends, the people in my life have great personalities. Well, I was going to say, we interview insanely interesting people all week. Yes.
Starting point is 01:48:44 And then generally, if I hang out with somebody, it's one of, someone in our friendship group. So I probably don't have a great read on the general options personality-wise. Other than when I'm in Nashville, I'm just hanging with my neighbors and stuff and out at restaurants. Right. I do think that just being my best friend is a hindrance. Yeah, big time. He is the most, he is the most special personality of anyone I've ever met in my entire life. And I spent all my time with him.
Starting point is 01:49:18 Uh-huh. I know. Even Marinera. Like, who am I going to meet? That is Mariner. Like, no one. Yeah. And so this is where I really think sometimes.
Starting point is 01:49:30 I'm like, look, I got so lucky. You should send him to conversion camp. No, we're not attracted to each other. And that's what's great about us. He has a incredible personality. And I get to spend, I get free access to that personality. And it's so lucky. That is a problem.
Starting point is 01:49:48 If you're deciding, you meet a guy, you've been on a day with them, and then you're deciding the next night, do I hang out with Jess or do I hang out with this guy? That's, yeah, this is interesting. This is a problem, kind of. It is. Yeah. And that is what goes through my head. Of course it is. Like, okay, I have two hours to hang out tonight.
Starting point is 01:50:06 Am I going to go on a date? Or am I going to hang out with this person that's going to make me laugh for two hours? Yeah. I'm always going to pick that. Yeah. So sometimes I think, like, oh, maybe. I should just, in fact, most days, I think I think this. Like, I'm just so lucky.
Starting point is 01:50:22 I have these incredible people in my life, multiple incredible people that I think if anyone would be so lucky to have one of these people in their life and I have so many. Yeah. Maybe I should just be lucky and grateful for that. And like, that's enough. How about this? If I said there was this new breakthrough, AI figured this out. Okay.
Starting point is 01:50:44 You and Jess could take this pill. They took your DNA and they engineered it. after you wake up tomorrow morning, you're going to be insanely attracted to Jess. And he's going to be insanely attracted to you. Oh. Would I do it? Yeah, right? I know, but what if it ruined everything?
Starting point is 01:50:58 This is a black mirror. This should be a black mirror. It could ruin everything. Yeah. I think you just got to be grateful what you have. All right. Yeah, let's say you're both attracted to each other. But now, he wants to have sex with you more than you want to have sex with him.
Starting point is 01:51:13 Or what if he's, like, selfish in bed or something. Like, then, like, you know, bad parts of you. of personalities can come out when these things get involved. Jealousy. Like, there can be a lot of things. Jealousy when he's making other people laugh all of a sudden it bothers you. Yeah, because right now you don't care. No, I feel.
Starting point is 01:51:31 But if he was making some girl just laugh uncontrollably and he was your boyfriend. And he was straight. Yeah, I would be. You'd tell him to shut up. So shut up. Your comedy is only for me. I know. It is funny because now when we're out places and he's making people laugh and
Starting point is 01:51:47 and he's my, you know, buddy. I'm like so, I feel so, yeah, I'm like, oh my God, yeah, just is my best friend. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. And, but yeah, if he was into girls. Uh-huh, he's making some hot chick laugh uncontrollably. And you could see she was looking at him like, I wish this guy was my boyfriend. Yeah, and then she's like pulling her shirt down.
Starting point is 01:52:11 And I'm like, fuck you. Get out of here. I break up with you, Jess. Yeah. See, it could go badly. So maybe we wouldn't. We wouldn't take it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:52:21 Okay. All right. Should we do facts? Yeah. Okay. This is for Rachel Zoffness. What a name. Great name.
Starting point is 01:52:29 Yeah. Zoffness. I wish my name was Dax Softness. It'd be too many weird letters, but it does soften everything. God, do you want to hear something embarrassing? Yeah. I can't believe I'm going to admit this. Oh, good.
Starting point is 01:52:42 It's a day of admissions. So when I was young, I was like, you know, write a lot of, of fiction stories on my computer. And I would create, I was basically like writing what I wish my life was, kind of, the main character. And I was always like thinking about what name, what I would like name the characters and stuff. And I did really like the last name, Shepard. Really?
Starting point is 01:53:11 Yes, I did. Where did that come from? I don't know. I must have heard it. And I was like, oh, I really wish that was my last. last name. I like that. He's very white. Yeah, but it's like, it sounds nice. It sounds really nice. I'm grateful for Shepard. Yeah. Don't get me wrong. It's good. Yeah. It's a good name. And then, of course, I like that it's not spelled the way. So I still have some uniqueness, you know. I love uniqueness. I don't like that. It's annoying.
Starting point is 01:53:36 You would want H-E-R-D. Actually, no. I like the way yours is spelled aesthetically. Yeah, it looks better. Yeah, it looks better. Yeah. We don't even have H in there. But it bothers me when people spell it wrong, like when they're, like, reaching. out. Oh, it's almost exclusively wrong. I get offers or I get these, these ones that are kind of like, they're very flattering letters begging me to be a part of something. And I'm like, but you didn't even look up out. You don't even. You're acting like a super fan, but you don't know how to spell my name. Yeah. But I don't get that bet on to shape of a while. Rob McElhenney famously. Oh, well, he's let people go over it. Oh, wow. Yeah. Yeah. I get it. It's like just take a second. But I've made them as I've also made that mistake. I don't care. Thank you.
Starting point is 01:54:17 God, it's one. I mean, I care about so many dumb things, but I don't, I don't happen to care too much. I just, it's ironic. I see the irony of like, I'm your biggest fan. I know. It would happen with Kristen too. D-A-C-S-H-E-P-H-E-R-A-R-D. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:35 Yeah, yeah, yeah. When I was Kristen's assistant and people would reach out asking for things and they would misspell her name. I was like, no. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're not getting it. You can't even take the time. So, anyway, so I wanted it to be, I wanted that as a last name.
Starting point is 01:54:54 Monica Shepard. No, it wasn't Monica. Oh, it was going to be Gail Shepard. No, it was like Sky or, like, Ansley. Ansley, Shepard. Yeah. That's cool. I know.
Starting point is 01:55:06 Yeah. It is cool. Okay. You never wanted Hollis? Sorry, I didn't know about it. With a bunch of crazy letters slammed in there. I would have written a character. No one spells my name right.
Starting point is 01:55:19 Well, Rob, we've been working together for eight and a half years. And honestly, every time I have to write your last name, I get a sharp pang of anxiety. I'm like, I'm never doing this right. Yeah. How dare you complain about yours. I'm going to try right now in public. I'm going to try. Okay.
Starting point is 01:55:33 I think it's Hollis. H-O-L-Y-C-Z? No, Z. Yes. Okay. Wow. I thought it was C-Z for a second. You are dyslexic.
Starting point is 01:55:46 You can definitely see where there would be a C in there, right? Hollis? No. I don't normally get a C in the wrong space. Do you get H-O-L-I-S? Well, fanatically, yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:55:58 Could you ever thought about it? No. Rob, you be you. I think it was already changed technically from like the real Polish. Oh, probably. Pronunciation. Okay, so I blew it in public.
Starting point is 01:56:12 Yeah, so it's a tough one for me. It's a hard name. It's a hard name. It's a hard name. Oh, having a Y and a Z in your name is tough. It's going to be tough. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:56:21 Speaking of names that someone could mispronounce, you say Bolt. That's a tough one, yeah. Yeah. So just some stuff about his back. Scoliosis, yeah. To manage his back issues and protect his spine, Bolt focused heavily on core strength,
Starting point is 01:56:38 sometimes doing up to 700 sit-ups per day. At age 15, he became the youngest male world junior champion ever in the 200 meter running it under 20 seconds. Wow. During the 2008 Beijing Olympics, he ate roughly 1,000 McNuggets over 10 days because he was picky about the food. One thousand McNuggets?
Starting point is 01:57:02 That's a scientific experiment. Yeah. Like what would happen if someone ate 1,000 nuggets in two weeks? They would set all the world records. That pink sledge video is one of the best, mark, I don't know what they were marketing. I get me, a Burger King probably was behind that. Like, and I cannot hear the word McNugget and not think of that pink sludge.
Starting point is 01:57:28 Oh, thank God, I don't. I have no association. It is permanent. It's cemented. I mean, I'll still maybe eat it. They're delicious. Oh, yeah. They're delicious.
Starting point is 01:57:38 Oh, they're fucking delicious. By the way. I wish I had an excuse to eat a thousand of them in two weeks. Well, you could. I wouldn't look like you saying. If you do 700 sit-ups a day, you might. I think I'll also have to be running very fast for very frequently. Probably.
Starting point is 01:57:56 At what margin do women experience chronic pain more than men? Data suggests that approximately 70% of chronic pain cases are women, and they suffer from higher pain sensitivity, more severe pain and higher rates of conditions like fibromyalgia and migraines. Fibromyalgia. Remember? Classic. Classic.
Starting point is 01:58:15 There used to be so many. Marshall's about fibromyalgia. Yeah, especially on 60 Minutes. Yeah. Yeah. The older person programs. Older demo, yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:58:25 Which I am out of officially. You're what? I'm not in the demo anymore. It's 18 to 49. I'm not a valued viewer anymore. Oh, no. Yeah. But you're in the fibromyalgia.
Starting point is 01:58:36 Yeah. That's why I said the older demo, but this is kind of a throwaway demo. It's not what advertisers care about. They care about 18 to 40. That's silly. They should care about the older people because Because the older people... They have more money, but they spend less.
Starting point is 01:58:50 Right. Yeah, they're done buying crap. How much of the world's opioids does the U.S. consume? The U.S. has less than 5% of the world's population, but consumed roughly 30% of the world's opioids in 2009, including more than 99% of the world's hydrocodone, who, and 80% of the world's oxycodone. As of 2017, that was a long time ago, the U.S. and other affluent nations, Canada, Western Europe, consume roughly 95% of the global opioid supply, leaving only 5% for the rest of the world.
Starting point is 01:59:29 Some Sackler family fund facts. Oh, great. Owners of Purdue Pharma made approximately $35 billion in revenue from OxyContin sales. In 2025, family agreed to a 7.4 billion settlement as part of a bankruptcy deal, which required them to give up control of Purdue Pharma and bansom from selling opioids in the U.S. of A. Okay, so this is some stats on AAA and its success rate. But like... Before you read them, I'm going to, I'm just going to say something very smart and astute that
Starting point is 02:00:03 Drew Pinsky said about the success rate AAA. A.A. is a very hard thing to evaluate because you can evaluate a cancer medication. Mm-hmm. Because you take the one pill. They took it or they didn't. And then you measure the outcome. Whereas AA is advise, go to meetings, get a sponsor, work the steps, sponsor someone else, do service. Right.
Starting point is 02:00:28 So there's a lot of components. So it's hard to measure. I know. If someone has the full dosage, if they do all five of those things consistently, you're going to get one outcome. Right. And then a person who does one meeting a week and ever gets a sponsor doesn't do the steps. You know. That's why I don't really agree with this.
Starting point is 02:00:47 I don't want to read this. I don't think that's... What does it say? 10% or something? This is 2014. Well, yeah, this says it's 7%. Yeah. And then also how are you defining it's like relapse within the first year?
Starting point is 02:00:59 Right. Then, okay, so it says addiction specialist sites success rates slightly higher between 8 and 12%. But then it says 27% of the participants were sober for less than a year, 24% were sober. From what? Oh, a 2014 study conducted by AA. found the following among over 6,000 members. 27% of participants were sober for less than a year. 24% were sober 1 to 5 years.
Starting point is 02:01:24 13% were sober 5 to 10, 14% were sober 10 to 20. 22 were sober for 20 or more years. The eight-year follow-up showed that 46% of those who chose formal treatment were abstinent, well, 49% of individuals who attended AA were abstinent. Those are actually... Some more. Yeah, but they're saying these are A.A. studies. Yeah, what success? If someone drinks once within a year versus they drank seven days a week, that's pretty successful.
Starting point is 02:01:51 Yeah. You know, over the course of 20 years, they have eight relapses, does that mean it's not successful? No, to me, that person used eight times in 20 years and they used to use 365 days a year. I know. It's hard. It's really, I don't know. It's hard to push. It's almost impossible to evaluate. I agree. Yeah. That's it. Okay, great. Well, I enjoyed Rachel. I've been. telling so many people about the tail of two nails is so fun at a Durn party, especially if you have the x-ray on your phone like I do. Yep.
Starting point is 02:02:23 And then the back data is fascinating. The back data is really fascinating. Just pain in general. I mean, it relates to the other episode we had on overdiagnosis where there's phantom seizure, you know, people can have seizures. that are not caused by epilepsy. You can have, you know, it's similar. Like, your body is still reacting.
Starting point is 02:02:51 Yeah, it's in a high alert survival mode. And it doesn't need to be. It just ever, you know when people will ask, like, you've had so many experts on in the past eight years? What have you learned? Like, what's your biggest takeaway? I always kind of like trip on that because there's so much. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:08 But I think the main takeaway is just the brain. is so powerful. Yeah. It can do anything. It can kill you and it can, it can take you to another, uh, it take you out of the, this planet to another place. Yes. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:03:26 It can save you. It can, I mean, it's, it's like, it's all of fucking here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. No, it's, uh, it's the great enigma still. I know. Yeah. We all got one. Some of us didn't get one.
Starting point is 02:03:41 That's my diss. Did you even get a brain? Yeah, when God was handing out brains, you must have an absin'pap da. Did you miss that day? There was a thing in when God was getting up brains. When God was handing out somethings, you thought he said somethings. Do you, does that ring a bell? Like shirts and you thought he was saying shits.
Starting point is 02:04:02 It's not that, but it's like, it's a burn. Yeah, I was like, oh, oh, it's, when God was hanging out brains, you thought he said stains and said, no thanks. That's a thing. That's a third grade thing. That's a Christian dis. No, that's a, what's the name of my elementary school? Spring Mills Elementary diss on third grade.
Starting point is 02:04:21 When God was handing out brains, you thought he said stains and said no thanks. Be honest. Did you invent that? No. I could barely remember it. Okay. Yeah, yeah. I never forget something I create.
Starting point is 02:04:33 All right. Love you.

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