Huberman Lab - How to Access Your Creativity | Rick Rubin

Episode Date: January 16, 2023

My guest is Rick Rubin, one of the most renowned music producers of all time, known for his work with a wide range of artists, including Run DMC, Public Enemy, Beastie Boys, Red Hot Chili Peppers, Jay...Z, Adele, Johnny Cash, LL Cool J, Slayer, Neil Young, Ye (formerly Kayne West), Tom Petty, and many more. He is also the author of a new book, "The Creative Act: A Way of Being," which explores the creative process and how to access creativity. We discuss topics such as finding inspiration, the role of feelings as guideposts, learning from observing nature, balancing self-doubt and anxiety, and adopting new perspectives to channel the creative process. Rick also shares his thoughts on using deadlines, eliminating distractions, and how our experiences and emotions influence the creative process. Additionally, we discuss his love for professional wrestling. Our conversation can be applied to any activity or profession to access creativity. For the full show notes, visit hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://athleticgreens.com/huberman LMNT: https://drinklmnt.com/hubermanlab Waking Up: https://wakingup.com/huberman Momentous: https://livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Rick Rubin (00:04:24) Sponsor: LNT (00:08:23) Creativity & Ideas, Cloud Analogy  (00:12:26) Language & Creativity; Kids (00:17:36) Feelings & Creative Ideas (00:22:01) Rules, Choice & Art; Personal Taste & Other’s Opinions  (00:29:59) Sponsor: AG1 (00:30:20) Changing Perspective & Creativity (00:35:04) Scientific Knowledge; Opinions & Art (00:41:27) Finishing Projects; The Source & Nature (00:47:40) Perception Filters, Contrast & Novelty (00:58:42) Music & Identity, Evolving Tastes (01:04:14) Focus, Disengaging & Subconscious; Anxiety  (01:13:22) Collaboration, Art & Rigorous Work (01:18:26) Process & “Cloud”; Perception & Storytelling (01:29:13) Limited Resolution, Considering the Inverse (01:35:38) Wrestling, Energy & Reality; Dopamine  (01:49:43) Wrestling, Style & Performance (01:52:40) Resetting Energy & Nature; Nostalgia (02:01:56) Sleep, Waking Up & Sunlight, Capturing Ideas (02:08:16) Creative Work Phases; Structure & Deadlines (02:15:32) Self-Doubt & Performance (02:19:13) Predictability & Surprise, Authenticity   (02:25:02) Past Experiences, Other’s Opinions  (02:29:42) Public Opinion & Science: Light, Acupuncture & Nutrition  (02:39:44) “Look for Clues”, Belief Effects  (02:46:25) Attention, Emotion & Art (02:48:07) Mantra Meditation, Awareness Meditation  (02:57:33) Rick Rubin Questions, Zero-Cost Support, YouTube Feedback, Spotify & Apple Reviews, Sponsors, Momentous, Social Media, Neural Network Newsletter Disclaimer Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 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 my guest is Rick Rubin. Rick Rubin is credited with being one of the most creative and prolific music producers of all time.
Starting point is 00:00:21 The range of artists with whom he's worked with and discovered is absolutely staggering, ranging from artists such as LL Cool J, public enemy, minor threat, Fugazi, Beastie Boy, is Jesus and Mary Chain, JZ, red hot chili peppers, Metallica, Green Day, Tom Petty, System of a Down, Joe Strummer, Kanye West, Johnny Cash, Adele, and many, many more.
Starting point is 00:00:42 Not surprisingly, therefore, Rick is considered somewhat of an enigma. That is, people want to know how it is that one individual is able to extract the best creative artistry from so many different people in so many different genres of music. Well, as today's discussion reveals, Rick's expertise in the creative
Starting point is 00:01:01 process extends well beyond music. In fact, our conversation takes us into the realm of what the creative process is specifically and generally across domains, including music, of course, but also writing, film, science, and essentially all domains in which new original thought, ideas, and production of anything becomes important. Our conversation ventures from abstract themes,
Starting point is 00:01:25 such as what is creativity and where does it stem from, to the more concrete, everyday tool-based approaches to creativity, including those that Rick himself uses and that he's seen other people use to great success. That took us down some incredible avenues ranging from a discussion about the subconscious to how the subconscious interacts with our conscious mind and how the subconscious and conscious mind
Starting point is 00:01:46 interact with nature around us and within us. Indeed, our conversation got rather scientific at times, but all with an eye and in near toward understanding the practical tools that any and all of us can use in order to access the creative process. We also spend some time talking about Rick's new book, which is all about creativity and ways to access creativity.
Starting point is 00:02:06 The title of the book is The Creative Act, A Way of Being by Rick Rubin. This is a book that I've now read three times from cover to cover, and I'm now reading it a fourth time because it is so rich with wisdom and information that I'm applying in multiple domains of my life, not just my work, but my everyday life.
Starting point is 00:02:24 I cannot recommend it highly enough. Rick has an incredible ability to translate his understanding, of the creative process in a way that is meaningful for anybody. So if you're in music, if you're a musician, it will certainly be meaningful for you, but it is not about music, it is about the creative process. And so whether or not you consider yourself somebody creative
Starting point is 00:02:45 or not, you seek to be more creative, Rick's book in today's conversation sheds light on what I believe to be the fundamental features of what makes us human beings. That is what allows us, unlike other animals, to look out on the landscape around us, to examine our inner landscape and to come up with truly novel ideas
Starting point is 00:03:03 that thrill us, entertain us, entertain other people, scare us, make us laugh, make us cry. All the things that make life rich are essentially contained in the creative process. And to be able to sit down and learn from the Rick Rubin how the creative process emerges in him and his observations about how it can best emerge in others is and was truly a gift.
Starting point is 00:03:25 So I'm excited to share his knowledge with you today. One thing that you'll quickly come to notice about today's conversation is that Rick is incredibly generous with his knowledge about the creative process. In fact, he very graciously and spontaneously, I should add, offered to answer your questions about creativity. So if you have questions about the creative process for Rick,
Starting point is 00:03:44 please put those in the comment section on YouTube. And in order to make those questions a bit easier for me to find, please put question for Rick Rubin in capitals than colon or dash, whichever you choose, and then put your question there. I do ask that you keep the questions relatively short so that I can ask Rick as many of those questions as possible. We will record that conversation and we will post it as a clip on the Huberman Lab Clips channel.
Starting point is 00:04:08 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. And now for my discussion with Rick Rubin. Great to have you here today, Rick. Thank you for having me. It's a pleasure. So of all the topics in science and in particular in neuroscience, I confess that creativity is the most difficult one to capture because you can find papers,
Starting point is 00:04:43 scientific studies that is, on convergent thinking versus divergent thinking. And there are definitions to these. I mean, they take on different forms. But in a strict definition form, it seems that, Creativity has something to do with either rearranging existing elements or coming up with new elements. But as I went into your book, which I've done twice, I've read it twice. And by the way, I feel so blessed and honor to have gotten an early copy from you. Or a final copy early, that is.
Starting point is 00:05:21 But having gone through it twice, I'm now convinced that there may not actually be an internal source of creativity that exists on its own, right? And the example that you give that for me really is serving as an anchor and tell me if I'm wrong here is this idea that ideas and creativity are a little bit like a cloud. If you look at it at one moment, you might think that it looks like one thing where it has a certain shape and texture. But then you look at it a moment later, it could be quite a bit different. And if you look at an hour later, it very well could be gone. And the the reason I think that serves as such a powerful hook for me to think about creativity and why I think neuroscientists and scientists in general have never actually captured
Starting point is 00:06:08 a way to even talk about creativity. It stems from somebody that you knew in person, but as you know, I greatly admire. I don't have many heroes, but I would put Joe Strummer among the short list of heroes that I have. And I remember once an interview with him fairly disjointed, he was sort of, you know, often in different tangents that I couldn't follow. But at one point, he just kind of blurted out that if you have an idea, you have to write it down.
Starting point is 00:06:37 And you may end up throwing it away. But if you wait, it will be gone. And I remember that. And as a consequence, I have a whole system that I used to try and capture ideas. But what are your thoughts on what Joe said, this cloud idea that comes up in one form in one area of the book. But then I think is thread throughout the book in different ways. you know, how did that come to you and, um, and how does it serve you and trying to,
Starting point is 00:07:05 I don't want to say extract, but trying to access creativity. I think the best way to think about it is like a dream. It's like if you think about your dreams, they don't, they don't necessarily make sense. When you wake up, you'll, you might remember part, but not the whole thing. Then if you start writing them down, they'll, they'll, they'll come back. and they may not make sense to you. There will be a series of abstract images. And maybe someday in the future
Starting point is 00:07:38 you'll be able to look back and understand what they mean and maybe not. And that's sort of how the art making process works. It's like we're making things and we're looking for feeling in ourselves. And it could be a feeling of excitement or enthusiasm, a feeling of interest, a feeling of curiosity, I want to know more, feeling of leaning forward.
Starting point is 00:08:07 And we're following that energy in our body when we feel this, there's something here, there's something here, I want to know more, I want to know more, I want to know more. But it's not, I'll say it's not an intellectual process. It's a different thing. That's why it's hard. It's hard even to talk about it because it's so elusive, you know. Recently, I was listening to a podcast by our friend Lex Friedman. I think it was an episode with Bologi Serenovison where this with Bology,
Starting point is 00:08:43 who's a investor type guy, thinker type guy, this is like an eight-hour episode. He says something at the beginning that I'd love your thoughts on. He said, look, you know, we can train a rat. to lever press every other time or to expect reward on every even number press or every odd number press or even every fifth number press. But a human and a rat can't do that for like prime number presses. You can't actually train that. And then you think about the reward systems and the way that we follow life from when we get
Starting point is 00:09:19 up until we go to sleep. And what he said is the fact that we can't do that means that, we may not actually be in touch with the best schedules of doing things. Like every time I'm thirsty, I take a sip. I assume that's the right way to do it. But it might not be optimal, right? Optimal for whatever purpose. When I was reading your book, I was thinking about there's a set of things to follow,
Starting point is 00:09:49 things to pay attention to. You talk about this, things to access, that none of the creative process comes from just within us. It can, but it's always being fed by things outside of it. And so what I started to do is the second time I read through the book was think about it through the lens of what Bologi was saying was that there may not even be a language for this thing that we call accessing creativity. I mean, there's a process, but that language in the form of words is a little bit like trying to use even numbers to try and access prime numbers. Yes. Like the math becomes so convoluted that we end up in a conversation like this where I'm confident we can get to the kernels of it.
Starting point is 00:10:32 Because what's remarkable about the book is that you do. You show and inform the process. But there may not be a English or any other language for saying do this, then this, then this, then this. And you'll have something of creative value. Does that capture it? Yes. I think language is insufficient, insufficient to drill down on creativity. It's more, it's closer to magic than it is science.
Starting point is 00:11:05 So when kids come into the world, do you think that they have better access to this creative process than we do as adults? Because we start to impart rule plays and books like, will it get likes, will people like it? but also like all the things that are available to us that we're not paying attention to like the texture of this table right they we're discarding things kind of systematically we get quote unquote set in our ways do you think kids are more are just by definition and by design more creative than adults yes kids are they're open and they have no baggage they don't have any belief system they don't know how things are supposed to work um they just see what is. And if we pay attention to what is, we learn much more than if we, uh, most of us select from an endless number of data points available to us to, well, as a species, to make sure that we don't die and to procreate and to feed ourselves are probably the primary functions first. And then, and then, and And then we learn things about what's right and what's wrong and we learn things about how to do certain things.
Starting point is 00:12:28 Or we're inspired by someone who makes something we love and we want to do it the way they do it. And all of those things undermine the purity of the creative process. They can be tools to build your skill set to be able to do it yourself. Like if you're a singer, you might imitate a singer you really like for a while to get good at it, and then eventually come to find your own voice. It doesn't always start with your own voice. But if you're three years old or five years old and you try singing, you're not singing like anyone else. You're singing with your own voice.
Starting point is 00:13:11 And when you make something, you're making it based on not known, knowing. And I think I had the advantage early in my career of starting making music without any experience, which was helpful because I didn't know what rules I was breaking. And so it wasn't intentional breaking of rules. I just did what seemed right to me. But I didn't realize that I was doing things that other people wouldn't do. I mean, there is this idea that there are no new ideas. You know, I sort of disagree because every once in a while I'll see or hear something that at least seems different enough. I think it's a combination of a new combination of existing ideas presented in a new way.
Starting point is 00:13:59 I think that's, I think that's how it works. I don't know. But I will say it does seem like the things that are most interesting to me have a series of familiar elements joined together in a way that it's creating something that I've never seen before. You mentioned that it's that when you are close to or you have see hints of creativity, that is of real value that you can, that it's a feeling. And I also believe that the body is a great source of information, which, you know, once people will realize that the brain, of course, is in the skull, but the nervous system extends everywhere in the body. The whole mind-body thing just falls away. You know, philosophers have argued about this forever, but it's a silly argument. it's also true that you know god forbid i were to amputate all my limbs have them amputated i'd fundamentally
Starting point is 00:14:52 still be me right the same is not true if we took about big enough chunk of my brain and i still survived i would be fundamentally different human being uh it still have the same name and identity and social security number but i would behave very differently um who knows maybe better uh the signals from the body we know or at least we assume are pretty generic. Like I can think of 50 different ways or 100 ways that we could talk about creativity today and we could define it and redefine it and carve it up and serve it up like sushi in a bunch of different ways. But the body sends signals that most of us are, we have a kind of coarse understanding
Starting point is 00:15:37 of. It's like, oh, my stomach hurts or my stomach feels good or I'm not sensing my stomach. or oh that feels good it feels warm it feels cool like most of us aren't trained in understanding how to interpret those signals so it's almost like you have a few vowels a few syllables and there isn't a lot more whereas when we talk about our thoughts and our experiences depending on how hyperverbal somebody is and how much emphasis they put on different sounds it's kind of near infinite right um not infinite but near infinite so for you personally when you know that you're all the on the end of a thread of creativity. Maybe you're listening to an artist or you're, or you're
Starting point is 00:16:17 hearing something and you're like there and the the, your antennae start to deflect in a certain way, right? Do you feel that in your body as a recognizable sensation or is it a thought in a sensation? It's a it's a feeling in my body. Is it localized? No, it's a it's a feeling of a I would say it's like a surge of energy. Do you remember the first time you experienced that? Probably, you know, hearing the Beatles when I was three or four years old. Three or four years old? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:55 Wow. Yeah. Is there something wrong with me that the Beatles have never done it for me? No, maybe you just weren't exposed at the right time in the right way. There's no right or wrong way. And everyone, I can love the Beatles and you cannot and we're both right. You know, there's not a... I'm glad we're not.
Starting point is 00:17:11 can still be friends. I was a little concerned. I was a little scared to ask you that question. I know my taste of music is a little bit obscure, but, and kind of fragmentary. But, okay, good. I always felt like, gosh, there must be something wrong with me. I like their songs, but they don't, there's no juice for me there. I think maybe we'll watch, there was an eight-part series called the Beatles Anthology, which is out of print, but I can try to find it somewhere and we can watch that together. Okay. Maybe that'll make the case for the Beatles. Okay. Yeah, but I mean, nothing against them. It's just, and I'm always bothering you for story,
Starting point is 00:17:46 but like, Ramones, I saw that and I was like, wow, like jeans, aviators, everyone had to change their last name to Ramon. A lot of them hated each other. There's so much drama in there and three chords and just, but to me, it just was like, wow, like kids from New York, that energy. So I think different things for different people, right? Absolutely. So that brings me to a question of when something feels creatively, right and you're sensing it and you're there, let's say in the studio or maybe even you're listening to something that somebody sent you. How do you translate that given the absence of language, how do you translate that into a conversation with the artist? And again, this could
Starting point is 00:18:32 be about writing or comedy or science or podcasting for that matter. How do you say that keep going that way when they might not even recognize that they did it and i'm guessing a lot of times they don't yeah sometimes they don't it depends when we're in the i'll try to be in a in a setting where as we're talking about it we can engage with it in that moment so it's not much good um let's say i was producing your new record and you played me something and i had some thoughts about it it wouldn't be so helpful for me to tell you what those were. It'd be better for us to wait till we were in a place where we could try things and see where it goes. So the first thing is, I wouldn't rely on language to do it. It would be more of making a suggestion of something that's actionable. We try it, and then we
Starting point is 00:19:29 have more data. And either we're moving in a good direction or we're moving away from it. We're moving towards it or away from it. And we never know. And so it's always an experiment. And maybe a simple way to talk about it would be like if I gave you two dishes of food and asked you to taste them and tell me which one you like better. Usually it's pretty straightforward. You know when you have two choices which you like better. And I think most creativity can be boiled down to that. That's very different than I wonder how this is going to perform on certain social media platforms. That's different than what is it when I'm tasting these two things, which is the I want to finish eating.
Starting point is 00:20:11 And if I would say, I like this one better, but it needs a little salt. And then put a little salt on. It's like, maybe I put too much salt. And you know when you taste it's like, it's that simple. Being in tune enough with ourselves to really know how we feel in the face of knowing that other people might feel very differently, which is part of the challenge. like if everyone tells you A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A, A. And you listen and you're like, that's B.
Starting point is 00:20:50 As an artist, it's important to be able to say, to me, it's B. And that's a, it's a disconnect because so much of, you know, when we go to school, it's to get us to follow the rules. And in art, it's different because the, The rules are there as a scaffolding to be chipped away as need be. Sometimes they're helpful. Sometimes they're not. And sometimes we'll even impose our own rules to give something its shape.
Starting point is 00:21:27 So we can decide to make a, we're going to make a painting, but we're only going to use green and red or the only colors we're allowed to use. We decide that in advance. And then how do we solve the problem? all we have is green and red. It can, because otherwise, if there's an infinite number of choices, anything can be anything. You know, it's like it's, sometimes more choices is not better. So limiting your palate to something manageable
Starting point is 00:22:01 forces you to solve problems in a different way. Now in our, in our digital age, music-wise, can make anything digitally. There's no, like in there was a time when if you didn't have a guitar in the studio, you couldn't record guitar, or if you didn't, if you couldn't hire an orchestra, there couldn't be orchestra on your recording.
Starting point is 00:22:26 Now you can just call any of those things up. So there's infinite choices. And infinite choices don't necessarily lead to better, better compositions or better final final works, understanding how you feel in the face of other voices without second-guessing yourself is probably the single most important thing to practice as an artist or skill set to develop as an artist, is to know how you feel and own your feelings. And the key to that is not I know, so I know what's right for you.
Starting point is 00:23:14 It doesn't work that way. It's just I know for me. And the reason I chose to be an artist is to demonstrate this is how I see it. If I'm undermining my taste for some commercial idea or it defeats the whole purpose of doing this. That's not what this process is about. process is I'm doing me and I'm showing you who I am and you can like it or not, but either way, this is still how I see it. I love that because in science, you know, having trained graduate students, having been a
Starting point is 00:23:55 graduate student, I was very blessed to have mentors, one of who was a real iconoclass. He's dead now. Actually, all my advisors are dead. Suicide cancer cancer. The joke is, you don't want me to work for you. So they were all had a morbid sense of humor. So they're laughing about this someplace right now. I thought you were going to say they ate the poison mushrooms.
Starting point is 00:24:15 No, but the last one said to me, you're the common denominator, Andrew. And I thought, oh my goodness. And he said, kind of just kidding, but not really. So that's a little bit eerie. But in any case, he always said, his name was Ben, he always said, the one thing I can't teach is taste. And the one predictor I have of the people who will never develop it are the ones who are perfectionists because they're filtering their perfect perfectionists that filter their perfection
Starting point is 00:24:50 through the feedback of others. He was always looking for the person that was putting up a little bit of a middle finger to feedback, not so much that they would get things wrong because you can be badly wrong in science. You can be wrong for the right reasons, but you can also be wrong. for the wrong reasons, but people that just had almost a compulsion to do it their way or to believe in what they were doing. And I'm hearing some of that, or I'm hearing that in what you're describing. I also think that there's something about the human empathic process or the emotional
Starting point is 00:25:22 process where when we see somebody doing something and they seem to really not be paying attention to what anyone else is doing, I mean, like I said, the crazy person on the street is one version of it where we go, they're just in their experience and it's just crazy. But when somebody seems to be enjoying themselves or the emotion seems to be real, I think there are a good fraction of people who feel a kind of gravitational pull. And they go, yeah, that. And the best example I have of this is I remember growing up in the skateboard thing, we were the first, we were the first start doing the baggy, like sagging the clothes thing. We got teased endlessly one year in school. Then there was a bunch of hip-hop that came out and guys were wearing sagging their their jeans or their shorts next
Starting point is 00:26:08 year we come back and the very same people who were making fun of us were all doing it and that's when it clicked for me i was like most people don't actually know what they like no they like because of the certainty of the people that they like and um so the question then is in this um landscape of creative stuff what's real what's not real um You know, these are, it's almost like whoever can create the most convincing story, at least captures a good number of, a good fraction of audiences. But that's not what the creative artist needs to do. They need to actually depart from that.
Starting point is 00:26:46 Do I have that right? Well, they're just two different things. Like, coming up with a story with the purpose of pleasing someone else is a skill set, but it's more of a, it's more of a commercial endeavor than an artistic endeavor. It's like tactical. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, I was seeing it in your book you describe, again, when you're thinking about the creative process as the cloud. For me, again, it serves as such a powerful anchor. And then I think about the biology, the neurobiology of like strategy formation or strategy implementation. And then almost by sheer luck or miraculously, I turn a few pages later into the book. And there's a description of how animals, that are trying to accomplish something, eat, mate, find water, accomplish their requirements of living.
Starting point is 00:27:43 It requires a narrow visual focus. This is something my lab is kind of obsessed with and I've been obsessed with. And in that more narrow visual focus, we know that the playbook becomes more narrow. The rule set is more narrow. Now, at some point in order to come up with a new creative, idea. That means broadening vision is essential in some way or broadening thinking. Well, it could either be a broadening or a narrowing, but it's changing the aperture from the standard. The reason we do this is to present something new that maybe you already knew but didn't know you knew it. And for that to be the
Starting point is 00:28:29 case, if to be looking at it, it's not unlike what a comedian does. You know, comedian makes you laugh. Usually what they're saying, it's outrageous, but you know that it's right. You know, just no one says it that way or no one has said it that way before. But it's always the truth in it that makes it funny. It's like that. It's the same idea as recognizing something that seems really obvious once you see it, but it seems like nobody else sees it or no one else points it out. And I feel like science is like that too,
Starting point is 00:29:05 because how much of science, when once the, you know, the light flashes over your head, it's like, I got it. It just seems like, well, we knew that forever. No one knew it, but do you know what I'm saying? It's like it's so obvious. It's so obvious.
Starting point is 00:29:23 And I think another superpower of artist, is this accepting we don't know anything. When we think we know things, that also limits our world. We think we know. It's only like this. This is all that's possible. We're mice in this little box. But in reality, who's to say that's the case?
Starting point is 00:29:47 Who's to say any of the, we could take all of the, what we believe in science now and decide to throw all of that away and start from scratch and we'd probably create a different, a whole different one. I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Athletic Greens. Athletic Greens now called AG1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that covers all of your foundational nutritional needs. I've been taking athletic greens since 2012, so I'm delighted that they're sponsoring the podcast. The reason I started taking athletic greens and the reason I still take athletic greens once or usually twice a day is that it gets to be the probiotics that I need for gut health.
Starting point is 00:30:25 Our gut is very important. It's populated by gut microbiota that communicate with the brain, the immune system, and basically all the biological systems of our body to strongly impact our immediate and long-term health. And those probiotics and athletic greens are optimal and vital for microbiotic health. In addition, athletic greens contains a number of adaptogens, vitamins, and minerals that make sure that all of my foundational, nutritional needs are met.
Starting point is 00:30:49 And it tastes great. If you'd like to try Athletic Greens, you can go to Athletic Greens.com slash Huberman and they'll give you five free travel packs that make it really easy to mix up athletic greens while you're on the road in the car, on the plane, etc. And they'll give you a year's supply of vitamin D3K2. Again, that's athletic greens.com slash Huberman to get the five free travel packs and the year's supply of vitamin D3K2. In an offline conversation, one time you asked a good friend of mine who's been a guest
Starting point is 00:31:21 on this podcast, Eddie Chang, who's chair of neurosurgery. And I would place him in the top, top 1% of neuroscientist, you know, he's pulling speech out of people who are completely paralyzed with Lockton syndrome, et cetera. And you asked him what percentage of what's contained in medical textbooks and training today? Today. Yeah. If you went to medical school today.
Starting point is 00:31:43 Right. And you learned what was in the textbook, what percentage of that information is accurate and what percentage is not. And he said, maybe. half. Right. And you asked, and what is the consequence of that? And he said, incalculable. And I completely agree. And I asked him a second time and he still came up with the same answer. So that's a good sign. Reliability from experiment to the next is good. Yeah, I think that the, there is this idea that we really know things. In science, I mean, you've seen, we've observed amazing discoveries
Starting point is 00:32:17 from chance. We've observed amazing discoveries from incredible bouts of hard work. In both cases, people were spending a lot of time in the lab. No one walked into the lab, saw something one day and had a Nobel Prize winning discovery or fundamental discovery. They were all hanging out in lab a lot. Just some of them came up with something that they didn't expect. Others were drilling toward an answer. And in all those cases, when the breakthroughs happen, I'm guessing, I don't know this, that considering we assume this information, then this discovery is true based on everything that came before it. But if everything that came before it is wrong, then the discoveries are probably built on a,
Starting point is 00:33:10 do you know what I'm saying? It's like the context, everything that happens takes into account that the context that the context that it's sitting in, it fits in that context. Maybe that context isn't right. Who knows? We don't know. So I'm saying we're too close to most things in thinking when we know, when we think we know things, where there are a lot of assumptions that go into it and that any new
Starting point is 00:33:38 discoveries are essentially built on top of these beliefs, you know, but they're beliefs. I remember, you know, learn, of course I listened to the BC boys growing up, who didn't I was a child of the 90s. And they were in the, you know, sabotage was sort of an outgrowth of a skateboarding movie like Spike Jones and like the girl movies and those worlds that Beast Boys and Skateboarding were really closely interwoven for a while. Some people know that some people don't. And Spike sort of formed the bridge and then Spike went off and started making more
Starting point is 00:34:11 bigger movies than more people watch. But let's just use them as an example. I heard you say once before that, you know, you guys were kind of joking around, like BC boys, like, you know, these guys doing hip hop, but it was kind of like the hardcore scene in New York and punk rock scene. And it was sort of a joke. There were a lot of inside jokes. When you were working together, was there the thought that people might love it, might hate it,
Starting point is 00:34:39 or you just weren't paying attention at all? Weren't paying attention at all. Never considered it. there would know at that point in time when we were making license to ill hip hop music was a tiny underground thing and it was no one making hip hop at that time thought it would ever mean anything it was it was not a realistic thought so we were making it really for our crazy friends and that's it so do you think nowadays the fact that one can create something and quote unquote release it quickly.
Starting point is 00:35:16 I can put something out onto Twitter or Instagram now. I can do it in 10 seconds from now. And I will get immediate feedback, which is external feedback, of course, but then I can iterate on the basis of that feedback. Do you think that's problematic for the larger opportunity for creativity? In other words, if we were to go back 20 years or even 15 years, when the opportunity to create was certainly still there. but you really didn't know how it was going to land until you quote unquote released it.
Starting point is 00:35:49 It seems to me there was more opportunity to stay in that magical rainforest that is the creativity itself. I don't think it's wrong or right. It's more information that you can use or not use and use it in a useful way. And you can make something and put it out and people could not like it. And you're like, they still don't get it. I got to go harder. You know, like I got to go hard.
Starting point is 00:36:12 harder in that direction, not, do you know what I'm saying? It's like not to react away from information. It can be helpful. It can be helpful when there could be different stories that happen at the same time where you're making something and you have an idea of what it is. And then other people engage with it and they have a different idea of what it is and they like it for a different reason than you did or dislike it for a reason different different than the reason you like it.
Starting point is 00:36:44 We can't control any of those things, you know? The only part of it that we can control is how we relate to the thing that we make. And any external information that undermines the clarity of that connection is probably bad for the art, is my guess. And again, I'm only saying this from my experience. try to make things. All I've ever tried to make were was something I like or something that I felt like was missing as a fan that I wanted. And nobody was making it. So I'll make it. You know, but it wasn't. It was always in the service of I love this thing. I want something like this.
Starting point is 00:37:34 No one else is making one. I have to make one. Yeah. It's, it's beautiful because the word that keeps coming to mind is this, it's almost like a compulsion. Like there, there are other options of ways to be and to behave and to function and work in life, but there's, if something's a compulsion, it yanks us away from those other opportunities, just enough that we have to get back to it. You've talked before about, and you talk in the book, this notion of the source. And to me, again, I can't help but put my neuroscientist lens on this. I think of, um, the source has not one brain area, but some function within the brain where we are in touch with our bodily signals, like what feels right, what doesn't.
Starting point is 00:38:23 We're like tasting the two foods. I love that example. And that it's a playbook that is far more vast than the short-term adaptive playbook, like this is how I'm going to get from point A to point B. And yet, when I listen to an album or a song, I mean, I have to assume that at some point, it becomes not strategy development or creativity, but strategy implementation. Like, there needs to be, like, songs are going to come in this order. And, like, I don't know much about music. My musician friends are always, you know, laughing.
Starting point is 00:38:59 I don't either. It's not so much about music. Right. Well, well put. But the ordering of the sequence of the melodies, et cetera. So at what point does one decide, okay, like now is the time to get into that more narrow focus of effort? Like, we've got it. Let's run with this.
Starting point is 00:39:24 Because there is a component of the creative process that involves packaging and finishing. And is that part less satisfying to you? Or is it just all part of the same larger arc? It's all part of the same. It's nice. There's a good feeling. There's usually a good feeling when something is done. On the one hand, it's a commitment because up until the time that you say it's done,
Starting point is 00:39:47 you can keep experimenting and changing it. You know, if you think, well, maybe tomorrow I can make it better, then it's not finished. And you keep thinking that for a long time, you can do that forever and never, never put out anything. So getting to the point where you're ready to sign off is a good feeling. And it allows you, one of the things I talk about in the book is because it is a difficult thing to do because it's fun to play and it's fun to maybe it's not the best it could be yet. You know, to use whatever the next project is going to be as motivation to finish the one you're working on now. Like, I'm working on this. I'm spending all of my time on this thing.
Starting point is 00:40:33 It's really good. I believe it can be better, but there's this other thing that I really want to make. And if I keep tinkering with this one, I'll never get to make the other one. So using other projects as an impetus to finish something and release it into the world, it's a good one. And you said your description of source as something within us, I don't know if I would accurate, if I would say that was accurate. it's definitely in us too, but it's not only in us.
Starting point is 00:41:09 And it's, I think of source as the organizing principle of everything. And it's how everything exists, how the trees grow and why there are mountains and anything that we can see in the outside world and every discovery. and every piece of art and every new design and every machine are all outgrowth of this source energy. Our part of it is the antenna that like connects to it. And maybe where the vehicle for source to allow things to happen in the world. And thank you for that because I did indeed misspeak because I recall very distinctly in the book you described how the physical world is constrained by the laws of physics and certain things. The imagination is unconstrained.
Starting point is 00:42:15 And I think I have this right that you said, you know, the work sits somewhere between those. It's neither of one nor the other. But that ultimately what feeds into all of that, our imagination and the way indeed that our brain is a physical entity. the nature in the outside world provides, at least what appears to be near infinite, if not infinite options. And I love the example of the color palette, that if we restrict me to whatever sorts of paints or medium I have, then it's restricted. But in nature, there's an infinite number of shades and tones and combinations. And even on one, you know, if you pick up a rock and look at the color of the rock and tried to find a paint to match that rock, it would never match. There's too much, there are too many variations in nature within a single color rock for us to get close.
Starting point is 00:43:12 There's too much information. We scratch the surface. We're only scratching the surface. And we love when we are able to peer in at different scales, spatial scales, time scales, too, but spatial scales, the delight that comes from that, you know, that these nature pictures seem like they were more. these in the 80s like where you'd see a drop of oil shot at high very high resolution there's beauty in a drop of oil and then you'd see that the earth and the galaxy there's beauty in that too right these extremes um and of course our daily perception is mostly through the filter of these kinds of interactions walls and sometimes outdoors there's a um a brilliant neuroscientists and um not surprisingly
Starting point is 00:43:54 he has a nobel his name is richard axel he's at columbia university um he's outrageous personality, choose Nicorette nonstop. You guys would get along great, not because of the Nicorette, but because his perspective on things is very abstract for a guy who's solved. He won the Nobel for solving a great problem within how we smell, perception of odors and taste. And he says, you know, everything that the brain does is an abstraction. Like, I could take a photograph of your face and show it to you and say, yeah, that's me.
Starting point is 00:44:30 or let's say for the moment I call myself an abstract artist. Let's just play a game because I've never been accused of being an artist. And I do three dots and a squiggly line. And I say, that's you. And you say, well, that doesn't look like me. And I say, but that's my abstraction of you. Okay. Well, the brain essentially does that because we're something in between that.
Starting point is 00:44:48 Because there's no actual photograph of you in my brain. It's just a bunch of neurons playing what we call an ensemble, like a different keys on a piano. And we go, Rick, I recognize you, Rick Rubin. And so everything is an abstraction. And it's only once we start tinkering with the parts, and this is the essence of science, to remove and add and manipulate. And the best example I can come up with would be Rothko. And I only come up with this example because I started off in vision science and maybe
Starting point is 00:45:15 so make the most sense to everyone except the folks who've been blind since birth and they can swap something in here. If I show you a Rothko and I don't tell you it's a Rothko, you may or may not actually think it's that impressive. It depends on your taste in art. But what Rothko did, which was amazing, even if you don't like Rothkos, and I happen to, is that he removed all the white and high contrasty stuff. And when you do that, you alter color space.
Starting point is 00:45:44 And so the colors look very different. Some people saw that dress a few years ago. Is it orange or is it gold or whatever? That was a little bit of the same phenomenon. I doubt, in fact, I'd be willing to bet my left arm that Rothko knew nothing about the neuroscience of color perception, but somehow got to this place where if there was no canvas showing and no high contrast and the paintings were large enough and on the appropriate wall, you saw them a certain way that tapped into something fundamental.
Starting point is 00:46:16 And this is where I think art and science really converge, is that every once in a while we see something that feels amazing to enough people and not just like the baggy pants phenomenon, not just because other people think it's cool, but there's something there. And again, this defies language. And I have to imagine that in your years of light and music and other creative endeavors, that every once in a while,
Starting point is 00:46:44 have you ever encountered something where, like something fundamental keeps showing up in different form? Or there's something like almost like a rule or a principle. Does it ever come about? Because in science, we think of this as like, this reveals something about our limitation to abstract the world. I hope I made that clear. Not exactly, but I have a thought. You talked earlier about the drop of oil, the photograph of the drop of oil and the photograph or we could use on the other side,
Starting point is 00:47:18 like Hubble telescope images of these vast things and high definition. what we see every day is as impressive as those things, but we're numb to them because we see them all the time. And if we were to look at drops of oil every day in a microscope, a month from now, we would not find wonder in that image. So it's, sometimes it's the novelty of not seeing it from that perspective before that's really thrilling. You could, and I could imagine,
Starting point is 00:47:57 and this probably relates to the Rothko idea, that you could see something from a particular angle and have this magical experience and then walk three feet to the side and see it from a different way, and it just evaporates. It only works. It only triggers this thing in us
Starting point is 00:48:16 when we look at it just the right way. There was an experience, an experiment I just heard about the other day that sounds fascinating that a painting teacher recommended where instead of painting, you know, having a model in the room and painting the model, that you have the model in the next room. And you go into the next room without your equipment. You don't have your equipment. And you can study the model for as long as you want.
Starting point is 00:48:50 And then you go into a different room where you can't see. see the model and paint the model instead of and it's it changes your relationship where it's not we're not just painting the lines we're painting what is interesting enough about what I saw what are the data points that's stuck in my mind and when I string those together what do I get and and what do I how do I form it to get as close to whatever that the experience of that person was, which the closest of getting to the experience of that person in the painting might not look like a photograph. You know, it might look more different than more the same to really see what you.
Starting point is 00:49:50 you see. If we think about the Picasso paintings that were inspired by African art where the eyes are on different levels, they may give us more information than a photograph would give us. I'm thinking about the, when you were describing the sensation of when something takes your breath away, and we all have that when we see a dramatic. sunset. Anyone you know when there's a really dramatic sunset or if there's a whale and if anyone's on the beach and there's a whale, everybody's really interested that there's a whale. Do you know what I'm
Starting point is 00:50:34 saying? These feelings of wonder, we get to experience them depending on where we are or, you know, dragonfly or a bird flies into your space. These things happen. And when they happen, like we're confronted with the mystery of the world when we change the perspective. Normally, we don't think of whales in our backyard or birds in our house, you know, flying freely. But they do happen. These things do happen. And they, like, break us out of our trance when these things happen.
Starting point is 00:51:10 It's like, oh, yeah, there are birds like this everywhere. I'm just not paying attention. This guy's coming into, like, tap me on the shoulder. It's like, remember me, here I am, you know? So I would say that the whale example and what you're describing is it's revealing to us how, in a delightful way, how deficient our perceptual filters normally are. Yes. It's a little bit like the Rothko is revealing how I've never thought about it this way until
Starting point is 00:51:38 this moment, is revealing to us how color normally looks is actually, first of all, not the only way it looks. Those colors we think are one way, but all color, this gets into the biology of color vision is all about contrast. What something is next to dictates what it looks like. And that's the origin of that dress meme or whatever you call it. I still can't figure out exactly what a meme is. Someone will eventually tell me. In the same way when you see a whale and it's delightful, I think it's revealing to us the extent to which those whales are, the ocean is vast. There's a whole universe there and we are
Starting point is 00:52:13 blind to it all the time. And I think the misperception or the misconstruction, or the misconstitutional inception, excuse me, is that we're delighted because we see the whale. We might be just as delighted because we're getting hit with the contrast of how little we recognize all the time. And in that way, it reminds me a little bit about comedy where, and I've been watching more comedy lately and sometimes it's the shock, sometimes it's the absolute truth that's revealed. And then other times what I've noticed, and I saw Rogan do, comedy at the Vulcan Club in Austin, which he does every once in a while, and it was small club, and he was leading out this story during his routine or bit, I think, right? This bit,
Starting point is 00:53:01 he's leading, and everyone knew where it was going. We all knew. And then when he finally told us, it was exactly where we thought it was going, and it was hilarious. And it felt good. And it felt amazing. And I thought in that moment, I was like, wait a second, how did he pull that off? That was masterful because normally it's this thing like you create one story. There's like a scripting out almost like a courtroom lawyer. And then they kind of pull the curtain and it's something different. And if you look at the science, the neuroscience and brain imaging of laughter and humor, which I've looked into, to be honest and no disrespect to the people in that field, it's pretty lame. It's lame because it's always the jarring nature of a surprise.
Starting point is 00:53:45 but what he led us to was something that, oh, no, he's actually going there. Oh, wait, he's really going there. And it was this anticipation with a beautiful delivery at the end. And so I'm convinced that, based on what we're talking about here, that there's something about when we see something, we think it's about that. But the delight that we feel could be about all the other experiences that now become in a subconscious way, kind of like, ha, it's almost like laughing. at this perceptual deficit that we have.
Starting point is 00:54:17 It's almost like laughing at how little we actually know, which is what you've said. Yeah. It could be that it also could be the sense of community of when you think it's going to go a particular way and it goes that way. It's like reinforcement of you. You know, it's like, yeah, he's saying it, but in a way we're saying it together. I'm listening, he's saying it, but we're in this together. And that's a good feeling.
Starting point is 00:54:51 To think about that for a second. I was trying to think about why certain music still can evoke such powerful emotions in me. And there does seem to be something special about the music we listen to when we are teenagers, you know, from about 14 until about 25, it seems to get routed into our nervous system in some way, maybe because that phase of our life is really one of identity. crisis. I mean, you don't find too many 40-year-olds, some, who are wondering like who they are occasionally. But almost every young teenager or preteen and it's kind of like, who am I? You're defining personality. So I always likened it to that. But leaving out the sort of critical period biology stuff,
Starting point is 00:55:34 what do you think it is about the music that we hear at that time? Are we that much more emotionally tuned? Have we not shut down our sensors quite as much? The songs and the artists don't matter because they're very individual to me. For other people, it'll be the Beatles or something. Now, I just really wish the Beatles did it for me too. But do you think that's important? Because I could see how it's really terrific. I could also see how it sets up one of these, what I'll just use nerdy language, you call the, like a semi-deprived filter. Because if I'm only looking for the way that, like, a stiff little fingers track made me feel the first time I listened to when I was 15, the feeling is worthwhile. But if I'm looking for that, I'm missing all the other stuff. I'm missing
Starting point is 00:56:15 the Beatles. I'm missing Fleetwood Mac, which you never did it for me either. I'm like, I'm missing all this stuff that, you know, people I love and respect really love. So I've never worried about it because there's kind of an infinite treasure trove of other things that I do love. But I do sometimes wonder whether or not my life experiences diminish because I'm not allowing kind of range. And you've obviously worked in a huge number of different genres of music. Punk is one thing, hip-hop is, I mean, Neil Diamond, too, right? M&M, too, Slayer, too, right?
Starting point is 00:56:54 And in some senses, I list these off, I mean, just think about how much in high school, maybe nowadays less so, but even in college and as an adult, we societally were sort of asked to constrain ourselves to one of these groups. I didn't know it was okay to love Bob Dylan and love punk rock as much as I do until I heard Tim Armstrong said he, love Bob Dylan. And I was like, and recently he told me he loves the Grateful Dead. And I was like, whoa. But to it, I remember when you had to pick. Both the Ramones and the clash loved the Beatles. So we can. Okay, I've got work to do it. We'll do it together. Okay. So I have a feeling part of
Starting point is 00:57:34 it is the reason it gets in at that age is it's at a time when we're defining who we are. And the music is part of the definition of how we see ourselves. So it's the, like, the music that we hear before that might be the music that's on the radio or our parents' music or our older brother or sisters' music. And then when you're 14 or 15 and you start choosing what you're listening to, it's like, now it's finally mine. And my parents might not like it. And my older brothers and sisters may or may not like it. But this one is mine. and it always has that impression in us that this is ours.
Starting point is 00:58:21 That's my thought of why it continues to last, you know. How do you wipe the slate clean then? So, for instance, if you're going to go in and work with somebody new, and again, as people are hearing this, I hope that they're transplanting this to whatever it is that they do. because in the realm of science and podcasting communication, it's not music, but there's a contour and a way, you know, hopefully this podcast will look nothing like it does in five years. That's my hope is it will still have the core features of the beauty and utility of biology
Starting point is 00:58:52 coming through, but I hope it doesn't look anything like episode two. Yeah. And I think it'll evolve as you evolve. It's just the truer it is to what interests you. And if you're not interested in biology, the same way in five years. I would hope it's not the same. I'll be doing psychoanalysis in real time here. Whatever it is. Whatever it is. Yeah. We probably won't be on psychedelics, but we might be levitating, you know. So how do you, let's talk a little bit if you would, because I know,
Starting point is 00:59:24 I'm very interested in your process. I'll spare you the daily routine question. It's very cliche. but you and I are both lovers of sunlight of horizons and not as a trivial source as an amazing gift of energy right and there aren't words for it really aside from your daily routines when it comes to you know somebody you're going from project to project and you know you're going to be doing work with somebody could be your own work and we'll talk about the writing in this book and its structure which is very unique. I've never encountered a book with this kind of structure before. It's the most facile read ever and yet every single page I underlined, took note starred. As you notice, it's very worn, very, very worn already and only
Starting point is 01:00:21 more so over time. Do you have a process for removing the functions of the day and what you were doing last week and what's going on and in order to get more access to this. I'm going to think of it now more as a receiver inside of you, right? Almost like it tuning a radio and then it comes in. Like the beginning of like a strummer clash thing, right? You love the radio. Joe love the radio, right? And then it comes in clear and there it is.
Starting point is 01:00:53 How do you clear the static? What are some of the operational steps that you think might be more. generalizable to regardless of where somebody in you know Africa's listening to I would say when I'm when I engage in a particular project whatever it is I I dedicate all of myself for that period of time whatever it is whether it be 20 minutes or whether it be five hours whatever it is total focus and and no outside distraction whatsoever. And when I leave that process,
Starting point is 01:01:39 I do my best not to think about it when I'm away from it. I don't bring any materials with me. I don't leave the studio with works in progress and spend time listening to them during the day or looking for ideas. I stay as far away from it when I'm not directly engaging in it as possible. And in the best of situations, I have something else to totally engage myself in in between.
Starting point is 01:02:06 So instead of working on Project A for five hours and then leaving and doing nothing, I'm hoping to engage in a Project B or B, C, and D with all of myself before going back to Project A again, which might be the next day, let's say. So this relates to an amazing chapter and series of writings of your book that I'm not going to describe because I want people to find it for themselves about disengaging, about disengaging from the process. One question I had is I read that chapter and as you're saying this now is even though you're disengaged, do you believe that your subconscious is working it through? I believe so. I believe so. And I think in general to stew over a problem is not the way to solve a problem.
Starting point is 01:02:52 Think to hold the problems lightly. And when I say, a problem, you know, when we're starting a project, there's usually this feeling of, there's a question mark at the beginning of every project. I'm always anxious when I start a new project because I have no idea what's going to happen. I never know. I never, I never, I may have in some cases a potential backup plan if, you know, if nothing works. But I really try not even to have that. I prefer not to have that. I prefer to go in, maybe to calm myself down enough to be able to show up. There'll be an idea of like, if nothing works, maybe we could try something like this, but that would only be for my own anxiety. It wouldn't be for actual
Starting point is 01:03:47 practical use. But there's always a sense of anxiety because I know whatever's going to happen is completely out of my control. Something's going to, something either interesting or not will appear. And then we're going to follow that wherever it goes. And until something appears for us to follow, I have a lot of anxiety. Even though I know, even though it has never not come, you know, it has come every time. But there's something about it because I also feel like there might be expectation on me that I'm going to make it happen. And I know that's not happening. That's not how it works. It's, it's, um, I show up ready for it to happen and, and I'm open to whatever we have to do to find that first thread. And once we find the thread, then it's like, okay, we have a, and it, that thread may lead
Starting point is 01:04:50 us to anything, you know, could lead us to in a million different directions. But something about having that glimmer that it's not a blank we're not looking at a blank page you know we're looking at okay we have uh we have uh the beginnings of um i would say a map but it's a map that we don't know where it takes us and it's just the beginning it's just like it's just to start you know you are here if you have a map and it says you are here even if you can't see the directions Knowing where we are feels okay. And usually, again, usually in the first day, first couple of days, it happens. But up until then, it's really an anxiety-producing situation.
Starting point is 01:05:47 And then I can't remember the original question. So that was just the beginning of something completely different. But do you remember what you asked? I don't remember. Yeah. Well, we were talking about disengaging and as your subconscious into it. And then we were talking about, you know, so I love this. So like what is your process of wading into this thing?
Starting point is 01:06:08 And you're revealing that now. I mean, I think of anxiety as readiness. You know, I mean, think about the characteristic features of anxiety. It tends to be a bit of a constriction of the visual field into more of a narrow vision. But that's appropriate because you want to shed what's going on elsewhere. And then, you know, even when people talk about the shakes or this like not feeling okay sitting still, anxiety was designed to mobilize us and not always to run away. This is one of the, I could, you know, rarely do I talk about the work in my own laboratory, but one of the things that, frankly, I didn't discover, but it was done in my laboratory, but this brilliant graduate student, Lindsay Saleh, who's now at Caltech, was that we can often observe animals or humans in very high states of anxiety as they move forward toward a goal. And we always think of moving forward as like this calm thing, you know, these heroes, you know, Rosa Parks telling people like, F you, like I'm not getting off the back. I'm not leaving the giving up my seat on the bus or Muhammad Ali. I bet you they were experiencing tremendous anxiety. But it was in the forward tilt. And so I think anxiety is least comfortable when we are forcing ourselves to stand still. So it's a activating energy. And, you know,
Starting point is 01:07:25 That brings up a word that, you know, I have written in my notebook as an extraction of a lot of themes from within the book that you and I have talked about before, which is, and here I'm going to sound very West Coast woo, but I mean it as seriously as it can be stated that I feel like everything is energetic. We can do things from a place of anger. We can do things from a place of joy. We can do things from a place of delight. I like to think maturing into the idea that joy and delight and love is kind of the ultimate reservoir of energy. But a lot of the music I liked from when I was younger was because of the anger that was
Starting point is 01:08:08 thread into it or the sadness. But if you think of your relationship to that music, it's a relationship of love. You didn't listen to that to get angry. No. You listened to it because you loved it. And I felt loved by it because it matched where I was at at the time. Yes. it was true to who you were and where you were.
Starting point is 01:08:27 I know that collaboration, there's a wonderful chapter on collaboration, but it's collaboration, as you mentioned before, with the universe, not with others. But in terms of the, especially the kind of work that you've done and do, when it comes to working with artists, I do wonder. And here I'm not looking for any gossip or stories. I've never been interested in gossip. I love stories, but I'm not interested in gossip. But once you see that thread kind of dangling there and you're going to, you're going to go after this or you grab onto it and you're like, okay, now you have a little bit of a map and an orientation within that map.
Starting point is 01:09:04 I often wonder, you know, scientists are complicated people. People think they're very boring, but they're actually very complicated because they're often living in one limited rule set of the prefrontal cortex. That's how you get good at getting degrees. This is by understanding the rules of academia and playing by those rules. People tinker with the rules. You get your Richard Axles who are very playful in how they go about it, but they are systematic. He's known for rigor, rigor, rigor, right?
Starting point is 01:09:33 When I think of creative artists and musical artists, I think of a bit more zany or loose, or you watch the documentary about the Ramones, and you're like, wow, there's all this chaos. How, because so many of the brilliant artists, musical artists that are out there seem to have some chaos inside them or their lives aren't always structured. Oftentimes, and science too, by the way,
Starting point is 01:09:55 there are substance abuse issues and personal life issues. How, since you don't have 100% control, they need to play the instruments, sing, et cetera, how do you work with people who have it in them but are getting in their own way, right? And do you think that that kind of the internal chaos that a lot of artists seem to have, do you think that sometimes is actually
Starting point is 01:10:23 an essential piece of the creativity picture? You can't disentangle it. Yeah, I don't think it's an essential piece in general, but certain artists, that's how they do it. I would say I rarely get to see the chaotic part of artists for whatever reason they rarely show it to me. And most of them, like most comedians I know, are much more serious about what they're doing
Starting point is 01:10:51 than what it looks like from, if you see them on stage. There's much more to it and there's much more focus on craft going on and digging deep than would necessarily be obvious seeing them jump around on stage. I'm a fan of boxing,
Starting point is 01:11:12 track and field and boxing, the sports nobody really cares about now that UFC is so popular. And track and field is a, It's a little bit like wrestling. When you go, the people that they are there because they really love it. We'll talk about wrestling a little bit, professional wrestling. But, you know, Floyd Mayweather is obviously a colorful character and one of the best records in boxing of all time.
Starting point is 01:11:34 And a few years back, I got into watching his stuff. And what one sees is the cars and the money that literally call themselves the money team, you know, and the spending and there's all the outrageous stuff. but I know someone who is in his in camp with him who actually was a sparring partner for him and the lore has it they have very closed door sparring um or clamps but the lore is that he would do you know because nowadays it's 12 three minute rounds right with a minute in between used to be 15 but now neuroscientists stepped in and it turns out a lot of the deaths were occurring when it was more than 12 rounds for whatever reason you cut off at 12 really seemed to truncate the death there other things too. If the dad is apparently a cornerman, we have someone else here at the podcast
Starting point is 01:12:17 who knows more about this than me. That's fascinating. Yeah, the kid not wanting to disappoint the parent correlated with death. I'll get some of this wrong and then they can come after me. But in any case, this guy who was in Floyd's camp said that he would do 30 to 60 minutes of sparring, bringing in fresh sparring partners with no rest, that he would run three or four times per 24 hour cycle, despite all the critical need for sleep, that his training was unbelievably intense to the point where he would just chew out, chew up and destroy all training partners. And yet the perception that we see is it's kind of, it's playful for him. So it sounds very similar. Like what we see is often not what goes into it, that people are intensely rigorous. Yeah. And I think in a way from a psychological perspective,
Starting point is 01:13:08 if you knew you were fighting someone who wasn't taking it seriously, that would give you some confidence. And that would not be a good thing if the person was actually working really hard outworking you. Do you know what I'm saying? Like it's from a psychological perspective that makes sense to me. So what I keep coming back to is that I'm imagining my mind, kind of two ends of the continuum, one that is about fairly narrow focus, training, training, strategy, implementation, cultivating craft, building craft.
Starting point is 01:13:43 And then the other side is this, the cloud. It's very nebulous, right? And there's this word that I learned from a colleague of mine when I was down at the Salk Institute when my lab was there because he studies this. There's this phenomenon that I don't want to mispronounce because then it sounds like something else. But the correct pronunciation is peridolia. And peridolia is our.
Starting point is 01:14:06 tendency to look at an amorphous shape like a cloud or a tree and think that it looks like something else. An ice cream cone. The man in the moon. And that again reveals the extent to which the brain wants to place symbolic filters on things. And we need this, right? Because I see you walk in the door and Rick, I recognize you. In fact, we have a brain area called the fusiform face gyrus that literally is a face recognition area. And, you could be at any orientation or I could just see your eyes and know that it's you. There's a phenomenon called proposagnosia where people can see faces. They can describe everything in the face, but they don't know, for instance, that it's JFK or Madonna or Lex Friedman.
Starting point is 01:14:57 It's quite the list. Quite the list. There you go, Lex. Run for office, Lex. Just kidding. It's hard enough to get you to respond to my text as it is. So we have these filters. And so we're taking this cloud and we're deciding what things are. Yes. And what I want to drill into your process a little bit more deeply, when you approach a project, so everyone meets each other,
Starting point is 01:15:23 shakes hand, here are the engineers. We're going to sit down where everyone knows what they're doing because you work with professionals and you start going. Are you trying to be with the cloud or in the implementation? Like where are you in that continuum? And forgive me if I'm like trying to surgically go into your process in a way that would disrupt it in any way.
Starting point is 01:15:43 But I trust you've been doing this for a while and there's no, there's no threat. I'm not at, I'm in the cloud with the exception of I'm aware of what could go wrong on a technical side. And I might like if something good is happening, I might look over and make sure that we're rolling. So that's a leap over to here momentarily. Maybe. Maybe. If I, if I feel like if I was in the moment, I would be in the cloud. And if something good starts happening, it would trigger something in me like, oh, I hope this is, I hope we're really doing this because I don't know if we could ever do this again.
Starting point is 01:16:29 That would be a thought of when the first time the real world would come into the picture would. be something good is happening. Let's not lose it. And when that happens, do you never been in a studio besides a podcast studio, do you say, hey guys, that sounded good, more of that? Or do you wait? You let them continue because obviously you don't want to break their flow. We'd never want to break any flow once it's happening. Yeah, once something's happening, just kind of sit back and watch. And do you think there's resonance, like the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, the, team of engineers and other people know when it quote unquote is happening if everyone's paying attention yes when everyone's paying attention it's usually pretty obvious sometimes the threat will be
Starting point is 01:17:16 something different than expected and maybe not everybody would pick up on it and that might be a particular that might be particular based on my taste or an artist's taste or someone involved in might say that was let's listen back to that I think that was better than what we thought that can happen You said several things and it was like you said enough for there to be several conversations. I tend to do that. Sorry, especially with you. I don't get to see you as nearly as often as I would like.
Starting point is 01:17:49 And so when I do, I confess that I'm a little bit of a kid in a candy shop. I wrote down the brain tells us stories. So you talked about I walk in certain data points. You recognize me. But it's a real like looking at a cloud shorthand. We go through our lives. doing this all day with everything we see. And the shorthand, in the case of me, you know me, the shorthand turns out to be right.
Starting point is 01:18:18 It checks out. If it's something we don't know and something we're not familiar with, something happens. We experience something on the street. Something happens. And it doesn't make sense. something out of the ordinary happens. First thing is, is this doesn't make sense. Then what we do is, again, subconsciously,
Starting point is 01:18:47 I don't know if it's unconscious or subconsciously, without thinking, we create a story that explains what just happened, a hypothetical. That makes it okay that what just happened happened. And, oh, maybe he's running because he's done. dog ran away and he's chasing his dog. Maybe that's why he's running. And as soon as we have that thought of what it might be, we relax because now it's not just a guy running and this is weird, but it's a guy running. Oh, he's probably running after his dog. And now we register that story
Starting point is 01:19:25 that we just made up without even knowing we were making it up as what happened. And then later in the day, if someone says, yeah, do you see that guy running out of a box? Like, yeah, he was chasing his dog. I saw that. And you won't even realize that it was the maybe hypothetical story that was the first possible explanation that allowed you to continue walking. Do you know what I'm saying? That's our whole lives.
Starting point is 01:19:54 Our whole lives are reacting to things, making up a story of what we think may have happened without realizing that's what we're doing, and then living the rest of the of our lives as if that thing that we made up really happened and we never know. I completely agree. We confabulate from birth until death. There's this well-observed phenomenon in people who have memory deficits. So there's the sad example of this and then there's the everyday typical, not, who knows, sad or not sad example. So for instance, if somebody has a slight memory deficit or someone has Alzheimer's dementia, they'll find themselves in the hallway at night and say, what are you doing here? And they'll say, oh, you know, I was going to
Starting point is 01:20:37 get a glass of water, but they're walking away from the direction that would make sense. People who, alcoholics who drink enough, develop something called Korsakov syndrome where a certain brain area gets messed up and you'll ask them a question like, oh, what are you doing here? And they will come up with incredible stories, sometimes interesting stories that have no bearing on reality. Yeah. You ask them who their name is. But do they believe, they believe that's what with 100% certainty. And this actually relates to a lot of the now better understood controversy around repressed memories. You know, you can, especially from young people, you can pull memories from them of things that never happened. This has been demonstrated over and over again.
Starting point is 01:21:17 So courtrooms know to be very cautious now about this whole notion of repressed memories. That's good to know. Yeah, very, very complicated area of the law, as you can imagine, because we want, we tend to want to trust victims for understandable reasons. but in terms of accuracy of details, two people have very different accounts of the same, of the same experiences. And this has been shown over and over again. Yes. Even that you can do well in the laboratory.
Starting point is 01:21:42 It's pretty interesting. So again, because of these selective filtering and storytelling, and we are, I think it was Salman Rushdie, who said we are the storytelling species. He probably, wow, I was going to say we're storytelling machines, but that's great. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We are, story.
Starting point is 01:21:58 I would say that the big five, if I had to pick up sort of brain function is, we are very limited filters. The Mantis Shrimp sees 67 shades of red for every one that we see. They have access to things we don't have access to. They're not, as far as I know, releasing albums of the red hot chili peppers caliber. But who knows, maybe down there they are. I did see something, by the way, as a relevant tangent recently.
Starting point is 01:22:23 And I don't know if it's, look, even if it's crazy, it's super cool. if you take a device that amplifies the electrical signals coming from cactus, and you just translate that into a simple rule of conversion to two or three pitches of sound, the music that comes out of it is beautiful. Nothing short of beautiful. And when I saw that, the teenager in me thought, you know, when we hear whale song, we think it's so beautiful. Like, what if they're just like cursing at each other the whole time, right?
Starting point is 01:22:53 I mean, maybe they're in there like a Rogan episode when he invites all his comedian friends in there. Who knows? Maybe it's a psychoanalytic conversation about their childhood traumas. I don't know. Yes. But we decide whale song is beautiful. Yes. We decide cactus are just plants. And it's beautiful to us. And we're right that it is beautiful to us. But it doesn't mean we know anything about it. That's right. Yeah. So we have these filters, perceptual filters. We only can see in here, smell and taste what we can. And then the brain likes to work in symbols. We tend to like to match. that person whose shoes are messed up must be homeless. I've had a couple instances in life where I saw what I thought was a homeless vagrant inside a building at an academic institution.
Starting point is 01:23:40 It turned out it was the most accomplished person in the field. That's always cool. Yes, that happened at Berkeley. then the other thing that we do is we tend to put, you know, symbol, so we said perception, symbol representations, and then our memories are entirely confabulated based on already deficient symbol and perceptual representation. Yes. And so I never like the statement that we don't know how the brain works.
Starting point is 01:24:12 I think we do know how the brain works, but that it works through very limited filters. Yes. Okay. So knowing that and accepting. it. And it seems to me that this idea of looking to nature, looking outside us, is so critical. And in fact, I hope you won't mind me sharing this, but a few years back, I had sent you something by text. And I was kind of in disbelief about something I'd seen in the media. I was like, they got it all wrong. And I knew the person involved. And it was not a good situation for them. And I was like, they got it all wrong. And you wrote back, you said, it's all lies back to nature the only truth. Wow. And I wrote that down.
Starting point is 01:24:59 I put it over my desk. Wow. And I still, you know, I tattooed it on my forehead if I didn't already have it well, well committed to memory. But I think I know that's true. Like nature we can look at and it's...
Starting point is 01:25:12 But when I say it's all lies, you just talked about our ability to how limited our facility to see. and understand what we see. Yes? Yes. So based on that, that leads us to, we can't know much. Do you know what I'm saying? Our resolution is so low on everything that we're really just like we're grasping at straws.
Starting point is 01:25:45 We have no idea. We have no idea. And there's great power in knowing that. Because if you think you know what's going on, chances are you're being deceived. Not because somebody's deceiving you, but because they're telling you what they see and they don't know. It's all, do you know what I'm saying? It's all made up. Everything that we, everything we know is made up.
Starting point is 01:26:11 Maybe, maybe it's true. This brings us to pro wrestling. It's the reason that pro wrestling is closer to reality than anything else we can want. watch or any other content. It's we know it's made up. We know that it's a performance. It's storytelling. And that's how everything is,
Starting point is 01:26:36 except we think wrestling's fake and the world is real. Wrestling's real and the world's fake. You talk about in the book, we're definitely going this direction. In the book, you talk about this notion of, entertaining the idea of the opposite being true as it. And there's our not only emerging, but established fields of psychology that are making great ground, I think, into the human psyche, Byron Katie's work and others where you take a statement and you start playing with that statement
Starting point is 01:27:06 for you poke at its authenticity. And when I first heard that, I thought, this is kind of hokey, right? It's just words. And then I realized how foolish I was being because she's really on to something, and there are others too, of course, but in science, that's exactly what you do. You don't really ask questions in science. You are forced to raise hypotheses and try and say true or false. Now, there are limitations to that approach, certainly. I mean, pure observational studies have been incredible in terms of what they've revealed to us, especially in medicine, you know, a patient that has a bullet hole through a certain area of the brain. You don't go in and say, oh, I hypothesize that person will have a deficit in seeing faces.
Starting point is 01:27:48 No, the person wandered into the clinic and they go, this person cannot see, sees faces but can't make sense of them. And then you reverse, you forensically arrive at an understanding. So, but in general, we, we go about things in this way. And considering that the opposite might be true, well, that's a little bit, I suppose, of like seeing the whale at the surface of the water. It's like, well, the opposite of my experience, which is all above water for the most part. is maybe not the complete experience of life. You start seeing the inverse all the time. So I want to consider the inverse all the time.
Starting point is 01:28:27 And it really relates to the way that you described how we see colors is based on contrast. So maybe blue is only blue in relation to yellow. So if blue is our choice, if we're not considering yellow, blue doesn't exist. Do you know what I'm saying? It's like we talk about night. It's only night because there's day. If there was no day, there is no night.
Starting point is 01:28:55 In all of our cases, like it's like being yang. You know, it's like it's we there's the light and the shadow always. There's always another side for everything. And we, we focus on one aspect. But if we look at the other aspect, chances are we'll learn something too. The nervous system is not just able to do this. It's the way it does everything.
Starting point is 01:29:25 Two experiments I'll just briefly describe. My scientific great-grandparents, David Hewbel and Torrance of Weasel, showed that if you force a person to look at something for a long period of time without moving their eyes, there's a way that you can do this. The image disappears because normally your eyes are making little micro-sacococads and you're comparing what you're seeing to what's right next to it. pixel by pixel, pixel by pixel. If we don't even have to use the example of pressing on the arm,
Starting point is 01:29:49 we're sitting in chairs right now. And until I said, you know, what's going on at the level of sensation on the backs of your thighs, you were unaware of it because if you experience a pressure or a smell in a room, you ever walk in, the smell is either good or not good. Pretty soon the smell disappears. The neurons are still firing like sledgehammers on a bell. But we become blind and deaf to it because the nervous system likes to habituate the value. of that signal when it's there often.
Starting point is 01:30:16 And it's only the stuff that comes through, signal the noise that kind of jolt us into, you know, attention and awareness. And I want to return to attention awareness, which are prominent themes in the book. And I think it, in an important way, not just, oh, attention awareness is important, but you also give insight into how to pay better attention, how to pay awareness with the understanding that people are going to go about it differently. But I do want to ask you about wrestling. Because when I was growing up, I was not, I lived south of the Cow Palace and there was some wrestling going on there.
Starting point is 01:30:52 I think back then it was WWF. There was a short stint of my childhood where I paid attention to, in particular, was it Cocoa Beware, the guy that had a macaw? I was obsessed with tropical birds and he would come in and he put his tropical bird on the thing. And then who's that George the Animal Steel, the guy that would eat the ring. Yeah. Okay, so, and I believe he was a professor. Seriously, seriously. Seriously.
Starting point is 01:31:17 Was he real? In real life, amazing. He was a professor, but he played Georgie Animal Steel as a wrestler. And I loved the movie, The Wrestler. Darren Aronovsky movie. It was Mickey Roar. Yeah, one of the reasons I liked is I once visited Asbury Park. Isn't that where that was filmed?
Starting point is 01:31:36 There's a vacant, he goes to visit his daughter. There's a vacant. amusement park or abandoned amusement park scene there that was really eerie still kind of haunts me a little bit. There's something about the East Coast in kind of fall all the places that people normally go just for the summer
Starting point is 01:31:52 that we don't have out here in the West Coast people in the East Coast are just tougher than we are. It still haunts me. Great movie. But I remember watching wrestling and it was at that age I think I was probably about 1213, maybe 11, 1213,
Starting point is 01:32:07 where, you know, you're kind of entering puberty. So, and I, you know, puberty is a fundamental landmark of development. It's the most rapid period of aging. It's also when we start to change our rule set, like certain people and certain kinds of interactions take on profoundly different meaning, right? It's not just a reproductive competence time and when kids change their bodies change. The rule book changes. fundamentally. Our understanding of the world changes in that moment. Oh yeah. I mean the moment that a
Starting point is 01:32:42 child understands really what sex is and kind of how they got there and that a lot of the stuff that we see in the world is kind of passively or not so passively being sent through that filter. It's like it's something. It changes the rule or the rule book of a perception. I view this age from about 11 to 13, at least for me, was a unique transition point where the The gap between what I perceived as reality and fiction was kind of blurry. This is captured pretty well in that movie Stand By Me, where they're hanging around the campfire at night and the kid says, who do you think would win in a fight between Superman and Mighty Mouse?
Starting point is 01:33:21 And the other kid says, like, you idiot, Mighty Mouse is a cartoon. Of course Superman would win. And like, to me, that's being 11 and a half or 12 years old, where your understanding of reality, as you know it is changing, but it's not completely crystallized into an adult form reality. That sounds like a really healthy place to be, to me,
Starting point is 01:33:45 like that, not letting it crystallize. I think that's the, there's where the downfall happens. So I have questions specifically about wrestling, but it's really about process. I want to know whether or not you watch wrestling because it allows you to access the energy state in your body and mind
Starting point is 01:34:06 and that kind of mode of thinking in which reality, as one conceives it, is somewhat blurry? Or is it for a number of other reasons, which is fine? Is that the energy you're trying to export and bring to the creative process elsewhere to life? Is it that anything is possible or that we're dealing with archetypes? Because it doesn't matter if it's Cocoa Beware or Randy Macho Man Savage or George the Animal Steel and the lovely Elizabeth. I guess I did watch a little bit of wrestling. They are archetypes, much like the Greek myths or the Bible or, you know, no disrespect to the Bible or to Greek myths or to wrestling for that matter.
Starting point is 01:34:48 Architects are a powerful filter for humans, but we know that they're a very limited filter too because people aren't built like square wave functions. We have curves and contours and complexity. So what is the deal with your relationship to wrestling? I think it maintains that kind of playfulness, anything is possible. We expect the unexpected all the time in wrestling. And it's a way to have kind of a feeling of the energy of a sport with no competition. Everyone is working together to put on the best show they can.
Starting point is 01:35:31 So it's more like a ballet than it is like a sporting event. and there's great skill involved. It's one of the few things that I can watch and really feel relaxed. It relaxes me. I don't feel like I have to think about it. I can just relax and enjoy it. This brings up a topic that is very near and dear to my heart, which is this notion of dopamine schedules.
Starting point is 01:35:56 I never want to reduce everything to dopamine, but dopamine is the universal currency of delight, pleasure, motivation seeking. There are other chemicals involved, too. But there's a beautiful experiment and a couple of examples that I'll use as a foundation to more questions about wrestling and why it's powerful and why other people may want to use wrestling or some other endeavor as a way to access creative energy and source. Earlier we talked about you can train an animal to press a lever three times and then get reward and it will learn three is the magic number for reward. And then it can switch. It takes a little bit of training. switch, but they can't do prime numbers. They can't do high abstraction schedules. Humans either were
Starting point is 01:36:40 not very good at figuring out the rule set for optimal foraging. We do it well enough to persist as a species, at least for now, but it's very likely that we are not tapping into that system as well as we could. And how would we know if we don't know? It's one of those. You don't know what you don't knows. There's a beautiful experiment that explored when dopamine is released in the context of watching sport or watching comedy, believe it or not. And with the comedy stuff, it was every time there was a surprise, it was kind of that jarring like, ha ha, and they measure people's dopamine output. They were also brain imaging. In the game of basketball, it's a beautiful opportunity experimentally because every time one team gets the ball or shooting free throws or something,
Starting point is 01:37:27 they're going down court and it's either going to end up in the basket or it's not. Might end up on the free throw line, but it's ended up or not. So what they found is that the schedule of anticipation was every time there was a switch of which team got it. So you're waiting, waiting, waiting, and then it's, ah, you're waiting, waiting, waiting, waiting, three-pointer, oh, awesome. And if something happened where it looked like they were going to make the three-pointer, but then somebody basically swatted the ball away and then went for a half-court shot,
Starting point is 01:37:54 like you don't expect that very often, bigger dopamine release. Okay, so that's kind of how the dopamine thing works. When you describe wrestling, I wonder, because you don't know the script, it's not one team gets it, then the other team gets it. You don't know who's going to win. Anything could happen is what you said. Yes. The availability of that dopamine surge or drip, which is a powerful thing,
Starting point is 01:38:19 is completely out of your reach in terms of anticipation. You don't know when it's going to come, but it must arrive often enough that you return to it 11 hours a week of watching. In many ways, the way I'm starting to conceptualize the creative process is a little bit the same. You don't know where those nuggets of gold and those loose threads are, but you have enough experience, and in this case I am referring to you specifically, to know that they are in there. The people walking in this room have a certain level of ability and talent to create that. the map will form itself as we are going through the voyage. And those nuggets of, here I'm calling them dopamine, but they are out there.
Starting point is 01:39:08 And that knowledge is enough to get you to come back again and again to trust the process. So I actually think the way you describe wrestling as, you know, it's the energy of the sport. It's not the whether or not it's this move or that move or who wins or who loses. It's the energy. and I'm guessing it's the energy that it creates in you as an observer.
Starting point is 01:39:30 Yes. It's the energy it creates in me and the reality that it's honest in what it is in a world where seemingly nothing is honest at what it is. And again, not because people are lying all the time. We have a little data. We make up a story to explain it. And then we say that's what happened. and we have trusted sources who do exactly what I just described
Starting point is 01:40:01 and who pass this down as gospel of what we teach and maybe it's true and maybe it's not. With wrestling we know maybe it's true, maybe it's not. We lean towards it not being true, but what's really interesting about wrestling and maybe one of the most fun things about it, is that sometimes real life works its way into the story, like two wrestlers get married.
Starting point is 01:40:34 Now, in real life? Well, we don't know. It's like that you never know. It's like in the storyline, they're getting married or getting divorced or best friends turn on each other. And it could be part of the story, and it could really be happening, because they do right, someone breaks their leg.
Starting point is 01:40:57 So they're out because their leg is broken. Did they break their leg? We don't know. They're out. Do you know what I'm saying? We're told they broke their leg. So there's always this like, I wonder what's true. You know, I wonder where the line is.
Starting point is 01:41:14 We know that it's scripted or predetermined. That's how they say. It's predetermined. But we don't know where reality. is and isn't. And in some ways, that's our real experience of the world. We don't really know where reality is and isn't. We have an idea maybe. I think in some ways, wrestling's more honest or legitimate because we start with the idea that it's fixed. When we go to a boxing match, we don't go to a boxing match thinking it's fixed, yet it might be. And historically, it's
Starting point is 01:41:54 It's happened, you know, or there was just something in baseball where, was it baseball? I don't follow baseball. I should know. There was just, there was just a big sports. Oh, one of the teams that. The plays, basically. Yes. Is it the call signals of the, of the catcher? Yes.
Starting point is 01:42:15 Yeah. So they were, they were, you're not supposed to deprogram the, or deconstruct the call, the call signals of the other team. And I guess maybe some, a team got caught. doing that. Yes, and the team that won whatever the, you know, World Series was. So it's like, with wrestling, you know, that wouldn't be a scandal. Do you know what I'm saying? It's like, because that almost anything goes. Anything goes. And that's what the world is really like. So in some ways it's comforting. And there's still this mystery of like, wow, I wonder if that's true
Starting point is 01:42:47 or not. Because we never really know. Someone gets hurt. Did they really break their back? Or are they just going on vacation. We don't know. We'll never know. It's fascinating. It is fascinating. And I feel like there are certain people who show up in a way that is surprising in not just one direction, but in all directions. Like, it's one thing for a celebrity to come out and make a statement. That can be interesting or not interesting depending on the celebrity and the statement and the delivery. But, and I'm probably going to get this wrong because I'm terrible at pop culture things, most of them anyway. But as I recall, you know, Lady Gaga showed up to someone event wearing a outfit made of meat. And I can't tell you for the life of me whether or not
Starting point is 01:43:29 that was a statement against meat or for meat. Maybe it was a statement for the carnivore diet. Maybe it was a statement for veganism. I don't know. Either way. Or maybe neither. Or maybe neither. But it was definitely a statement in that it broke with the norm. And it said to me, okay, she creates different rules for herself or so it breaks boundaries that other people have. I never heard of anyone doing that before. It doesn't mean they hadn't, but I never heard of anyone doing it before. But we do tend to associate outside the current playbook with quote-unquote creativity, unless it crosses a line, in which case it becomes something else.
Starting point is 01:44:14 It becomes almost theater for sake of theater. But what you're telling me is that within the realm of wrestling, theater is the goal at some level. and everybody knows it who goes into those arenas who watches it. Yes. Everybody. Yes. And everyone agrees to kind of suspend outside reality and say, this is reality. Yes.
Starting point is 01:44:35 And they boo for the bad guys and cheer for the good guys, knowing that backstage they're probably friends. Except for the kids that are 11 who think it's really real. I don't know. I don't even know if they know. I'm not sure. The only other person I know who has vocalized their love of, of professional wrestling to the extent that you have is Lars Fredericks and the rhythm guitar player
Starting point is 01:44:58 for Rancid who loves wrestling. But his statement, and forgive me, Lars, if I'm getting this wrong, is that because he grew up in an area of the South Bay, we're like there were no teams. Like now there's the San Jose earthquakes, but there was no football team in San Jose. He's from Campbell. But there were, there were no like good teams, no sports teams, but they had wrestling. And he had it where on the television set? And so if you didn't have have a like I didn't grow up with any organized sports thing. The 49ers were up the road, but for me it was skateboarding. And I love it for the same reason. You actually never really know what's going to happen. There is no rulebook. The rule book is made up. But they are very,
Starting point is 01:45:38 it's a unique sport in that surfing is a bit like this too, in that they are absolutely maniacal about making things look a certain way. It's not about just doing it. It's about doing it and making it look good. Yeah. Smooth, catching it with the front foot. You know, and the trends change. Style. Style.
Starting point is 01:45:58 It's a style. Style is this like nebulous thing of like, you know, in fashion or in sport. Right. Whereas with a football, there's some amazing catches. There's even like the catch, which I happen to know is a 40, the catch during the Super Bowl. But in general, it's like the goal is getting the end zone win the game. And I'm sure football players are like cringing as I say this. But it doesn't matter if you run ugly, if you run fastest.
Starting point is 01:46:22 In skateboarding, that would never fly. In fact, you'll basically be ridiculed out of the sport. In wrestling, is it the same? Is there style to wrestling? It's all performance. It's all the charisma of the people involved. There's the physical ability, the ability to talk and tell a story, and how charismatic the performers are,
Starting point is 01:46:47 whether you want to watch them, whether you want to see them win, whether you want to see them lose, and whether you're interested in cheering or booing for them. I was going to say it reminds me of opera, but opera gets released over and over again. You know the story and how it ends when you walk in if you've listened to it before. So wrestling does seem to be unique in that way. It's real-time iteration, at least from the perspective of the...
Starting point is 01:47:13 And it's real-time iteration based on because people get hurt all the time. they're doing really crazy physical stuff. So if someone gets hurt, the story has to change because in real life they can't show up next week and do what was planned in the script. So it's very alive. And there's a lot of something interesting and unexpected is always happening. Well, in a much more calm form, I'll share with you something. You know, just like your perspective on it.
Starting point is 01:47:50 For years, I used a tool in order to try and access ideas since I was a little kid, actually. Because I have a little bit of OCD, a little bit of a Tourette. When I get tired, I'll do that. And like very like strategy implementation oriented. I had that when I was a little, little kid, I needed all my stuffed animals arranged in a certain way. Lego is how to be, you know, a little neurotic, you know, or a lot. And then science is very much about you have to do things with a lot of, precision and I discovered that the ultimate reset for me when I was in graduate school or a postdoc
Starting point is 01:48:25 if I couldn't make it to a really good like agnostic front show or like chaos like the chaos of a punk rock show for me was kind of this reset it was like could like release all this thing and I got energy from it first time I saw transplants play and you know it's like wow because you don't know what's going to happen and it was scary and I loved it the other thing that I used over time to kind of reset this ability to to think in a structured way without it feeling like it was overcoming me maybe even access the same thing in some ways that you're accessing with wrestling was I like to stare at aquaria like I like to go to aquariums or I'd build aquariums and I would just sit there because you never know which way the fish are going to go you think it's going
Starting point is 01:49:04 that way but then all of a sudden they'll turn and go the other way it's completely unpredictable and I love aquaria because of the tranquility and had them in my lab for a long time I just adore aquariums because of the non-linearity of it. It's not ABC, it's A, Z, Z, Q, you know. And I think this is what some people try and access through psychedelics, but that didn't seem to me like a very good way to do it on a regular basis, whereas with Aquaria, you just, the tanks are there. So in your book, you talk about something that I also share a love for, which is how, you know, the ocean and aspects of nature like clouds and ocean, they have a predictability to them.
Starting point is 01:49:48 We know where they are and where to find them. Fortunately, the sun rises and sets every day, at least for now. And we can count on them with 100% reliability. And yet they are from the perspective of like what physicists would say, they're very chaotic. You can't look at a wave and know exactly how the foam is going to roll out. You know it's going to roll in and roll out. We have the tides.
Starting point is 01:50:11 When I hear about wrestling, I think about my love of Aquaria, when I think about my love of punk rock music, for instance, where I think about the ocean. I think of it in that way that we actually have a need to source from things that have both a combination of structure and no structure. I think it's interesting that there are some places that don't change in some places that change a lot. And I can remember thinking about this. I was walking. There's a beach that I walk on in Hawaii that I walk on every morning when I'm there. And if you walk on the same beach every day, you kind of get a sense of what it's like. And I remember I was in Hawaii, walked on the beach every day for a year, however long it was. And then I left for six months. Then I came back. And the next time I walked on the beach,
Starting point is 01:51:00 it was an entirely different beach, entirely different. And I remember thinking in that, moments like this is an unusual place because I pictured the house that I didn't even grow up in before the house I was I lived in maybe for the first seven years of my life and I think about what the backyard looked like and I think about a particular old tree that was there and I don't know this for sure but my sense is if I were to go back to where I grew up and go to that place and look in that yard, it would probably look pretty similar. Yet, here was this beach that I was walking on in Hawaii, that in the course of six months,
Starting point is 01:51:48 completely changed its face. And just how interesting both of those things are, and that depending on the project we're working on, to be able to go to a place that we know has the potential to change a lot and what that would do to our connection with the earth when we're when we're experiencing that versus going to a place that has very little change and you can kind of count on it being the way it's always been that both of those are interesting things to be able to draw upon depending on what we want to open in our in our psyche
Starting point is 01:52:26 I have an almost unhealthy fascination with New York in the mid 80s and 90s and um uh you didn't live there though. No, but I, since I was a kid, I went there when I was a little kid and I was fascinated by it. There's also a very interesting migration of East Coast to West Coast creatives, including yourself, that played an important part of my life, just seeing things and hearing things that were meaningful to me. But I, like, for instance, I love the movie. I haven't seen the documentary, but the one about Jean-Michel Basquia, Basquiao, because of the characters that are in it, and the huge number of people in that, like Parker, Pauze, Dennis Hopper, and on and on, those images of New York at that time are so exciting and what was happening. I wish I could transplant
Starting point is 01:53:10 myself to that. If I had a time machine, that's where I'd land first. I hear a lot of people say, New York isn't what it used to be. San Francisco isn't what it used to be. Whatever. L.A. isn't there does seem to be something that feels a little bit disruptive to people about cities changing. But the idea that natural landscapes change is actually, we even accept like, hey, fire sweep through places and assuming they weren't started by humans, we accept that, that change and the reordering of landscapes is normal and healthy. And I always tell myself, you have the kids growing up in New York or San Francisco or Chicago now, they only know it that way. So to them, it's as cooler as uncool as it's ever going to be. They either want to get out or they're loving every
Starting point is 01:53:55 piece of it. And this happened for all the people that came before us. So my question is a very basic one. Do you miss the New York that you came up in? Are you somebody who is attached to the past? I'm not attached to anything in the past. I don't look back at all. You don't think about like, oh, in my dorm room at NYU, Beastie Boys, this, like I miss, no, your optics are forward, present and forward. Only, only present and forward. Is there a process to that or it just happens to be where you default to? I don't know. I'm not sure, but that's how I do it. Nostalgia is not in, in, Rick Rubin's brain. No.
Starting point is 01:54:36 Oh, lucky you, man. No. I say that with genuine admiration. So you can hear a song that maybe you had a role in producing or not, something from the past, and you're accessing a state, presumably,
Starting point is 01:54:54 but you're not pining for or wishing how it was. Never. I'm no psychologist, but I'm going to venture to say that I think that's a very unique quality. I think a lot of people wish for or wish that things did not happen the way they did, that there's a lot of living in the past. There's a lot of this notion of like people future trip.
Starting point is 01:55:17 I don't actually think that's the default state of the brain. I think a lot of people live in emotional anchors to the past, good and bad. Yeah. I have none. And watching wrestling is one way that you cleanse the palate. Yeah. Like when you go to a meal and you're at, They pass around this, that doesn't really do the same more, but pass around a little bit of sorbet to cleanse the palate.
Starting point is 01:55:39 Turns out there's a biological reason for that. There's a kind of neutralization of the taste receptors between savory and sweet, et cetera. So wrestling is your palate neutralizing? I know that if I watch wrestling before I go to sleep, it's going to be a good night's sleep. Do you dream about wrestling? No. Never. But it's just relaxing.
Starting point is 01:56:00 It's just relaxing. Do you anticipate when you watch it? Like here comes the dopamine hit. Sometimes. Sometimes when it happens. He's going up for the three pointer. Yeah, sometimes it's exciting. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:56:14 But do you enjoy it? But even then, it's like the stakes are low. It's like I don't really care what happens, which feels good. You know, that I'm just being entertained. Do they actually get hurt sometimes? You said they do. A lot. Often.
Starting point is 01:56:29 I mean, they're basically stunt men. So imagine stunt man getting hurt doing a crazy stunt. happens all the time. Well, in the movie The Wrestler, I remember he got staples, stapled into him, and I thought that's pretty intense. I once went and saw, I guess they called it Mexican wrestling. I don't know if they call it that anymore, where the guys dip their hands in glass. This was in Sacramento.
Starting point is 01:56:49 And I went saw, I honestly didn't have a stomach for it. I really didn't. I couldn't believe it was legal. It might not have been legal. Yeah. But I thought. There's crazy stuff in wrestling sometimes. So before sleep, is that typically when you watch wrestling?
Starting point is 01:57:05 Yes. Do you think it's useful for people to have some activity that allows them to kind of clear their mind and create peace before heading off to sleep? I think so. And I think yoga nidrues would be good. It's like yoga nidra pro wrestling, any of the, any of those type things. Yeah, not watching the Dahlmer thing. I won't watch that. I don't watch any horror, anything, or I don't like violent things.
Starting point is 01:57:31 Yeah. I know it exists. I know horrible things happen in the world, but I certainly don't want to do that before. I think these liminal states before and emerging from sleep are very powerful. When you wake up in the morning, are your thoughts immediately structured or do you enjoy the kind of clearing of the clouds? It's a slow process for me to wake up. And I like that. I like not engaging too much too soon. I also another, I usually fall asleep listening to a lecture or something speaking. Because if I'm, if I don't, I can get caught in my own thoughts.
Starting point is 01:58:12 And listening to something is enough of a focus point that it stops me from talking to myself. I do the same. My grandfather listened to the radio to sports on the radio and he would fall asleep. Oftentimes he was a smoker with a cigarette in his mouth. His wife's responsibility was to stay up later than he did to make sure they didn't burn everything down. And then when you wake up, you said it's a slow process. Is it an hour or two before you feel like you're? I would say probably an hour.
Starting point is 01:58:46 I usually wake up and try to get in the sun as soon as I possibly can and hope to spend about an hour. And then I'll usually go for a walk on the beach for another hour or 90 minutes depending. Are you with family members and other people at that time? usually focused by myself. Phone? I'll be listening to something. I don't look at the phone, but I listen. I listen to, again, a lecture or podcast or an audiobook.
Starting point is 01:59:18 I like audiobooks a lot. Yeah, I do too. If an idea comes to mind, do you write it down? I may. It depends. I like to. I usually would do a note in my phone. I don't usually carry pen and paper with me when I'm walking.
Starting point is 01:59:35 Yeah, I do the same. I do a long Sunday hike or jog and I will audio script into my phone. People sometimes give me funny looks because I'm talking to myself. That's a nice way to do it though. I'd like to learn more of the audio methods of doing it instead of the typing methods. Right now I type and I don't think it's the best way. The voice memos function in the iPhone and other phones is really good. And they're now companies like Rev.com that will turn those into word docs
Starting point is 02:00:06 that are fairly well corrected, fairly inexpensive. No, they're not a sponsor of the podcast. I just happen to use it. It's great. I actually learn that trick from Richard Axel, the Nicorette chewing Wildman Nobel Prize winner. He writes manuscripts and by walking around his office pacing and talking into his phone. I always think of the Woody Allen movie where the Alan Alda character is,
Starting point is 02:00:36 with you know talking about yeah he's he's speaking comedy ideas into the phone it's really pretentious yeah i liked that movie about harvey milk that sean penn played harvey milk because al took place before i was alive mostly in the bay area but there's this these beautiful scenes of him as i recall sitting there at his kitchen table talking into a tape recorder at night talking about how he predicted that he would be possibly assassinated etc and this goes back to the strummer thing about writing things down. I think that a lot of people, including myself, feel a little bit of like egotistical guilt around like, who am I to think that my ideas could be worthwhile or something. But, you know, I think over time I've come to realize that the ideas about experiments
Starting point is 02:01:21 or health questions I have about health. They don't always, but oftentimes can lead to real, you know, seeds that grow into big trees. But it's something that's interesting to you. It's, It doesn't matter what anyone else thinks. You know, like most of my notes are not for anyone else's, you know, for anyone else's use. Like I hear about something that's interesting to me and I think about, okay, I want to learn more about this, whatever it is. And then sometimes those things work their way into things I'm doing because the universe seems to work in that way. But I rarely am learning something with the idea of using it. I learn things with the idea of this is what I want to know.
Starting point is 02:02:03 this is what's interesting to me. And then often those things that are interesting to me can find their way into other projects just because they do. Yeah, it's almost like coal or kindling, but the moment that you think of it that way, it sounds so extractive, right? So you take this walk and you're writing down
Starting point is 02:02:27 the occasional idea perhaps, and then what is the next sort of? of the way that I'm here are less than do this than this than that. I'm interested in like where does your mind shift do? Does it become more structured as the day goes on? Does your thinking become more structured around projects and plans? I try to deal with things that need dealing with after that and in preparation for going to work. And then when I go to work, it's more like this free thing where I'm, again, hoping something good comes.
Starting point is 02:03:03 welcoming something good, paying attention, and maybe trying to will it to happen, but never, but knowing I don't have the ability to make it happen. I can just be present for it and be ready if it does arrive. Some of the more surprising, and I found really interesting and useful features of the book, were about dancing with structure and lack of structure. So when I think of structure, I think like deadlines. So when you are in the process of creating something, obviously deadlines are relevant, time of day. There's only so many hours in the day where one can stay in the groove or this like readiness to receive.
Starting point is 02:03:54 Have you ever found yourself in that mode where you're kind of grinding like, ah, like here we are like okay i'm not coming home for dinner and i it's the next you know we're going to push we're like put on the coffee pot kind of thing a lot a lot in the over the course of my life a lot not as much now um and one of the things that i discovered through working on the book was the phases of work we're not required to treat the different phases of work in the same way whereas before i did before everything was in this state of play. Everything had a wide open time schedule. It happens when it happens.
Starting point is 02:04:39 And if it takes two years or three years, it doesn't matter. It's not about that. It's only about this thing. It has to be great. And what I came to realize in working on the book is that there are different phases. And the first phase is this seed collecting phase, which is kind of an ongoing part of life in general. I do that.
Starting point is 02:04:59 I do that always, whether I'm working on something or not. I'm always in the seed collecting phase and there's no deadline or just anything that interests me that I think I want to learn more about or has potential to be something, anything, something, I hear something, think, hmm, I'd like to read more about that. Or I wonder if there's a movie about that. Is there a movie about that? If not, maybe there's a movie to be made. You know, like, again, I want, this is something I want in my life.
Starting point is 02:05:30 Let's see if it exists. If it doesn't exist, then maybe that's something interesting to pursue. But I know that the desire is there because I have it. So in the seed phase, there's no deadlines. It's just a wide open part. And then the next phase is called the experimentation phase where you start experimenting to see what the seeds want to do. You're involved, but you're more.
Starting point is 02:05:56 of a, you're not really dictating the action. You're setting the stage for something to happen, but it's not about you yet. So it'd be like the equivalent of you'd plant the seed, you would water it, you'd make sure it was in the sun, and you'd wait. So you're involved, but you can't make it grow, you know? And then when it sprouts and it grows, or if it turns into a plant, then you can look at the plants like, okay, how does this plant, what's the potential of this plant? And then the third phase is the crafting phase, where it's like, okay, have this plant, maybe I'm going to trim it, or maybe I'm going to combine it with these other plants to make something else with it. Now it's like material that you have. And then finally is the completion
Starting point is 02:06:54 or finishing phase, which is the final edit, get, getting to the version of it. The version of it, that's the one that you can share with the world, if that's something you're going to do. And I've come to realize that by the time you're going into the completion phase, you can have a deadline. And it won't hurt the project. In fact, it might help the project.
Starting point is 02:07:19 And I didn't know that before. So I've worked on projects that have gone longer than they necessarily needed to. And maybe not in the best of the best. interest of the project because I didn't know that I didn't understand that that the timing of that because I because I am so aware of the necessity in the experimental phase did not have a deadline that I assumed that that held through the whole project and and they're not it's not a clear phase one finishes and then you start phase two phase two finishes and you start phase two finishes
Starting point is 02:07:58 and then you start phase three, you move back and forth between them. I'm collecting seeds all the time. I'm always in phase one. And then probably to some degree, there's always some version of experimentation going on, maybe not now, but if something's on a list of things I want to look at, hopefully I'll get to the list and give them some experimentation
Starting point is 02:08:18 and see what they can turn into. And then if they do turn into something, then they get to the crafting phase where it's more, okay, now I have this thing, What do I know about this kind of thing? What can I match this with? What can I use this for? How can I be involved as a craftsman?
Starting point is 02:08:37 And by the end of the crafting phase or deep into the crafting phase, you can start seeing the end. You can start seeing an end. And then you can even dictate an end. But I recommend if you do, just dictate it for you, not for anyone else. because if something comes up where you learn if you set a deadline, a public deadline, and then a new discovery happens along the way and you realize, oh, this could actually be much better than I thought, but I need more time.
Starting point is 02:09:09 It's harder to do that if you set the deadline. So I would say have an internal deadline to get to finish it. That said, if an unusual situation comes up and it's better for everything not to meet that deadline. It's one of those rules that you set the rule to break it if it's what's best for the project. But that was a new thing for me and it helped me a lot. When did you realize that? In collecting the material for the book and thinking about it, when I realized that it was phases, I didn't know any of this. When I started writing the book, I didn't know hardly any of the things in the book.
Starting point is 02:09:51 They're more, most of it would be reverse engineering something that I had experience, a successful experience, using these methods without knowing they were methods, just following my instincts, got me to something good. And then I would look back at, why did I want to do that?
Starting point is 02:10:16 And is there a principle at play that could be of use, outside of this case and how do I explain that and that's what the book is is these reverse engineered principles that have led to good decision-making and trying to make things. The chapter on self-doubt was really interesting to me. Tell me what it says because I can't remember. Well, you know, I'll read the first sentence of it, which is that self-doubt lives in all of us. And while you may wish it was gone, it is there to serve us. And it goes on to describe how to dance with self-doubt in not so many words.
Starting point is 02:11:01 I think, you know, there's a saying that is actually from the landscape of psychology, which is generally discussed in a kind of pathological context, which is if nothing matters, anything goes. This is usually the phrase used to describe people who feel as if like there's no use in living. So just go crazy, often to self-destruct. But there's a light version of this, I realize, where in some sense, the creative process seems to have something to do with, you know, if you're not paying attention to what outcomes are, like who likes it, who doesn't like it, and you're just doing it for you, you make the rule play, I want to delight myself. well then anything goes and you have an infinite rule set there to extract from, at least initially. So as one gets better at their craft, you can imagine self-doubt goes down. I think that's the perception of a lot of people, right?
Starting point is 02:12:02 You get better what you're doing. You know, you can land more free throws as a basketball player. You can hit more home runs as a baseball player. You can produce more, you know, platinum albums as an artist. You, you know, self-confidence goes up, self-doubt goes down. But I think you and I both know a number of people who are successful enough to know that oftentimes there's a mirror image to that where people feel pressure because they did it once. Now they got to do it again.
Starting point is 02:12:27 Yes. Or that you think you're so good at it that it comes easily and you don't have to apply yourself. Arrogance. Yeah. So self-doubt is a it's like a, it's a check on yourself. it can either be really helpful or it can undermine you. So it's something we all have, and if we let it undermine us, then we don't make anything, that's not good. But when used as a balancing tool in our lives, it serves a great function, where we really do.
Starting point is 02:13:10 It's okay to have all the confidence in the world, and still second guess, is this the best to come? can be. You can doubt, I think the phrases in the book, you can doubt your way to a great work, you know, to a masterpiece. Sometimes that questioning allows you to push further than just accepting, I made it so it's good. Yeah, I've encountered more people that seem to be driven by self-doubt and the need to constantly perform and perform again than I have real arrogance, just that's been my experience, fortunately. I've met some arrogant people in my life.
Starting point is 02:13:54 And of course, we never, as a psychiatrist who I admire a lot and bioengineer, who was a guest on this podcast, Carl Dyseroth, said, you know, we never really know how other people feel. I mean, most of the time, we don't even know how we feel. Again, language is a very deprived format for explaining feeling. So we think somebody feels one way, but we can observe, and it could be another, but we observe their behavior. So in the sense of returning to the work, you know, just always returning to process, it sounds like your routine is fairly scripted, at least now. But the things that you
Starting point is 02:14:28 are getting in touch with, wrestling, sleep and dreaming, the ocean, there's a predictability of them because you can access them in a predictable way, but they seem to have a lot of unpredictability in them. The ocean is completely unpredictable. I also listen to a lot of music that I don't know. So I listen to a lot of classical music and less so, but some jazz and a lot of old music that I never heard before. And I like being surprised by music. And sometimes it really catches me off guard. Like I Shazam a lot, you know, when I hear something I like.
Starting point is 02:15:15 Have you ever encountered music that really. really works well live but just does not work in a recording or that is that much better live but the recording is sort of meh you don't have to name name yeah i don't think so i feel like maybe there's some artists who are great live who've never captured it well on record example would probably be the grateful dead's a good example of a band where i feel like their albums are not their strong point but there if you hear live recordings they're really interesting and really different from each other And that's kind of part of what makes the Grateful Dead interesting is their unpredictability. I confess, my sister who listened to the Grateful Dead and I got taken to a few shows when I was younger.
Starting point is 02:15:58 And they would do that, what is it called, Space? It was like these drum solos that would go on for hours and hours. This is like the antithesis of punk rock shows where songs are like 90 to 120 seconds. And I remember thinking like, what is this? What is this? But people I know who love the Grateful Dead love that uncertainty about where that drum thing. I think they do call it space. Forgive me deadheads.
Starting point is 02:16:24 I'm not enough of one to get it right. But they're looking for something. And sometimes they find it. And if you're there when they find it, it feels exciting because it's not just, it's not just following a script. It's like something is really happening. It's a real moment. It's something that I aim for in the studio is to create real moments that when you hear them,
Starting point is 02:16:56 they don't necessarily sound perfect. They sound like something that really happened, and in that moment something happened, and it's a special moment. And you can feel that if they were, to play it again, it wouldn't be like that. There's something really exciting about that. It's how jazz works as well.
Starting point is 02:17:21 And I think some of bringing some of that jazz mentality into other types of music is really interesting. It makes for compelling things because when you hear them, there's a certain amount of, you really have to pay attention to do it. But when you're doing it, you're really paying attention. I don't really know. There's no music. There's no, you know, there's no, there's no map to follow.
Starting point is 02:17:51 And now we're working together to make something. Do I play or not play? When do I play? And you're really paying attention. And can I add, or you go to start adding something and someone else added something. Like, oh, I can't do that. And it's like, everyone's just in this thing, in this, moment experiencing this thing at once that you can feel as a listener and we get to we get to hear
Starting point is 02:18:22 their excitement of finding it and it's thrilling when it happens so i i like that experience i feel like that's kind of what the dead do live they'll play songs in different ways um and again i don't know very much about the dead and it's sort of a newer uh it's newer uh it's newer for me me to listen to the dead. Growing up, I never listened to the dead. But probably because I heard songs on their albums and thought, it doesn't really speak to me. But I think that the albums don't really reflect what's special about them. I think a lot of their shows were recorded, right, or videotaped. Yes, but by fans, which they supported. They supported that everybody come, everybody tape, everybody, you know, trade tapes. It made sense for who that band was. They redefined,
Starting point is 02:19:10 or they define, excuse me, the notion of followers. I mean, people literally gave up their lives or spent much of their lives, literally driving from city to city to follow them. Because it's not like going from city to city to watch a movie over and over. Because it's not a movie. It's different every night.
Starting point is 02:19:29 It's changing. Pretty incredible phenomenon. I don't know if anything else quite like it except cults. And those often don't end well. I think a guy that mixed the punch for the Jones Town Massacre went to my high school. Is that true? I think so, yeah. My sister is really good at all this kind of like 70s, 80s, like dark psychology trivia.
Starting point is 02:19:56 She's a very light person. Did you read Season of the Witch? No. It's about San Francisco in the 60s. It's great. You love it. Great book. I'll have to check it out.
Starting point is 02:20:07 The way you describe experiences going. by in time and or things emerging in time and the creative process being a way of sort of grabbing catching capturing those moments maybe rearranging maybe watering etc i thought was beautifully captured in the in the analogy you gave about a kind of a conveyor belt going by of things right that we think of the creative process like it's going to land in us or we're going to enter it or that we're going to sit there and or chair and like grid our teeth. You know, there's like some Hemingway quote where you just sit there and stare at the page
Starting point is 02:20:45 until the beads of blood form on your forehead or something. Maybe it was him. Maybe it was, sounds like Bukowski or something. Anyway, I'm going to get this wrong. People tell me in the comments. Maybe no one said it. It was a dream. But I love this conveyor belt thing.
Starting point is 02:21:01 That reminds me of being in laboratory, doing experiments thinking I was trying to solve one thing and then seeing something else and then having to make the decision like, that really cool enough to drop everything and go that direction or to kind of spend a night or a week or a career going that way? I mean, these are kind of big decisions given that at least as far as we know, we're going to live 100 years or less. But this idea that we have, you know, thoughts and experiences in our past and we can draw on in, like trying to make good decisions. Do we like grab these things off the conveyor or not? I'm hearing you and I'm starting to realize that being attached to the past might be the worst thing that one could do
Starting point is 02:21:43 in terms of being able to make good decisions in this context. Because we have a kind of a playbook of what's worked and what hasn't worked, but you actually talk about this. There's a passage in the book that I'll just read it, to be aware of the assumption that the way you work is the best way, simply because it's the way you've done it before. I sat with this page for almost 10 full minutes, which is not something I do very often. Maybe you could elaborate on this a little bit.
Starting point is 02:22:15 I mean, we want to have mechanisms and routines we can trust. But this is, I think, an important warning. Yeah. When something works, it's easy to be fooled into believing that's the way to do it or that's the right way. It's just a way, and it's just a way that happened to work that time. And this plays into when you get advice from people who have more experience than you. You explain your situation. They tell you their advice.
Starting point is 02:22:58 The advice that they're giving you is not based on your life or your experience. It's based on their life and their experience. and the stories that they're telling are based on experiences they've had that have very different data points than yours. So maybe they're giving you good advice, but maybe they're giving you good advice for them and not giving you good advice for you. And it's easy when we try something and have a result, a positive result, thinking, this is everybody can do this you know the way i i was vegan for a long time 22 years and then i started eating um i started eating animal protein and then eventually changed my change my diet a few times to the point where i lost a lot of weight the way that i did it worked for me
Starting point is 02:24:00 right before that happened, I did something that I was told that everyone else who did what you did, they all lost weight for whatever reason I didn't. So the idea that we know what's right for someone else, I think it's hard enough to even figure out what's right for ourselves. And if we do somehow crack the code of what's right for us, be happy we have it. still know, I wonder if that's the only way. Maybe there's an even better way that we're not considering, you know, like not to get comfortable with thinking we know how it works, just because
Starting point is 02:24:45 we get the outcome we want. I was raised in science with a principle. It was literally dictated to me as a principle, almost like a rule of religion, which was that the brain is plastic. It can change and learn until you're about 25, and then the critical periods end, and that's it. And this was a rule essentially it was dictated a Nobel Prize, which was very deserved given to my scientific great-grandparents. They deserve it. But I was told there was no changing of brain structure function in any meaningful way after age 25 or so. Turns out that's completely wrong. Sorry, David and Torsten, but they knew it was wrong. Wow. That's interesting. Yeah, it was actively suppressed because of the competitive nature of prizes and discoveries at that time. And a guy
Starting point is 02:25:35 named Mike Mersenik and his student, Greg Reckinzone, were showing that adult plasticity exists. And only now is this really starting to emerge as a theme. Right. Just crazy. Like there were so many reasons and the textbooks said it, we were all told it and it changed our behavior. Now we know this to be completely false. There's plasticity throughout the lifespan. There's limits to it here and there, but it's just far and away a different story. So why would that be the only time that ever happened? Right, exactly. And, but the field was run by a very small cabal of people at that time.
Starting point is 02:26:12 All fields are run by a very small cabal of people who have an investment in things being the way they are now because they're in charge. And one of the great things about getting older is that, well, fortunately everyone eventually ages. And I hope that, you know, David unfortunately passed away. he was lovely. Tornton's lovely. He's still alive. And they would say, I think Torsten would say, yeah, we should have been a little more open or kind in allowing these other ideas. But I think that... But just think about all the years that were wasted with this misunderstanding. Absolutely. Absolutely. And it went beyond that. And there were BBC specials that helped propagate this. And, you know, one of the goals of the podcast has been to try and shed shine light on ideas that
Starting point is 02:26:59 at first seemed crazy. Like, I know you and I are both semi-obsessed with the health benefits of light. And you hear about this stuff like negative ionotherapy. It sounds crazy, right? Sounds like something you would only hear about at Esseland or in Big Sur. Turns out negative ionization therapy for sleep and mood is based on really amazing work out of Columbia by guy named Michael Turman. The Nobel Prize, I think it was in 1916, was given for phototherapy for the treatment of
Starting point is 02:27:25 lupus. Like this idea that certain wavelengths of light. can help treat medical conditions is not a new idea. But somehow we see a red light. We're not used to seeing red lights except in sunsets and on stoplights. And somehow it bothers people or it makes them feel like. Well, it undermines a business model that doesn't take red light into consideration. Right.
Starting point is 02:27:52 Until it does. And then it was and then it's co-opted there. And the place that what I look to is acupuncture. For a lot of years, people said, well, acupuncture, this is like no mechanism, no mechanism. There's a lab at Harvard guy named Chufu Ma, who I know reasonably well, whose laboratory is dedicated to trying to figure out the biological mechanisms of acupuncture. And they're discovering what everyone is known for thousands of years, which is that incredible effects on anti-inflammation, the gut microbiome.
Starting point is 02:28:21 So I have a friend who was having a terrible back problem, and I suggested that he's seen an acupuncturist. And he went to the acupuncturist that I suggested, and his back problem completely healed almost instantaneously. And I asked him, you know, have you been keeping up? Because he had another flare up. He's like, no, I can't go back there because acupuncture doesn't work. I said, well, you saw it work for you.
Starting point is 02:28:51 He's like, yeah, but there's no science. Wow. Yeah. Oh, he's got it. Now there's good science and published in premier journals. It, you know, what's interesting is, this is a little bit of science editorial, but since we like to exchange information about health and things of that sort, the editorial staff of a journal dictates what gets published and what doesn't.
Starting point is 02:29:12 And the premier journals have an outsized effect on what the media covers. And so the beautiful thing is the journal staff now is of the age that they grew up hearing about acupuncture. Hypnosis has a powerful clinical effect if it's done right. Yoga nidra and similar practices. And so the tides are changing, but I sometimes like to take a step back and think, what are we confronted with now that seems crazy that in 10 years, the kids that will be the, because to me they're kids, will be journal editors. I'm like, oh yeah, absolutely, you know, I'm making this up, but putting tuning forks against your head or something like that, like sound wave therapy.
Starting point is 02:29:56 I think when one adopts a stance of, like, we have to filter everything through the limitations of our biology, but also through the sociology of like the way culture goes, it becomes a different story. How do you deal with that? Not just in terms of health, but in terms of thinking about anything. It sounds like you don't spend a whole lot of time,
Starting point is 02:30:22 thinking about what people are going to think is cool or not. No, I can't. You're punk rocker at heart. Yes. You still are. Yes. I can't. I just know what I like and what I don't.
Starting point is 02:30:32 I know it works for me and what doesn't. You know, I try things. And I'm constantly looking for new, better solutions to anything. And wherever they come from, doesn't matter. It could come from, it could come from Stanford or it could come from the guy talking to himself on the street. If it works, I'm good. You know, it doesn't really matter to me at all.
Starting point is 02:30:54 I don't hold, I don't hold any of it tightly. Well, fortunately, there's now a division of the National Institutes of Health called complementary health, complementary and alternative health. And it's amazing. NCCIH is run by a woman who has published on, this is interesting, some of the anti-cancer effects of things like acupuncture. Not that acupuncture can cure all cancers, but real, you know, real data. That I think for a lot of people, you know, certainly of the generation above us,
Starting point is 02:31:34 you know, they just are like not interested. It sheds new light on the Andrew Wiles, the Paul Stanmitses, you know, the wild ones. Ozone therapy or there's so many. There's so many we can look at. I mean, for a long time, nutrition was just thought of as something that doesn't matter what you eat. It's what medicine you take and what, you know, it's like the food is everything. Food, food is a powerful, powerful variable. In the landscape of online nutrition, it's sort of one of the third rails for anyone like myself who's out there on social media.
Starting point is 02:32:14 You do a very good job of putting out posts on Twitter and Instagram, but each day you take it down and you put up a new one. And I don't talk about any, I only talk about, you know, I talk about creative ideas. I don't talk about anything specific related to anything other than, you know, maybe something like, don't believe what you hear. Right, exactly. Well, in the landscape of nutrition, sometimes I now place it through the filter of professional wrestling. You've got your, your vegans and your omnivores and your carnivore MD, and you've got liver king,
Starting point is 02:32:51 and you've got everything in between, right? So you could translate that to any number of different areas. Fashion probably has its people. I'm just not aware of it. Music has theirs and sports has theirs and science has theirs. Characters. So are we all just pro wrestling-like characters in these different domains? And we're taking ourselves and each other way too seriously?
Starting point is 02:33:16 Yeah. We don't know anything. It's all, if someone has an idea and it sounds. It's interesting to you, try it. And if it doesn't work, it's okay, and try something else. You're an empiricist. Yeah, whatever works, whatever works. And if something seems interesting to you and you're excited by it, why not try it?
Starting point is 02:33:35 You know, I try very fringy things. I like in some ways, the more unrealistic it seems, the more interesting it is to me. because I feel like that's getting closer to something that somebody doesn't want me to know, you know. But you're not a big drug guy, like the big psychedelic craze that's happening now and that happened some years back. I'm not, I'm not against it. It's just has never been something that I've done.
Starting point is 02:34:05 Yeah. Yeah, it's an interesting area that's definitely making headway inside of standard academic science and medicine now. So that I'm interested in non-formological approaches to things, whatever they are. I'm a big believer that also that behavioral do's and don'ts first are that they're the most fun to explore. Because in general, unless it's something like, you know, jumping between buildings doing parkour or something, most of the time you're not going to injure or harm yourself. There's more room for iteration than there is with a pill or a potion. Although, you know, certainly pharmacology has its place.
Starting point is 02:34:47 So you've had creative works, certainly within the realm of music, also comedy and producing film and other things. For somebody out there who, of whatever age, maybe they're creating, maybe they, they know they have this creative antennae. The source is outside. What was it that Strummer said? wrote this on the wall of my laboratory. No input, no output. That's Strummer's law. It's written in my laboratory. The people in my lab were so like, what's going on here. I think one guy knew what that was, but it was a picture of him and picture my bulldog and, you know, no input, no output. I don't think I can just stay in a room with four walls and a ceiling and nothing else and create. I mean, I know that
Starting point is 02:35:33 there's a certain number of things in here, but I do think accessing the world is important. the world is giving us clues all the time if we're paying attention that's another part of it like if you're paying attention the thing that you are looking for is being either whispered or screamed at you in the outside world if you're paying attention well and i i forget the exact title of the chapter but um there's a chapter about staying open to clues or or being on the lookout for clues. Now I feel tempted to look for the exact title of that chapter. It's probably look for clues.
Starting point is 02:36:17 It was a good look for clues. It sounds like it sounds right. And since you wrote it, I'm guessing that's right. So do you think there are clues in everywhere? Yes. I think there are clues everywhere. If we pay attention, we'll hear a phrase, we'll trigger a thought,
Starting point is 02:36:34 will see something unexpected. If someone recommends something to you, maybe it's a coincidence. If three people recommend the same thing to you, maybe it's not. You know, who knows? Who knows? I do believe the universe is on the side of creativity
Starting point is 02:36:59 and the universe is supporting things to happen. And they can happen through you or they could happen through someone else. So if you're paying attention, maybe it'll happen through you. We had a guest on the podcast named Justin Sondenberg. He's an expert in the gut microbiome. And he applied something that without knowing, he applied the opposite principle. The opposite is true principle. We were talking about these trillions of gut microbiota that clearly are doing amazing things to create our transmitters and govern our brain and even decision making how much sugar is in our system driving appetite etc and he said you know we think of them as cargo but like maybe we're just vehicles and they're in charge yeah that all of our
Starting point is 02:37:48 interactions like every time we shake hands or touch our eyes we're exchanging gut microbiota and we think of intelligence as a as thinking and intelligence and he's a microbiologist and In all seriousness, he said, maybe we're the ones being manipulated. We're the house cats. And we think here we are. We're falling in love and kissing and shaking hands and washing hands and doing all sorts of things to isolate or connect with one another. And maybe the gut microbiota are really trying to optimize their survival. That's what Laird Hamilton said that at one point in the sauna, that when you're in the sauna, it's really hot.
Starting point is 02:38:26 the feeling that you have of wanting to get out could be the bad critters in your body that can't handle it like let's get out of here are trying to convince you from the inside to get out maybe that's where the that feeling of being compelled to get out comes from so Elon getting us all to Mars might be a bit of um maybe they just want to get to Mars and so they're uh maybe as I'm starting to feel like I'm channeling Lex Friedman here for a moment. No, I think this considering the opposite is really key. And while it might sound mystical to people or a little bit like we're just playing with ideas, it's exactly what you do in science. Someone walks in with a result and says, I found this, this is true. And you say, but what if it's all something else? A good example might be,
Starting point is 02:39:16 here I'm pulling from podcast episodes that we've had, but Aaliyah Crum is this amazing psychologist who works on belief effects. Your knowledge strongly shapes the physiological. outcome. And she had this amazing graduate thesis where she said, what if all of exercise is placebo, all of it? Yeah, it burns some calories and does some things. Turns out this isn't the case. But it turns out a lot of the effects of exercise, positive effects, lowering blood pressure, relieving stress, positive or placebo. But nobody thinks of it like that because we're so attached to calories, burned, et cetera. I think that's a big point that the belief part of it is a huge part of the conversation about everything. You know, what we believe has
Starting point is 02:40:03 power. If we believe we could make something great, the chances of us making something great are better than if we don't believe we can. So I would say any ability to harness your belief on your behalf is a really healthy thing to do. And one thing that you make very clear is that while our own abilities may come into question from time to time, you absolutely believe that the elements from which to create are out there. Absolutely. All the elements are here. Everything is here. We get to pick and choose. We get the conveyor belts going by with the little gifts. And we can first, first we have to notice there's a conveyor belt. Then we notice the gifts. And then that's the starting point.
Starting point is 02:40:58 And then we may even feel empowered enough to grab one of the gifts and open it up and see what's inside. And then maybe that started something really beautiful that we wouldn't have done. Everything that I make or have made has always been based on something that I see or hear that allows me to see something that I didn't see before. So I was going to ask you whether or not it's important to be happy in order to create, but certainly a lot of people that were unhappy were still able to create. But the more I listen to you, it seems that it's really about an ability to pay attention. Yes.
Starting point is 02:41:46 So if I'm unhappy or if I'm happy may not be as relevant as whether or not I'm able to stay undistracted. Yes. I would say being able to stay present in the work is probably the most important part of it. And how you feel is less of an issue unless how you feel gets in the way of you feeling how the work makes you feel. Do you know what I'm saying? If you're in a lot of pain and you're looking at a piece of art, it may be hard to know, how that art makes you feel because the big signal in your body is the physical pain. I'm sure there are some people who can do that too, who can even through the physical pain can feel it.
Starting point is 02:42:36 There's this idea of transmutation of taking one emotion and contorting it and co-opting it into another action in an adaptive way. But this idea of distraction being a problem, this really resonates. I think when I think of times of great productivity is when I was able to be undistracted. I could also see how success can be its own distraction. This is often discussed in the context of fighting sports where someone starts making a lot of money and pretty soon their focus becomes all the things they can access with their success as opposed to the thing that got them there in the first place.
Starting point is 02:43:10 Keeping an underdog mentality. Yeah. Before we conclude, I do want to ask you about one other aspect of process, which is meditation. Meditation is interesting to me because when we close our eyes, as most meditations are done, and we focus on our brain, our brain has no sensation. I wouldn't say we focus on our brain. Oh, or we focus on something other than our normal experience? How would you define meditation?
Starting point is 02:43:39 Well, there's different. There are different types of meditation. Usually, either way, I would say there's no form of meditation where we're focused on our brain. Okay. Good. I'm glad we disagree. I would say, here is. the things that happen. We either are engaging in a mantra, which would be a version of
Starting point is 02:44:03 almost like creating a trance for ourselves, not unlike listening to something when we go to sleep that would distract our conscious mind from participating. We would be overriding our talking mind with just a sound that we're generating or a word or a phrase, series of phrases. Meta meditation is a loving kindness meditation with phrases. Could be that or it could be focused on the breath. But the purpose of being focused on the breath is to not hear the self-talk that we normally have. It's a single pointed focus exercise in those that I described. The other version is an awareness meditation where you're closing your eyes and you're being with whatever is and noticing.
Starting point is 02:45:06 So if we were to do it now, and you could do it eyes open or eyes closed with an awareness practice. but the first thing that I would do is I would feel a little ringing in my ears. It might be from the electronic equipment around us, and I don't mean that I hear the sound. It's like a vibration. I hear cars passing in the distance. Let's see what else comes up. I can feel feeling in my chest.
Starting point is 02:45:40 I can feel... This part of my face, not sure why. Feels like it's related to my jaw. More car sounds. I'm aware of a little feeling of warmth. So now I would say the room feels a bit warm. I wasn't aware of that before when I wasn't just being with what's happening. Feel a little itch on my left shoulder.
Starting point is 02:46:19 So that would be an awareness practice, which is another kind of meditation where you're just paying attention. what's going on. There's no story. There's no this means this, none of those things. Just like an inventory almost of everything that comes up when it comes up and you do that for a period of time. But in all of those cases, in the example of doing the awareness meditation or doing a mantra meditation or focusing on the breath, in none of them am I thinking and none of them my concentrating on, I'm being aware of the, of sense perceptions in the awareness one, or in the other meditations, I'm doing a practice so that I'm not aware of thinking about anything else. When do you start meditating and how often do you meditate now?
Starting point is 02:47:17 I learned when I was 14 and I started with TM and that's probably the, the meditation. that I've done the most in my life, and I come back to, although I try many different kinds, and also different physical forms of meditation, Tai Chi, things like that. I meditated for five or six years, and then I stopped when I went to school to university, and then I started again several years later, and when I started again, I realized how profound it wasn't in me that I had done it when I did it. So I usually have some sort of a, some sort of a practice. In some ways, the beach walks could be a form of meditation.
Starting point is 02:48:04 But for me, typically I would wake up. It would be the first thing I would do during that sort of in-between time, maybe go out in the sun, close my eyes, and meditate before starting my day. if I'm doing it twice a day, the second time would probably be right before dinner, if I'm doing it on a regular schedule. Then if I find myself on an airplane, I might meditate for an hour. I can remember one time meditating the entire flight from New York to L.A. Just was a great opportunity to do a deep dive.
Starting point is 02:48:42 And time passes. You lose track of time. You know, you don't even know. it's like going to sleep and waking up. You don't feel like that was eight hours. You know, it's just time stops. Not always, but when it does, it's a great feeling. Yeah, you've sent me some meditations,
Starting point is 02:49:01 including the one that you did on that transatlantic, or transcontinental flight. And I've been trying to do longer and longer meditations, but I've always meditated a little bit, but your meditation practice is one that I'm starting to adopt. maybe we could commit to you to give us suggestions of one or two and we can link out to them for listeners. I'm sure they'd appreciate that.
Starting point is 02:49:22 And there's also meditation-like practices to do that involve, like there's something called the surgical series from the Monroe Institute, which I used when I had a surgery. You listened to this recording and it both allows your body to hear. heal much faster and remove some of the trauma that goes on when, you know, getting cut open. It's traumatic. But just through listening to certain things, you can have a really powerful effect to heal much faster. I remember I was about to be put under for a surgery and my eyes were closed and I wasn't. communicating with anyone there because I was going inside and my wife was with me.
Starting point is 02:50:27 And they came in and they said, oh, so they already gave Rick the sedative because he's ready to wheel in. She's like, I didn't give him anything. He's like, but look at his numbers. Like, yeah. I love it. Yeah. It's an amazingly powerful practice.
Starting point is 02:50:44 I like because anyone can cultivate Shana. Absolutely. Absolutely. And there's no good or bad version. It really is just if you learn a technique and show up and do it, it works. Well, I love that you're so willing to share what you do and your process. And I just want to say thank you for a number of things. I want to thank you for the music you've created and that you are to create
Starting point is 02:51:12 because we want to be still ongoing. Certainly for your time today and share. sharing your thought process and a bit of what goes into this incredible creative process. And I want to thank you for writing the book. You know, I don't talk about or feature many books on the podcast. It's just not something we typically do. But I've seen a little bit of the evolution of it. And then I've seen it now and read through it in its final form twice, as I mentioned.
Starting point is 02:51:39 I'm going to continue to read through it again. It is one of those books where it is so filled with gems, like every chapter. I could take notes on this and take notes on this. And it's assembled in a very digestible way that allows people to extract the meaningful parts in every chapter. And there's so many in a way that's very straightforward. So I love the book. So thank you for doing it because you certainly didn't have to write a book.
Starting point is 02:52:08 But I'm so happy that you did. And I know that I've already benefited. I know so many people are going to benefit. It's an amazing book. And I couldn't help but put my book. my neuroscience lens on it, but I also, about halfway through, I learned to discard my preexisting lens a bit and start to see things through what I think is a different perspective. So I just want to thank you for being such an incredible portal and also for being an amazing friend.
Starting point is 02:52:32 Thank you. I love you. I'm so happy to be here with you. And anytime I get to see you, it's a good day. Likewise. Thank you for joining me today for my discussion with Rick Rubin, all about creativity and the creative process. Please also be sure to check out his new book, The Creative Act, A Way of Being by Rick Rubin. As I mentioned earlier, it's an incredible book and such a wealth of knowledge for you creative types out there, for those of you that seek to be more creative or to understand the creative process generally. And as I mentioned at the beginning of today's episode, Rick has very generously offered to answer your questions about creativity. So if you have questions for Rick Rubin about creativity or the creative process
Starting point is 02:53:10 or anything else for that matter, please put those in the comment section on YouTube by writing in capital letters, question for Rick Rubin, and then please put the question there. That will make it easier for me to find those questions. I will record the conversation where I ask Rick those questions. And of course, we will post his answers to those questions on our Huberman Lab Clips channel. If you're learning from Ender & Enjoying this podcast,
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Starting point is 02:55:02 all platforms, Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn. If you haven't already subscribed to our neural network newsletter, that's a monthly newsletter. It's completely zero cost and it includes summaries of podcast episodes, as well as toolkits for things like enhancing your sleep, enhancing your focus and ability to learn, hormone support, fitness, and on and on. You simply go to Hubermanlap.com, go to the menu, click on the menu, and scroll down to newsletter, provide your email, and you can start receiving our monthly neural network newsletter. Thank you for joining me for today's discussion with Rick Rubin, all about creativity and the creative process. And as always, thank you for your interest in science.

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