Huberman Lab - Dr. Elissa Epel: Control Stress for Healthy Eating, Metabolism & Aging
Episode Date: April 3, 2023In this episode, my guest is Elissa Epel, Ph.D., professor and vice chair of the department of psychiatry at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF) and the author of a new book entitled The... Stress Prescription. We discuss her work showing how stress impacts mood, eating behavior, mental health, physical health, and aging. She explains stress intervention tools using “top-down” techniques (e.g., radical acceptance, mindfulness, reframing), body-based methods (e.g., breathwork) including the Wim Hof Method, exercise, meditation, body scans, and environmental shifts proven to help people cease unhealthy rumination patterns. We discuss how stress can positively impact psychology and sense of purpose, how stress affects cellular aging, how our narratives of stressful events impact our mood and biology, and how to effectively reframe stress. She explains science-based techniques to break stress-induced cycles of craving and overeating and thereby improve insulin sensitivity and metabolic health. Dr. Epel provides a wide range of tools shown to be effective in reducing stress and improving various aspects of our health. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman Thesis: https://takethesis.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman HVMN: https://hvmn.com/huberman InsideTracker: https://www.insidetracker.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Dr. Elissa Epel (00:02:17) Sponsors: Thesis, Eight Sleep, HVMN (00:06:18) Stress; Effects on Body & Mind (00:12:50) Tools: Overthinking & Stress (00:15:37) Acute, Moderate & Chronic Stress, Breathing (00:21:23) Stress Benefits, Aging & Cognition; Stress Challenge Response (00:31:04) Sponsor: AG-1 (Athletic Greens) (00:32:19) Tool: Shifting Stress to Challenge Response, “Stress Shields” (00:37:400 Stress, Overeating, Craving & Opioid System (00:48:55) Tools: Breaking Overeating Cycles, Mindfulness (00:54:44) Soda & Sugary Drinks (01:00:51) Smoking, Processed Food & Rebellion (01:05:29) Sponsor: InsideTracker (01:06:47) Tools: Mindfulness, Pregnancy & Metabolic Health (01:14:11) Body Scan & Cravings (01:17:28) Tool: Meditation & Aging; Meditation Retreats (01:23:35) Meditation, Psychedelics & Neuroplasticity (01:26:02) Mitochondrial Health, Stress & Mood (01:29:49) Chronic Stress & Radical Acceptance, “Brick Wall” (01:37:57) Tool: Control, Uncertainty (01:45:25) Stress Management, “Skillful Surfing” (01:50:25) Narrative, Purpose & Stress (01:52:49) Breathwork, Wim Hof Method, Positivity & Cellular Aging (02:03:11) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Momentous, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
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Welcome to the Uberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Uberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today my guest is Dr. Alyssa Eppel.
Dr. Eppel is a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of California, San Francisco.
She is also the director of the Center on Aging,
Metabolism, and Emotions.
Dr. Apple's laboratory focuses on stress
and the many impacts that it has on our brain and body,
both negative and positive.
For instance, her laboratory has shown that particular forms of stress
change our telomeres, which are a component of the genetic machinery
of our cells that impacts how quickly our cells and therefore we age.
We also discuss exciting work from Dr. Eppel's laboratory, exploring how stress impacts our
behavioral choices, in particular which foods we elect to eat, and how we experience those
foods.
Today you'll learn how stress and your interpretation of your stress impacts the different aspects
of your biology and psychology.
You'll also learn about several important stress interventions that Dr. Eppel's laboratory
has explored, including meditation and breath work, can profoundly influence the way that
stress impacts your brain and body, both for better or for worse.
She's also explored how specific dietary interventions, such as omega-3 fatty acid intake,
impacts stress and our response to stress, And a key and important feature I believe of Dr. Apple's work is how stress and stress
interventions vary in their effectiveness depending on whether or not the subjects in her
experiments are male versus female and their social status.
By the end of today's episode, I assure you you will have a much more thorough understanding
of what stress is and how it changes our biology and psychology,
as well as the specific stress interventions that are going to be most optimal for you in
reducing the negative effects of stress on the aging process and on negative behavioral
choices, and also how to leverage stress in order to maximize the positive effects that
stress can have on cellular metabolism, mental health, physical health, and performance.
To learn more about the work from Dr. Eppel's laboratory, as well as to learn more about her books
entitled The Telemere Effect, and now, more recently, The Stress Prescription,
you can find links to those in the show note captions. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that
this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It is, however,
part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science
and science-related tools to the general public.
In keeping with that theme,
I'd like to thank the sponsors of today's podcast.
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And now for my discussion with Dr. Alyssa Eppel.
Dr. Eppel, welcome.
Thank you.
So great to have you here.
We have colleagues in common and topics of interest
related to our laboratories in common.
So I've got a lot of questions today.
I'd love to just kick off by you explaining a little bit
about the different forms of stress.
We hear stress, stress is bad, stress can kill us.
No one likes to feel stressed, et cetera.
But as you and I both know, that's not the entire picture.
So I'd love for you to just educate us a bit
on what stress is and what it isn't,
where it can be problematic
and where perhaps it can even be beneficial.
So, as a stress scientist, it is a word I use a lot,
but it has to be broken down
because it has so many different kind of dimensions
and meanings.
So there's good and bad stress, there's acute and chronic stress.
And you know, technically, it just means anytime we feel overwhelmed that we feel like the
demands are too much for our resources.
So that's kind of a very technical way to put it.
But really, so much of life is about meeting challenges and we're never going to
get rid of different stressful situations in life, if anything they are increasing.
And so it really comes down to not the stressors or what happens to us, but really how we respond
the stress response.
So that's a distinction that we're still trying to get the field to talk about stress in a more specific way,
so that we can think about, well, what situations
are in your life?
They might be difficult ongoing situations
like caregiving or work stress or worrying
about health your own or someone's.
And then there's, how are you coping with it?
So when something happens, we mount a stress response
and we recover.
And that's beautiful, no harm done.
We need that.
That's why we're here still alive,
is that survival response.
It's a problem these days of just,
we keep it alive in our head,
we keep it alive with our thoughts.
Our thoughts are the most common form of stress.
Even though I expected that we would get into tools
to combat stress a little bit later,
since you have now told us that our thoughts
are the biggest sort of propagator of internal stress,
what to your knowledge is the best way
or what are the best ways for us to manage over thinking
and ruminating on stressful topics?
Because I certainly experience stress and when I do I have tools related to, you know, breath
work running, exercise sleep, non-sleep deep rest.
I'm a huge fan of all these sorts of things.
But when we succumb to stress
and the thinking patterns take over where the gears are turning and they won't stop turning,
what does the science tell us about ways to manage those thoughts? Should we work with
them in the sense that we try and rationalize or understand the basis of the stress or should
we try and divert our thinking away,
or is there some other tool that I'm aware of?
Yes, yes, both.
Right.
So, I like to bin it in three categories.
So, one is, we, well, I'll just say,
first of all, we have to have some awareness of how our mind works,
or we're just like, you just like a subject to thinking our thoughts
are real, thinking that it's helpful to keep
ruminating and problem solving,
because that's our tendency is to go toward
whatever we think there's threat or risk
and to problem solve that.
We could just be stuck there all day
in this kind of threat mode or red mind state.
And that's just a shame.
We don't need to turn on that stress response all the time.
But that's where we are as a society.
So that's why I wrote the stress prescription, take any survey, even pre-pandemic, and people
feel the majority of people feel an overwhelming amount of stress. So even this past year, 46%
of adults report feeling overwhelmed by stress. And then you break it down, you're like,
oh, this is really bad for young adults and women and people of color. And we say we have these,
groups that are targeted for marginalization that are feeling an extremely high amount of stress in most of those subgroups.
So bottom, yeah.
Wouldn't you argue that most everyone is feeling more stressed now, or is it just, what are the data set?
Yeah, so I think that we're, we come with different levels of awareness of our stress.
And so when I find someone who really doesn't feel a lot of stress,
sometimes I can see right through that and they're just not aware.
And sometimes it really is true.
They're often in a different stage of life and they control their environment a lot.
And they've been through a lot.
I mean, one of the big patterns in the population levels
of stress is that the older people are less stressed period.
If you're over 65, you have been through so much,
solved so much, you just have a better perspective
on life and on stressors.
And then our adults, our young adults,
have like four times the level of stress as our older adults.
So we do, we don't have to wait till we get older,
but there certainly is true wisdom
and resilience that comes with age for many people.
Often we're so used to feeling daily stress
from our urban and modern life that we don't notice it.
We're just used to it.
And so we're going through the day with kind of like
clenched hands and just, you know, for listeners
just even just taking a check in now
and noticing how you might be holding stress in your body.
That's a huge clue.
It's a huge place where we accumulate tension.
So we might not be aware that we're stressed
but we're crunching our hands.
And in fact, my taxi driver who drove me here, let me know that
he's exactly that point that he doesn't realize he's stressed
until he realizes that he's tensing his shoulders and his
fists.
And so great signal.
You know, doing a check-in to notice where an
abitable holding stress is step one to releasing it.
So I'm going back to this notion of overthinking.
What are the tools that are most efficient for dealing
with overthinking or ruminating when people just can't seem
to let go of the thing that's the stress or thinking about
not the stress in their body, but the thing that caused the stress, the difficult conversation,
the thing that irked them on social media or in their personal life or professional life,
or simply out in the world.
So, I wish I had one answer, but I'm going to say lots of strategies tackle that.
And so in those three bins, one are top-down strategies of awareness and things that we
can say to ourselves, since our beliefs and mindsets can really help us release stress,
use stress more positively.
The second bucket is not that the mind changes the body, but the body changes the mind.
And those are the set of strategies that you tend to use the most, right?
Where we're working stress out of the body,
we're metabolizing it, we're burning it up.
And we get relief.
Changes are amygdala activity and moves us to more an experiential state,
where we're more in our somatosensory cortex.
And then the third bucket is change the scene,
just getting away from all the stress triggers
that we have in our office or in the city
and being an environment that we find calming.
It might even be just be a corner of the house,
but implanting what I call safety signals.
We're just these animals that are conditioned to signals, whether we're aware of it or not.
So having things like comforting pets, pictures, smells, music, why not?
We need those.
They help.
They add up.
Yeah, I like the idea of having a small physical space, or I suppose it could be a large physical
space, but for most people who don't have the resources,
some small pre-designate physical space
that represents a safe zone,
and creating, or I should say,
populating that safe zone with things, as you said,
as a visual neuroscientists originally,
I guess now I study stress,
but as a visual neuroscientists, we I guess now I study stress, but as a visual neuroscientist
we know that photographs are extremely powerful cues for the memory system, especially actual
physical photographs.
And I believe there is some work on this that if people keep a photograph of something
that draws positive memories that that photograph actually, they keep it with them that actually can be a positive cue for alleviating stress and just enhancing mood.
This is probably done less so nowadays because everyone keeps things on their phones and
it's just kind of a scroll through.
But in any event, when we talk about stress, it's clear that there's short term, medium
term, long term stress. You-term, long-term stress.
You studied all these different forms of stress.
If you would be so kind as to just give us an overview of the different forms of stress,
how we can learn to recognize those.
And then I'd love to transition from there into talking about some of the work that you've
been doing on stress and stress-related eating and stress and how it relates to aging in particular.
But before we do that, to make sure everyone's on the same page, if you could just pepper
our minds with knowledge about stress in all its beautiful and not so beautiful forms.
So when we think about stress, we usually think feeling stress, reporting stress, and that's
important.
What our body is doing is also important, and it's not always related to our mind.
So measuring levels of the nervous system and how vigilant we are is another way that
we can understand stress.
And that's particularly important and interesting because that's how stress gets under the
skin, and we might not be aware.
We're not report stress, but we're still holding tension
and being much more sympathetically dominated,
meaning that our body is vigilant and scanning for cues
and we don't feel safe.
And so we're mobilizing a lot more energy
than we need to.
And stress is so expensive to the body.
The stress response uses a tremendous amount of energy, ATP,
that's made by your mitochondria.
And if we have that kind of vigilant stress response
on all day, we're just gonna feel exhausted.
And we all feel exhausted at the stage of the,
kind of long shadow of the pandemic.
And it's really no mystery because we're not
good at turning the stress response off and that's what we want to
really focus on is understanding we need to mount a big stress response to cope with things when we need extra energy
but then we can actually let our body
relax and we can turn it off and that's where the
our body relax and we can turn it off. And that's where the rumination comes
and we want to catch ourselves,
rehearsing and reliving stress
or worrying about the next thing saying,
right now, I'm safe.
And you know, there's the breathing strategies
I'm right with you where those are the most direct
and fast path to reducing stress in the body, period.
Yeah, our colleague David Spiegel,
our associate chair of psychiatry at Stanford,
and also a colleague of yours as well,
has, I think said it best,
which is that breathing is unique among the functions
of the brain, because it really originates
as a brain function, and then extends, of course,
to the body, in that it represents a bridge
between the conscious and the unconscious,
because at any given moment we're breathing,
and of course, at any given moment,
we can take control of our breathing.
There are very few brain circuits
that impact the body in that way.
Like I can't suddenly just change my rate of digestion
because I decide to, but we can do that with breathing.
Well, we will definitely get into some of the work that you've been doing on breath work,
in particular. I know you have a study that's actually explored the Wim Hof method quite directly.
One of the few studies that I'm aware of that's done that, so we'll get to that a little bit later.
So you describe stress as a way that the body and mind mobilize energy.
Yeah, and I didn't quite answer your question. So there's that acute stress response when everything,
every hormone and cell in our body
is having a stress response.
And that is allowing us to reorient, focus,
problem solve.
It's really beautiful how much we can increase our capacity
to do things during stress.
And then if it lasts a minute or hours, we eventually recover.
And that is what happens all day, to small extents with daily stressors.
We don't necessarily get so threatened that we release a lot of cortisol, but our nervous
system is going up and down all day. Then there are, then there's kind of moderate, stressful events that maybe
take days or months to cope with. And what's important there is that noticing like right
now, am I really coping acutely with something or can I restore? So that kind of daily
respiration is very important. And then there are chronically stressful
situations that go on for years. Many of us, not all of us, but many of us have those in our life.
These are situations I'll just use caregiving as an example that we can't change. We can't change
other people. We can't change certain situations or resources and we can be thinking about them chronically
problem solving, trying to wish things were different, or we can use acceptance, radical
acceptance strategies and other strategies to live well with them.
And so that's a really important strategy for people who feel like their life is going
to be stressful forever because of X or Y. That's not true. You have a harder life. You're
going to do more coping, but you can actually be dealing with uncontrolled little chronic
stress in ways that it's not going to take that toll on your body. I mean, I study chronic stress and how it accelerates cell aging.
And I can tell you, there's so much variance between people.
People are so different.
So among caregivers, some of them look as biologically young or younger than our controls.
People with no identifiable, big, tough situation in their life.
I love to hear about the lack of inevitability around aging
and stress. I realized that there's a big landscape of discussion around aging and stress
for us to cover, but since you brought it up, in one of your papers, there's a beautiful graph,
and since a lot of people are listening, not watching, and we don't use visual diagrams for that reason,
And since a lot of people are listening, not watching, and we don't use visual diagrams for that reason,
I'll try and explain this as best I can.
You distinguish between optimal aging,
typical aging and accelerated aging.
And I think everyone can imagine would want optimal aging, right?
Certainly not accelerated aging.
And what's interesting about this graph in your paper
is that while of course of course, it appears
that toxic stress, chronically unmitigated stress that's, makes us feel like we are at
the world's mercy or the other people's mercy, will accelerate aging.
Turns out that under exposure to stress leads to more rapid aging than what you describe as ideal amounts of stress.
In other words, that no stress is not the answer, rather to have some stress as ideal if you
want to have so-called optimal aging.
Can you explain a little bit about the mechanisms behind that?
Maybe this is a good opportunity also to tell us
about your telomere work.
So the questions are, how does one measure optimal
versus accelerated aging?
And why would it be that some stress is better than
no stress when it comes to aging ideally?
Mm-hmm.
So having no stress means we're not really living like we're not
engaging in the gifts of life which are inevitably have some challenge and risk
and let me give you an example one study took elderly people who were tired and
they you know society kind of labels them as you're
kind of done with your meaningful work in life and you're, you know, you are pretty much
not able to contribute to society. I mean, there's so many negative stereotypes of people
then kind of embody and then live. And this program brought them to work in schools and tutor young at-risk students.
And what happened to them is they went from feeling maybe safe and understressed to feeling
challenged but generative.
They were feeling more purpose, they were feeling like they were growing, and they were
feeling like their day had more meaning.
They had more relationships.
They had these caring relationships with the students.
The students had all sorts of issues and troubles, drugs and maybe not having lunch, poverty.
And so they felt the stress of that.
But they also saw how much they could help with their support and their tutoring.
And in the study, they took images of the hippocampus and those who engaged in the program, particularly
the men, actually had growth of their hippocampus during this program.
So at any stage in life, we can be growing and challenging ourselves even in our much
later years and growing our brain and you know
more than anyone like what does that hippocampal growth mean for their well-being and their cognitive
function? Yeah it's interesting that hippocampus of course of brain area involved in formation and
recall of memories mostly formation of memories. It's super interesting because it's so plastic,
it's so amenable to the addition of new memories.
I think the most striking study to me is the one, and I should point out that most of the
data say that the addition of new neurons is not the main reason for improvements in
memory, but it is one of them.
But Rusty Gage down at the Salk Institute did a study in, I think, that really 2000s,
where it took terminally ill people
and these people agreed to have their bodies injected
with a die that would label new neurons.
And then after they died, their brains were processed
and they didn't die from the die injection.
By the way, folks, they died from other causes.
They were terminally ill.
And what they discovered was that even in terminally ill
or or and some of these people were
quite old
those
people were still generating new neurons
especially in the context of still trying to learn and acquire new information. So
Of course they're dead so they can't apply that information after that. But of course none of us can right?
None of the information that why not up to when you die?
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
So one other example of this, my colleague, Dave Elmeida,
he measures daily stressful events
in huge national populations.
And a small percentage of people report no stressors.
And so you wonder, what's happening?
Are they not engaging in life?
Are they really not having stressors?
It looks like they are, it's not just that
they're not getting stressed by things, they're not, they're not really going out and doing
much. And what he found is that their level of kind of memory and cognition, their cognitive
health was significantly lower. So you can imagine the hippocampal, you know, the lack
of those neuropergeneral cells, They're just not being stimulated.
It's super interesting. I wasn't aware of that result, so I appreciate you sharing it.
I almost have to wonder if it's like exercise where, you know, so many people,
I think now everybody hopefully understands that exercise is going to lower blood pressure,
reduce resting heart rate, improve musculoskeletal function, and bone density, all that stuff.
But that if you took a snapshot of the bodily response during exercise, blood pressure
is way way up.
Heart rate is way way up.
Stress hormones are way up.
Cortisol is through the roof during a heart workout and immediately afterwards.
And yet that sets in motion a series of adaptations that brings you to a better place most of
the time.
I must wonder if stress is the same.
Is there any evidence that short bouts of stress provided that they're managed well,
meaning that we don't spend the next 24 or 48 hours
ruminating on the stressor, but that we're able to move through the stressor and resolve it in some way?
That that's actually beneficial for us because of the mobilization of energy stores and maybe
maybe even changing our threshold for reacting to stressors in the future.
It's a great question and it's one that I have been chewing on for a while because we know
as you said that physical stressors when they're short and repeated like high intensity
interval training, they are promoting not just aerobic fitness, but stress
fitness. People feel less rumination, less depression, less anxiety. So they're kind of tuning
up the nervous system. What about psychological stressors? And we know two things. So one
is I do think that there is a level of engagement with moderate stressors that when we are used to them, we get fit
and our stress resilience builds, meaning we're less threatened by them. So let me go deep
onto that. Two people can approach the exact same stressor, and one person is having a pretty
overreactive stress response where they basically are feeling their survivalist
threatened.
So it's high cortisol, high vasoconstriction,
and blood pressure goes up equally in both,
but the person who's feeling super threatened,
either their survival or their social survival,
or their ego, their blood pressure
went up because of the vasoconstriction.
The other person who is viewing the same stressor as,
I can do this, this is a great challenge and opportunity.
I have what it takes.
Those types of thoughts generate a different
hemodynamic response, which is actually more cardiac output.
So blood pressure is going up,
but in this healthier way,
more oxygenation to the brain, better problem solving,
they're able to maintain
this positive outlook. So we've measured the threat challenge response in many lab studies,
and we know lots of things. So if you're having more of the challenge response,
at the end of it, you're less inflamed. So just in a lab within an hour or two, we see that they
didn't trigger all that prone inflammatory response. And their telomeres tend to be longer,
which is a measure we can talk more about,
but basically it looks like they have a slower speed of aging.
That is super interesting.
You call this a stress challenge response?
So we could call this kind of a...
to be really simplistic, two types of psychological stress response, feeling threatened,
like you're going to fail, you're embarrassed.
That social pain response, we know well, that feels terrible.
But that also that huge stress response when we feel it in our stomach, our heart is pounding,
it's just an over exaggerated response. That response
biologically is different and the thoughts that go with it are different. And we recover
a lot slower. And then there's the challenge response, which is this, it's more of that
kind of activated, um, excited response. And the beauty is that there are lots of studies out there done by emotions and
social psychologists that tilt people toward the challenge response. We can actually promote
that challenge response. And so when you asked about like, is it good to have a repeated
stress response? Yes, if it's if it's manageable, right, then we're kind of building the muscle
of stress resilience.
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What are the sorts of things that people I can do in order, including me, I should say, can do in order to wage that
challenge response.
Is this purely based on mindset?
Like, instead of saying, why me, why this, why now, I can't believe this is happening.
Is it a mental pivot to, okay, this is a great opportunity for growth.
I don't know how I'm going to manage this,
but I'll manage this. You want to stop me, you got to kill me type of mindset. Is that the
switch that then the body follows? Because this is an interesting instance where the most all the
stress mitigation work that my lab does is focus on using the body to control the mind, but here
we're talking about the mind controlling the body first and then the body following suit,
which I find equally fascinating.
So are there some specific mental scripts that people follow and are we all able to follow those scripts?
Yes. To some extent, we control the script.
We can use that script to prepare ourselves going into a stressful situation
And we can use it at any point during the stressor
So some of us are just wired to have a big threat response period. Maybe it's you know
It's epigenetics. We've inherited. Maybe it's early trauma that has shaped us to be have this exaggerated emotional response
And yes, we and others have found that.
Trauma sensitizes our emotional stress response so that we are feeling more threatened.
But that's okay, because that's the part we can't control.
And we just have to have a lot of self-compassion and awareness that, okay, this is what I do.
My body reacts like this.
But what happens next?
That's when we can start to use those statements, self-comforting,
self-compassion, distancing. There's all sorts of statements that allow us to then recover more quickly.
So when we want to shift from a threatened response to a kind of challenge response.
Are there any data that dictate whether or not we should keep those statements in our
head, write them down, say them out loud?
I guess what I'm trying to do here is try to get to a little bit more of the meat of the
actionable, since a lot of our listeners, I think we'll be, as I am, very excited about
the idea that a mere shift in our mentality
about stress can give us the opposite outcome.
And before you were talking about vasoconstriction and inflammation and all these bad things to
put it lightly.
And then, in the challenge response to stress, getting the exact opposite, more vasodilation,
more resources used and more positive effects
on the brain body.
So what are some, if you can recall from the papers, if not, that's fine.
No, I can give you some statements.
But I'm just curious what those specific tools might be.
Every statement you said, Andrew, is good.
It's a good one.
The whole trick here is that people need to find the strength statements, the stress shields, I call them,
that fit them, that feels right, and that they believe.
And so, I list a bunch of options in chapter three,
which is called Be the Lion instead of the gazelle.
So they're blind and gazelle are both,
high blood pressure, high stress,
and the lion's chasing the gazelle.
But the gazelle's having this total threat,
vasoconstriction response,
because she might die,
lion might get dinner, right?
So it's needing to mount the stress response
because it's so excited to get the tasty dinner
for the next few days.
And so the lion is having that challenge response.
And so we can remind ourselves, be the lion.
It's not that we're always lion
or gazelle. We get to shape that. And so some of those statements are, let's say,
right, when when we're going into it, list your resources. Why have you ever dealt with
any situation like this? Remind yourself of past successes. Remind yourself of someone
you can call or text or feel supported by. Remind yourself that this outcome is not going to affect your life in 10 years or 5 years.
That's a distancing kind of perspective taking.
So there's all these strategies and you've got to use what works for you.
Telling yourself, I got this, I can do it, I can get through it, I have what it takes.
Those are all good shields.
And another set is, you know, we,
some of us feel really stressed out by stress.
Like once we get feel our heart racing,
that leads to, oh no, you know, this is bad for me.
And so rather than getting stressed by stress,
we actually want to remind ourselves
that this stress response is empowering.
This is going to help me cope. My body is excited. My body is doing just what it should right now.
So that reframing in studies by Wendy Mendez and others, my colleagues who do this re-apraisal
research, they have basically trained people to view stress as positive during the stressful situations in the lab people do better.
They perform better. They feel more positive emotion, they problem solve better, they recover more quickly.
So pretty powerful stuff.
Yeah, that is powerful stuff.
I'm wondering if we can talk about the relationship between stress and eating.
And I think that's also a great opportunity for us
to talk about the opioid system.
A lot of people are familiar with the so-called opioid epidemic
and opioid crisis.
Sadly, far too many people are dying.
A fentanyl overdoses and we all know about the oxy.
Content epidemic and all these people addicted to opioids.
And that's not really what this is about
What we're about to talk about is the fact that we have an opioid system within us that is
Neurons and other cell types that can reduce
Excuse me can release substances into our brain and body that make us feel less pain and make us feel sedated
But at a healthy level.
And yet there are a lot of things besides drugs that can activate this opioid system.
I think sex activates the endogenous opioid system. As far as I last read, there was a paper out recently, but also food can do it.
And again, to healthy levels, provided the context is healthy, of course.
What is the relationship between stress and eating and eating and the opioid system?
Stress and eating is an interesting one. So most people when they feel stressed or
you know I'm just gonna ask you do you eat more or less when you're stressed?
Less definitely. I feel like I can go two, three days without food
when I'm really stressed.
But I came up in a profession where sadly, for me,
all nighters were part of the regular
until pretty recently, a couple of years ago
when I just called an end to that.
And no, it wasn't just because of procrastination.
It was just to work overload.
But I can go a long period of time without eating, although I love to eat.
So I do point out that I do love to eat.
And what does the body feel like when you're in that stress state, when you're not even hungry,
you're kind of shut down in your digestion?
Oh, that I have enough energy from my neural resources, from adrenaline.
And generally those periods of time when I'm not hungry coincide with a
hyper focus on the stressor, the deadline, whatever it is in life that needs
tending to and food just doesn't appeal to me as much. It doesn't taste as good
and it's not as enticing. Yeah, so we think that if your type of
body temperament is high sympathetic.
And so when you have a big stress response,
your digestion is pretty much shut down.
Like it would be the opposite.
Eating would be the opposite of what your body is telling you to do.
I'm just going to forgive me for interrupting.
For those of you hearing sympathetic,
we're not talking about sympathy.
We're talking about the sympathetic arm of the autonomic nervous system, which is the
so-called fighter flight, as opposed to the parasympathetic.
In any event, it starts interrupt, but I want to make sure that sometimes people hear
sympathy and then I think emotional sympathy.
I like to think I have that too, but okay, so I tend to mean more towards the sympathetic,
meaning more alertness or rousal on the sea
saw of the autonomic nervous system.
And I'm a high sympathetic actor.
I lose weight when I go through, like writing my dissertation.
I look like a skeleton at the end.
But that's not what most people complain about.
It's not weight loss.
Most people complain about overeating
or binge eating when they're emotional, when they're stressed.
And so that's the more common pattern.
And that looks different, both in the brain and biologically.
And so what it looks like is that the stress response
is driving cravings.
And also, let's say high insulin or an insulin resistance state.
And what goes along with that is tending to be overweight or have obesity.
And so just by whether it's through conditioning or genetics,
having that kind of larger body with a big stress-eating temperament,
that is a challenge in life.
And I've been, you know, I've worked with people with different eating conditions,
eating disorders, binge eating, and it is a, what's hard about it is number one, it's very common and normative
to just feel like you can't feel satiated.
So it's this compulsive eating tendency that stress brings you to.
And so the, so what it means we measure this, it's very easy to measure, it means that people
feel like they can't control their eating, they don't get full, they think about food a
lot.
And so stress kind of exacerbates that tendency.
And that is a common phenotype, we've studied it and maybe 50% of people with obesity have
that.
Do lean people have that?
Some, not many, like less than 20%.
But what they also have is this tremendous kind of diet, what we call diet terrestrial
and our control over their eating.
So they are able to not overeat even though they're thinking about food a lot. So that explains that unusual body of someone who's really more,
has still has those compulsive traits.
So why does this matter?
This makes it really hard to eat well,
because when you're stressed, you're craving
the comfort food, the high fat, high sugar, high salt, depending on your
temperament.
And that is, that means with repeated bouts of stress, you're just going to be gaining
weight, and particularly in the intra-abdominal area.
That's what we've seen.
We've seen it cross sexually.
We've seen it in rat studies and mice studies.
And now we've seen it in people.
And many staff, for about 10 years, I studied this.
And the question was, is what's happening in people the same thing that's happening in my?
So if you stress them out and you give them Oreos, the mice develop binge eating, they get really
compulsive. And they get this, you know, terrible metabolic health profile, metabolic syndrome,
where they're around, you know, their they're belly fat basically expands like a cushion.
And that's because that's this really good immediate source of energy during stress.
So we're like, we're really well wired to, if our body thinks we're under chronic stress,
we're going to store stress fat or a don't look at so that we can just mobilize that in
a second.
And then the second question we've asked is, can you reverse that with different interventions?
Can you block the compulsive eating?
So I can tell you what we found there.
But the opioid system that you mentioned is certainly involved.
And in studies with people, lean people and people with obesity, my colleague, Rajita
Sinha at Yale, I basically found that when you stress them out, people with obesity
are having a different reward response. And they're having, they're the more insulin resistant
they are, the more their rewards center lights up during stress.
And what's causal there? Like what's the chicken, what's the egg? So, because I can imagine
these were people that at one time were not obese who got stressed.
The opioid system reacted in a particularly potent way to food, and they were able to clamp
their stress, and so then they become binge eaters in the context of stress. And that leads to
insulin insensitivity. Exactly. I could also imagine that they were insulin
insensitive. Therefore, they need to eat more in order to feel kind of an increase in
satiety, because we know this now based on brain and body mechanisms. And then that set off
a cascade of things leading to obesity. Not that it necessarily matters,
but what's causal?
Do we know if it's true?
Oh, I think it really does matter.
I think there's been a mistake of kind of confounding
all obesity with food addiction and metabolic disease,
and it's completely heterogeneous.
So I think it's the developmental path
that you're describing, which is that there's a tendency
toward having a bigger reward response and hunger during stress.
So it becomes a way of coping, a lifestyle, and that is a pathway toward obesity.
And so some obese people have a dysregulated stress response, but not all of them.
I mean, it really is a certain type of person.
So that's why we target people with cravings in all of our intervention studies.
Now, we want to know who has more of the compulsive eating type
because they need a different set of skills to cope with stress
and to lose weight if that's their goal.
There's a drug I'm sure you're familiar with Naltrexone,
which can block the opioid receptor.
It's used to block the opioid receptor
in the context of different types of addiction.
Have people tried to use Naltrexone
in the context of binge eating
and does it help people lose weight?
Because it presumably reduces some of the rewarding properties
of food.
That's one of the very few drug combinations that has been used for binge eating.
So it was a combination of not trek zone and well butrin.
And I'm not sure at this moment how much that's favored for binge eating,
but certainly the early trials showed that it really does damp down on the compulsive eating.
Interesting.
So is that a commonly prescribed kit of drugs now for obesity?
I know there's a lot of excitement nowadays
about these semi-glutide analogues,
because they do seem very effective in blocking hunger,
especially in diabetic, so I don't know if you're familiar
with that.
There's all the rage.
Most of the people saw that before and after photos of Elon,
he had a shirt off on a boat, and there were some not
so nice comments made about them. And then sometime later, he had a shirt off on a boat, and there were some not-so-nice comments made about him,
and then sometime later he was quite a bit lighter,
and he announced that he had been taking one of these
semiglutide agonists.
Yeah.
I really hope that we come up with safe and effective drugs,
and one thing to think about is that the challenge
that we all have, particularly for prone to obesity,
is the toxic food environment,
and particularly the refined sugar.
And regardless of what we're on met,
for men or one of these drugs,
we override it with our diet.
And really, the improved nutrition
is the only way to solve it as a public health problem.
I mean, the drug companies are saying everyone should be,
everyone knows a certain BMI should be on one of these new drugs and it's just rubbish and it's not
going to lead to long-term health.
Well, I know you have a colleague there at UCSF, Dr. Robert Lustig who's been talking about
sugars and hidden sugars for years and the problems with that. And we don't want to demonize
sugars the only cause of the obesity epidemic, but it's certainly one of them.
At least that's my belief according to the data.
Yes, and Rob is the biggest proponent of helping people
understand the big problem in the root is in the process
food and the sugar and that the drugs don't touch that.
We just override effects of any drugs with our diet. And so it's been a losing battle, really,
because of the force of big food and big pharma.
So let me go back to the complicity.
So there are some clues about how to break that cycle.
So one is in our weight loss trials or our healthy mindful eating trials, we find that
mindful eating is not going to cause a lot of weight loss period.
But the people who benefit most from learning this kind of calm self-regulation where you
check in with your hunger, you slow down, you increase your awareness of your body. So in
tereseptive awareness, that type of skill is really critical for people with
compulsive eating. And so in our trials, we find that if they, people with
compulsive eating, if they get randomized to the mindful eating, they do better
in terms of their insulin resistance and their glucose and their long-term weight loss.
So that's one good clue.
Another is the positive stress pathway looks important for breaking the compulsive eating
cycle.
So extra high-intensity to interval training or maybe some of these other ways that we've
been talking about to increase the bodily stress in these short-term ways
to metabolize stress in our body
can help with the cravings.
So what would that look like in the context of,
let's say somebody has the opposite phenotype to me.
They get stressed and they find themselves
reaching for snack food or that they simply can't reach
satiety, they just want to eat and eat and eat.
What are some of the,
aside from now, Trexon and Wilbuterin and some of these prescription approaches? Because I always say, while
I value, certainly value prescription drugs in certain contexts, I always feel like behaviors
should come first, do's and don'ts, then nutrition, then supplementation, and then if and only
if it still needed prescription drugs. But that's just my bias based on my observation. I like to think so.
It also starts at a zero cost endeavor.
I mean, behaviors require time,
but it certainly includes everybody,
not just those that have insurance
or that live in a particular region of the US or the world.
So anyway, that's my bias and at least for the time being,
I'm sticking
with it. It's the basis of a lot of what we talk about on this podcast. But nonetheless,
if somebody is finding themselves in that category of binge eating or heading towards binge eating
or using food to comfort or alleviate stress, how should they intervene in their own thoughts
and behavior?
We talked about the vans, top down strategies, changing the body, changing the scene.
We need all of those.
I mean, the compulsive drive to eat is one of our strongest impulses if we've developed
that pathway.
And so we train people, for example, in mindful awareness of separating out emotions from hunger.
So they get really wrapped up together.
So just labeling how you're feeling, labeling your hunger from one to ten, and figuring
out, is it, am I really hungry as a boredom?
That helps people.
If you do that check-in right before you eat, that helps the most.
So that's the top- mindful check in. The other thing we help people do is like
ride the craving, surf the earth, so we deal a lot with soda drinkers, and it is addictive,
and there is nothing worse than drinking sugar soda for our body. So we help people by having them watch their craving pass and
knowing that it's a matter of time that they can surf the urge without jumping to
consuming. And so that practice helps some people, especially with practice. The
pushups, the taking a walk, the changing the scene, getting away from food is
always going to be a huge strong strategy if the scene, getting away from food is always going to be a huge
strong strategy if you can get yourself away from it. The problem is, as you know, is that the
cravings get you to the buffet, they drive you to the soda, et cetera. And so just creating
safe environments but at home and in the workplace where you don't have soda is really important.
So we tried that at UCSF.
My colleagues and I, including Rob Lustig, the anti-sugar doctor,
we just saw the absurdity of being a medical center,
people come with these chronic diseases,
and what are they served in the cafeteria, or even at their bedside,
sugared coke?
In the hospital.
In the hospital.
And so my colleague, Lourish Mett, who's partly responsible for the soda tax, she rallied
the, all the, we went top down to administration, bottom up to vendors, got rid of all the
soda in all of our hospitals and campuses.
And we found two things.
Number one, people who were heavy drinkers lost weight in the most important place.
They're waste.
Heavy you soda drinkers?
Mm-hmm.
So when we took it out of the workplace, they actually, their health improved.
And number two, those with compulsive eating, they score high on our little scale for reward-based drive.
It didn't help them.
So then we randomized half of them to get some extra boost, we call it motivational interviewing.
We're really supporting them more and helping them, you know, think of goals like being
with our grandchildren not getting diabetes.
And that little bit of support helped
them tremendously.
And so now we are trying to roll that out in, you know, a big controlled trial, but at
least 100 hospitals have adopted the, um, stopped selling sugary drinks because people don't
want to be sick, but they can't help it if they have the reward drive.
And if they have the complicity and it's right there at work, we're just working against health.
That's super interesting. I think that for most of us, we think about soda as the kind of thing
that maybe we have every once in a while or that we drink more when we were kids. I seem to
lost my appetite for soda at some point. You just know too much.
Ten years. Maybe or just at some point.
Yeah.
I started to feel like there were better alternatives.
And, you know, like what?
Well, okay.
Well, people want ideas.
Yeah, well, full confession.
I mean, okay, most of my non-water beverage consumption is going to be either coffee.
Usually black coffee or nowadays I sometimes will throw some ketones in there,
not because I'm on a ketogenic diet,
but for, I do feel like it makes my level of focus
and cognition better.
Is that what you're exploring in this morning?
Yeah, I do use it before podcasts
and we're prepping for podcasts.
It, they're a good data showing that we can all utilize
ketones as a brain fuel,
even if we're not on a ketogenic diet. That's clear to me based on my experience and the data
as I see them and understand them.
Or your bramate tea, which is just a caffeinated tea
from South America, which I like very much.
However, I am a guilty of drinking the occasional diet
soared every once in a while.
And I know that some of my audience will just gasp, how could I do that?
But we're talking about the occasional diet code.
Diet soda diet code.
The decaying old diet code.
Mostly because I don't like the taste of sugary soda.
And I actually really like the taste of diet soda.
Aspartame is a particularly rewarding taste for me.
And as a consequence, I try and avoid drinking it more than I might have a can of diet coke
once a month maximum
Usually on a plane or something like that. So that's the extent of it
But if I have the choice between a really great coffee and a soda, it's gonna be coffee or your bravate and a soda
It's gonna be your bravate
or food and soda I'm gonna eat instead and so that's me, but I do recall, you know,
as a teenager, soda was kind of a default.
You just kinda like go to the soda fountain
and fill the drink.
It felt like such a rewarding thing.
And I think the reason we're drilling into this
more deeply is it sounds to me based on what you said earlier
in my read of the literature,
also brings me the idea that drinking sugar
in the form of liquid
is one of the worst things that we can do
in terms of our bodily regulation of insulin and glucose.
It's, I don't want to use the word empty calories
because that's kind of a loaded phrase,
but it is essentially empty calories.
It doesn't have a problem.
Well, it's harmful calories, they're not empty.
Yeah, I mean, there are amino acids
and they're no essential fatty acids.
And there aren't many carbohydrates
that you can really utilize for long-term bouts of mental or physical work.
So do you view soda as one of the worst, certainly not the best, but one of the worst culprits
out there?
I mean, it is really prominent, especially nowadays also we should include energy drinks.
A lot of kids, especially males, by the way, it's almost, this is crazy. It's almost 95% of energy drink consumption is males. Interesting. And I don't know what, why
there's maybe it's the packaging or how the marketing has been bitched. But by the way,
as soon as I say that, someone will be in the YouTube comments telling me that that's
completely false, but we can point you to the data. So what are your thoughts on sugary
drinks and what that's doing?
Do you think this is a reaction to how much stress people are experiencing? Is this like
people's attempt to to inoculate their stress? Or is it simply that it tastes good and it's
easy to consume and it's relatively inexpensive?
People have not and we have not really studied the sugary drinks in the same way we have studied the comfort food and the binge eating.
And so my guess is that it is part of a stress response, but even more than that, it's part of the
hedonic cycle. So when you get the sugar, especially if it's packed with caffeine, that's gonna be a more addictive drink. You get this, you know, really feel good response
right away, and then you get the low,
and it's the hedonic withdrawal,
so which is this, you actually feel bad
when it's been a while since you've had it,
and so then it drives the compulsivity.
You want it again, because you wanna,
how can you wanna feel better?
You wanna get rid of feeling bad. So that's what happens with both food addiction, and we think it again, because you want to, how can you want to feel better, you want to get rid of feeling bad.
So that's what happens with both food addiction, and we think that happens with sugary drinks.
Now let me tell you that when you ask, is a sugary drink one of the worst things we can do for
our health?
Yes.
Because sugary food doesn't go to our brain as quickly as a liquid, liquid sugar, a sugary drink. So think about cocaine and crack.
Crack goes to the brain immediately and it's that much more addictive. That's how we think of liquid sugar.
The view on sugar I think is starting to change and I think in the years to come, provided folks like you and
Dr. Lustig continue to be vocal about it, which I hope you will.
I think it's going to shift things quite a bit. I'd look at it a little bit like trans fats.
You know, when I was growing up, people ate margarine and now trans fats are banned in many cities.
It's kind of incredible how these things have changed over time and it requires an effort
not just on social media, but podcasts and I think also lobbying,
lobbying on our politicians,
really getting them to understand
just how pernicious this stuff is.
There's a lot of social norms that go into like,
what's good for all of us as a group or community
and what's personal choice.
It's very fiery.
You know, I've heard a colleague talking about how
bringing junk food or soda to work is like passive smoking.
You're like, you're bringing something
and that's gonna pollute other people's health
and you shouldn't do it.
So that's much more edgy and people will fight them on that.
But the basic reality is, yeah,
we're gonna eat the donuts if they're in front of us.
And so it is much more considerate to bring a bowl of fruit.
I do love a good donut.
Oh, me too.
That's a great question.
That's a great question.
You're very excited.
I'm glad you brought up smoking.
I don't want to take us off topic.
But as long as we're venturing into these general, or I should say more general, and yet
really important themes around public health and food, you know, I learned something interesting
about smoking and why so few people now smoke.
I always thought that the campaigns around smoking and how terrible it is for us showing pictures
of lungs that are caked with all this tar and cancer and all this stuff was the effective
message.
But what I learned was that one of the most effective messaging systems
in the battle against smoking was to get young people to stop smoking, not by telling them
it was bad for them, but by showing them videos of these rich men sitting around tables,
cackling about the fact that they're making so much money on the health problems of other
people because of smoking.
In other words, what they did is they made being a non-smoker anti-establishment.
And so I find it very interesting. Anytime there's something like soda or highly processed foods that are so woven into the establishment,
it seems like though we can tell people until we're blue in the face about all the health concerns with these things.
Sugar is bad, and this is bad.
Highly processed food is bad.
Some people might change their behavior,
but seems like for the younger generation,
the thing that's most effective
is to activate their sense of rebellion.
This has been true for probably hundreds of thousands
of years, but it's certainly true in the last 100 years.
And let them see that there is a very strong big food, sometimes big
pharma, but certainly big food system that is working against them and that in order to
take control of their health, actually, we want to activate their sense of rebellion so
that they're like, no, I'm going to take excellent care of myself.
I'm not going to fall victim to this monetary scheme.
And here, I'm not pointing to any conspiracy.
I mean, this has been seen with smoking.
This has been seen with a number of different pharmaceuticals.
Again, not all pharmaceuticals are bad.
This is true of a number of different aspects
of kind of big marketing.
Absolutely.
It's like, pull the blinders off, let people know
that we're vulnerable to all the marketing
and that there really are suppression of data
behind a lot of it.
So it's happening with eating source disorders too, Eric Stice,
who's at Stanford with you, has been using this method.
We call it dissonance, showing people with eating disorders,
how the food industry has been manipulated,
and has tried to design food for addiction,
for the highest bang for the buck with dopamine, etc.
And so that has helped reduce eating disorders in these studies.
And it has even helped reduce reward drive.
Isn't that amazing that the dissonance could do that?
So interesting.
Yeah, I think what it's telling us is that a few things are as strong as the
no-I-won, I refuse to your response
in terms of changing behavior,
especially when there's something to push against.
So it's not just a battle with ourselves.
I want the soda, but I'm not gonna drink it.
It becomes a, well I want it, but I want it
because you are making me think I want it.
I don't actually want that.
So I don't know, maybe this is getting me back
into my teenage mindset, but I think a sense of rebellion provided
it's in the direction of health, one's own health and the health of others, of course, can be a positive thing.
Yeah, well we do that with the mindful eating. We really, we have them bring in the
shankiest processed food they can think of, like a twinkie and eat that really slowly and
mindfully. And few people finish it and they're like, that actually wasn't nearly as good as the picture of it and the idea of it.
And so it's like that reward predictive error that you've talked about where
they think the brain is driving them to have it because of the advertising
and their expectation that they'll feel good.
But if they're really paying attention, it's a very disappointing experience.
Versus, we also have people
savor a piece of good chocolate,
whichever they like, milk or dark,
and that experience teaches them to eat slowly
and really enjoy small amounts of rewarding food,
so that they don't need to feel full and binge.
Oh, so interesting.
Dark or milk chocolate?
Dark.
Yeah, like what?
Actually, like the 100% chocolate.
There's one brand of Venezuelan chocolate that's 100%
which sound, you might sound awful,
but it's actually quite good.
I think that was the first time I could actually
taste the real elements of chocolate.
Interesting.
Yeah, that is not reward.
It's way too bitter for me.
I need the mouthfeeling.
Give me some fat neck.
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So while we're talking about stress, eating, obesity,
and here we've also brought in the discussion
to include different generations.
We're talking about teens and adults.
I'd love for you to share with us your findings
around this study that you did of pregnant women
and how stress and pregnancy and
different patterns of eating and physiological changes that people experience during pregnancy.
Could you share with us what those findings were because I think those are relevant,
not just to people who are pregnant or planning to become pregnant, but to everybody because
I think they shed light on how we manage stress and sometimes how we fail to manage.
Yeah. So with overweight, obesity, we know we can't just change calories. It's just not going to work.
The next stressful event is going to come along, and people will go back to what their brain is driving them to do,
is to binge on comfort food. And so we've done these interventions with men and women that show that we can help them regulate
using some of these mindful eating strategies,
we're checking in.
We wanted to do this with pregnant women
because when you have excess weight and your pregnant,
you're really vulnerable to gaining excessive weight
during pregnancy, which is not healthy for the mom
or the offspring.
So we did this study.
It took us probably 10 years total to get the grant and recruit groups of 10 women who
are pregnant in the same stage and give them this training in mindful eating, mindful nutrition,
stress reduction. And then my colleague, Nikki Book Bush,
has been following the babies for,
I think it's been almost 10 years since then.
And here's what we found.
First of all, we couldn't stop excess weight gain.
The women in the control group gained about,
about 60% of them gained excess weight during pregnancy
and same with our mindful group. So maybe it's in a story. You'd stop there and say, fails don't do it. There have been so many
beautiful developments in the women who got the training that we just keep are, you know,
being shocked by how impactful this stress reduction training was. It was just two months of their
life, but, but pregnancy is a very critical period when these women were changing their habits and they were very
motivated to help their baby.
So here's what we found.
Within that first month of the intervention, they all got this oral glucose tolerance test.
So they got a blood test to see how well their body was metabolizing food, sugar.
And so it's like a pre-biabetes test.
And what we found was that twice as many women
in the no treatment control group
had impaired glucose tolerance during pregnancy.
It's a common high risk.
And half that many women had this in the mindfulness group.
So by reducing stress,
they improved their insulin sensitivity during
pregnancy. So imagine what that's doing to the baby too. Then the babies have come out with less
obesity, less illnesses in their first year of life, and more of this kind of healthy stress
response when they've been stressed out in the lab study.
And so then eight years later, we looked at the mental health of the mom.
So right after the intervention eight weeks later, everyone in our mindfulness stress
writing group felt great.
They felt less depressed.
They had less stress and less anxiety.
That's what you'd expect, right?
I mean, they'd just gone to a weekly class.
They got all the support.
But eight years later, they got all the support, but eight years later they still showed
improvement on health. Every year that we measured them, they still looked better. So it's probably
one of the longest studies looking at long-term effects of a mindfulness training. And I don't
think it was a quincence that was during pregnancy. I think this is a very important time to have
these skills. And being in a group adds that social support piece that we know is powerful.
That's an incredible result.
Could you share with us what the mindfulness intervention was and when it was initiated,
when it was stopped.
So we're talking about 10 minutes a day of meditation.
As many details as you can possibly give us because I know even though I don't think
I'll ever be pregnant, I don't plan on it. Never know.
Well, yeah, zero minus one probability in my mind, but anyway, maybe other people have other
ideas for me, but zero minus one probability in my mind.
And yet, I'm very interested in this mindfulness intervention because it sounds like a very potent
one, so much so that it sounds like a very potent one.
So much so that it's having a multi-generational impact.
So how many minutes a day?
How many days per week?
We had them.
They met once a week.
They had little reminder cards.
I mean, we need all the reminders we can.
You know, post it's on the fridge,
timers in our phone to do this mindful check-in.
And so they were during the week doing this check-in,
and it was simply a mindful check-in closing their eyes
and feeling their body, feeling their labeling,
their emotions, so it was mindful breathing.
And then it was some movement.
And we taught them prenatal yoga but really any
mind-body movement people like different things there's chigong there's
there's even just slow walking would have worked so it was mindful check-in
breathe move my body that's what the reminder card said. So close your eyes and look inside,
do slow breathing. They also put their hands on their belly and so they felt that they
were taking care of their baby and then more movement. So they did increase their walking.
And the mindful of check-ins are, as we were talking about at the very beginning, I would say necessary, but not sufficient.
We've got to stop during the day and check in and look inside. If we're not aware of where our mind is, we are just subject to the, you know, believing the stressful thoughts, thinking that we need to keep ruminating their sticky thoughts. So the mindful check-in is really important. And then I think the breathing, as we talked about,
is probably the more direct way that they're influencing
the prenatal environment, the uterine environment,
to reduce the stress that the baby's being exposed to.
And the movement refocuses us from our mind
and our reminited thoughts to the experiences to what we feel in the body.
There's even been a study that showed that overweight people with a lot of cravings.
If they do the body scan, that's simply focusing on the body from the head to the toe,
you know, just reminding ourselves to focus on each part of the body, breathe into it,
release tension.
It's very basic and simple.
The body's skin significantly reduced cravings.
I mean, to me, that's really hard to reduce cravings.
So like, just that refocusing on the body
took away stress, anxiety, self-referential thoughts
that kind of are favorite topic,
thinking about ourselves, thinking negative thoughts about ourselves to relaxing, feeling ease, feeling
well-being.
I can't help but ask about what that body scan might have been doing at a little bit more
of a mechanistic level.
Some of the listeners might be familiar with these terms, but some won't.
So I'll just briefly define them.
We can perceive things in terms of
extra reception or basically paying attention to and focusing on things beyond the confines
of our skin or interoception. I realize you know all this, but for their sake.
No one really understands interoception. Go for it. So an interoception essentially, the sensory
innovation of the internal organs of our own skin. That includes proprioception, which is our knowledge or our sense of where our limbs are,
where we are relative to gravity, all that stuff.
And, you know, it raises this body scan result, that is the fact that a brief body scan can
reduce cravings raises this question in my mind, which is, is craving a heightened sense
of interception or heightened sense of extraception.
So I could think of one form of craving where,
for instance, the donut, again, donuts for me,
is in front of me and I'm thinking that, I want that.
And so I'm almost in complete extraception,
but I'm tethered to it.
Like my internal world is tethered to the donut.
It's almost like the donut is in control of me briefly.
And then I eat it.
But if I do... It's hijacked your prefrontal cortex. It's hij like the donut is in control of me briefly. And then I eat it. But if I-
It's hijacked your prefrontal cortex.
It's hijacked everything.
Yeah.
And then if I do a body scan, so I'm putting it myself in this experiment in this kind
of hypothetical scenario, I'm putting myself into this experiment.
I do a body scan, which without question is shifting me more towards interoception, right?
I'm focusing on my skin, my heart rate, all these things, interoception.
So I could see how that would draw my attention off of the external stimulus and reduce craving.
And that makes me wonder whether or not craving is a form of extra reception where our interoception
is just exquisitely locked to extra reception and if so, you know, because I do think this is a remarkable result
It is very hard to stop cravings. I mean we had a guest on here a former colleague of mine at Stanford is now at chair of neurosurgery at UPEN
School medicine, which is Casey Halpern. I mean they do they literally drill down through the skull of people who have been
Jeeting disorder and start stimulating different brain areas because these people are so out of control
in terms of their binge eating.
I mean, that's the kind of intervention that is considered necessary for a lot of folks
who binge eat.
So here you're telling me a body scan in some individuals can reduce that.
And I have to wonder whether or not it's somehow breaking that interoceptive, extraoceptive
tether. Anyway, I'm speculating here, but I'd that interoceptive, extraoceptive tether.
Anyway, I'm speculating here,
but I'd love your thoughts on craving and binging
and breaking binging.
Do you think that there are behavioral interventions
that could be layered on top of body scans?
Should we all be doing body scans routinely?
Yes, why not?
And some people are gonna like that.
Lying down is maybe not comfortable. And so any mind body activity is going to do the same.
It's going to be, you know, I think breaking that link that you talked about.
Yeah, I find this whole inter-receptive, extra-receptive balance thing.
One of the more interesting conversations these days in neuroscience, because we're starting
finally starting to understand what some of the circuitries are and they do link to these reward pathways. In any event,
getting back to the relationship doing stress and food, maybe even just weaving back a little bit
to the opioid system, have there been any long-term studies of stress intervention? You know,
in the studies that we do in our laboratory, we get people for a month, they do one intervention,
we swap them to another intervention,
and you get a month, we analyze data,
takes a couple of years to do all that,
but we write papers and we move on.
Sounds like your laboratory has been involved
in doing a lot of studies where you're examining people
over a very long period of time, even their children.
What can we learn about the long term outcomes
of things like body scans, meditation, and then we'll get into breath work?
There haven't been that many long-term studies of stress interventions.
Now that you mention it, I think the meditation studies are probably the best example.
There are some studies that have either followed people who have taken up meditation or just these cross-sexual studies where you compare a long-term
meditator to someone who's never meditated. And they are interesting. I mean, let's talk about the cross-sexual studies.
You're already, you know, studying someone who eats like kale chips instead of potatoeships.
So there's a lot of differences in who decides to be a meditator.
We, in terms of the health and biology, we have found that there is slower biological aging and other
people have found that. In these meditation interventions, we do the short term ones,
the inflammatory pathways of gene expression are dampened way down.
And cross-sectionally, other people, like Elizabeth Hoji,
have found longer telomeres in the meditators
versus the controls.
So we haven't really found telomere lengthening
in our short-term meditation studies,
but we do find boosts in telomerase activity, which
is this enzyme that protects our cell aging,
slows our cell aging, revils the telomeres.
So those are studies that suggest if someone works to continue meditating,
they might keep up that slower rate of aging.
So there's one study we did, which I think was particularly fun.
We went to retreat center Center, where Deepak
Chopra leads us one week, Transcendental Meditation Retreat. So people got a mantra and they
were focusing for probably eight hours a day on different yoga, meditation, and reflective
exercises. And then we had half the group just walk around the resort, take walks, hear some
boring health talks. So that was our control group. And what we found from that study was
that in the short run, a week later, everyone felt fantastic after the week, right? They
weren't allowed to bring their laptop and work and they ate this great anti-inflammatory diet,
an aerobatic diet.
And then the gene expression pathways
were like night and day from day one to the last day.
And our model of machine learning model
was able to identify people over 90%
and could say whether they were on day one or day seven.
And the difference really emerged over the long run.
We went and we followed
them about 10 months later. And we found that not everyone felt great 10 months later, the
group who learned meditation still had lower depression, but the control group bounced right
back up. And then we looked a little bit further and we saw that people with early adversity
benefited the most from the meditation condition.
Oh, what was the meditation condition? How long per day?
Yeah, well, so they did, they learned transcendental, primordial sound meditation, which is similar
to TM, where you have a, you have focused attention on your unawared, over and over, but there's also more awareness of the body.
And that was, I couldn't say how many minutes a day,
but it was on and off during the day.
Okay, so repeatedly, but for a fairly short period
of time, one week.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, I've never done one of these extended meditation retreats.
Are you interested?
Well, various people in my life have told me that I need to go do a silent meditation,
but they probably were emphasizing the silent part.
The, I still remember.
I recommend them.
I think there are amazing ways to get to know the mind
and to really calm the body in ways like a quantum shift
in our level of stress that we don't get.
It's very hard to get in short
bounce.
I do a daily meditation practice, but it's a relatively brief meditation practice. I do tend
to focus more on things like deliberate cold exposure and breath work and exercise and
sunlight and all the things I talk about on the podcast, but I'm certainly not averse
to doing a longer meditation. Are all of these TMA meditations, are they silent meditations?
And they range from what two days to a week is that?
Well, the retreats, you can always find a retreat that's half a day, one day, a week, two
weeks. So you don't go right into a two week, you work up to it. So the longest I've ever
done is a two week silent meditation retreat. And that was after, you know, 10 years of doing yearly, shorter retreats.
And then when you, you know, I think it would be too hard and stressful if you haven't
been able to, I mean, meditation would be stressful if you think that you're failing at it.
And so you need to have kind of developed the skill a little bit before you go on the
retreats.
And so lots of classes can do that in online.
But I think the short bouts every day are, that is what is the most important message
for people, for managing daily stress.
And that's in the stress prescription, it's very much about how we can do short daily
nudges to reduce our stress arousal.
So breathing is one of the best body-based examples
of getting right there.
But there are other ways.
So being in nature, that's a really strong stimulus,
an environment that sends all sorts of safety signals to us.
Yeah, certainly it's not an either or,
but it seems like nowadays a lot of the discussion
that used to be had around meditation,
its ability to evoke neuroplasticity and things of that sort,
has shifted over to an increased focus on psychedelics.
It's a common theme on this podcast,
but it just seems like in taking the pulse of social media
and the landscape out there,
there's so much excitement about psilocybin,
both in microdose and macrados and MDMA
and some of the other trials that are out there,
that many people are trying to forget the incredibly rich and vast literature supporting
the use of even brief meditation practices for reshaping the mind.
So I'm glad that we're talking about meditation.
But I mean, even going into plant medicine experiences is enhanced if you have a little bit
of training in how to, in
medical cognition, how to view the mind and thoughts.
You can observe the whole experience with that much more kind of calmness, skill, and wisdom
knowing this is just the mind doing this cool things.
So it's not, they're not separate.
And then I think the, the psilocybin experiences enhance daily meditation.
So they really go well together.
Yeah, and then just as a little editorial on psychedelics,
what's interesting, I think, about the clinical data
is that, you know, we think of the psychedelic journey
as the time in which all the changes occur
because it has all these properties of hallucinations
and altered thinking, et cetera, that acts as kind of a gravitational pull around our ideas about what psychedelics do.
But it's actually in the window after the psychedelic journey that the actual rewiring in the brain
takes place.
So when people talk about integration afterwards, they're not just talking about the few
hours where they're, you know, parachuting back down to typical consciousness.
Let's call it that.
But that there's these long, perhaps even weeks
or month-long tail of plasticity.
And that's actually when most of the rewiring is happening,
and which I find really interesting,
which is not unlike meditation, where, sure,
in one bout of meditation, you might see
a adjustment or rewiring of the brain.
But at least from the book, Alter Traits,
which I'm a big fan of, talked
about these daily repeated short meditations or these longer TM retreats, as they're sometimes
called, in inducing this big-time brain plasticity.
All right, well, I'm now going to have to do it, and I'll report back to everybody what
my experience was, although I might do it silently.
I'd love to talk a little bit about some of the other health metrics that you've explored,
not just in the context of mindfulness, but I'm particularly intrigued by a graph here,
I'm showing my really nerdy side. There's a graph in one of your papers. It's the Picard paper,
2018. We will provide a link to this in the show note captions that people want to take a look.
But it essentially describes the relationship between mitochondrial health and mood
in the context of people who have different type
of mood tendencies.
If you would be willing to just describe the top contour
of that study and some of the points
that you find most interesting.
I think it's a fascinating study and I'm so glad you did it,
but I'll let you tell us about it.
Yeah, we've done these in-depth studies
where we are looking at people under a lot of daily demand,
caregivers, and then we look at normal people, parents
of neurotypical children who still have a lot of stress.
But we then ask, does do people under chronic stress
have accelerated aging?
So we look at telomeres, epigenetics, mitochondrial health.
And then what explains those who looked really good,
who look resilient and don't look vulnerable.
And so then we can find out like what's the magic sauce
in the day that protects them from chronic stress.
So Martin Bacart, my colleague who has been obsessed
with mitochondrial health as a pathway to understanding both stress
and really health and disease.
He has developed a way to measure mitochondrial health
in humans so we can measure a bunch of enzymes
and then we can adjust it for how many mitochondria we have.
So we have this really nice index we can get from the blood.
And in this study of young mothers
who had either typical children or children with autism,
we found that the caregiving moms had significantly
lower dampened mitochondrial activity.
What that means is they can't produce as much energy. So if they're
feeling more exhausted from the chronic stress, we know why. I mean, it's, it really is a,
it was quite dramatic. Martin commented some of those low levels even looked like people
with some genetic reasons to have low mitochondrial activity. But here's the beauty of that study.
We then get to look within their day at their mood and ask,
what about the caregivers who have really great mitochondrial enzymes?
And thus, should be making a lot of ATP, they had more positive emotions,
both waking up and in the evening, but especially in the evening.
And what's so interesting that is all of these daily diary
studies of stress and mood.
One of the things we know that matters for long-term health
is how positive you feel at night.
So especially in a stressful day.
So at the end of a stressful day,
can you muster from some feelings of content, ease,
confidence, joy, do you have any of that?
Or has it just wiped out your positivity?
And so for people who feel either lower, negative,
or higher positive, they tend to have better health
trajectories, so like a decade later, less depression,
less heart disease, less early death.
So that's why we care so much about daily moods.
And in our study, it looked like the daily mood was really quite correlated with the mitochondria
levels that same day.
And we measured mood like days away from that and was much less correlated.
So that's just our first study on this, but it really leads us to think that our mitochondria
are sensitive to our thoughts and our feelings,
probably on a daily basis.
Incredible. So for those of us that find ourselves in a state of chronic stress,
and here I'm talking about the kind of stress that you mentioned before, which is, you know,
there is unlikely to be a simple solution. Like we're just gonna be grappling with this thing.
And you mentioned the words radical acceptance,
which I'd like to drill into a little bit too.
Cause this is a theme in the self-help literature.
And it's a theme in that now I think
in the formal psychology literature,
I actually was talking to a dialectical,
trained dialectical psychology expert recently,
I think that's the correct title.
Dialectical behavioral therapy.
Correct, yeah, thank you.
That's a common great one.
Yeah, you're correct.
I was grasping and that's correct.
And they were talking about
some of the misconceptions about radical acceptance,
because I think a lot of people hear the words radical acceptance, at least this is what they
told me, and think, oh, that means that you have to just
accept what is and deal with it.
There's another form of radical acceptance, which is,
I radically accept the fact that I'm not going to deal with
this, right?
I'm going to walk away from it.
But what you're talking about is chronic stress of the
sort that really the stress or the fact that a very close relative or family member is
dealing with a lifelong condition or the fact that we can't extract ourselves from a
situation, that we are not in full agency to remove the stress or that radical acceptance
of that fact then can ratchet into an understanding of,
okay, and yet there are tools that we can use to not just offset the negative
health effects, but maybe even thrive in the context of this, essentially
turning what initially was thought of as a curse into a blessing, at least
biologically speaking. What are the data around the practices that can help make that conversion possible?
I realize there's a lot of psychological work that needs to be done on going people need
coping mechanisms, support groups, always better to have more social support than last, of
course.
But are we again talking about a daily mindfulness, or is it daily mindfulness of a certain
type?
What do we know about best practices for mitigating these essentially non-negotiable
stressors?
It's a great question, and it's not a quick answer.
I think it is partly how we view life and our purpose in our own life.
What's this game that we were born into?
And even just the idea that bad things shouldn't happen.
Sets us up for vulnerability to feel victimized, to feel like we can't accept bad things that
have happened. So, just stepping back and asking everyone, listening,
do you have a situation in your life that is unwanted
and you can't change?
It could be small, it could be huge.
How much time do you spend thinking about this? The more we spend time
trying to problem solve or worry or just wishing things were different, the more we are creating
a chronic stress state. And so just even taking that first kind of step back to get perspective on what are the
situations in my life that stress me out?
And which of these can I circle those that I can't change?
They're on my list, so they're on my mind.
They're still upsetting.
They haven't receded.
And the background they haven't gone away. Just that recognition of, this isn't going to go away, is incredibly powerful because
we can, as I say, put the baggage down and give ourselves some relief and some freedom
from the big space it holds in our mind and in our body.
And this is not a one-time thing. It's a practice.
Radical acceptance is something we practice over and over to help us loosen our grip on unwanted
situations, on letting them control our well-being and taking up this mental real estate. That's so precious, our attention. So I would, there are statements that we can say that help us.
And it's, I have, you know, there are a few metaphors.
So I'm an expert at this because I have, I'm a caregiver.
And I often need to refocus from wishing things
were different, trying to solve things to really radical acceptance
of this is how things are right now.
This is the reality.
And by just reminding ourselves that there is freedom
within that, that there are things that you can do,
you can actually live better, live well with these situations.
So let me tell you what we found from our caregivers.
We measure where their mind is at night.
We paint them and we say, in the last five minutes,
how much have you been wishing things were different?
How much have you been engaged and focused and what you're doing, right?
Right before we came to you.
And just those two questions tell us so much about that person's well-being.
So people, and actually, yes, the caregivers are doing more of what I'll call suffering,
wishing things were different, not being present for their lives.
But regardless of that difference, whether people are caregiver or not, this negative mind-warner
state of not being present for your evening, wishing things were different instead of being
engaged, predicts more unhappiness.
It predicts shorter telomeres. So it suggests that it's a pattern that has gone on
for days, months, and years that has been wearing on them. And so some of the metaphors that I
think are helpful for this are thinking of yourself, think of this unwanted situation, and think of how you're pulling a rope
that's attached to a brick wall.
And you're doing that because you care.
You want things to be better for yourself or this person
and or a group.
I mean, it's something you're passionate about.
And so you're pulling and pulling
and every day you're pulling.
And you can't move that brick wall.
So the only thing that's happening
is that you're chafing your hands,
that tinge that chronic tension.
What if you just drop the rope?
I say that to myself, drop the rope.
When I start getting going on,
trying to solve
unsolved problems, the brick wall is still there.
It's never going to move. Yet my hands are free.
And so I can be freed up to live in the ways that I do have
control over, to do things that help around the edges.
So I was just talking with someone who's just so concerned about their aging parents.
And them not getting the care they need, not taking care of themselves. So I was just talking with someone who is just so concerned about their aging parents.
And you know, them not getting the care they need, not taking care of themselves, you
know, things aren't going well.
But there was so little that they could do to help their parents.
And so by dropping the rope for them meant realizing there were things they could do, being
present, being loving, doing the little bit of care
that they could from a distance, was all they could do.
And that's enough.
That's, that loving presence is like a gift that we don't realize that we, we always have
that to give.
Where do you think the tendency for us to try and pull on brick walls comes from?
I mean, it's so non-adaptive.
And I've also heard it stated that people do this in the reverse direction to meaning in time,
trying to control the past through current behaviors as well as trying to control the future.
It's kind of it. So give me an example of that. Yeah, this is something I learned from a guess we had on here, Dr. Paul Conti, the psychiatrist
to extremely skilled psychiatrists who wrote a book on trauma, which I think is the best
book on trauma, frankly.
And he talked about how the limbic system that engages these fight or flight responses has
no sense of time.
And that's why developmental scripts get reactivated.
In particular, parent, child, or caretaker, child, neural circuits that were engaged in
those relationships when we were really young, get reactivated in adult relationships.
I mean, in some sense, it doesn't make any sense.
Like, why wouldn't the human mind have separate circuits for adult, like romantic attachment
versus child parent attachment?
This is all sounding very Freudian, and yet when you look at the neuroimaging, it's like
you get one set of circuits for understanding of relationship. Of course, you adjust according
to context and they get repurposed. You don't just set that aside, say that was for childhood.
What he said was that the limbic system and the stress system, when it's activated,
system and the stress system when it's activated distorts our perception of time and that this is what he was saying leads to what's sometimes called the repetition and compulsion.
People try and repeat the same, place themselves into mildly to severely traumatic circumstances
over and over again despite the presence of a trauma.
It doesn't have to be childhood trauma.
You think, well, that doesn't make any sense.
It's like the most illogical thing in the world.
Like, you get burned on the stove and you keep going back to the stove.
And the idea is that these circuits, when they get activated, really engage entire cognitive
scripts, they make it very hard to escape.
It's like it pulls you into a story that is exquisitely hard to get away from it.
So that this repetition compulsion is an attempt to try and rewrite the story.
And this is the theory, not just of Freudian psychology, but a modern trauma and neuroscience-informed trauma therapies.
In any event, as you described this pulling on a brick wall, I find it a very compelling image, and one that makes total sense to try and drop the rope,
as you describe it, because of the incredibly high energetic demand
that pulling on that rope represents.
As you said, it's sort of a way of diverting resources
towards something that has no conclusion, right?
And in dropping the rope, you can divert those resources towards other things.
So I was just curious, again,
I wasn't consulted the design phase,
and I'm assuming you weren't either,
but you know what,
I wonder what in us,
as scientists,
I'm just kind of doing the G'donk and experiment here.
Like I wonder what in us,
as human beings, compels us to try and change
what we, the unchangeable.
and being compels us to try and change what we, the unchangeable.
We really, really, really love control.
And we want to control the future,
not just because it makes us feel powerful and happy,
but because then we can relax.
If we know what's gonna happen next,
if it's predictable,
we're that much happier. We're not vigilant and looking ahead and being prepared for what might
happen. So let me ask you that. So I have two whole chapters in the stress prescription. One is
on certainty and one is on control. And these drive us crazy until we can somewhat master
and understand how little control we have
and how much uncertainty there is and we'll always be.
So let me ask you this,
if you couldn't plan your day tomorrow
and you wanted to know with certainty
what your plans were, what was gonna happen,
how much ease and relaxation would you feel
at the not knowing what's gonna happen tomorrow?
Very little.
So like on a one through 10 scale,
how much would that drive you crazy tomorrow?
Tomorrow, it's a Saturday, so I'm a little more flexible.
On Monday.
Oh no, Mondays are mine. I own Monday, no kidding. I'm just kidding more flexible. But in Monday. I don't know, Mondays are mine.
I own Monday.
No, I'm kidding.
I'm just kidding.
I love Mondays.
It's always been my favorite day of the week.
Even when I was in school.
Yeah, that would be on it.
That would be a six out of 10.
And that's not unusual.
And we have a scale to measure how comfortable people are with certainty.
And what we already knew was that being comfortable with uncertainty is a beautiful but rare
resilience factor. People who tolerate uncertainty have much less anxiety and depression.
And when stressful things happen, they get over it more quickly. So we measured this during the pandemic. And what we found was that intolerance of uncertainty pretty strongly
predicted pandemic, anxiety, PTSD, depression, and distress about the fires, the climate, the
climate situation in California. So this is interesting. I mean, is this like a fixed personality and we're
just stuck with our rigidity around wanting certainty? Or is this something that we,
like a muscle that we can build? So I think it's a ladder and I think there are practices
we can do that help us feel ease with the uncertain future. Some of these mindful check-ins noticing
that we are carrying around uncertainty stress
is one way and then reframing uncertainty
as the beauty of the mystery of life
and the freedom that we can feel when we realize
we don't control tomorrow. We just go with
it and we, you know, we do our best and what delight there is in just viewing things with
curiosity and just seeing what emerges. So even just our posture, here's an exercise
for dealing with uncertainty. Instead of like kind of that alert posture when we're trying to take it all in and predict the next
second and just lean back and take some slow breaths, we know that's going to help orient
us and realize that we can actually face time in that way by letting it come to us and receiving what happens. And that's a completely different body stance than our
usual go mode during the day. And that's just a way of saying, I am in a, you know, receptive
mode and I'm going to just be curious about what arises. And so I actually learn that
on a meditation retreat because I tend to be type A and I
leave a retreat going from very relaxed to that leaning forward tense of where's the
to-do list.
And so carrying with me that posture of just see, let time unfold as it will without trying
to control things.
It's really interesting. It gets right to the heart of something that I spent a lot of time thinking about in time unfold as it will without trying to control things.
It's really interesting. It gets right to the heart of something that I spent a lot of time thinking about in the context of
stress management and also just general thriving, which is that I think that
about half of the messages that we get related to stress and mind body interventions relate to adopting this forward center of mass. You know, this idea of okay, stress can give us early
dementia, stress can limit our sleep, stress can impair our cognition, or stress
can make us more resilient, stress can activate all sorts of positive anti-
inflammatory pathways as well. That the mindset matters. And here I am doing a terrible job of it,
but I'm trying to scrape off and capture the top contour of the beautiful work of my colleague,
Dr. Alia Crumb, who's, you know,
who's been on this podcast and is a huge fan of her work as well.
And with that mindset matters because it shapes shapes physiology for sure, her data point to
that.
So there are these kind of forward center of mass type approaches.
And these are abundant on social media, different people come to mind.
Different archetypes really have the merge, millions and millions of followers that are
the archetypes of when challenge arises you smash into it, you go through it, right?
And then on the other hand, there are these stress mitigation techniques, both mental and physical,
body oriented, mind oriented, etc. that are more of the sort that you described that are
they're not being back on your heels, so to speak, like letting things bulldoze you,
but are more of this receptive mode
and more of an awareness mode.
Exactly.
And I think that since here we are at the table
to researchers who focus on these issues a lot,
do you think it's fair for us to adopt a sort of general
framework and model
that perhaps people can adopt for themselves
if they like, that of course it's not an either or,
but that having both of these in one's kit of tools
could be valuable.
Because one is less energetically demanding,
but of course offers less opportunity for agency,
or at least apparently so, that's the leaning back.
And then the other is, certainly gives an opportunity for agency, but we know from
100 years or more of psychology and psychiatric literature, and from the emerging literature on
stress mitigation, that it's work. It's not something that is without a cost. It can get you
far better results
than it were you to just let stress bulldoze you,
but that it's work.
And so we have to emphasize that work
in very deliberate ways.
Exactly, I couldn't agree more.
It's work when we know it's productive, we should work.
And when we know there's a brick wall, we should let go.
So I think of it, I like this forward mass idea.
I think of it as you muscle it and or you release it.
And we need both.
And so that letting go is a really important wise, discerning way to mitigate stress in the
right situations and the right time.
And we can't muscle through everything, right?
So another way I like to think about it is
just the waves of life.
Like, I mean, we are in an ocean
and we have small waves, we have big waves.
Some of these tidal waves are gonna hit all of us,
the global stressors, the climate disasters that will come.
And so when we're not in the middle of a wave,
which is when we need to muscle it,
we're between waves.
How much control do we have to fight the tide there?
Some, it's not black or white.
We are, we can't fight a rip tide.
We need to go the direction of the tide,
but we can have some control in our direction.
And it kind of goes back to our colleague, Robert Sapolsky's very biologically based idea
of us having, you know, he's a little bit extreme with a no free will.
We are influenced by all of these things around us, as well as all of our biological, you know, I'll say, um, brilliant evolutionary animal
instincts. So given all of that, we have some deterministic forces on us. And within that,
we get to ease up between the waves when we can, we get to change our direction,
we're always gonna be hit by the next wave.
And so it's this skillful surfing or navigating
that we can do better when we realize,
when we control things, when we can truly feel safe
and have ease versus when we need to kind of gently paddle.
have ease versus when we need to kind of gently paddle.
What do you think is the value of journaling and placing one's own narrative
on stressful circumstances,
especially these non-negotiable circumstances?
Again, I'm fascinated by these
because I think it's a category of stress
that's not often talked about.
And yet it's so prominent.
Some people say, okay, you know,
dealing with short-term stress, okay, well, well, I would say like use physiological size
or raise your stress threshold and we'll get back to that
and then a little bit as it relates to the work
you're doing with breath work.
But so many stressors are gonna take a year or five years,
we don't know, you know, the uncertainty
that you mentioned earlier, or the certainty
that this is gonna go on forever. And so, you know, what is the, you know, for people that are listening to this and that
and want to start to adopt practices, do you think that spending some time creating a
written or a spoken narrative is helpful? I mean, we hear this, but are there any data
that support the use of journaling as a tool?
I seem to recall that there are a few studies out there,
but I can't remember exactly.
Yeah, definitely creating a coherent narrative
is critical to our ability to make sense,
find meaning, find resolution,
have a social identity around our lived experience,
what happens to us.
So narrative is kind of everything, right?
In stress research, it's not what happens to us,
it's how we're interpreting it and how we're responding to it.
And I've heard you say the exact same thing
when you've talked about what is stress.
It's really what narrative we're creating around it.
So I think
a narrative of purpose, fill in the blank about what's meaningful to you, but that is why we're
different than just the rats that we study or the monkeys. Like they have these amazing
stress responses that are, we have them too, and we can't control that.
But we have the ability to do this projection to the future,
to ask what is our purpose in life, to see and know that we are going to die,
and we can have some control over how we live,
and maybe even how we die and how we want to be remembered.
That is so beautiful. That helps us rise above this being monkeys and clothes.
I'd love before we wrap for us to return to this question
about breath work and the study that you're doing,
well, one of the, I've known about your work
for a very long time,
when I've admired it for a very long time.
And one of the things that excite me about
being able to sit down with you today
is that
our laboratory is studied breath work, your laboratory studying breath work, and I know that you've
been doing a study on the so-called Wim Hof method, which I'll let you familiarize our listeners to some of them are familiar with the Wim Hof method others are not. I think a lot of people
think of Wim in terms of his role as the ice man because of cold exposure. But of course, he has breathwork practices that mirror things like two-mo breathing and other things.
But maybe you could tell us a little bit about what you're doing there and what you're interested in discovering.
I realize it's too early to give us the results.
But hopefully we'll come back and do that another time.
But what is the study, what motivated the study, and maybe I can
convince you to give us a little teaser of what you're discovering.
So for many years, I mean, I think my first paper when I was a graduate student with
Bruce McEwan was about this idea of positive physiological stress.
And so I've always been wanting to really understand what's positive stress, how can we induce it?
And instead for many, many, too many years, I've been studying the dark side, toxic stress, trauma, caregiving, and how that is can take a toll on the body without the right resilience and resources. And now I'm very excited about the opportunity
to just focus on different ways that we can stress out
our body and mind in short-term bursts
that might promote stress resilience.
And the body-based strategies are concrete, they're quick,
they're also my favorite strategies.
I probably have internalized a lot of the mindsets
and the things that I've learned from meditation
and what I feel the biggest bang for the buck is,
if I'm waking up super jittery with a big stress response
because of X or Y, it is actually something like a hit type workout
or taking the dogs for like a really brisk walk
or like burning up that energy and my body is
a very big effect size for me personally.
Everyone has their different ways that they
can see the biggest shifts in daily stress. So I've been looking for ways
to create positive stress besides exercise. We all know about exercise. And I met Wim Hof
at a meeting where we talked kind of back to back. And so we hadn't, I had kind of heard
something about, you know, crazy ice man climbing up the Himalayas. I really had to. He has 27 or more world records for that sort of thing.
Yeah.
So, he, so I got to hear, I got to do the breathing with him during this conference.
And I just felt like elation afterward.
I was like, what was that?
And then he heard about telomeres.
And he was like, I need to know if my method is affecting cell aging.
He loves research.
And so we, he helped us design a study
that we've been working on at UCSF
with my colleagues Wendy Mendez and Eric Prather.
It's been many years, and it's funded by the
John W. Brick Foundation, which is very focused on
what are non-drug ways that we can help
met to health.
So it's a very good fit for all of us to come together and design the study.
And we have been basically comparing low arousal relaxation methods, mindfulness, slow breathing,
to positive stress, exercise, and whim-half method.
And one of the things that we've learned in a big way
is that regardless of whether we're creating deep states
of ease or a hermetic stress in the body,
that short-term burst of either a aerobic activity
or the extreme breathing, people feel better, period.
So three weeks later, after this experiment,
of doing their practice every day, they were either randomly assigned to the higher
relsal or the lower relsal, the level of stress, anxiety, and depression fell dramatically in everyone. So many paths to changes in stress, there are probably very different physiological pathways, and we can talk about that more when we get to
really look in depth at our physiological data as well as our blood-based data.
But what we do know is that the WIMHOP method did create daily positive emotion that
increased over time, just like your study on sighing. And so even though there are different mechanisms, they were selectively boosting feelings
of positivity.
I love that.
You know, that's very unusual to get a very selective positive effect.
Super interesting.
I can't wait to hear more about the data.
So I gather, and by the way, know as a perfectly fine answer, I gather that you're not going
to tell us about the whether or not there are telomere changes yet, or maybe
that's not possible to detect in this kind of short-term study.
So what we are going to look at, we don't really think that telomers can change very quickly
and telomere may. So we're going to look at mitochondrial enzymes, telomerase, and gene expression patterns.
And as you know, we can look at many different mechanisms and pathways with gene expression
patterns, especially with these new kind of assays where you can look at, you know,
some 1,000 different proteins like the somalogic.
And so we'll get to see, well, what's the,
you know, did we really change patterns of acute stress
with these different types of stress resilience interventions?
And in terms of the physiological reactivity,
there are ways that we can examine both the stress response system,
the sympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic nervous system and the parasympathetic
response system.
And I will tell you that while we're still preparing the results, there were very different
profiles from the different interventions that make us think that there's a lot of specificity.
Even though everyone feels better, the way that they got there is very different,
the ways that we're impacting both the nervous system and the brain.
Incredible.
And I have to say, when I heard that you were studying Wim Hof Method, I was positively
delighted because I find that there are so few serious researchers in the realm of modern science that are both
explorers and then take what they've, you know, gleaned from those explorations and then take
it to the laboratory and put rigor on those and really try and parse mechanism with, of course,
all the open-mindedness to whatever the outcome happens to be, right? I mean, good science involves
all the open-mindedness to whatever the outcome happens to be, right? I mean, good science involves not necessarily asking questions alone,
but raising hypotheses and being comfortable for those hypotheses to be correct
or not correct.
And I find your work to be just so incredibly creative and brave in that way.
And I love the way that you've meshed different aspects of your own personal journey
into these different practices.
I don't know what came first, the science of the practices, but I have my guesses, but I must say it's very refreshing, and I think
it's exactly what the world needs right now in terms of tools for mental health and physical
health, because far too many studies try and isolate variables without understanding a larger
context of like what are the different types of stressors and clearly you're addressing
that or you know there's this thing breath work that some people might think oh you know
the iceman, Wim Hof, it's really esoteric and you know kind of crazy. I'm certainly
not saying that but you say well what are the critical elements from that that we might
be able to extract to understand this positive use stress phenomenon?
So I just, I want to first of all just say thank you for doing the incredibly important
work you do.
And thank you.
I mean, we were so delighted to see the paper you did with David Speagle and to know that
you're pursuing this path.
And it's very reassuring with your rigor and your depth of background.
I agree with you.
These are the types of studies we need.
Releasing the inherent power of rejuvenation that's
in our body is relatively untapped in these rigorous,
controlled studies.
And we just can't reduce inflammation with a drug, we can't
reduce stress with a drug, we desperately need to learn how to use, you know, the
whole range of the nervous system from the acute stress to the deep relaxation
to heal and to promote these healthy resilient states.
I couldn't agree more. And UCSF is very, very fortunate to have you. And should they ever forget that,
please come to Stanford instead. Maybe we can recruit you away from UCSF. And I'm here
I'm being friendly to my colleagues at UCSF, but they better treat you right or else we're
coming for you. And I also just want to thank you for taking the time today to share this
information. Also, you've written wonderful books. We will provide a link to the newest
one. And I'll, of course, queue people to that
because it sounds like a very rich source of information
and actionable tools that people can take
in terms of mitigating stress.
And I love the idea that there's this discussion
about certainty and control to elements
that are very prominent in my life, better for worse.
And all of us, all of us.
Yeah, and so really thank you for the work you're doing.
Thank you for taking the time to share that work
through books and through podcasts.
And especially today on this one,
I know I speak on behalf of many, many people
and I just really want to extend my gratitude.
Thank you so much.
And thank you for your podcast.
Well, it's a labor of love and it stays like today and discussions like this that make
it worthwhile.
So thank you.
Thanks, Andrew.
Thank you for joining me for today's discussion all about stress, aging, and metabolism
with Dr. Alyssa Eppel.
I hope you enjoyed the conversation as much as I did.
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