Huberman Lab - AMA #18: Cold Therapy Advice, Skin Health Tips, Motivation, Learning Strategies & More
Episode Date: August 2, 2024Welcome to a special edition of the 18th Ask Me Anything (AMA) episode, part of Huberman Lab Premium. This episode is a recording of the live stream AMA, exclusive to our Premium members. We've decide...d 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 and other donors. 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 Introduction & Announcements 00:15 Supporting Mental & Physical Health Research 01:56 Exciting New Research Initiatives 03:39 Skin Health & Appearance 14:46 Cold Therapy Benefits & Guidelines 21:18 Self-Motivation Strategies 27:05 Understanding REM Sleep 28:45 Morning Routine: Exercise & Cold Exposure 29:17 The Importance of REM Sleep 29:49 Non-Sleep Deep Rest (NSDR) Protocols 31:27 REM Sleep Rebound & Compensation 32:55 Impactful School Strategies for Learning 34:19 Meditation & Micro Gaps in Learning 39:13 Physical Activity & Learning 41:01 Exploring Shilajit & Testosterone 47:51 Writing Process & Overcoming Obstacles 51:32 Addiction & Recovery Resources 53:47 Closing Remarks & Gratitude Disclaimer & Disclosures
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast,
where we discuss science
and science-based tools for everyday life.
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Okay, so without further ado,
let's get to answering your questions
about mental health, physical health and performance.
The first question comes from Robert.
And the question is,
is there any way to repair thinning skin as we age?
I'm 77 years old.
And in the last few years,
the skin on my arms has gotten noticeably thinner.
Thank you.
Well, thank you for this question.
It's a very timely question
given that we just had a solo episode.
I did a solo episode about skin health
and appearance on the podcast.
I should mention that that episode was reviewed
by a derm oncologist.
I consulted with different dermatologists
prior to that episode.
And my general sense is that it's been received very well.
There are a few areas within the skin health
and appearance field that are of controversy,
mainly around sunscreens.
I'll just go on record saying that it's very clear
that excessive sun exposure will age skin more rapidly.
Okay, that's just categorically true.
Okay, so if anyone's debating that,
there's an issue there, right?
There shouldn't be any debate about that.
It's absolutely true that sunscreen can help.
And there are sort of three major forms of sunscreen.
This relates to how to protect skin from thinning.
One is a physical barrier.
Pretty much nobody disputes a physical barrier,
a hat, a long sleeve shirt, long pants, et cetera.
However, those don't always cover all the areas
of the body that need sun protection,
such as the ears, the back of the neck,
portions of the face and so forth.
When it comes to sunscreen, sometimes called sunblocks,
I think there's general agreement that the sunscreens
and I'll use sunscreen and sunblock interchangeably
that are mineral-based that is inorganic,
meaning that the active ingredients are either zinc oxide
or titanium dioxide or some combination of those
up to a concentration of 25% are generally deemed safe
by most all dermatologists.
Now there are some people who will point out
that there's some controversy
around certain forms of titanium dioxide.
The evidence for that however, is not conclusive.
I would say that if you're really, really concerned
about any of that,
then just stick with a pure zinc oxide formula up to 25%.
Why would people not use zinc oxide formulas?
Well, they tend to be kind of pasty
and they don't spread on very easily
compared to some other sunscreen formulas.
Sunscreens that are quote unquote chemical-based, okay?
Everyone will say, well, everything is a chemical.
Yes, but they're chemical-based.
They use a different approach to blocking
or reflecting or absorbing UV rays.
Those do indeed have some controversy around them.
There are a few studies in which very large amounts
of those chemical containing sunscreens,
these are chemicals like oxybenzene, et cetera,
are applied to the skin,
and they do make it into general circulation.
They do blood draws.
They see that some of these chemicals
can be endocrine disruptors,
leading some people to believe that chemical-based
or sunscreens that contain some of these chemicals are to be avoided. Now, I want to be very clearine disruptors, leading some people to believe that chemical-based or sunscreens that contain some of these chemicals
are to be avoided.
Now, I want to be very clear on my stance,
which is if you need sun protection
and the choice is either to use those types of sunscreens
occasionally versus no sun protection,
I would say probably better to just use them.
But if you are picking a sunscreen, AK sunblock,
where you are going to be using it all summer
or very frequently, well, in that case,
probably best to go with a mineral-based sunscreen
because you'll be doing more frequent exposure application.
Okay.
And then of course, there are people that will argue
that the chemical-based sunscreens are in fact fine.
And if that's your threshold,
meaning that there isn't enough conclusive evidence
that they're problematic, then that's fine.
So those are the three general categories,
but yes, sun will damage the skin.
That doesn't mean you shouldn't get any sun exposure
to your skin.
Turns out that generating vitamin D, of course,
getting your circadian rhythms right,
hormone production, et cetera,
actually requires some exposure to sunlight.
You just don't want to do it
during the highest UV index portions of the day,
like the middle of the day.
You don't want to burn.
However, and please note this,
you do not have to burn
in order to put yourself at a greater risk for skin cancer.
So, you know, avoid burns,
but avoid excessive sun exposure for you as well.
Now, back to Robert's question.
The skin is thinning.
Why is it thinning? Well, as well. Now, back to Robert's question. The skin is thinning. Why is it thinning?
Well, as we get older,
the composition of the proteins in skin,
and there are many different proteins,
but in particular, the collagen and elastins
start to either mutate or weaken.
There could be less production of these.
The skin sometimes loses moisture as well.
And the basic solution to this is the following.
We know that sun protection will help.
We also know, and I covered this in the episode,
that there's some evidence, okay,
I would say it's moderate evidence.
It's not extremely strong.
It's not weak.
That ingestion of collagen proteins, believe it or not,
can improve skin elasticity
and the appearance of smoothness and plumpness
as it's subjectively rated in these studies.
You might ask yourself, well, how is that?
Is it that you ingest collagen?
And by the way, people typically do this
at dosages of anywhere from,
you'll see as low as five grams per day,
but as high as 30 grams per day of collagen protein.
Typically there's some vitamin C in there as well,
which seems to help its absorption or utilization.
And they will observe in these studies
over time, some improved elasticity,
appearance of smoothness and plumpness of the skin.
So should you ingest collagen protein?
Well, the results are again, statistically significant,
but they're not overwhelming in the sense
that you're not going to reverse all the thinning
and kind of what appears to be a little kind of local sagging
of the skin completely by ingesting collagen,
but it can help.
Collagen can be ingested through things like bone broth.
By the way, collagen is a composition of not just skin,
but of tendon and ligaments and things of that sort.
Typically people will get their collagen in powdered form.
It's relatively inexpensive.
There are a lot of different forms of this
from fish, from animal sources.
There are some plant-based sources.
It's a little unclear whether or not those are as good,
but in any event, five to 30 grams,
typically 15 to 30 grams in most of the studies
does seem to be moderately effective
in improving skin elasticity,
plumpness,
and appearance of smoothness.
Okay, so that's one area.
The other area where there's some interesting research
is red light exposure.
So red light exposure is an interesting one
because of course in sunlight,
we have full spectrum light, right?
If you ever put a prism out
and you get a light beam through it,
you need to get the rainbow, right?
It includes red.
There are long wavelengths, AKA red wavelengths of light.
I pause as I say red wavelengths
because they're actually long wavelengths of light
that appear red.
And it has been shown that light panels
that are emitting red light or near infrared light
or typically both can also improve skin appearance
if done for about 10 to 15 minutes per day,
maybe five days per week minimum
over the course of a few months.
Again, the results in those studies
are statistically significant in many of those studies.
And I would place them in kind of the moderate result,
meaning it's not a striking result,
but you could imagine combining red light with the collagen.
So you start to get perhaps a synergistic effect,
but those studies combining them have not been done.
It does seem that one of the best,
that is dermatologists supported ways
to improve skin appearance is to ingest a retinoid.
Now these are prescription drugs.
The retinoids do require that, you know,
you work with a qualified dermatologist.
They require that you stay out of the sun
for some period of time
because they can increase sensitivity to the sun,
but they will improve collagen composition
and that's from the inside out.
So, and by the way, there are also some different supplements
that one can take that can protect your skin
so that you don't have to put sunscreen on.
It's actually the extract of a vine.
I did not cover that on the skin health
and appearance episode, but we very soon have a guest,
Dr. Tio Solomani, who is an expert dermatologist,
oncologist trained at Stanford and Harvard and UCLA,
who is going to talk about the use of essentially
sun guarding by the ingestion of certain compounds
that change the chemical composition of the skin
from the inside.
So that's very interesting.
He also added another tool for improving skin appearance.
And this is true for the face and for the arms, et cetera,
is the use of laser resurfacing.
Now, this is not a cosmetic procedure
as much as it is a procedure
to remove the very top epidermal layer,
the very, very superficial layer of dead keratinocytes
and other cells of the skin, excuse me,
as a means to reduce cancer risk.
Okay, so he's a derm oncologist.
It does have the consequence of making skin
look quite a bit younger, so it does work.
And like anything in the realm of kind of laser resurfacing
and things of that sort,
it does require a period of peeling,
of staying out of sunlight
because, and being really strict about that
because the skin is more sensitive in the immediate days
and even week after the laser resurfacing.
It was kind of remarkable for me to learn
that this laser resurfacing and the retinoids
are very well supported by dermatologists
as a preventative measure for certain forms,
not all forms, but certain forms of skin cancers,
and that they can dramatically improve the appearance
of skin, that is to make it look more youthful.
So certainly that would work on the arms as well.
So we've got, we're talking about collagen, red light,
retinoids, laser resurfacing by a qualified dermatologist
or derm oncologist ideally.
And the reason I emphasize the derm part is
there are a lot of people who do kind of plastic
and cosmetic work on skin who are probably very qualified.
And then there's probably some who are not as qualified
and there can be some real issues raised
by using excessive laser power and things of that sort.
This is something I also touched on in the episode.
So those are the four major ones.
And then of course, eating a diet that's low inflammatory.
So limiting fried and highly processed foods, of course,
making sure that you're getting enough
essential fatty acids in the form of either supplementing
or ingesting fatty fish, oils,
all of these sorts of things, fruits and vegetables,
fiber, all the sorts of things
that support healthy skin internally,
some directly, some indirectly
by virtue of the gut microbiome.
So I think that's probably a sufficient answer.
I will add one last thing for your question, Robert.
It's very clear that the appearance of skin
is also very supported by hydration and moisture.
So applying a regular moisturizer,
a high quality moisturizer regularly,
pick a non-fragranced moisturizer regularly to the arms,
that will help as well.
And then there's some more aggressive approaches
that I'll talk about with Dr. Soleimani,
things like hyaluronic acid and things of that sort
that can help with the kind of plumpness
or moisture of the skin,
but we'll hold off for that episode,
which comes out in a few weeks.
So thanks again for your question.
I like to think that those are some actionable tools
and then depending on people's disposable income,
time and energy they want to devote to this,
you could go with the zero cost one, the moderate cost one,
or the combination of all of them if you're able to.
Okay, the next question comes from Jen Shaw.
How cold does the water need to be
for cold therapy to be effective?
This is a great question,
especially since at least in the Northern hemisphere,
it's summer and people are doing cold plunges more,
cold showers.
Such an effective tool for shifting the state of your mind.
Any debate about deliberate cold exposure to me
that centers around metabolism or, you know,
how long the dopamine increase lasts
is kind of a trivial one in my estimation.
Because what do we know for sure?
We know that deliberate cold exposure is very, very low cost
or even cost saving if you use a cold shower, because you're
saving on the heating bill. We know that if you can afford a cold plunge or access a safe river
or stream or cold plunge, great. What do we know it does? It changes your state. It shifts your state.
It makes you more alert, not just while you're in there, but in the minutes and certainly up to an
hour or more afterwards.
And let's face it, rarely does it feel good getting in.
Sometimes it feels good being in it
because you're very, very warm before you get in it.
Maybe you came from a run or from the sauna,
but it always feels great getting out
and you always feel much better afterwards,
provided you get the right stimulus,
which is really what this question's about.
So what is the right stimulus, which is really what this question's about. So what is the right stimulus?
How cold?
Cold enough that you feel a bit uncomfortable
and you want to get out,
but you can safely stay in
and you stay in for a little bit longer.
Now, I know that sounds vague,
but there has never been a systematic study
of exactly how long to stay in at a given temperature
at a given time of day. Why do given temperature at a given time of day.
Why do I say at a given time of day?
Well, try doing a cold shower first thing in the morning.
It can be pretty rough, pretty jarring.
Try doing it at night when you're tired,
far bigger barrier to getting in that cold shower
or cold plunge, unless you are particularly warm
because you exited the sauna or exceptionally motivated.
So the point is to make the water just cold enough
that you would kind of retract from it
that you don't want to be in it,
but not so that it's like a icy burn,
so cold that it burns.
This is my opinion.
I like to do deliberate cold exposure in the following way.
I don't even do it for time.
I do it for what I call walls.
So if you're having a hard time
even persuading yourself to get in the thing,
well, then that's one wall
you need to get over.
And then if you get over that wall, which hopefully you do,
you get in and you start to breathe very quickly,
just know that if it's very cold, you'll breathe quickly.
And after about 20 seconds,
your ability to think clearly will come back online.
Okay, that's right about the time that most people say
that their hands or feet hurt.
Okay, I do recommend putting your hands under.
It's not necessary, but hands and feet under.
If you're in the shower,
getting your body as small as possible.
Sometimes people will huddle in the shower.
If you really want to make it uncomfortable,
you can raise your arms and get in your armpits,
which is especially cold.
But in any case, it should be uncomfortable.
And then you should stay in till you adapt to that.
I'm like, okay, so maybe that's 30 seconds.
Maybe it's 10 seconds, maybe it's a minute.
And then I suggest getting out at that point.
So I would say anywhere from one to three minutes
for most people, maybe 30 seconds,
if you're really experiencing a lot of mental barriers
to getting in there, and it should be just cold enough
that you don't want to be in there that you want to get out,
but that you can stay in for that one to three minutes
safely.
Why do I say this?
Well, if you get into very, very cold water,
like 30 degree Fahrenheit water,
and you're really hyperventilating,
you do run the risk of hypothermia.
You run the risk of putting your, you know,
your cardiovascular system into shock.
I mean, there is a real danger to these things.
And by the way, you should never, ever, ever
do any kind of breath work
prior to getting into deliberate cold, okay?
Prior to getting into very cold water,
because if you're doing a lot of exhaling,
you're blowing off a lot of carbon dioxide
that will limit your gas brief flex.
And there have been people who have done, you know,
cyclic hyperventilation, deep breathing,
then gone into water and they didn't realize
that they needed to breathe.
They didn't get that gas brief flex early enough.
And unfortunately they blacked out and died.
So that's very serious.
So what do I recommend in terms of cold water?
Great to have somebody there.
Ideally you have somebody there with you
who's not in the water with you, who can monitor you.
If you're talking about cold shower or cold plunge
and you're talking about, okay, should I do it
at 40 degrees or 45 degrees Fahrenheit or 50 degrees?
Well, put your hand in and then ask yourself
on a scale of one to 10,
how eager am I to get in?
If it's 10, well, then it's probably a little too warm
or maybe you're just highly motivated.
If it's a five or a six
and you're kind of feeling some resistance,
great, provided it's not so cold that it's dangerous.
So for me, the typical temperature,
if you just want me to throw one out there
is somewhere between 45 and 50 degrees.
And a few of my friends who really like it extra cold
or like an ice bath will say, oh, that's weak.
Well, that's what works for me.
I never liked the cold.
I love getting out of it.
Sometimes I like being in there after a little while,
but I never like getting into it.
I much prefer heat in the sauna.
And while we're here,
I'll just mention how hot for the sauna.
Again, same thing,
hot enough that you feel a little uncomfortable,
but not so hot that you put yourself in danger.
And here we really have to emphasize danger
because it doesn't take much of a temperature increase
to overheat the brain.
So for me, I'm pretty heat tolerant.
So I'll put the traditional sauna, not infrared sauna,
but traditional sauna to about 210
and I'll last about 10 to 20 minutes in there maximum.
And then I'll go into the cold plunge and back and forth.
Okay, so if you're going to do the cold plunge
for the first time, maybe start at 55, 60 degrees
and stay in a little longer.
If you're going to be more experienced with this
and you're more cold tolerant, try 45, 50.
And then if you're really aggressive
and you want to try getting down into the, you know,
low 40s or so high 30s,
well then make sure you have somebody there
and make sure that you don't force yourself
to do something that's going to cause tissue damage
or cardiovascular damage.
Cold is a very potent stimulus
and you should go with the minimum effective dose,
but you don't have to obsess over the difference
between 58 degrees and 56 degrees or 46 and 48.
I think subjective feel is going to help.
Just make sure that you build in some safeties
so that you can adjust quickly, stay out of danger.
No deep breathing prior to getting in there.
Now, some of you might be asking,
well, what about deep breathing while I'm in there?
That's how I calm myself down.
That's fine, but no emphasizing the exhales
to blow off carbon dioxide.
Certainly no submerging yourself intentionally, okay?
So be safe, have fun with it, deliberate cold exposure,
I think is a wonderful tool for increasing alertness,
not just while you're in there, but when you get out.
In fact, that's the best part, if you ask me,
is getting out.
All right, next question is from Katie.
It's about self-motivation.
Do you have any suggestions or steps to self-motivate
to start a new routine?
I do, I do, I do, I do.
First of all, be very careful who you announce
and what you announce to people
in terms of starting a new routine,
unless they are going to really be on you
about accountability in general,
talking to people about our goals,
less effective in my opinion, and then there's some research to support this, then just people about our goals, less effective in my opinion,
and then there's some research to support this,
then just simply making the decision, writing it down,
simple, you know, old school like me,
eight and a half by 11 paper,
write down what the goal is,
give yourself a check for each day that you do it,
or the times of day that you do it.
Sometimes signing your signature
as if you have a contract with yourself can help.
These are all different tricks.
Some people will say,
should you reward yourself for completing something?
Sure.
Should you scare yourself into doing something?
Sure.
There's data to support that also.
I covered this in the episode with Emily Balchitis
and about goal seeking and habits
that I did as solo episodes.
We have a newsletter on this.
Here's the deal.
There are going to be multiple barriers
to starting a new routine.
I do believe in incremental approaches to these things.
Right now I'm working on some bonus chapters of my book.
And while I'm a pretty motivated person,
I'm excited to share that information with the world.
I must say that setting aside time to do these bonus chapters
has been challenging because I've got a lot else going on.
So rather than tell people that I'm doing that,
I actually have a contract with myself
that I sign each time I complete anywhere
from a 10 to 60 minute writing block.
So a contract with yourself can really help.
I think it's far more valuable
than stating to the world what you're going to do.
I don't know why that tends to work,
but we know why stating to the world
what you're going to do often wears off
because typically, and this reflects both good and bad
things about human behavior and psychology,
typically people will support you by saying,
great, you're going to do great,
the book's going to be great,
or your new exercise program is going to be great,
and they're just supporting you,
supporting you, supporting you.
And that support turns out to be sufficient
to create this mindset that you could do it
at any point where you've got the support you need.
Sometimes a little bit of additional friction,
what Tim Ferriss would call fear setting is a good idea.
You think about worst outcomes if you don't do the thing,
but let's face it, you can't lie to yourself and believe it.
So if you know that not doing the thing
isn't going to markedly change your life for the worse,
well, in that case, you need some additional support.
You need some additional motivation.
So you could use all sorts of tools and protocols
like a cold shower to increase epinephrine,
adrenaline and dopamine and get more motivated
and then do something.
You could, and I think this is probably the best tool
anyone could apply, which would be to put away your phone,
turn it off, put it in the other room.
I now have a box for my phone
that I've dedicated to keeping my phone in when I'm busy doing
other types of work for which the presence of the phone
would be an intrusion.
It would limit my work output.
I do think that the contract with self
is going to be the best way.
You say, I am going to do 30 minutes of whatever,
resistance training three times a week,
and then you're going to sign off by the end of the week.
And when you complete each one,
that's your reward to yourself that you were accountable.
There's no external reward.
Why do I say this?
The work itself should become the reward.
We know this from all the work on growth mindset
that we've talked about.
Carol Dweck's wonderful work,
and David Yeager's wonderful work.
He was a guest on the podcast.
I've done solo episodes about their work
about growth mindset,
that ultimately the work becoming the reward
is how you're going to sustain motivation over time.
So when you sign off that you did the work
and that's the reward,
well, then there's this kind of cyclical relationship
between what you've promised yourself you would do,
what you did and rewarding yourself for the work,
no additional external reward, the work becomes a reward.
So I like the idea of being a bit of a,
what we would call closed loop system on motivation
rather than going out and seeking excessive support
from others.
And I say this not to isolate,
I encourage healthy relationships, et cetera.
But if we start seeking external validation or pressure
in order to do what we know we want to do
or would love to be able to do without external support,
we limit ourselves.
And when that support isn't there,
we tend to be far less productive
and move toward our goals far less well.
So it's an internal process of reshaping your psychology.
There's also some deeper psychology around this stuff
of agency and what you feel you deserve.
You deserve, I'll tell you this,
cause I believe everyone deserves to be able
to better themselves through these kinds
of self-directed actions.
And I also liked the idea of a closed loop
because you can be really honest with yourself
at the end of a week.
Did you do your three sessions?
Did you sign off three times?
Keeping some of that reward system
and validation internal really helps you become stronger
also to be able to support other people
if they need your support.
Whereas if you have a committee of people
that you rely on, that you need to hear from,
you need their support in order to be motivated,
well, that can be great.
Coaches can be great and support systems are wonderful.
I don't think it's nearly as effective
as being your own committee,
your own chair and secretary in this case,
and member of your own committee.
And then of course, seek social support
and reinforcement for other areas of your life
that you need and be a source of social support,
but also encourage people to be in this kind of
self cyclical loop of motivation
and to really impart the principles of growth mindset,
which is really what we're talking about,
make the effort, the reward.
Okay.
I'm gonna take a sip of tea here.
Lou asks, what can you do if you're not getting enough
rapid eye movement sleep?
What are the consequences?
Okay, so to remind everybody,
rapid eye movement sleep is more enriched
towards the end of the night.
It differs from slow wave sleep or deep sleep.
Tends to be dream rich sleep.
The dreams tend to be more elaborate.
You also dream during deep sleep, during slow wave sleep,
but your dreams are far more emotionally laid in
during rapid eye movement sleep, more vivid, et cetera.
And rapid eye movement sleep is associated with learning.
So getting enough rapid eye movement sleep,
especially on the first night
after trying to learn something is important.
Rapid eye movement sleep is also important
for removing the emotional load of previous day
and previous days experiences.
So it's its own form of trauma therapy
during rapid eye movement sleep.
Your body is essentially incapable of releasing adrenaline.
So you can have these very intense emotional experiences
in your mind without adrenaline in your body.
You're actually paralyzed during rapid eye movement sleep.
It's a healthy paralysis sleep at atonia, it's called.
How do you get more REM sleep?
Well, one of the best ways to get more REM sleep
is to simply add anywhere from 10 minutes to 30 minutes
to your sleep schedule,
adding that 10 to 30 minutes in the morning.
Most people can't do that, however.
Another way to increase the amount
of rapid eye movement sleep that you get
is to get a bigger surge of epinephrine
of adrenaline in the early day prior to that sleep.
So this is a great reason to do deliberate cold exposure
in your shower in the morning.
You could also get it through exercise.
So exercising early in the morning.
And then we're talking about the rapid eye movement sleep
that occurs the very next, that same night, okay?
So we're talking about a Monday morning
where you exercise and get deliberate cold exposure.
By the way, it is true that if you do
deliberate cold exposure after resistance training,
you can limit some of the strength
and hypertrophy increases or adaptations,
but at other times it seems to be fine.
And there is zero evidence that taking a cold shower
after resistance training is going to limit
strength or hypertrophy adaptation.
So you don't have to be too paranoid
about deliberate cold exposure.
In fact, I think the best recommendation I can make
about deliberate cold exposure is neither be too paranoid
nor too obsessive about it.
So spiking your adrenaline a bit
in the early part of the day with exercise
and or deliberate cold exposure can help get
more rapid eye movement sleep later that night.
Sleeping in a bit, even 10 minutes more going back to sleep.
This is a case for hitting the snooze.
You go back to sleep, maybe even two or three times.
Of course, better to just sleep the whole way through
until a maximum long night is achieved,
long night of sleep that is.
If you wake up and you're not rested enough,
or if you're looking at your sleep score
and you don't see enough rapid eye movement sleep,
the other thing you can do is a non-sleep deep rest protocol,
which by the way, Matt Walker's laboratory and I
are gearing up to do some studies on non-sleep deep rest
and how it impacts the brain specifically as opposed,
and this has been done in other studies,
but not with modern methods in a while.
So we're excited about that.
So do a 10 to 30 minute or 10 or 20 minute
non-sleep deep rest protocol.
Those are easy to find.
I have zero cost ones that are on YouTube.
You simply put NSDR Huberman.
There's a 10 minute one, a 20 minute one.
We have them in Spotify format.
There's actually a link on the HubermanLab.com webpage
that links out to audio format
so that you don't have to go onto YouTube
if you don't want to do that.
You can download that script from Spotify
and that way you have it in your phone.
You don't need to even have internet access.
So if you're camping or you're out of internet access,
you can still do that non-sleep deep rest.
And then if you prefer a female voice, Kelly Boyes, B-O-Y-S,
has some wonderful NSDR and yoga nidra scripts on YouTube
and has her own, she also is on the waking up app
doing NSDR and yoga nidra.
So I would do that first thing in the morning
to get a bit more REM-like rest is what we'll call it
until the data are in.
REM-like rest puts the brain into this very interesting state
with body completely still, right?
Similar to sleep atonia that you observe in REM sleep
and mind active, very similar to REM sleep.
This is actually our hypothesis,
which is that non-sleep deep rest
mimics rapid eye movement sleep,
but that hypothesis still needs to be tested formally
and Dr. Walker and I are going to do that.
So that's another way to get more REM sleep.
The other way, and this is kind of a tongue in cheek answer
is if you don't get enough REM sleep on one night,
you can be sure that if you allow yourself
sufficient sleep the next night,
you'll get more REM sleep than you normally would anyway
had you slept well the previous night.
What does all that mean?
Means that there's something called the REM sleep rebound.
If you don't sleep enough or you don't get enough REM sleep
on say Monday night, Tuesday night, when you go to sleep,
provided you didn't blitz your system with caffeine,
you're not ingesting anything
that would disrupt your REM sleep,
such as caffeine late in the day,
well, or alcohol, which will disrupt REM sleep dramatically.
Well, then you will get more REM sleep on Tuesday night.
Okay, there's a REM compensation.
Anyone that's tracked their sleep has observed this.
So that's another way.
Right now, there's no clear pharmacology
to induce more REM sleep, unfortunately.
There are some tools to increase slow wave sleep,
deep sleep pharmacologically.
Some of the growth hormones,
the cretogogs that are in common peptides will do that.
But right now there doesn't seem to be any pharmacology
directed specifically at increasing REM sleep.
There are a few, these go by brand names like Quivivic
and things like that that are thought to do this,
but it's still somewhat debated
as to whether or not they specifically increase REM sleep.
Okay.
Danielle says, the top three most impactful things
schools could do to raise student capacity for learning.
What a great question.
Well, I'll add a fourth because I don't want to,
I don't want to try and wriggle out of the question
by just saying sleep again.
But I think trying to get kids to sleep enough
is going to be key.
So that means off phones and iPads
in the middle of the night.
That means starting school a little bit later.
I don't know if that's ever going to work,
but that would be a marvelous thing for learning
because as you know,
or we all should know or remember,
neuroplasticity and learning is triggered
by focused attention,
which is supported by having slept well the night before,
but the actual rewiring of neural connections occurs when?
It occurs during sleep.
It occurs during deep sleep and rapid eye movement sleep.
That's when the reorganization of neural connections occurs,
the strengthening of particular synapses,
the weakening of other synapses.
And there's a small, small, small,
perhaps infinitesimally small percentage of neuroplasticity
that is the consequence of the addition of new neurons.
So most neuroplasticity is not that,
most neuroplasticity is the reorganization
of existing neural connections.
But nonetheless, that happens during sleep.
So getting kids to sleep enough, nap enough,
sleep late if they need to is actually a great thing.
But who knows if schools will change their protocols.
What else can we do?
What can schools do?
Well, I'm a big fan, as you know,
of non-sleep deep rest.
Wouldn't it be wonderful if in every school that started the day with a five minute, of non-sleep deep rest. Wouldn't it be wonderful if in every school
that started the day with a five minute meditation
or non-sleep deep rest,
where kids would do some quiet focused breathing,
bringing their attention back to their breathing,
bringing their attention back to the spot
just behind their forehead,
just before beginning a learning session.
Why? Why?
Is it about mysticism?
No.
Is it about trying to understand consciousness?
No.
It's about a study done by Wendy Suzuki's laboratory
at New York University.
She's their current Dean of Letters and Science
as far as I know.
She's a neuroscientist.
She has a spectacular record in the field of neuroscience
and psychology.
And her laboratory showed that even a very brief
meditation session
in that particular study, it was about 13 minutes per day,
can significantly improve working memory,
which is the ability to keep information online
in one's mind active.
It can increase other forms of memory.
It can increase focus.
It can decrease stress and it is a zero cost tool.
So I think, unfortunately, we think of meditation
as a mystical tool to explore consciousness,
and it can be, but if you think about it,
exercise can also be an ultra marathon to run 242 miles
or something to win a trophy,
or it can be something to improve cardiovascular health.
So similarly, meditation is just a perceptual exercise.
I think that if kids learn
that they can bring their perception internally
to what we call interoception,
as opposed to looking at things externally,
exteroception, understand that they have some control,
some regulation over their focus and attention,
bringing their attention back to them,
to interoception whenever it drifts,
well, then they get better at focus over time
and it improves learning in the long-term,
but also in the bout of learning
that they go into immediately after.
So, you know, if I had a magic wand,
every classroom would begin a session of learning
with five minutes or maybe even three minutes
of what is typically known as third eye
or focused meditation with no interest in mysticism,
pure interest in improving the ballot of learning.
I think another thing that schools should include
to increase capacity for learning
is they should include micro gaps.
So we know that if you take gaps in information delivery,
so for instance, if I were to just pause now
and then continue, it seems like kind of an odd interruption
and then every once in a while at random
introduce a short 10 second pause or so,
what do we know happens?
We know based on now a number of different
really high quality papers,
how they'd have looked at musical learning,
mathematical learning, concept learning,
physical skill learning,
that those little micro gaps allow for very rapid replay
of the information that's relevant,
for whatever reason in reverse,
in the brain very quickly within the hippocampus
and the neocortex areas of the brain,
critical for encoding and storage of memories.
And these little micro gaps
and the rapid replay of the information one is trying
to learn at 20 to 30 times the normal rate
increases the number of repetitions.
You're basically getting 30 repetitions for doing nothing.
This is exactly what happens in what?
In rapid eye movement sleep.
When you learn something,
like maybe you learned something today
in our discussion thus far,
and you go to sleep at night,
there's a very strong chance
that if we were to record from your brain,
we would see that the same areas of your brain
that were active during specific portions
of this discussion,
which arguably is more of a lecture than a discussion,
but those brain areas would repeat at 20 to 30 times speed
within a very compressed time.
And then you'd go back to a different pattern
of brain activity.
What is going on?
Well, in rapid eye movement sleep, the brain is rehearsing.
It's generating repetitions of certain forms of behavior
and certain forms of learning of cognitive information.
At high speed, you're generating more repetitions
and this is critical for the learning process.
We know this from animal studies,
we now know this from human studies as well.
So if in the classroom teachers would just say,
okay, we just finished discussing,
I don't know, the cell cycle or the Krebs cycle.
Now let's take a moment.
And students are not checking their phone at that time
or reviewing the material at that time.
They just got 20 to 30 repetitions of,
and by the way, at a subconscious level,
they're not aware of it,
of the material they had just been exposed to.
And so you introduce these, excuse me, at random.
You could do anywhere from one to five of these per hour.
You could do as many as 10 per hour.
You're just introducing these brief micro rest intervals.
There's a beautiful literature to support this.
And the third thing, it's very important,
is I think it's very, very clear that physical activity,
in particular cardiovascular training,
any kind of physical activity, running, jogging, swimming,
et cetera, is going to facilitate learning,
especially if the learning is done immediately after that activity to facilitate learning, especially if the learning is done
immediately after that activity.
That's right, if the learning is done
immediately after that activity,
and that's probably related to the increase
in the various catecholamines,
dopamine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine
associated with physical activity,
then making coding of new memories,
encoding of new information more readily accessible.
So this is a call for including PE class
or even just some basic movement, even walks or things of that sort.
We can look at this through the other lens
and say, what are the worst things for learning?
Terrible sleep, being delivered information
like through a fire hose with no pauses
and forgive me if from time to time I tend to do that.
Maybe I should start introducing micro gaps
into the podcast, but you can always just pause it,
go back to it.
I feel like real life provides that.
There is the strong, strong incentive
for including some physical movement each day.
And then I suppose if we were going to include another one,
we'd say that kids and teachers should have a discussion
about optimal learning protocols.
They should understand where their thresholds are
after which their attention falls off.
There's really no point in trying to learn information
if you're not focused on what you're trying to learn.
And then there's a whole discussion to be had about caffeine.
There's a whole discussion to be had about nutrition
as it relates to maintaining alertness throughout the day.
Anyone that's ever gone into a lecture on a college campus
or a high school or elementary school,
even after lunch,
you'll see that people's brains are just kind of idling
there in the background.
It's the rare student that's wrapped with attention
even after a big lunch, even after running around outside.
So structuring of the day properly is essential.
And of course, get that sleep at night.
Okay, Alec, could you share your thoughts
on how Shilaji might influence cognitive function
and physical health, specifically its impact
to boost testosterone?
I get a lot of questions about Shilaji.
Shilaji is a mineral pitch from the Himalayas.
There are a lot of fake versions out there,
but the authentic versions are basically,
this is stuff that basically they take soil and grasses
and a bunch of things and they mash it down and they take the extract
and they create this stuff called Shilaji
which sometimes is sold as a thick paste,
kind of a tar like paste, sometimes it's in capsules.
What do we know about Shilaji?
Shilaji contains minerals that are thought to augment
some hormone pathways and that's why people have argued
and it's marketed that Shilaji increases vitality.
It's been argued that Shilaji can increase testosterone,
maybe estrogen as well.
There are actually a few studies on this
that are covered at examine.com.
I'm going to bring up one just now.
This we can induce a little gap effect here
if there's a pause.
There is some data, not a ton,
but there's some data that support the use of Shilaji for testosterone increase,
but I would place it on the low end
of the effectiveness scale in terms of things
to increase testosterone.
And then of course, the real question is,
are you getting enough authentic Shilaji
to really have an effect?
The dosaging on this is very mysterious.
In other words, I personally wouldn't place Shilaji high
on any list of ways to generate hormone support.
There are far better ways.
I mean, the best ways of course are to make sure
that your body fat percentage is neither too high
nor too low, okay?
The, you know, people who are overweight, who are obese,
who lose body fat will improve their hormone profiles
dramatically.
However, people who are already very lean,
who get excessively lean,
you can disrupt testosterone levels dramatically.
And by the way,
anytime there's a discussion about testosterone,
I want to remind that both men and women have testosterone.
It's important in both men and women.
Yes, it's related to libido,
but having sufficiently high levels of estrogen
in both men and women is also critical for libido.
People that take drugs like anastrozole
to disrupt the aratase conversion of testosterone
into estrogen can sometimes find themselves
with reduced libido.
And that's because estrogen is critical for libido
in men and women as is testosterone.
So it's all about the ratios.
Going back to Shilaji,
let's look at the human effect matrix on Shilaji.
There is one study here with 60 participants
that cites a small increase,
small but statistically significant increase
in follicle stimulating hormone, FSH,
which in females is critical, in males is critical.
And the extent of the increase is just very small.
So it's not clear that it would be worth taking Shilaji
given the risks and the cost.
It depends on how aggressive you are
in trying to increase testosterone.
Certainly there are other ways.
Sperm quality, one study showing a small improvement
in sperm quality, one study of 60 participants
showing a small increase in testosterone.
And then of course, there's a bunch of other things
that have been looked at.
The perhaps most impressive effect is a reduction
in some LDLs, but again, even though I say
the most impressive, it's still a small effect.
So I wouldn't place Shilaji High on the list
of supplements to consider.
Always, always, always, before talking about supplements,
you want to get your nutrition right.
I've talked about how to do this.
You want to be exercising, but not over-training.
You want to do both resistance training
and cardiovascular training, maybe on the same day
or different days, whatever your schedule allows.
You want to make sure you get enough sleep at night.
If you want to increase your testosterone significantly,
get an extra 30 to 60 minutes of sleep each night.
Even a 20 minute increase in rapid eye movement sleep
is going to serve your testosterone far better
than taking Shilaji.
Will taking Shilaji increase your vitality?
You know, probably increase your energy a bit.
You might increase libido a bit.
You have to ask yourself, is it transient?
Is that effect transient?
Is it directly related to testosterone increases?
Probably not.
It's probably directly related
to follicle stimulating hormone increases.
And for women who have a menstrual cycle
that is obviously going to lead
to different constellations of hormones to lead to different constellations
of hormones, markedly different constellations of hormones,
such as follicle stimulating hormone, estrogen,
progestins, et cetera,
different times throughout the cycle,
taking something like Shilaji
because it can stimulate FSH release
can potentially disrupt that.
If you're a male who's doing everything else,
like you're exercising, you're sleeping well,
your nutrition is locked in,
you are taking creatine and fish oil,
you're taking care of your gut microbiome
and you want to experiment with Shilaji,
well, by all means, find a reliable source of Shilaji,
they are out there, just look for one
that has some testing for authenticity.
And then you're likely to be able to see
within about a week or so,
if it leads to a significant increase in vitality,
libido, whatever it is that you're seeking.
But I wouldn't play Shilohge high
on the list of things to pursue.
And I will also say having tried Shilohge,
it's pretty messy.
It's hard to get the dosaging right in the tar form.
The capsules make it a little bit easier.
If you wanted to explore other ways to augment testosterone
that have a bit more data to support them,
I would say things like Tonga-Ali,
which may have its effects on increasing libido
in both men and women by virtue of increasing testosterone
or maybe free testosterone,
more likely it's an increase in luteinizing hormone
in that case, which is upstream of testosterone.
So this can all get into some pretty extended discussions
about biochemical pathways and hormone pathways.
I did this on the episode about optimizing testosterone
and estrogen as a solo episode that I also covered
with Dr. Kyle Gillette and with Dr. Peter Attia.
By the way, if you go to hubermanlab.com
and you put in any combination of search items,
if you put, for instance, Shilaji testosterone,
it will take you to the timestamp that covers that.
If you put Tonga Ali testosterone or libido, Tonga Ali,
it will take you to the timestamps
across different episodes, directly to those timestamps
so that you don't have to listen to entire episodes
or go searching for this information.
It's all there.
We also have an AI engine at hubermanlab.com
that allows you to do searches on this sort of thing.
But of course, I'm happy to talk to you about it as well.
I'm delighted to. So again, if you have the budget
and you're somebody who likes to experiment,
maybe Shilajit is the right thing for you.
Find a good brand.
It shouldn't be hard to distinguish the real brands.
They always have a label of authentication on there.
And if you're going to already be doing everything else
right behaviorally, and you want to explore
supplementation for improving testosterone,
vitality, et cetera, then I would say,
don't start with Shilajit.
You'd probably be best off starting with something
like Tonga Ali, maybe Fadojia.
I've talked about these things previously.
Okay.
Let's see, two questions popped up in front of me.
So I'll just take the first one.
Alexander, Alexander, I like the way you spell your name,
Alexander, it's unusual, I dig it.
What has your process been for the writing of your book?
Slow.
I have a saying that I say in my lab,
or that I have said for many years in doing science when I was a graduate student
of postdoc and then in my lab.
And by the way, I suppose people ask about this.
I still have research funds for human studies.
I closed my animal lab focusing mainly on teaching
which I'll be doing again this year,
teaching in the spring, maybe in the winter as well
to undergraduates.
And I may get re-involved in some human clinical studies
on vision, an area that I've loved for many years.
But in any case, there's a saying that I always would
reiterate to my students in post-docs,
which is I go as fast as I carefully can.
Okay, so I believe in a sense of urgency.
I like to sit down to write and think, okay,
I'm going to go as fast as I carefully can.
It's that right balance between urgency and precision.
Okay, going fast is rarely good in its own right.
Going too slow isn't good either.
So there's that place where I feel like
I'm just pushing myself a little bit,
but then you have to be careful, right?
So as fast as you carefully can.
So the process has been slow,
but I've been going as fast as I carefully can.
Any recommendations on overcoming obstacles
and how did you deal with them?
Yes, put that phone away, put it in the other room.
If you have to generate accountability measures, do it.
When I used to write grants in my laboratory in San Diego,
you can ask my lab, I used to walk in and say,
okay, I'm giving my phone to somebody.
And if I ask for it back before 5 p.m. today,
you each get a thousand dollars.
And I did not have a thousand dollars
to give everyone in my lab.
I had a pretty big lab and I didn't have the money.
So you may have to create some barriers
and gosh, about an hour and a half in,
I'd think, okay, gosh,
I was supposed to respond to this person today.
They're going to think that I've dropped off the map.
Oh my goodness.
And then I'd remember, I have an office phone.
Someone really need to get ahold of me. If it was an emergency, they'd let me know. And if I couldn't be reached that I've dropped off the map. Oh my goodness. And then I'd remember, I have an office phone. Someone really need to get ahold of me
if it was an emergency, they'd let me know.
And if I couldn't be reached that way,
someone would find me.
I realized for people with kids, et cetera,
this might not be feasible.
But if you have to do that, you do that.
Set stakes, okay?
Give someone a check for an exorbitant amount of money
that you can't afford to give away,
but that you do have in your bank account,
give them that check and say,
if I don't stop writing for the next hour,
then you can tear up the check.
Otherwise you can go cash it.
So you can put some fear in there,
but again, as I mentioned earlier,
better to generate these kind of incentives with yourself.
So I like to put my phone away.
I like to take about 10 minutes
to transition into the writing. And like to take about 10 minutes to transition
into the writing.
And then I actually set rules for myself.
I don't allow myself to get out of the seat,
even to use the bathroom.
It's true.
I've never gone to the bathroom in my seat,
but I resist the temptation to get up
until the timer goes off.
That's how I did it as an undergraduate.
That's how I did it writing grants.
That's how I've done it writing fellowships
as a graduate student.
And that's how I write the book now.
And I find that after about 20, 30 minutes,
I don't want to stand up.
I'm super happy.
And then if an interruption comes,
then I get frustrated because I want to keep writing.
So give it a try, set some high stakes incentives
for yourself.
I mean, don't make them too high,
but set some high stakes incentive.
Thank you for saying looking forward to the book.
I appreciate it.
If you want to buy a pre-order copy,
it's a protocolsbook.com.
It's there in multiple languages now.
I'd be grateful if you did.
On the other hand, if you don't want to buy it
or you just want to wait till it comes out,
that's fine too.
And I'm just grateful that I have the opportunity
to put this information into one place
that people can access if they like.
Mike Torres, and I think this is the last question, right?
Are we down to about the last question?
Two more, one more?
All right, here we go.
I'm asking my producer here,
Mike, where can I find information from Huberman Lab
regarding addictions and recovery?
Great question, I get this a lot.
A lot of people struggle with addiction.
Addiction is a progressive narrowing
of the things that bring you pleasure
in ways that can be very disruptive for your life.
These can be process addictions,
meaning behavioral addictions.
These can be substance abuse issues.
First of all, I just want to say,
while I have no formal relationship to them,
there are wonderful zero cost resources
in every city around the world,
12 step communities, go online, look for that.
The meetings and programs that they provide are very useful,
have proven very useful.
Actually, this was explored in a study
from Stanford Psychiatry a few years ago,
because there hadn't been a lot of science
on those sorts of programs,
and the conclusion was they can be very, very useful.
In terms of Huberman Lab resources,
if you go to hubermanlab.com,
put addiction into the search function,
it will take you to specific timestamps,
mainly of an episode that I did with Dr. Anna Lemke,
who is our director of the Dual Diagnosis Addiction Clinic
at Stanford, the author of Dopamine Nation,
and the absolute virtuoso in terms of the description
of the underlying biological mechanisms,
mostly surrounding dopamine,
but also the approach to treating and getting over addictions.
You can get over addictions.
People get sober from their addictions.
It takes time, it takes energy, it takes effort.
And in every case, it's an incredibly rewarding thing that just makes your life and other
people's lives better.
So I highly encourage anyone that's struggling with process addictions or substance abuse addictions
or alcohol use disorder or things of that sort
to pursue those resources, both on our website.
And of course, the other resources
that I mentioned a few minutes ago,
also Ana's book, Dopamine Nation is a wonderful one.
It will allow you to see and understand
that these are brain mechanisms that are at play.
These are not, it's not a lack of willpower.
It's a disruption in neurochemical circuit regulation.
And that should give you some grace
and some feelings of ease,
because what that means is that
while it is not quote unquote your fault,
it is your responsibility to deal with it.
And you can, and there are great zero-cost resources
to do that, so please access those.
And then just popped up on my screen,
it says, happy birthday, Karen Dhingar.
I hope I pronounced that correctly.
Happy birthday, Karen, and happy birthday to anyone else
whose birthday happens to be today
or in the vicinity of today.
I guess this is going to be recorded and put out eventually
and then it'll be somebody's birthday on every day
at some point.
But happy birthday, Karen.
Thank you for being a premium subscriber.
Thank you all for tuning in.
Thank you to those of you that listened to this
at a later time recorded.
I really appreciate your questions.
I really appreciate your support of Huberman Lab.
As I've said many times before, it's a labor of love.
It continues to be a labor of love.
I spend my life, basically all of my waking life
minus some self-care and some care of others.
And hopefully a bulldog soon, another bulldog soon.
Can't wait, I've been looking for bulldogs
and there will be another one soon.
I don't know his or her name will be,
but in the absence of tending to those things,
I'm focusing 98% of my waking life
to trying to suss out the best health
and science information for you all
and get it out to you in formats that are convenient
for you, that are useful for you,
and that you can apply also discussions with expert guests.
So there are the guest episodes, the solo episodes,
there's hubermanlab.com has a lot of resources
like the AI engine, please give that a try if you like.
It's basically an AI version of me,
which is kind of weird to me, but it does a pretty good job.
I would say it does a very good job
of encapsulating a lot of themes.
It's a great way to generate your own brief protocols
if you want to do that.
You can ask it to generate a, you know,
exercise plan based on Huberman Lab protocols
or what have you.
And then the newsletters,
I'm assuming most of you already subscribe to,
but if you would be so kind as to make sure
that you follow the podcast by clicking subscribe
on YouTube, following the podcast on Apple and Spotify,
just click, if you already follow, by the way,
make sure you don't accidentally unfollow.
But if you go click that follow tab,
that really helps us at zero cost.
Give us a five-star review if you think we deserve it
or different review if you think we deserve that.
I love your comments on YouTube.
I do read them all.
I really do read them all.
Even go and find the hidden comments that get filtered
and I read those too.
So please, if you feel inclined,
you can support us in that way.
And most importantly, take the protocols
and the information that you think works for you,
apply it, discard the protocols and the information
that you don't feel is for you, discard it, that's great.
And of course, I don't deserve credit
for any of these protocols per se, right?
These are the product of so much great science
and health studies out there, clinical studies,
and I'm just a funnel in a filter,
but it is a true pleasure to be able to be that funnel
and filter.
So thank you for letting me funnel and filter
today's knowledge for you.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.
And as always, thank you for your interest in science.