Feel Better, Live More with Dr Rangan Chatterjee - #227 Dr Andrew Huberman: The One Daily Practice Everyone Should Do, Training Your Brain and Reducing Anxiety
Episode Date: January 7, 2022CAUTION: Contains themes of an adult nature. If I told you there was a simple, free habit you could take up to optimise your health in just five to 10 minutes a day, would you be up for trying it? If... the answer’s yes, then you’re going to love today’s guest, a brilliant science communicator who reveals what the habit is – and shares ground-breaking insights from his research.  Dr. Andrew Huberman is a professor of neuroscience at Stanford University School of Medicine in the US and he has made numerous contributions to the fields of brain development, brain function and neuroplasticity. His lab’s most recent work focuses on the influence of vision and breathing on human performance and brain states such as fear and courage. His work has been published in top scientific journals including Nature, Science, and Cell and has been featured in global media outlets such as TIME magazine, BBC, and Scientific American.  We begin this conversation discussing why exposure to morning light is key to optimum human functioning. Our visual system is about more than just seeing. The light that enters our eyes, even in blind people, gives knowledge to the nervous system. Getting the right light, at the right time, sets the clock in all of your body’s cells, which in turn will affect many different functions in the body. It stimulates the cortisol you need for energy and focus. And it has positive effects on everything from sleep, energy and immunity to appetite, mood and so much more.  We also discuss what exactly is going on in the brain when we feel fearful and how something as simple as getting outside and looking at the horizon can completely change our physiology and powerfully inhibit anxiety.  Finally, we talk about the role that technology is having on our attention and Andrew shares a variety of simple exercises that we can all do to train our brains to improve our focus, health and performance.  Andrew is a special human being and someone who I have been wanting to speak to for a long, long time. I really enjoyed speaking to him - I hope you enjoy listening. Thanks to our sponsors:  https://vivobarefoot.com/livemore  https://calm.com/livemore  http://www.athleticgreens.com/livemore Order Dr Chatterjee's new book Happy Mind, Happy Life: UK version and US & Canada version  Show notes available at https://drchatterjee.com/227  Support the podcast and enjoy Ad-Free episodes. Try FREE for 7 days on Apple Podcasts https://apple.co/3oAKmxi. For other podcast platforms go to https://fblm.supercast.com. DISCLAIMER: The content in the podcast and on this webpage is not intended to constitute or be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your doctor or other qualified health care provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have heard on the podcast or on my website.
Transcript
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Digestive issues, mental focus issues, depression, anxiety, exacerbation of every major psychiatric disorder from OCD to ADHD is closely associated with disruptions in circadian clock function.
So you need to coordinate the cells and systems of the body.
The primary way that happens is through the arrival of light to the eyes at the appropriate times of day and the absence of light at other
times. Hi, my name is Rangan Chatterjee. Welcome to Feel Better Live More.
Happy New Year. Welcome to a brand new season of Feel Better Live More. I hope 2022 has started
off well for you. And I hope you feel positive and motivated for the year ahead. I know I certainly
do. I have got so many fabulous guests lined up to speak to on the podcast this year. And today's
guest is no exception. Dr. Andrew Huberman is a professor of neuroscience
at Stanford University School of Medicine, and he has made numerous contributions to the fields of
brain development, brain function, and neuroplasticity. His lab's most recent work
focuses on the influence of vision and breathing on human performance and brain states such as fear and
courage. And his work has been published in top scientific journals, including Nature, Science,
and Cell, and has been featured in global media outlets such as Time Magazine, the BBC,
and Scientific American. We begin our conversation discussing why exposure to morning light is key to optimum human functioning.
You see, our visual system is about more than just seeing.
The light that enters our eyes, even in blind people, gives knowledge and information to our nervous system.
Getting the right light at the right time sets the clock in all of your body's cells, which in turn will affect many different functions in the body. It stimulates the cortisol that you need,
the energy and focus, and it has positive effects on everything from sleep, energy, and immunity
to appetite, mood, and so much more. We also discuss what exactly is going on in the brain
when we feel fearful and how something as simple as getting outside and looking at the horizon
can completely change our physiology and powerfully inhibits anxiety. We talk about the role that
technology is having on our attention and And Andrew shares a variety of simple
exercises that we can all do to train our brains and improve our focus, health, and performance.
Andrew is a special human being and someone who I've been wanting to speak to for a long,
long time. I really enjoyed my conversation with him. I hope you enjoyed listening.
really enjoyed my conversation with him. I hope you enjoyed listening.
And now my conversation with Dr. Andrew Huberman.
First of all, I mean, thank you for making time.
It's a pleasure. I feel like we know one another because- So do I.
We've seen your face so many times and I feel a kinship. And I'm not just
saying that. I listen to your content. We're familiar. Well, thank you, man. And the way I
thought we could start this conversation was because we've got very different experiences
in our life. I'm a clinician, you're a scientist. So I've been a practicing medical doctor for
over 20 years now and I'm very passionate how lifestyle influences our health. And when I see a patient, I'm always trying to think about what aspects of our lifestyle, of their lifestyle, can I try and change?
try and do is think, what is that upstream lever that I can turn? And if I can get that right,
then automatically, it's going to take care of a lot of downstream consequences.
And when I think about your work, one of the key things that sort of jumps out to me is that the visual system may well be one of these key upstream levers. If we can learn how to manipulate it,
if we can learn how to let the right type of light in at the right times of day,
that can also have a whole myriad of downstream consequences.
Yeah, absolutely. You know, I think when we think about health practices,
When we think about health practices, you know, I think about foundational practices and often those are lifestyle practices and foundational practices in my mind are the things that, you know, bring the tide in so that the ship that is our health can actually get out of harbor and get out into whatever destination it wants to head to. You know, for many years, I paid close attention to these areas of wellness and biohacking and also standard healthcare. But as an outsider,
you know, or somewhat of an outsider, because I have many colleagues who are clinicians, but as
you point out, and it's important for me also to point out, I'm not a clinician. I always say I'm
not a medical doctor. I don't prescribe anything. I'm a professor. So I do research and profess a lot of things.
And I think science people should be aware of in order to lay down the bedrock of their foundation of mental and physical health and high performance for those that already feel as if they're doing well and want to level up their mental or physical practices.
And the reason I say that is for the following reason, as you know, but maybe some of the listeners are not aware of.
You have a brain, of course, but the brain is really part of this larger organ, the nervous system, right? The brain and spinal cord central
nervous system, and then you have a so-called peripheral nervous system. And the nervous
system's job is to coordinate the activities of all the organs of the body, including our
movement and our thought and our emotions, but really coordinate the immune system, coordinate the endocrine system. It's really the
conductor of the whole business that is us. The visual system is unique in that it's the only
piece of the central nervous system that resides outside the cranial vault. So our eyes, we think
of as seeing devices, little cameras with lenses that inform the brain about the rest of the
outside world. But they are actually the primary and in some sense, the only way in which the
nervous system has knowledge about external circumstances. And so lining the back of our
eyes is this three-layered structure called the neural retina. And the neural retina is part of
the brain proper. It's a piece of the brain that got extruded out of the cranial vault during development. So you've got two little bits
of brain outside your cranial vault. And when those two little bits of brain see light, or when
I should say more accurately, when light lands on those two little bits of brain has a profound
effect on levels of energy, the function of the immune system,
the timing of sleep, the depth of sleep, the appetite, and a whole other host of biological
processes. And it sounds very complex, but actually the system is quite straightforward.
It was organized, right? It is organized such that if light arrives at the appropriate times of the 24-hour cycle onto the neural retina, many, many things go terrifically well, everything doesn't go to disaster right away.
But in a day or two, very quickly, things start to fall apart at the level of immune system and
mood and functioning. So we could talk about the practical tools, but I hope that lays the sort of
the organizational logic behind why we say the visual system is so important. We could not say
the same thing for touch or hearing, smell or taste. And while those senses are important, they don't have this major
lever effect on the rest of the nervous system and therefore the rest of the body.
Yeah, I find that super fascinating because, you know, there's other senses. Of course,
we get so much information, you know, touch receptors,
we can glean so much from our immediate environment through those touch receptors.
But yeah, I like what you say that the visual system really is that kind of top down driver,
get that right, and lots of things sort of take care of themselves. So, you know, compared to when
we were sort of evolving or for the majority of our time
on planet Earth, we have been exposed to light in a very particular way, haven't we? We had
presumably lots of natural light in the daytime and low levels of light in the evening.
Yet for many of us, that's been flipped. So maybe you could
talk to how many of us live these days and what are those practical tips that we can use to get
the visual system to start working for us and not against us? Great. Yeah, I'd be happy to. So a
couple of just basic facts about the way we organize every cell in our body. Every cell has a 24 hour oscillator, just meaning it's like a clock that counts down from 24 to zero and then repeats.
And every cell in our body needs to be coordinated to some master clock in order to so that the cells of our body work as a coherent whole.
This system, when disrupted, is what happens in jet lag.
It can happen under a number of conditions. A lot of people are what I call jet lagged at home.
The clocks of their cells are out of sync, and this causes many problems. And I'll mention the
problems first. These include digestive issues, mental focus issues, depression, anxiety,
These include digestive issues, mental focus issues, depression, anxiety, exacerbation of every major psychiatric disorder from OCD to ADHD to Alzheimer's, which is a neurologic disorder, of course, sometimes classified as one or the other, but you get the idea. So you need to coordinate the cells and systems of the body. How does that happen?
Well, the primary way that happens is through the arrival of light to the eyes at the appropriate times of day and the absence of light at other times.
So I'll give the practice and the tools first, and then I'll flesh it out with some days, is to view bright light, ideally sunlight, within 30 minutes to an hour of waking.
And ideally, it would be even sooner.
Now, this is not practical for many people who live in certain areas of the world where there isn't a lot of sunlight, and we'll get to that.
But the idea is to get up in the morning and within about 30 minutes to get outside and get sunlight into your eyes. It is fine to wear corrective lenses like contacts or corrective eye lenses.
In fact, because of what they do, those actually
focus light to the retina precisely. That's the role of those lenses so that the light actually
lands not in front of or back of the neural retina, but on the neural retina. But sunglasses
would be problematic. So provided you can safely do it, you get outside and you want to view
sunlight. Do you need to be in direct sunlight? No. Do you get outside and you want to view sunlight.
Do you need to be in direct sunlight?
No.
Do you need to stare at the sun?
No.
Please don't stare directly at the sun.
I always say never look at any light, artificial or sunlight, that's so bright that it's painful to look at.
You have a blink reflex for a reason.
But how much and how long to do that?
Well, it's going to vary because of time of year.
People have different sensitivities to light.
But in general, getting outside for about five to ten minutes every morning is extremely important.
If there's cloud cover, it's still important.
And it's far better than getting light from artificial sources like the ones behind me.
Even though artificial lights can seem very bright early in the day, they really don't carry the light intensities that are required to do the following things. When you look at sunlight, especially
early in the day, there's a special class of neurons, nerve cells in the back of the eye
called intrinsically photosensitive cells. These were discovered by David Burson at Brown University
and others. These cells connect to your hypothalamus. They literally send a wire that we call an axon to
your hypothalamus which resides over the roof of your mouth and there resides what we call the
master circadian clock the master circadian clock also has a name the suprachiasmatic nucleus and
the suprachiasmatic nucleus acts as a conductor for all the cells of your body from your liver
to your brain cells every cell and it starts sending out signals to coordinate those clocks think about a clock shop where all the clocks are out of sync. The suprachiasmatic
nucleus sets them all to the same correct time so that they all chime at the appropriate time.
Otherwise it would be chaos. So light early in the day is the primary signal by which that
clock setting mechanism occurs. Now, if it's very dark out, you may have to rely on artificial lights. And I'll
mention some low cost options. If you wake up before the sun comes out, turn on as many bright
artificial lights as you can. But then once the sun is out, then go outside. People ask,
can and should you do this through a window or a car windshield? And the answer is no,
because of the filtration of particular wavelengths of light by windows and windshields,
it will take about 50 times longer. You'll be spending all day waiting for this clock mechanism
to kick on. A couple other things about positive things that happen when you do this practice.
First of all, every 24 hours, your body will release a hormone called cortisol. We often hear about cortisol as a
stress hormone and then it's terrible for us, but cortisol, as you know, is vital to life.
And it actually provides a lot of the alertness and focus that is wonderful for so many things
that pulses we call that increase in cortisol is going to happen at least once every 24 hours,
regardless of when you view light, but by viewing light early in the day,
that pulse arrives early in the day and gives you energy and focus for a 10 to 12, maybe even 14
hour period. If you do not view light early in the day for a couple of days in a row, what happens
is that cortisol pulse starts to drift later and later into the afternoon. And a late shifted cortisol peak, I should call it
peak or pulse, is closely associated with many forms of chronic depression. People's mood starts
to get worse. They start having evening anxiety. They start having trouble sleeping. So get as
much bright light in your eyes as you can early in the day as is safely possible. If it's a really
bright day or you're on a snow field,
it'd probably only take a minute or two to set this clock. If for instance, it's a today,
actually, it's pretty overcast. It's looking pretty UK here right now. Um, I spent some time
over there and it's, you know, I'll get outside and view light. Um, maybe I'll spend 30 minutes
there. Maybe I'll take my work outside. It's raining a bit. So it's tough, but you try and do it most days. If you miss a day, no big deal. But the next day,
you should try and get twice as much time outside. Now, why would that be? It turns out that this
clock mechanism is what we call a slow integrator. It's actually counting photons over time,
light energy. So this part of our visual system is very different than the visual
system components that we use to see edges and faces and recognize motion, et cetera.
It is a clock setting mechanism for our entire brain and body. So get that morning and early
light. If you don't have access to sunlight for whatever reason, I know there are a lot of
daytime simulators that are for sale out there so-called sad lamps
um seasonal affective disorder lamps they're quite expensive I want to be very clear I have
no financial relationship to any of these um companies but one low-cost alternative is to
get a ring light of the sort that the Instagram or YouTube uh YouTubers use to make themselves
look good it's like a blue ring light. It's very, you can find
them very low cost. And you just put that at your breakfast table or while you work in the morning,
that is bright and we'll get the system going. And some people like that on all day.
And that brings me to another point, which is that there's a lot of interest nowadays in blue
blockers. And we've heard so much about how blue light is so terrible for us, but nothing could be further from the truth. Blue wavelengths of light are one of the main wavelengths that sets the circadian
clock. In other words, don't wear blue blockers in the morning and throughout the day. You're
actually short-circuiting this wakefulness signal and clock setting signal. If you're going to wear
blue blockers or try and truncate the amount of light coming into the eye for sake of better sleep,
et cetera. Try to do that late in the day. And I'll get to late in the day in a moment.
So hopefully that covers the main bullet points and the questions that I usually get asked about
this. It's a zero cost practice to get outside. You can, yes, you can bring your phone. I suggest
bringing your children or your dog or your, you know, or just yourself and getting
outside, take your coffee outside. Even on a day where it seems kind of overcast, you're getting
far more photon energy than you would from bright indoor lights. So that's the main thing. And many
people report feeling much better immediately. But in addition to that, as you do this more and more, you'll start to recognize the
physiological response. It's not a placebo response. There are two things that happen.
That cortisol pulse starts to get entrained, as we call it, synchronized to this behavior and to
this light viewing. And the other thing that happens is that when you do this morning light
viewing, it sets about a 16-hour countdown to the release of another hormone called melatonin which is
released from the pineal gland and is the hormone that's responsible for transitioning us into sleep
not keeping us asleep but transitioning us into sleep so it actually helps establish a better
transition and quality of sleep later that night many people who have sleep issues find that just
this simple morning light viewing practice assists their sleep issues tremendously. So that's the primary layer. And this is all mediated by
vision. There are other things one could do, for instance, if you want to kind of synergize with
this practice, which would be if you're an exerciser, you could try and do your exercise
outside without sunglasses. There are a number of other practices you can layer in, but in terms of
the visual system, that's the main one. The other one, I would say a close second is to absolutely
dim the lights in the evening and late hours. The hormone melatonin, as I mentioned before,
is powerfully inhibited by light.
When you view light, even if you go into the bathroom in the middle of the night and you turn on really bright lights, that quashes the levels of melatonin that are released
from the pineal.
And many people get a little paranoid about light when they hear that.
I wouldn't worry about it.
I would just dim lights as dim as you need in order to safely move about your evening
activities.
as dim lights as dim as you need in order to safely move about your evening activities.
And basically the time to avoid light would be between about, about 10 PM and 4 AM shift workers are a separate conversation.
I have an episode of my podcast completely devoted to shift work and involves some technical
details to figure out how to adjust these behaviors for them.
So they could check out that episode, but. But let's think about typical night,
you know, diurnal people, as we call it, sleep at night and awake during the day.
So avoid bright lights in the evening. Now, earlier I said the lights that are artificial
lights are not bright enough to set the circadian clock. So you need sunlight. So why can't you view
Netflix or your screen or bright lights at home between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. Well, it turns
out that the sensitivity of the cells in your retina changes such that it doesn't take much
light in the evening or later, you know, 10 p.m. to 4 a.m. to throw off your whole clock schedule
and system. So in the evening is when you want to dim the lights. And ideally, you would also
have the lights low in your physical environment.
The cells that transmit this information to the hypothalamus reside in the lower half of the retina. And because of the optics of the eye, they view the upper visual field. So table lamps,
lights down near the floor, fire, fire light, or candle light is fine. Moonlight is fine.
Believe it or not, even though a very bright moon actually doesn't carry that much photon energy. So avoid bright lights between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m. As a last point,
if you somehow have to run to the store or to a hospital or you turn on the lights in the middle
of the night, don't freak out. Remember, these are slow integrating systems. It's just that if
you're consistently looking at screens late at night,
or you're consistently turning on bright lights in the middle of the night,
you're really messing up your system.
So these are averages.
It's a lot like nutrition or exercise.
Try and get it right, or mostly right, about 80% of the time.
And don't panic if you happen to violate these tools every once in a while.
You'll be just fine.
Yeah, I love that. Very, very thorough. Very, very comprehensive. I just want to echo,
Andrew, in my own clinical experience, I have seen natural light exposure, just like you,
be game changing for people. I first wrote about it, I think about five years ago,
my first book, and I still get messages today from people taking photos of themselves outside having their morning cup of tea or coffee in the
garden. I think that's really, really important. And I also love, you know, the way you talk about
the visual system and the cells in the back of the retina. For me, it sort of feels like
light coming through the eyes first thing in the morning is kind of like the conductor of this beautiful orchestra that can be played by different organs and cells within your body.
Is that sort of fair to say?
Absolutely.
And yeah, I think, you know, as a clinician, you'll probably recognize this phenomenon, ICU psychosis, when people don't get
regular sunlight because they're in the hospital. Remember, hospitals are some of the most unhealthy
places to be. Sorry, my clinical friends, but you know, you look at the food in hospitals,
it's dreadful. You look at the lighting conditions and they violate everything that I just said.
And there's a phenomenon well-known called ICU psychosis, where people literally develop
psychosis in the hospital because of the chaotic lighting schedules.
They leave and they feel better.
And I'm mentioning this because there are two studies from University of Colorado showing
that when people get onto these schedules of morning light viewing and avoiding artificial
lights at night, to some extent, their melatonin and cortisol rhythms correct within two days.
And so that's,
I just, you know, put that in there as a kind of an encouragement that it works very quickly and nobody escapes this mechanism. There is no one, you know, you can say nutrition, we could argue
about plant-based carnivore omnivore. I mean, you know, the discussion is such a hairball topic
that I, you know, I've made the mistake of touching that third rail before, you know, but,
but when it comes to light viewing, nobody escapes this. In fact, even blind people,
provided they still have eyes, have this mechanism. And I actually, because my lab works on visual
repair, in addition to a number of other things, I consult a lot of people who are blind and they
have vastly improved their sleep. A major issue for blind people is sleep
and other aspects of wellbeing through this mechanism. Now you said the conductor or the
orchestra, and that's absolutely right. It is fair to say that this is the most important
mechanism by which we coordinate the activities of all the cells of our body. In the classic
circadian literature, they call it light is the primary zeitgeber. It's my terrible German
pronunciation for timekeeper. When you eat, when you exercise, when you socialize, and temperature
are the other factors, but light is the primary zeitgeber by which you, your body and your brain orient itself
in time. And so when you say the conductor, we should just, you're exactly right. We, of course,
know where we are in space because of, in physical space, because we can see where we are, but how do
we know where we are in time? And actually this mechanism of viewing sunlight is how we orient in time because
the earth non-coincidentally, I should say ourselves non-coincidentally have a 24 hour
clock because the earth rotates once every 24 hours. In addition to that, because it's a 365 day
orbit around the sun each year, and the earth is tilted toward or away from the sun somewhat at
different times of years, the so-called equinoxes and so forth, there's a beautiful mechanism by which
sunlight viewing every day orients us in time and in ways that are powerful because
melatonin, as I mentioned, is inhibited. It's prevented by light. So as you, on average,
get longer days or shorter days throughout the year and because of the changes in
the intensity of light in the morning what ends up happening is there's a signal that's sent to
your brain a very slow integration signal so that your brain and body know where you are in that 365
day journey which is incredible right and we're talking about an annual calendar that's transmitted from the eye to the hypothalamus,
converted into a hormonal signal, which is melatonin.
And you actually know what season you're in biologically as a consequence.
And we know that, for instance, in longer days, shorter nights, the body and brain make
much more dopamine and serotonin, neuromodulators that enhance our sense of well-being and safety and motivation in longer shorter day excuse me longer night periods you
know in the winter then we tend to feel a little bit more um solemn a little bit less energy we
tend to want to eat more cortisol lowering foods like carbohydrates which function pretty well to
lower cortisol so-called comfort foods i'm not suggesting people do that, but it does work. Pigmentation
of the skin is related to this. Hormones related to libido and mood and all of this. Now, it varies
depending on where you live. If you're at the equator, there isn't much variation in the
melatonin signal because there isn't much variation in day length across the year. But this orchestra is one in
which your body and brain need to need to anchor themselves in time. And it seems somewhat abstract.
But one thing that we know for sure is that people with anxiety, sadly, suicidal depression,
different forms of depression, almost always before an episode or sadly before a suicide
that ends in death, in almost always preceding those events is a disruption in somebody's sleep
schedule. I mean, it's almost 100% is that somebody is feeling off, but their sleep schedule is off.
And a characteristic feature of depression is waking up at 3.30 in
the morning or 4 in the morning and failure to be able to fall back asleep or 2 in the morning.
Now, that doesn't mean if that's happening to you that you're necessarily clinically depressed,
but every depressive disorder, suicide, anxiety, ADHD is closely associated with disruptions in
circadian clock function. And while what we're talking about won't necessarily cure those issues or resolve those issues, they greatly facilitate the
transition to health and well-being in all people, but in particular in depression and anxiety and
so forth. Yeah, I mean, thank you for sharing that. One of the things I notice with a lot of
patients who are struggling with a whole variety of different conditions, but like the mental health conditions sort of you were describing there, is that yes, it can be early morning wakening, but it can also be this general lethargy and an unwillingness to get out of bed and to get outside. So there's a lot of time spent indoor. And actually, that action of getting
natural light exposure in the morning can be so, so beneficial. And I think a lot of people also,
in my experience, Andrew, don't realize that actually it becomes this vicious cycle. You
don't expose yourself to natural light till early afternoon. You push your whole clock back. So you
go to bed later. You wake up feeling exhausted the next day, and again, you don't want to go outside in the
morning. And then you keep getting locked in this cycle where, as you say, very quickly, we can start
to reset that with natural light exposure. So I think that's a really great point to make.
The other thing, what you were saying about seasons, I had that written down,
actually. I wanted to talk to you about seasons because one of the things modern life does for
many of us is that it kind of imprints certain times that we do things irrespective of our
natural environment. So here in the UK, as we have this conversation, it is still dark at 7.30 in the morning, and it is now getting dark
again at about 4.30, 4.45 in the afternoon. So dramatically limited are exposures to natural
light. So it strikes me that it's hard depending on which job you're in, but do we need to live
with the seasons a little bit more is the first question. And I guess semi-related to that is something that I, as a parent, is probably
concerning me somewhat at the moment. My son started secondary school or high school just a
few months ago. And I think because of the restrictions over the past two years, a lot of homework now gets given online. And I also go into schools to help them with wellbeing
and how do we address all these mental health problems. And for me, talking about these levers
that can have, you know, these key levers that can have multiple downstream benefits, for me,
I think, well, particularly in the winter when it gets dark so early,
if kids have to be on their screens in the evening to do homework, that's going to push back melatonin. They're going to be more tired the following day. They're going to be less
emotionally regulated. They're going to be more prone to getting triggered. So talk to me a little
bit about those things if you can, because I think this could be quite a big problem that could be addressed with a very simple dictum, which is let's not give
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yeah i think that um improper viewing of light meaning at the wrong times um is going we're going to look back and uh and realize that this is the um snack and junk food
of the 80s and 90s you know that that's led to so many issues metabolic issues and
yeah um obesity crisis and um and things of that sort.
Mostly because it fits a lot of the same, it has sort of the same contour, right? Easily accessible,
everybody's doing it. It's kind of meshed itself into the way that we work and behave and in ways
that, you know, that I have a friend, he's a psychiatrist. So he uses this kind of language,
which is, you know, the subtle informs the gross, you know, he's a psychiatrist. So he uses this kind of language, which is, you know, the
subtle informs the gross, you know, it's these little, these little behaviors that we accumulate
over time that lead us down the path of either health or disease of various kinds. So, you know,
a couple of things, those kids just from a practical standpoint could dim their screens.
It would not be a bad idea for them to dim the room lights as well.
Keep phones and tablets out of their rooms at night. It's that bright light relative to dark
background that really can amplify the signal to the clock in the evening. There are a couple other
things that I should mention about kids and adults too. So when we view things up close, there are changes in the optics of the eye.
The lens of the eye is this beautiful structure.
It actually can move.
Your eye is a very dynamic structure.
It's got little muscles and the lens moves.
It's incredible.
But one of the consequences of viewing things up close too much
is that the eyeball lengthens and children and adults develop myopia,
which is nearsightedness,
and they need corrective lenses. One of the more exciting things to happen in the last
couple of years are a couple of large-scale clinical trials, thousands of patients,
where they looked at if kids and adults, but mostly kids, if they spend two hours a day outside,
even if they're doing their homework outside on a computer, but if they spend two hours a day outside, even if they're doing their
homework outside on a computer, but if they spend two hours a day outside, two things happen. One
is they greatly reduce the incidence of myopia through a different eye to, excuse me, light to
eye mechanism that we won't go into the details, but these are very solid findings. And the other
thing that's very, very powerful for kids and for adults,
but especially for kids, because their brain is still plastic, as we say, can change very easily
in response to experience is to view things at a distance. When you go outside in the morning and
get that sunlight or what throughout the day, periodically, you want to try and view things
that are beyond, certainly beyond the extent of your phone or your computer or the walls of a house, but also often to the distance. If you can view a horizon even better,
but if you can't try and look across the street, down the street, as far as you can,
there's a number of reasons for doing this. First of all, viewing things up close all day
is a very active process of keeping that lens in your eye, a particular shape and the muscles of
your eye. And it can lead to headaches. It can lead to eye strain. Many people who have migraines have migraines
because they're just not looking far enough into the distance very much. The other thing
is that getting that sunlight outside during the day through mechanisms separate from the
clock mechanisms is known to improve mood and improve metabolic function. And this is because of the linkage between the
eye and a structure has a weird name called the habenula. The habenula is a little structure in
the thalamus, kind of middle of the thalamus, for those of you that want to know, that is associated
with the dopamine system and with feeding and regulation of mood and feeding rhythms.
The beautiful work of Samur Hatar, who's the head of the chronobiology unit at the National Institutes of Mental Health and others.
So there's real science to back up what I'm saying here.
And so get outside during the day as much as possible.
Take a walk.
View things in the distance.
Don't be looking at your phone like this as you walk.
getting the optics of your eyes into what we call panoramic vision, where you're not necessarily moving your head or eyes around a lot, but you're just kind of opening up that aperture of your
visual field. Very important, and especially in kids. So we're talking now about improving sleep,
improving wakefulness, improving concentration through morning light viewing, improving sleep,
improving, or I should say, offsetting the development of myopia,
nearsightedness, possibly even reversing myopia or some of that myopia in adults.
We're talking about also anxiety relief. One of the things that's really exciting the last few
years is that we've known this for a long time, but that when we move through what we call,
the scientists are so geeky, when we self-generate motion, whether or not on a bicycle or running or jogging or just even walking, doesn't matter what speed, the visual world is slipping by us, right?
But we don't actually see blurry blur going by like we would if we took a picture on our phone and moved our phone.
And that's because we have what are called slip compensating eye movements where we're constantly making adjustments for the slip of the visual image on our retina.
And those slip compensating eye movements and forward movement in particular, as long as it's
self-generated, is known to directly inhibit and powerfully inhibit the activity of the threat
reflex that involves brain areas like the amygdala, which is associated with fear and anxiety. In other words, walking forward or biking forward
or jogging forward, provided that your visual system isn't staring at your phone the whole time
and no, unfortunately, this won't work on a treadmill. When you do that, you're actually
creating an anxiety relief. And this is, you is you know get it so we're talking about
very basic things get outside and take a walk don't look at your phone while you're doing it
run outside as opposed to on a treadmill if you can safely do that some people might say well on
the peloton i see all this stuff streaming by but ah it's not actually streaming by it's a slightly
different situation probably better than not having any visual imagery there but get outside
take a walk view things at a
distance. Even if you're just doing this 10, 15 minutes a day, you're doing tremendous things
for your health. And kids who aren't doing this were locked to screens all day and all night.
I mean, I don't want to be hyperbolic, but they're messing themselves up and their brain is very
plastic. They're going to have issues, vision issues anxiety issues um it's it's really serious and um sadly there isn't enough attention on this
at the kind of national and international level but there is a lot of science to support the
practices that we're talking about here yeah and again all these practices that you've mentioned so far are completely free of
charge, right? That's nothing. And, you know, like me, I know you're super passionate about that.
So I think it's one of the many reasons why I'm drawn to your work is I always see that with you,
this kind of desire to make sure that the things that you recommend, where possible,
are accessible to everyone. And I feel if teachers, if head teachers around the globe could hear that
and really think about how they can implement those things within their schools, again,
it's a top-down effect that would have just multiple downstream consequences straight away.
that would have just multiple downstream consequences straight away. What you say about panoramic vision, I think is fascinating. And I want to talk, if it's okay, Andrew,
about this sort of bi-directional communication we have between certain behaviours that we have
in our brain. So, you know, we could talk about vision or breathing, and hopefully we'll get to
that. But, you know, let's take with breathwork, for example, if we're feeling super stressed and we're trying to get through deadlines, that can change the way
that we breathe. But at the same time, we can consciously change the way that we breathe
to have a calming effect on our brain. And I sort of feel with respect to vision,
I think with breathwork, we're sort of getting there. People are starting
to understand that, but I don't think with vision they are. Maybe you could talk to how,
whether you have this peripheral sort of soft vision or this kind of tightly focused
vision, what is that doing? What messages is that sending up to our brain?
Yeah. I'd be happy to talk about respiration. That's one of the things that my lab works on,
but you're absolutely right. The mean, the, the breathing system is, is amazing because
it bridges subconscious and conscious processing, right? All the time we're breathing and we don't
have to think about it just like our heartbeat, but at any moment we can grab ahold of our
breathing and change our breathing. And that's, that's a unique neural apparatus that allows us to bridge between those two. Um, this,
the visual system is, is similar in that we're seeing things all the time, but we can also take
control of our vision. I can decide to focus in a very, you know, narrow soda straw view of the
world, or I can open up the aperture of my visual field. So let's talk about opening the aperture,
so-called panoramic vision. Um, you don't have't have to try this. You can do this anywhere.
You don't have to actually be, you know, stone still. You just, what you want to do is just try and see without moving your head or eyes. What you're trying to do is dilate your gaze
so that you're seeing more of the space around you, the ceiling, the area in front of you.
Ideally, you'll see your own body a little
bit in your peripheral vision. And when you do this, when you shift into this mode of vision,
we call panoramic vision, a couple of things happen. One is that you release a connection
between the brain and the brain stem that's involved in alertness. And so it's not that
you become less alert, but it has a relaxing effect. It's like coming off of the accelerator just a little bit.
If ever you are in an argument or you feel like you're getting triggered and you are,
you can feel your heart rate increasing.
You can feel the, you know, when adrenaline hits our system, it hits it very fast.
And there's this propensity to move and there's a propensity to say things.
And if you want to inhibit those reflexes, because those can be kind of life damaging,
depending on what you're going to do and what you're going to say.
Also, it's always better to be the calm one in an argument if you can.
Panoramic vision is great because it's completely covert.
Whereas we'll talk about breathing tools in a moment to calm down.
But breathing tools require a kind of overt shift in one's behavior.
So you can tell
when someone's, you know, or something like that, but with vision, you can, in a very covert way,
you can expand your visual field and it will relax you. People have fear of public speaking,
people who have challenges in different environments, going to the doctor's office,
face-to-face communication for a lot of people is hard, especially if they don't
spend much time doing it. And nowadays people, many people are more isolated than before.
Panoramic vision is a wonderful way to relax the systems of your brain and body just a bit.
And what's really fun is that you can start feeling that shift. And the more you do it,
the more you engage the mechanisms by which you
decelerate, I would say, this is less of a break than a deceleration. It's not like slamming on
the brake of stress. It's coming off the accelerator a little bit. So it allows you to
kind of drive the car that is you. Um, and panoramic vision also has a unique feature,
which is that you're, you actually become more alert, aware, and responsive.
The neurons that are responsible for panoramic vision, the aficionados, so-called magnocellular,
meaning large, magno neurons of the eye and brain, and big neurons transmit information much faster.
So when you catch a ball or when you reflexively do something, you're actually using this panoramic system rather
than the high acuity fine system. And your reaction times go up about fourfold. So, you know,
you might think, oh, well, I'm kind of tuning out, but you're not tuning out. You're actually far
more situationally aware. And I'm fortunate to do a little bit of work with people in
US and Canadian special operations. You know, they talk a lot about situational awareness, going into environments where you can monitor large swaths of behavior and activity, but be very responsive to things in different locations.
And so actually, panoramic vision is a wonderful way, not just for them to do their work, but when you're walking down the hall, for instance, let's just take an example.
You just took a meeting or you get off a Zoom, you're headed upstairs. Are you going to look into the
narrow box that is your phone and check something bringing you a soda straw view of the world?
That's driving those attentional mechanisms up and stress level up, or you're just going to walk
to your car down the hall or up the stairs and kind of panoramic vision allows your system to
relax a little bit so that when you get to your destination, you're able to focus again. Remember throughout your day, your focus is designed to be
a bit of a roller coaster. You weren't designed to wake up in the morning and go phone, check
Instagram, boom, check email, get kids to school. Okay. Brief trough. What am I going to do? Okay.
You know, you think about the way that our attentional system is working and it's, it's absurd what we, what we're demanding of ourselves.
Now we've killed all the micro breaks throughout the day.
And maybe later,
if we have time we can talk about neuro learning and the power of micro
breaks, even 10 second breaks.
But I'll just put out a little teaser that even little 10 second pauses in
high attentional activities.
So learning or a pod, like what we're doing now,
talking back and forth, even just little 10 second pauses allow the brain to store a bunch
of information much faster about what was just learned. It allows the system to decompress a bit.
And here's the real, the really powerful aspect of it is that then when you lean back into activity,
you have a heightened level of focus.
Many, many people out there are struggling. They think my memory is bad. I'm in trouble with focus.
A lot of people are taking ADHD meds who don't need them. A lot of people need them and are
taking them. Let's, you know, let's be honest. There's a lot of ADHD out there, but a lot of
people have trouble focusing because they're basically spending their focus, if you will,
throughout the day. It's like dropping, you know, small coins all day long. By the end of the day, you've spent out quite a lot of money.
So you have to be judicious in your use of this thing that we call focus and attention.
So panoramic vision is one excellent way to do that. Ambulating through space,
getting that optic flow to shut down the anxiety system. And then of course, the sunlight.
The key point there for me is, for people, is that we, as I said before, many of us sort of
know that if we're feeling stressed, we can apply a selection of breathwork techniques
potentially in the moment to change things, change our physiology. But you're sort of really making
a very powerful case that we can actually also do that with our peripheral vision. So this could be potentially
a regular practice for people in between Zoom calls, get outside. And I guess this is one of
the reasons why nature is so calming for us. Maybe it's not just the fractals in the trees
and in the coastlines. Maybe it's also the fact that we are, by default,
presumably going into that peripheral vision? Yeah. Walking through nature or outdoors of
any kind, you're grabbing all of these mechanisms. You're getting sunlight even on a cloudy day,
you're getting panoramic vision, and you're getting what we call self-generated optic flow, as I mentioned, which shuts down the, or quiets these threat reflex centers, including the amygdala.
So it's, you know, what we see obviously has a powerful effect on how we feel. You know,
the brain represents visual images, mostly in symbols. We could play a little mini experiment right now where imagine viewing a
particular politician's face. It's going to make you feel a certain way and bring about a whole
library of ideas associated with that. You know, we store things in visual object symbols and those
visual object symbols are the gateway into a whole set of ideas about what we're looking at. However, the mechanisms that we're talking about up until now,
sunlight viewing, et cetera, evolved long before the mechanisms for high acuity vision,
object recognition, face recognition, or color vision. And so we tend to think that, oh, color
is so powerful or what we see is so powerful, but far more powerful in terms of our mood and our physiology is when we see, aka light,
and our mode of physical action as we see.
And so this would be self-generated forward optic flow and so forth.
The point I wanted to make was that, yes, respiration, breathing is very powerful,
very powerful, but it requires signals from the body, from the lungs and tissues of the body to
the brain, and then the brain will adjust its state. And we can talk about those. Vision,
as you recall, is the brain. So it's the fastest route by which we can change our state of mind. There's a
one other kind of tool that I think might be useful in the, in the context of vision, which
isn't so much about calming down, but about focus one very effective tool. And this is actually in
use in China, pretty widespread now is if people have a hard time focusing, remember that vision,
that cognitive or mental focus follows visual focus.
So if you're going to sit down and do some work and you find, oh, I can't concentrate.
I'm not getting it.
I can't get into the writing or I can't do what I'm doing.
Very simple practice.
It's been tested.
You can take a piece of paper, put a little crosshatch on it, put it at the distance of
your computer and force yourself to bring your vision, what we call a vergence eye movement to that location and try and hold that blinking as seldom as possible as
you can for about 60 seconds. You've now adjusted the aperture of your visual field, but you've also
changed the aperture of your thinking, right? In doing that. And this is very different than if
you were just to concentrate on like the feeling of touch on the tips of your fingers because as you do work most
all work requires vision and then the work that you do you'll find exists in this kind of narrow
tunnel and you're able to rule out distractions quite a bit better that's one of the reasons why
this device is so terrible i mean i fall victim to this too but if you have your phone every two
seconds you're looking at your phone your visual attention is darting all over the place. So there's a lot of clinically legitimate, if you will, ADHD that we've brought up on ourselves.
And so you can use visual focus as a training tool. I have a simple meditation I do in the
morning. I call it a meditation, but it's really just visual training. I can explain it now. I
don't think I've described this anywhere that anchors several of these practices.
I actually will close my eyes and just concentrate on my internal state, something we call interoception,
and I'll just breathe three times.
Then I'll open my eyes.
I'll stare at my hand or something at about a distance of arm's length, and I'll focus
my visual attention there and breathe three times just for sake of timekeeping.
Then I'll look in the distance and I'll do the same.
And then I try and go into panoramic vision, even if I'm indoors.
And I'll breathe three times.
And then I bring myself right back into my internal landscape.
I'll focus on a little crosshatching.
Usually then I get to work.
And so what am I doing?
What is this wacky practice?
Well, this wacky practice I just described is stepping through each, as we call what I'm doing is I'm training
my system to adjust to these shifts because throughout the day, life is a series of shifts
between one thing and the next and the next and the ability to transition between these
and then lock into them and then transition into the next is what makes us effective.
And this might seem a little abstract, but if you try it, what you'll find is that transitions
between say work and a conversation or dropping into work very deeply become much easier. And there's,
there's reason there's neurobiological underpinnings to this. Um, it's, this is a
forced practice. It's kind of mimics what we ought to be doing all day long. The problem is,
is that the interference of, of mostly of smartphone communications is that we're
constantly being
bombarded with new context after new context. That's what's really, I don't think there's
as much problem with the content on social media, although that's a debate, you know,
there's there too, obviously you want to protect kids and so forth, except that when you're on
social media, it's the equivalent of watching 50 movies in two minutes because you're scrolling
through and context switch, context switch,
context switch. The human brain has never been confronted with this. Even if you have 200
channels on the television, it's very rare to just go channel, channel, channel the whole
idea of social media. And by the way, I obviously I participate, I teach on social media and I
consume social media, but you're just, you're context switching, context switching, context switching in a very passive way. And so what I've tried to do is create practices that are
grounded in the neurobiology of vision and how vision anchors attention and can induce calm.
And the practice, that simple practice I described, what it does is it gives you the power
and control to shift your visual attention to different things, as opposed to some external stimulus shifting your visual attention for you. And it, and I find it,
I've been doing this for about eight years now. I do it every morning and sometimes in the
afternoon. And what I find is that it's allowed me to be far more effective in the activities
that I'm engaged in and transitioning between those activities.
And my lab's looking at this from the experimental perspective, but I just thought I'd put the tool
out there because again, it's zero cost. There's biome safe, et cetera.
I love it. It kind of sounds like training a muscle in the gym is going to allow us to,
well, do many things, but lift heavier things,
be more strong and robust in our life for whatever we're trying to do. And it sounds like this kind
of four-part process of, you know, focusing on, you know, things at different distances,
it kind of feels to me as though this is a process that's helping adapt our visual systems
to the way the modern world is now, because the modern world ain't changing any time soon. So
it sort of feels like this might have been a practice that maybe wasn't necessary 100 years
ago, 50 years ago, but it is now highly necessary because of the environments in which we
find ourselves in. That's right. Very well put. And, you know, the smartphones and internet are
delivering experience at rapid speed in ways that the human brain just simply didn't evolve to
contend with. Now, the human brain is great at dealing with
new technologies, creating new technologies. What I'm describing are very basic practices
that are designed to offset some of the damage, but also, you know, it's not just about avoiding
problems. It's also about being functional. You know, I think that everybody wants to be
mentally healthy, physically healthy, and perform well in their various activities.
And we do that by engaging the attentional systems and then disengaging the attentional systems.
Everything in terms of learning, whether or not you're a child or an adult, is a function of being able to lean in with intense focus and then lean out and access rest of different kinds. In fact,
I know we were talking about a respiration, but neuroplasticity, the nervous system's ability to change in response to experience is what, aside from the fact that the nervous system anchors
and coordinates all those actions of the body, the nervous system is so unique in that it can
change itself. But unless you deliberately force specific changes
onto your nervous system, the passive consequence of living in a particular way will also change
your nervous system and not necessarily for the better. So excessive light viewing at night,
not getting enough sunlight, not getting enough movement. I mean, the nervous system will atrophy
or change in response to whatever you give it. That, the nervous system will atrophy or change in
response to whatever you give it. That's the beauty of it for better or for worse. And so
what we're talking about here is, is leveraging this incredible capacity of the nervous system
to change and saying, well, what are the simple zero cost, low top, very low time investment tools
that are going to allow me to be very effective as I transition from one
stage of life to the next. And, you know, I, I'm a big fan of a lot of the work that's happening now
in the clinical setting, I should say around, you know, various compounds to improve plasticity or
to open plasticity, or some of the, I know that the pharmaceutical industry gets a tough
rap and I agree that
there tends to be this kind of default to pills mentality is not one that I subscribe to.
I think lifestyle factors are extremely important. I should mention that I do think that for a number
of people, they are so depressed or their ADHD is so severe that the idea of doing the sorts
of practices that we're talking about is kind of overwhelming. And that's something that unless someone has really been in those states,
it's really hard to empathize with. But so we should keep that in mind. But for most people,
I would say 90% of people out there, these are practices that we can simply do and we get an
immediate benefit. But in addition to that, we get a cumulative benefit because I, as I mentioned before, these are slow integrative processes. So the day to day and across the year it accumulates.
And then there's a third benefit, which is neuroplasticity, which is that your nervous
system becomes very good at doing the things that are best for it. So this is the systems of the
brain. They're responsible for being able to rest or being able to de-stress or to focus.
Those systems actually get stronger so that your default is to be able to rest more easily when
you need to rest, to be able to focus more easily when you need to focus and so on. And so that's
unique. It's not just about putting pennies in the jar, you know, putting small, small coins into a
jar. You could say, well, eventually you accumulate a lot, but it's more than that. Putting small coins into a jar, you could say, well, eventually you accumulate a lot,
but it's more than that. Those small coins are actually in the neuroplasticity model,
are actually being converted into a much more valuable currency by way of that action.
And so then what you find is after six months or so of doing some of these things,
you feel much better all the time.
And if you miss a day or two, it's no big deal. That's the idea.
I love that. I think that's just a great way to put it. And I guess that there's that wider point
that the environment around us is affecting our nervous system. It is changing our nervous system,
whether we want it to or not. So one not be intentional about some practices that are going to help strengthen it or improve its functionality in a way that we
want. Before we get to respiration and breathing, one of the things that I've heard you talk about
before, Andrew, which has always struck in my mind, probably because I subscribe to this view as well, is you've said this,
almost all of the unfortunate things that happen to us in life is down to a poorly regulated
nervous system. I wonder if you could speak to that initially, because I think that really
helps set some context for why vision or breathing or whatever it might be,
why it's so beneficial.
Before we get back to this week's episode, I just wanted to let you know that I am doing my
very first national UK theatre tour. I am planning a really special evening where I share how you can break free from
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This episode is also brought to you by the Three Question Journal,
the journal that I designed and created in partnership with Intelligent Change.
Now, journaling is something that I've been recommending to my patients for years.
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and reduce symptoms of anxiety and depression. It's also been shown to decrease emotional stress, make it easier to
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Yeah, so let's take stress, for instance. We hear a lot of times that stress destroys our
immune system and nothing could be further from the truth.
I mean, stress is actually the way that your immune system knows that it should turn on.
Let's just think about the ways that our species got to where we are. There were long periods of time with bad weather, cold, babies that were undernourished, et cetera. Many of us are familiar
with working very hard in school or just generally working hard or taking care of a loved
one. And then you stop doing that. You finally get rest and all of a sudden you get sick.
Why is that? Well, because we have this incredible system whereby mental stress and physical stress
causes the release of adrenaline, epinephrine, depending on where you live in the world,
from the adrenals, which reside right
above our kidneys. And adrenaline is the signal by which the immune system decides to employ
killer cells, anti-inflammatory cytokines, and also inflammatory cytokines, which can be beneficial
for wound healing and things of that sort. So the activation of the stress system in the short term
is actually very good at keeping us
healthy i'll just point to a practice that many people now do which are cold showers
deliberate cold showers for three minutes a day you know three minutes every two or three days
taking a three-minute cold shower and then it's fine to get into the hot shower or i'm doing what
we call cyclic hyperventilation which is is just, okay, both those practices,
you might say, okay, what is powerful about a cold shower, cyclic hyperventilation? Well,
there's nothing actually powerful about them directly. I hate to tell people this. It's that
they cause the release of adrenaline. And in excellent studies, peer-reviewed studies,
it's been shown that breathing of that sort, and we can describe it in more detail, or the cold water exposure, the cold exposure, creates this adrenaline release,
which then creates an ability to resist infection of different bacteria, viruses, and even fungal
infections. Dramatic results. But it shouldn't surprise us because we have a system that we are
still the, we are here and we are the curators of the planet, not the house cats or some other species, because we have the capacity to lean into challenge and resist infection, heal wounds.
And that is all mediated by adrenaline.
And the release of adrenaline is mediated by the nervous system.
is mediated by the nervous system. Now, when things go bad, for instance, people with chronically elevated adrenals, they're drinking coffee all the time and working like crazy, not getting enough
sleep, psychological stress, they're not shutting off that system, then you start getting into
chronic health issues, right? Because the stress system can't be chronically activated for too long
or else you run into issues. But the nervous system coordinates that. Likewise, for people
that have anxiety, we have to say, well, what is anxiety? Well, at a biological level, anxiety,
stress, trauma, fear, and PTSD are all the same thing. It's ruminating on thoughts, but it's the
release of adrenaline in a very unregulated way. And adrenaline has a primary effect, which is to
make us want to move or speak it biases us
towards action it's the quaking of the hands it's the quaking of the voice it's the quickening of
the breath it's the um dilation of the pupils uh of the eyes which um sort of counterintuitively
creates a constricting of our visual field it takes us out of the past and future and puts us
into the moment so that we can you you know, identify what's going on.
So the idea is to take basic practices in the case of this discussion,
practices that mainly anchor to vision and respiration and learn to control
adrenaline release and the timing of that release.
Learn to control it is a three essentially has three components.
One is you can increase adrenaline
release and there are times where that is beneficial and we talk about that then you can
come off the accelerator of adrenaline release and then there's a third component which is to
slam on the brake and shut down the adrenaline system and the ways to do that are uh you could
people try to do it pharmacologically. They drink alcohol, they drink
coffee has opposite effects on the adrenaline system. Obviously they use, uh, sedatives and
opioid compounds. Um, but they also do things like take vacations or do meditation or, um,
get massages, which are all wonderful. The meditations, massages, and, um, vacations are
great. However, those all require that you step out of
life. You know, I love getting a professional massage, but professional massage is like $190,
which frankly, even at my stage of life, I always feel like it's great, but you know,
it's a considerable investment. I'm not going to do it every day. I don't have a masseuse in my home.
And to be honest, it requires that I not do something else. Being a functional human and a functional
human on any kind of budget means that you need to be able to turn on and off focus and relaxation
and stress and so forth in a way that you are in control of that. And so when you start learning
how to control your nervous system, it's tremendously empowering. And I don't think
that people should not take vacations or not get massages or whatever it is, but the ability to control your nervous system in a dynamic way in short timescales,
on the timescale of seconds, on the timescale of days, on the timescale of weeks,
that's what leads to really terrific work and school and relationship and sleep and exercise
practices. I just simply can't think of any other route to it.
For instance, there's no liver detox that's going to do that. There's no gut microbiome
fix. The gut microbiome is very important, by the way, for reasons we could discuss. And as you know,
and far more about than I do, but there's no one tool or pill or potion or practice that's going to allow the whole system that is you to fall into place.
Whereas if you learn to control your nervous system from the standpoint of attention, focus, relaxation and sleep, and you use the appropriate tools to access those, then you find that everything else works better.
And that those additional tools of I am a believer in certain supplements i also think you
know people should eat fermented foods to improve their gut and reduce the activity the inflammatone
there's great science to that but that one practice isn't going to change everything
it's going to help but controlling learning to control your nervous system will indeed change
everything your whole life gets better better, mentally and physically.
That idea, learning to control your nervous system, I think is one that we should just
pause on because sometimes in life, we'll want to up-regulate our nervous system to,
I guess, perform a certain task. Other times in life, we'll want to down-regulate it.
other times in life will want to down-regulate it. In my experience, and my bias is as a clinician,
what I have seen is that at least the people who come in to see me are usually struggling to down-regulate a lot of them. They've taken on too much. We know there's
a big problem, chronic unmanaged stress, burnout, taking on too
many things, not actively prioritizing relaxation. That's a big problem. So, you know, maybe we can
talk about some of the things that, well, first of all, would you agree that actually that's a
key skill and one that actually is potentially not as hard as we think to teach people? And then
what are some of those practical tools that we can use to down regulate our nervous system yeah well first of all i completely agree and even if i do agree
and even if i didn't you'd be right because you're the clinician not me right um well really and i
should say i have tremendous respect for the clinical fields i mean i like i'm on the school
of medicine side at stanford i don't teach undergraduates. I used to be at an undergraduate university, but so I'm in the
medicine side. And, and I think that chronic stresses is a major issue. And stress, stress
makes every neurologic, I know we said this earlier, but it's worth paying attention. It makes
every, everything worse when it's chronic.
And stress, when you can take advantage of the mechanisms of stress and leverage them,
it's tremendously empowering. I mean, I will even say that, I mean, clearly you're not an example of this, but there are a lot of physicians who are very unhealthy. I mean,
this idea that scientists and doctors are healthy, I mean, just look at most of them,
and doctors are healthy. I mean, just look at most of them, right? Nope. They're not taking good care. And so that is not, I'm not poking at them. What I'm saying is that everybody has
to learn how to do this. There's a, there's a truth, which is that we are generally compensated
in life for the degree to which we can lean into hard work and effort. But a lot of people learn
how to hit the accelerator. And as you said, they never learned how to decompress. So a big part of my lab's work has been to develop
zero cost tools that people can use in real time to adjust their levels of stress and calm down
quickly. So we can talk about those tools. And then we've also been developing tools that people
can do as short practices separate from real life, meaning like a five minute a day practice
that will what we call raise their stress threshold so that their trigger point to become
stressed is further away. And the first practice, which is based on work that goes back to the
1930s, actually, it's what's called the physiological sigh. Physiological sighs are something that we all actually do about once every five minutes.
So in sleep or in wakefulness, every five minutes or so, we take a big, deep breath.
We don't realize it, but we do this and dogs will do this right before they go down to sleep.
Humans do this. Why do we do that? Well, there are two main reasons why we breathe.
One is to bring oxygen into our system.
And then that oxygen, it's a beautiful system.
It actually, you know, it fills the lungs.
And then as we know, it moves from the lungs into the bloodstream
and our cells require oxygen.
And then exhales, we discard carbon dioxide.
And we need oxygen and carbon dioxide, of course, for our health.
Every cell relies on this you you wouldn't want to get rid of one or the other entirely the the stimulus to
breathe meaning the impulse to breathe is because if you have a small set of neurons in your brain
stem that detect the buildup of carbon dioxide in the bloodstream so when that level gets too high
you take a big deep breath and then you offload the carbon dioxide.
That's actually why you do the physiological size to discard carbon dioxide.
As a consequence, you bring in more oxygen.
Now, here's what's interesting.
The lungs are not just two big bags of air.
They have millions, actually hundreds of millions of little, if you only little sacks.
And when we under breathe or when we are stressed and when we
over breathe, so either way, um, those little sacks actually deflate and because they have
fluid inside them because of surface tension, they are, they are not, um, easily reinflated.
And so we're actually asphyxiating ourselves. We don't have oxygen and we're not able to offload
carbon dioxide, bad situation. The physiological side
that I recommend that people do when they're feeling stressed anytime or any place, I suppose,
unless you're underwater is to do two inhales through the nose back to back. The first one is
a big, long inhale. And then the second inhale, you's, so it's a very sharp little second inhale after
the first one. You almost feel like you couldn't get any more air in, but when you do that second
inhale, you reinflate the alveoli of the lungs. You snap open all those, they don't break. And
then when you exhale, you offload the carbon dioxide doing that just once
sometimes two or three times but just once we know from data in our laboratory and other laboratories
will immediately reduce your levels of stress and anxiety immediately it's the fastest approach that
i'm aware of to de-stress far faster than trying to tell yourself not to worry. Certainly far faster than telling
you or somebody else to take a deep breath. It's this, this double inhale through the nose,
exhale through the mouth is a very efficient way to bring in oxygen, dump carbon dioxide
and reinflate the avioli of the lungs so that in the immediate moments afterward,
you're breathing more naturally and more calmly. So it's a, you know, I don't like
to use the phrase of like power tools and this kind of thing, because that's not the business
I come from. But I think if there were one tool that I would like everyone to do would be the
morning light viewing. But the other tool I'd love for people to have in their kit is this
physiological sigh. And as I mentioned, you do this spontaneously in low claustrophobic environments.
And as I mentioned, you do this spontaneously in claustrophobic environments.
People do it during sleep when they are developing apnea.
And then when we cry or we observe someone crying, watch how they recover their breathing after sobbing. Because sobbing is mostly exhaling.
And then there's like a kind of a reverberating inhale.
So big inhale, second inhale through the nose, just squeeze in a little bit more, and then long exhale through the mouth.
And that one has saved me and from the feedback I've gotten, it's saved many, many people many, many times.
And it can be done essentially anywhere.
It's almost a reset for your nervous system.
Things are getting out of control,
tension, pressure's building up,
and you instantaneously can sort of reset it
back to baseline.
Is that a way that we can think about it?
Yeah, think about it as a break on the adrenaline system.
Think about it as,
because when there's elevated carbon dioxide
in the bloodstream,
the brain registers that and sends a signal to your adrenals. Uh-oh, we're running out of air.
You need to move. You need to get to someplace else in order to not asphyxiate. And so this is
why the signal is so powerful. Now, I think that there's another aspect to this, which is that
when our minds are racing out of control, it's very hard to stabilize our thinking with thinking.
I always say, you know, trying to control your thoughts with thoughts is like trying to grab fog.
It's very, very difficult.
So when your brain and your mind and your thinking aren't where you want them to be, you need to look to your body to recalibrate your state of mind so that then you get a new vantage point to view whatever it
is that you're happening to be contending with mentally. I actually had this happen the other
day. I've been dealing with a set of issues that are kind of chronic and ongoing and it's a slow
grind and it's working out that details aren't important or relevant here. But it's something I
have to think about a lot each day, what I'm going to do, how I'm going to handle this situation.
And I noticed I was on the plane and I was feeling pretty stressed about this. And you do a couple of
these physiological size. And then what happens is you're able to still parse those thoughts,
but from a different perspective, it's much easier to look to the body, readjust your state of mind
to a calmer place, and then be able to analyze able to analyze something cognitively than it is to try
and prevent yourself from thinking about something, which is very hard. And in many cases, we need,
we do need to think about what's stressful. I mean, this is something we don't often acknowledge.
People think, okay, we're going to go meditate or we're gonna take a vacation. We're just going to
step away. We're just going to take a deep breath. All sounds wonderful, right? But many times the
thing that we're stressing about is, is critical well-being. It's important that we be able to think about this stuff. So use the body to
control the mind and place the mind in a better vantage point. That's the idea.
Yeah, I really like that. I think it's so powerful for people. And I think so many people will hear
that, Andrew, and go, yeah, you know, when I feel anxious and I do some yoga
or I go for a walk around the block, you know, I just don't feel the same when I come back. You
know, you are literally changing the way you experience life through that action. And I wanted
to talk to you about something that, again, I've heard you speak about many times which is the idea that um you know grounded in neuroscience that it is
actions and behavior first thoughts and feelings second yeah um i definitely believe that we should
put our actions first when it comes to taking control of our mental and physical health and
performance i want to be clear that i don't relegate feelings, emotions, and thinking.
I've been open about this before, but I'll be open about it again. I've,
through a lot of effort of my own and through great expense and challenge, I've been doing analysis for many decades. I got into this because I was a bit of a wayward youth and I was forced to
do it at first. So I just want to point out that I, I wholeheartedly believe in the value of therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy, exposure
therapies, talk therapies. I think we are a social verbal species and there's tremendous value to
journaling, tremendous value to thinking and to feeling our feelings. However, feelings are complicated and they can become their own trap being able to parse
a hard emotional problem or being able to think about life in a way that's from a good stance
as a kind of a i like to think about the stance of the nervous system more than the state because
a stance allows you to move in different directions. Whereas a state implies that
there's one ideal state to be in all the time, which of course not. I mean, there's a time to
be stressed, angry, sad, in awe, devastated. I mean, that's life. That's actually what makes
for a rich life. But the ability to be in a good stance around all that means that when we are in
a state of deep sadness or deep confusion or great happiness, that we know
that we will eventually transition out of that state. And that's a manageable
idea that we're going to transition in and out of these states. One of the hallmarks of mental
illness of different kinds is that people have horrible feelings and they feel like those
horrible feelings are going to go on forever.
That's one of the things that leads to suicidal depression and, um, or chronic anxiety is people are, you know, told we're always told, you know, don't, don't think about the future. Don't think
about the past, just be present. Well, what if your present really is awful? That doesn't help
much. So the reason that I'm a fan of physical tools is the following, orienting towards action
first and physical tools is the following. First of all, there is no fossil record whatsoever of
the things that we feel or think. None. Your feelings and your thoughts actually are pretty
meaningless in the long run, but what you do and what you say has a profound impact on you and other people. Second, using physical practices
allows us to communicate with one another about tools. Thinking is tricky. I don't know what I'm
thinking, excuse me, feeling half the time. How do I know what anyone else is feeling? You know,
I have a colleague in psychiatry who says this most of the time, we don't even know what we feel
exactly, much less how someone else feels. And so if we
were to enter a dialogue around how we're supposed to feel and control our feelings,
well, now we're really moving into the realm of wishy-washy nothingness, because I can't tell you
what to do or how to think about something. But when we're talking about physical tools
and using the body to influence the state of mind or the stance of the mind,
then we know if we're doing the same thing,
two inhales followed by an exhale, panoramic vision, light viewing.
These are tools that everybody can access.
And so it creates a whole different conversation.
I also believe,
and I've had a lot of experience with the fact that there are times when
things can feel so overwhelming and we are so back on our heels
that we have to get outside of our head. And the best way to do that is to get into physical
practices. The imagery I like to use is that any moment we are either flat footed, forward center
of mass, which is kind of leaning into life and feeling strong, or we're back on our heels. Many people wake up back on their heels. Many people feel back on
their heels a lot of the time. So the question is, how do you go from mentally and physically
back on your heels to flat footed stance and maintain the ability to go into forward
center of mass? How do you do that? Well, you do that by controlling the, this basic
system in the body that we call the autonomic nervous system. It's a bit of a misnomer because
autonomic means automatic, but you can think of it like a seesaw that on one end is our ability
to get into states of alertness and focus. And at the other end is the ability to relax and get
into states of calm or sleep or deep rest or focused but relaxed.
Maybe the even seesaw would be focused but relaxed.
And so much of being functional is the ability to move from alert to asleep
because sleep is so key for our health, of course,
or from sleep to getting up and getting outside and exercising.
But a lot of people get trapped at one end of the seesaw or
the other, chronically activated or chronically exhausted. And the notion of the seesaw is
important here because it's not so much about your ability to be on either end. It's about the
tightness of the hinge of that seesaw. What I'm talking about are tools that allow the seesaw to
be calibrated so that it's very easy to go from sleep to alert, from alert to relax,
from relaxed back to work, as opposed to getting locked in one position. That's really the key.
And so I realize this is all, I'm talking all in analogy now, but I think I'm hoping it's
worthwhile because we've heard so much about mindfulness, which is a wonderful concept.
We hear about mental health.
We hear about physical health, but it's never actually been defined.
What is a mentally healthy person, right?
Usually when we're talking about mental health, we're talking about mental illness.
So to me, a mentally healthy person and a physically healthy person is somebody that
can be in action when they need to be in action, can relax when they need to relax, can focus
when they need to focus and can sleep when they need to focus and can sleep
when they need to sleep. That's a pretty darn good life. And you can go, you can get a lot done
and you can have very effective relationship to yourself and others with that kind of ability.
And that ability is anchored in the nervous system. It's kind of nervous system flexibility,
isn't it? It's that ability to adapt and utilize your nervous system in an
optimal way, depending on what you need at any given moment. I think that hinge analogy is great.
And, and sort of just to, just to sort of follow up on that, Andrew, I totally agree. You know,
if someone is stuck in a negative loop or, you know, in a way that they're feeling, there's nothing better than
a physical practice to actually, you know, move them. You know, movement is by definition becoming
unstuck, right? It's going to move thoughts, feelings, it's going to sort of mix them all
up together. So I completely agree. I guess where I was going with it, and I'm really interested in your thoughts on this, is I have, like you, for many years been trying to promote healthy,
low-cost lifestyle practices. I've written four, my first four books have all been about this,
how you can inspire people to take on these things. But one thing I've noticed,
these things. But one thing I've noticed, including with myself, is that some of my patients would do all the best lifestyle behaviors, whether it's diets, good sleep practices,
breathing techniques. But there's still a subsection who were struggling because they
would allow the thoughts or the actions of other people
to negatively influence them. And so for the last year or so, I've been writing my next book,
which is really about trying to address this point of the way we think. We can change the
way we think. It's harder. It takes time, but we can train ourselves to think differently.
think it's harder, it takes time, but we can train ourselves to think differently. And so a concrete example, let's say you were doing loads of great lifestyle practices. You know what to do when you
feel stressed and anxious. You know you can use the physiological sigh when you need to, and you're
in a good place. And then your boss sends you an email that really upset you and wound you up. So
you want to comfort eat,
you want to have a glass of wine to de-stress, yes, you can use the physiological sigh to calm yourself down and hopefully make better decisions because of that.
But I'm also sort of thinking about, well, what if you could also not get triggered in the first
place by that email? What if you could work on your mindset
and change the way that you think so that actually you don't, you're needing these
practices to deregulate, to downregulate less and less? There are a couple of things that come to
mind. And, you know, I am a big believer in the fact that, well, what I consider the fact that subconscious processes,
mainly brought on by our developmental models of attachment, really act as a filter by which we
engage in the world. Meaning, if you grew up with a narcissistic parent or an avoided parent or
somebody that had a quick temper, I mean, you would think
the rational approach would be, okay, you're not going to be like that or you won't seek
out people like that.
But as we know, that is not how it works.
Freud was probably right about the repetition compulsion, which is that we tend to engage
in those types of dynamics over and over again.
His theory, which I rather like,
is that we do that in order to offer ourselves many opportunities to respond differently. It's
kind of an interesting concept. I think that once I have a friend who's an analyst who I respect a
lot, who said that basically all of Freudian psychoanalysis can be summarized in
a three box diagram with two arrows. And the first box says wish, and then there's a little arrow,
and then there's another box that says anxiety, and then there's another arrow to the right.
And then there's a third box which says defense. And basically we have a wish, we want something,
then we feel some anxiety around that wish. And then we have some defensive reaction, unless of course we identify what those arrows
are and we understand the subconscious processes, in which case we can intervene in our own thinking.
So this is completely separate from the kind of conversation we were having earlier, where it's
like do a physiological side. The whole idea is to make the unconscious conscious. And so the email
from the boss that shows up, you know, we can think, okay, why do I get so triggered? You know, I mean, oftentimes an email from a boss is pretty important and it makes sense to get triggered.
we a pleaser? Are we a rebel? Are we a person that, um, like I, for instance, I went into the profession I'm in because I don't like to be told what to do. Frankly, I was, you know, my own mother
had a hard time controlling me when I was a kid. And so I don't like to be told what to do. I'm not
a people pleaser, but the, um, there, there are people pleasers. And so, you know, how can we
start to intervene with our own tendencies and see?
I think it's worthwhile.
I will say this.
Now it's just my beliefs.
I don't have any laboratory data to support this.
But most people, I would say 95% of the world does not do any hard, ongoing psychological
work to try and better themselves and adjust their thinking.
Sadly, this is a matter
of resource, but it's resources and lack of resources, but most people don't. So that means
that 95% of the misbehavior that we see in the world is coming from kind of untrained nervous
systems and people who are not super reflective. I'm not, I'm not being disparaging of them,
but I think that's the reality. We also have to remember that, and this is actually very useful for online interactions
where people get crazy comments and things. Just when I first started teaching in university,
a colleague of mine, who's a psychiatrist came to me and said, just remember 1% of the world
is schizophrenic, has schizophrenia, right? About four to 8% are dealing with a bipolar disorder
of some sort. About 10 to 20% are dealing with anxiety disorders, OCD. He starts listing all
of them off. And then he says, so when things happen and you hear or see things that are
concerning, just remember to filter them through the reality of mental challenge.
And so you start, when I used to get comments online and someone's being very aggressive, I think to
myself, I'm like, wow, like they must be struggling in some very intense way. I think that, and I say
this a little, you know, I'm smiling as I say it, but it brings me both a lot of relief for myself,
but also I think we need to acknowledge the sadness around this is that our
species is, is very flawed. We're an amazing species, but we're very flawed in that unless
we intervene in our own internal processes, uh, we're apt to just shed our, our inherited and our,
um, learned and our innate dysfunction onto one another. So I think a lot of learning to adjust
one's thinking is about the acknowledgement that most people are dealing with a challenged nervous system to begin
with, and that it's a lot of work, but well worthwhile to, to be one of, to try and make
oneself one of the healthy ones. You know, you look at a lot of the dysfunction and the despair
in the world, and a lot, a lot of it is the consequence of people who just are not very self-aware and are not taking care of themselves or other people. So, uh, when that email comes in from your boss, I wouldn't recommend, you know, sending them a recommendation for a, you know, a clinical seminar to help them get some relief. But I often look at it and think, wow, it's incredible how, um, how angry somebody
seems about something that, you know, is kind of easy to deal with or is kind of trivial. Um,
they must be pretty dysregulated. Um, they, they must have a really hard time regulating.
And, uh, and again, I don't say it from a stance of, of, of better than or disparaging. I just
think that we are not very good at taking care of ourselves
and it takes a lot of work. And that's why I oriented to the physical practices first. It's
like, let's talk about concrete things to get into the stance so that one can then do the deeper work
because the deep work is hard and it takes years. Even cognitive behavioral therapy takes a long
time. And so that's why I've oriented my public facing work more towards the things that everyone,
I believe, can and should do.
It's about adjusting the stance that we're in to be able to access the deeper work.
But I love that you're writing this book.
As you can tell, I'd love to share a meal with you sometime or a long walk and chat
about the psychological aspects of this and thinking and thinking because i mean that's at
the heart of how we experience life you know i like you have always focused on these practices
i i decided to go here because i i kind of feel a bit like you know the breath the way we breathe
influences the brain the stress signals coming into the brain influences the breath same with
the visual system as we've already spoken about. I kind of feel that our thoughts and our mindset can also
totally influence our behaviors and what we might want to do, how we might choose to do it. But at
the same time, yeah, I, you know, like a lot of people know that if we focus on the action,
the behavior, we change our states immediately.
And I kind of feel it's a two-way thing. It's not necessarily either or. And sometimes these
physical practices, especially these ones that can be done regularly, are really good to keep us
tuned up and ticking over. So in the background, we're in a better position to actually start
working on these thoughts. And even what you
said about your colleagues saying, hey, Andrew, look, this percent of people currently have
schizophrenia, this percent of people have this. That's kind of mindset in some ways, isn't it?
Because it's helping us view those comments through a different lens. So instead of getting
triggered, we can immediately go, oh man, there's a lot of people out there who are struggling and they're just sort of putting that out on me. And I love
that untrained nervous system because I've heard you talk before about your teenage years. I don't
think we're going to have time to get into that today. Maybe on a part two, if you have time at some point. But when we think about what you've said before that
a lot of the bad things that happen to us in life come about because of a dysregulated nervous system
or an inability to manage it, I know from doing inner work and therapy, which again has taken
years, I sort of feel that my nervous system used to be tightly strung, right? So I could do
lots of lifestyle practices, but it was on the background, on the bedrock of this tightly
strung nervous system. And as I have processed traumatic experiences early on in life, as I've
done various forms of inner work, I sort of feel there's more kind of flexibility and spring now in my nervous system.
So I feel that I need less of these symptom relief tools compared to the past. Or if I use
them, I can go deeper with them now, whereas before they used to just get me back down to
baseline. That makes perfect sense. And that makes very good sense.
And I think that, you know, I find this too,
you know, I've been doing practices for a long time.
When I noticed like a couple of weeks now,
I've been traveling a lot.
Life's been particularly busy
and a little stressful, frankly.
And then I tend to orient back to the tools
as the bedrock of my wellbeing.
I noticed I missed some of my sunlight. I'm human sunlight viewing.
My sleep was really off. So I go back to those bedrock practices,
but I don't rely on them quite as much as I used to. Um,
and I like this idea of flexibility and range, you know,
feeling comfort in exploration and feeling range. And I think that,
um, I mean, I think part of that also,
if I may, is just, I think it's a, it's a sign of, of just general maturity that, you know,
this notion of this too will pass. Um, a child can't really understand that because they haven't
had enough bad experiences. Um, you know, you go through a couple hard rounds in life or more,
and you realize you, for most people, fortunately there are ups and there are downs and there are seasons.
And you learn to lean into sometimes even the sadness of a loss or a challenge because you know things are going to pass.
You also lean into the gratitude of opportunity and the gratitude of a close connection.
And that connection can be, you know,
with your interaction with your dog or even with yourself or with nature.
And you just can marvel at how amazing life is
because you have an enormous data set to compare it to
for the engineers and the audience.
And, you know, signal the noise.
If you are experiencing something,
how do you know what that, how great or how lousy that is,
except relative to other experiences?
So I think that we, as we get healthier physically, we become healthier mentally. And as we become healthier
mentally, you're right. We don't have to rely so much on these support, physical support systems,
but it's good to know. I think that they're always there and that they work the first time
and every time. And I think that that there are very few ground truths in
life. But the things that we're talking about in respiration and light viewing, they work the first
time and every time because in many ways, the circuits and cells that are in us were are there
for that purpose. One thing I know for sure, I wasn't consulted at the design phase, but all of this stuff exists in all of us. And it's very
trustworthy hardware. I think that I'm, again, I'm really delighted that you're writing this book
because my real, one of my real loves is, is the mind and not so much just neurophysiology is where
most of my public facing work is focused on and lab work is focused on now. And I think the mind is, is really the incredible frontier.
It's just, it's harder to parse. And,
and as a colleague of mine in psychiatry, Carl Deisseroth says, you know,
one of the amazing things is that the mind,
the only thing we have to parse it in terms of with one another is language. And we may not even
have adequate language to describe feelings. We may not even, you know, people like to say,
oh, this culture has one word for sadness and this culture has 50. But I would say maybe language
isn't even the right way to parse feelings. I mean, and so i think as we move forward as a species it's gonna be really
interesting to see where we take all this ideas about inner landscape and how we conceptualize
them so i i look forward to reading your book i can't wait i've got to say i'm feeling a lot
of pressure now given the the the high regard in which i hold you when you're looking forward to
it this much it went off actually to print a few days ago in the UK. So I will send you an electronic version.
And just to be clear,
what I always try and do is really simplify things down.
I want to be able to speak to the man or the woman on the street
and not use jargon.
I want to break things down, make them low cost for people.
So bear that in mind as you're reading it.
I hope you like it.
I'm sure it's going to be great.
Look, also, again, the medical training is wonderful that in mind as you're reading it. I hope you like it. I'm sure it's going to be great.
Also, again, the medical training is wonderful because medical training, as you know, is very nuts and bolts. The difference between clinicians and scientists is an important one.
Clinicians have far more knowledge in their heads. True. This is true. I'm saying that so
that you don't resist me on this one. They know far more about more aspects of biology than scientists are very narrow, typically. But the
difference is that clinicians learn how to communicate with people because they have
patience, whereas scientists usually have no concept how to communicate with anyone except
other scientists. And so, you know, clinicians are masterful at translating the
complex into the straightforward. So I look forward to the book and hopefully it'll land
here in the US before long. It will do. And look, I appreciate that difference between clinicians
and scientists. I would have to say, I mean, Andrew, I think there are very few science
communicators better than you. I think one of the reasons I mean, Andrew, I think there are very few science communicators
better than you. I think one of the reasons so many people around the world are deeply
drawn to your content, including myself, is your ability to simplify these potentially quite
difficult concepts and make them really actionable. So I really do think you're doing a great job of
that. And I think it's really, really needed. I'm conscious of time is winding down. It certainly wasn't as much time as I wanted
with you and it isn't face to face. But before we close down the conversation for today, at least,
a mutual friend of ours introduced us on email, Brian McKenzie. And Brian's condition of email
introing me to you was that I had to ask you a very specific question
on the podcast. So I have to ask it because that's basically what Brian said. So I'm going to try it.
Here it is. Your good friend, Brian McKenzie, wanted me to ask you which supplements you take.
to me to ask you which supplements you take all of them all of them brian okay so a little bit of context and then maybe i can flesh the answer out with a little bit of information that might
be useful um brian mckenzie is a world-class um uh he trains for high performance he's done ultras
he's a close friend we've done a lot
of great adventures and including a few um foolishly dangerous ones together um he's an
incredible human being and uh really a pioneer in the area of breath work and you hear a lot about
the um benefits of nasal breathing from james nestor there was the book jaws from my colleagues
at stanford brian was talking about that stuff long before everyone, honestly, he's, he's, Brian is a decade ahead of, or more on this
stuff. So you can check out his Instagram and various other channels, but you know, I'm of the
belief that behavioral tools are the most powerful way to shift our mental and physical wellbeing.
that behavioral tools are the most powerful way to shift our mental and physical well-being,
and that there are prescription drugs that are very useful to some people and necessary for some people. But in between, there are a number of other things, certainly good nutrition,
good sleep, et cetera. But there are also this, there is, excuse me, this huge category of
non-prescription over-the-counter compounds.
Let's just call them what they are.
We call them supplements, but compounds that can have an outsized effect on health and
well-being.
Many of these are better, frankly, alternatives to prescription medication.
I will always say that behavioral tools should come first because if you don't have your
behaviors right, it doesn't matter what you're taking.
Sooner or later, you're going to run into trouble. So I will just say there are a few supplements that I take that I
think many people could benefit from. I also want to be clear that I'm not selling these supplements.
My podcast has a relationship to a supplement company, but I'm not even going to mention it
because I would just say shop for cost. And, um, but getting there are two states of mind that I
think can vastly improve all
of our wellbeing.
And that's the ability to be alert and calm during the day and the ability to be asleep
at night for long periods of time.
And there are a number of things to do for sleep, including the light viewing.
I'm a big believer in yoga Nidra, which is a free practice.
Um, that it's, it's a 30 minute script that you listen to.
It falls under the category of non-sleep deep rest or NSDR.
It gets you better at falling asleep.
You do this during wakefulness
or if you wake up in the middle of the night.
Another great resource, also zero cost
is Reveri, R-E-V-E-R-I.com.
That's an app that was established by my colleague
and the associate chair of psychology at Stanford,
which is a self-hypnosis app to get better at sleeping,
to manage anxiety, focus, et cetera. Again, free for Apple and Android, zero cost.
But for people who have trouble falling and staying asleep, many people benefit from taking
magnesium threonate, T-H-R-E-O-N-A-T, or bisglycinate, one or the other. And there's also evidence that magnesium
threonate can offset some symptoms of cognitive decline. There are good data on that starting to
surface. And then the other thing is apigenin, A-P-I-G-E-N-I-N, 50 milligrams of apigenin,
which is chamomile extract, can help a lot of people fall and stay asleep. Those two supplements,
you know, have really helped me with sleep. They're non-addictive. Some people, about 5%
of people experience gastric discomfort with magnathrinate, but that's very rare. Most people
report that their sleep is just fantastic. I don't monitor my sleep with whoops and auras and things
like that. I'm not against it. I just go by the subjective feeling, but for people that do monitor their sleep, they tend to get a lot more deep sleep.
Um, I just like to use subjective measures. Like I feel really rested or something like that.
And, um, I've talked about this. We have a newsletter, uh, on Huberman lab.com that lists
out some of the dosages and this kind of thing. If people want to look at it, it's very easy to
find zero costs. You don't have to sign up. Uh just, you can just grab it there. I do think supplements are powerful that way. And,
but Brian was teasing me because when we traveled together to give some talks,
I was constantly getting stopped at security because I had a duffel full of what essentially
looked like a pharmacy. I take a lot of stuff. I do. I take a multivitamin. I take ginger. I take
garlic, the Allison and ginger, excuse me, in garlic, A-L-L-I-C-I-N.
And if you look at the data on allicin, I mean, in terms of cardiovascular health, it's
quite impressive.
I take one to three grams of EPA essential fatty acids per day because I don't eat fatty
fish.
I don't like the taste of fish.
And in double blind placebo controlled studies, one to two grams of EPA per day stands up against SSRIs, things like Prozac and Zoloft, without the side effect profile.
And for people that do need to take those drugs, it lowers the total dosages that they need to take in order to have an effective antidepressant effect.
So it essentially lowers the side effect profile.
So to say, I think a few years ago, the idea of supplements
was like, Ooh, can't you get everything from what you eat? Maybe, but I personally derive
tremendous benefit from vitamin D3 from, for my gut microbiome, I don't take probiotics. I,
what I do is I eat one to four servings of fermented foods per day, because there's
evidence from Justin Sonnenberg's
lab, which is upstairs from my lab at Stanford, that it can improve the pathways that are related
to inflammation. So, you know, there's a lot of stuff that one can do and take. I'd like to focus
on the do and then focus on the take. And then I do think people should be scientists about this.
I think that you don't want to start taking 50 things at once and wonder what, you know, it's a big expense. And then
you're wondering what works and what doesn't, you know, if one wants to experiment, introduce things
one at a time, talk to your physician, obviously make sure that these things are safe for you.
But that's why Brian was making that joke because he, you know, he was like, what,
what supplements do you take?
People always ask me, I just say all of them
because otherwise I could do a three hour podcast
on everything that I take
and it would put everyone to sleep.
It would cure insomnia.
Well, I've got plenty.
Thank you for answering it, first of all.
I've got plenty more to follow up on that.
But just to finish off then,
a lot of people in the world right now are struggling.
A lot of people can't see a way out.
The way the world has changed, it's making them feel fearful, anxious. A lot of people have tried
to go and see their doctors, yet feel very frustrated with some of the solutions that
are on offer. And with your wealth of knowledge about the brain and the body and the minds,
I wonder for people who are wanting some practical help, you've mentioned some great tips already
in the show so far, but just to finish off, the podcast is called Feel Better Live More. When we
feel better in ourselves, we get more out of life. Could you maybe share some of your sort of final words and thoughts with my audience?
Sure. Well, certainly there is a lot of challenge in the world right now.
Yes. And I think that the thing to remember is that ultimately, if we start in close with our nervous system and start thinking
about adding one practice um some morning light viewing um dimming the lights in the evening
simple things um having that physiological side you can practice it once or twice but it's ready
to go it was installed in you uh with all everything you need, you know, realizing that you have control over
your response system and your nervous system. I think that's a, that's a start. I think
without getting into the science of it, I am a believer in doing a little bit of journaling each
day. So it's amazing how our anxieties and stresses when placed onto paper can actually expunge some of those anxieties
and stresses. It's sort of obvious, but even if your handwriting is as poor as mine, even if you're
not writing in complete sentences, even if you tear up the sheet of paper afterward, or even if
it's just a walk where you're thinking about this stuff, that can be very powerful. You know, I,
I'm not, I usually don't come to things from kind of the
tough love stance, but so I don't want this to sound like that, but the truth is that there is no
magic stork or fairy or pill or anything that's going to be handed to us or deployed.
That's going to take care of our challenges. We are, we are all responsible for our immediate well-being. And what I can promise,
however, is that these tools and practices, they work and they lead to places where we have a
more optimal stance to deal with the challenges of the world. Our species is remarkable. We've
come through far worse than what we're dealing with now, believe it or not.
I mean, the number of deaths from childbirth alone, mother and infant, you know, over time has gone down. I'm not saying the world is much better than it used to be. I can recall a not too
distant past when things felt far simpler, frankly. And I think others can too. But I think that as bleak as things appear,
we are here where we have this incredible system, our nervous system that was arranged to adapt.
And we are right now we are building resilience. It's uncomfortable. But because it's uncomfortable,
it means that our species is actually getting stronger right now, not weaker, because we are a little bit back on our heels.
And so we're just trying to get to flat footed stance, as we talked about earlier.
And the discomfort of that is uncomfortable.
It's a circular statement, I realize, but it's uncomfortable.
But we're getting stronger.
And I'm an optimist. I do
believe that we will reap the benefits of all this hard work and strain. And meanwhile, we
should try and reinforce ourselves from the inside out. And hopefully today's discussion provided
a few tools and some mechanisms behind those tools that will allow people to do that
with zero cost and with just a little bit
of time and effort. Yeah, Andrew, thank you so much for that. Thank you for everything you've
shared during the conversation today. Thank you for everything you do to share freely such wonderful
information with hundreds of thousands, probably millions of people across the globe now. You are
having an impact in such a profound way. And as I
said right at the start, it isn't just the information you share, it's the way you share it.
I think you are one of the best followers on Instagram out there for people. I'd highly
encourage they follow you, they check out your podcast, because it's full of practical tips. But
it's done in a very kind, gentle, and non-judgmental way, which I deeply,
deeply resonate with. Is there anywhere else you would like to point people, Andrew,
apart from what I've just mentioned? Well, thanks. We're Huberman Lab on Instagram,
Huberman Lab on Twitter, Huberman Lab podcast. And then of course, there's the Huberman Lab
at Stanford, which right now is
not open to studies, but eventually we will start recruiting again. Those are the places to find us.
So I just really want to extend my thanks. I've been a consumer of your content for a long time
now. And I love the approach that you take. Again, nonjudgmental, give, give, give, give, give.
I can feel that.
I can see it.
I know other people feel and see it.
And I feel very much a partner
in arms with you in this.
And I look forward to being able
to meet face to face.
And should I be so lucky to come back
for a part two or a part three on here,
I'd be honored and delighted.
Thank you so much.
for a part two or a part three on here,
I'd be honored and delighted.
So thank you so much.
Really hope you enjoyed that conversation.
As always, do think about one thing that you can take away
and start applying into your own life.
Thank you so much for listening.
Have a wonderful week.
And always remember,
you are the architects of your own health.
Making lifestyle changes always worth it.
Because when you feel better, you live more.