Huberman Lab - AMA #16: Sleep, Vertigo, TBI, OCD, Tips for Travelers, Gut-Brain Axis & More
Episode Date: February 29, 2024Welcome to a special edition of the 16th Ask Me Anything (AMA) episode, part of Huberman Lab Premium, recorded in Sydney, Australia. This episode is a recording of a live stream AMA, originally exclus...ive to our Premium members. We've decided to make the full-length version available to everyone, including non-members of Huberman Lab Premium. Huberman Lab Premium was launched for two main reasons. First, it was launched in order to raise support for the main Huberman Lab podcast — which will continue to come out every Monday at zero-cost. Second, it was launched as a means to raise funds for important scientific research. A significant portion of proceeds from the Huberman Lab Premium subscription will fund human research (not animal models) selected by Dr. Huberman, with a dollar-for-dollar match from the Tiny Foundation. If you're not yet a member but enjoyed this full-length livestream AMA, we invite you to join Huberman Lab Premium. By subscribing, you'll gain access to exclusive benefits including our regular monthly full-length AMA episodes, AMA transcripts, podcast episode transcripts, early access to live events and more. Additionally, a significant portion of your membership proceeds contributes to advancing human scientific research. You can learn more about the research we were able to support in our Annual Letter 2023. If you're a Huberman Lab Premium member, you can access the transcript for this AMA episode here. Timestamps (00:00:00) Introduction (00:02:34) Achieving Key Health Pillars While Traveling (00:07:11) Improving Sleep Quality (00:13:11) Understanding and Managing Vertigo (00:20:44) Enhancing Brain Function Post-TBI (00:26:58) Getting Closer to Unraveling OCD (00:30:44) Adjusting Circadian Rhythms for Travel (00:34:58) Optimal Dosage for Fish Oil Supplements (00:40:17) Monitoring Hormone Levels (00:46:09) Optimizing the Gut-Brain Axis (00:52:04) Best Practices for Tongue Cleaning (00:56:36) Conclusion & Thank You Disclaimer
 Transcript
 Discussion  (0)
    
                                         Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
                                         
                                         Hello everybody and welcome.
                                         
                                         I want to thank all of you premium Huberman Lab Podcast subscribers for joining.
                                         
                                         This is an exciting one, even though the backdrop here looks very much like the studio back in the United States.
                                         
                                         the backdrop here looks very much like the studio back in the United States. I am doing this
                                         
                                         AMA Live from Sydney, Australia, where I and the Huberman Lab podcast team have been
                                         
                                         for well over a week. We were in Melbourne and we just did two live shows here in Sydney and we're headed off to Brisbane tomorrow and it's been absolutely delightful. We've had so much fun
                                         
                                         to Brisbane tomorrow and it's been absolutely delightful. We've had so much fun talking science, learning from people. It's a wonderful place. I want to get right into your questions
                                         
    
                                         and do my best to answer as many of them as possible as thoroughly, clearly and succinctly
                                         
                                         as possible over the next hour. So I'm going to dive into those in just a moment. Just one last
                                         
                                         important thing before I do that,
                                         
                                         which is that I wanna thank everyone
                                         
                                         for being a premium subscriber
                                         
                                         and let you know that we,
                                         
                                         based on your contributions to the premium channel,
                                         
                                         have already, as you know,
                                         
    
                                         supported four laboratories
                                         
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                                         Salt Institute and elsewhere for important projects
                                         
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                                         to important therapeutic breakthroughs
                                         
                                         that we will soon share with you on the Huberinland podcast.
                                         
                                         But that this year, 2024, we were fortunate enough
                                         
                                         to secure no fewer than $3 for dollar match donors
                                         
    
                                         who have generously agreed to match our contributions
                                         
                                         from the premium channel to additional projects.
                                         
                                         Those are going to head out to a number of different universities and researchers working
                                         
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                                         novel treatments for mental health issues, headache and migraine, some interesting stuff on immunology and cancer, mindsets and immune system function,
                                         
                                         and much, much more also nutrition, physiology,
                                         
                                         exercise, physiology, et cetera.
                                         
                                         So your contributions to the premium channel
                                         
    
                                         really do make a difference.
                                         
                                         I can say this because I'm familiar with the challenges
                                         
                                         of raising funding for doing truly breakthrough work
                                         
                                         and getting things quickly out to the general public.
                                         
                                         So thank you, thank you, thank you.
                                         
                                         And now without further ado,
                                         
                                         let's get to your questions.
                                         
                                         The first question was is,
                                         
    
                                         how are you managing to achieve your key health pillars
                                         
                                         while in Australia?
                                         
                                         And any other place you've enjoyed doing so,
                                         
                                         all while working so hard.
                                         
                                         Well, thanks for the question.
                                         
                                         I'll answer this question in the context
                                         
                                         of what I think we all can and should
                                         
                                         and really will do,
                                         
    
                                         because if you're a premium channel subscriber,
                                         
                                         certainly you're taking your health seriously.
                                         
                                         So first off, I think there's a bit of a misconception
                                         
                                         about the protocols on the Huberman Lab podcast
                                         
                                         being that we are all, including myself,
                                         
                                         super, super regimented about them to the point
                                         
                                         where we don't enjoy other things in life
                                         
                                         and that's simply not true.
                                         
    
                                         So I view the protocols of the Huberman Lab podcast
                                         
                                         as science-based, actionable, low-cost, zero-cost,
                                         
                                         minimal-cost in almost all situations.
                                         
                                         There are a few exceptions to that,
                                         
                                         but it really designed to mesh with the rest of life
                                         
                                         and enhance mental health and physical health,
                                         
                                         which of course means remaining social,
                                         
                                         staying on typical sleep schedules, et cetera.
                                         
    
                                         So the big ones for me when arriving here
                                         
                                         were of course to get morning sunlight
                                         
                                         as often as possible.
                                         
                                         It saw a beautiful sunrise this morning over Sydney,
                                         
                                         but even on the overcast days,
                                         
                                         we've had a few rainy overcast days
                                         
                                         to really make it a point to get outside and to get that morning sunlight.
                                         
                                         Also, our crew did travel in with a red light, not a red light panel, although I do have
                                         
    
                                         a couple red light panels, those little portable ones that I use from time to time. The red
                                         
                                         lights I'm referring to in reference to answering this question are the red lights, which are
                                         
                                         just red light bulb that we actually travel with a little red light bulb unit.
                                         
                                         It's just like a small, you know, screwing unit.
                                         
                                         You plug it in here with an adapter, of course.
                                         
                                         And then in the evening, we've switched off the lights
                                         
                                         in the place where we're staying.
                                         
                                         And it just brings the overall levels of cortisol down low
                                         
    
                                         very quickly, and it makes it very easy
                                         
                                         to get to sleep each night.
                                         
                                         It makes a big big difference.
                                         
                                         And this is a very low-cost tool. You could essentially purchase any red light, even red
                                         
                                         party lights and put those up and then switch off the regular overhead lights. It makes a big
                                         
                                         difference. That's probably even cost saving. We've also stayed fairly regimented about exercise.
                                         
                                         So this morning, took a great jog down to the ocean, jumped in the ocean. If
                                         
                                         you don't have access to an ocean on vacation, just getting outside and getting some movement
                                         
    
                                         early in the day can help shift your rhythm. Really the quad-fect of shifting your circadian
                                         
                                         rhythm in a new place or becoming an early riser if you want to do that is morning sunlight,
                                         
                                         movement, social engagement, and in my case, caffeine. Although some people would opt for
                                         
                                         eating breakfast, I just happen to prefer to eat a little bit later in the day.
                                         
                                         So when you combine those things, you are really amplifying that morning cortisol increase that I've talked about on the podcast,
                                         
                                         morning catecholamine release, so dopamine epinephrine and norepinephrine, and
                                         
                                         those act in synergy to create more
                                         
                                         early day and daytime mood focus and alertness and enhance the transition to nighttime sleep.
                                         
    
                                         But of course, that dimming of the lights
                                         
                                         and maybe even red light in the evening
                                         
                                         really, really can help.
                                         
                                         And so those are the biggies.
                                         
                                         And then of course,
                                         
                                         if you wanna shift your circadian rhythm really quickly
                                         
                                         to be on a local schedule,
                                         
                                         it helps to hop on the local meal schedule.
                                         
    
                                         But for me, that always means skipping breakfast.
                                         
                                         I'm not a big breakfast eater.
                                         
                                         I like lunch and afternoon snacks sometimes and dinner.
                                         
                                         So when you do all of those things,
                                         
                                         makes it very easy to stay with the health pillars.
                                         
                                         And of course, stress control is important.
                                         
                                         We're doing lives, there's a lot of work to do.
                                         
                                         So there's a daily for me, non-sleep deep rest
                                         
    
                                         or yoga, knee-drill protocol, by the way,
                                         
                                         you may be familiar with non-sleep deep rest
                                         
                                         and yoga, knee-drill terrific zero cost practice
                                         
                                         for reducing stress, replacing or replenishing dopamine and mental and physical vigor. I've talked about this in the studies that
                                         
                                         support this on the podcast. There is a Huberman NSDR script on YouTube that's again zero cost.
                                         
                                         But while down here, we recorded a 10 minute, 20 minute and 30 minute NSDR script with a view of
                                         
                                         a beautiful Sydney sunrise. Those should be posted to our Huberman Lab
                                         
                                         clips channel in the not too distant future, probably in the next couple weeks. And then you
                                         
    
                                         can have different duration NSDR scripts that you can use again, completely zero cost anytime you
                                         
                                         like. We've recorded also some additional meditations and we're considering putting out
                                         
                                         a Spotify album, if you will, of an SDR and meditations
                                         
                                         that are science-based of different durations. So if you like that idea, maybe just give a
                                         
                                         shout into the internet and hopefully we'll hear it or put a comment on in the latest episode of
                                         
                                         the Huberman Lab podcast on YouTube. And if that sounds like a good idea to you, we'll do more of
                                         
                                         that. These are again, zero cost, zero to access tools
                                         
                                         for enhancing mental health and physical health.
                                         
    
                                         So combining all of those is really what we've done.
                                         
                                         Next question was, is I have followed your sleep advice
                                         
                                         and I have seen a huge improvement.
                                         
                                         Great, happy to hear that, wonderful.
                                         
                                         But I still wake up at night
                                         
                                         and only get five or six hours.
                                         
                                         Is that enough?
                                         
                                         Can you please give more advice if possible?
                                         
    
                                         Well, first of all, thanks for tuning into the sleep advice.
                                         
                                         So the question of whether or not five or six hours is enough,
                                         
                                         really depends on person context.
                                         
                                         And by context, I mean, it can even change
                                         
                                         across the course of the year by life circumstances.
                                         
                                         The criteria for insomnia are very clear. Insomnia
                                         
                                         is excessive daytime sleepiness due to lack of sleep at night. Excessive daytime sleep
                                         
                                         sleepiness due to lack of sleep at night. So if you're not falling asleep during the
                                         
    
                                         day or you feel reasonably good throughout the day, maybe you only need a brief 10 minute
                                         
                                         to 30 minute nap in the afternoon. Some people nap, some people don't like to nap. Doesn't
                                         
                                         matter. But if you feel pretty good throughout the day and you have enough mental and physical energy
                                         
                                         and focus to complete the activities that you need to complete,
                                         
                                         then I wouldn't worry so much about five to six hours.
                                         
                                         And I wouldn't obsess over these kind of scary things
                                         
                                         that we hear, oh, if we're not getting seven to eight hours
                                         
                                         that we get to mention, et cetera.
                                         
    
                                         Because that's not necessarily the case.
                                         
                                         Everyone has different sleep needs.
                                         
                                         The other thing, and this is perhaps the most important
                                         
                                         thing for everybody listening to this really to think about, is QQRT, which
                                         
                                         is quality, quantity, timing, excuse me, quality, quantity, regularity and timing, QQRT, QQRT,
                                         
                                         which is an acronym coined by the great Matt Walker, author of the book Why We Sleep. He
                                         
                                         has her own terrific podcast in his own right.
                                         
                                         There's a series on the government lab podcast
                                         
    
                                         coming out soon.
                                         
                                         QQRT is what you really need to think about
                                         
                                         when you think about your sleep.
                                         
                                         So you wanna think about the quantity.
                                         
                                         How much are you getting?
                                         
                                         Well, you, Rima, who asked this question,
                                         
                                         are getting five to six hours a night.
                                         
                                         Okay, what about the quality of that sleep?
                                         
    
                                         Is it consistently five to six hours with no breaks
                                         
                                         or is there a break in the middle?
                                         
                                         One trip to the restroom in the middle of the night
                                         
                                         is considered normal and healthy for most people.
                                         
                                         If you're making multiple trips to the restroom
                                         
                                         in the middle of the night,
                                         
                                         you're waking up multiple times throughout the night
                                         
                                         on a regular basis, that's something to try and overcome.
                                         
    
                                         So the quality piece is important.
                                         
                                         Also, whether or not you remember your dreams
                                         
                                         or you don't, you want to make sure
                                         
                                         that you're getting ample amounts of slow wave sleep
                                         
                                         which dominates the first half of your sleep night
                                         
                                         and rapid eye movement sleep
                                         
                                         which dominates the second half of your sleep night
                                         
                                         because they have different roles
                                         
    
                                         in recovery of brain and body,
                                         
                                         namely slow wave, aka deep sleep is responsible
                                         
                                         for growth hormone release, aka deep sleep is responsible for growth hormone release,
                                         
                                         rapid eye movement sleep responsible for the unpacking or the uncoupling of
                                         
                                         emotions to prior day and previous day experiences, and in that way, actually,
                                         
                                         it's a kind of scrubbing out or a therapy for your emotional state.
                                         
                                         So are you feeling emotionally rested when you wake up?
                                         
                                         Is a good indication of whether or not you're getting enough rapid eye movement sleep. Some people like sleep trackers using their eight
                                         
    
                                         sleep or their whoop or their aura ring or something like that. I'm a fan of sleep trackers,
                                         
                                         but I think that relying too heavily on sleep scores can be risky. There are data from Ali
                                         
                                         Crumb's lab at Stanford showing that if people receive a poor sleep score, even though they
                                         
                                         sleep well, their performance will drop. If people get a poor sleep score, even though they sleep well, their performance will drop.
                                         
                                         If people get a good sleep score,
                                         
                                         even though their sleep was lousy,
                                         
                                         their performance is maintained or even enhanced.
                                         
                                         So you don't wanna take any one sleep score
                                         
    
                                         and overinterpret it.
                                         
                                         You wanna look at the average
                                         
                                         and compare that to your subjective experience of sleep.
                                         
                                         Maybe I would say go about halfway through your day
                                         
                                         if you can bear to do it
                                         
                                         before looking at your sleep score and see how to do it before looking at your sleep score
                                         
                                         and see how you feel,
                                         
                                         then look at your sleep score
                                         
    
                                         as opposed to the other way around.
                                         
                                         That might be a good way to adjust
                                         
                                         for that belief effect I just mentioned.
                                         
                                         But if you're getting enough quantity,
                                         
                                         let's say you get five to six hours
                                         
                                         and quality you're sleeping through that bout,
                                         
                                         maybe with one epoch of waking up.
                                         
                                         And then the regularity of your sleep
                                         
    
                                         is that you're going to sleep more or less
                                         
                                         at the same time each night, plus or minus an hour
                                         
                                         on let's say five to six days per week
                                         
                                         because sometimes we like to stay up on a weekend night
                                         
                                         and have some fun or something like that.
                                         
                                         And then the timing, you know,
                                         
                                         where that sleep is falling in your 24 hour schedule
                                         
                                         is really key.
                                         
    
                                         And here's what we're learning as a field
                                         
                                         that for many people who are early to bed,
                                         
                                         early to rise types, if they go to bed around 9 p.m., 9.30,
                                         
                                         and they only get six hours of sleep, they feel great.
                                         
                                         Whereas if they get the equivalent amount of sleep,
                                         
                                         but go to bed at 11 p.m. or midnight, they feel lousy.
                                         
                                         Similarly, if you're a night owl,
                                         
                                         you're somebody that really prefers to go to bed
                                         
    
                                         around one or two AM and wake up around,
                                         
                                         let's say 10 AM, if you take that equivalent amount sleep
                                         
                                         and you go to bed earlier, you're gonna feel not so good.
                                         
                                         So getting the timing of your sleep
                                         
                                         in the 24 hour cycle correct and fairly consistent,
                                         
                                         that's the R part of QQRT,
                                         
                                         correct is gonna be beneficial.
                                         
                                         So I wouldn't worry so much about five to six hours only.
                                         
    
                                         Here's what I would do, Rima.
                                         
                                         I would take that five to six hours,
                                         
                                         and before getting out of bed each morning,
                                         
                                         I would do a 10 to 30 minute
                                         
                                         and SDR non-sleep deep rest protocol,
                                         
                                         which will allow you to feel deeply rested,
                                         
                                         and frankly, to recover whatever bits
                                         
                                         of sleep that you perhaps misturing the night.
                                         
    
                                         I found that to be a tremendously beneficial practice.
                                         
                                         Waking up, if I don't feel thoroughly rested
                                         
                                         doing a 10 to 30 minute NSDR,
                                         
                                         then getting out of bed and continuing the day.
                                         
                                         And if you don't have time to do that,
                                         
                                         do that 10 minute, maybe 20 minute NSDR later in the day
                                         
                                         at any point.
                                         
                                         And I think you'll see terrific results,
                                         
    
                                         not just because you're recovering some sleep that you lost, perhaps during the night,
                                         
                                         or maybe you just need five to six hours, but also because you'll get better at falling and
                                         
                                         staying deeply asleep through the practice of NSDR in the morning or at some point throughout the
                                         
                                         day. I wouldn't recommend anything else elaborate unless you're feeling really exhausted during the day,
                                         
                                         in which case, then I would move
                                         
                                         to some of the more advanced sleep tools.
                                         
                                         I've had vertigo, I should announce, this is a question.
                                         
                                         I'm not just telling you about my vertigo.
                                         
    
                                         I've had vertigo on and off and wonder what causes it.
                                         
                                         Is it hormones, adrenals, autolists moving around?
                                         
                                         Ah, this person knows about the cochlea.
                                         
                                         Hydration, virus exposure.
                                         
                                         Zenana, I think is how you pronounce your name.
                                         
                                         Forgive me if that's not the correct pronunciation,
                                         
                                         Zenana.
                                         
                                         So vertigo is very interesting.
                                         
    
                                         Unfortunately, it's uncomfortable,
                                         
                                         but we can learn a thing or two right now
                                         
                                         that should be able to help you,
                                         
                                         Zenana and others,
                                         
                                         even if they haven't had vertigo.
                                         
                                         So vertigo, this perception of falling or dizziness
                                         
                                         needs to be distinguished from lightheadedness.
                                         
                                         So if you're ever feeling dizzy,
                                         
    
                                         it's worth stopping and sitting,
                                         
                                         or if you can't sit standing and closing your eyes
                                         
                                         and asking yourself a question,
                                         
                                         do I feel like I'm ready to fall straight down
                                         
                                         or do I feel like I'm going to spin and fall down?
                                         
                                         Because in answering that question,
                                         
                                         you can determine whether or not you are lightheaded,
                                         
                                         that would be the straight falling down,
                                         
    
                                         or you have vertigo, which is you're dizzy,
                                         
                                         which is that you're gonna spin and fall down.
                                         
                                         Now do this in a safe place, please.
                                         
                                         You can do this while bracing yourself against a wall
                                         
                                         or that's why I said ideally seated
                                         
                                         so you don't actually fall.
                                         
                                         But in most cases, if you're feeling that spin,
                                         
                                         if you're feeling truly dizzy, you're feeling vertigo
                                         
    
                                         and I'm moving my head around on purpose,
                                         
                                         then chances are you've got some issue
                                         
                                         in either your visual system or your inner ear.
                                         
                                         Okay, so since this is being recorded on video,
                                         
                                         I can display what I'm about to say.
                                         
                                         So your visual system and your inner ear system
                                         
                                         for balance have some really important features.
                                         
                                         I'm gonna make this a very quick tutorial.
                                         
    
                                         Your head, as you move through space,
                                         
                                         is experiencing visual images going by all the time.
                                         
                                         Your retinas, your eyes are essentially exposed to a lot of what's called visual slip. Imagine
                                         
                                         you're walking and you're trying to take a picture on your iPhone or if you have an Android phone on
                                         
                                         your Android phone and you're moving, it's going to be blurry, right? Well, there's a stabilization
                                         
                                         process in your body and brain. It's a magnificent one
                                         
                                         that frankly is built into all jawed animals, whereby your head, because it can move forward,
                                         
                                         so think nodding, right? So this is pitch for you, pilots, right? Yaw moving from side to side.
                                         
    
                                         This would be the no. This would be the no, no. So pitch, yaw and roll, which would
                                         
                                         be like the puppy look, right? Pitch, yaw and roll, pitch, yaw, roll. Those are the three
                                         
                                         major angles of visual slip. And in an absolutely magnificent set of things, Your inner ear has three hula hoop-like shaped structures,
                                         
                                         one that's arranged vertically, so up on its end,
                                         
                                         one that's at an angle of about 45 degrees to that,
                                         
                                         and another that sits like a hula hoop flat on the ground.
                                         
                                         And inside of each of those little hula hoop-like tubes,
                                         
                                         they're little stones called otolists,
                                         
    
                                         okay, you heard that word earlier,
                                         
                                         that roll around on the
                                         
                                         bottom just like marbles at the bottom of a hula hoop, such that when you pitch, nod,
                                         
                                         the marbles in the vertical hula hoop slide back and forth.
                                         
                                         When you say no, the marbles in that hula hoop lying essentially parallel to the floor move
                                         
                                         around and then the one at 45 degrees,
                                         
                                         when you roll your head from side to side, those move.
                                         
                                         And each of those sends neural signals
                                         
    
                                         that converge on the neural signals coming from the eye
                                         
                                         and get this, when you move through space,
                                         
                                         there is a precise offset of whatever visual slip
                                         
                                         you happen to be experiencing by walking,
                                         
                                         the images are moving,
                                         
                                         you're looking up, you're looking at buildings,
                                         
                                         you're looking around, you're talking to somebody,
                                         
                                         they're moving their head,
                                         
    
                                         and your eye is making little tiny movements,
                                         
                                         little micro saccades on the millisecond time scale
                                         
                                         that act as a perfect image stabilizer.
                                         
                                         So what this means, this is by the way called
                                         
                                         the vestibulorecular reflex, vestibular system
                                         
                                         ocular reflex.
                                         
                                         And it's mediated through a structure called the cerebellum in the back of the brain.
                                         
                                         This is why when you're on a boat, when the horizon is tipping back and forth, I have
                                         
    
                                         to be careful with this because I have such a prominent seasickness based on a prior experience
                                         
                                         that if I think about this too much, I might get nauseous.
                                         
                                         When that horizon is moving around, your system becomes uncalibrated
                                         
                                         because you can't really keep the system jolting about
                                         
                                         in a regular way, have to be really careful here,
                                         
                                         I'm getting dizzy.
                                         
                                         Notice I said dizzy, not lightheaded.
                                         
                                         And you will end up disrupting that slip process
                                         
    
                                         and you'll essentially overcompensate,
                                         
                                         which is why whenever you feel sick on a boat,
                                         
                                         they say look at the horizon, fixate to something
                                         
                                         at a distance.
                                         
                                         Okay, so if you have vertigo,
                                         
                                         almost certainly there's something going on
                                         
                                         in your inner ear.
                                         
                                         Yes, it can be caused by viruses.
                                         
    
                                         Yes, it can be caused by hormones.
                                         
                                         These things tend to be transient,
                                         
                                         but the most important thing is going to be to anchor the visual part of the vestibular ocular reflex.
                                         
                                         So what you're going to want to do
                                         
                                         is you're going to want to fixate on a point,
                                         
                                         maybe three or four feet away,
                                         
                                         and then you're going to actually want to move closer
                                         
                                         to that point, or if you don't have access to it,
                                         
    
                                         you would want to look at your hand,
                                         
                                         your finger out in front of you,
                                         
                                         and then slowly move it in toward your nose.
                                         
                                         At some point you'll feel like you're gonna go cross-eyed
                                         
                                         and you can stop at that point, then move out again,
                                         
                                         then in again, what are you doing when you're doing this?
                                         
                                         What you're doing is you're overriding the error signals,
                                         
                                         the incorrect error signals that exist
                                         
    
                                         in your kind of default setting at that when you have vertigo
                                         
                                         and you're forcing the visual component to dominate
                                         
                                         and then your inner ear mechanisms will adjust to that.
                                         
                                         So this is a very powerful tool
                                         
                                         if you ever feel nauseous or seasick.
                                         
                                         It's a very powerful tool.
                                         
                                         If you ever, like me, you sit in the back of an Uber
                                         
                                         and in the Uber is too small, you get out
                                         
    
                                         and you're like walk into a building
                                         
                                         where there are no windows.
                                         
                                         You're like, I don't really feel good.
                                         
                                         Get outside and look at a fixation point some distance away.
                                         
                                         This actually happened the other day.
                                         
                                         We went to the gym, we went inside this gym,
                                         
                                         we'd been in a van and then went inside
                                         
                                         and weren't feeling well.
                                         
    
                                         So we decided to get out and just take a walk
                                         
                                         and fixate to the longest distance possible.
                                         
                                         The fresh air probably helped as well.
                                         
                                         But when doing that, you are anchoring the visual part
                                         
                                         of the vestibular ocular reflex.
                                         
                                         Now that's far and away better than trying to avoid moving your head to not get those little
                                         
                                         stones moving around in the semicircular canals. Lots to say about this. I could go on and on,
                                         
                                         but hopefully you learned some biology and you learned how to not be nauseous if ever you feel
                                         
    
                                         dizzy or nauseous based on movement,
                                         
                                         motion sick.
                                         
                                         And we can talk about why you get motion sick,
                                         
                                         but it's through the vagus nerve, et cetera, et cetera.
                                         
                                         But this is a very useful tool.
                                         
                                         And if you're ever just not feeling well,
                                         
                                         unless you have a fever or something like that,
                                         
                                         I recommend getting outside and looking at the furthest
                                         
    
                                         fixation point with your vision that you possibly can,
                                         
                                         and then walking toward it as far as you can safely.
                                         
                                         If not, by actually just doing a few of these exercises
                                         
                                         of looking at your finger up close,
                                         
                                         that's going to be very good for anchoring
                                         
                                         the vestibular ocular reflex, and not every time,
                                         
                                         but many times people report feeling better,
                                         
                                         especially if you've moved from one closed environment
                                         
    
                                         to another closed environment,
                                         
                                         to another closed environment, and so on.
                                         
                                         Okay, next question is, what can
                                         
                                         be done to improve brain function for people that have been negatively impacted by things
                                         
                                         such as poor sleep, poor diet and TBI early in life? James, yeah, this is a great question.
                                         
                                         I get this a lot. I think that it reminds me that a lot of the conversation that we
                                         
                                         have on the podcast is about the good things that happen when you do things right and the
                                         
                                         bad things that happen when you do things wrong and the bad things that happen when you do things wrong.
                                         
    
                                         And while I think that's an important conversation,
                                         
                                         what I've frankly failed to do enough,
                                         
                                         and that's why I'm grateful for this question,
                                         
                                         because it gives me the opportunity to talk more
                                         
                                         about the fact that your system is very robust.
                                         
                                         There is neuroplasticity.
                                         
                                         And also, as my graduate advisor used to say,
                                         
                                         time machine's broken, which is not to say,
                                         
    
                                         you're out of luck, but I wouldn't spend any extra energy
                                         
                                         thinking about how many seed, not seed, excuse me,
                                         
                                         how many, I have to be careful.
                                         
                                         The seed oil debate is still a debate, it's unclear.
                                         
                                         How many trans fats you were exposed to in childhood?
                                         
                                         We know trans fats are bad.
                                         
                                         Everyone agrees they're bad.
                                         
                                         Governments agree they're bad.
                                         
    
                                         This is perhaps one of the few things
                                         
                                         everybody agrees on in the nutrition space.
                                         
                                         Trans fats are bad.
                                         
                                         When I was growing up,
                                         
                                         trans fats were abundant in foods.
                                         
                                         There were probably fewer of certain things
                                         
                                         that we have more of now that are bad,
                                         
                                         but we ate a lot of trans fats.
                                         
    
                                         We had margarine in our fridge.
                                         
                                         There were other things that were probably
                                         
                                         weren't good for us that we consumed.
                                         
                                         And every once in a while, I'll think, gosh,
                                         
                                         if I'd only been eating grass fed meats
                                         
                                         and fruits and vegetables and healthy grains as I do now,
                                         
                                         back then, imagine how much healthier I'd be.
                                         
                                         But I really don't spend too much time on it
                                         
    
                                         and I don't think you should either.
                                         
                                         I think the most important thing to remember
                                         
                                         is that biological systems, unless they're really damaged,
                                         
                                         you're talking about a major injury.
                                         
                                         And even then, they're very robust.
                                         
                                         You can overcome years, decades of poor use
                                         
                                         or misuse of those systems.
                                         
                                         That said, if you have the opportunity
                                         
    
                                         to take care of them now, I highly suggest you do.
                                         
                                         So for instance, if you haven't slept well for years, now's the time to get it right.
                                         
                                         I wouldn't worry about the past. Truly. You can always rescue
                                         
                                         some of your health and health span and lifespan. Poor diet,
                                         
                                         same thing. Just it's a just do it kind of thing. Just hop on,
                                         
                                         hop on the train of getting things right 80 to 90% of the
                                         
                                         time. TBI traumatic brain injury. Well, the episode of the
                                         
                                         Hebrew Middle Health podcast is out right now with Dr. Mark
                                         
    
                                         Esposito. He's an MD and neurologist, originally trained
                                         
                                         at University of Pennsylvania, now at University of California,
                                         
                                         Berkeley, we talk about TBI, you know, there are a lot of
                                         
                                         different forms of TBI, different origins, you know,
                                         
                                         everything from bomb blasts to car accident to construction work
                                         
                                         to just you know, slipped on the stairs at a party.
                                         
                                         I know someone that slipped on some wet floor at a party
                                         
                                         and has a brain injury.
                                         
    
                                         What do we know?
                                         
                                         Well, you get back to the basics.
                                         
                                         Sleep is going to be important,
                                         
                                         but there are some things like
                                         
                                         transcranial magnetic stimulation,
                                         
                                         certainly things that reduce brain inflammation
                                         
                                         like lymphatic outflow. So, lymphatic outflow is this washing of the brain at night that removes
                                         
                                         debris. Very, very important in the weeks and months after traumatic brain injury to get adequate
                                         
    
                                         sleep for that reason. But then there are things that also seem to perhaps improve outcomes from
                                         
                                         traumatic brain injuries such as hyperbaric chambers, so hyperoxygenation treatments,
                                         
                                         if you have access to those.
                                         
                                         Even things like elevating the feet slightly
                                         
                                         when you sleep by about five to 15 degrees
                                         
                                         is known to increase lymphatic flow during sleep,
                                         
                                         which can, we believe, by way of increased clearance
                                         
                                         of a bunch of basically debris, reactive oxygen species within
                                         
    
                                         the cells, but also debris outside the cells in the extracellular space. So between neurons,
                                         
                                         there isn't just empty space, there's all this like heavily glycolosylated stuff, which basically
                                         
                                         just means this kind of like spongy carbohydrate stuff that fills in the spaces, the clearance of
                                         
                                         some of the metabolites and some of the debris that's accumulated there by just sleeping with feet
                                         
                                         slightly elevated, definitely not falling asleep in a chair upright. That's the worst
                                         
                                         thing for glimphatic flow, things like that. Some people go kind of bonkers on all things
                                         
                                         anti-inflammation. They start taking tons of curcumin and they kind of get obsessed
                                         
                                         with inflammation as the enemy. I wouldn't do that. In fact, there's some negative effects
                                         
    
                                         of things like curcumin, turmeric, if you take in high doses, like limiting the amount of the hydro testosterone production, which is
                                         
                                         not good.
                                         
                                         You don't want that.
                                         
                                         Male or female, you don't want to take too much turmeric or curcumin.
                                         
                                         There are real issues with that.
                                         
                                         To say nothing of the studies that have showed lead contamination in a lot of turmeric, so
                                         
                                         you want to check the sourcing very carefully.
                                         
                                         If you do consume any turmeric, A little bit is probably fine,
                                         
    
                                         cooking with it is fine,
                                         
                                         but we're here, we're talking about supplementation.
                                         
                                         And just really not trying to turn inflammation
                                         
                                         into this terrible thing to the point
                                         
                                         where you're starting to do other things
                                         
                                         that are potentially damaging.
                                         
                                         There's some really interesting evidence
                                         
                                         that five grams, maybe 10 grams,
                                         
    
                                         depending on your body weight,
                                         
                                         of creatine monohydrate per day can enhance
                                         
                                         creatine phosphate metabolism
                                         
                                         in the forebrain and enhance brain function under conditions of high altitude or TBI.
                                         
                                         I take five to 10 grams of creatine, just creatine monohydrate powder.
                                         
                                         Frankly, any creatine monohydrate powder should be sufficient. There are other forms of creatine.
                                         
                                         They are not any better. Creatine monohydrate is the least expensive, fortunately. That mixed in water, you take it with or without food.
                                         
                                         Some people ask, does creatine make your hair fall out?
                                         
    
                                         No, it does not make your hair fall out.
                                         
                                         But some people do experience an increase in DHT
                                         
                                         with creatine monohydrate and there can be a DHT hair loss
                                         
                                         link.
                                         
                                         So if you think you're losing your hair from taking creatine,
                                         
                                         then stop and see, do the control experiment.
                                         
                                         It should grow back, but five to 10 grams
                                         
                                         of creatine monohydrate,
                                         
    
                                         something to explore hyperbaric chamber,
                                         
                                         something to explore excellent sleep, definitely do that.
                                         
                                         And I just wouldn't obsess over past ills or wrongs
                                         
                                         to the extent that it impacts your ability
                                         
                                         to try and correct those in the present.
                                         
                                         I would say that about most everything,
                                         
                                         but then again, I understand that as humans,
                                         
                                         because we can remember the past, the present,
                                         
    
                                         and the future that sometimes, you know,
                                         
                                         it's difficult to let go of the mistakes of past
                                         
                                         that we made, but that's just simply being human
                                         
                                         and I don't have a solution to that.
                                         
                                         Are we any closer to finding the cause of OCD?
                                         
                                         Well, I think we know what causes OCD.
                                         
                                         I think it's pretty clear that OCD is some form
                                         
                                         of miswiring in the basal ganglia,
                                         
    
                                         the structures of the brain that are involved in go action
                                         
                                         and no go withholding action type behaviors.
                                         
                                         And some malwiring of those structures
                                         
                                         to the dopamine reward system,
                                         
                                         because here's what's interesting about OCD.
                                         
                                         OCD involves obsessions, obviously, that's the O in OCD,
                                         
                                         compulsions, the actions, that's the C in OCD,
                                         
                                         but in a kind of weird twist of the neurology,
                                         
    
                                         OCD is a situation where the compulsion
                                         
                                         does not remove the obsession, rather it exacerbates it. Okay, the compulsion does not remove the obsession, rather it exacerbates
                                         
                                         it. Okay, the compulsion does not remove the obsession, it exacerbates it. So unlike an
                                         
                                         itch that you scratch with OCD, the scratching of the itch makes it worse, which is actually
                                         
                                         what we experience when we have a mosquito bite, which by the way, I have absolutely
                                         
                                         low mosquito bites. So one of my least favorite things in life. I have about 3,600 and counting pet peeves.
                                         
                                         That's definitely high on the list of those.
                                         
                                         The obsessive compulsive disorder
                                         
    
                                         is one that really needs to be treated,
                                         
                                         frankly, neurologically.
                                         
                                         It's one for which there are behavioral interventions,
                                         
                                         but it's clear that adjusting the pharmacology
                                         
                                         of the neural circuits involved in OCD really can help.
                                         
                                         Again, there are behavioral treatments,
                                         
                                         but for severe cases of OCD, it's just very, very clear
                                         
                                         that interventions which include SSRIs,
                                         
    
                                         which have been demonized, a lot of people say,
                                         
                                         oh, selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors are terrible,
                                         
                                         blah, blah, blah, blah.
                                         
                                         The serotonin hypothesis of depression is in true.
                                         
                                         Well, listen, the reality is this,
                                         
                                         that all treatments for depression that are effective,
                                         
                                         which include SSRIs, in some cases,
                                         
                                         cognitive behavioral treatments,
                                         
    
                                         all of these sorts of things, which have shown efficacy,
                                         
                                         are all about what?
                                         
                                         They're not about serotonin, they're about neuroplasticity.
                                         
                                         That's why some antidepressants center
                                         
                                         on dopamine and norepinephrine, others center on serotonin, they're about neuroplasticity. That's why some antidepressants center on dopamine and norepinephrine, others center on serotonin.
                                         
                                         They're about neuroplasticity.
                                         
                                         They're about changing neural networks.
                                         
                                         They're not about a neurochemical per se,
                                         
    
                                         but the neuromodulators such as serotonin
                                         
                                         allow an access point.
                                         
                                         They are a wedge into the neuroplasticity process.
                                         
                                         Now with OCD, in order to overcome these malwirings, it's very important to get plasticity. How do you get
                                         
                                         plasticity? Well, you, in my belief, you work with an
                                         
                                         excellent psychiatrist who can prescribe the appropriate dose
                                         
                                         of drug to release the appropriate amount of neuromodulator
                                         
                                         then, and this is really key, you have opened up the window for
                                         
    
                                         plasticity, but then it's really important
                                         
                                         that the proper behaviors are engaged in.
                                         
                                         And when I did an episode on OCD,
                                         
                                         I talked about what some of these are.
                                         
                                         For instance, the person is exposed to the stimulus
                                         
                                         that causes the obsession,
                                         
                                         or maybe this obsession arises spontaneously.
                                         
                                         They feel the impulse to complete the compulsion,
                                         
    
                                         the behavior, and they resist with the support of a therapist,
                                         
                                         but they're doing this in the context of having elevated levels of serotonin or some other
                                         
                                         neuromodulator that then allows fewer trials of resistance, fewer times of needing to withhold
                                         
                                         the behavior that this person so badly wants to perform because it's coming from within,
                                         
                                         it's this compulsion literally,
                                         
                                         then they are able to achieve plasticity more quickly,
                                         
                                         perhaps also transcurnal magnetic stimulation.
                                         
                                         So a conjunction of the correct behavior,
                                         
    
                                         the withholding behavior, maybe a replacement behavior
                                         
                                         that's often used, use a replacement behavior
                                         
                                         with the appropriate neurochemical milieu
                                         
                                         is the solution to OCD.
                                         
                                         Okay, next question is, if I'm just going to New York City from San Francisco,
                                         
                                         how do I control shifting my circadian rhythm
                                         
                                         by only three hours?
                                         
                                         So if you're going to New York City from San Francisco,
                                         
    
                                         the best way, frankly, would be to get up
                                         
                                         an hour earlier, two days before you head off to New York,
                                         
                                         and then another day you might try and shift by two hours
                                         
                                         before you go and then head to New York
                                         
                                         and do the last shift on the last day.
                                         
                                         Most people won't do that.
                                         
                                         It's just, you know, it takes a little bit of work,
                                         
                                         but they just don't have the time ability
                                         
    
                                         or your discipline to do that,
                                         
                                         but it is perhaps the best way.
                                         
                                         I would say the best thing to do
                                         
                                         is to know
                                         
                                         your temperature minimum.
                                         
                                         And I'll try and keep this pretty simple.
                                         
                                         If you typically wake up at eight a.m.,
                                         
                                         let's say just by way of example,
                                         
    
                                         that means that your minimum body temperature is at six a.m.
                                         
                                         Which means that if you wanna get up earlier
                                         
                                         in the days where you travel to New York,
                                         
                                         well in the couple of days before you leave,
                                         
                                         anytime between six a.m. and 10 a 10am, get some bright light in your eyes, even if you go back to sleep. So for instance, get up at 6am, set an alarm clock, I know you normally like to get up at 8am,
                                         
                                         get up at 6am, get some bright light in your eyes from artificial sources or from sunlight,
                                         
                                         maybe 5-10 minutes, then go back to sleep until 8am. You do that again the next night,
                                         
                                         and then you head off to New York, you'll find the shift to be much easier.
                                         
    
                                         Now here's what you don't wanna do.
                                         
                                         You want to make sure that you do not
                                         
                                         view bright light before 6 a.m.
                                         
                                         So in the middle of the night, if you get up,
                                         
                                         you need to use the restroom,
                                         
                                         try and use dim lights as dim as is safely possible, et cetera.
                                         
                                         And what are you doing when you're doing this?
                                         
                                         I could get into a long description of the science
                                         
    
                                         behind this and I'll probably do a podcast all about this at some point. you doing when you're doing this? I could get into a long description of the science behind this and I'll probably do a podcast
                                         
                                         all about this at some point.
                                         
                                         But really what you're doing,
                                         
                                         if you get up at six a.m. and getting some bright light
                                         
                                         exposure is, you think about it,
                                         
                                         you're kind of looking at a New York sunrise of sorts.
                                         
                                         If it's not a sunrise, you're getting some bright light
                                         
                                         that mimics sunrise, at least to some extent.
                                         
    
                                         Nothing's quite like sunrise, but to some extent.
                                         
                                         So in that sense, even if you go back to sleep,
                                         
                                         what you're doing is you're sending the light signal,
                                         
                                         the zeitgeber, the time signal to your circadian clock
                                         
                                         of your hypothalamus that it should shift,
                                         
                                         that you need to get up earlier.
                                         
                                         And indeed that will happen
                                         
                                         over the course of about two, three days.
                                         
    
                                         The other thing you can do,
                                         
                                         and I know this is kind of rare these days
                                         
                                         to get an answer like this.
                                         
                                         The other thing you can do is just fly to New York
                                         
                                         and force yourself to get up and just drink caffeine
                                         
                                         and get out and exercise and use the social rhythm
                                         
                                         of the activity of the city in order to get up earlier.
                                         
                                         But you will feel lousy late morning.
                                         
    
                                         And so you would only want to do that
                                         
                                         if you could access a brief nap of anywhere
                                         
                                         from 30 to 90 minutes late morning
                                         
                                         and then you'll feel fine.
                                         
                                         But my suggestion would be to,
                                         
                                         something back there like some animal
                                         
                                         or something likes that answer so much.
                                         
                                         So like that, yeah, it would be to just
                                         
    
                                         try and get a little bit of light exposure
                                         
                                         a couple hours before your normal wake up time,
                                         
                                         then go back to sleep in the two days before
                                         
                                         you head off to New York City.
                                         
                                         And of course, everything here was set in the context
                                         
                                         of the New York City,
                                         
                                         the flight from San Francisco to New York City,
                                         
                                         but the principle, the logic holds.
                                         
    
                                         And if you have any questions about this temperature minimum
                                         
                                         and wake up time and you wanna get your circadian
                                         
                                         clock right for travel,
                                         
                                         check out the episode that we did on jet lag and shift work.
                                         
                                         And I'm realizing now as I say this,
                                         
                                         and my team's here and they're listening, that I will do a video on the Huberoom Lab Clips
                                         
                                         channel where I explain temperature minimum and how to plug in your wake normal wake up time in
                                         
                                         order to essentially arrive at whatever time shift you want. We should probably put that out as a
                                         
    
                                         newsletter too, where it's a little chart where it, I currently wake up at 8 a.m.
                                         
                                         And then which means my,
                                         
                                         and then it'll say subtract two hours,
                                         
                                         my temperature minimum is 6 a.m.
                                         
                                         And I want to travel to whatever it is,
                                         
                                         I don't know, Sydney, Australia on this date from this city.
                                         
                                         And then we know the time change
                                         
                                         and then I can tell you exactly what to do for a couple of days.
                                         
    
                                         I've done this for various military groups.
                                         
                                         I've done this for people in close friends
                                         
                                         and who travel a lot and it works fabulously well.
                                         
                                         I can't eliminate jet lag for you.
                                         
                                         Don't I wish I could just eliminate jet lag?
                                         
                                         I can't do that, but I definitely can have the time
                                         
                                         that it takes for you to shift maybe more.
                                         
                                         Hi, hi.
                                         
    
                                         I love the Sydney show.
                                         
                                         Thank you, thanks for coming out.
                                         
                                         Thanks for coming to Australia.
                                         
                                         Thanks for having us. I take fish oil, but I'm not sure I'm getting the Sydney show. Thank you, thanks for coming out. Thanks for coming to Australia. Thanks for having us.
                                         
                                         I take fish oil, but I'm not sure I'm getting the dose right.
                                         
                                         What are your thoughts on fish oil and dose?
                                         
                                         I have lots of thoughts on fish oil.
                                         
                                         I think it's a terrific tool.
                                         
    
                                         I think every time I see a study or a news article saying
                                         
                                         fish oil, not shown to, I just go, oh gosh, all right.
                                         
                                         Well, listen, whoever's reading, wrote that article,
                                         
                                         you know, I take no pleasure in your declining health span
                                         
                                         or lifespan, but whatsoever,
                                         
                                         but the rest of us are gonna be taking fish oil.
                                         
                                         And here's why, there's just so much evidence
                                         
                                         that getting enough omega-3 fatty acids
                                         
    
                                         is great for brain health, body health.
                                         
                                         And I think that the issue around fish oil
                                         
                                         is typically around contaminants,
                                         
                                         so you wanna make sure that it doesn't have loads of mercury.
                                         
                                         So things like sardines, cod liver oil, et cetera, you can get those from natural sources,
                                         
                                         except there's one problem.
                                         
                                         I hate sardines and I don't want to slurp down a bunch of cod fat.
                                         
                                         I'm just not interested in that.
                                         
    
                                         So if you eat a lot of fatty ocean fish and it's really clean fish, great.
                                         
                                         I don't, most people don't.
                                         
                                         So I believe in taking a high quality fish oil.
                                         
                                         There are a lot of different sources of these.
                                         
                                         In fact, in the episode that we did
                                         
                                         with Dr. Rhonda Patrick,
                                         
                                         there's a link in the show note captions, I believe,
                                         
                                         that takes you to a chart of the different
                                         
    
                                         fish oil sources and their relative levels
                                         
                                         of contaminants, et cetera. But most of the rep fish oil sources and their relative levels of contaminants, et cetera.
                                         
                                         But most of the reputable brands out there
                                         
                                         are not going to have any contaminants
                                         
                                         because they've been cleaned out, it's been checked for.
                                         
                                         So I take the fish oil from AG1 or from Momentus,
                                         
                                         that's just me, there are a lot of other great sources
                                         
                                         out there, but I will say this,
                                         
    
                                         that's when I'm traveling and I take capsules.
                                         
                                         Typically, I like to take it in liquid form
                                         
                                         and I will take the liquid take it in liquid form.
                                         
                                         I have no financial relationship
                                         
                                         to the liquid non-capsule forms of fish oil.
                                         
                                         And I get the one that has a lemon flavor
                                         
                                         to overcome the absolutely disgusting flavor
                                         
                                         of cod liver oil.
                                         
    
                                         I guess, I don't know, presumably cod
                                         
                                         like the taste of cod liver oil, but I don't.
                                         
                                         So that's what I do.
                                         
                                         I'll take a tablespoon of that once a day
                                         
                                         in a protein shake.
                                         
                                         It tastes like lemon.
                                         
                                         It doesn't take as like cod.
                                         
                                         Thank goodness.
                                         
    
                                         And when I travel, I take the capsules
                                         
                                         from AG1 or Romantus or their excellent ones
                                         
                                         from other sources.
                                         
                                         I have lots of great sources out there.
                                         
                                         Now, what are we trying to do when we take fish oil?
                                         
                                         Yes, it can reduce inflammation.
                                         
                                         Yes, it can do a number of different things,
                                         
                                         but that's all by way of omega-3 fatty acid intake, right?
                                         
    
                                         Most people get far too much omega-6, right?
                                         
                                         This is why there's a seed oil debate.
                                         
                                         We're not gonna have that debate now.
                                         
                                         We put us all to sleep, frankly.
                                         
                                         The key thing is to get enough omega-3s,
                                         
                                         and they're hard to get unless you're eating krill,
                                         
                                         so unless you're a large, you know, booleen whale, you're probably not eating that much krill,
                                         
                                         if you're getting fatty fish, great.
                                         
    
                                         But when you take an omega-3 fatty acid
                                         
                                         in the form of fish oil,
                                         
                                         or you eat sardines for that matter,
                                         
                                         what you're getting essentially is the substrate
                                         
                                         for a lot of other important building blocks,
                                         
                                         not the least of which is the lipid bilayer
                                         
                                         that surrounds the neurons of your brain.
                                         
                                         And so basically the Omega-3 fatty acids provide
                                         
    
                                         the substrate for some key building blocks of nerve cells
                                         
                                         and other cells in the brain and body.
                                         
                                         And, and this is perhaps the most important reason
                                         
                                         I can think of,
                                         
                                         when you get out past one gram of the EPA form of Omega-3,
                                         
                                         okay, one gram of EPA form of omega-3 per day.
                                         
                                         It's clear there's a either mild to moderate
                                         
                                         antidepressant effect, so much so that one can,
                                         
    
                                         in some cases, talk to your psychiatrist or psychologist,
                                         
                                         partially offset the dosage of any antidepressant.
                                         
                                         I am not telling you to go off antidepressant medication
                                         
                                         and go onto fish oil.
                                         
                                         That is not what I'm saying.
                                         
                                         I'm just saying that there's some impressive
                                         
                                         clinical trials showing onto fish oil. That is not what I'm saying. I'm just saying that there's some impressive clinical trials showing that fish oil,
                                         
                                         if taken at dosages of one to three grams of EPA per day,
                                         
    
                                         can have a mild to moderate antidepressant effect.
                                         
                                         And I don't know anyone that wouldn't want
                                         
                                         to have better mood.
                                         
                                         So I take one and a half grams of EPA,
                                         
                                         which is not to say one and a half grams of fish oil.
                                         
                                         You need to look at the package and see how much fish oil, but then look at how much EPA. And typically it's
                                         
                                         less than one gram per serving. So you may have to take two servings. Some people say,
                                         
                                         well, is it safe to take two servings? I don't see any reason why not. And then of course,
                                         
    
                                         there are the high potency fish oils for which there is certainly one gram or more of EPA.
                                         
                                         Keep in mind that all this discussion about fish oil might sound kind of health food hippie store,
                                         
                                         forgive me hippies, health food store kind of stuff.
                                         
                                         But the reality is that EPA, high concentration EPA,
                                         
                                         is actually a prescription drug in the United States
                                         
                                         and elsewhere prescribed often for enhancing mental health,
                                         
                                         enhancing cardiovascular health and on and on.
                                         
                                         So, you know, we're not out on a limb or out on a fin as it were,
                                         
    
                                         when we're having this discussion,
                                         
                                         we're actually just talking about something
                                         
                                         for which there's a lot of clinical evidence,
                                         
                                         there's a lot of biochemical evidence,
                                         
                                         there's a lot of mechanisms.
                                         
                                         So I take anywhere from one to two grams of EPA per day,
                                         
                                         even if that requires taking six,
                                         
                                         rather than the suggested three capsules per day,
                                         
    
                                         or taking a full tablespoon
                                         
                                         or even two tablespoons of fish oil. And frankly, most people are getting too much omega six
                                         
                                         fatty acids and not enough omega three. So shout out to the fish oils. What is the recommended
                                         
                                         protocol for measuring hormone levels? Hmm, interesting. How frequently do you advise
                                         
                                         monitoring these levels to accurately determine their typical range? And I just have to try and pronounce your name. Volod Rezneschenko.
                                         
                                         What a cool name. Volod Rezneschenko. I'm a big fan of like two syllable first and I don't know
                                         
                                         how to do it today. All right. So Volod Rezneschenko. Thank you for this question and the opportunity
                                         
                                         to try and pronounce your name. So hormone levels, I think a good thing to do is in the absence of any apparent or suspected
                                         
    
                                         endocrine dysfunction. We're talking about you feel pretty good. You're wondering if you're good
                                         
                                         under the, if I say good under the hood, that just sounds like weird. It rhymes. If you're feeling
                                         
                                         pretty good, I recommend getting your hormone levels checked once, if you can, if you're feeling pretty good, I recommend getting your hormone levels checked once,
                                         
                                         if you can, if you're still in your teens,
                                         
                                         in your late teens, after you've gone through puberty,
                                         
                                         to establish a sort of baseline.
                                         
                                         Most people won't do that because it's too late.
                                         
                                         I didn't do that.
                                         
    
                                         Once in your mid-20s, again, we're talking about
                                         
                                         no suspected or apparent endocrine dysfunction,
                                         
                                         okay, in your mid 20s.
                                         
                                         So you have a baseline, something to compare to
                                         
                                         when you were in your say 18 to 20
                                         
                                         and again, when you're 25, that would be ideal.
                                         
                                         And then again, I would say when you're 30
                                         
                                         and then start once a year starting when you are 40 or older.
                                         
    
                                         I think that just, you know, just logically, I would love to know what my hormone levels were starting when you are 40 or older.
                                         
                                         I think that just logically, I would love to know what my hormone levels were
                                         
                                         when I was 25, when I was 30,
                                         
                                         maybe when I was, yeah, when I was 18, 25, 30, 35.
                                         
                                         And actually 35 is when I got my first blood draw
                                         
                                         for just getting a look under the hood.
                                         
                                         Like what's there?
                                         
                                         What are my estrogen levels? What are my testosterone levels? What are my growth hormone
                                         
    
                                         levels? This kind of thing. And then once you're 40 and older, I think once a year minimum. And I
                                         
                                         realized that some people out there are going to say, well, that's ridiculous. What are you going
                                         
                                         to do with that information? Well, you're going to do a lot with that information. You're going to
                                         
                                         figure out whether or not your LDL cholesterol is in healthy range. You're going to figure out whether or not your ALT is in the healthy range. You're going to figure out whether or not your LDL cholesterol is in healthy range. You're gonna figure out whether or not
                                         
                                         your ALT is in the healthy range.
                                         
                                         You're gonna figure out whether or not
                                         
                                         your APOB is in healthy range.
                                         
                                         You're gonna figure out a lot more
                                         
    
                                         than just whether or not your testosterone is,
                                         
                                         you know, 400, 600, 800, or 1200.
                                         
                                         And I think we also need to be careful
                                         
                                         about over-interpreting results of hormones
                                         
                                         because a lot of it has to do with the ratio
                                         
                                         of testosterone to estrogen,
                                         
                                         or the ratio of free testosterone to testosterone,
                                         
                                         both in men and women.
                                         
    
                                         So for instance, if your testosterone level is 900,
                                         
                                         but your free testosterone level is two,
                                         
                                         well, then you have a problem.
                                         
                                         Whereas if your total testosterone level is 500 or 600,
                                         
                                         but your free testosterone level is 15,
                                         
                                         well then you're probably doing pretty well.
                                         
                                         So I would say getting your hormone levels checked
                                         
                                         once a year after age 40,
                                         
    
                                         and prior to that, once every three to five years,
                                         
                                         starting at about age 18 would be ideal.
                                         
                                         But most people don't do that.
                                         
                                         They either don't have the disposable income.
                                         
                                         I certainly didn't when I was 18, 20, 25.
                                         
                                         And at that time it was really hard to get that measured
                                         
                                         unless you had a clinical problem.
                                         
                                         Now, if anyone has a clinical problem
                                         
    
                                         that they suspect or is real, then obviously more testing.
                                         
                                         I think great sources for endocrine profiling
                                         
                                         are things like Insight Tracker, full disclosure,
                                         
                                         they are a sponsor of the podcast,
                                         
                                         but they do an excellent job. They'll even come to your house. The flimbotomist will come to your
                                         
                                         house if you want, or you can go to a clinic so they make it all very easy. But there are other
                                         
                                         sources as well, right? I'll never make these AMAs or anything else about specific companies for
                                         
                                         its own sake. I just think Insight Tracker does a great job. There are a number of clinics like
                                         
    
                                         Merrick Health and others online clinics that will do that,
                                         
                                         but it's part of a more comprehensive package
                                         
                                         of agreeing to work with them.
                                         
                                         At least that's how I understand it.
                                         
                                         I hope I didn't get that wrong,
                                         
                                         but check and see.
                                         
                                         Nowadays it's pretty easy to find ways
                                         
                                         to get your hormones checked,
                                         
    
                                         but I would suggest that the following things
                                         
                                         at least beyond there, growth hormone or IGF-1,
                                         
                                         rather IGF-1 testosterone estrogen.
                                         
                                         This is true for women and men, by the way.
                                         
                                         So IGF-1 testosterone estrogen,
                                         
                                         they'll show up as ester dial on there.
                                         
                                         Free testosterone, dihydrotestosterone, cortisol.
                                         
                                         Keep in mind, morning cortisol is always elevated
                                         
    
                                         relative to afternoon cortisol.
                                         
                                         It will be impacted by food.
                                         
                                         So you want to go in fasted in the morning.
                                         
                                         Ideally, get this done early. Your creatinine levels, which by the way will be elevated
                                         
                                         if you're taking creatine or you're exercising hard, your doctor will say your creatinine
                                         
                                         levels are elevated and you say, well, great, well, my creatine intake is elevated too.
                                         
                                         So, you know, take that. It's not going to be a problem necessarily to check with your doctor. LDL,
                                         
                                         cholesterol, ApoB, and there are probably a few others that would be good to have in there for
                                         
    
                                         men and women, sex hormone binding, globulin, SHBG, and for women especially progesterone
                                         
                                         and prolactin and any of the progestins are gonna be important.
                                         
                                         And of course for women, the trick is going to be
                                         
                                         when you get your blood taken with respect
                                         
                                         to your hormone cycle, your ovulatory cycle.
                                         
                                         And to try and make that at least consistent
                                         
                                         from test to test, not necessarily having to go in
                                         
                                         both during the follicular and the luteal phase
                                         
    
                                         of your cycle, but always going in during mid-follicular
                                         
                                         or mid-luteal and that can be challenging to do perhaps,
                                         
                                         but that's going to be important because of course,
                                         
                                         those are widely fluctuating levels across the cycle,
                                         
                                         but unless you're really obsessed with your hormone levels
                                         
                                         and analyzing them, taking them at multiple times
                                         
                                         throughout your menstrual cycle,
                                         
                                         probably not necessary unless you're starting to think
                                         
    
                                         about conceiving or there's some issue, PCOS
                                         
                                         or other issue. Okay, I find that I need to NSDR after working
                                         
                                         out any thoughts on this? Yes, well, first of all, I'm glad
                                         
                                         you're using NSDR as your cost tool known to replenish my
                                         
                                         mental and physical vigor works oh so well. I think it's great,
                                         
                                         I think it probably is accelerating your recovery. I
                                         
                                         think this tells me that you're probably
                                         
                                         working out really hard and hopefully not too long.
                                         
    
                                         If you find that you work out in the morning
                                         
                                         and then you're really, really sleepy in the afternoon
                                         
                                         and the next day, you might be working out too long
                                         
                                         or too hard.
                                         
                                         So maybe ratchet back the intensity a little bit
                                         
                                         or the duration.
                                         
                                         It's amazing how great we can feel when we work out to like 80 to 90%
                                         
                                         of our maximum output and duration.
                                         
    
                                         We did this the other day.
                                         
                                         We went out for a little jog, run,
                                         
                                         bounding, skipping, jumping jack thing
                                         
                                         and stopped at like 80 to 90% of maximum
                                         
                                         and then went about the rest of the day
                                         
                                         and evening feeling great. If you do this, you know, consistently, you'll find you have more
                                         
                                         energy and there's actually a lot of solid physiology and physics to support why that is as
                                         
                                         opposed to if you go to the gym and you do every set to failure or even every exercise, you include
                                         
    
                                         one set to failure and you're grinding out four straps or you're, I don't know what kind of exercise you're doing
                                         
                                         or you're running more and more distance each day
                                         
                                         or with more intensity.
                                         
                                         You know, it's understandable how one gets kind of drawn to
                                         
                                         or addicted to that burn or the effort,
                                         
                                         but keep in mind that is stress.
                                         
                                         You're stressing the body to produce a certain kind
                                         
                                         of adaptation, either endurance or strength
                                         
    
                                         or hypertrophy or et cetera, adaptation.
                                         
                                         So, you know, there's real beauty in learning
                                         
                                         to love working out hard,
                                         
                                         but to leaving the gym or ending the run
                                         
                                         with 10 to 20% of the gas in the tank
                                         
                                         and knowing that you can come back and do more
                                         
                                         and you actually kind of want to do more.
                                         
                                         There's, it increases vigor
                                         
    
                                         as opposed to taking yourself over that cliff,
                                         
                                         even a slight 10 to 20% and then finding
                                         
                                         that you're kind of depleted.
                                         
                                         And this is something that we don't hear enough about
                                         
                                         because we, most people that are into fitness
                                         
                                         are into pushing themselves.
                                         
                                         It's also true for work.
                                         
                                         I think some of the best advice I ever got
                                         
    
                                         in the professional landscape was when I was a graduate student
                                         
                                         at UC Berkeley and an excellent neurologist
                                         
                                         by the name of Bob Knight said,
                                         
                                         the key is to figure out how much can you work
                                         
                                         each day consistently?
                                         
                                         If that's four hours a day, fine.
                                         
                                         If that's eight hours a day, fine.
                                         
                                         We're talking with weekend breaks
                                         
    
                                         because that was in the era of weekend breaks.
                                         
                                         Maybe a weekend every once in a while
                                         
                                         where you have a deadline.
                                         
                                         But by thinking about what you personally
                                         
                                         can really do consistently while maintaining sleep
                                         
                                         and mental health and physical health,
                                         
                                         you're gonna go a lot further than doing like,
                                         
                                         for instance, what I did, which is, you know,
                                         
    
                                         maniac and working 100 hour weeks as a graduate student
                                         
                                         and then ending up sick four times a year
                                         
                                         and missing out on a bunch of days
                                         
                                         when I could have been in lab.
                                         
                                         So these days I try and get as much focused work done
                                         
                                         as possible, but try and make that as consistent as possible,
                                         
                                         if not from every day to the next over time.
                                         
                                         You know, figure out what those averages are
                                         
    
                                         and don't be ashamed of those averages.
                                         
                                         I would say declare those averages to people
                                         
                                         so they know what to expect.
                                         
                                         And the fact that you can do more
                                         
                                         does not necessarily mean that you should do more
                                         
                                         because I think one of the best pieces of advice
                                         
                                         I ever got in the world of fitness
                                         
                                         is more important than training hard,
                                         
    
                                         more important than doing any particular exercises,
                                         
                                         more important than anything is to not get hurt.
                                         
                                         Because if you get hurt, you can't train.
                                         
                                         So I love that you're doing NSDR after training.
                                         
                                         I love that you're making that part of your practice,
                                         
                                         but maybe also throttle back a little bit,
                                         
                                         because you said I have to do it after training.
                                         
                                         Maybe throttle back a little bit
                                         
    
                                         on the duration or intensity of exercise
                                         
                                         and see how you feel.
                                         
                                         What can we do to optimize the function
                                         
                                         of our gut brain access?
                                         
                                         That's very simple.
                                         
                                         Get enough sleep in addition to that.
                                         
                                         Avoid excessive intake of antibiotics,
                                         
                                         but if your doctor prescribes them,
                                         
    
                                         take them, I am a believer in antibiotics, okay,
                                         
                                         before the internet jumps on me.
                                         
                                         I'm not anti-biotic.
                                         
                                         I always want to say that.
                                         
                                         I'm not anti-biotic. I am not pro-antibiotic. I always want to say that. I'm not anti-antibiotic.
                                         
                                         I am not pro-antibiotic, but I am pro-probiotics.
                                         
                                         I'm probiotic.
                                         
                                         So I think you should ingest one to four servings
                                         
    
                                         of low sugar fermented foods per day.
                                         
                                         So sauerkraut, kimchi, natto, or kefir,
                                         
                                         or otherwise whatever you like
                                         
                                         and fits with your nutrition preferences and plan.
                                         
                                         I think it's also very important
                                         
                                         that you don't overuse antiseptics
                                         
                                         like antiseptic mouth washes and hand rinses
                                         
                                         and all that stuff.
                                         
    
                                         This was all discussed on a podcast episode I did
                                         
                                         with Dr. Justin Sonnenberg on the Hubrind Lab podcast,
                                         
                                         which is just to say that Justin,
                                         
                                         who's a professor at Stanford and is amazing,
                                         
                                         even said that he lets his kids eat lunch
                                         
                                         when they've been playing outside without washing their hands before eating lunch because he wants the probiotic
                                         
                                         makeup of their gut to be diverse, including from outside. Now I'm presuming that's not a public
                                         
                                         park. I'm assuming it's their yard. So we're not talking about gross stuff being on their hands.
                                         
    
                                         We're talking about a little dirt here and there. Turns out owning a pet increases the diversity
                                         
                                         of your microbiome. Lots of things
                                         
                                         like that. I mean, you don't want to go around licking people's pets. It's okay to let them
                                         
                                         lick you, depending on what your preferences are, but don't lick them. But when you interact
                                         
                                         with people, you shake their hands, your pets, you're increasing the diversity of your microbiome.
                                         
                                         When you eat low sugar fermented foods, you want to make sure
                                         
                                         also you get enough fiber, both prebiotic and probiotic fiber, so fruits and vegetables.
                                         
                                         The fiber debate from me just like makes me roll my eyes. I mean, it's so clear that fiber is good
                                         
    
                                         for us, for gut motility and for offsetting cancers of the gut. I mean, I realize there are
                                         
                                         the people out there who are really into elimination diets where they just only eat meat. But I mean, there's just so much good data on fiber, especially from fiber's vegetables.
                                         
                                         It just seems like a what?
                                         
                                         Yes.
                                         
                                         I mean, it's almost silly that we have the debate, frankly, but I'm sure someone out
                                         
                                         there who's pure carnivore will be shouting.
                                         
                                         But guess what?
                                         
                                         You're shouting and you're constipated. Last question.
                                         
    
                                         Regarding the subject on tongue cleaning
                                         
                                         from the oral health episode,
                                         
                                         can you please share a bit on brushing tongue,
                                         
                                         scraping tongue and generally how best to clean the tongue?
                                         
                                         So tongue cleaning came up on the oral health episode.
                                         
                                         I talked to four different dentists
                                         
                                         and a periodontist in preparation for that episode.
                                         
                                         Almost all of them remarkably,
                                         
    
                                         extraordinarily converged on the same advice,
                                         
                                         except for some slight deviations around frequency of flossing.
                                         
                                         It's kind of cool, right?
                                         
                                         A field where almost everybody seems to agree.
                                         
                                         I realize that isn't the usual sample size,
                                         
                                         but I picked them from diverse locations,
                                         
                                         backgrounds, trainings, et cetera. Every of them said brush and floss your teeth.
                                         
                                         Everyone of them said antiseptic alcohol based mouth washes are bad. And every single one of
                                         
    
                                         them said that brushing your teeth before sleep is especially important because at night you
                                         
                                         produce less saliva and you want to be able to remineralize your teeth. That is fill in cavities
                                         
                                         that are starting to form while you sleep.
                                         
                                         So brush your teeth floss, ideally as well before sleep,
                                         
                                         but at least brush.
                                         
                                         And of course in the morning too, for everyone's sake.
                                         
                                         But if we're talking about tongue brushing and scraping,
                                         
                                         it was clear that tongue scraping was advised
                                         
    
                                         if done correctly, okay?
                                         
                                         Because there are certain bacteria that grow on the tongue that you don't want there
                                         
                                         and that scraping can help with the turnover
                                         
                                         of healthy bacteria there in addition to removing
                                         
                                         some of the bad bacteria,
                                         
                                         but that most people scrape their tongue too hard.
                                         
                                         And rather, it would be wise to brush your tongue gently
                                         
                                         with a soft toothbrush.
                                         
    
                                         And by the way, you should also use a soft brush
                                         
                                         for your teeth, but not the same one
                                         
                                         that you use for tongue brushing.
                                         
                                         So the takeaway that I was told,
                                         
                                         and it makes a lot of sense to me based on what I know now
                                         
                                         about the biology, physiology, and care of the mouth,
                                         
                                         is that you want to use a different soft toothbrush
                                         
                                         to brush your tongue than the soft brush
                                         
    
                                         that you use to brush your teeth.
                                         
                                         And that you do to brush your teeth.
                                         
                                         And that you do not need to use anything on it, but if you wanted to put a little bit
                                         
                                         of salt and baking soda, that is perfectly fine.
                                         
                                         A lot of people wonder whether or not baking soda scrapes the enamel off the teeth.
                                         
                                         It actually is low on the abrasion scale.
                                         
                                         Dentists have, believe it or not, an abrasion scale with a list of things of how much enamel
                                         
                                         it scrapes off at a given pressure.
                                         
    
                                         These dentists have done their work. It's really, really cool.
                                         
                                         I can't say I always liked dentists. I didn't like going to the dentist.
                                         
                                         They always seemed like nice people, but now I have newfound respect for dentists.
                                         
                                         They really care about their craft and oral health has been kind of pushed to the backseat of the different aspects of health.
                                         
                                         I consider it one of the major pillars of mental health and physical health
                                         
                                         because taking care of your teeth, your gums, your mouth, including your oral microbiome is critical
                                         
                                         for cardiovascular health, it's critical for brain health.
                                         
                                         One of the bad bacteria is streptococcus mutans
                                         
    
                                         that can proliferate in the mouth,
                                         
                                         especially after eating sugary foods,
                                         
                                         can make it through the blood brain barrier
                                         
                                         and maybe it's thought one of the causes of dementia
                                         
                                         can disrupt your neurons.
                                         
                                         Your brain and body is a system,
                                         
                                         everything's talking to everything else.
                                         
                                         And so yeah, brush your tongue,
                                         
    
                                         but use a separate soft brush to do that
                                         
                                         and replace it every few weeks to months.
                                         
                                         I suppose get expensive,
                                         
                                         but probably not as expensive
                                         
                                         as some of the other health issues that were just described.
                                         
                                         So I appreciate that question.
                                         
                                         We didn't talk about oil pulling on
                                         
                                         the podcast. A lot of people asked about that. Some people like to swish oil and then spit it out
                                         
    
                                         as a way that's oil pulling for oral health. And all the dentists I spoke to said,
                                         
                                         not big fans of oil pulling, but none of them said it would be particularly bad.
                                         
                                         If you enjoy it or you think it works for you, great,
                                         
                                         but none of them really pointed to any clear evidence
                                         
                                         that it was going to be beneficial.
                                         
                                         So I was told that was the last question
                                         
                                         and we are coming up on the hour.
                                         
                                         Again, I wanna thank everybody for joining this AMA,
                                         
    
                                         I'm doing this from Australia, Sydney, Australia.
                                         
                                         What's interesting down here is
                                         
                                         because we are below the equator,
                                         
                                         everything is reversed, right? So this was actually, it's being presented to you upside. I was,
                                         
                                         I'm actually upside down, but they turned the camera so I would appear right side up to you.
                                         
                                         I also, when I'm down here, I drink my AG1 normally, I swish it counterclockwise, but I
                                         
                                         notice here reflexively, I'm swishing it clockwise. So anyway, lots of interesting stuff going on.
                                         
                                         We'll talk about how that all works. It's not through the vestibular ocular reflex, it turns out, but maybe on a
                                         
    
                                         future episode of the podcast about the relationship between
                                         
                                         location relative to the equator and neural functioning. And
                                         
                                         I'm just kidding. But what I'm not kidding about is they
                                         
                                         appreciate that you tuned in. And last but certainly not least,
                                         
                                         thank you for your interest in science.
                                         
