Huberman Lab - Focus Toolkit: Tools to Improve Your Focus & Concentration
Episode Date: September 5, 2022In this episode, I provide a list of behavioral, nutritional, and supplement-based tools you can use to improve your ability to get into a focused state to do mental or physical work. I explain scienc...e-supported strategies for transitioning into focus, maintaining focus during the work bout, and exiting the focus session, which is also critical, including decompression/defocusing tools. I explain when and how to use: binaural beats, caffeine, deliberate cold exposure, the pros and cons of working in fasted vs. fed states, and supplements and foods that enhance dopamine, epinephrine (i.e., adrenaline) and acetylcholine to promote optimal focus. Also, I explain how short behavioral practices, such as meditation and visual gaze training, will benefit your ability to focus over the long term. As deep focus is crucial to significantly improve cognitive or physical performance in any realm, this episode should be useful to anyone. By the end, you’ll have an essential toolkit of science-supported, low- to zero-cost focus and concentration strategies to select from that can be tailored to your physical and mental performance needs. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1 (Athletic Greens): https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/huberman Supplements from Momentous https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Focus Toolkit (00:04:42) Sponsors: AG1, LMNT (00:09:37) The “Arrow Model” of Focus: Epinephrine, Acetylcholine & Dopamine (00:15:15) Modulation vs. Mediation, Importance of Sleep (00:18:11) Tool: Binaural Beats to Improve Concentration (00:20:54) Tool: White, Brown & Pink Noise, Transition to Focused State (00:22:55) Warm-Up for Cognitive Work, Refocusing Attention & Neuroplasticity (00:26:14) Tool: Ultradian Cycles: Warm-Up, Maintaining Focus & Deliberate Defocusing (00:31:22) How Many Daily Ultradian Cycles Can One Perform? (00:32:28) Sponsor: AG1 (00:35:35) Virtusan: Mental & Physical Health Journeys (00:36:52) Tool: Fasted vs. Fed States & Focus, Prevent an Afternoon Crash, Ketosis (00:45:52) Tool: Foods to Improve Focus & Regulating Food Volume (00:47:53) Tool: Caffeine & Focused Work, Dopamine Efficacy, Alertness (00:52:55) Tool: Stress & Improved Concentration (00:55:46) Tool: Deliberate Cold Exposure & Focus, Dopamine & Epinephrine (01:00:39) Layer Focusing Tools & Design Your Own Protocols (01:01:19) Tool: Short Meditation & Improved Ability to Refocus (01:07:40) Tool: Yoga Nidra, Non-Sleep Deep Rest (NSDR) & Defocus Periods (01:12:13) Tool: Hypnosis & Focus/Deep Relaxation States (01:16:07) Optimal Time of Day to Use Specific Tools (01:16:46) Tool: Overt Visual Focus & Deliberate Gaze (01:20:42) Covert Visual Focus; Deliberate Gaze Warm-Up & Focused Work (01:24:43) Tool: Omega-3 Essential Fatty Acids (01:27:28) Tool: Creatine Monohydrate (01:29:10) Tool: Alpha-GPC & Acetylcholine, Increased Risk of Stroke? & Garlic (01:33:52) Tool: L-Tyrosine Supplements & Food (01:34:47) Combining & Choosing Focus Tools, Variability (01:36:50) ADHD Prescriptions, Training Neural Circuits, Maintenance & Reduced Dosage (01:39:19) Tool: Optimal Order Approaching Focus Tools, Prescriptions & Dependency (01:42:56) Tool: Phenylethylamine & Dopamine (01:44:50) Tool: Other Supplements to Enhance Dopamine, Epinephrine & Acetylcholine (01:46:46) Behavioral, Nutrition & Supplement Tools for Focus (01:49:12) Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Momentous Supplements, AG1 (Athletic Greens), Instagram, Twitter, Neural Network Newsletter Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of neurobiology and
ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. Today, we are discussing focus and concentration and
tools for improving your focus and concentration.
This is a topic that I've covered previously on the Hubertman Lab podcast, but in different contexts.
For instance, we had a very popular episode on ADHD, Attention Deposit Hyperactivity Disorder,
which of course relates to the topic of focus and how to improve focus.
We've also talked a lot about dopamine motivation and drive.
In fact, that's the title of your previous also quite popular episode of this podcast.
But never before have we had a single episode solely devoted to the
tools to improve focus and concentration.
The rationale for recording this episode is to provide people one location where they
can go and quickly access the specific tools for increasing focus and concentration that
are known to be the most powerful tools and the most up-to-date tools.
In fact, today's episode is going to include description of several peer reviewed studies
and the tools that emerge from those scientific
peer reviewed studies that point to new
and fortunately even briefer protocols
than I've described before.
So what I'm basically describing here is tools
that in a very short amount of time
will allow you to significantly increase
your focus and concentration abilities.
Those tools will include behavioral tools,
nutrition-based tools, supplement-based tools, brain
machine interface-based tools, and for those of you that are working with physician, prescription
drug tools.
Today's episode ought to benefit anybody, young or old, or anything in between, whether
or not you have ADHD or not.
Today's episode is going to give you tools that you can apply in your daily life.
Most of them are completely zero cost, and those tools will allow you to tap into the neurochemistry
and the neural circuits within your brain embody that peer-reviewed science has reliably shown
can significantly improve your focus and concentration abilities. Just to give you a little teaser of
the kinds of tools that I'm going to provide you on today's episode, a previous guest on the
Hubertman Lab podcast was Dr. Wendy Suzuki.
Dr. Suzuki is a professor of psychology and neuroscience
at New York University or NYU, as it's commonly referred to.
She's also the Dean of Arts and Sciences at NYU.
Her laboratory made a very important discovery,
which was that a very brief, just 12, actually 13,
if you really count the intro,
but 13-minute daily meditation,
performed for a period of about eight weeks,
significantly increased people's focus
and concentration abilities.
And the great news is, you didn't need all eight weeks.
It was just that's how long that you ran the study.
So during today's episode,
I will describe that protocol in detail.
I'll also provide you an even brief
or alternative to that protocol that you can use.
If, for instance, you find yourself
with only three minutes or four minutes or five minutes
a day to meditate.
The great news is there's quality peer reviewed science
to support that form of meditation
for improving focus and concentration.
And that falls under the bin of these zero cost tools
that you can really use to tap into the neurochemistry
and neural circuits that really allow you
to take control of your cognitive abilities and improve them over time.
I'll also provide you important details about that protocol and other protocols.
For instance, contrary to popular belief, it is not, I repeat, it is not a good idea,
to do a focused based meditation within the four hours before bedtime.
Many people, including some of the subjects in that study performed by the Suzuki lab, found that when they did a focusing meditation protocol, even if it was very calming,
it led to difficulties in falling and staying asleep. So that runs counter to a lot of what
we heard about meditation being great for sleep. It turns out meditation might be great for sleep.
It certainly is great for improving focus capacity. But I highly recommend that if you're
going to apply a focus meditation tool in order to improve your focus and concentration,
then you make sure that that's performed not within four hours prior to bedtime. So that's just
a brief example of the sorts of tools and protocols and details about the tools and protocols that I'll
provide on today's episode. I should mention that we have provided links in the show note captions so
that you can quickly go to the studies that we describe, as well as some of the behavioral tools and other tools
that we'll cover.
Things like the use of BINORL BEAT, SUPPLIMENTS, etc.
Our goal here again is to provide you the maximum number of tools for focusing concentration
that you can pick from and choose from and apply in your life and try and eliminate
as much of the legwork required to seek out and apply
those tools.
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.
Our first sponsor is Element.
Element is an electrolyte drink with everything you need
and nothing you don't.
That means plenty of salt, magnesium, and potassium,
the so-called electrolytes, and no sugar.
Salt, magnesium, and potassium are critical
to the function of all the cells in your body,
in particular, to the function of your nerve cells,
also called neurons.
In fact, in order for your neurons to function properly,
all three electrolytes need to be present in the proper ratios.
And we now know that even slight reductions
in electrolyte concentrations or dehydration of the body
can lead to deficits in cognitive and physical performance.
Element contains a science-backed electrolyte ratio
of 1,000 milligrams, that's one gram of sodium,
200 milligrams of potassium, and 60 milligrams
of magnesium. I typically drink element first thing in the morning when I wake up in order to hydrate
my body and make sure I have enough electrolytes. And while I do any kind of physical training and
after physical training as well, especially if I've been sweating a lot, if you'd like to try
element, you can go to drink element, that's LMNT.com slash Huberman to claim a free element sample pack with your purchase.
Again, that's drinkelementlmnt.com slash Huberman.
Okay, let's talk about focus and concentration and how you can improve your focus and concentration
using science-based protocols.
Because today's episode is mainly focused on tools and not so much the underlying mechanisms,
I'm mainly going to focus on what to do and when and how to do it.
But I just want to take about three minutes and briefly describe a model.
That is a visual image that you can put in your mind that will help you incorporate the
tools that I'll provide and that generally will help you understand at a mechanistic level
how focus and concentration work.
So what I want you to imagine is an arrow.
And an arrow, of course, has an arrow head
and it has the shaft of that arrow.
And in the context of the neuroscience of focus and concentration,
the neurochemical system that really represents
the shaft of that arrow, right, the straight line,
is epinephrine, also called adrenaline.
And today I'll refer to adrenaline is epinephrine, also called adrenaline. And today I'll refer
to adrenaline and epinephrine interchangeably. Turns out that epinephrine slash adrenaline
are released within your brain from a little location, a little cluster of neurons called
locus ceruleus, but you do not need to remember that name. And from your body, from the adrenal
glands. And the release of epinephrine from those two locations, overall increases energy, it increases alertness.
It does not alone increase focus.
Okay, so the reason I've assigned epinephrine,
adrenaline as the shaft of the arrow,
is that if focus is the arrow,
there is no focus without epinephrine.
So things, whether or not they're behavioral
or psychological or supplements or drugs that increase epinephrine allow focus to occur.
They are necessary for focus, but they are not sufficient for focus. That is they are required, but they are not enough to create focus.
So we're going to need epinephrine in the equation. Without epinephrine, there is no focus or concentration.
Now, the arrow head on this metaphorical arrow head that represents focusing concentration
is going to be represented or related to the mechanisms of acetylcholine, a different
neurochemical that also exists in the brain and body. In fact, in the body, it's responsible
for the contraction and movement of your muscles. But today, we're talking about acetylcholine, not in that
context, but rather in the context of its release within the brain. Acetylcholine is released
from a couple of different locations in the brain, and the best way to think about it is
it's like a spotlight. It highlights specific neurons, nerve cells, that should be active
or more active, I should say, than the other neurons in the environment. So the reason I've assigned the arrowhead to a cita-coling and a cita-coling to the arrowhead
is that if you have an arrow with a very big arrowhead that's really broad, really
blunt, imagine a mile wide arrowhead, that's not very focused on any one location, it's
not really pointing to any one location, is it?
But with a narrow, really tightly focused arrowhead, well, that's focused on one location.
So we have alertness, epinephrine, and then we have the actual direction in which our concentration
and focus is placed, and that's at least in this mental model I'm creating acetylcholine.
And then in order to have ongoing focus, we need another neurochemical. And it
turns out that that third neurochemical is dopamine. A molecule often associated with pleasure
and reward, but it's really the molecule of motivation. So here I want you to imagine in
your mind an arrow with an arrowhead, think acetylcholine in the arrowhead, a shaft or a line behind
that arrowhead, which is epinephrine, also called adrenaline, and then behind it, a sort of an engine that keeps
that focus moving forward, right? Because we don't just want to be focused for a moment,
we want to be able to focus for 10 minutes or for an hour, maybe even for two hours. Turns
out there's an optimal duration to focus. I'll teach you that in just a little bit. But
these three neurochemicals together, a cedocolean epinephrine and dopamine, really
allow you to get focused, to focus very precisely, and in fact, increasingly precisely over time
to really narrow and narrow and narrow your focus progressively within a single bout of
focus, and to continue to do that and to be able to do that repeatedly whenever you want.
So here I'm purely talking in metaphor and in models and mental models of arrows, but
in a moment or two I'll start transitioning to discussing tools in which I'll talk about
increasing dopamine and acetylcholine, or increasing epinephrine and dopamine in various
combinations with various approaches.
And what I'd like you to conceptualize is how those are contributing to creating a very
narrowly pointed arrow that has the capacity to continue moving forward over and over so that you can focus as sharply and as long as you like.
And of course, for those of you that want to get really down in the weeds of how dopamine works, we have an entire episode about dopamine motivation and drive that really gets into neurotransmitter release and dopamine baselines and thresholds and all of that sort of thing.
We also have episodes on focus, much longer episodes, I should say, on focus, that incorporate
a lot of the biology of acetylcholine.
Turns out acetylcholine is also involved in neuroplacidity, et cetera.
And epinephrine, of course, relates to stress and our capacity to deal with and buffer stress
and on and on.
Those episodes are all available to you in their long form at HubermanLab.com.
You can find them very easily. They are all time stamps. You can navigate to the particular topics most of interest to you.
I mentioned this all not as a diversion from what we want to cover today, but I know that some of you are hungry for a lot more mechanism.
But today's episode is really mainly focused on the tools. I will of course touch on mechanism.
But if you really want to do the deep dive on mechanism, go to HubertmanLab.com and you'll have more than you ever could want about those
mechanisms.
Let's jump into the tools for concentration and focus.
If you want to think about tools of any kind to modify your biology or physiology in any
way, whether or not it's for cognitive function or you want to get better at exercising or
you want to be a muscle or you want to improve your hormones, you need to think and
understand tools in the context of modulation and mediation.
What do I mean by that?
Well, it's quite simple really.
Mediation is how specific types of chemicals and cells and circuits and organs control
very specific things in your brain and body. Whereas modulation is the ability of chemicals and cells and circuits to adjust how different
things change, how different things work in your brain and body, but to do it more broadly.
What do I mean by this?
Let me give an example.
For instance, I'm going to tell you now that one of the most important things to build and maintain your focus and concentration
is to optimize your sleeping behavior.
That is to get enough quality sleep.
I would say 80% of the nights of your life.
Not everyone can get optimal sleep 100% of the nights of their life.
Nobody, truly nobody achieves that.
However, sleep has been shown to relate to cognitive performance, physical
performance, hormone output, and so many other things, including immune system function, what we can
reliably say is that sleep modulates just about every process in your brain and body. So you have
to get great sleep. There's simply no tool that's going to allow you to overcome chronic
sleep deprivation and allow you to remain focused.
No pill, no device, no supplement, no protocol whatsoever.
There are tools to overcome one night or maybe two nights of sleep deprivation.
We'll talk about those.
But at a fundamental level, we need to do the things that modulate our focus and attention
in powerful ways.
And sleep really
is that thing. So we've done two episodes, one called Master Your Sleep and the other episode is
Perfect Your Sleep. The Perfect Your Sleep is a little bit more like this episode, more focused on
protocols. Master's Sleep includes protocols and mechanism. Again, you can find those at Hubertman
Lab.com. We also have a sleep toolkit. It is still a list of things to do in order to optimize
your sleep. I highly recommend that you download that.
You can go to HubertmanLab.com, go to the Neural Network newsletter.
It is listed there.
If you want, you can sign up for the newsletter, but you don't have to, you can simply download
the PDF of that toolkit for a zero cost.
Why do I say sleep modulates focus and attention?
Well, I'll give an analogy.
If right now someone pulled a fire alarm in this building, or if we had a fire in this building, my attention would drift.
It would not be on recording this podcast.
It would be on something else.
But would I say that the fire alarm mediates attention?
I mean, fire alarms are not really involved in attention.
No, rather, they modulate my attention.
The noise in the room modulates my attention.
That's quite a bit different than a tool that I'll provide later, and I'll just give you
a little hint of now.
In fact, I'll give it to you now, which is that 40 Hertz binarol beats have been shown
in a number of peer-reviewed studies to increase focus and concentration.
And if you'd like to access 40 Hertz binarol beats in order to improve your focus and concentration,
you can do that.
You can actually get it at zero cost.
You can go into the App Store, or instance, the Apple App Store. You can actually get at zero cost. You can go into the app store,
or instance the Apple app store.
This is also available for Android phone.
There's an app called Brainwave,
and you can go there.
You can dial in 40 Hertz,
and it'll play these binomial beats.
It's been shown in multiple quality peer reviewed studies
that playing a pattern of sound waves to one ear,
do do do do do do.
And the other ear, which is slightly offset in frequency,
meaning not quite the same frequencies,
some more like do do do do some more like that combination of frequencies
played to the different ears,
actually get integrated within deep brain centers
and can increase focus and concentration in part
by increasing levels of the neurochemical dopamine
and acetylcholine, which we talked about
a little bit earlier in this aero model of focus.
So we'll provide a link to that app.
I don't have any relationship to that app, I should mention.
But it's an excellent one.
It's one that I've used for many years.
There are also additional functions within the app,
such as for sleep and for other things.
But the 40 Hertz 40HZ is the way,
reads out 40 Hertz stimulation,
has been shown to improve focus and concentration.
Here is my recommendation in the way that I use it.
I would not use 40 hurts, binomial beats every time I'm doing about to work.
What I tend to do is use it for about five minutes prior to that work and then turn it off
and then do the work and I'll talk about other tools to use during that work, whether
it's reading or math or even just emailing or something where I require a bunch of focus for a while.
However, there are times in which I'm in an area or I'm in a state of mind where I'm feeling very distractible and then I'll keep the 40 Hertz binomial beats on the entire time I'm doing that bout of cognitive work.
I'll also sometimes use the 40 Hertz binomial beats prior to a workout in particular weight workouts where I really want to be able to focus on and contract specific muscles.
This is a very useful tool.
Again, supported by quality peer reviewed science,
zero cost available out there,
not just in the brainwave app, but in multiple apps.
I think many of you will benefit from it.
Some of you might not experience it immediately
as a total dropping into a tunnel of focus
in the same way that you might with say,
the sorts of neurochemicals
that we'll talk about later, like alpha GPC and some of these other things that change
neurochemicals directly.
But nonetheless, 40 Hertz binarobites are a very powerful tool, again, zero cost non-pharmacologic
tool that tap into your own endogenous, meaning within you or exist within you physiology
in order to increase acetylcholine and some other neurochemicals,
and they have been shown to work quite well.
Okay, so assuming that you are sleeping well, 80% of the nights of your life,
or at least working on the various protocols and tools to sleep well,
and sufficiently long, 80% of the nights of your life,
and you are interested in additional tools that are sound-based in order to improve your ability
to concentrate and focus. There are quality peer-reviewed studies supporting the idea that white noise
or pink noise, and believe it or not, there is something called pink noise. It has to do with the
specific frequencies of sound that are in the noise. Well, white noise and pink noise have been shown to not improve concentration, per se,
but to improve people's ability to transition into concentrated states. So I don't tend to use
white noise and pink noise while I work, but I know a number of people that do. I know people that
also use what's called brown noise. The folks I know from the engineering and computer science side
get really into these details of white noise, pink noise, brown noise.
You can find white noise, pink noise, or brown noise and listen to it through headphones or in the room.
There is indeed some data to support the fact that white noise and to some extent pink noise and brown noise
can support the release of particular neurochemicals, but more data showing that they can amplify the
activity of neurons in the so-called prefrontal cortex,
this front area, this is the bumper behind your forehead,
that is directly related to your ability
to direct your own focus and remain focused on certain things.
So you have the option of either using bineral beats before,
but not during your work, that is 40 Hertz bineral beats
or 40 Hertz binol beats throughout your
attempt to focus. You also have the option of not using binol beats, but using white noise,
pink noise, or brown noise. Again, there are a lot of zero cost apps. You can find also white
noise, pink noise, and brown noise on YouTube. Again, these are tools that really have been shown over
and over in humans to allow people to focus with more depth
and to decrease the transition time into focus. This is a really key point. A lot of people are
challenged with getting into a mode of focus. None of us, however, should be expected to just sit
down and drop directly into a state of focus. I think that's completely an unfair request of
ourselves. I mean, for instance, you wouldn't expect yourself to go out on the track or go out for a run and not warm up.
You might jog for a few minutes or even walk before you would jog in the jog before you would run.
I would hope you would do that.
And if you're doing resistance training, I doubt that you go over and load up the bar or the machine with the maximum amount of weight
that you can move and then just drop right in that, you always do a warm up.
And I think it's very important to understand mental work, focus, and concentration as requiring that warm-up. What is that warm-up? Well, you know what that warm-up is. That warm-up
is the ramping-up or the increase of epinephrine, adrenaline, acetylcholine, endopamy.
The way that neurochemicals work is you don't just get to flip switches in our brain because we
decide to. That's a fantasy.
That's sort of the limitless movie or movies and ideas that suddenly you're going to flip
a switch on your arm and all of a sudden you're going to be in a laser focus.
That is just not the way that your nervous system works.
There's a gradual dropping into any state, whether or not that state is sleep, right?
You go from shallow sleep to deep sleep and then out eventually.
Focus too, you go from shallow focus to increasingly deep focus.
That is in our metaphor of the arrow.
It's very broad.
It's pointed a lot of things and over time as we drop into focus that arrow is narrowing
and narrowing and narrowing.
In fact, probably better to think about it narrowing and then sometimes oscillating and getting
wider again.
You know, we might hear something down the hallway or more typically our phone will buzz or we'll
think, oh, I wonder what someone's doing.
I hadn't contacted them about something.
Your focus is dynamic.
It is not what we call a step function.
It's not like you go from unfocused to focus and then you drop into your maximum focus.
By understanding that it's dynamic, by understanding that you are going to be continually going in and out of
progressively but varying levels of focus
you will greatly release the pressure on yourself to feel focused all the time when you want to be this is very
key people who are very good at focusing understand this and understand that
They can't expect themselves to just immediately focus and then snap into or out of focus.
So be patient with yourself and also understand that focus is an ability that you can improve your ability to focus
by engaging the neural circuits responsible for focus repeatedly over time.
Through so-called neuroplasticity, the ability of the nervous system to change in response to experience.
And that has a couple of different components, but put very simply what we repeat gets etched
into our nervous system and becomes easier over time.
And the more emotionally important or vital something feels to us, the more likely it is
to trigger neuroplasticity.
We're going to talk a little bit more about how to increase neural circuits for focus later.
But right now, what you have in hand is the key importance of sleep.
And I again will direct you to hubermanLab.com and the neural network newsletter to really work on optimizing your sleep. We've also
got two auditory sound-based tools for improving focus. There's 40 Hertz binol beats used before or
during bouts of focusing concentration. And if you don't like those or even if you do, you might
alternate them with or occasionally use
white noise, pink noise, or brown noise,
also readily available at zero cost.
A question I often get is how long should I try to focus?
Well, the research literature point to the key importance
of so-called ultradian cycles.
You've all probably heard of circadian cycles
or circadian biology, circ-ca, the day circadian
is about 24 hour cycle.
Well, our brain and body operate within that day,
or within each and every day, I should say,
with 90 minute, ultra-dian cycles.
So my suggestion would be,
anytime you're going to sit down and try and focus,
you're going to try and do a focused
bout of physical exercise or skill learning
or musical learning,
or maybe you're even just having a conversation.
Maybe you're a therapist or you're attending therapy
or a class, how long should it be?
And the ideal duration is about 90 minutes, not exactly 90 minutes, but we can reliably
say 90 minutes or less.
Okay, it doesn't have to be the full 90 minutes, but trying to push yourself to be able to
drop into two hours of focus, or three hours of focus while possible is not really inline
with what we know about
the underlying biology.
Everything from our sleep states or the different stages of sleep and our waking states is divided
into these 90-minute cycles, or so-called, okridian cycles.
So what I like to do is set a timer for 90 minutes.
I acknowledge and accept the fact that under most conditions, unless I'm really pressed
for a deadline and I'm optimally caffeinated, etc. The first five to ten minutes of that 90 minutes are a
transition time. It's like the warm-up for focus, but I do include it in that 90
minutes. And then I really try and drop into doing focused mental work or
learning of some sort. Again, this could be physical as well, motor skill
learning, or I think we're running or lifting weights, etc. and really try and
drop into that across the full 90 minutes.
Again, accepting the fact, okay, it's not just an idea.
The fact that occasionally our focus will flicker.
It will jump out of focus and then a big part of being able to focus is to go back to
focusing.
The way I'd like you to conceptualize this perhaps is that arrowhead suddenly getting
very, very broad that you're focusing on many things where that arrow shifts to a different
location in the room.
The key is to be able to shift it back and to narrow it once again.
And that's an active process.
So much so that it requires a lot of metabolic energy.
Your brain is the chief consumer of metabolic energy.
The calories that you consume is so-called basal metabolic rate.
Most of that isn't related to movement or heartbeat or breathing.
It's related to brain function.
Your brain is a glutton with respect to caloric need.
So understand that at the end of 90 minutes
or maybe even after 45 minutes,
you might feel rather tired or even exhausted.
And it's very important that after about a focus
that you take at least 10 minutes
and ideally as long as 30 minutes
and go through what I call deliberate defocus.
You really want to focus on somewhat menial tasks or things that really don't require
a ton of your concentration.
This is starting to become a little bit of a movement out there in the kind of pop psychology
and optimization world.
This idea of not looking at your phone as you walk down the hall to the bathroom.
Certainly not looking at your phone in the bathroom.
And I should mention, by the way, this is a particular annoyance of mine.
Have you noticed that wait times for restrooms
and public places has increased substantially
in the last 10 years?
The reason for that is not digestive, okay?
It's not the gut microbiome.
I mean, it might be the gut microbiome,
but chances are it's because people
are on their phones in the bathroom.
So you're doing yourself and everybody else a favor
by staying off your phone in the restroom, staying off your phone while walking down the hall, try and give
yourself some time to deliberately decompress, to let your mental state's idle, to not be
focused on any one thing. That period of idling is essential for your ability to focus, much in
the same way that rest between sets of resistance training or rest between exercise
is vital to being able to focus and perform during the actual sets or during the actual
bouts of running or cycling or whatever your particular form of exercise might be.
So deliberate decompression is key and I know this is hard because we're all being drawn in by the
incredible rich array of sensory information available on our phones and other devices.
But I can't emphasize this enough.
Our ability to focus is not just related to what happens during the entry and movement
through those focus bouts, but after those focus bouts, we really need to deliberately decompress.
And of course, the ultimate decompress, the time in which we are not directing our thinking
and our action, is during sleep. And so it's no wonder, or I should say it holds together logically, that that deep, long
lasting duration of not controlling where our mind is at, is in fact the ultimate form
of restoration, even if we have very intense dreams.
So take that period after each 90 minute or less focus about, right?
Remember those focus bouts don't have to be full 90 minutes.
Let's see, you do 45 minutes of work.
You're just done with it.
Set it down and go do something for maybe five, 10, maybe even 30 minutes.
That is functional for your day, right?
Just not just walking around in circles or staring up the sky.
Although, if you can do that, do that.
But most of us have other things to do.
But do things that are rather automatic or reflexive for you and try not to do any focused
reading, try not to bring your vision into a tight location such as your phone and try and deliberately decompress
because that will allow you to drop into intense spouts of focus again repeatedly and repeatedly
throughout the day.
I'm often asked how many ultra-addened cycles one can perform throughout the day.
That depends on how well you've slept, how well you are nourished, which we'll talk about
in a moment, and how well trained up your focus capacity is and
Here's the paradox. If you are very trained at focusing if you're very good at dropping into focus
You're actually going to need more deliberate decompression and defocus and I recommend only doing about two maybe three
deep work sessions per day. So not one 90 minute session,
then expecting yourself to do another one,
another one, another one,
but rather one deep work 90 minute session
and maybe another in the afternoon.
A lot of people get surprised by this and say,
wait, how many people can afford to just work three hours a day?
I'm not saying just work three hours a day.
I'm really talking about the hard mental work.
And again, somewhat paradoxically,
the more you can concentrate,
the more deeply you can concentrate, the fewer deep work concentration bouts you can actually
perform each day. It makes sense, however, if you think about in the context of, say, resistance
training, if you are stronger and stronger in the gym or you're an endurance athlete and you can
run ultra-marathons 100 miles or so, you are essentially cutting
a deeper cut into your recovery capacity than somebody who's not very skilled at those
things or can't perform as much intense work.
So the intensity of the work scales directly with how long you need to rest after that
work.
I at the stage of my life and pretty good at dropping into and maintaining focus bounce
of concentration provided the landscape of my life and pretty good at dropping into and maintaining focus bouts of concentration, provided the landscape of my life is right.
You know, I don't have some burning stressful thing that's essential or an
emergency that I'm tending to. And that I put my phone away or turn it off.
I can do three 90 minute focus bouts per day, but that's about it.
And then in between those focus bouts, I'm doing other things that require less
focus. Some of you may be able to perform for. What I highly recommend is that you try doing at least one, that is one 90 minute or less,
bout of focused, concentrated work per day.
And yes, that means the weekends too.
And on the weekends, I like to read a book with my phone nowhere in sight, not on a device.
That's what I do.
Or I'll listen to an audiobook sometimes while taking a walk.
But really concentrating on what I'm trying to learn, what I'm hearing's what I do. Or I'll listen to an audiobook sometimes while taking a walk, but really concentrating
on what I'm trying to learn, what I'm hearing and what I'm seeing.
So again, a daily 90 minute bowed is one to start with.
And now I would say after about four weeks of that, if you're able to stay concentrated
at work through the agitation, then I would consider increasing the number of focus
bouts.
Again, this is not to say that you should go to your teacher or your PhD advisor or
your parent or your PhD advisor or your
parent or your friends and say, listen, I can't really concentrate or think about anything
for more than 90 minutes per day.
That's not what I'm saying.
These are deep focus bouts.
These are bouts of work or I should say mental work or physical work where you're really
forcing yourself to focus and refocus, to sharpen the head of that arrowhead, to redirect
it to what you're trying to concentrate on.
And it is indeed hard work. I would even think about it more or less like a workout of any kind.
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Athletic Greens.
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I mentioned the topic of nutrition a little bit ago.
And of course, nutrition is a complicated topic.
In fact, one of the quickest ways to get yourself into a battle online is to say something
definitive about nutrition.
I just want to clearly state my stance about nutrition.
I fully support and applaud those of you that are vegans for whatever reason, those of you
that are pure carnivore for whatever reason, and those of you that are omnivores for whatever
reason.
I happen to be an omnivore.
My goal is always to eat high quality, minimally,
or non-process foods, and to eat things in moderation.
So I do eat some meat from sustainable sources,
or from organic sources.
I eat some starches, and I eat vegetables,
and I eat fruits.
I try not to eat sugars,
and I don't really like highly processed foods
at this point in my life.
That's me. That's what I do.
But I'm certainly not dictating what people should eat.
I know certain people are ketogenic,
and I can say that for people who achieve ketosis
and can get into ketosis, yes indeed,
there is a mental state associated with ketosis
that will allow your brain to function
and to think really clearly that many people find very attractive
and keep them going back over and over again
to a ketogenic diet.
I'm somebody who, for instance, has not been in ketosis many times in my life, at least
not deliberately so, but I actually will ingest liquid ketones from time to time because
of the further cognitive enhancement or physical enhancement that I experience on top of nutrition
that does include some carbohydrates.
So there are a lot of different ways to approach all this.
Whether or not you're a vegan, omnivore, vegetarian, carnivore, etc.
The point is this, your ability to focus, and in fact, your ability of neurons to encode
specific information in your environment, that is to represent what's out there in the
world, is actually related to your blood glucose level.
Now here I'm setting aside the discussion of ketosis and ketogenic diets for the moment,
but there's a beautiful study that was published in Neuron not long ago that showed that the
tuning, that is the precision with which Neurons in the brain will represent things in our
environment, is actually much greater when there is sufficient glucose in the brain.
Translated into English, this means that when we are fasted or when our blood glucose
is very low, we aren't able to perceive and think about things as
clearly.
Now there's a twist to this, however.
Many people who practice intermittent fasting, and I should say, I practice a sort of pseudo-intermittent
fasting, I generally eat my meals between the hours of 11 a.m. and 8 p.m. although sometimes
there's some wiggle around that.
Occasionally I have an early breakfast, I'm not super rigid about it, but I know there
are a number of people who are doing longer fast or they're eating in a six hour window. We did an entire episode about fasting. You can
again find that HubermanLav.com will likely have such in Panda who's an expert in intermittent
fasting on the podcast. Intermittent fasting has a lot of different potential benefits.
For some people, it's a convenient way to restrict their calories for other people. It's
a convenient way to avoid eating. That is, it's easier to not eat,
then to eat a small portion.
So they opt for intermittent fasting,
and so on and so forth.
But one of the things that you hear very often
is that some people like being fasted
because they like the clarity of mind that it provides.
Here's the situation.
Neurons, unless you're in a ketogenic diet,
really thrive on glucose.
They love glucose.
And as I mentioned before,
your ability to think and
perceive things is actually enhanced by having sufficient glucose in your bloodstream. So why would
it be that some people experience a heightened state of mental clarity when they are fasted? I've
certainly experienced that before. Well, I should say that provided you're well hydrated enough and
you have enough electrolytes in your system, what tends to happen is that when you ingest food,
there's a shift in your nervous system towards so-called parasympathetic mode. That is, the more relaxed
you probably heard it as rest and digest, although it does other things, the more relaxed
mode. That can indeed make us very sleepy. If we have too many carbohydrates, it actually
can make us quite sleepy. However, if we have any food, if we have enough of it, that
is if our gut is full, it diverts blood to our gut and we become sleepy and we can't focus as well.
So a lot of people really like fasting in the state of being fasted for focusing concentration
because they don't have as much of that parasympathetic activation, they're just not as sleepy.
And in fact, under those conditions, half as much caffeine will give you just as much
lift as twice as much caffeine will give you on a full belly of pasta.
That's just the way that caffeine interacts with blood glucose.
So what I'd like you to imagine is if you had a measure of focus from zero to 10, these
are arbitrary units, 10 being maximally focused and zero being not focused at all, imagine
a U-shaped function, right?
Where if you're very fasted, you're going to have a high degree of focusing concentration. But then if you ingest some food in your belly is full, your focusing concentration is reduced.
But having enough blood glucose and maybe even elevated blood glucose will increase cognitive
function.
So there are two ends of the spectrum.
On one end of the spectrum, blood glucose is relatively low and you're fasted and you
can think and behave in a very concentrated way. And on the other end of the spectrum,
you have a lot of blood glucose,
or I should say sufficient blood glucose,
you never want your blood glucose to be too high.
And that allows your neurons to encode and perceive
and basically allow you to think really clearly.
So you sort of have to pick your condition.
What do you want for your balance of focusing concentration?
I actually do both.
So what I do is, as I mentioned before,
I eat my meals sometime around 11 a.m.
my first meal, typically,
unless I'm very hungry when I wake up.
And so I will do my workout
and one bout of focused work.
I always think of this as my hard work early in the day.
And I do that fasted.
I'll be consuming water with electrolytes,
maybe element or other electrolytes,
maybe some caffeine as well in the form of urbimante
or coffee, that's my first focus bout of 90 minutes or less.
That is essentially done fasted.
And then I'll eat, and then I do notice, after I eat,
I actually have a diminished capacity to focus.
But then again in the afternoon,
I will do another 90 minute bout of focus.
And I'll talk about some of the tools I use
to make sure that that bout of focus
is optimal for getting the most amount of focused work done,
whether or not it's mental work or physical work, although I tend to do my
physical work early in the day and my mental work, both early and late in the day.
So to make this very simple, or as simple as I can for you, being fasted is great
for focusing concentration, provided you're not thinking about food the entire time,
and being fed is terrific for focusing and concentration, provided you're not thinking about food the entire time. And being fed is terrific for focus and concentration.
Actually can improve neuronal function, provided that you didn't eat too much food.
So one way to manage this is if you're going to have a lunch to make sure that you don't stuff yourself at lunch,
that you're not overeating and to not get quite so full that you put sheer nervous system into this
parasympathetic mode and
make it hard to focus in the afternoon.
I know a lot of people experience a dip or even a crash in energy in the afternoon that
make it really hard to focus.
For that reason, I'll just remind people of a tool I've talked about many times before,
which is based on the biology of adenosine and caffeine, etc.
Which is to delay your first caffeine intake to 90 to 120 minutes after waking up.
I know that can be painful for certain people.
I violate that rule when I'm working out very early
in the morning, I'll drink my caffeine
before my workout, which often occurs
within 30 to 60 minutes of waking.
But in general, unless I'm working out very early,
I will ingest my caffeine 90 to 120 minutes
after I wake up.
So again, I want to emphasize that if you hear somebody out there say, being fasted is
optimal for focus and concentration, well, that is true in one context and perhaps ideal
for a certain part of the day.
And other people will say, no, you know, neurons run on glucose.
You need glucose in your bloodstream in order to get those neurons to be tuned.
That is to respond with electrical activity in the optimal way when you're reading something
or when you're trying to perform exercise.
Well, that's also true.
And of course, you can incorporate both.
I, in fact, as I just described,
incorporate both fasted states and fed states
in order to optimize my concentration and focus.
And as a brief note about ketosis,
for those of you that actually managed
to transition into ketosis and for those of you that actually managed to transition
into ketosis and are maintaining a ketogenic state, that, as I mentioned earlier, can enhance
brain function, concentration and focus, because of the way in which ketones can be used as
a so-called optimal fuel for neurons.
The ketogenic diet was originally designed, if you will, for epilepsy.
It has a whole relationship to epilepsy and controlling epileptic seizures.
And it can, in fact, allow people to achieve focus-concentrated brain states.
So in the future, I'll do an episode about ketosis and be sure to circle back on how to optimize
ketosis for focusing concentration.
Although I have to believe that most of the people listening to this are probably not in ketosis
or following a ketogenic diet.
So that's why I mainly focused on fasted states
and fed states.
And just to make sure that I'm thorough,
a fasted state to me would be a state
in which you haven't ingested any calories,
but may have ingested caffeine
or maybe even a small amount of artificial sweetener
or something like that.
But really haven't ingested any significant number
of calories in the previous four to
eight or maybe even 12 hours.
And again, there's tremendous variation here, depending on how long people have fasted,
whether or not we're talking about the state right after people wake up, et cetera.
Again, if you're interested in intermittent fasting, both for sake of mental and physical
health and performance, check out our episode on fasting at HubermanLab.com.
I also want to touch back on this idea of which foods can increase focus.
In the episode on ADHD that I did,
I touched on this quite a bit,
as it relates to elimination diets.
There's a whole industry and a ton of interest,
for obvious reasons, into what sorts of things kids
and adults should and shouldn't eat in order
to reduce symptoms of ADHD.
I think that the sum total of those data
pointed the fact that reducing simple sugar intake and certainly highly processed foods, in order to reduce symptoms of ADHD. I think that the sum total of those data
point to the fact that reducing simple sugar intake
and certainly highly processed foods,
so ice cream, candy, chips, et cetera,
those sorts of things really does seem to improve symptoms
of ADHD in both children and adults.
But once you move past that and you start to say,
well, which foods can improve concentration and focus?
Well, foods that, for instance, include a lot of tyrosine, which is a precursor to dopamine.
And now you know why dopamine is important in this context,
are certainly going to increase concentration and focus.
So things like parmesan cheese, certain meats, certain nuts,
you can look up which foods contain high amounts of tyrosine.
There are also some fruits and vegetables that include high amounts of tyrosine.
But to be quite direct, it doesn't matter whether or not you're ingesting foods that are
rich in the precursor amino acids to dopamine, aceto-colon, et cetera, if you're consuming
large amounts of those foods.
That is, one can look and see, for instance, that a stake includes a lot of the precursors
to aceto-colon.
It has amino acid precursors to dopamine as well,
and there are other foods that will do that as well.
But if I were to ingest say two ribeye steaks,
that's a lot of meat,
and it will direct a lot of blood to my gut,
and it will cause me to be sleepy,
and that will create challenges in me
being able to achieve states of focus and concentration.
So the simple way to put this is, if you eat eat too much or you eat a very large volume of food,
you are going to diminish your focus and concentration. The key is to eat enough that you're nourished
for the certain activities, mental and physical that you need to perform. But if you're eating large
meals, you are going to diminish your concentration and focus. Period. I know many people are curious as to whether or not caffeine can improve focus and concentration.
And indeed, it can.
There is an immense amount of data supporting the idea that caffeine provided it's consumed
in the appropriate dosages can improve mental performance and physical performance.
And it largely does that through improvements in focus and concentration.
The dosage of caffeine, of course,
is going to depend on how caffeine adapted you are,
how much caffeine tolerance you have.
And that is going to vary tremendously
depending on whether or not you ingest that caffeine with
or without food, as I mentioned earlier,
but there is a kind of general range
in which we can talk about caffeine as being useful for focus and concentration.
And the range is basically from 100 milligrams to 400 milligrams.
I want to caution everybody out there.
If you're somebody who suffers from anxiety or panic attacks and you're not used to ingesting
caffeine, then you run out and ingest 400 milligrams of caffeine in the form of espresso
or your bimote or an energy drink or in pill form, that is going to be very
uncomfortable for you. You're going to be sweating profusely. Your heart rate is
going to increase. You're going to be quite panicked, in fact, or at least anxious.
So be cautious with your use and adopting of caffeine if you're not already
caffeine adapted. But most people do quite well to ingest 100 to 200
milligrams of caffeine prior to doing some focused work. And again, I
recommend delaying your caffeine intake to 90 to 120 minutes after waking,
unless you are using that caffeine to really jolt your system before a workout.
Caffeine can of course be ingested in various forms, even pill form. But most
people ingested in the form of coffee or my particular favorite way to ingest caffeine
is yerba mate.
It is important, and I should note,
that you should actively avoid the smoked versions
of yerba mate as they contain a lot of carcinogenic
cancer-promoting compounds.
There's some great yerba mate brands out there
that most cost-effective way to consume it
would be to use the loose leaf tea
and to pour water over that.
There's one particular brand that I like. I don't have any affiliation to them whatsoever,
but I've been using it for years. It's Anna Park. It's an organic brand that is sold by mine on Amazon.
You can find it elsewhere on the internet as well. Again, I don't have any affiliation to them.
It's just very cost-effective, very clean. It doesn't have the smoked flavor. At least the one that I buy
is not the smoked variety, so none of the Carsonogenic compounds are in there,
at least that I'm aware of.
And I like the way it tastes, and it provides a very even,
lift and stimulant that I think certainly works for me
and that a number of people I know
that have suggested to also enjoy.
Urbomatte or caffeine also have other additional benefits
in particular, the caffeine in your
bommatte and coffee and other sources of caffeine are known to increase the density and efficacy,
that is the number and the function of dopamine receptors. And this has been shown in humans
several times. So by ingesting caffeine pretty regularly, you're actually increasing
the ability of dopamine to have this effect of increasing motivation and drive.
I tend to ingest caffeine only early in the day.
I tend to cut off my caffeine and take somewhere around 1 or 2 pm to ensure that I can get into
a good night's sleep.
But I realize that there are people out there that ingest caffeine is late as 2 or 3 in the
afternoon and can still sleep fine.
I will caution those of you that think that you can drink caffeine in the evening or
nighttime and still sleep fine. I will caution those of you that think that you can drink caffeine in the evening or nighttime and still fall asleep. All of the research points to the fact
that the architecture of your sleep and the depth of your sleep is disrupted, even if
you're able to fall and stay asleep, the sleep you're getting is simply not as good as
the sleep you would get if you were to shut off your caffeine intake at least eight hours
before bedtime and ideally more like 10 or even 12 hours before bedtime. But of course, there are practical constraints as well.
Okay, so caffeine is increasing dopamine's function by changing the number and efficacy
of dopamine receptors.
But of course, it also increases our wakefulness, our alertness.
And that is largely through the neurochemical systems related to adenosine, which is a
molecule that builds up in our brain and body the longer we are awake. It's part of the sleepiness system, if you will. It makes us feel
fatigued or tired. And caffeine also operates on the epinephrine, the adrenaline system. In fact,
if we ingest too much caffeine, we'll sometimes get the jitters. Those jitters are really the
sympathetic, as it's called nervous nervous systems, biased toward movement.
And our pupils will dilate.
They actually get broader.
Now somewhat paradoxically, when our pupils get bigger, the pupils of our eyes, that is,
our visual world actually narrows.
It becomes more tunnel-like.
A lot of people don't realize this.
When our pupils are really small, that means we are relaxed.
If you ever see someone really tiny or pin-sized pupils, they are very relaxed. If their pupils are very big, that means we are relaxed. So if you ever see someone really tiny or you'll pin-sized pupils, they are very relaxed.
If their pupils are very big, they're very dilated, well then they are very amped up.
They are very, very alert.
Caffeine increases alertness by increasing epinephrine, adrenaline release both in the brain and
within the body.
And so that's another way that it facilitates focus and concentration.
Now, there are other ways to increase epinephrine in the brain and body besides caffeine or other stimulants. And in fact, that has been studied. There's an excellent study that was carried out
not that long ago on how stress itself can increase our ability to focus and concentrate. That's
right. How stress itself can increase focus and concentration. Most people think of stress as impairing our ability of focus, but that's actually not
true when we are stressed. It involves the deployment, the release of adrenaline, epinephrine,
and that adrenaline both changes our visual field. In other words, it narrows our vision
to a more tunnel-like focus. That is, it makes the arrow in our metaphor of the arrow more sharp,
and it improves our concentration.
This makes sense given what we know about stress.
When we're stressed, we tend to be stressed about a specific thing.
We start anticipating or wondering or thinking about what's going to happen next, what
led up to this?
How is this going to impact me?
How do I feel right now?
It really narrows the context of our thinking and our behavior.
It's one of my favorite studies that really illustrates how stress can improve concentration How do I feel right now? It really narrows the context of our thinking and our behavior.
So one of my favorite studies that really illustrates
how stress can improve concentration and performance
is one that was published not that long ago
and I will provide a link to this in the show notes.
It's a paper published in the journal
Experimental Psychology in 2020.
The title of the paper is, not surprisingly,
acute stress improves concentration performance.
First author, DeGroot, D-E-G-R-O-O-T-E. And this study involved taking a number of subjects and
stressing them out or not prior to a cognitive or concentration task. And there
are a lot of data in this paper, but I'm just going to home in on one specific
set of data. I should mention as I go there that they measured things like
cortisol, a stress hormone,
they measured anxiety.
It was a quite thorough study.
And what they found was that concentration performance improved manyfold, I should
say, from there was a greater than doubling of concentration and performance in the stress
group.
And stress in this context was provided using a standard way of inducing stress.
What they basically do is they bring subjects into the laboratory and they have to either
do something fairly mundane in the control group.
Or they have to do a simulated job interview and arithmetic task and they're being evaluated
as doing this.
So this isn't, you know, intense psychosocial stress.
You know, they're not watching anything disturbing.
They're not being traumatized in any kind of way.
This is fairly low levels of stress that rate their levels of epinephrine, and we know
this from this study, and other levels of cortisol, another stress hormone, modestly within
their brain and blood.
But that even modest increase in these stress hormones, and their reported psychological
levels of stress really
enhance their focus and concentration.
This may come as surprising because you, like many people think, gosh, stress really diminishes
cognitive performance, but that's absolutely wrong.
Stress improves cognitive performance.
Now of course, there are other ways to increase stress levels and to do that in healthy ways
to improve concentration and performance.
And one of the best ways to do that because it's so sure fire and it's generally safe,
provided you do it safely, is deliberate cold exposure.
This is something I've talked about on the podcast before, but deliberate cold exposure
can be achieved by getting into a cold shower for one to five minutes.
If you're not used to it, you probably want to start with one minute, or you can get into
a nice bath or nowadays there are a number of different commercial sources of circulating cold water or if you
have access to a body of cold water like a lake or a pool or a notion, we know that getting
into cold water or under cold water greatly increases epinephrine levels and dopamine levels
in the brain and blood. There's a beautiful study that was published in the European
Journal of Physiology
that showed that the increases in dopamine are massive,
you know, near doubling or more of dopamine levels
that are very long lasting for hours.
And epinephrine, N and E cortisol levels are also increased,
and in ways that support not just immune system function
because they do that, but and mood because it does that,
but they can really improve concentration and focus.
I touched on this a little bit in an episode about memory
that there is an age-old practice,
really dating back to medieval times,
of putting people into cold water
right after they learn something
in order to spike, to increase their epinephrine
as a way to consolidate those memories.
For sake of today's discussion, in order to spike to increase their epinephrine as a way to consolidate those memories.
For sake of today's discussion, if you're interested in ways to improve focusing concentration,
you need to increase your epinephrine, your adrenaline levels.
Cold water exposure is one of the most efficient ways to do that.
This is not a biohack.
I don't like the word hack.
I know it's commonly used, but a hack is something
where you're using one thing for a different purpose
than it was originally intended for.
And here, I'm not referring to the shower,
the cold bathroom, referring to epinephrine.
Epinephrine is a neurochemical that will place your vision
into more of a tunnel mode, which will allow you
to focus on cognitive work or physical work
in a more specific way.
You're not gonna be as distractable.
And it's very easy to achieve by getting into a cold shower
or a cold body of water for a brief period of time.
People always ask how long to get under or into cold water
and how cold to make it.
Here's the thing, it should be uncomfortably cold
but safe to stay in for one to five minutes.
Okay, so uncomfortably cold that you really want to get out
but safe to stay in.
Not so cold that it's going to give you a heart attack and not so warm that it's comfortable
that it doesn't create that adrenaline release. Cold water exposure, I should say deliberate
cold water or non deliberate cold water exposure, reliably increases epinephrine levels. It
is incredibly useful as a tool for this. And it is in fact zero cost or even negative zero cost.
How could it be negative zero cost?
Well, you can certainly save on your heating bill
by taking a cold shower.
So that's one way.
And for those of you that have access to devices
or locations where you can get into cold water,
you can submerge, well, then that can work.
For those of you that don't, maybe you take a cold bath,
you get in up to your neck, that's going to be most efficient.
For those of you that can't do that,
you'll get under a cold shower.
Again, it should be uncomfortably cold to the point where you want to get out, but that
you can safely stay in for one to five minutes.
How long should you do it before a work-out?
Well, if you get into really cold water, it's uncomfortably cold, and get out after about
three minutes, you're probably good to go, dry off and get to work.
Some of you might think this is a little bit silly as a tool for focus and concentration,
but if you look at the data on epinephrine and how powerfully it can increase focus, I
think you'd be very impressed.
I mean, it certainly can increase one's ability to attend a specific visual stimuli, so for
reading or math work, et cetera, it's going to be very useful.
Of course, you don't want to make it so cold that you're shivering and
chattering the whole time. And of course, you could, if you like, combine this with 40 Hertz
binomial beats. There's no reason why you couldn't combine the two protocols.
But the point here is that a lot of people would love to, and I think,
ought to leverage the health promoting and powerful effects of increasing
epinephrine on focusing on concentrationration and running out and getting stressed by a life event or
getting into an argument or something like that simply as a way to
increase focus and concentration doesn't seem that adaptive to me.
So deliberate cold exposure is a straightforward way to do that.
It doesn't involve anyone else.
I suppose you could do it with somebody else, but it doesn't require anyone
else.
And again, there are zero, low, and even negative cost ways to approach that.
If you'd like to know how long the positive effects of epinephrine last toward improving
focus and concentration, well, if we look to that study from de-groot at all, the acute
stress improves cognitive performance study, they measured concentration before and 30 minutes
after the stress was induced.
And there does appear to be a quite long lasting really up to an hour or more effect of increasing
at Peneferin.
So, how might you apply these sorts of protocols early in the day or later in the day?
Well, one suggestion or one potential protocol would be if you're going to sit down and do
some work, if you're already feeling alert and focused, no need to reach to this tool.
But if you're feeling like your focus and alertness
isn't quite where you'd like it to be,
you could take a three minute very cold shower
or submerge yourself in cold water for three minutes.
You might have a cup of coffee as well
and then sit down and do that work,
maybe even throw in the 40 Hertz binarrow beats.
All of that would be layering in the different systems
that different neurochemicals, such as
acetycoline, epinephrine, and dopamine that are going to lend themselves
to a really terrific 90 minute or less workabout.
Now I'd like to discuss some of the purely behavioral tools that quality peer reviewed
science say can improve focus and concentration significantly.
At the beginning of today's episode, I talked about the study from Dr. Wendy Suzuki's
lab, where they explored a 13 minute meditation
done every day for a period of eight weeks.
That meditation led to significant improvements in focus and concentration ability, as well
as other aspects of cognitive performance.
It also improved mood and reduced stress.
So, you might be wondering what exactly is this meditation.
The meditation is very simple and it's one that anyone can perform.
What you would want to do is set a timer for about 13 minutes. I don't think it has to
be exactly 13 minutes, but since that's what they included in the study, you would set a
timer for 13 minutes. You would sit or lie down, close your eyes, and you would simply
focus on your breathing. Most people are going to benefit from only doing that breathing through their nose, but if you have some sort of obstruction or
inability of breath just through your nose, you could probably also do it by
breathing through your nose and mouth or just your mouth. But ideally you do
just nasal breathing for a period of 13 minutes, concentrating on that breathing
and concentrating, meaning bringing your awareness, your so-called
interoceptive awareness, if you wanted to get
really technical about it, your interoceptive awareness to a point just about an inch inside
of your forehead. Now, of course, that might sound kind of gory to some of you, you've never actually
been inside your forehead, but just about an inch behind your forehead is where you would want to
place your concentration while also concentrating on your breathing. Now, here's the thing about meditation that all studies of meditation show, which is that
unless you are a very experienced meditator, your concentration, your focus will drift
away from your breathing and away from that location about an inch inside your head, inside
your brain, about just behind your forehead.
That will happen maybe every 10 seconds, every 20 seconds, maybe even every five seconds.
But an important part of such a meditation practice to improve concentration and focus
is that you are continually refocusing back to that specific location and refocusing back
on your breath.
This is something that, again, is not often discussed.
People think that if you do a meditation and you're supposed to concentrate on your breath,
that if your mind drifts that somehow you failed in that meditation, but actually that's
not the case, a huge component of improving your ability to focus and concentrate by way
of neural plasticity, rewiring of the circuits for focus and concentration
is the repeated return to a state of focus from a state of non-focus or diminished focus.
So think about it like trying to drive down the freeway and staying between the lane lines,
excuse me, and every once in a while because there's a bit of drift on the vehicle,
maybe the wheels aren't aligned correctly or there's something else wrong with the chassis or the steering device,
it starts to drift right a little bit, then you hit the rumble strip and then you pull
back to the center. That's really what a focused meditation practice is about as opposed
to expecting yourself to stay between the mental lane lines, so to speak. So if you're somebody
who's going to do a practice of the sort that I described in a 13 minute meditation practice every day, you'd want to sit or lie down, close
your eyes, start to concentrate on your breath, focus your attention on a location about
an inch behind your forehead, and then fully expect that at some point you'll be thinking
about something else. And that's a cue to focus back to that location, just about an inch
behind your forehead and back to your breath.
By doing that repeatedly over and over, what you're really training up is the network within
your brain that indeed includes that prefrontal cortex that you're focusing on as well as
some other structures, the infertemporal cortex, indeed the hippocampus, a structure
associated with memory, and other components of the neural circuit that are involved in
directing our mental focus and concentration.
Again, I can't emphasize the importance of this practice being one of focusing and refocusing.
In fact, I would prefer to call such a practice a refocus, focus meditation or a constantly
refocusing or maybe you all can come up with a better name for it.
I'm certainly not that good at naming things.
But this sort of meditation practice
has been shown in the study, the Suzuki Lab
and other studies to really improve people's ability
to focus and remain focused.
So much so that in the beautiful book, altered states,
they describe a number of different meditation practices.
Some a little bit longer than the one that I described,
one that's 17 minutes, another one that's 30 minutes, some people meditate as long as
16 minutes a day, although that's quite a long time, in my opinion.
The point here isn't how long you focus or somehow trying to achieve total focus for
the entire 13 minute or 17 minute or 60 minute bout of meditation.
While that would be wonderful, and I think many people aspire to do that,
that's a lot of hard mental work.
I think for most people out there,
including myself, a relatively short meditation practice
of about 13 minutes,
in which you fully expect your focusing concentration
to drift, but that you are continually refocusing
is going to be the most effective.
Yes, indeed, the most effective at teaching yourself to focus and stay concentrate.
In fact, I invite you to interpret every time that you focus off that location about one
inch behind your forehead as an opportunity to refocus and think about the refocusing as
the trigger for teaching your neural circuits how to focus for extended periods of time.
And as a bonus to that sort of meditation practice, the study from Wendy Suzuki's lab also showed
that people experience improvements in sleep and improvements in memory.
So not just improvements in mood and reduction in stress and improvements in focus and concentration,
but all these other positive benefits from just doing that 13-minute-a-day meditation practice.
It's one that I've started to adopt and have felt tremendous benefit from
and that I encourage many of you to try as well.
The one cautionary note is the one that I mentioned
at the beginning of the episode,
which is because the refocus, as I'll call it,
meditation does involve a significant amount of effort
and engagement of these prefrontal cortical circuits,
it is disruptive to sleep if performed too closely to sleep.
So if you are going to do that practice, I recommend that you not do it within the four
hours prior to your bedtime.
Earlier I mentioned that I would talk about ways to improve focus if you are sleep deprived.
This is something that I'm all too familiar with.
I put a lot of effort into optimizing my sleep.
That's something that with each passing year, I put more and more effort into, again,
because sleep is so vital for mental health, physical health, and performance of all
kinds.
But certainly in my role as a student, in my role as a professor, and in my role in life,
I've had numerous times in which I simply did not get enough sleep, or my sleep was terrible
for whatever reason.
And yet I still had work demands and social demands, etc. One practice that is very
effective at allowing you to focus better than you would otherwise under conditions of sleep deprivation
is so called non-sleep deep breast or NSDR. This is also referred to sometimes as yoga
knee-dra. Yoga knee-dra actually means yoga sleep. Yoga knee-dra is a practice of lying down for
about 10 to 30, sometimes even as long as
60 minutes. You listen to a script, it's an audio script that takes you through a progressive deep
relaxation, involves a body scan, some long exhale breathing. It is very restorative in the sense
that one tends to emerge from yoga Neja or NSTR feeling greatly refreshed compared to how you felt prior to it.
There is also terrific neuroimaging data from laboratories in Denmark showing that there's
a restoration of dopamine levels in the so-called basal ganglia after NSTR aka Yoganidra.
Whether or not you call it Yoganidra or NSTR, which is what I refer to it as non-sleep
deep rest, you can find these scripts at zero cost. Multiple places, you can find there's certain apps
that are NSDR or Yoganidra apps.
There is a NSDR protocol that was put out there by Made For,
which is on YouTube that you can access for free.
There is a NSDR or I should say a number of NSDR protocols
through the Virtus-In app.
There are again, a number of different places
that one can access
NSDR protocols. I do NSDR for 10 to 30 minutes per day every single day, not just on days where I'm
sleep deprived. If I happen to be sleep deprived, I would extend that NSDR to 30 or 60 minutes.
And when you do that NSDR, we'll depend on when you have time for that NSDR. When I haven't slept
well, what I'll try and do is find a quiet place where I can do NSDR for 30 or ideally 60 minutes.
Sometimes I will fall back asleep during that NSDR. That's fine if you do that. But most
people will stay awake during the NSDR and then I'll emerge from that and go about my day.
If in the afternoon I'm very fatigued because of lack of sleep, I might do another NSDR of 10 to 30 or 60 minutes,
and then another work-bout.
Again, NSDR is something I do every day.
I talk a lot about this in the episodes related to sleep
because it can help you get better at falling
and staying asleep at night in addition to feeling restorative
in that immediate timeframe of the day
in which you do NSDR.
So it's immensely beneficial at various times and for various purposes.
But here within the context of trying to concentrate and focus when you're sleep deprived, NSTR,
aka yoga knee drop is an immensely beneficial practice.
There's growing amounts of quality science pointing to the neurochemical replenishing
effects, as I mentioned before dopamine, but also the potential for NSDR
to replace sleep that you've lost.
I would never want anyone to try and use NSDR
as a total replacement for sleep,
but under conditions in which you cannot control your sleep,
NSDR is going to be the best way that I am aware of
to restore your ability to focus and concentrate
for whatever purpose.
And if you emerge from your NSDR
and then during some caffeine,
you'll notice an even greater capacity
for focusing concentration for all the reasons
directly related to caffeine.
So again, NSDR is a general tool
for enhancing your ability to sleep.
And it's a tool that you can use in order to compensate for,
at least to some degree, compensate for loss sleep
when you need to focus
and concentrate.
One thing that really contrasts NSDR and Yoganidra with the sort of focus meditation that
I talked about a few minutes ago, the 13-minute meditation, is that during the 13-minute meditation
you're actively trying to refocus and focus, whereas during NSDR and Yoganidra you're actually
trying to defocus.
So you can think of the 13-minute meditation for refocusing and focusing as directly tapping
into and mediating improvements in the circuitry for focusing concentration, whereas you can
think of NSTR and yoga knee-dra as modulating your brain and body state to allow you to focus
and concentrate better.
Now another tool that you can use to directly tap into the circuits for focus and concentration
and to greatly accelerate neuroplasticity, the improvements, or I should say the changes
in those circuits that will allow you to focus and concentrate better, is hypnosis.
A lot of people here, hypnosis, and they think stage hypnosis, people squawking like chickens
and doing things against their will.
But actually hypnosis is a typical but highly accessible brain state that's been studied
with a lot of rigor at Stanford University School of Medicine by my colleague, Dr. David
Spiegel.
He's been a guest on this podcast previously.
hypnosis is a unique brain state because it's one in which you are deeply focused and yet
deeply relaxed.
So to just sort of set up the array of practices here
so you can think about them logically,
the focus refocus meditation is based on and focused on focus,
no pun intended.
NSDR and Yoganidra are aimed at deep relaxation.
Hypnosis is this atypical, very powerful brain state
in which you combine high levels of focus and deep relaxation. Now it's a little bit of a tough one to just take oneself into.
But fortunately, there's a tool based on a lot of quality peer reviewed research from
the Speagle Lab and other labs.
And that is the Revery app, REVRI.
The Revery app is available for no cost, at least for a period of time.
And then I think they play certain elements of it behind a paywall.
But you can try at zero cost. It's available for Apple soon, I think also to be available for Android.
And they have specific hypnosis protocols that you listen to, and these are very brief protocols.
Follow the instructions you're listening to a particular audio script of David Spiegel himself.
And some progressive breathing and actually some eye movements that
are directly linked to the neural circuits that allow for these highly focused deeply
relaxed states.
And there are components within the Reverie app specifically geared towards improving focus
and concentration.
So again, there's meditation for focus.
There's deliberate decompression, NSDR, yoga, NIDra, which take you into deep relaxation. And then hypnosis is this very special, very directed state of highly focused and highly
relaxed, or I should say deeply relaxed, that allow access to the neural circuits for
focusing concentration and allow you to tune those up and to improve those very significantly
in a very brief amount of time.
And again, some of those hypnosis scripts are as short as eight minutes,
some are as long as 13 minutes.
So what we're really talking about here
are zero cost tools that directly tap into the neural circuits,
the components within your brain
that allow for deep relaxation,
allow for deep focus and improve your ability
to focus and concentrate over time simply by repeating these.
How often do you need to repeat the
reverie hypnosis for focusing concentration
before you see benefits?
Well, that will vary from person to person.
I tend to use it once every third or fourth day
and have experienced tremendous benefits from it.
I don't think I'm unique in that sense.
They have a lot of data to support this.
Reverie app and the protocols within it.
How long do you have to do NSTR before you experience those benefits?
There, I would say the first time in every time because it's so deeply relaxing that you emerge from it feeling quite restored relative to how you went into it.
And as I mentioned earlier, the study on meditation, it took about eight weeks to see the effects that they observed in that study,
but they didn't observe shorter time points.
So I highly encourage people to explore
meditation, geared towards focus and refocus, also NSDR, non-sleeped, depressed, aka Yoganitra, and the Reverie app, specifically the hypnosis within the Reverie app,
that's geared towards improving focus and concentration. All of these have terrific
science to support them. This is not woo science or hacks or just something that people came up with.
This is all grounded in work from some of the best universities
in the world, from excellent groups who've
looked at underlying neural mechanisms and measured things
with a lot of rigor, et cetera, et cetera.
These tools are available to you.
I highly recommend that you use them.
And if you're interested in the optimal time of day
to do these, we already mentioned that the focus, refocus
meditation shouldn't be done too
close to sleep. The revery hypnosis app can be done at any time. Really, in fact, there's
a component of falling back asleep in there. In other words, a hypnosis specifically geared
toward helping people teach themselves to fall back asleep when they wake up in the middle
of the night. NSDR, I always say can be done first thing in the morning in the afternoon
or any time of day. And in fact, I'll sometimes do that in the middle of the night if I happen to wake up and need to get back to sleep.
So really these tools can be applied
most any time of day except for that one caveat about the focus, refocus, meditation not being done too close to sleep.
Now there's another set of behavioral tools that can really help enhance one's ability to focus and those are visual-based tools.
one's ability to focus, and those are visual-based tools. In fact, the tools I'm about to describe are actually being employed in a number of schools
in China and elsewhere in order to teach children to focus better and for longer periods of
time.
The key principle here is that much of our cognitive focus, our ability to think about something
in a very specific way and stay focused on it to read or to follow a line of conversation or math or music, et cetera, is going to
be directed by our visual system. Our visual system has two forms of attention and focus.
One is overt focus, which is very straightforward. If I'm looking at the tip of my pen for
those of you listening right now, I'm looking at the tip of my pen. That's overt focus.
I'm focusing on it with my eyes. And of course, the rest of my pen for those of you listening right now, I'm looking at the tip of my pen. That's a vert focus. I'm focusing on it with my eyes.
And of course, the rest of my brain then will follow
and start to analyze the details
of what I'm seeing, the contours of the pen, et cetera.
It seems sort of obvious when you first hear it,
but our cognitive focus tends to follow our vert visual focus.
That's also why they put blinders on horses.
That's also why sometimes wearing a hoodie or a hat or limiting your visual field in some
way can help you enhance your cognitive focus.
It can help limit distraction.
You're just not seeing as much.
It's also why when we ingest caffeine or any kind of stimulant or we are stressed and
our people's dilate and our vision becomes more tunnel-like, less panoramic, but more
tunnel-like.
You know, they say a soda straw view of the world, you're looking through a tunnel,
your focus, your visual focus,
is actually driving your cognitive focus.
Your cognitive focus is narrower than it would be
if you were seeing the whole scene that you're in.
So when you hear this, it sounds obvious,
but for many people, including many scientists,
it's just not obvious that this would be the case.
However, that is the case,
your visual focus drives your cognitive focus.
So what is a practice
that has been studied in various laboratories and that's being employed in various schools
is to have children or adults visually focus on one location for a given period of time, how long
anywhere from 30 seconds to three minutes and believe it or not three minutes is a long time to
maintain visual focus at one location.
If you were to try that right now, you'd probably find it to be a bit of a strain, but if
you want to try it, you can.
Keep in mind, you yes are allowed to blink, but also keep in mind that meditation refocusing
practice that we talked about earlier, that the refocusing is the key component of teaching
yourself or your brain.
You are your brain, your brain is you, but to teach yourself how to focus better.
So if you're going to incorporate this practice,
what you would want to do is pick a location, it could be on a wall,
it could be on your computer in front of you, although I would encourage it to not be the contents of your computer screen.
You might just want to blank your screen,
you might want to put a piece of paper with a crosshatch there, any sort of visual target, or you can imagine a visual target,
and then focus your visual attention on that target, and try to breathe normally, try and stay
relaxed, and certainly allow yourself to blink so that your eyes don't try out. This is not a test
of how long you can go without blinking. By focusing on that particular location, and by forcing
yourself to refocus on that location, anytime you gaze your vision drifts from that location, you are encouraging the circuits
for focus to get better at focusing for longer and longer and at refocusing when your focus
drifts off of that location.
This is incorporating neural circuits, including the prefrontal cortex, things like the frontal
eye field.
For those of you curious about the underlying biology,
this practice is recruiting certain elements
of your so-called prefrontal cortex,
also the frontal eye fields,
which are locations not far from the prefrontal cortex
that are involved in deliberately directing your gaze
to particular locations in space, not outer space,
although you could do this by focusing on stars, I suppose,
but in visual space. Now, I mentioned
before that this is overt visual focus and attention. You are overtly looking at that location,
but one also very powerful practice for improving focus and concentration is to use covert focus.
Covert focus is where my gaze, my eyes are focused on one location, such as my pen, but my focus
is actually directed elsewhere in the room or location that I'm in.
My mind and to some extent, my peripheral vision is focused in this case on the door, just
to my left in the room that I'm in.
That takes a little bit more effort.
This is something that all Old World primates, of which we are, Old World primates, are
able to do. And it probably evolved as part of the mechanism by which animals
could evaluate their scene, evaluate predators, evaluate other primates while not necessarily
staring them directly. So they can obtain information. We can obtain information without
having to direct our gaze specifically to one location. Maybe we can obtain information from multiple locations, indeed we can.
Without getting too far down the rabbit hole of how vision and cognition relate,
because we've done episodes on that previously,
and simply focusing on the tools that can be incorporated to improve focusing concentration,
here's what I recommend.
Set yourself a low bar at first, that can be incorporated to improve focusing concentration. Here's what I recommend.
Set yourself a low bar at first and set a timer and try to focus on one location for 30 seconds.
And that's it for that day.
The next day you might add five seconds and then the next day,
five seconds after that.
If you miss a day, no big deal, simply do the practice for the same amount
of time that you did the last time that you do the practice for the same amount of time that you did, the last
time that you did the practice, and then gradually try and increase the amount of time that
you can focus on one visual location overtly by looking directly at that location. If you
like and if you feel you have the ability, you can try and do this through covert attention
and focus by looking straight forward, for instance, and attending to something in the
corner of the room and trying to do that for 30 seconds.
You'll find that that's quite a bit harder.
And then extending that by five seconds every time you do the practice.
This is something that I don't think you necessarily have to build up to being able to do for
a full hour in order to extract the benefits.
In fact, the best way to think about this practice is as a means to get into a focused state.
If you remember back about an hour or so ago,
I was talking about how focused states
are not a drop all the way in and then exit type phenomenon.
We don't just drop into a focused state the same way,
we don't drop into the peak performance of a workout,
we warm up.
So what I recommend is having a 30 second to three minute
period at the beginning of about a focus where you're
going to do work or physical work and anchoring your vision to one location somewhere in the
room or if you want to do it covertly, you can do that.
Setting a timer and trying to do that for anywhere from 30 seconds to three minutes.
What you're doing when you exercise that practice is you are ramping
up neural activity within the neural circuits that create focus and concentration. Then I
would stop looking at that location or that covert location. And then I would move to the
work that you're trying to do, either mental work or physical work. And if about halfway
through your 90 minute bow to or at some point in your 90 minute bow of work or exercise, you feel that your concentration is drifting, rather than look
at your phone and scroll through the thousands of contexts that exist within social media
or your phone, try just picking a location again on the wall, focusing back on that location,
using that as a ramp up to then direct your focus back towards, if you're weight training
sets and reps that you might be performing, if you're running,
you might do this, or cycling, you might do this
by focusing on a particular location
and really homing in on that location physically.
And this is a practice that a lot of athletes use in fact.
And if you're, say, doing musical practice or math,
well, then you'd wanna focus on something
other than the tasks that you're trying to perform,
but again, using visual focus as a way to ramp up and increase your overall ability to focus and concentrate and
then applying that to whatever it is that you're trying to learn or perform.
Next I'd like to talk about compounds that can improve concentration and focus.
These are most often consumed as supplements, although some of them I should mention can
also be derived from food.
Again, I just want to remind you that there are things in this case compounds
that can modulate a biological mechanism, that is, can modulate focus and concentration.
And there are compounds that can mediate, can directly contribute to concentration and focus.
One of the key compounds that supports concentration in focus because it generally
supports mood concentration in focus and brain function in general are the omega-3 essential
fatty acids. I've talked about the omega-3 essential fatty acids in a variety of contexts
in particular depression, but also ADHD. There are interesting data on that. And it's
really clear that getting somewhere between one and three grams of EPA,
that is one to three grams of EPA essential fatty acid per day can improve outcomes that
is can improve mood and can improve cognitive function. And while there's some debate
about whether or not I can improve cardiac function, it's very clear at least to me that
ingesting one to three grams of EPA central fatty
acids per day is beneficial.
But again, in the context of focus and concentration, it's in modulating the neural circuits and
brain function that are going to support focus and concentration.
It's not as if taking 1 to 3 grams of EPA central fatty acids per day is going to tap directly
into only the circuits
for focus and concentration.
That said, and as discussed on the episode
of the human lab podcast with Dr. Rona Patrick
and on the episode on ADHD that I did
and on the episode on depression that I did,
I make it a point to ingest one to three grams of EPA's per day.
You can get those EPA's from other sources
besides supplements, of course,
but supplements are going to be the easiest way to do that.
You could do that through liquid form, fish oil,
cod liver oil, some people who are vegan opt for
other sources of EPA's.
You can find those out there.
Certainly, some people even use prescription EPA's
to get the dosage really high.
Dr. Ron Opatrick talked about this in the episode with me.
That's actually something that she does.
I don't take the prescription form.
I get them through pill form,
through our supplement affiliate, which is momentous,
but there are a number of different quality sources
of EPAs out there.
And some of those quality sources also include things
like fatty fish, algae, and things of that sort.
So I'll leave it to you as to whether or not you supplement with omega-3 fatty acids
in order to get that one to three grams per day
or whether or not you do it through food,
but I would encourage you to try and reach that threshold
because there are a number of known positive effects
for mood and brain function generally.
The other thing that can positively
modulate brain function,
and that actually works as a fuel for neurons to function and can improve
cognitive performance in particular within the brain circuits such as the prefrontal cortex
that are involved in concentration and focus is creatine. I know many people are familiar with
creatine monohydrate for its effects on muscle growth and strength and performance,
but it's quite clear that the bulk of scientific studies have examined the role of creatine in
the clinical context and as its role in improving cognitive performance. So my read of the literature
has led to a practice in which I ingest five grams per day of creatine monohydrate,
the sort of standard form that's available in, this is generally available as a powder,
that's certainly how I take it, I take the creatine powder, I'll mix it with water or with my
athletic greens or some sort of electrolyte drink, whatever liquid happens to be convenient to adjust that
in.
The time of day doesn't really seem to be important.
Some people are strong believers in consuming creotene post workout, while that might be
beneficial, I simply take it in the morning or post workout, it sort of depends on when
I remember to take it.
But that five grams of creotine per day, in my case,
really isn't geared towards muscle growth or strength or performance as much as geared toward
tapping into the creatine phosphate system within the brain and specifically the benefits of
creatine for prefrontal cortical networks. Again, modulating, not directly median, but modulating
and generally supporting the brain networks that are going to allow me to
generate focus and concentration. So much like sleep, much like omega-3 fatty acids,
creatine monohydrate 5 grams a day seems to generally support brain function which will generally
support concentration and focus. Now in terms of compounds that more specifically
mediate concentration and focus, we have to go
back to that arrow metaphor model that we talked about at the beginning of the episode
that included epinephrine adrenaline, acetylcholine, which acts as this attentional spotlight.
In fact, acetylcholine and elevated levels of acetylcholine have been shown over and
over again through beautiful work from my Merzenix Lab at UCSF and the Killguard lab down in Houston
and a number of other labs including Norm Weimberger's lab at UC Irvine again, again, to improve or even
directly gate neural plasticity by increasing focus directly. That's a lot of word, soup, but basically
what happens is if a Cedal Cullcholine transmission is increased even transily within
the brain, there's a greater opportunity for neuroplasticity to take place.
And the reason there's a greater opportunity for neuroplasticity, aka learning to take
place, is by way of the increased focus that spiking acetylcholine can provide.
As I mentioned earlier, there are a number of different foods which contain choline.
You can look those up online, choline acting as an amino acid precursor to acetyl
colon, but of course, there are compounds, there are supplements that can further and more
acutely increase acetyl colon. And indeed, I use these myself. The most effective one I've
found is alpha GPC. Alpha GPC consumed at dosages of 300 milligrams to 600 milligrams prior to a work-bout or prior to a work-out,
greatly increase one's ability to focus and concentrate.
At least that's been my experience.
And there are some good data in humans.
So how would I use alpha GPC?
I would use alpha GPC taking it about 10 to 20 minutes prior to any time I want to focus
or concentrate very deeply.
I've taken as much as 600 milligrams at one time,
although I find that 300 milligrams is enough for me
and I tend to be quite sensitive to supplements
and caffeine in general, so I'll sometimes take it
alongside your bomote or with your bomote
or with coffee prior to a workout
or prior to a bout of work in which I'm focusing
on mental work. So it could be reading, writing, it could be math, it could be data analysis, it could be
anything where I need a lot of focusing concentration.
Now a number of people have contacted me about a recent study suggesting that alpha GPC,
when taken chronically over many years, could increase one's vulnerability to stroke.
I've looked at those data and my read of the data
is that they're not very conclusive.
Although anytime you see something like that,
you know, it's study that's pointing to the fact
that a given compound might increase the propensity for stroke,
you obviously want to be concerned.
So we have to ask ourselves how,
by what mechanism that is, could alpha GPC be increasing
the susceptibility to stroke?
And it seems to be related to increases in TMAO, that is, could alpha GPC be increasing the susceptibility to stroke?
And it seems to be related to increases in TMAO, which is a marker related to the cardiovascular
system.
And one known way to offset increases in TMAO that are associated either with alpha GPC
or increases due to other things.
So ingestion of particular food compounds actually can increase TMAO is to offset that
by taking 600 milligrams of garlic.
Now, I've been taking alpha GPC pretty consistently
for a number of years.
I do not take it every day.
I would say I take it about four days per week,
again, prior to workouts or bouts of cognitive work.
I have not seen my TMAO spike,
and I've evaluated that by way of blood tests.
But nonetheless, I take 600 milligrams of garlic in capsule form.
Anytime I eat any way, and I do that for general cardiovascular function, and there's some
interesting data on immune system function, et cetera, for garlic.
So I've been consuming 600 milligrams capsules of garlic for some period of time.
Some days I'll ingest just one 600 milligram capsule other times I'll take two, but based
on this recent study and the concerns about TMAO, I make it a point to always ingest a
600 milligram capsule of garlic anytime I take alpha GPC, which again for me is about
four days per week.
So in our model of attention and focus, you can now clearly see why
taking alpha GPC, which increases the CETO cooling transmission would be beneficial for concentration
and focus and why taking it with a double espresso or why taking it with your bimote would
further increase concentration and focus because as I mentioned earlier, caffeine is going to
increase epinephrine. It's also going to increase the density of dopamine receptors and the alpha GPC is going
to increase the C2C, calling the spotlighting for cognition, this ability to really amplify
the activity of specific neural networks, which is largely what's happening when you're
trying to focus and pay attention to something specifically.
So if one wants to increase the amount of dopamine transmission
in the brain and body for sake of increasing concentration and focus, one of the most efficient
ways to do that is by ingestion of the amino acid L-tyrosine. Again, L-tyrosine can be derived
from food sources. I invite you to look up those various food sources on the web. Simply go to
web browser and put in foods that contain a lot of L-tyrosine and you'll get a rich array of choices to select from.
But in my case, I use altyrosine in capsule form.
I will take 500 milligrams of altyrosine,
300 milligrams of alpha GPC and a cup of coffee.
I'm careful to do this early in the day,
certainly not after two or three PM
because I don't want to diminish my ability
to fall and stay asleep that night.
Do this early in the day before a workout
or before a bout of concentrated mental work.
Again, I tend to do this about four days per week, so certainly not every time I sit down
to do work.
And I should also mention that I still tend to do the behavioral tools.
I'll tend to use five minutes of BINARO beats or BINARO beats throughout the work session.
Sometimes do it in a nice bath or a cold shower before. I don't want to give the impression that I
combine every tool that I've talked about today for a given workout. I mean, that would be pretty wild
to take a cold shower, pop a dental tyrosine, take an alpha GPC, drink to espresso, listen to
binaural beats. That, to me, seems like a very inefficient way to go about life. In fact, I make it a point to try and use tools to increase my ability to concentrate
and focus, but not to combine more than two or three of them at any one time.
And when I say two or three, what I mean is I will use supplements like alpha GPC,
L-tyrosine and caffeine together before certain workabouts.
I might use the visual practice of focusing on a given location for a minute before I begin that work about. I might use the visual practice of focusing on a given location
for a minute before I begin that workabout. I might combine those, then another time I might
take a cold shower prior to doing some work. Other days, I confess, I've slept very well,
or my enthusiasm about what I'm about to work on is such that I don't require any of these tools.
Again, there's no requirement. There's no pressure to use any of these tools,
behavioral supplement based or otherwise. It's simply a matter of using the tools that are going to allow you to achieve the
states you want to achieve and to improve your ability to go into those states without any help at all. And this is what I find
particularly attractive about supplements. It's not so much that they put you into the ideal state for that work and then you accomplish
that work and then you always rely on those supplements.
I prefer to look at supplements of the sort that I just described as a route into a deeper
trench of focus and concentration that I use as a tool to teach myself to focus and concentrate
more deeply such that I don't need those tools every single time I try and focus and concentrate more deeply, such that I don't need those tools every single time
I try and focus and concentrate. I think this is an important point because I think that many
people think of supplements as a crutch or a way of simply getting into a state for which no other
tool will suffice or replace. But in that context, I want to remind you of the larger context of pharmacology, which is the
vast landscape of prescription pharmacology for ADHD, for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.
Now, I covered that landscape in intense detail on the episode on ADHD and focus.
And just to summarize, there is of course, Adderall, Ritalin, Vivance, Modaphanil, Armodaphanil, a number of different
compounds, all of which generally increase dopamine transmission in the brain, so increasing
dopamine, and all of which generally increase epinephrine, adrenaline transmission in the brain
and body.
And many of those compounds have been of tremendous benefit to children and even some adults who suffer from ADHD.
So properly prescribed at the appropriate dosage, those compounds can really help people
with clinically diagnosed ADHD.
The way they help those people is a bit surprising, however.
You might think, well, they turn on the brain chemicals that allow those people to concentrate
and focus.
That's true, but they also have the benefit
of teaching those brain circuits how to engage.
And that's one of the reasons why
somewhat paradoxically giving a stimulant
like riddle in or adderol to a kid
that legitimately needs it.
Obviously, you don't want to do this
without the oversight and careful evaluation
of a psychiatrist.
But giving that to a kid who has severe ADHD, you would think would make them more
rembunctious, less able to focus and more distractable overall. After all, Ritalin,
Modaphanil, Armodaphanil, all these things are stimulant. So you take a kid who has attention,
deficit, hyperactivity disorder and give them these drugs that increase
transmission of dopamine and epinephrine.
You think, wow, it's going to make them even more distractible and hyperactive.
And indeed, it has the opposite effect.
It doesn't necessarily make them feel calm, but it makes them feel that they can focus.
They really can anchor their attention.
And the idea is that it's teaching those neural circuits, or those neural circuits rather
are teaching themselves to engage into focus and concentrate.
And the ideal situation is one in which the total dosage of those compounds,
those drugs, can be reduced over time as those circuits learn to come online
through purely behavioral tools. Now, oftentimes, there's a maintenance of those drugs
over long periods of time, although there is a common practice nowadays of trying to diminish
the dosage overall.
That's in the context of ADHD and prescription medication.
And I acknowledge that a lot indeed 80% or more of college students say the statistics
are using prescription drugs when they are not in fact prescribed those prescription
drugs.
So basically what I'm saying is there are a lot of people using drugs designed for ADHD
and narcolepsy because those drugs will effectively increase focus and concentration.
But I strongly discourage the use of powerful prescription drugs that have not been to
prescribe you.
First of all, it's illegal.
Second of all, it's quite dangerous to hit the accelerator of those neural circuits with
such a vigor
because it can increase dependency and they can have a number of other side effects
outside the context of clinically diagnosed and prescribed ADHD medication.
But in the context of supplementation, the increase in dopamine, acetocholine,
and epinephrine that one can achieve from say 500 milligrams of alkyrosine,
300 milligrams of alpha GPC and a cup of coffee is going to be substantially less than one
would see for prescription drugs.
So you're getting a modest effect that can similarly teach those brain circuits for
focus and concentration how to engage better.
But as a general backdrop to all of this, I always say, and I'll say it again and concentration, how to engage better. But as a general backdrop to all of this,
I always say, and I'll say it again and again, probably until the day I die, which hopefully
is a long time from now. But regardless, it'll be the same message. I always believe that behavioral
tools should come first. Behavioral tools should come first. Then focus on nutrition. In fact,
I would say behavioral and nutrition tools and of course get excellent sleep.
Then focus on supplementation and then and only if those are failing to bring your brain
and body to the state you need to be in to perform well in school and work and life, etc.
Do I recommend that people lean on prescription drugs?
Now there's a caveat to that, which is in under conditions like severe eating disorders,
obsessive compulsive disorder, bipolar disorder, depression, where people are truly at risk
of suicide or severe mental health effects or behavioral health effects, and they're really
at their lives are at risk, and they're overall mood and well-being is at risk.
It's often the case that people cannot access the brain states required to shift themselves
purely with behavioral tools, nutrition, et cetera.
So again, for the typical person who's not suffering from one of the psychiatric disorders
that I mentioned before or other psychiatric disorders, schizophrenia, et cetera. I strongly encourage you to look to behavioral tools, first nutrition, then supplementation,
then, and only if there's a remaining need to prescription drugs.
This contrasts very much with the typical scenario here about these days where college students
or other people will say, oh, yeah, I hear that there's this drug, you know, riddle-in or
vivance that can immediately put me into a state of heightened focus and concentration.
Now listen, if you have ADHD, by all means, talk to a physician, talk to a great psychiatrist,
and figure out whether or not that's right for you.
But if you don't, again, behavioral tools, nutrition, supplementation, and in particular,
those behavioral tools are going to be the ones that are going to allow you to teach your neural circuits how to focus and concentrate better.
And I cannot overstate the importance of that, that the behavioral tools, and to some
extent, the supplementation combined with behavioral tools really allow you to train up your
neural circuits so that you can focus and concentrate to the depth and the degree and
the duration that's going to best serve your mental and physical goals.
Now there's one other compound that I've used from time to time and that I continue to
use in order to increase focus and concentration.
And I will use this in combination with the other supplements I talked about before.
And that's phenylethylaming.
Phenylethylaming is in the dopamine synthesis pathway, so it increases dopamine transmission
and tends to function a little bit differently than eltyrosine.
So, every once in a while, I'll swap out eltyrosine and put in 500 milligrams of phenoletholaming,
or sometimes, if I really want to push a little bit harder on the dopamine system, and
I'm going to be doing a long bout of intense work, I will take the 300 milligrams of alpha GPC, the 500 milligrams
of altarocene. I'll generally take that with some caffeine. And I should mention I don't
go past about 100 or 200 milligrams of caffeine because I don't really like feeling too
jittery. That's not really my goal. It's the goal to be alert, but not so alert that I
you don't really can't focus on anything. I'm not interested in having an anxiety attack
after all. But I'll sometimes either swap in
or I will add that 500 milligrams of phenolethylaming.
Phenolethylaming is in the PEA pathway.
I've talked about this in a previous podcast
on dopamine motivation and drive.
And it's a very short-lived compound.
So what I'll tend to do is take it once
at the beginning of the workout and sometimes
in the middle of the workout, I'll tend to do is take it once at the beginning of the work out and sometimes in the middle of the work out, I'll take another 500
milligram capsule. But what I just described with combining all of those compounds,
alpha-GPC, L-Tyrocene, phenolethylamine, and caffeine, that's a fairly rare
occurrence that I'll combine all four and really only under conditions in which
I have to do an intensely challenging bout of mental or physical work. I would say the frequency at which I combine all four of those things is probably about
once every two weeks and typically more like once a month.
Again being careful to do that in the early part of the day, certainly before the new
an hour so that I am in no way going to disrupt my sleep.
I realize that many of you are probably wondering about or hoping that I'll discuss things like lion's mane or the rassetams or some of the other compounds that are known to powerfully
modulate the dopamine epinephrine and acetocholine systems.
To be quite direct, there are far too many of these compounds to review in a single episode,
and they all generally tap into the same set of processes.
Again, epinephrine, that shaft of the arrowhead that we're thinking of as focus, aceto-coline,
which is the arrowhead itself, and then dopamine, which is the sort of propeller behind the
arrow that allows it to continually drive forward through about of mental or physical
work.
There is a wonderful site.
I've mentioned it several times before on this podcast.
That is examine wonderful site. I've mentioned it several times before on this podcast. That is examine.com.
That wonderful site that is examine.com has recently been updated.
They've changed their format.
It was terrific before it provided links to relevant studies.
It talked about specific compounds.
It talked about the magnitude of effect.
It talked about the human effect matrix.
It really focused on human studies with links to those studies and on and on.
The new revamped version of examin.com is even better.
It's really next, next level.
I really applaud them for doing such a terrific job in organizing the information.
There are a lot of interesting pages that you can read there about different compounds.
So you can put in any compound, in Ginkgo, Beloba, Fosodytalsirin, AlphaGPC, and you're
going to get a rich array of information
about those compounds.
And if you were to put in a specific goal state, that is focus or concentration or sleep
or hormones like testosterone, etc., you're going to get a rich array of compounds, supplements,
as well as links to the studies on those compounds.
And some details about those particular studies.
This is an absolutely phenomenal site.
It's one that I rely on and that I know thousands, if not millions of other people, rely
on.
And I encourage you to check it out.
Again, the URL is examine.com.
So today we've talked about a number of different tools.
And to some extent, some mechanisms involved in concentration and focus.
And really, the goal has been to provide you an understanding of the neurochemical systems and a little bit about the neural circuits that
can allow you to achieve states of attention and focus. In contrast to previous episodes of the
Hubertman Lab podcast where I've covered these topics in tremendous depth as it relates to mechanism
and also focused on tools today, I largely focused on tools. We talked about behavioral tools, like a meditation that's 13 minutes long,
done daily, specifically to improve your ability of focus,
and in fact, there are data to support that it will.
We talked about hypnosis.
We talked about visual focus, overt and co-fort.
We talked about various supplements, such as alpha GPC, phenolethylamine, L-tyrosine, supplements that I use to directly modulate the neural circuits for
concentration focus.
This is talked about creatine, the omega-3s, talked about the importance of sleep,
which modulates our ability to function mentally and physically overall.
So optimize that sleep.
And we talked about a number of other protocols that you can incorporate.
My hope in giving you all this information in one single location is that you will be
able to pick and choose which of these protocols you would like to incorporate into your attempts
to improve your focus and concentration.
Again, I don't recommend doing all of these protocols all at once.
When I recommend is picking a handful of them, maybe one or two, maybe three or four,
and trying them in different combinations at different times of day and for different purposes,
for mental work, for physical work, etc.
Find what is best for you.
Once again, the goal is to teach your brain.
That is to increase neuroplasticity in the neural circuits that allow you not just to focus,
but to refocus your attention.
And I'd be remiss if I didn't mention that it's also critical to be able to defocus.
I highly encourage people to take a period of time each day, to daydream, to walk down
the hall without looking at your phone, to not have to incorporate more sensory information,
to not place increasing demands on yourself to focus and see and realize how having a period of deliberate decompression
and defocusing can allow your brain to focus so much better
when you do decide to return to about
a focus-concentrated work or physical work.
So I want to thank you for joining me
for this discussion about tools for focusing concentration.
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especially the tools for enhancing concentration and focus.
And last but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.
you