Huberman Lab - LIVE EVENT Q&A: Dr. Andrew Huberman Question & Answer in Chicago, IL
Episode Date: December 13, 2023Recently I had the pleasure of hosting a live event in Chicago, IL. This event was part of a lecture series called The Brain Body Contract. My favorite part of the evening was the question & answer pe...riod, where I had the opportunity to answer questions from the attendees of each event. Included here is the Q&A from our event in Chicago, IL at The Chicago Theatre. We'll be hosting four live events in Australia in February 2024. Limited tickets remain for our show in Melbourne on February 10, 2024, and our second show in Sydney at the Aware Super Theatre on February 18, 2024. For tickets and event details, please visit https://www.hubermanlab.com/events. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Introduction (00:02:42) What Is Your Best Advice to Keep My Brain Healthy in Old Age? (00:07:07) How Can I Optimize Sleep While Working 24 Hour Shifts? (00:10:17) How Does Hypnosis Therapy Work? (00:17:15) Psychedelics in Clinical Therapy (00:30:23) How Has Your Podcast Changed Your Life? (00:35:21) What Do You Feel Is the Next Big Thing in the Health Space? (00:44:31) Daylight Saving Time: Is It Worth the Productivity Trade-Off? (00:46:34) Enhancing Neuroplasticity: Strategies for a 19-Year-Old College Student (00:50:17) How Can We Transform the American Education System to Be More Effective? (00:54:06) Conclusion Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac Disclaimer
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Huberman Lab podcast where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
Recently, the Huberman Lab hosted a live event at the Chicago Theatre in Chicago, Illinois.
The event consisted of a lecture entitled The Brain Body Contract, followed by a question and answer session.
We wanted to make sure that the question and answer session was available to everybody regardless of who could attend in person. I also want to make sure to thank the sponsors of that event, which were AG1 and 8 sleep.
8 sleep makes smart mattress covers with cooling, heating, and sleep tracking capacity.
One of the key things to getting a great night sleep is to make sure that the temperature
of your sleeping environment is correct, and that's because in order to fall and stay
deeply asleep, your body temperature actually has to drop by about one to three degrees.
And in order to wake up feeling refreshed and energized, your body temperature actually
has to increase by about one to three degrees.
With eight sleep, you can program the temperature of your sleeping environment in the beginning,
middle, and end of your night.
It has a number of other features like tracking the amount of rapid eye movement and slow wave
sleep that you get.
Things that are essential to really dialing in the perfect night sleep for you.
I've been sleeping on an eight-sleep mattress cover for well over two years now, and it
has greatly improved my sleep.
I fall asleep far more quickly.
I wake up far less often in the middle of the night, and I wake up feeling far more refreshed
than I ever did prior to using an eight-sleep mattress cover.
If you'd like to try eight-sleep, you can go to 8-Sleep.com slash Huberman to save $150 off
their pod 3 cover.
8-Sleep currently ships to the USA, Canada, UK, select countries in the EU and Australia.
Again, that's 8-Sleep.com slash Huberman.
AG1 is an all-in-one vitamin mineral probiotic drink.
I've been taking AG1 since 2012, so I'm delighted that they sponsored the live event.
The reason I started taking AG1 and the reason I still drink AG1 once or twice a day is that
it provides all of my foundational nutritional needs.
That is, it provides insurance that I get the proper amounts of those vitamins, minerals,
probiotics, and fiber to ensure optimal mental health, physical health, and performance.
If you'd like to try AG1, you can go to drinkag1.com slash Huberman to claim a special offer.
They're giving away 5 free travel packs plus a year supply of vitamin D3K2.
Again, that's drinkag1.com slash Huberman to claim that special offer.
And now without further ado, the question and answer session from our live event at the
Chicago Theatre in Chicago,
Illinois.
I turned 70 soon, was your best advice to keep my brain healthy in old age.
A terrific question.
The advice I would give to you as somebody about to reach 70 is the same advice I give to
anybody, which is that essentially all of the things that improve cardiovascular health
and perfusion of your bodily tissues are going to improve functionality of the brain.
Because, of course, the brain has a rich consumer of fuel,
requires very good portals to deliver those fuels
and that capillaries, microcapillaries, and arteries,
and so forth need to be cleaning clear.
That's the big one.
This is why I think the prescription now
is that's generally accepted. And here I'm borrowing from my friend Peter Atia but about
150 or maybe as much as 200 minutes of so-called zone two cardio per week.
Movement that you can just barely carry out a conversation is going to be very
useful. One thing that's often not discussed is that load-bearing exercise of
some sort is going to be better provided your body can tolerate it but you
should do something that you can do consistently over those
long durations without injuring yourself.
But there's a very interesting literature about how load-bearing movements actually generate
the release of hormones.
Yes, hormones from bone that actually cross the blood-brain barrier and may influence
health of neurons in brain areas
such as the hippocampus.
And there I'm extending from preclinical data
and animals to humans, but there's some human data
starting to emerge that that's true.
It's also true and there's a wonderful paper out
just today or yesterday from Dr. Andy Galpins lab
and collaborators talking about how if you look
at cognitive health, it's
highly correlated with things that relate to strength.
And that is not to say that you should just do strength training exercise, but we know
that all people, truly all people, should be doing some sort of resistance training two
or three times per week.
And we know that grip strength and increasing asymmetry and grip strength between the two hands is one of the indicators
of deficits in control from the brain out to the periphery
and it's correlated with cognitive decline.
There's also some interesting data about how
when the feet become floppy and kind of flaccid
or the lack of ability to extend one's toes,
I'm still working, I've been wearing this toe spreader thing
as anyone tried those, those hurt.
Those hurt, I broke this foot a bunch of times, but I'll tell you, when you get better
at spreading your toes, it's really exciting.
And it's really exciting for several reasons.
It's really exciting because there's more stability in your feet, you can run and move and
do things better without pain.
But in addition to that, believe it or not, just as one of the first things that they're going to do when you come into this world
is scrape the bottom of your foot and look for the Babinsky reflex, which
is a neural transmission reflex, as all reflexes are.
But it's testing the, essentially, the health of the nervous system that over time, you
know, again, there are many correlates of dementia, many, many correlates of dementia, but
an inability to finally control the extremities is certainly one of them.
So strength training, cardiovascular training, these are kind of stereotyped answers for your
question, and yet those are really the prime movers against cardiovascular and cerebral
vascular disease.
And then of course, I'd be remiss if I didn't throw in something that was a little bit
more edgy, because that's what I do.
You know, they're interesting data about the use of drugs to increase the citacolene
transmission, right?
I mean, I was visiting a Nobel Prize winner at Columbia to learn about his incredible
work some years ago and saw that he chewed no fewer than five pieces of nicorette gum,
something I don't recommend.
During this short meeting, and I said,
what is this all about?
And he said, well, I don't smoke anymore
because I don't want lung cancer, but he said nicotine
is a protective against Parkinson's and Alzheimer's.
I was like, how can that be?
And he said, well, it decreases in neuromodulation.
Dopamine is hydrocholine, correlated with cognitive decline,
keep your brain sharp, and so on and so forth.
So I'm not encouraging people to take nicotine,
it increases blood pressure, it is a constriction.
But it's an interesting consideration,
some of the emerging cholinergic and dopaminergic drugs
are ways to increase citacolene and dopamine
are certainly intriguing.
And I won't tell you who that person is,
but his name is Richard Axel.
Next question.
Yeah.
How can I optimize sleep while working 24 hours shifts as a firefighter, 24 hours on, 48
hours off?
Okay, and this probably also pertains to new parents, and it probably also pertains to anyone
that's going through a particularly stressful time where you're microwaking throughout the
night, so not just firefighters.
So what do we know?
We know, based on really good data, that shift work is bad for us.
It's just bad.
We're a diurnal species.
We're not nocturnal.
But thank you, thank you, thank you, shift workers,
because you essentially keep us all safe and make the world
go round.
And so we need you.
And we want you healthy.
So one of the main things is that you can make sure that you stay on the same sleep wake
schedule, schedule, excuse me, for at least two weeks.
It's the swing shift that's really the worst.
You can tell your boss, I said that.
And if they won't agree and you're doing this 24 hour on 24 hour off,
there are a couple of things that are really important.
First of all, the main way to wake up your nervous system,
even though it might not feel like a triple espresso,
is going to be that light exposure to the eyes.
And if you can't get it from sunlight
is going to be from any bright artificial light.
I'm not a huge proponent of the daylight simulators.
They're very expensive.
You can simply buy a 900 lux LED far more inexpensively.
I don't have any relationship to any company that sells these,
but you can find them on Amazon or wherever
you happen to prefer to purchase things.
Or you can just get really close to a bright light.
Anytime you're trying to wake up, even if you don't feel that it helps you wake up very much,
mostly for the melatonin suppression,
because bright light will very acutely suppress melatonin.
And then the real question from shift workers
always seems to be, should I catch up on sleep?
Or is that going to be problematic?
Should I just stay up into the next cycle?
And the answer there is a little bit nuanced,
but the best answer I can give
across the board is if this is a pattern that you're going to be in regularly over say months
or years, then get whatever sleep you can. Get whatever sleep you can. If it's something
that you're doing somewhat acutely like you're traveling to Europe and you're just going
to force yourself to stay up a day and a half, then in that case I would say no need to get the maximum amount
of sleep, just try and stay with the local schedule. We have an entire episode about shift work
that somehow maybe didn't get as much recognition as it should have for shift workers and we'll try
and get it out in better form. We don't always succeed in top-carding things in a way that gets
them out to the most people.
One thing I will say is an opportunity to announce that our website, hubermanlab.com,
is completely revamped, so it's highly searchable, it will take you to exact time stamps, and
now you can segregate out time stamps from newsletters, from all this stuff, so thanks
to a lot of effort by my amazing team, you can now navigate that site with,
it's a real precision.
So if you want to say ADHD, Adderall,
kids yes, no, for instance,
it will take you to precise time stamps
that will address those issues.
Next question, please.
How does hypnosis therapy work?
Well, this is a very interesting topic to me
because my colleague Associate Chair of Psychiatry at Stanford,
David Spiegel, is a world expert in hypnosis and its neural underpinnings and its use for
clinical applications.
His father was a hypnotist, also a psychiatrist.
And when people hear hypnotism, they think of stage hypnotism
and being up on stage and doing things you don't want to
in front of other people.
But really, it's when we're talking about clinical applications
or wellness applications of hypnosis,
we're talking about self-directed hypnosis.
I really wish there was a better name
because I don't think hypnosis is going to advance very far
as a field, frankly, because everyone thinks hypnosis,
and it would be like if psychedelics were just called drugs, right, we were taught in the 80s that drugs are bad,
and that your brain on drugs looks like an omelette,
and that's bad, and if you like omelettes,
they're still bad, and drugs of abuse are bad,
and actually, I hope we can talk briefly
about psychedelics at some point,
because I do think there's a little bit of a runaway train around the topic of psychedelics.
Now, I think we need to be very careful how we approach that entire landscape. But hypnosis
essentially works by allowing someone to place their own brain into this very unique state.
Earlier, we were talking about neuroplasticity, and we talked about the fact that neuroplasticity
about neuroplasticity, and we talked about the fact that neuroplasticity involves intense focus, followed by deep rest in the form of deep sleep or non-sleep deep rest, maybe even
Rick Rubin and just kind of like lay in there.
Hypnosis is different because hypnosis is in a state in which your focus is very narrow,
the context is very narrow, but you're very, very relaxed.
So maybe the Ruben example of being brain active
and body very still is a bit more like hypnosis,
to be fair.
Why would it be the case that David Spiegel and his dad
have literally a tool that is approved
by the psychiatric association,
the major American psychiatric association, the major American Psychiatric Association,
where they can figure out how hypnotizable you are
by having you look up and try and close your eyelids
while continuing to look up.
The so-called Spiegel Eye Roll Test
sounds pretty wacky, right?
This is like TikTok level wacky.
Well, the reason is you have cranial nerves,
so they sit more or less near your neck,
that allow you to direct your focus, your eyes upward, and then you have cranial nerves that have your
eyes go down, and the ones that, the cranial nerves that drive your eyes up are associated
with alertness and eyes open, no surprise, and the cranial nerves that are associated with
pointing your eyes down and closing your eyelids are associated with what, with drowsiness
sleep and lack of alertness
There's sort of a push pull in the autonomic nervous system and
Spiegel Spiegel's daddy and him figured out because they're geniuses
That if somebody can maintain upward gaze while closing their eyelids two things happen one
You'll see the whites of their eyes and it's pretty creepy
two things happen. One, you'll see the whites of their eyes and it's pretty creepy. Two, that means they're highly hypnotizable because that is a reflection of the probability that
they can enter a brain state in which they are both very awake and very relaxed. Pretty
cool. Now, if that sounds kind of wacky because you're just looking at the periphery, keep
in mind that one of the primary entry points for diagnosing concussion is to shine a light in one eye
and have that pupil constrict and then see whether or not the other pupil constricts.
The so-called consensual or pupillary reflex. Although technically, and I've been bothered by this
from day one, it should be called the non-consensual pupil reflex because the other eye doesn't have a choice
if everything's working. In any case, if you have a hard hit to the head, you'll see that you shine light in one eye,
the people constricts, and the other one stays really dilated, and you go, okay, get this
person in the emergency room.
Because there's been a severing of the connections between the two sides of the brain.
So looking in the eyes and trying to deduce what might be happening more centrally within
the caverns of the skull and the brain is not a new thing.
It is a primary diagnostic tool in neurology.
It's also how your parents knew that you were taking drugs when you came in the door because
your people were like that big.
And that reflects a difference in autonomic arousal.
It basically stimulates, as people dilate their pupils, this is also why the story about Bella Dona,
people intentionally dilating their pupils
to trick people into thinking that they were attracted
to them, thought about this one a lot too.
It's like not a precursor to good relationship.
It's like someone's using their physiology
to pretend that they're attracted to the other person,
things that they're attracted so that they might become attracted.
Anyway, it's a recipe for failure,
almost as bad as most of the dating apps.
Oh, I would know I'm not on them,
but from what I hear.
Okay, so where were we hypnosis?
When you are in a state of elevated attention,
but very relaxed, guess what?
Neural plasticity occurs much faster
because you're essentially marrying the two states that
are normally divorced, which are heightened levels of attention first and then depress.
You're essentially putting the nervous system into a more, I wouldn't call it hyperplastic
state, but a more plastic state.
And for people that are highly hypnotizable, the success rates, for instance, smoking cessation,
pain relief are pretty impressive.
The Spiegel Lab has published a number of these.
So I think Self-Hypnosis is a very interesting tool.
I just hope that they rename it
so that it stands a chance of getting off the ground.
I mean, one of the things that you learn
as a public facing educator is that what things are called
has a great impact on whether or not they achieve any kind of use in the world.
Hence why I decided to swallow the difficult pill of partially renaming Yoganidra as non-sleep depressed.
I don't like to do that. Yoganidra has more than a thousand year history. But when people hear Y yoga nidra unless they are very open-minded, they hear magic carpet.
They hear levitation and it's unfortunate and that's not how I feel, but for
years I talked about yoga nidra. It's so cool. It's like sleep state, but it's
like, yeah, like yoga nidra, okay. And, but if you come from a culture where
that's discussed, they're all about it. And so non-sleep deep rest, you know,
I felt like, all right, leave my name out of it,
you know, I'll be dead eventually. I mean, I'm in this line of advisors, right? I'm like approaching 50.
I'm like, I'm winning in my lineage, but should I be fortunate enough to, you know, live past, you know,
bullet cancer or car crash far enough, then, you know, NSDR hopefully will persist, and I don't need a piece of it.
It's just the hope is that people will learn to put themselves in the brain
states that can be adaptive for them. So be nice if someone could come up with
something other than hypnosis, I think Spiegel would agree. Super interesting
psychedelics as medicine to be done with somebody with experience, worried about
unlocking mental health conditions. Yeah, you should be. What does the research say and what are your thoughts?
Okay.
Barbed wire question, we like that.
Psychedelics.
Well, let's just back up a little bit
and acknowledge one thing that's more important
than psychedelics or anything else
when it comes to
rewiring the brain, which is that ultimately rewiring of the brain is about shifts
in neuromodulators, dopamine serotonin, epinephrine, norepinephrine, acetylcholine,
and it's no coincidence that you know SSRIs, selective serotonin, reuptake
inhibitors, have been one of the major entry points for attempts
to treat things like depression over the last 20, 30 years,
or more.
When I was in college, that's when the book
listening to Prozac came out.
But prior to that, there's a long history of drugs,
prescription drugs, in that case,
to change levels of neuromodulators,
like serotonin or acetylcholine or dopamine,
in an attempt
to cure or treat a disease.
But keep in mind, despite the varied success of SSRIs, the topic unto itself, that there's
a strong belief, and there has been for a long time, that if SSRIs worked, it wasn't because
the depressed brain is deficient in serotonin, but rather because increasing serotonin
offer the opportunity to increase neuroplasticity.
It says a different way of thinking about it.
That's a segue for saying that when you say psychedelics,
that's a broad category of drugs.
Nowadays people even lump ketamine into that,
although technically it's not a psychedelic,
but the sort of classic, if you will,
psychedelics are LSD,
like Sergio Casadilla,
and Silasocybin,
aka mushrooms, although it comes in other sources as well.
The major effect of psilocybin is to stimulate a particular serotonin receptor,
which has elevated density in particular brain areas,
and indeed there are many recent clinical trials, many.
Let's just say, let's say, 12 to 20 good-sized clinical trials done in diverse locations on the planet,
many at Johns Hopkins and UCSF, some in Switzerland, showing that enhancing,
and here you're using the mechanistic language, enhancing the transmission
of the release of serotonin and activating
particular serotonin receptors leads
to an opportunity for more what neuroplasticity.
Now, I say it that way, not to add a bunch of word soup,
but because the real question is whether or not
the experience that one has while
under the influence of psychedelics is critical to the clinical outcome or a growing idea just
as a hypothesis, I think is equally interesting is that it's the serotonin itself and that
the things you see, the things you hear, the things you experience
are not relevant.
Now I have some experience with psychedelics.
I had a bad time on psychedelics as a teenager.
I was also pretty wayward youth, but I've had a bad trip on LSD.
For years I was scared that people were going to dose me with LSD after that.
It was so bad.
I think across the board, we can say,
kids doing psychedelics just seems like a bad idea.
Their brains are already hyperplastic.
If you have a predisposition to bipolar type issues
or schizophrenia, it can exacerbate those issues.
And certainly, certainly, certainly,
if you don't have adequate support in the form of somebody
that can guide you through the sessions, as well as the pre-sessions,
which are not done with psychedelics, as well as the so-called integration afterwards,
it can be a really slippery slope.
I know examples of people really suffering in the aftermath of psychedelic journeys.
Now, there are a few interesting points as well, and it wouldn't be fair if I didn't say that several, if not many individuals, who have had so-called treatment-resistant depression,
at least in these clinical trials, have reported feeling far better after psilocybin therapy.
But that psilocybin therapy was done with several precessions, then the psychedelic sessions
then several aftercessions, and it's not always the
case that things turn out well.
So I think it's early days.
What is interesting, and I think important, is to recognize that psilocybin and the structure
of psilocybin is very similar to serotonin itself, very similar.
But it activates particular receptors.
A lot of people don't realize how similar to serotonin it is.
And that microdosing psilocybin, I should say the data on microdosing psilocybin,
something that's increasingly popular, is not particularly compelling. It's not clear
what it does, it's not clear if it's of any use. And I think the danger here is that
we end up in a situation as we did with, frankly frankly with cannabis. And by the way, I'm not somebody who demonizes cannabis. I think
it has its uses for certain people. But very high THC concentration cannabis can be a
problem, especially with people that have a predisposition of psychosis. And anyone
that tells you that cannabis is addictive, just say, great, like don't smoke weed for
a week. Let's see how you do. Yeah.
And let's go on a plane trip together.
Right?
And how are you sleeping?
And, you know, so I think the chronic cannabis users are starting to take note of some of the issues it causes.
But again, there are some clinical applications.
Now, when it comes to the sort of the high speed train psychedelics, like DMT,
and that's far far fewer far less data
available there. And then MDMA assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of PTSD.
They're the data I think are more robust and I think we're likely to see
legalization or at least decriminalization in the next few years but keep in
mind that MDMA is methaline-dioxy, meth and fetamine. So for people that like
dopaminergic states,
it's a particularly compelling estate to be in
so much so that they could overindulge an MDMA,
and then there's the issues of purity,
and I could do a five-hour podcast on this right now.
So I think the important point is approach with caution,
kids absolutely not.
And I think it's an exciting landscape, very exciting.
And whereas a discussion like the one we just had
would have gotten me fired a few years ago.
I mean, Stanford has big programs now,
a lot of philanthropy, federal grants,
and many laboratories focused on the study of psychedelics.
So, I would say stay tuned,
but keep in mind that increasing neuromodulator levels
very acutely, whether or not it's with a prescription drug or whether or not it's with psychedelics
is really what lies at the heart of the recovery, the potential recovery, I should say, or the
negative effects that happen to occur in anyone that embarks on the psychedelic journey.
Do people who meditate need less sleep than people who don't?
Oh, that's interesting.
Well, we know that from a study by Wendy Suzuki
who I believe if NYU made the right choice,
and I think they did, is now the dean of arts and sciences
at NYU, she ran a memory lab for a long time.
She has data showing that even 10, I think it's 13, but as
little as 10 minutes of meditation, so to be sitting still, breathing, focusing on
your breathing, directing one's attention to third eye center, et cetera. We
don't have a third eye. The pineal is not to be the third eye, but I don't know
why. It's a light-sensitive tissue deep in the brain, but maybe that's why
they call it the third eye. But in any case, that type of practice has been shown to increase memory, focus, AK learning.
But there's some interesting footnotes in those papers, which point to the fact that when
people meditate too close to bedtime, oftentimes they have trouble sleeping because basically
meditation is a focusing exercise.
It's a perceptual exercise. I don't think a meditation is a focusing exercise. It's a perceptual exercise.
I don't think a meditation is anything mystical.
It's a self-directed shift in your perception to what?
To your interoception, to your internal state,
as opposed to anything beyond the confines of your skin.
There's nothing mystical about that.
And then in that state, your brain starts to generate
patterns of activity that are distinct from when you're
sharing your attention
between what's going on internally
and what's going out, what's happening out in the world.
Right, I think we need to demystify what people have cloaked
as mystical and when I say cloaked,
I don't think that the people that meditate
for thousands of years thought that there was
anything mystical about it,
but sometimes what we experience there can feel mystical.
So if you have trouble sleeping, I recommend doing some sort of non-sleep, deep rest practice,
like NSDR, Yogyakaya, Yogyaknidra, although those are different.
NSDR generally lacks the intention piece, and the ones that I put in the world, we've
stripped away the intentions and we've stripped away any kind of language
that would make you think that there was some sort of,
let's just say, like cultural aspect to it.
Which again, is admittedly a bit unfair
to the origin practice of Yoganidra,
but the problem again is that in Yoganidra,
you're gonna be doing intentions and hearing language
that for some people, not all, might divorce you from the wish to do it.
In any case, non-sleep deep rest on it any time of day,
but especially if you fall asleep in the middle of the night,
is going to be useful for helping you fall back asleep,
whereas meditation, again, is going to enhance your level of focus.
So I don't think it's a good practice if you're if you have trouble sleeping now to finally answer a question if you
Meditate can you afford to sleep less?
My friend Matt Walker would say no
However many of us can't sleep as much as we want to and many of us are not like Matt where we can wake up without an alarm clock
I'll just keep sleeping and sleeping
Unless I went to bed at like eight o'clock
This is actually interesting. There's an asymmetry to your sleeping. Unless I went to bed at like eight o'clock, this is actually interesting.
There's an asymmetry to your sleep needs.
If you go to bed, remember that old adage,
every hour before midnight is worth two after.
Well, it turns out that for people
that are meant to be early risers, going to bed at eight,
you'll wake up at three or four feeling great.
You go to bed at 11, you feel groggy,
and there are good reasons to explain that.
But Matt would say that you need your sleep period.
I'm more of the camp based on my read of the data,
and yes, we are allowed to disagree and still be friends.
It's allowed.
In fact, Matt's going to do a series on sleep with our podcast,
even though he has a terrific podcast of his own,
where we will maybe debate a little bit of this,
that there
are ways that you can at least replace the feeling of wakefulness that you would have
lost if you don't sleep enough.
And for me, really, that's why NSDR became such an attractive tool to do for 10 or 30
minutes each morning if I didn't sleep enough the night before.
I first learned about Yogan-Nidja actually at a Diction Recovery Center, trauma recovery center in Florida in 2017. I have a friend, a super talented
trauma therapist who has also treats addiction that I've sent many, many people to. And he
has this kind of seemingly like wizard ability to get people who have been addicts, to not be addicts. And one of the tools he uses is Yoganidra every morning
for 30 minutes and eventually an hour,
which seems like a lot.
But then he also has these people wake up very early,
maybe an hour before they would normally wake up
and go into that liminal state between sleep and wakefulness.
Now, my experience is that 10 to 20 minutes of NSDR,
Yogan-Eedra, is sufficient to offset some sleep loss
and allow at least me to function.
Many people report the same.
We have a study going with the sleep laboratory.
It's Stanford to explore this in more depth.
And what I can tell you, because I'm involved in some of this work,
is that there are several military units
because they have no opportunity to get sleep
because they're working that have to rely on tools
like this in order to be able to function
at their highest level.
And I'm sure they will tell you as I will
that they'd prefer to get eight to 10 hours of sleep.
But guess what, they can't.
And so I think that's the important takeaway
is that we don't get to pick how much we sleep
unless you're gonna be
Completely neurotic about your sleep hygiene, which makes you kind of a less interesting person in life is what I'm told
You know going to bed at 8 is great
Like some or most of the time, but you got to stay up every once in a while
I mean after they release chimp empire on Netflix. I discovered the NSDR as a very valuable tool because, and by the way,
chimpanzee and succession have a lot of parallels. And if you watch one, I sort of interleave
chimpanzee succession, chimpanzee succession, and you start to realize, like, whoa, like
we're pretty similar. And then you look at the world differently, I promise. Your podcast
has positively changed the lives of so many people, including me.
How has it changed your life?
Okay.
I wasn't expecting that one.
Thank you, Samantha.
Well, first of all, I mean, as this little 11-year-old told me, I mean, this is essentially,
I don't know what I've done my whole life.
I'm a fairly private person.
Believe it or not, I'm pretty introverted.
I spent a lot of time alone.
And I think that's required for me to,
I basically have four modes.
Four modes.
One, I'm either reading myself through sleep and NSDR
to do one of the other three modes. Maybe there's a fifth mode, or I'm in one
of these other three modes, which is I'm either foraging for information, organizing
that information or dispersing that information, or getting ready to do it all over again.
And then there's this relaxation vacation thing that they keep telling me about, but then
I went to Italy and then like Rick and I, just like hung out there. And it didn't feel like work.
I also discovered some really great podcasts.
I don't know, I think one of the coolest podcasts out there, if you like rock and roll, which
I love, is a history of 500 songs, but Andrew Hickey's podcast on rock and roll.
I like the Nerdy podcast.
It's like a graduate or an education in rock and roll.
It's so cool. And you'll learn a lot about music and history and the mobs involved
and all that stuff. And from what I was told, like Al Capone used to sit there, right? His
exit was there. You know, so it was weird, right? And then any diet syphilis and like,
so I don't know how I feel about all that, but they told me that.
So I think the podcast has been wonderful as an opportunity to share things that I love.
If I had my way, it would be more like this, although more of a dialogue, frankly.
It's changed my understanding of what the world is like.
I certainly get critique, and that's good.
But again, I was raised by iconoclasts,
and particularly my postdoc advisor Ben Barris,
who unfortunately, well, as I mentioned, is dead,
because I worked for him.
But he really encouraged all of us in his lab,
and often we were very close friends
I spent the last year of his life recording interview with him. There's actually a documentary coming out about Ben
and
Then I'm gonna release the audio
Interviews with Ben which he approved by the way and you'll get to realize that the history of what you see is often not
What the dead person really did or said it's gonna be fun So I can't wait till they release this documentary and then Ben gets to have his voice
Infusion and there'll be a cool documentary, but as some of you know that like what appears to be and what was in the historical narrative
It's not necessarily what it what really happened, but that's just life. So I suppose the short answer is that you know
I feel very honored with the opportunity,
very, very honored.
And, you know, it's a challenge at times.
I suppose that the major challenges are when things
are taken out of context, like little clips
and things of that sort.
Being misunderstood doesn't feel good,
but look, at the end of the day,
I feel like the luckiest person in the world
because I get to spend my time learning.
So it's either, you know, I'm foraging, I'm organizing, or I'm dispersing information
that I also want, and that I find incredibly useful, or if not that,
then certainly informative and at times enchanting as well.
So I try and focus on the positive,
and I have a number of practices that help me do that.
And I am somebody who engages on social media.
I'm not a post-engotten kind of person.
I want to understand, I think that, you know,
the cuddle fish are super interesting,
but human beings are super interesting too.
And I have a strong drive for mastery,
but also I do have a strong sense of justice,
and that can be problematic at times.
I define justice as feeling like there's something
for us to do about something.
Like seeing something upset us, or they excites us,
is great, but then if you have a strong sense of justice,
you feel like there's something you need to do about it,
and not everybody feels that.
And then of course, a desire to understand.
And I think
for reasons very personal to me that relate mostly to just having a kind of incredible array of
experiences in life, many of which were like shocking, disturbing, exciting, and chanting that I
want to understand. And so, you know, it's changed things, but you know, it's like, I don't know, I got one truck when watch.
I, you know, it's not to say that I don't care
about having things.
There are a few things I really love,
but like mostly like I'm just thinking about the podcast
we got a record on Monday, which is about willpower
and tenacity, and if I don't stop myself,
I'll give it right now.
So, what do you feel is the next big thing
to come to the forefront in the health space?
Thanks for this question.
One is non-protein amino acids.
I love these debates online because I know that there's something there.
It's so cool because I grew up and seen these debates.
And you know there's something interesting there because people are debating about it.
But the debate isn't what's interesting.
It's almost always the thing that people aren't talking about that's sure to surface at some
point.
And right now there's a succession of like seed oils, it's like seed oil, seed oils.
And I can't demonize seed oils all the day to say that if you separate out their caloric
load, there's nothing inherently bad about seed oils.
And it's there, I don't know.
It's still an emerging literature, but there was a scientist at Stanford, Ed Rubenstein, who passed away at a ripe old age,
a brilliant scientist who talked about it. I had a lot of discussions with when I was a post-doc,
about non-protein amino acids. Turns out his son is a neuroscientist at UCSF, so other sons are physician at UCSF,
so it's another one of these low performing families. And all wonderful people. And, you
know, Ed had data that, you know, unlike a lot of animals like birds, there are certain amino
acids, which are non-protein amino acids,
that exist in fairly high density in seeds and nuts,
which is not to say that seeds and nuts are bad.
I'd almonds this evening, okay, so please.
But non-protein amino acids are similar enough to mammalian protein amino acids
that if they are consumed in abundance
and perhaps especially in liquid form,
that they may, again, may,
because it's about the future,
this isn't about what we know,
this is about where I think there's interest
and growing interest,
they may be able to incorporate into certain proteins
of our tissues of our body
that potentially
Ed thought could lead to misfolding of those proteins and may explain certain forms of neurodegeneration
and other neurocognitive challenges.
So I think non-protein amino acids are going to be an important discussion.
Now there are lots of non-protein amino acids that don't come from foods, but I think the
discussion around non-protein amino acids
from foods is going to be very interesting.
So that's one area.
The other area, and perhaps you picked up on this a little bit
tonight, is that I like the nuts and boltsy stuff
around stress and neuroplasticity, but the high-level stuff.
I think the relationship between structure, thought, abstract thought.
I'm not interested in the free will discussion.
I just feel like that's a career ender.
I'm friends with Robert Sapolsky and he's got a great book coming out about this.
I'm called Determin, so he obviously doesn't believe in free will.
But he's far smarter than I ever could be.
And it just feels like, I don't know that there's an end
point with that one.
But if anyone could find it, it would be Robert.
He's oh so smart.
But I think that the higher level stuff, creativity,
abstract reasoning and thought, defining
and better understanding the different states
that we can go into and waking. And I confess without a hint of sheepishness about it that I also think the notion
of spirituality and the belief in things that are beyond our current and conscious understanding
is super interesting. I think that, you know, as a species,
we've been challenged and conflicted from go,
at least that's what the historical scripture tells us,
and that it's sort of inherent to our experience
that life is challenging and perplexing and also wonderful.
And so I think a better understanding
of how to navigate all that.
I mean, this stuff in our skulls,
except for the eyes, which by the way,
are the two pieces of brain that are not in your skull.
The retinas have to point that out.
You know, it's tricky,
and we're trying to use that very tissue to understand it.
And so I'm intrigued by the possibility
that there are certain
aspects of self that maybe are not intended to be explored because they are not
really of us, right? Brains interacting with one another is an interesting area
certainly for scientific exploration, but I'm fascinated by and excited about
the possibility that you know at some, our species will both understand the mechanics of our
Emotions mechanics of our thought process, creativity, and so on, but that we will also allow room for the stuff that we can't explain with science and
To allow room for that in our in our life experience because I also believe that can be powerful.
And while understanding things in great detail
and putting mechanism and utility around that
and applying that is wonderful,
it's the stuff of my life, which is obvious.
I also think that there's great value
in not trying to control and understand everything
and enjoying the mystery of things that are clearly greater than us.
How do you balance having fun with having such a rich knowledge and passion in neuroscience
and optimization?
Fun.
People ask me like, what do you do for fun?
I think people think I do all the protocols.
It's like, sure, I get my sunlight, I drink my water, I do them, but fun. I like learning. I like learning. I like I do enjoy physical movement. I like learning.
You know, for me, that, okay, so like, for me, it's the little things. I don't know. Maybe
I'm weird. Certainly, I've been told that. Like the other day, there's a frog in my swimming
pool. And he's just like, seeing there like, and I was just like spend some time looking
at him back and forth.
And then I had all sorts of ideas about like, like, what's he doing?
And what's he thinking?
And then I was thinking how all of her sacks used to spend time imagining experiencing
life as a bat through only echolocation.
He talked about this.
And I thought, and why would he do that?
And that's kind of cute.
He's like delightful old man.
He had a 600 pound free weight squat
on the state California of squatting championship,
but then also pretending he was a bat.
It's a weird dude.
Did methamphetamines, race motorcycles,
you know, hung out with movie stars,
but then also was like a recluse and like rocks.
Okay, that's a weird scientist
Been around a lot of those
but
You know in discussions with people that knew him
I mean that that exercise of and like seeing something you thought was cool like a bat
You know it
It allowed him to also use theory of mind to kind of think like what would it be like to have locked in syndrome and only be able to
Like blink your eyes to communicate and gave them an incredible compassion and sensitivity for
other people that then he transmuted into the form of like these wonderful books. So for me,
fun is really about doing the things that I do systematically each day, but then when something
excites me, I know that feeling. I know it physically in my
body, and to just follow that trail. Like a weirdo, right? Like a weirdo, just like
Barris was a weird and Barbara Chapman was weird, and like, I think everybody's a
little weird if you allow yourself to just see the things that you think are
really cool. And there are a bunch of things that I think are really cool that
enchant me, that a bunch of other people love too.
And I know that because like I see,
we're all watching that video or something like that.
But I think for me, fun is in the practice
of trying to stay open to the little things.
The little things that kids say are always delightful
because they're not filtering through all the bullshit
that we filter our life experience through.
But also just, yeah, I like reading and learning, exercising.
I mean, I like to think I'm not a very wooden person, but at the same time,
I mean, I didn't see the Barbie movie.
No disrespect to Barbie.
I, you know, I go to movies.
I do that kind of thing.
I don't know what else is there to do.
At some point, you know, what else is there to do anyway?
I mean, I delight in certain things as you now know far too much about.
But fun is a relative term.
That was a hard question.
Thank you. That was a hard question.
Thanks for the pass.
Do you believe time changes due to daylight savings time is worth a potential loss of productivity?
Daylight saving time is anti-health.
Okay, this is where I'll get like, it's just dumb.
It's just dumb. It's just so dumb. It makes no sense.
I mean, the director of the Chronobiology Unit
at the National Institutes of Mental Health, my good friend,
long-time friend, and brilliant scientist,
Samarhatar, will tell you, it's a stupid idea.
It's anti-biology, and it increased car crashes,
increased heart attacks, increased depression.
It's just like kids don't like to wake up early.
Anyway, parents don't like to wake up early, especially with kids that don't like to wake up early. Anyway, parents don't like to wake up early, especially with kids, they don't like to wake
up early.
It makes no sense.
And then there's all these arguments about, you know, is it really about trying to truncate
the late, you know, you want more light in the evening so there's less crime like, that's
totally unsubstantiated, completely unsubstantiated.
So the daylight savings thing is just stupid.
Basically, try and get as much light in your eyes
ideally from sunlight early in the day.
And by the way, if you're worried about cataract,
that's a serious concern after all.
I have an appointment in ophthalmology.
Cataract, macular degeneration, but guess what?
The chair of ophthalmology from Stanford
when he came on the podcast verified this.
When the sun is low in the sky, you're not really
at risk of that. So when the is low in the sky, you're not really at risk of that.
So when the scuton is overhead, you're
beaming your eyes, trying to get, yeah, it's a problem.
But we're talking about viewing low solar angle sunlight
in the morning and in the evening.
And if there's clouds, do it anyway, in fact, do it longer.
And if you can't do that, look at some artificial light
inside.
Daylight savings is just stupid.
What happens here is as the night goes on, the amount of gaba in my brain starts to diminish, and then I just kind of go to short form.
We've thought about podcasting in the middle of the night. That's why when I won on Lexus Podcast recently, the more recent one, he did it at eight o'clock at night, and he cried.
He made me cry, he didn't cry. He made me cry. I was so tired and then I can't think, and then he asked me about my dog and I'm talking about the dog.
So, you know, his goal was to get me to cry.
We have this friendship, you know, he's delightful.
What should I, as a 19 year old college student,
be doing to maximize the years of neuroplasticity
I have left?
I get this question, I'm like,
oh man, such a great question.
Reese, well, I'm assuming, yeah.
I don't know who you are, Reese, or what you're doing.
But you're 19, so the cool thing is,
your brain is hyperplastic.
Life is a psychedelic experience, without psychedelics.
Gosh, people always say like,
if you could go back to your 19 year old self,
what would you do?
And that's a tricky one, there are movies about that, right?
self, what would you do? And that's a tricky one. There are movies about that, right? You know, I would definitely worry less. Yeah, I would worry less. I would have more fun. I
would certainly, I started latching on to practices and the understanding of science as a way.
For me, it was kind of like my world felt very unstable
and for me it brought stability,
but you want to avoid rigidity.
So, you know, do you want to be the one 19 year old
who's like, oh, you've got to get to sleep,
you know, you've got to go back to bed at 8.30 at night.
And I enjoy life, but I would say,
when you're 19, learn how you learn, learn how to focus, learn
how to rest. Basically, you can stress and focus as much as you want, as long as you can
still fall asleep at night and sleep well and fall back asleep if you wake up. You know
that we hear stress is bad, stress is good, stress is bad, stress is good, stress is bad
unless you're getting enough sleep in which case stress is called learning in life.
Now obviously don't do anything dangerous,
avoid psychological and physical danger.
But I think as a 19 year old,
I mean my direct advice would be have some cardiovascular
activity you like,
have some resistance training activity you like,
develop some sort of self-awareness practice
like journaling, could be meditation,
surround yourself with people that you like, avoid people you don't like.
I mean, it sounds so straightforward, but then we can all look into our personal
histories and like, well, I spent all this time trying to resolve this thing that
like clearly, you didn't like them, it's simple. Now, you didn't like them,
they weren't into cuttlefish or ferrets, you didn't like them, wasn't your kind of
person, right?
And that's not a box you can check on the dating apps.
They tell me, right?
The ferret thing, I think it'd be very,
very small subset of people.
I think the know thyself thing is huge.
Learn to tap into that early feeling
of like this feels right, this doesn't feel right.
Learn to be a bit of a rudder for yourself. And journal, I still have stacks of things that I wrote across the
years. Most of it is terrible. But you will find if you go back that you kind of knew better
all along, even if you didn't do better all along. That voice in your head, don't do that,
do that. This person is like, everyone else is crazy
about this person, but not me.
But this is like, you know, like, I don't want
to sound sentimental, but you have to find your heart, right?
Or at least not lose it.
You have to make sure that you're in touch with that piece
of yourself that wasn't judging and just felt good.
And as long as it's not something that's self-destructive,
I think that's the most important thing.
And then, yeah, have tools and practices in place
because they work.
And when you're 19 and your neuroplasticity is through the roof,
you can do a lot less and get a lot more.
But don't worry about hitting 25 and it all being over.
Certainly that's not the case.
But you can cram in a lot early on,
is, you know, I still regret not learning an instrument.
The data on people that learn an instrument even later in life, but certainly at 19 is
that it greatly increases your ability to learn all sorts of things.
So learn an instrument.
How can we transform the American education system to be more effective?
Oh.
So in 10 seconds, so when I'm in charge, I'm just going to go a little while back, I did
an interview with a major media outlet and they were very gracious and then they said,
like, what's next?
And I was like, I'm going to run for office, I was like, you know, I was sort of a, look,
it's not out of the question, but frankly, I think that I'm so poorly suited for that.
It's obvious.
I'm so poorly suited for that.
So it wasn't a joke, but I think as I spend some time
afterwards, like, oh, I should really go talk to people
who do that for a living.
And but I am very interested in potentially informing
policy, if I were to ever be asked, I'd certainly respond.
And my stance on this is much in the same vein as the podcast because keep in
mind the podcast yes, Lex suggested I start one, but it was really during the
those days of the deep 2020-2021 pandemic where by the way I wasn't allowed to
talk about vaccine, so I didn't and also I don't have any expertise in it
So I was not well suited to do it
But I also decided it's a topic that enough people are talking about so my response in life and in general when
People say what about something as I like well. I've got a lot of opinions about that
But this isn't the venue or okay, but during the pandemic I
when you were okay. But during the pandemic,
I realized there was a lot of circadian disruption,
anxiety, stress.
A bunch of things happening with visual systems
and biological systems that I felt there were tools
that people could perhaps benefit from.
So I just started putting that information into the world
and I was really surprised, really surprised
that people that I knew from the neuroscience community,
for instance, at NIMH or,
you know, in government positions weren't talking about this stuff, so I just kept doing it.
And I think that it made clear to me that the education system is not one thing, it's tough,
especially when talking about kids, like what to do.
Is a tricky thing, but that the education system in my mind should at least involve some
sort of discussion early on about this thing called a brain, this thing called a body,
how they work, how you can do certain things to modulate your stress level, your sleep,
the importance of not just the importance
of sleep and nutrition and avoiding social isolation
and all these important things,
but giving people some levers and knobs
to maneuver within themselves
and zero cost tools as a way to do that,
that transcend socioeconomic boundaries,
ideally transcend language as well,
because we're not just talking about the United States,
and of course within the United States,
there are many different cultures
speaking different languages,
but maybe AI will soon allow us to put out
the podcast into a bunch of different languages,
I think it will.
So I think that the education system
should start, in my opinion, with teaching kids
how to understand themselves,
what to do in difficult scenarios that's really anchored
in the real pillars of biology and psychology,
and try to take some of the mystery out of trying to navigate
the tough business of growing up.
I mean, if you think it's tough being an adult,
which it can be, certainly it's really tough growing up as we all know.
And I think that more tools, more tools, more protocols, more tools, more tools, more protocols,
more tools.
But that's obviously a biased opinion.
And no one's ever asked me, like, hey, what should we be teaching kids?
But if they ask, you can tell, like, I'm not gonna shut up.
So, I think that was our last question.
Thank you all for coming tonight.
I want to, forgive me for going long.
I do wanna say thank you, sincere, thank you
for making your way out here, especially on a weekday night.
Thanks for your hospitality.
My incredible team, I want to thank them.
And certainly last but not least, thank you for your interest in science. Thank you.
Thank you so much.
you