Good Life Project - The 4 Chemicals That Secretly Run Your Life (and How to Rebalance Them) | Tj Power
Episode Date: July 10, 2025What if your phone is actually training your brain to feel less motivated, less connected, and more stressed?In this fascinating conversation, neuroscientist TJ Power, author of The DOSE Effect: An In...spiring Self-Healing Guide About the Mind-Body-Hormonal Connection, reveals how four key brain chemicals shape our experience of life, and shares surprisingly simple ways to work with your natural chemistry rather than against it. Learn practical strategies to boost motivation, deepen connections, and feel more energized without expensive supplements or complicated protocols.You can find Tj at: Website | Instagram | Episode TranscriptIf you LOVED this episode, you’ll also love the conversations we had with Julia Hotz about social prescribing using movement, nature, art, service, and belonging as potent prescription-strength remedies.Check out our offerings & partners: Join My New Writing Project: Awake at the WheelVisit Our Sponsor Page For Great Resources & Discount Codes Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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So have you ever noticed how, after scrolling through social media for an hour or so, nothing
else seems interesting or exciting anymore?
Or why that quick dopamine hit from your phone feels amazing in the moment but leads you
feeling oddly empty and unmotivated later?
There is a fascinating reason for this, and it has everything to do with how our ancient
brain chemistry collides with modern technology.
These questions sparked one of the most
eye-opening conversations about what's really happening
in our brains when we pick up our phones
and also just live our lives today.
Why nature instantly makes us feel better,
how singing out loud in a car might be one of the most
powerful stress relievers you're not using.
Not theoretical ideas, but practical insights
about how four specific brain chemicals shape nearly every aspect of how
we feel and function and how sometimes they get hijacked by modern life. My guest today is TJ
Power, a lead neuroscientist at the Dose Lab and author of the Instant Sunday Times bestseller,
The Dose Effect, an inspiring self-healing guide about the mind-body hormonal connection.
And through his research and the Dose framework, TJ has drained over 75,000 people at institutions
like Harvard, Amazon, NHS, building a community of more than 800,000 followers who are discovering
how to work with their brain chemistry rather than against it.
And what really caught me off guard in this conversation was learning that 90% of our
feel-good chemical serotonin is actually produced in our gut, not in our brain.
And wait till you hear what TJ shares about how a simple walk without headphones could
dramatically shift your state of mind and why, like what's actually happening under
the hood.
We explore practical ways to harness these natural chemical processes that make you feel
more alive, more connected, and yes, happier even in our hyper digital and fast paced world. So excited to share this
conversation with you. I'm Jonathan Fields and this is Good Life Project.
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You make sort of a bold claim, which maybe isn't so bold. Maybe we're all feeling this in a lot
of different ways. And it's this notion that modern life is disrupting the way that our brains work, especially on a neurochemical
level.
Take me into this.
Yeah.
So thank you for having me.
Our brain chemicals are a fascinating world to investigate.
We have these four that I'm particularly focused on in my research lab, dopamine, which is
super famous, oxytocin, serotonin, and endins and they very conveniently spell the acronym DOS.
These chemicals evolved over a huge period of time for our pre-hominin ancestors, 2.5 million
years, for our homo sapien ancestors 300,000 years and they really evolved for a very different
experience of life. One that was deeply connected with nature, tons of sunlight, tons of movement, tons of effort.
Our environment now is very different
to the one that humanity grew up in,
and it's causing disruptions
to the balance of these chemicals.
What is that disruption doing to us?
How's that actually showing up in our lives?
With each of these chemicals,
and our whole goal with DoseLab
is to really demystify these,
rather than just seeing them as sort of like,
quote unquote, happy hormones. They have very specific functions. So for example, how it may show
up for us is if our dopamine level was very low, we'd find it really hard to take action
towards any form of goal. So if you were like, I need to work hard on a project or I need
to get myself to go to the gym or I need to spend longer cooking so that I can eat healthier.
If the dopamine is low, it's very hard to get momentum. Oxytocin is much more about the love and connection we feel. If you're feeling lonely
and disconnected and potentially struggling with your confidence about who you are, that could be
oxytocin. Serotonin explores our energy levels and the stability of our mood. If your mood is
very fluctuating, you're thinking a lot in your brain, you're very worried and you're very tired, that would be serotonin.
And then endorphins really help us to tolerate stress through physical action.
If you're feeling a lot of tension inside you, stressed out, angry, frustrated, it's going to be tricky there.
And the useful thing about understanding your own dose is that if you end up not feeling good for whatever reason,
you're then going to be able to create a game plan as we'll explore today as to how you
could alleviate that challenge.
Here's my curiosity around this. The quote symptoms that you just listed out, which so
many of us have felt we've moved in and out of, sometimes stayed in for long windows of
time, sometimes it's sort of like passing, you know, a lack of motivation, a lack of
energy or a feeling of disconnection or isolation, stress,
mood fluctuations.
We live in a world where it's really easy for us to point to all of these things happening
around us as, oh, this is why it's happening.
So we have all these external circumstances, these external stimuli that somehow we can
look at and say, this is why I'm feeling this way.
This is why I just can't get up out of bed.
This is why I can't motivate to go and move my body or eat healthier. This is why I'm feeling disconnected.
We can point to all these different things that exist outside of us. And what you're offering is,
I want to wrap my head around this. You're not necessarily saying all those things aren't true
and all those things are not in fact contributors, but it's a yes and, and maybe we're actually
not looking as much
about what's happening internally in our brain.
Yeah, I think it's great to have awareness,
for example, understanding that the food system
is a complicated one and it can really disrupt
the chemical balance within our system,
or the phones could disrupt us.
Awareness and understanding is an amazing first step.
So you kind of said, oh, okay, so this is causing that.
But what we're really trying to do is provide
really achievable actions that people can take so they can actually get themselves out of these
states. And when we learn about these brain chemicals as well, it's not necessarily just
about learning what happens if the chemical is not in balance and if we're not feeling good.
It's really about learning what happens if the chemical is really, really thriving. And
I think in general with mental and physical health, rather than kind of the mindset of
running away from feeling bad, I think learning to chase feeling really, really good is actually
often something that will lead to better results.
So once you understand that case, if my dopamine is charged up, I'm going to feel super focused
and driven towards my goals or oxytocin, I'm going to feel a lot of deep love and fulfillment and safety within my
life.
Once you chase feeling really good on these chemicals, it can be pretty profound.
What about modalities that are often pointed to as a way to sort of like fix all the types
of things that you just listed?
Because we talk about behavioral modification therapy, just have discipline, change your
environment and your structure.
Technology can be harness technology to do this?
And of course, pharmaceutical interventions, medication.
These are things that for all the things that you just listed out, people generally turn
to these different modalities, these interventions to try and fix them or feel better or get
into the state of mind that you listed out.
How are these working and how are these also not working in the context of what we're talking about?
Yeah, interesting.
There's a variety you mentioned there.
I think behavioral change is right at the core
of what we're really aiming towards.
I think our behavior is misaligned
to what our body is evolutionarily desiring.
So I think anything down the lane of behavior change
can be powerful.
It needs to be very deeply rooted
with an internal motivation though.
It can't just be like, oh, I heard on Instagram that this is good for you, so I'm going to
do it too.
It needs to be something that feels truthful to you and feels genuinely important to the
direction you're wanting to head towards in your life.
I think therapy is magical.
I think I've personally I've navigated a huge amount of grief.
I grew up with OCD, which has been super tricky in my brain.
I've had some great therapeutic interventions.
I think it serves an important purpose, but without significant behavior change, I don't
think therapy can solve the entire thing.
Like if you're going through significant grief, but you're having fantastic therapy, but you're
also drinking a lot every day of alcohol, then it really disrupts the capacity for that
therapy to be successful.
Technological interventions, I think some can be great. I think things like for that therapy to be successful. Technological interventions.
I think some can be great.
I think things like wearable devices can be motivating.
I think they can also be complicated.
I think they can actually dissuade you from how you're feeling.
They can always convince you you're not feeling good when maybe you were.
So I think there's nuance with these different approaches.
I think really it comes down to deeply learning to listen to your own intuition.
Like I see these brain chemicals as almost like our friends that live within our system
and they're simply trying to guide you towards your greatest experience of life.
And if you make them unhappy, they're going to create some tricky symptoms within you
that are going to try and get you away from that state.
And if you make them happy, they're going to say, good job, keep heading down that lane.
And the more you build a relationship with them and almost a conversation with them, I think the better
you can feel.
Let's talk about technology a little bit more because it is this really interesting double
edged sword, right? On the one hand, we've got technology that gives us almost any information
we want at the blink of an eye. And on the other hand, like you just shared, sometimes
that technology gives us singles that contradict how we actually
feel at any given moment. I wear different wearables and there'll be times where I get
up in the morning, I feel like I had a solid night's sleep, I feel pretty good, I feel energized,
I feel ready for the day, and then I'll check my tech and it'll be like, oh, you slept terribly,
your readiness level is really low, take it easy, just chill, make a recovery. But I don't feel
that's actually, like my felt lived experience is not giving me the same data.
Yeah, I think this is definitely something we need to be super aware of because interestingly,
I was actually listening to my mom and dad on the weekend. I went to see my mom and dad
and they were laughing because my mom will say to my dad, like, how did you sleep last
night? Just like general conversation. And he'll say he'll say oh I don't know I haven't checked yet and that sentence in itself like I
actually don't know how I slept until I see the data it's tricky because it's
just outsourcing our intuition to a device effectively so for me I've also
used wearables a lot over the last three or four years I think going through
periods where you don't wear them is actually quite useful
and I definitely think the time in the day in which you check them is important. Like it's really important to me that I don't check my data as soon as I wake up so that my body can naturally feel
into what sort of state it's in. Then like normally around like 11 o'clock or something, I'll just have
a quick look and see like, oh okay cool I got a pretty decent sleep score, I'll look at my steps
or whatever it might be. But I definitely don't think opening your eyes
and looking at your data is a good path
to having a good sort of intuitive connection
with your system.
Yeah, I agree with that.
It's interesting also, I mean, you bring up this notion,
you mentioned outsourcing, you know,
like sort of like how we're feeling to technology.
And I wonder sometimes what happens,
whether if we keep doing that over time, that our own
inner ability, like our inter reception, like our ability to actually sense what's happening within
us diminishes over time, it sort of becomes untrained and we become less and less able to
actually understand how we're feeling at any given moment if we get used to just habitually outsourcing
sort of like all these metrics to technology or to something
outside of us.
We get to a point where if one day we woke up and that tech was gone or the battery failed
and we were without it for a month or something like that, we literally would struggle to
get a bean on how we feel.
I think that's rapidly occurring.
I think that really is happening very quickly.
And aside from wearables, I think humanity's connection with our body
is reducing in general.
Like we're just not like a physical being
that's always moving and deeply interconnected
with our body.
Like often, and definitely in my early journey
into meditation, when someone told me to do a body scan
and feel my body, there was nothing there to be felt.
Like I had no connection with it.
And I think we're just in a world,
I like to call our world dopamine land now,
where we're so in our heads
and so focused on more, more, more and digital stimulation.
And I think our general relationship
with having a good feeling and connection
with what's going in our body is reducing.
And I think wearables on top of that
is outsourcing it even further.
I then think with the advent of AI
and how much we're utilizing that,
I think also outsourcing our capacity
to think deeply is a challenge.
And I'm someone that's very pro tech,
like I love tech,
but I do think there's a really specific balance
to strike with it in order for humanity to thrive
and live in harmony with it.
Yeah, I'm right there with you.
I'm not a Luddite by any means.
I surround myself with technology all day, every day,
and yet I'm also deeply aware of the fact
that on any given moment, it can both give and take from you.
When we talk about the chemicals that you mentioned,
like that shorthand is dose, dopamine.
Oxytocin.
Oxytocin, serotonin, endorphin.
Those are not the only four chemicals that exist.
Why focus just on those four?
Yeah, these are the ones that I went deep into throughout my time at university.
So I was just learning a huge amount about them.
Dopamine really was the beginning for me of understanding more about neurochemistry.
Very conveniently with the acronym, and this is just by chance, dopamine is really the
first chemical to work on because it's the motivational chemical
that will enable you to have the desire to do things with the others.
So dopamine because it's just getting so significantly influenced by the modern world.
It's the only chemical we've learned how to hijack and alter artificially.
Oxytocin because I actually believe our greatest goal in
humanity as humans is actually to acquire oxytocin and not dopamine and I
think currently we're in the pursuit of the wrong goal as a species and I think
oxytocin is very important to pursue how do we create more love in our life and
more connection both with ourselves and others. Serotonin because it's so
influenced by food, nutrition and time
outdoors and they are integral factors to the circadian rhythm and a huge
variety of areas. And then I'm fascinated by endorphins because of how deeply they
influence our ability to tolerate stress and I think the modern mind is stress. I
think our ancestors' minds were also stressed by getting chased by bears and
all kinds of things but those four just seem to encapsulate a really great insight into how to approach living in this
world today.
That makes sense to me. If you think about if we shorthand dopamine as motivation, we
shorthand oxytocin as connection, we shorthand serotonin as mood and energy and endorphin
as stress or de-stressing. Those four qualities are just massively,
I won't say entirely determinative of our experience
as human beings, but they play a huge role.
So if we have some neurochemical that is directly
associated with our ability to experience them at a level
which is nourishing to us, it makes sense that we would
really want to try and do that as much as we can.
Definitely. And you're right, it definitely doesn't encapsulate the whole experience of being a human. It's arguably quite reductionist to think of us as just four chemicals.
Some people say that to me, and I think that's a fair opinion for sure, but I think it provides
a great foundation and building blocks to consider how our behavior is influencing how we feel.
There are other chemicals, you've got adrenaline and cortisol and testosterone and estrogen.
A lot of other chemicals have a significant influence. The interesting thing with these
chemicals that live within the human body is they're not working alone. They're all
in conversation with one another. I think these four are a great starting point to make
significant change.
To me, the whole notion of the paradox of choice, right?
It's like, okay, so sure, there may be hundreds of different things that we can look at within
the human system, but the more that we add to the menu at a certain point, it just becomes
paralyzing to us.
We end up so confusing, we just take no action at all.
So in a way, it's almost like being intentionally reductionist and
saying, these are four things that we want to focus on influencing. It creates a, like
a doable, a digestible menu to focus on rather than just looking at the universe of things
and saying, I don't know where to start. There's just too much here.
Yeah. I mean, I would always prefer if Netflix just had four options for me rather than thousands
that I can never pick from.
So down that lane.
And then once you're inside the chemicals, it can really open back out.
Once you're inside the four, there's a multitude of ways in which we could consider influencing
them.
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So I want to go through your methodology,
which you shorthanded as a dose effect
in each one of these different chemicals.
Before we talk about some of the ways
that we can influence him also,
one of the curiosities for me is,
are these four different chemicals,
things where there is endogenous version of them,
a pill, a shot where you literally take it and in the blink of an eye get what you need
or are these things that are actually much harder to control then or are there risk factors
in doing that even if it was available?
Yeah.
So dopamine and serotonin would be the main ones you could influence endogenously
through medication and things like that.
We have all kinds of medication like Adderol and Ritalin that will influence your dopamine
pathway.
We have selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, SSRIs like Citalopram and Sertraline that
will influence serotonin.
And those are definitely paths that can support these brain chemicals.
I think it's always, I didn't pursue the psychiatry route, I pursued more of the behavioral change
route.
So I think whether you're taking a medication to support them or not, I think behavioral
change is very useful for all.
On the oxytocin lane, in research, you can utilize intranasal oxytocin, you can inhale
oxytocin to check how things are operating in different studies.
We can go into different things that can occur there in our conversation.
Endorphins, you can't really do that.
You need to physically push the body in some way to get those to rise.
And typically, I feel the behavioral influence on them is the best way to go.
They're built in abundance inside our body,
and we can just expand and increase how much it can do so.
Yeah. So these are four things that we have the ability to manufacture inside of us. We
don't actually need them externally. Although, as you were just describing oxytocin intranasally,
like as a nasal spray, I'm thinking, isn't that sort of like the classic love potion
that's been like fabled in so many different ways? Because effectively, like if that is
the feel good, I want to be around other people,
like a deep sense of connection,
it's kind of an interesting way to do it.
And fraud too.
Yeah, I mean, I'm pleased that it hasn't hit the market
as a product that everyone can take.
Because humans are low in oxytocin.
So I think if it came out as a pharmaceutical drug,
I think it would be a big thing.
So I'd rather humans decide it through actual connection with humans.
From a research point of view, it's interesting to see what happens with different scenarios.
But yeah, I'm definitely in general like in my true nature, just more on the natural path
to getting these chemicals up where it's possible.
And I love that approach also.
Let's kind of jump into the four different ones in more detail and explore some of the
ideas, some of the things we might do to harness them.
So starting out with dopamine, you mentioned that this is the neurochemical which is really
connected to motivation.
Take me a little bit deeper into what dopamine is and what it does to us.
Yeah.
So dopamine is definitely super famous now.
It's probably the most famous of the four chemicals.
And whilst now we kind
of hear the word dopamine and we might think about social media dopamine hits. Like that's
a classic thing. Oh yeah, apparently you get dopamine off social media. That'd be something
that may be in someone's mind. We might also think about things like cold water exposure.
That's got very popularized, the ice baths and stuff. That's another thing that can influence
dopamine.
Right at its core, it evolved within our brain
to ensure that we would enjoy the experience
of pursuing hard things for our ancestors.
And I continue to refer to our ancestors
because the brain did that for hundreds of thousands
of years, and then for the last 30 years,
we started massively changing the human experience.
Even if you go back 100 years,
life was still a lot more effort,
a lot more discipline, a lot more natural in terms of food,
a lot more social connection, better sleep.
Like, humanity really changed about 30 years ago.
This is called the evolutionary mismatch hypothesis.
Originally, we had to scratch rocks together
for five hours to make fire.
We had to hunt for days,
build shelter to survive
cold winters. Dopamine would come into our brain and give us the desire to pursue
survival and then it would would reward us when we were aligning ourselves to
that. So when the fire did eventually get created, when we were building the heart
and nearly finished building the heart, when we found the food and it really
wants us to experience long-term success. So even
something as basic as tidying your house is an example of slowly building
dopamine in your brain. It's boring, it's not particularly fun but it creates a
feeling of satisfaction. The real thing that has got dopamine, I was about to say
almost a swear word there, but has really got dopamine held is the phone. The phone
has given us this capacity to attain the feeling of hunting an animal for three
hours, but within one second of getting a phone in our hand.
And that's very confusing for how this chemical operates.
Yeah.
So it's almost like, you know, we've evolved over hundreds of thousands of years to have
this chemical to that both motivates us to do hard things, probably historically based on okay that's how we survive and
then gives us a really good feeling when we do it so that we want to do it again and
then what you're saying is more recently the phones is basically hijacking this impulse and
Giving us that flooding sensation, but in a very different way and and I would imagine dysfunctional
To take this further just you can visualize in visualize in your brain exactly what's happening here. We have an area of the brain called the ventral
tegmental area. It's called the VTA. And you can think of this as like your dopamine factory
where your brain is literally manufacturing dopamine vesicles, like little dopamine bubbles,
tiny little things, but it can manufacture them. You then have something called your
nucleus accumbens, which is your reward center in the brain a little bit further along from the VTA from the factory. In
that scenario there are talking about tidying your home or you can think about
this with anything the hunting the building the making the fires. What's
happening in your brain is your brain is putting in effort so your factory
starts to generate dopamine because it's thinking okay this human's putting in
effort it's gonna need its motivational chemical and occasionally it will ship
these dopamine vesicles these bubbles towards the reward
center in order to create a feeling of satisfaction whilst we're in the pursuit of the goal.
So as you were building the shelter, you'd be like, oh, it's looking pretty good.
This is looking pretty safe.
And you get little hits of dopamine, just like going towards the reward center.
And during the effort, the factory would be replenishing.
We'd get a nice bit of reward in the reward center.
Great. In the phone, when we open the phone, there's obviously no effort involved
to experience the pleasure in our brain. Once you start scrolling one of those short video
feeds, you're experiencing deep experiences of pleasure with no effort. So what happens
is the factory starts mass shipping the bubbles towards the reward center going, oh nice,
this is really good, this is really good. After a period of time, if you look back at
the factory,
there's not been anyone working on generating more dopamine.
So suddenly the factory gets very low in that resource.
And when we're in that kind of apathetic state,
we can't concentrate, we can't be bothered to do anything,
we're at our computer and we're just clicking around
on loads of different things and not really actually doing
the hard tasks that we know we need to do.
That's because this factory is very low in this chemical. The phone is the sole source of reducing the quantity of dopamine
within that.
If that's happening inside of us, is there a risk that over time, I think a lot of people
familiar with the concept of insulin resistance these days, is there a phenomenon which is
similarly, is there a sort of like a dopamine resistance type of thing where, you know,
the nucleus just gets flooded and flooded and flooded because we're scrolling on a phone for hours and hours and hours and seeing the
quick hit on the video and this and that. And then do we get to a point where the same volume
of dopamine no longer gives us the same feeling of satisfaction or joy or elation and we just
need more and more and more?
Yeah, it really does. And from a scientific perspective, there's not yet a name for insulin resistance in the
dopamine world. I think one will come in time for sure. What effectively happens is you
have a baseline level of dopamine production. In that factory, your brain is producing a
certain amount of dopamine each and every day, and that's based on your genetics. And
it's also very heavily based on the lifestyle you've had. If I took a 14 year old hunter gatherer that's in the Hudson right now in Central Africa,
his brain would be manufacturing a ton of dopamine because he's expected to do so much.
If I took a 14 year old in a local school near here that might spend all day scrolling
social media and not doing lots, his brain wouldn't need to manufacture much dopamine.
And effectively, you can imagine if the brain is getting super exhausted by shipping so much dopamine to the reward center
and not manufacturing much of it what it starts to do in response is just goes
can't cope with how low we're getting in dopamine because of how much you're
sending to the reward center so I'm just going to produce less for you very
similar to what happens in terms of insulin as well so then the dopamine
starts producing less and less and then when it's a bit of a downward spiral
because reward stops feeling as good we're not generating as much of the
motivation chemical, so then we want to do less hard things, keeping our home tidy, exercising,
working, connecting, and we pursue more and more of the quick hits. And it's like this
journey towards very low levels of dopamine, which a huge amount of humanity is now there.
The good thing is,
this system can respond fast. So if you start taking the right course of action, the brain
again will begin to regenerate dopamine in a healthy way.
Yeah. So can that crash? And I want to talk about some of the ways that we can regenerate,
but I kind of want to come full circle on the crash side of it. When you hear stories about
people who are in a military theater, who are in battle for years
at a time, and I've heard it described as your brain, literally it's extreme effort, it's extreme
risk, extreme action, and you're being flooded with dopamine and manufacturing dopamine nonstop.
So the level of dopamine in your brain is just persistently higher. Then they come home,
and their day-to-day suburban life and
oftentimes experience a real crash. Can that cause or be a factor in things like depression,
anxiety, things like this where your brain just becomes wired over a long period of time to have
experience a very high level of this? You're manufacturing it because you need it, but then
you come back to an environment where you really don't need it anymore. And so it's not being produced,
but your brain has kind of like the set point has changed. And now it's like you need it.
The baseline production would change significantly in that scenario. Their brain would be expecting
immense levels of dopamine to keep them laser focused and motivated in that sort of scenario.
And it's very based on kind of the level
of stimulation we're experiencing.
So they would get very used to a high level
of slightly natural stimulation.
It's a bit complicated.
Military scenario is obviously quite an extreme scenario
for the brain.
Coming home, they'd dope me every day
where they'd wake up and think,
right, I'm ready to go.
I'm ready to really get a lot done.
And if it was just sort of like taking the dog out
for a wee and coming back inside
and like doing a little bit of work on the computer, it's just going to feel comparatively
very under stimulating. It could change over time and begin to counterbalance itself. But the tricky
thing is, is in the scenario like that, when suddenly life is feeling under stimulating and
kind of like an underwhelming experience, then our brain starts going, okay, so how could I get my dopamine up instinctively?
And then it goes alcohol, sugar, pornography,
social media, and then we really break the system.
If you got home from a scenario like that,
and you were coming into a slower pace of life,
if you really managed to like create a game plan
where you're like, okay,
so I'm going to get my nutrition really dialed in,
I'm still going to exercise,
I'm going to have a goal to do a 10 kilometer
in this exact time.
And you gave yourself a new environment of goals.
Your dopamine could nicely come down and stabilize.
But if you suddenly go in the pursuit of quick dopamine,
then you're going to burn the engine out hard.
And that's typically what might happen.
Yeah, so it's like there's a process of slowly recalibrating
over an extended period of time.
Yeah, acclimatizing almost.
I would imagine this also happens, you know,
you take somebody who's just a long time triathlete
or a runner and they're a competitor
and they're training all the time doing it
and, you know, all of a sudden,
like they just, their lifestyle changes,
they get injured, they get sick or something like this
and they can't do that thing anymore.
I would imagine it's probably a similar phenomenon
that was probably a much more common experience.
Yeah, and the pursuit of a goal in itself is very important. We think of dopamine primarily as a
reward chemical. That's kind of how we've been taught to understand dopamine. Dopamine at its
core is much more about just being in the pursuit of something rather than just receiving a reward.
This is why the phones are so disruptive. A chap called Schultz from Cambridge University had a
huge discovery about 20 years ago where
he found that dopamine levels are actually at their highest not once we achieve the thing
we're looking for.
It's actually just before that.
And that would make sense evolutionarily if I was trying to actually catch a deer or like
an antelope in the wild.
I don't need the most dopamine in my brain once I've got it.
I need it just before so I've got the peak level of focus and motivation. In a scenario like that, where suddenly you can't pursue
the goal that you had been pursuing for a long period of time and you can't get that
reward from it, it's very tricky. The brain can crash. This also happens when people win
the lottery, when celebrities reach the pinnacle of success. People crash hard because there's
no longer a place to go. Setting a new goal, and it doesn't have to be a career goal, it doesn't have to be a financial goal,
loads of things can be a goal.
But your brain always wants to be looking forward
to try and attain something in its environment.
And this is one of the things you write about,
like the role of pursuit and the role of goals
as a mechanism to effectively harness or regenerate dopamine
so that you can get the feeling that you want to have.
So this is one of the techniques that we can think about.
You also explore the notion of flow states and the relationship to dopamine.
Take me there.
Flow state is this idea of a really deep immersion in a task.
And it was initially really understood and conceptualized by a chap called Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi.
And he discovered through watching athletes and musicians
and a variety of different domains,
people entering really deep states
of high performance and focus.
And you see this primarily within the sporting environments.
If you're watching the Wimbledon final,
you might see the player is just in this deep,
deep state of flow.
You might see an NFL, baseball, all kinds of things.
In that state, our dopamine level rises a lot in a really nice healthy and natural way.
And for humanity, originally for our ancestors, flow state would have just
been a daily occurrence. Hours and hours of flow state. Like I love watching this
show called Primal Survivor where this guy goes and visits these different
tribes that are still here today. And the different genders and different age roles have all different functions from creating tools to
building to hunting. But regardless, they spend hours on end just focusing on one
thing, a really deep state of focus, not really thinking about anything else. In
the modern world, we're rarely entering deep flow state. You and I in this
conversation throughout an hour, as our brain gets more and more immersed in this,
that's almost a flow state type experience because our brains aren't currently clicking on our email and WhatsApp and checking Instagram
and all kinds of things. In our day-to-day life when we are just working on our computers,
typically flow state is far from the reality of what happens. Like if I were trying to
write my book for example, if I write one paragraph and then go on WhatsApp, one paragraph,
go on WhatsApp, one paragraph, I'm never getting anywhere close to flow state. And getting into this deep state of immersion in work
or in personal creative activities is really important.
I think on a day-to-day basis, it is one of those things
that is increasingly hard to access,
especially as we have technology all around us
and notifications turned on.
What are some of the things that we can do to make it easier for us
to actually be able to access that state on a regular basis
without just completely isolating ourselves from humanity. Yeah I think I
met you going through this now we're in the process of my next book so I've
really got to get dialed in on entering flow state and the sort of considerations
I'd be taking is if you're working with other people if you have colleagues or
teammates or maybe even people in your family like you need to make sure people
are aware that you're about to try and enter this state
so that they can understand that interruptions
are really not particularly conducive to you getting there.
If you're in a working environment
where people are expecting you to reply every two minutes,
it's important for them to know,
I'm just about to get in flow state.
It's going to be beneficial to my work if I get there.
You don't have to do this all day.
Like I wouldn't expect myself
to be in 10 hours of flow state,
but it's just like a nice 60 minute block
or like a 30 minute block.
It takes about 15 minutes for the brain
to get into a deeper state of focus.
So at the beginning, it's hard.
Your brain is battling for distraction.
Eventually your brain starts coming to terms
with the fact that your brain wants to be isolated
on just one thing.
Typically our brain is scanning an environment,
just scanning, scanning, scanning.
Then eventually if the brain's like,
okay, I'm going to go into deep focus, it really can.
It just takes a bit of warmup time to get there.
So I'll make sure that my phone is not in this room.
If my phone is in this room
while I try and enter flow state, zero chance.
I'll make sure things like WhatsApp, LinkedIn, email,
everything is shut so that there's no opportunity for me
just when I get bored or something's challenging
just to click, because if it's open,
you're going on it 100%.
Then once that's done,
I'll typically start a stopwatch from zero minutes on Google.
So I'll just go on like stopwatch is like a basic one.
And I'll start it, then I'll begin the task.
And eventually I will find myself desperate
for something else.
Like desperate for distraction, desperate for stimulation
and a quick feeling of dopamine.
Before I let myself do it,
I'll always go back to the stopwatch
and I'll just see where I'm at.
Like am I at eight minutes?
Am I at two minutes?
Am I at 20 minutes?
And I'll always know that beyond 15 minutes,
proper focus is coming my way
and I'll use it to motivate me.
Like if I get to 14 minutes and I click on it,
then I think, well, if I go on LinkedIn right now
and get some crappy dopamine out of there,
I'm just resetting back to zero minutes.
So that's pointless.
So I'll kind of utilize it to motivate me. When I first started doing this on my first book,
I literally had no attention span at all. Gradually as you gamify this and train this
over time, you can get into deep states of focus. It's just practice and strengthening
the muscle.
Yeah. I love that. And I've done some of those same things. I have on my calendar, which
my team has access to, there are blocks of time where they're just a whole block, which
is just, you see on my calendar,
it just says maker mode.
And that's a signal to everybody else
that says basically it's like,
okay, so I'm either deep into writing
or I'm deep into creating something.
That's my telegraphing to everybody else
that I'm trying to really drop into a flow state in this time.
And unless there's a real fire burning that needs attention,
this is an uninterrupted window for me.
And for me, as a writer as well,
I have found that at times, similar to you,
I kind of have to leave a device outside of the room.
Even on my computer though,
I don't have the willpower often.
Yeah, for sure it's tough.
And I'll use apps like Freedom
or there are other similar apps
which basically completely disable all
connectivity. You can't open any other windows or platforms or apps for a fixed amount of
time. So the only thing you can do is sit there and do the thing.
That's a classic example of tech that is useful. I have the same on my phone. I have really
useful blockers that enable me to reduce my social media usage and stuff like that. And tech is such a different dopamine addiction to anything else because if you wanted to
quit smoking, you obviously wouldn't put a pack of cigarettes on your desk and then
like expect yourself to not smoke.
But tech just doesn't work like that.
Like we have to use it.
And setting up parameters like putting like almost a padlock on a pack of cigarettes is
almost what we have to do to be honest.
And with the social media, for example,
I have a blocker that enables me
to only go on Instagram three times a day.
So I could use all my three times
when I wake up if I wanted to,
but that would then mean I couldn't have Instagram
for 24 hours.
So I then have learned to steady it out
10 a.m., 3 p.m., 8 p.m.
is my moments to go on Instagram on my phone.
And I think systems like you've shared there,
like Freedom or whatever it is that you can utilize
to block your computer or your phone
are almost just essential.
They have to be used.
Yeah, that's actually a great idea.
I need to actually set up some sort of blocker
for my social media too.
Oh, it's so good.
And also then when you go on it,
it's actually much more enjoyable
because social media gets really boring
if you go on it all the time.
But when I go on it, like tonight, 8 p.m. Will come and I've like nice
I'm being on Instagram five hours quick checks and messages whatever it might be watch a few videos and
Social media in small bursts like that is absolutely fine. We can tolerate it
But it's the social media checks in every moment of boredom that are creating massive disruption
And I think one of the things we struggle with also is for us to actually say it
I literally need a mechanism on my device that stops me from being able to do this, you know, like with the exception of this agreed upon window.
It also makes us have to admit that we failed at being able to do it ourselves. And we don't like that. We don't like to actually sit there and say, OK, so it's me against the device and device is winning. And I need help, like either from a person or technology to actually make this happen.
That's sort of like a prerequisite.
You have to acknowledge that I need help with this thing.
And I think we're all there.
As a species, we need help to manage tech.
Tech is a monumental force that we have to manage and it's going to make humanity better
in so many ways as it already is. But I think it's the number one thing for a human being to be focusing
on is their relationship with technology because we're only in tech's infancy as well. Like
over the next few decades, AI will evolve rapidly. We'll get glasses, headsets, all
kinds of things are coming our way. And some are just going to end up in doom scrolling,
consumption, distraction land. And that's going to be really hard to live a life like that.
Where some will utilize its assets for good
and also prioritize connection and stillness
and creation and so on.
And I think it's very, very important
to make it a massive priority in your life.
So agree.
And we're not far away from a time where,
you know, like glasses will be readily available
at reasonable prices for everybody that will project whatever it is on your device into the lens of your glass.
So it's not even a matter of taking out your device anymore or looking for it.
It's literally going to be in your field of vision. And that freaks me out a little bit.
I'm nervous for that day. And I watched all the latest tech events. I always watch the
tech events because I'm in this weird position where I love tech. I've watched every Apple keynote since I was about 13. I literally cast them on my TV,
on YouTube, and I watched them every... I love it, but I also just feel the massive disruption
it's causing and the glasses is going to take things to a whole new level. If you can
sit with your partner and have your Instagram reels feed to the right of their face whilst
you're talking to them, that's a new world for humanity to navigate.
And I think whilst it's somewhat manageable now, it's time for us to individually take
action and start taking control of the relationship.
Yeah.
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And I think that also kind of brings us to the O and DOS or the second neurochemical
oxytocin. Take me into this a little bit more.
In neuroscience, we like to call oxytocin the great facilitator of life. It really is
that. It creates the desire to bond with humans, care for humans to procreate to build a family
to love people and
it's a chemical that is
underwhelmed and low as a result of this dopamine land that I like to call it that we're living in because in
Simple terms in a moment where you're lying in bed with your partner and you're both scrolling your phones rather than talking to each other
Or cuddling dopamine is winning in that moment the same as when you're with your partner and you're both scrolling your phones rather than talking to each other or cuddling, dopamine is winning in that moment. The same as when you're with your kids, your
family, your friends, and a huge amount of the time in moments where oxytocin has its
opportunity to be like, yes, connection, love, eye contact, questions, listening. In those
moments dopamine keeps winning. And originally for our ancestors, Dovmeme was just a prerequisite to then experiencing
oxytocin. And what I mean by that is if you watch these tribes, they spend all day hunting and they
have a good time. They're laser focused. They get a lot of like accomplishment and reward and
achievement from the hunting. But their real joy comes from when they get home from the hunting
and they all laugh around the fire and connect and have fun and tell stories and bond. That's
really the aim of life for them and the hunting enables it to occur.
The modern environment has flipped that whereby we, quote-unquote, hunt all day on our computers
by looking for dopamine down that lane, financial reward and so on.
It gets to the evening when we're like, okay, now originally we would just be laughter and chat and conversation and love.
But in reality, it's Netflix and scrolling and sugar
and just more and more dopamine.
And dopamine is designed in our brain
to never provide the feeling of satisfaction
and true fulfillment because our brain is programmed
to just more, more, more dopamine to help us survive.
Oxytocin is a very fulfilling nourishing chemical
that if it's prioritized, you feel way more full
and way more satisfied
with your experience alive.
Is there almost like an inverse relationship
between dopamine and oxytocin?
There are times where they would increase together.
If you were having sex with someone
that you're feeling of love with,
both of them would rise together.
If you were intimately connecting with someone
that you had no emotional connection with,
then it would just be purely dopamine and no oxytocins. There are times when they interconnect,
but in the modern environment, dopamine is distracting us from oxytocin massively.
And one of the big parts of oxytocin is feeling love for what you do have in your life, like a deep
feeling of gratitude. Everyone's aware of gratitude is important. We lack as a species,
a consistent approach to how we engage with gratitude, I think,
for many of us. But oxytocin is this nice feeling, oh yeah, I love my life a lot. I've got what I
need. I've got safety. I've got comfort. I've got people and so on. Dopamine is I need more,
I need more, I need more. And I think a lot of us spend more time in our brain in the I need more
than I love what I have. Yeah. What about group or team activities? And this can be in work, that can be as a
family, you're doing something together, it can be sports when you're in pursuit of something,
but also you're kind of working together really intimately and maybe really enjoying the quality
of the relationship along the way. And that facilitates the pursuit of the goal too. Would
that be potentially an example of where they're both rising together?
That would be a perfect example. And cohesion within a group and contribution to a group
outside of yourself just for the sake of contributing to that group is magic for oxytocin. Then
in the pursuit of a goal, it's going to be the additional rewarding sensation of dopamine
rising as well. And interestingly, I played on the weekend on Sunday, I played a sport called Rounders.
I don't know in the US if you know Rounders, but it's basically like a mini version of
baseball.
Effectively, if you think about the difference between England and the US in terms of country
size and population, it's like that, but for Rounders and baseball.
We play in groups of eight.
It's a little bat with one hand rather than a big bat and you just hit it and run around some area.
It was unbelievable how a group of strangers were suddenly best friends in our separate
teams and how everyone was high-fiving and connecting and bonding. That experience is
so rewarding as a human. It was like everyone was saying, it's the most fun I've had in
ages. I've loved today. It was so good. It was so good. It was just like a family come
together of like random different families and not an activity that any of us do regularly.
And it was so amazing just like, cause me, I'm always observing people's state and like
people will show up a bit exhausted, a bit socially awkward, a bit isolated. Like that's
just like the modern humans a little bit like that. By the end of it, everyone is literally
buzzing, so happy.
And that's because of that group cohesion towards a goal.
Yeah, and this is one of the things that you talk about
under oxytocin also is the role of socializing
in actually consistently creating more oxytocin.
Yeah, need to socialize.
We are a deeply social species.
What's brought us as humanity to this point
is how well we work as groups
and how much we want to be around each
other. There are some species in the animal kingdom that thrive alone. If you take a polar bear,
for example, they're really isolated species. They can cruise around on their own. They can
thrive like that. Humans are not like that. We did not survive in the jungle unless we were in a
group. If you were isolated on your own, you were terrified and very, very anxious because you're
not physically capable of taking on the animal kingdom as a human.
As a group, obviously, we're super smart,
very good at coordinating together.
Socializing is reducing massively in the modern world
because we're falsely satisfying it through our phones.
And what I mean by that is if you spend all evening
looking at people, hearing their voices,
hearing their laughter on your social media feeds,
your brain doesn't quite understand. Like obviously, it's very hard for our brain to comprehend that we're
looking at a glass electric panel that's a video feed of another reality. Like that's
so confusing for our natural brain that we have within us. And if we just deleted all
the phones and technology, everyone would be out there trying to socialize because we'd
all be so like bored of just being in our own company.
And I think the more discipline you have with your phone to scroll social media less, the
more your brain instinctively, and this comes back to the intuitive relationship we have
with our system, the more the brain starts going, okay, so I'm not getting it via social
media.
I'm going to have to get it from actual social.
And it makes you much happier if it's from the real thing.
Yeah, that makes so much sense.
You also talk about the role of giving or generosity,
which we've kind of been touching on,
because in a way when you're socializing,
or when you're playing rounders
with all these other people,
in a weird way it's almost like you're,
especially in a group activity,
it's like you're giving to everybody else
by your participation and shared pursuit of something.
But just more broadly,
talk to me about how generosity
or giving influences actually actually to us.
The brain is so hardwired to not be selfish at its core, because if we were a selfish
species, again, it would have just really harmed our potential for survival.
If I was to go on a walk and find a load of food and think, F the tribe, I'm just going
to eat all this myself, that's not going to be very useful.
Our brain has to be programmed.
I found food, take it to the group, Take it to the group. Contribute to the group. And
the same with all the hard activities, making the fires. It was all about group survival.
And the modern environment is a bit more self-focused. We spend a lot of time in our own head thinking
about our own experience in life. We've got social media profiles. We're constantly looking
at pictures of ourselves, videos of ourselves, our own name. It's very self-focused in comparison to what humanity was a long time ago.
But even if you go back 50 years, there was more of a community type focus.
And when you look in family environments, the West has become pretty isolated in terms
of family-based contribution to our parents and elders and stuff like that in comparison
to the East.
And we all know, like when you do something nice for another human, it just feels good.
And that's just useful.
The fact that that's a reality doesn't mean contribute
to others just to make yourself feel good.
It's very useful that doing something kind
for another human helps.
And you can think about this in loads of minor scenarios.
Like even this morning, I got home from my walk
and I live on like a street in a town
and there were a number of, there were like four of the bins
from the different apartments here where I live. And it's not my duty to take all those
bins into everyone's houses. I could leave them on the road. It's not, I don't have a
responsibility to do that. But in my brain, I then look at the bins and I think that's
contribution that helped them out. And I don't do it just for me, but I also know in my brain
out that will have built oxytocin. That makes me feel more connected, more like I'm contributing
and consciously thinking, am I contributing?
And also just recognizing the contribution you're making
to your kids, your family, your partner, your work.
Acknowledging it within your own mind is important.
I love the idea also,
when you take the bins in for somebody else
where they didn't expect it, it wasn't your job,
you just did it, it makes you feel good.
And at the same time, if somebody comes out
and they're like, oh, I gotta go take the bins in.
And they're like, wait, somebody did this already.
And it almost, I would imagine it creates a little bit of a flip in the switch of the
way that you feel about society writ large.
It's sort of like, like there's a lot of bad stuff happening around.
Like maybe I don't agree with a lot of people, but there's kindness around me too.
And this was just like a little tiny reminder in a way that I didn't see coming.
Yeah.
Your brain wants to feel like it's in a group
that's working together.
It doesn't want to feel like a super isolated species.
And that's, I used to live in central London
and it was really tricky
because there was so many people around,
but I was like way more isolated than ever
because no relationships with all the neighbors
in the coffee shops, no one knew who I was.
And because it's too many, it's just so many people.
And for me, that was tricky.
And in that scenario with the bin,
I didn't knock on the doors and say,
hey, by the way, I took the bin in, thank me.
Like they'll never have an idea
who it was that took the bin in.
But it's useful for them
and it's beneficial to me to contribute.
Yeah, I love that.
Serotonin, next up on our list.
Yeah, so serotonin is fascinating.
90% of the serotonin within our system
is generated in the intestinal lining within
our gut.
Literally in the lining of our gut, in our intestine, our serotonin is built.
10% is then generated in the brain.
The serotonin in the gut doesn't directly cross the blood-brain barrier straight into
the brain, but you have something called your vagus nerve, which is reading the state of
the gut and then relaying that information towards the brain.
And our gut really wants a nice calm life, like moments of deep calm and presence.
It wants lots of great nutrients in there.
It wants lots of good sleep.
It wants lots of sunlight throughout the day.
Unfortunately, that's quite far from the reality of what it gets.
It gets a lot of unnatural nutrients coming into it, poor sleep, a lack of sunlight.
And this is the chemical that just wants us all to be
running around in the nature in the sunshine,
like eating fruit basically.
And the more we can lean towards getting moments
like that, the better.
So it's sort of like the good mood, good energy chemical.
And I think a lot of us have heard of serotonin.
You're like, yeah, there's a huge category of drugs,
SSRIs, SNRIs, which are, which effectively, from what my understanding, they don't actually produce more serotonin. There's a huge category of drugs, SSRIs, SNRIs, which effectively, from what
my understanding, they don't actually produce more serotonin. What they do is they stop
the brain from re-uptaking it more quickly. So it sticks around longer so we can experience
the effects of it longer. But the effect is calm, relaxed, feel good, and good energy.
And probably it's going to be a big surprise for a lot of people listening that so much of this is actually produced in the gut and not in the brain itself. So
gut health has got to be a really important part of your serotonin balance then.
Yeah, crucial. And if I was picking two things that were the most important things for us
to focus on for our brain chemistry, it would be food and phones. I think if we get the
phone right and we get the food right,
I think those can be two big levers that have a big impact.
And for our gut, we have a great clinical nutritionist
at DoseLab that's really deeply studying this.
We're writing a cool paper on it at the moment.
And we have gut lining within our gut
that's enabling us to hold the nutrients
that are entering our body,
that are entering the gut specifically.
When the ultra-processed food type ingredients turn up,
I know America's having loads of conversations
about ultra-processed food at the moment,
I seem to see headlines on that,
they begin to disrupt the gut lining effectively
because they're very harmful to the gut,
they're very toxic and they create little gaps effectively,
little tiny micro holes within our gut
that then cause a huge amount of inflammation to happen within the gut.
And then our serotonin system, that's the last of its priorities at that point, building
serotonin.
It begins to focus on detoxification of the challenge that's happening within the gut.
And our gut really wants all these natural foods.
Could be a vegetarian diet, could be a meat diet, but it wants foods that were here on
earth before we got here as humanity.
When those foods turn out, they break down into a variety of amino acids like tryptophan.
Tryptophan is a key building block for serotonin. There is a life where you only eat natural
foods. I really believe it to be possible. For many people that are within our dose lab
process, they've come from lots of UPF diets to diets where there is literally zero UPF.
That could seem almost extreme.
It could seem like diet culture, but it's really not.
Like it's not dieting to only eat natural foods.
It's really just what the body has wanted for a long time.
And the longer you go with just natural foods, the more you're craving
for this modern diet begins to reduce.
Yeah, that makes sense.
And UPF, for those who don't know that acronym yet, ultra-processed food is what we're talking
about here.
Ultra-processed food.
And there's a lot of stuff in ultra-processed foods that's very intentionally designed to
really impact how our body connects with food.
We have these two hormones within the gut, ghrelin and leptin.
Ghrelin makes us really hungry.
Leptin makes us full.
The UPFs are quite strategically designed to make our ghrelin go crazy, so we're super
hungry and our leptin to switch off.
So we're not full at all.
And when you eat like a bag of Doritos, for example, you can just nail the Doritos.
Nothing really changes in your satiation.
Whereas when you're eating some chicken, a steak, salmon, fruit, nuts,
your brain begins to go, cool, pretty satisfied with that.
That was great.
That's the sort of feeling you're wanting to create with food.
Nature and sunlight are also things. and you kind of reference this,
like for us to be out in nature and to be out in the sun.
And I know for me, just intuitively, this has been my go-to.
If I'm kind of cranky, if I'm kind of low energy,
I'm incredibly fortunate to live in Boulder, Colorado.
I can walk out my front door and be surrounded by breathtaking nature
and often a lot of sun,
different than the UK where there's not nearly as much sun. But these are like, I've just, I've seen within a matter of minutes,
these just have a profound effect on my mood. Yeah. And that really is serotonin in action.
If the mood stabilizes or improves, it's serotonin that's coming into play there. And a lot of the
cool research comes out of Japan around nature and serotonin.
The Japanese created a concept called forest bathing, which has been really powerful for
Japan over the last 20 years. They created this term called karoshi, which is someone that's
really burnt out from intense experiences within urban environments with work and technology and
people that are very burnt out and mentally exhausted. They started prescribing all the way
back in 2008 something called shinrin-yoku, translates to forest bathing just to see if it would have any
impact on their mental state. Rapidly you see what's called serum serotonin rise within the brain
and body and a great scientist called Dr. Keeling has looked into this. If you're interested in that
real deepening into nature, if you search his name of forest bathing, it's pretty cool.
in that real deepening into nature. If you search his name of forest bathing, it's pretty cool. It's just really important to understand that we literally spent millions of years
walking around in a forest and then now we're not doing that. We could never even get away from it.
Nature was all there was. When we're in a forest or any form of nature, mountains, rivers, parks,
the brain effectively is getting a signal that it's home. It basically thinks, oh, I'm at home now.
Like I'm in a safe environment.
The serotonin rises, the nervous system regulates.
And one of the big benefits in the modern world
is we get very hyper stimulated
by these computers and phones.
And then sometimes if you go and try and sit on the sofa
and chill out, like if I told you to just go
and sit on the sofa and do nothing after this,
your brain would be like really rapidly operating. It'd be quite hard to just go and sit on the sofa and do nothing after this, your brain would be like really rapidly operating.
It'd be quite hard to just sit and chill.
Nature offers such a perfect way to calmly de-stimulate the brain so that then you can
properly relax.
After these calls this evening, I'll always go and get a bit of nature to chill me out
so that when I relax, I actually relax and I'll be able to be off my phone.
If you just go from tech to tech to tech to tech, it's very hard to ever enter like a nice, peaceful,
high serotonin stay.
I mean, I've experienced that so many times.
Oftentimes, I'll actually, I'll hike in the middle of the day
because I'll have an intense morning.
Maybe we're recording, maybe we're just like doing something.
And then I know that from my brain
to actually be able to function the way I want it,
maybe I want to drop into a writing mode in the afternoon,
I've actually got to get into nature
because I need the reset.
Yeah, for sure.
To be able to be dropped back into the mode
where I'm like, okay, so now I can,
like I have this new window where I can feel good.
I can drop in and do really good work again.
I was just going to add that one of the big recommendations
I would have is to really create a framework in your brain
where headphones don't come with you into nature anymore.
And that can seem unusual because I understand
like podcasts are really cool, definitely, given
that we're having this conversation.
But I think there needs to be time where it's just you and your brain, even if it feels
uncomfortable.
For me, it actually feels quite uncomfortable at first when I go into nature without stimulation.
Those thoughts have their moments to come through different challenges and worries.
Eventually, though, once they've had their moments to be heard, a nice peaceful state
can arise and a lot of creativity can come from there, a lot of gratitude and love and goal
planning and direction can come from there. So nature, headphone free, heaven for the serotonin.
Yeah, so agree with that. Let's drop into the last one here, endorphin.
I briefly mentioned at the beginning that stress really evolved as something that was
designed to be supported with physical action.
What I basically mean by that is in the modern world, we have loads of what we call micro
stressors that are stressing us out.
You might see someone's political opinion, you think, oh, I hate that.
That's really annoying.
That stressed me out.
Then something with your bank account and then like 10 emails come through and then
something happens with your wife.
It's just a lots of tiny little things stressing us out.
Originally, the main things that stress us out
were starving to death or chased by an animal.
And those would have equally been extremely stressful.
But in those scenarios, your body is doing one thing.
It's moving hard and fast.
It's going to be moving a lot in order to tolerate
the experiences coming its way.
To find the food, to survive the threat and
Endorphins basically evolved as this chemical that in intense stress
They would come in when our body was physically taking action to take the stress back out of our mind so that we could survive
So you didn't run away going. Oh my god. I'm gonna die. Your brain just got locked in similarly when you are hungry
You weren't like I'm so hungry. I'm so hungry. I'm gonna die. You just got locked in to Similarly, when you are hungry, you weren't like, oh, I'm so hungry. I'm so hungry. I'm going to die. You just got locked in to try and find the food.
Nowadays, with all those micro-stressors that I mentioned before, what typically happens
is things stress us out and our body remains dead still. And it just swallows more and
more and more stress. And you'll notice when you exercise, you get this stress relief experience
or when you go for a walk or when you hike. And our body really wants us to physically release
the stress from our body through movement
by activating endorphins.
So movement is one of the key things to activate endorphins,
which then helps us sort of de-stress or release the stress.
Yeah, definitely.
Like after work, you never want to go straight to the sofa.
You always want to move your body first,
get a bit of an endorphin release.
Whenever you have the energy and the motivation to work out or walk up a hill or even just
like go to the park and sprint like 20 meters, just anything that will really get the body
to activate, it's going to be super, super beneficial.
Then there's a variety of other ways we can activate the body.
Things like stretching, super powerful.
That could be things like yoga if you're quite committed down that lane.
Even just a few minutes of standing up,
stretching your body in between tasks,
in between calls, really powerful.
For me, I've also started making a conscious effort
to actually have calls with headphones in,
ironically after I just mentioned headphones there,
but just walking around,
like I literally just walk around my town here.
So that's not necessarily one of my nature experiences.
If ever a work call could be done on the move, definitely do it on the move because your body needs
more movement, more stretching, and then we can explore another few lanes if you want
to.
And it's funny, I, for years, I have, my default has always been to take calls with headphones
on and being outside walking. And this is pre pandemic time and then pandemic comes
and everybody switches to video as the primary mode of meetings and conversations.
And I still, when people want to meet with me,
I'm like, look, if there's an important reason
where we need to be on screen, then let's do video.
But if there's not, I'm gonna default to the phone,
I'm gonna have a headphone on,
and you're probably gonna hear a little bit
of outside noise when we're walking.
And people are kind of like, for a hot minute,
they're like, oh, that's weird,
because everyone's so devalted to being in a chair in front of a screen now.
And then they're kind of like, you know what?
I'm gonna do the same thing.
I'm putting on my earbuds and I'm gonna go out
and walk around and wanna talk to you too.
And it's a little jarring to have that reset,
but then I find it's so much better for me.
I think so much better when I'm moving my body.
I'm just tuned in a different way.
And I also feel like I can connect better with people when I'm moving in a weird way.
100%. You can have great conversations in those environments.
Like even this afternoon, I had a really important conversation with the director at Harper Collins
about my new book. And that would be one of those pressure conversations where a year ago,
I would have thought, it has to be on the computer. I've got to be locked in.
But the knowledge of what you've shared there, like if I go for a walk whilst I have that
call, like I'm going to actually probably communicate in a really effective and clear
and creative way. And she also chose to do a walk as well at the same time, which is
really cool. And so we were both walking around chatting about this and that's a great approach
to take. Obviously, sometimes you've got to share your screen and present or whatever
it might be. But if the opportunity presents, take it. We need 10,000 steps a day,
and it's actually quite a lot of effort to get there.
Yeah, I so agree.
Music is also one of the modes that you talk about
that affects endorphins,
which I thought was really interesting.
There's no doubt music for me is one of the great joys.
It's one of the mood changers for me.
If I'm kind of tired, if I'm kind of stressed out,
and I just put on my favorite playlist,
and then I go walking and listening to the playlist,
or even if it just lie down with headphones on,
it just completely transforms my experience
in the way that I feel.
But I never really thought about it
as something that would affect endorphins.
Yeah, it's interesting.
There's kind of two chemicals
that can be at play with music.
If you were kind of lying on the sofa,
listening to some music that you really like,
and you were just
passively listening to it, and it was calming you, and it was regulating your nervous system.
That could have a big impact on serotonin. That could help bring your brain into presence.
Where endorphins really come into play with music and how it can be so effective for de-stressing
you is when you sing or dance to the music, because the body really wants physical activation. If you just sort
of like hum to it one day in the car, just hum to a song, then one day really sing to
it in the car. And you don't have to be good at singing, it's relevant how good you are.
I'm not a good singer, but I sing a lot now. And you'll notice that if you really sing,
it creates a very euphoric experience. It's not just calming. It's actually like euphoria
to sing. There might be a time in your life where you have really sung with your friends on, your owner in the shower, in the car,
at a silent disco. Funny, at silent discos and people have their headphones on because suddenly
they feel like this confidence to sing in front of others because no one can hear them.
And real euphoria can come from singing. For hundreds of thousands of years, singing and
chanting was a big part of humanity and a lot of the religious practice involved a lot of singing as well.
And singing out loud is something that you might think in your head,
well, it's been like a week since I sung out loud.
Maybe longer could be a year since you sung out loud.
Singing out loud to music, walking in the car at home,
super powerful for the endorphins.
Okay. So you just give me permission to strap on headphones.
When this conversation ends, go out in my neighborhood,
walk around and sing at the top of my lungs.
My neighbors might not love it all that much,
but I'm good.
They might not be sure about it,
but they might ask you, what the hell are you doing?
And you can say, it's for my endorphins.
You gotta do it too.
Right, exactly.
I'm tuning my brain.
I'm giving it what it needs.
It's therapeutic.
100%.
That's beautiful.
So, and again, we shorthand that as dose, right?
We have these four different chemicals.
And what I love about this is there are so many
of the different things that we've talked about here.
It's not something where you have to go somewhere,
where you have to buy something, where you have to...
Like these are just accessible interventions.
These are things that almost anybody can do.
They can customize it, tailor it to whatever it is.
If it's their abilities or limitations, their lifestyle.
So nobody is excluded from the invitation to actually drop in and really experience
this dose effect that you described.
Definitely.
Within the dose effect, within the book, what we basically did was we made it into 20 actions.
These are 20 behaviors we study, many of which we've chatted through throughout this.
And as you say, there's no cost in any of them.
They're all just natural things that humans are deeply, deeply craving and not quite getting
enough of.
Some of the things you might be nailing, like you mentioned, you might already be hiking
loads in beautiful nature.
That's amazing and for those, it might be really affirming and help you think, cool,
that's great that I'm doing that.
For others, things like with the phones, for example, more discipline when you wake up
in the morning, more breaks in the evening.
These can be really useful things to add in.
Love that.
It feels like a great place for us to come full circle as well.
So in this container of good life project, if I offer up the phrase to live a good life,
what comes up?
To live a good life, I would say to really contribute to your family, to a really good
job of being there for your family family to find a way to create instead
of consume all the time. I think humans are such an amazing creative species and
I think it's getting reduced by our consumption. So I'd say create, over
consume, deeply contribute to your family and I really just think we need to spend
as much time in nature as we possibly can. I think that's the goal. The way to live in harmony with tech is to spend a lot of time in nature balancing it out.
Thank you.
Thanks for having me.
Hey, before you leave, if you love this episode, say that you'll also love the conversation we have with Julia Hotez
about social prescribing using movement, nature, art, service and belonging as potent prescription strength remedies.
You can find a link to that episode in the show notes.
This episode of Good Life Project was produced by executive producers Lindsay Fox and me,
Jonathan Fields. Editing help by Alejandro Ramirez and Troy Young. Christopher Carter
crafted our theme music. And of course, if you haven't already done so, please go ahead and
follow Good Life Project in your favorite listening app or on YouTube too. If you found this conversation
interesting or valuable and inspiring, chances are you did because you're still
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person even, then invite them to talk with you about what you've both
discovered to reconnect and explore ideas that really matter, because that's how we
all come alive together.
Until next time, I'm Jonathan Fields, signing off for Good Life Project.
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