Huberman Lab - Essentials: Maximize Productivity, Physical & Mental Health With Daily Tools
Episode Date: May 22, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode, I provide a science-based daily protocol designed to enhance performance, mood and overall health by strategically timing simple yet powerful tools and behavio...rs. I explain how to increase energy and alertness in the morning, optimize your workspace and work sessions for maximum focus, and structure your day for sustained productivity. I also discuss the roles of fasting, meal and caffeine timing, and key nutrients, as well as how to leverage exercise to sharpen alertness and cognitive performance. Additionally, I describe evening practices and supplements that help you fall asleep quickly and promote quality sleep. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00:00 Office Hours, Example Daily Protocol 00:01:48 Morning, Tools: Temperature Minimum, Walk, Sunlight & Cortisol 00:05:30 Hydration, Electrolytes, Tool: Delay Caffeine 00:07:39 Sponsor: Eight Sleep 00:09:45 Morning Focus, Fasting 00:10:34 Tools: Optimize Workspace, Screen Position, Work Bouts 00:13:45 Tool: Timing Work Bouts, Temperature Minimum 00:16:02 Exercise, Strength & Hypertrophy, Endurance Training, Tool: 80/20 Workouts 00:19:01 Sponsor: AG1 00:20:48 Afternoon, Meal Timing, Carbs, Omega-3s, Tool: Afternoon Walks & Light 00:25:33 Dinner, Sleep Transition, Carbs, Serotonin 00:28:44 Sponsor: LMNT 00:30:16 Accelerate Sleep, Tool: Reduce Temperature & Hot Baths 00:32:06 Sleep Supplements, Magnesium, Apigenin, Theanine; Waking at Night 00:35:06 Example Daily Routine, Work Blocks Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials,
where we revisit past episodes
for the most potent and actionable science-based tools
for mental health, physical health, and performance.
I'm Andrew Huberman,
and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology
at Stanford School of Medicine.
I decided that we would hold office hours.
Office hours in the university setting
are when students come to the professor's office, or you meet outdoors on campus or in the university setting are when students come to the professor's office
or you meet outdoors on campus or in the classroom
to review the material and questions from lecture
in more detail.
Now, unfortunately, we don't have the opportunity
to meet face-to-face in real life,
but nonetheless, you've been sending your questions,
putting them in the comment section on YouTube, et cetera.
And I prepared a number of answers to the questions
that have shown up most frequently.
Now, in order to provide context and structure
to the way that we will address these questions,
I've arranged the science and science-based protocols
that relate to various aspects of life,
such as mood, exercise, sleep, waking,
anxiety, creativity, et cetera,
into the context of a day.
Selecting the unit of a day
in order to deliver this science information and protocols
is not a haphazard decision on my part.
It's actually the case that every cell in our body,
every organ in our body and our brain is modulated
or changes across the 24 hour day
in a very regular and predictable rhythm.
And so selecting the unit of the day
is not just a practical one,
but it's one that's related to our deeper biology.
So let's talk about how to apply
quality peer-reviewed science to your day
and how to optimize everything from sleep to learning,
creativity, meal timing, et cetera.
I'm going to do this in the context of my day
and what I typically do.
I tend to wake up sometime around 6 a.m., 6.30.
The first thing I do after I wake up
is I take the pen that's on my nightstand
and the pad of paper on my nightstand
and I write down the time in which I woke up.
The reason for writing down what time I wake up
is because I want to know
what's called my temperature minimum.
I don't care what my actual temperature is,
I care when my lowest temperature is,
and I know that that lowest temperature
is approximately two hours before my average wake-up time.
The second thing I do after I wake up
is to get into forward ambulation,
which is just nerd speak for taking a walk.
There's a phenomenon whereby when we generate
our own forward motion, forward ambulation,
visual images pass by us on our eyes, so-called optic flow.
Experiencing visual flow has a powerful effect
on the nervous system.
The effect it has is essentially to quiet
or reduce the amount of neural activity
in this brain structure called the amygdala.
And many of you have probably heard about the amygdala
for its role in anxiety and fear and threat detection.
And indeed, the amygdala is part of the network
in the brain that generates feelings of fear
and threat and anxiety.
It does a bunch of other things too,
but that's one of its primary functions.
Forward ambulation, walking or biking or running
and generating optic flow in particular
has this incredible property of lowering activity
in the amygdala and thereby reducing levels of anxiety.
That walk is a particularly important protocol each day
because it really serves to push my neurology
in the direction that I'd like it to go,
which is alert, but not anxious.
I want to have a high degree of focus and alertness
because I'm soon going to move into about of work.
I need to lean into the day.
So in order to do that,
I make sure that the walking is done outdoors.
I do it outdoors because I also want sunlight in my eyes.
Getting sunlight in your eyes first thing in the morning
is absolutely vital to mental and physical health.
Even if there's cloud cover,
more photons, light information,
are coming through that cloud cover
than would be coming from a very bright indoor bulb.
So getting outside for a 10 minute walk or a 15 minute walk
will basically ensure that you're getting adequate
stimulation of these neurons in the eye
that are called the melanopsin
intrinsically photosensitive ganglion cells.
These are neurons that convey to the brain
that it's daytime and it's time to be alert.
And it sets in motion a huge number of biological cascades
within every cell and organ of your body,
from your liver to your gut, to your heart, to your brain.
Early in the day, we experience a natural and healthy bump
in a hormone called cortisol and promotes wakefulness.
It actually promotes a healthy immune system.
It's very important that that pulse of cortisol
arrive early in the day.
That pulse of cortisol is going to happen
once every 24 hours, no matter what.
It's going to happen and you get to time it.
How do you time it?
Primarily by when you view bright sunlight.
You can combine it with the forward ambulation,
with the walk and the optic flow that I talked about before.
And that's what I do each morning
to generate a sense of alertness in my body
and brain to generate a sense of calm yet alert.
So now we have a first protocol,
which is to write down the time of day that you wake up.
The second protocol is to get,
take a walk first thing in the morning.
And the third protocol is woven in with that walk,
at least for me, which is to get that sunlight exposure.
I'm a big believer based on quality peer review data
that hydration is essential for mental performance.
As many of you know, neurons require ionic flow.
What that means is neurons need sodium,
they need magnesium and they need potassium
in order to function.
We do tend to get dehydrated at night.
I try and make sure that I'm hydrated early in the day
before I begin any work.
So I make myself drink this water
with a little bit of sea salt.
How much sea salt, if you really want to get detailed,
I suppose it's about half a teaspoon, it's not much.
At that point, I start craving caffeine,
but I don't drink that caffeine yet.
I purposely delay my caffeine intake to 90 minutes,
to 120 minutes after I wake up.
The reason I delay caffeine is because one of the factors
that induces a sense of sleepiness
is the buildup of adenosine.
The buildup of adenosine accumulates
the longer we are awake.
When you wake up in the morning,
your adenosine levels are likely to be very low.
However, caffeine is an adenosine blocker.
It's actually a competitive antagonist
for you aficionados.
It sort of parks in the receptor
that adenosine normally would park at
and prevents adenosine from acting on that receptor.
That's why you feel more alert.
The reason for delaying caffeine intake 90 minutes
to two hours after waking is I want to make sure
that I don't have a late afternoon
or even early afternoon crash from caffeine.
One of the best ways to ensure a caffeine crash
is to drink a bunch of caffeine,
block all those adenosine receptors,
and then by early or late afternoon,
when that caffeine starts to wear off
and gets dislodged from the receptors,
a lower level of adenosine is able to create
a greater level of sleepiness.
Delaying caffeine a 90 minutes to two hours
optimizes this relationship between adenosine
and wakefulness and sleepiness
in a way that really provides a nice consistent arc
of energy throughout the day
and brings energy down as I'm headed toward sleep
and falling asleep.
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My primary objective early in the day
is to get into a mode of being focused yet alert
so that I can get work done.
I found that the best way for me to achieve that state
is through fasting.
So I don't eat anything until about 11 a.m. or 12 noon.
Fasting increases levels of adrenaline,
also called epinephrine in the brain and body.
And when our levels of epinephrine and adrenaline
are increased, we learn better, we can focus better.
You don't want epinephrine, AKA adrenaline, too high.
That feels like stress and panic.
You get jittery, you can't focus.
But in its optimal range, adrenaline really provides
a heightened sense of focus and the ability to encode,
meaning bring in and retain, remember information.
Next, I want to talk about what I'm doing while I'm working.
A couple of things for optimizing workspace
that are grounded in neuroscience and physiology.
I've talked before about the fact
that when our eyes are directed upward,
it creates a state of heightened alertness.
And this has a relationship to the brainstem neurons
that create alertness and their control
over the muscles of the eye,
and believe it or not, the eyelids.
The point here is that you can optimize your workstation
in a physical way that leverages this aspect
of the visual system and your level of alertness.
Try and position your screen or your tablet,
whatever device you happen to be working on,
at least at eye level and ideally slightly higher.
Most people are looking down at their computer or tablet
or are angling their eyes at their screen
at about 30 degrees.
When we look down, when our eyelids are slightly closed,
it tends to decrease our levels of alertness
and increase our levels of sleepiness.
So we're now at the description of my day
and these protocols in which I would do
a 90 minute bout of work.
Now, why 90 minutes?
Well, the brain is going through these 90 minutes,
so-called ultradian cycles throughout the entire day
and night.
Every 90 minutes, we shift over from being very alert
to being less alert and then back to alert again.
Here's how it works.
At the start of one of these 90 minute ultradian cycles,
my brain is not quite engaged
in whatever it is I'm trying to do,
but I set a timer for 90 minutes
and I try and get a strong bout of work done
inside of that 90 minutes with the full understanding
that the entire 90 minutes is not going to be uniform
in terms of my ability of focus.
So the goal is to get into what I call the tunnel,
to really get into a tunnel of quality work.
The brain loves that state,
but it's very hard for many of us to access.
My phone is absolutely off.
It's not on airplane mode,
it's absolutely off during this time.
In addition, I use low level white noise.
White noise, which is essentially all frequencies of sound,
or all frequencies of sound that we can perceive,
mixed up kind of randomly, there's no structure to it,
turned on at a low volume, puts the brain into a state
that's optimal for learning and workflow.
So everything about this 90 minute block
from the low levels of white noise
to the position of my computer, how I'm standing,
where my eyes are positioned is geared towards
putting me in this tunnel of work. And I have to say that while it can be a challenge to is geared towards putting me in this tunnel of work.
And I have to say that while it can be a challenge
to try and achieve this state and this tunnel of work,
some days you start to get kind of addicted to it.
It feels really good.
It's like a workout for the mind.
And it is something that as you exit that 90 minutes,
you really feel like you've accomplished a lot
because often you have,
and it just feels deeply satisfying.
And I'm convinced that that's because of the release
of neuromodulators like dopamine and the norepinephrine
that's circulating in your system.
And I want to be clear that I'm not perfect
about this 90 minutes.
Occasionally I get drawn away,
but I really try and achieve this most,
if not every day that I'm alive,
because for me, that work session is kind of holy.
There's a powerful way in which you can place the timing
of this 90 minute work bout in an optimal way.
You have access to a very important piece of data
that dictates when this bout should start, more or less,
and when it should end.
That piece of data is your temperature minimum.
If you're somebody who wakes up on average at 7 a.m.,
well, then your temperature minimum is 5 a.m.
You can be reasonably sure that your best work
is going to be done anywhere from four to six hours
after your temperature minimum.
How do I know this?
How do I know this relationship
between temperature minimum and focus cognition?
Well, temperature minimum defines the trough,
the nadir, as they say, of your temperature
across the 24-hour cycle.
And immediately after that,
your temperature will start to rise.
That temperature rise is actually what triggers
the initial cortisol release that you experience
and wakes you up further.
And then of course, that sunlight that you're getting
is going to further enhance
that healthy release of cortisol.
That cortisol will then provide fuel, if you will,
for that increase in temperature.
And your body will continue to increase in temperature
throughout the day toward the afternoon.
What you're trying to do in this idea
of optimizing this 90 minute
work bout to a particular time of day is catch the portion
of the steepest slope of that temperature rise.
So if you're somebody who wakes up at 8 a.m. each morning,
your temperature minimum is 6 a.m. chances are,
you're going to want to start this work bout somewhere
around 10 a.m. or 11 a.m.
Now, some people wake up
and feel very alert first thing in the morning.
They can really do their best work
first thing in the morning.
Please, if that's you, continue to do that.
Leverage that time, use that time.
But if you're somebody who struggles to find focus,
definitely let your physiology
and this rise in your body temperature
support your efforts to focus
rather than trying to do your best work at times of day
when your physiology is actually directing your body
and your brain toward defocus
and towards being more lethargic.
It just is setting yourself up for success
when you try and capture this rising phase
of your temperature.
Data going back to the 1990s supports the idea
that physical movement of particular kinds
can support brain health and brain function,
both in the immediate term and in the long term.
So after I've finished a bout of work,
this 90 minute bout of work,
I force myself to do some sort of physical exercise
that is going to be supportive of my brain health
and brain function and organ health
and bodily function in general.
Now there are various forms of physical activity
or what we call exercise,
but those can generally be batched into two categories.
First is strength and hypertrophy work.
So physical movements that are designed
to make you stronger and or make your muscles larger.
There's also endurance work,
physical exercise and movements that are designed
to allow you to do more work over time
or to extend the amount of time that you can do work
of any kind, both physical and mental.
The data all point to the fact that working out hard
for longer than an hour can actually be detrimental
because of the way that it raises cortisol.
And cortisol can be a good thing
if it's appropriately timed
and in the appropriate low levels,
but you don't want to have your cortisol levels up
throughout the day or have big spikes of cortisol repeatedly.
So keeping workouts relatively short
can definitely help with that.
Endurance work and strength training
or hypertrophy training done in combination,
meaning not necessarily in the same workout,
but done across the week is immensely beneficial
for the production of things
like brain-derived neutrophic factor,
for limiting inflammatory cytokines like IL-6,
for promoting anti-inflammatory cytokines like IL-10
provided that exercises of the proper duration
and that it's not so intense
that you're actually creating damage
to the various systems of the body.
What about the structure of the actual workouts?
Well, approximately 80% of the resistance training you do
should be resistance training
that doesn't go to what they call failure where you can't actually move the resistance training you do should be resistance training that doesn't go to what they call failure,
where you can't actually move the resistance anymore.
The other 20% can be of the higher intensity
to failure type training.
That 80-20 rule of less than failure
and work to failure in the resistance exercise regime
can be transported or translated
to the endurance exercise portion by focusing
on that thing that we're familiar with,
which is the burn.
When we're running hard or cycling hard,
we'll experience a kind of burning of the muscles
that's associated with the lactate system.
And actually the lactate system is its own form
of fuel for the brain.
And so there's increasing interest in generating
the lactate or pushing past that lactate threshold
for small portion, 20% or so of endurance work
in order to support brain health and function.
So on any given day, I finished that work block
and I train.
I do some sort of resistance or endurance training.
I put those on alternate days or different days rather.
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So we've now talked about the arc that spans all the way
from waking to a morning bout of focused work
to physical training.
I have not mentioned ingesting anything or nutrients.
One of the most common questions I get
are what should I eat for my brain?
Well, ironically enough,
one of the best things you can do for your brain
is do not eat, but of course,
we all have to eat sooner or later.
So let's talk about food timing first.
As I mentioned, I eat my first meal sometime around noon,
plus or minus an hour.
The volume of food is also important.
If you eat a large volume of anything,
because it diverts blood to your gut,
you will feel lethargic
and you will have less blood going to your brain.
That seems like a simple and trivial fact,
but if you want to be able to think,
you can't ingest large volumes of anything into your gut.
So for lunch, I do emphasize slightly lower carbohydrate
or low carbohydrate intake for the simple reason
that adrenaline and dopamine
and their associated neuromodulators
are going to support alertness.
So for me, I fast up until about noon,
then I eat a lunch that consists
of some sort of protein thing,
like some meat or some chicken or some salmon
and some vegetables, et cetera.
And if I've exercised previously,
which I do, as I mentioned, five days a week,
then I will ingest some starches.
I'll ingest some bread, excuse me,
or rice or oatmeal and butter and nuts and things like that.
But I will keep the total amount of carbohydrate
a little bit on the low side,
or if I haven't trained,
I won't have any carbohydrate at all.
Not because I'm ketogenic,
but because starches cause the release
of serotonin in the brain
and lend themselves to a state of sleepiness.
Now, what about components of foods
that are not about alertness, but are about mood?
We did an entire episode on mood and food,
and it's very clear based on now dozens of studies
that ingesting sufficient levels of omega-3 fatty acids
is going to support healthy mood
and even can act as an antidepressant.
Ingesting at least 1000 milligrams per day
of the EPA form of essential fatty acid
is as effective as prescription antidepressants
in relieving depression.
And if you're somebody who requires
prescription antidepressants, Prozac, Zoloft, et cetera,
it can allow people to take lower doses
of those medications.
A key aspect to the mid-day meal,
if you want that meal to benefit you,
is to take a brief walk afterwards.
It turns out that brief walks of five to 30 minutes
after ingesting food can accelerate metabolism
and actually can accelerate and improve nutrient utilization,
which is essentially the same as metabolism.
But nonetheless, that's something that I do
after I finish my noon meal.
I do force myself to stand up and go outside
and take a brief walk.
That also gets me again into optic flow.
It also has another benefit,
which is that I am giving my brain and thereby my body
more information about light and time of day,
which is always better than less information
about light and time of day. A is always better than less information about light and time of day.
A key protocol for sleep health and wakefulness
and metabolism and hormone health
is viewing light in the afternoon.
So here's the reason for doing this.
As we progress into the evening hours,
there's a phenomenon where our retina, our eyes,
become very sensitive to light,
such that if we view bright lights
or even not so bright lights
between the hours of 10 PM and 4 AM,
that is strongly disruptive, very disruptive
for our dopamine production.
It can really screw up our sleep.
But if you can get outside and see the sun
as it arcs down, or if you can't see the sun directly,
get some sunlight in your eyes in the afternoon hours,
so maybe 4 p.m. ish.
What it does is it lowers the sensitivity of your retina
in the late evening hours, which allows you
to buffer yourself against the negative effects of bright light later at night.
Now we haven't talked too much about melatonin,
but melatonin is a hormone that is inhibited by light.
Melatonin is the hormone that allows you
to fall asleep easily.
Now I'm not talking about supplementing melatonin,
I'm talking about melatonin that you naturally produce
from your pineal.
So the protocol is very simple.
Get outside in the afternoon or evening
for 10 to 30 minutes, take your sunglasses off.
So get that afternoon light.
So what you'll probably notice is that the optimal protocols
for optimizing your brain and body health
and performance and sleep, et cetera,
are actually really simple.
But just because they're simple does not mean
that they are not powerful.
In fact, they are very powerful
because they leverage the most powerful technology
that exists, which is your nervous system.
What we are talking about today are really basic things
that we can all do that can steer our neurology
and our biology in the directions
that are going to support workflow,
that are going to support hormones, that are going to support hormones,
that are going to support brain function.
So at some point in the evening,
I eat that thing that we call dinner.
And while it feels sort of strange to talk about my dinner,
the reason I want to talk about my dinner
and what I eat for dinner is that, for me,
dinner of course is about eating,
but also about optimizing the transition to sleep.
So my dinner generally is comprised of things
that are going to support rest and deep sleep.
And that means starchy carbohydrates.
It's absolutely clear that one of the major ways
that we can increase serotonin,
which helps in the transition to sleep,
is by ingesting starchy carbohydrates.
So my dinner is carbohydrates and some protein.
So maybe some chicken or fish or something like that,
maybe some eggs, or sometimes just pasta
or just rice and vegetables.
And that's because I enjoy those foods,
but also because I want to increase the amount
of serotonin in my brain
so that I can actually fall asleep that night.
Many people who are on low carbohydrate diets struggle
with falling and staying asleep.
And that's because it's hard to achieve heightened levels
of serotonin, which are necessary to enter sleep.
I should also mention that melatonin and serotonin
fall in the same pathway.
They are related hormones and neuromodulators.
Essentially what we're talking about is a system
that's biasing us towards rest and relaxation
as opposed to wakefulness.
You might ask, well, can't I just take serotonin?
Can't I just take 5-HTP or a precursor to serotonin
or tryptophan?
And indeed you can.
However, many people, including myself,
find that when they supplement with serotonin
in the evening or at night,
that can cause problems in the architecture
or the structure of sleep.
It can cause a lot of people, including me,
to fall asleep very fast,
sleep very deeply for three or four hours,
and then wake up and have a terrible time
falling back asleep.
And that effect, at least for me,
can last several days.
It's really disruptive.
So I don't like to supplement with anything
that is directly dopamine or a precursor to dopamine
at any time or directly serotonin
or a precursor to serotonin.
Rather, there are other things that can enhance
the transition to sleep safely,
which we will talk about in a few minutes.
But the evening meal consists largely of carbohydrates
for that specific purpose of generating a sense of calm.
And of course, carbohydrates are delicious.
And because I'm doing some physical training
and presumably you are as well,
or I hope you are,
because it's so beneficial to one's health,
that's also going to replenish my glycogen stores,
which is one of the primary fuel sources
for moving one's muscles and moving around
and doing exercise,
as well as for the brain and for cognitive function.
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and adequate electrolytes.
To make sure that I'm getting proper amounts of hydration
and electrolytes, I dissolve one packet of Element
in about 16 to 32 ounces of water
when I first wake up in the morning.
And I drink that basically first thing in the morning.
I'll also drink Element dissolved in water
during any kind of physical exercise that I'm doing,
especially on hot days when I'm sweating a lot
and losing water and electrolytes.
Element has a bunch of great tasting flavors.
I love the raspberry, I love the citrus flavor.
Right now, Element has a limited edition lemonade flavor
that is absolutely delicious.
I hate to say that I love one more than all the others,
but this lemonade flavor is right up there
with my favorite other one,
which is raspberry or watermelon.
Again, I can't pick just one flavor, I love them all.
If you'd like to try Element,
you can go to drinkelement.com slash Huberman,
spelled drinklmnt.com slash Huberman
to claim a free element sample pack
with a purchase of any element drink mix.
Again, that's drinkelement.com slash Huberman
to claim a free sample pack.
So let's talk about sleep and how to access sleep.
One way to do that is to leverage the drop in temperature
that's necessary to fall and stay asleep.
So as I mentioned earlier,
in the early parts of the day after waking,
our body temperature is rising
and that continues throughout the day.
And then sometime late in the afternoon,
our temperature peaks and then it starts to drop.
That drop in temperature of one to three degrees
is vitally important for us
to be able to fall asleep easily.
One way that we can decrease our transition time into sleep
is to accelerate that drop in temperature.
And one way to accelerate that drop in temperature,
somewhat counter-intuitively,
is to use hot baths, hot showers,
or if you have access to one, a sauna.
Now this is counter-intuitive,
but actually if you are to get into a sauna
or a hot shower or a hot bath and then get out,
your body is going to engage particular mechanisms
for cooling itself off that are going to allow you
to drop your temperature more quickly
and fall asleep more easily.
It is absolutely true
that keeping the room very dark is beneficial.
The other thing is keeping the room cool.
The reason keeping the room cool is useful
for getting into and staying asleep
is that throughout the night,
there are phases of sleep where you are paralyzed,
so-called REM sleep.
That's a healthy paralysis,
presumably so you can't act out your dreams.
But there are portions of the night where you can move.
And one of the more important movements
that you do in the middle of the night
is put your hand out
or your foot out, or you take your face out
from under the covers as a means to cool yourself.
You're actually allowing cooling of the body
through what are called AVA's,
arteriovenous estomoses is the technical name
that are in the palms, the upper half of the face
and the bottoms of the feet.
Now, there are things that one can take
to enhance the transition to sleep.
Three compounds that can be very beneficial
for aiding the transition to sleep
and for which there are wide safety margins,
although please do check with your physician
before taking anything, are specific forms of magnesium,
something called apigenin and theanine.
Magnesium comes in many forms.
Magnesium threonate, that's T-H-R-E-O-N-A-T-E,
threonate and magnesium biglycinate
have transporters that allow them
to cross the blood-brain barrier more readily
than other forms of magnesium.
And there within the brain,
they promote the release of a neurotransmitter called GABA,
which is an inhibitory neurotransmitter
which shuts off the forebrain to some extent.
It doesn't shut off completely,
but it essentially shuts down thinking, rumination,
planning, and then what we call executive function.
So for many people taking 300 to 400 milligrams
of magnesium by glycinate or magnesium threonate,
30 to 60 minutes before sleep can aid them in falling asleep.
When coupled with apigenin and theanine
provide a sort of synergy or a sleep cocktail
that seems to be very effective
in aiding the transition to sleep.
So apigenin is the substance that's found in chamomile
and 50 milligrams of apigenin taken 30 minutes before sleep
can act as another way to shut off the forebrain
and reduce rumination, reduce anxiety,
and allow people to fall and stay asleep.
And then the third compound is theanine, T-H-E-A-N-I-N-E.
Theanine is a compound that can also increase GABA,
but also increases activation
of something called chloride channels.
Chloride channels are another way
in which neurons lower their levels of activity.
So magnesium threonate or biglycinate, apigenin,
and theanine in combination can be very effective
for aiding the transition to sleep.
Now, what if you wake up in the middle of the night?
This is a very common occurrence.
And there are two general themes
around waking up in the middle of the night
that one can use tools to counteract.
The first theme is if you're somebody
who is tired in the evenings
and you're kind of pushing yourself to stay awake.
So you're going to the party
or you're pushing yourself to study or work
when in fact you'd like to get into bed
at 8.30 or nine, and then you're falling asleep
around 10.30, 11 and waking up at 2.30 or three
in the morning and you can't fall back asleep.
Chances are that your melatonin pulse was initiated
early in the night so that melatonin pulse started
probably around 8.30 or nine, but you're staying up,
you're battling that melatonin.
You may not like this advice,
but one of the things that you can do to offset that
is to simply go to bed earlier.
The other thing is many people wake up
in the middle of the night because of anxiety
or because they have to use the restroom.
It's perfectly fine to flip on the lights,
but keep the lights dim.
But if you flip on those lights,
try and flip them off as soon as possible
and try and get back into bed.
So now we've essentially traveled around the clock,
so to speak, from the time where one wakes up
until the time they get to sleep,
maybe wake up, get back to sleep, et cetera.
I want to emphasize that although people's schedules vary,
most people are doing more than one or two work bouts per day, and indeed, I'm doing more than one or two work bouts per day.
And indeed, I'm doing more than one
or two work bouts per day.
I really emphasize that morning 90-minute work block
because I think most people would agree
that there's a portion of each day
in which we need to do the hardest thing
or the most important thing,
or the thing that demands the most of our cognitive self.
I position that early in the day
and I position everything around that
in order to ensure that it happens
and that it happens with the highest degree of efficiency,
even though that morning 90 minute work block is so vital.
Of course, there's a second work block.
So combined, that's just three hours of focused work,
which may not seem like a lot,
but if you were to dissect your day
and kind of look at the arc and structure of your day,
I'd be willing to bet that if we added up
the total period of time in which you were in deep work,
really focused, dedicated work,
that it would probably amount to about three or four hours.
And of course, throughout the day,
there are other things happening.
Outside of those 90 minute work blocks,
I'm checking my text messages, I'm checking my email,
I'm responding to various demands,
I'm working and tending to life.
So while I've carved some boundaries
or delineate some boundaries around those work blocks,
and I'm certain that if you do too,
you will benefit from them,
of course, please adapt and modify
what I've described today in ways that best serve you
and your schedule.
What I've tried to do is provide you scientific support,
specific protocols and regimens,
because people are always asking me
for more specificity and detail,
and an example of one way, just one way,
in which these various tools and protocols
that are grounded in science could be leveraged
in one's own life.
And last but not least,
thank you for your interest in science.
And last but not least,
thank you for your interest in science.