Huberman Lab - LIVE EVENT Q&A: Dr. Andrew Huberman Question & Answer in Los Angeles, CA
Episode Date: November 9, 2022Recently I had the pleasure of hosting a live event in Los Angeles, CA. This event was part of a lecture series called The Brain Body Contract. My favorite part of the evening was the question & answe...r period, where I had the opportunity to answer questions from the attendees of each event. Included here is the Q&A from our event in Los Angeles, CA. Get notified when new live events are announced: https://hubermanlab.com/tour Thank you to our sponsors Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman Momentous: https://www.livemomentous.com/huberman Timestamps (00:00:00) Introduction (00:00:52) Sponsors: Eight Sleep & Momentous (00:02:23) What Occurs in the Mind/Body When You Have ADHD? Are There Ways to Address It Without Medication? (00:11:55) As a Teenager, What Are 5 Things You Would Recommend to Physically Feel My Best? (00:14:42) Should We Wait to Feel the Rise of Adrenaline and the Fall of It Before Bailing From Cold Water? (00:24:03) What Is the Competing Mechanism Behind Bilateral Eye Movement (EMDR & Walking) That Helps Resolve Psychological Trauma? (00:28:07) What New Research or Interventions Are You Most Excited About in the Health & Wellness Realm? (00:37:30) What Lessons From Skateboarding Have You Learned That Can Be Applied to Neuroscience? (00:39:03) Favorite Feynman Story (00:42:10) Do You Suppose This Physiological Stress Regulator Transcends Species? (00:47:20) Is There Any Science Behind Staying Motivated or Developing Discipline? (00:50:48) What Would Be Your Biggest Piece of Advice for Achieving One's Dreams? (00:57:09) What's Your Opinion on Psilocybin? (01:01:07) Why Does My Desire to Eat Disappear After I Use the Sauna? (01:02:26) Conclusion Huberman Lab is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Title Card Photo Credit: Mike Blabac
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Welcome to the Huberman Lab Podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life.
Recently, the Huberman Lab Podcast hosted a live event at the Wiltern Theater in Los Angeles.
It was entitled The Brain Body Contract. The first part of the evening was a lecture
about science and science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance.
The second half was a question and answer period
in which the audience asked me questions
from the podcast or related to their own interests
or things that they've gleaned from social media
or just general questions about mental health,
physical health, and performance.
And I answered those questions for them.
We wanted to make the recorded version
of that question and answer session available to everybody
regardless of who could attend.
So what follows is the question and answer session available to everybody regardless of who could attend. So what follows is the question and answer period from the Wiltern Theatre Brain Body Contract
Live Huberman Lab event. I want to be sure to thank the sponsors from that event. They were
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And they've formulated supplements as single ingredient formulations that match what is
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If you're interested in any of those supplements, please go to livemomentus.com slash Huberman.
And now without further ado,
the question and answer period
from the Huberman Lab live event in Los Angeles.
What occurs in the mind body when you have ADHD other ways to address it without medication? Thank you for this question.
So attention deficit hyperactivity disorder used to be called ADD.
The hyperactivity part is a little misleading.
And again, I'm not a clinician here.
Here's what we know works for some people.
And yet there are always going to be side effects
of any kind of chemical manipulation, which is that we know that people, kids and adults
with ADHD actually have a tremendous capacity to focus if they like what they're focusing
on. You take a kid with ADHD, you can't focus, and you give them their favorite video game, and they are a laser.
The threshold to access the dopamine system is higher, and dopamine has this incredible
ability to focus the brain and other aspects of the nervous system.
You know, certainly if people require medication, I'm not going to tell you to stop taking that
medication.
But the focus training exercises that have been explored mainly in China,
but they're starting to be explored and over here as well,
do seem to be of benefit.
And these are, as they sound, they use them in schools in China now,
which are literally visual-focused exercises.
Your mental focus, that is, your ability to focus on cognitively, follows your visual focus exercises. Your mental focus, that is your ability to focus on,
thing cognitively, follows your visual focus.
And of course, your stress will anchor your,
essentially put you in a soda straw view of the world.
So yes, there are non-medication-based treatments.
By medication, I'm assuming you mean prescription medication.
There are of course, supplement-based medications
that will increase dopamine mainly altyrosine.
Again, this is something to think carefully about before you start tampering with your dopamine
system, but it is the altyrosine, is the precursor to dopamine.
So it will raise your dopamine levels.
But I believe, and you'll hear me say this as many times as necessary, that one should, if you can, rely on behavioral tools
first, then, of course, sleep and nutrition are prerequisite, again, for all mental health,
physical health performance, you simply can't neglect those.
And then, and only then, if all of that isn't working to rely on supplement-based tools
or on prescription medication.
So it's clear that viavants, Adderall, Ridlin, etc. work for ADHD, but some people choose
to rely on more subtle forms of pharmacologic manipulation like L-tyrosine.
And this focusing exercise essentially consists of spending one to three minutes trying to maintain
visual focus.
And yes, you are allowed to blink.
I don't know why we tend to stare.
It's something we don't blink.
But don't realize, dry out.
And that can increase your ability to focus cognitively.
And it works.
And keep in mind that focusing always involves refocusing.
We covered a beautiful data set, not collected by MyLab, by Wendy Suzuki's Lab at NYU,
that at roughly 10 minutes, it's actually 13-minute a day meditation of the sort where you just
focus on your breathing, has been shown to improve focus significantly.
Why don't we hear about this more?
Well, she's now Dean of Arts and Sciences at NYU and all the students are hearing about
it.
Hopefully they're doing it, but it takes a little bit of discipline.
For some reason, 10-minute day type meditation
is something that very few people follow consistently.
But if you're looking for non-medication-based treatments
for ADHD or you're somebody who just struggles
with focus, the focusing exercise or the meditation,
I just described can be very useful.
So say the data.
Yeah, thanks for bringing up space time bridging.
Are people familiar with what space time bridging is?
I haven't talked a lot about it.
Okay, thanks for bringing that up.
We actually have an episode on meditation coming up soon
where I cover it, and I talked about it long ago,
and then I kind of abandoned it because, well,
we wanted more data, and it's a pretty interesting technique.
If you think about the nervous system
and vision in particular, but if you're not
a sighted person or your low vision or no vision,
you could do this with your hearing.
But I'm going to assume most people here are sighted,
if not just translate this to the auditory system.
You have this incredible ability to close your eyes
and focus, for instance, on people talk about the third eye
center, focusing right behind your forehead.
Do you know why people do that when they meditate?
The reason is that you actually have no sensation
in your brain.
It's the one place to focus your attention
for which you abandon sensation.
If I think about any portion of my body or my breathing, I'm
going to sense what's happening. I'm going to perceive my inner landscape, so-called
interoception, or my outer, if I look out into the world, it's exteroception. When you
focus your attention with your eyes closed, just you do have to close your eyes, just behind
your forehead, you are focusing on your thinking.
Right? Sort of obvious, but I don't, at least to me, it had never been stated that clearly.
Again, one of the problems with some of the more traditional practices,
but also the problem with science is that there's a shrouding of everything
in very complex language, which sucks.
Why is it suck? Because it's a separator.
You eliminate the number of people that could be brought to potentially useful practices.
And I don't like it when people, including myself,
overuse mechanism and descriptions of, you know, fancy phrases to mask basic principles.
So simplest language, I think, is a...
It tends to unify people around the practices.
So when you focus on this so-called third eye center,
or a spot right behind your forehead, or on your breath,
it's a little tricky with the breath,
but when you focus on your frontal cortex,
there's nothing to sense because there's no sensory neurons there.
There's no touch, there's no pain, nothing.
That's why in these gory movies, you know,
you can take the skull off, and we're in neurosurgery, they're poking around
in there, the person's playing a violin. Like, no anesthetic. No anesthetic. It doesn't require
anesthetic. There's no sensory neurons. Can't sense anything there. So, space time bridging
involves, it's essentially a meditation, but it's really a perceptual exercise. I think that's where we're going with this.
It starts by closing your eyes and focusing on that location for which there's no sensation,
there's only thought.
And then opening your eyes and focusing on a location, maybe about the distance of your
hand, and you focus also on your breathing.
So you sort of imagine a kind of a tether between that.
You can split your attention to these two locations.
You're thinking about your body and you're thinking about a location outside of you.
And then while continuing to think about your body, so-called interoception, focus on
your breathing, you focus further out and then further out and then further out.
And then ultimately, you know, the little cartoon or meme where they're like,
we're just a little blue dot floating in a big universe
and like it's supposed to make all your problems go away.
Like, it kind of works because what you've done
is you've expanded your perception and you go,
yeah, like the stuff that's happening in here
is really important when I'm focused on
what's happening in here.
But when I'm focused on what's going on
and the kind of the vastness of
all this and we're just a little, you know, pale blue dot and all that, it changes your perception.
Not just your visual perception, obviously, changing your visual perception,
changes your cognitive perception, which changes your emotional experience. So the space time
bridging is a perceptual exercise where you step from focusing internally to focusing externally
at a short distance, then a further distance, further distance, further distance, and then
trying to imagine yourself in this larger landscape.
It sounds very mystical, but it's actually very neurobiological, and it captures something
really amazing.
Why is the T in there the time, space time bridging?
Because this is space, but time is in there because when you focus in close,
your slicing of time is finer.
You notice the subtle fluctuations in your breathing and things that are happening up close.
Whereas when you focus further out, your perception of time actually changes, which is why in panoramic
vision we are calm.
When you think about, we're just a pale blue dot and we mostly only live to about 85 or maybe 100 years old.
And then what's happening right now,
my boss being in it, the jerk, and all that
doesn't really matter because the earth is spinning
and all that kind of stuff, which is all true,
and it's the stuff of philosophy and mindfulness.
And I think is beautiful.
What you're really doing is you're changing your time perception
by changing your space perception.
So space time bridging is very useful because most people get locked at one step, one of
these stations, especially under conditions of stress, and people who have a trouble focusing,
I'm glad you brought this up in this context of ADHD. People who have a hard time focusing whether or not they have ADHD
or not tend to skip back and forth between different space time domains as we call them in science.
So this is a simple exercise that you can do focusing internally then stepping out externally
then stepping back in all the while paying attention to your inner and landscape just simply by
focusing on your breathing. It's a tool that we're still collecting data on in terms of its utility, but people are already
using it. I don't think of it as a meditation. I think of it as a perceptual exercise.
Thanks for asking that. As a teenager, what are five things you would recommend to physically
feel my best? I'm a 15-year-old surfer who attends high school and plays soccer. Well, it sounds like you're doing a lot of things, right?
To physically feel your best.
Okay, so I'm gonna grasp it some context here
that I'm not, that's not within reach.
I'm assuming if you are doing all these things,
you're hopefully doing a bunch of other things too,
and they're going to be demands on you that you probably some of them you don't want to do school and things like that
are going to have varying levels of like joy and delight and demand of things you don't want to do.
I don't want to default always to the simplest of tools, but I certainly think that even as a 15
year old, if you're not already getting lots and lots of sleep, that's going to be great. Tell your parents that I said you should get lots and lots of sleep.
Well, you're not sleeping through classes. I am a professor after all. I couldn't tell you otherwise.
I would say if I could travel back in time as a 15-year-old, I would encourage you to cultivate
some sort of mindfulness practice. I know this
sounds a little cliche, but having some awareness of your thinking about your thinking is good,
but I'm actually not going to say sit down and meditate for 10 minutes a day or do NSDR. I'm
actually not going to tell you that. I think given how plastic your brain is, how much it's changing at 15,
I would encourage you, and maybe you would set a timer
for this, to actually develop just a really keen awareness
of what stresses you out, what relaxes you,
what delights you, et cetera, and just to simply develop
an awareness of that, because those are your antennae.
And I certainly had a meditation practice as a youth,
mostly given to me because I was a little haywire
and I needed it.
And it worked pretty well,
but I think in retrospect,
what I wish I had developed was more of a sense of,
how I navigated stress or things I enjoyed
and things I didn't enjoy.
And I would just encourage you to have a general awareness, trying to detect and learn about
what raises your adrenaline, what raises your dopamine, what raises your serotonin, and
then start thinking about tools. But again, the awareness is going to be very valuable.
And gosh, as a 15-year-old, you are in this amazing, blessed
period of heightened neuroplasticity.
Should we all be so lucky?
So enjoy it.
Next question, please.
Clarity on adrenaline regarding cold water.
Should we wait to feel the rise of adrenaline
that get me out of here feeling
and the fall of it before bailing?
Yes.
Provided it doesn't kill you.
You know, I don't want to say cold water.
It's hard to kill yourself with cold water.
Provided your heads above and your breathing,
but the, it's, sorry, my podcast producer's always like, I can't help that anyway.
It's a great tool.
And different days, it'll feel different.
So for instance, doing any kind of adrenaline and deliberate cold exposure or adrenaline
increasing activity early in the day,
you might find that you are more,
quote unquote, resilient than later.
In other words, the wall, like I really don't wanna do this.
This is actually interesting
for I think it extends beyond cold water.
Let's say you really don't wanna do something.
Pay attention to the fact that maybe it's not
the right thing to do, but assuming it's something
that you know you should do, but you don't want to do,
you are already in the first wall of adrenaline.
You don't experience it necessarily as heightened levels
of stress, you might experience it as heightened levels
of fatigue or a hard time shifting on
that kind of activation state that's required
to move through the thing.
But I do encourage you to take advantage of that.
Of course, and we have an episode coming out tomorrow
actually that answers questions like,
should you train if you're sick and what if you travel
and there's context always.
But I think that you do want to experience,
if you want to get the most out of the cold water exposure
and to be more specific, the adrenaline,
then you want to get to that point of,
I really want to get out of here,
but I know I can stay in safely,
but I really want to get out of here.
And it's a little hard to explain,
but there's just so much learning
in those short moments about where your mind goes.
And this sounds very kind of, again, subjective
and maybe a little wishy-washy,
but you can realize great things about yourself
in those moments.
You can find insight in those moments.
Also, keep in mind that the degree of discomfort,
not just physical but mental discomfort,
is directly predictive of the pain to pleasure wave
that you'll experience afterwards.
The reason it feels so good when you get out of the ice bath and you're showered off,
I always do the warm shower after. I don't do this end on cold thing. I don't know.
It just seems a little too painful. Then take a warm shower and then you feel great.
That's the surge of dopamine that we know based on a paper published in the European
Journal of Physiology last many hours. It's a 100 to 200 percent increase in dopamine.
This is not a subtle effect.
And then people say, well, wait, is that dopamine going to crash my dopamine system?
No, because it's a nice, slow rise.
In fact, I'm actually not aware of many things besides love and delight that can create this
long, slow arc of dopamine lasting many hours.
Maybe you're aware of other things, if you are, let me know.
But it turns out that long arc is a true antidepressant.
And my colleague at Stanford, Dr. Anna Lemke, who's ahead of our dual diagnosis,
addiction clinic has talked about in her amazing book, Dopamine Nation,
about patients of hers
that have really helped themselves along
and out of the more depressive phases of,
working through addiction and just depression
in general through directed cold water therapy.
So I, I'm obviously a fanatic about it
in the sense that it's a powerful, relatively safe,
if done properly, safe, if done properly,
way to modulate your internal dopamine.
Hopefully I answered your question.
Next question, please.
Sorry, I caught it, Ray.
It went off the fall as well.
Yes, I think you should get out once you've accomplished something.
Don't get out when you panic, unless it's dangerous.
Sorry.
How can you train your brain to feel more confident moments
where you tend to feel intimidated?
Okay, these are hard question.
Because context is tricky here,
because I don't know what the context is.
And confidence on short time scales,
and then long time scales.
So confidence in school, confidence in career,
those are long arc things, whereas confidence
to be able to do something in the short term is different.
But remember, those action sequences
that trigger the release of dopamine.
Dopamine, I've mainly talked about the dark side
of dopamine, but I hopefully also talked about
the upward spiral that dopamine can cause,
mainly by thinking about delight and things that you really enjoy.
That carries over.
And I would say that you want to micro slice the demands of what's maybe got you back
on your heels a bit.
Actually, a good friend of mine who's here tonight, I think also my friend Pat, he has a great
way of conceptualizing this, which is, if for most all endeavors, we either feel back
on our heels flat-footed or forward center of mass.
We can really do something or flat-footed or back on our heels.
Sometimes getting from back on our heels, let's call that lack of confidence to just
on two feet and confident enough
to move forward or at least stay in the game.
That's going to require, you could lean on different tools.
I can't say which would be ideal for the circumstance you have in mind, but I do think that having
a way to calm yourself will give you access to more resources, internal resources. We know this. This was something
I meant to bring up during the discussion about fear versus love, etc., trying to access delight and
love. When we are in a state of fear or stress or anxiety, the rule set, the options available to us,
and indeed our creativity is greatly diminished.
And this has to do with the way that the prefrontal cortex
interacts with an area of the brain called the insula,
which relates to our internal landscape.
And there's this weird phenomenon,
which is that normally our brain, our thinking brain,
and our rule setting brain,
can it leads our, the brain parts that control and pay
attention to how we feel internally.
And that's why, for instance, if you feel a little nervous, you can still do something.
At some point, you get stressed enough, and we know this from work by my colleague, David
Spiegel, it reverses.
And these areas of the brain that are paying attention to, like, how flushed my faces
or whether or not I'm sweating or my breathing actually start to shut down creative decision making. So I would
say the way to have more confidence is to learn to control that stress and keep the part of your
brain, the prefrontal cortex is that part that can come up with new rules that can be funny, that can be creative, that keeps that brain part leading.
The way you think about this is the prefrontal cortex,
it's sort of like the coach and the rest of your brain
are sort of like the players.
And if you get too stressed,
the players start to lead the game and the coach follows,
kind of drags them along.
So I would encourage you to focus on real-time stress modulation
and to raise your stress threshold using the
sorts of tools we talked about and to register your wins.
You know, I didn't get into this in too much detail,
but one of the amazing things about the dopamine system is
that it's highly subject to your interpretation.
If you tell yourself that a fail was a win and you can see or conceptualize some way in which that's actually true, you get to tap into the dopamine system.
You might think that's crazy. You can cheat your own brain. You can cheat your own neurochemistry and indeed you can.
You can change the time space time reference and we see this with examples like Nelson Mandela or Victor Franco. You know, you read their stories, right?
Trapped in little cells, right?
Confined, imprisoned.
And they come up with new ways to access the dopamine system by now not thinking about
what they're not getting, but thinking about what they can control in their immediate experience.
Many, many examples of this throughout literature and history.
And the dopamine system is the life force system.
I don't say that in any loose way.
Dopamine is life force.
It's the wish and the desire to continue.
It's persistence.
And so if you can think about what might seem like a failure
and really spend some time thinking about
not the potential wins on the outside,
but how you can conceptualize that as a potential win internally,
you really do get to achieve an internal chemical win
and that chemical win sets you up for more real wins,
for that makes sense.
It's incredible how contextualized the dopamine system is,
but if it weren't, why would it matter
if we're talking about money or mates or food or job
or school, you don't get 50 reward systems
and motivation systems, you get one.
And that's the dopamine system.
Next question, please.
What is the competing mechanism behind bilateral eye movement EMDR that helps resolve psychological
trauma?
The competing mechanism.
Well, let me try and answer as best I can.
I'm not sure I understand the full extent of the question, but let me EMDR, moving your
eyes from side to side.
And then recounting a trauma is a very common
and actually one of the four approved treatments
that are behavioral for trauma.
So it's taken seriously in the psychiatric
and psychological community for a good reason.
It tends to work best for single event traumas
as opposed to like entire childhoods.
No joke there, like some people have their entire childhood was traumatic.
Other people they experience a trauma, a single event trauma or repeated periods of the
same or similar type of trauma.
Eye movements from side to side have been shown in a number of studies to very potently reduce
the activity of a brain structure called the amygdala, which most people
are familiar with because of the character from the Star Wars movie, Amygdala.
There's a neuroscientist somewhere on that team. It is indeed a threat detection center,
and when you move through space, not outer space, but when you walk like this, your eyes actually generate
these subtle side to side shifts
unless you're focusing on a specific target.
And my lab and other laboratories have found
that that leads to a very potent quieting
of the threat detection system.
And then EMDR is essentially a process
of pairing that calmer state with no threat detection system
activated with the recount of something that normally would be quite triggering. So it's you've
heard of Pavlovian conditioning like a bell rings and the animal gets fed and
animal salivates eventually just the bell will evoke the salivation. You're doing the reverse of that.
It's a called behavioral desensitization.
It has an underlying mechanism, et cetera.
But the idea is to pair a calm state
with recount of something.
It has been shown to be successful.
There are people who think that the side-to-side eye
movements and the recount of trauma
may actually be invoking some form of hypnosis.
My colleague, David Speagol, you know,
expert in clinical hypnosis,
he's appeared on my podcast,
Rich Rolls podcast, a few other podcasts
and talks about this.
It's not stage hypnosis, it's clinical hypnosis.
So there may be something going on there.
EMDR, again, some people get great relief
from it, other people don't.
What's kind of nice is that this eye movements
from side to side, or simply taking a walk walk as long as you're not looking at your phone and not allowing your eyes
to move from side to side is a very good way to shut down the fear and stress system.
So taking a walk I think is relaxing for obvious reasons and there are data showing that you know
part of the reason why animals scratch at the door and want to go for a walk may not actually be
the exercise. There's kind of an anxiety and then an anxiety relief that occurs. Of course, they have to go the bathroom to one of
Costell's great joys in life was just peeing on everything outdoors, thankfully. So the psychological
trauma rewiring, unfortunately, there haven't been a lot of brain imaging studies looking at this long
term of how well EMDR works. What I think is going to happen in the next few years, by the way, is it is not going to
be a discussion around should you do EMDR, should you do transcranial magnetic stimulation,
should you do behavioral therapy, it's going to be combination therapies, combination therapies,
including pharmacologic manipulations to essentially give a boost to the systems that
encourage general plasticity like dopamine and serotonin and adrenaline,
and then also then perform EMDR.
And if you want to talk about what's happening in the landscape
of clinical trials on some of the psychedelics,
I'm happy to talk about it.
They're still illegal, but they are being used in clinical trials
and very interesting stuff is happening there.
Okay, next question, please.
What new researcher interventions
are you most excited about in the realm of wellness?
So what I think is going to be very interesting
in the next few years really reflects my obsession
that you've seen a little bit of tonight,
but the thing that I think is going to be most useful, and I've seen this in science before,
and I think we're going to see it in health and wellness, is that there are all these
tools and all these people, and he's saying this, and she's saying that, and what we're
going to start paying attention to is what are the common themes, right?
And a broader and more important theme
is going to be one of modulation versus mediation.
What do I mean?
Well, if someone were to pull a fire alarm right now,
and please don't, that will shift our attention
and make it hard to focus on what I'm saying,
and knowing me, I'd probably just stay up here talking.
Do we think that fire alarms mediate attention?
No, they modulate it, right?
If it were very, very cold in this room,
like it was when we first got here tonight,
we were Arctic cold.
Hopefully it's warmed up a bit.
It hasn't.
I'm so sorry.
So sorry. Yeah, I attempted to.
Yeah.
I almost thought maybe we all just do a bunch of breathing to heat up like adrenaline
released, but I don't know.
These days getting groups of people all breathe on each other is not exactly, you know, I
can see that might go the wrong way in terms of what people interpret.
So the idea here is that certain things directly mediate something, like a physiological
side directly calms you down quickly. It meditates the calming response. Getting good sleep
makes you less easily triggered. It modulates stress. But is sleeping directly mediating
stress control? No. And I think this is really
important and this brings up the topic of the gut brain axis. The gut is rich with these
little bugs, bacteria, trillions of them, which is an eerie thought to me. But also the
surface of your skin, the surface of your eyes, you have a skin microbiome, a nasal microbiome,
every mucosal lining has a microbiome. In fact, think about this. This is a crazy but worthwhile tangent. Have you ever bitten the
inside of your mouth? It sucks, right? And you get a hurt. But guess what? The inside of your
mouth heals without a scar. Think about that. Weird, right? You cut anywhere else on your body, and depending on how well you heal and your age and
your immune status, you get a score.
Your mouth is filled with bacteria, and it's open to the world.
But the gut microbiome provided it's healthy provides an incredible ability to heal quickly. And I'm not somebody who's done a lot of acupuncture.
I've went a few times and now there's interesting science happening on acupuncture.
But what's the first thing they do when you walk in there?
And then they go, oh yeah.
And they have this cool intuition that's not based on Western mechanistic science.
It's more of an intuition based on millions, if not billions of data points
that have been put into these charts.
It's pretty cool, right?
And what they are looking at, I believe, and from what my colleagues who work on microbiome
tell me is they can look at the power of your tongue, in particular in the back and get
a sense of whether or not the microbiome there is of the appropriate stuff, but they don't
go, oh, lactobacillus, and then the bacillus,
they all end to illness, right?
And they owe you're just biotic, instead,
they get a sense.
Now, parents of small babies learn to detect all sorts
of things coming out of essentially every orifice
of the child as a readout of health
because the child doesn't have language,
and a dog owner is unfortunately,
you learn to do this too, for better, for worse, probably for better, right?
So we have this intuition about gut health,
but gut health would be another example
where it's very clear now that fiber can be helpful,
but it's mostly consuming these fermented foods
that have been used in ages,
but low sugar fermented foods of the Nato, Kim,
cheese, sour, cow, kombucha, et cetera, like all these things, depending on which culture you're in,
they come in different forms, certain yogurts, et cetera, that allow the gut to be healthy
and it modulates a huge number of systems.
So I don't think that you're going to cure depression by adjusting your gut microbiome, but if your gut microbiota are not well and
you improve that, it will indeed shift the neurotransmitter systems of your brain and
give you a elevated mood.
That shouldn't come as a surprise anymore, but I think that the whole world thinks like,
gosh, it must be the serotonin in the gut.
No, it's actually not.
Serotonin in guttits, that the gut microbiota create chemicals that actually become serotonin in the gut. No, it's actually not serotonin in guttives that the gut microbiota
create chemicals that actually become serotonin in the brain or become dopamine in the brain.
And so I think that the gut microbiome I would put in the same category, although not quite
as important, I would put it in the category of like sleep. It modulates a huge number of
other processes. It doesn't mediate them. So sunlight, sleep, healthy gut microbiome,
exercise, good nutrition, social connection.
These things all create this general milieu
or environment of health.
I would like to see more distinction
between modulating and mediating effects
and tools out there, because I also see a lot of unnecessary argument.
People are like, there's no example
that improving your gut microbiome cures depression.
Of course there's not.
But there are really good examples.
If your gut microbiome is off,
that improving it can improve mood,
which, depending on where you are
on that spectrum of depression,
can really relieve things.
So I think that the future of health, you know, we hear so much about personalized medicine
and matched your genome, but we don't even have the basic, most people don't even have
the basics right.
And if you watch or listen to the podcast long enough, hopefully certain themes start to
kind of repeat themselves.
But a key theme that you learn in science, you teach your students, you know, does it
modulator or does it mediate it? You need to be careful with your language there. And
there's great information or as we say, interpretational power there, if you understand the
difference, then I think we can go a long way by making that distinction modulating versus
mediating. They're probably other things that modulate health that I'm overlooking now just because of the flow
that I'm in.
The cool mint.
Yeah, the cool mint.
Palmer cooling.
Okay, I promise to talk about Palmer cooling.
Well, I'll do it now.
Palmer cooling, they change the Q and A format.
What can I say?
This is like teaching in the classroom.
All right, very briefly,
the Palmer cooling, which is essentially placing, you can cool the core of the body most quickly
by placing cold objects on the hands, the bottoms of the feet, or on the top of the face,
because of the arrangement of vascular. Normally, you've got this arteries, capillaries, veins,
things. But at those locations in the body, you arteries, capillaries, veins, things, but at those locations in the body you skip the capillaries and you can basically, you're not really passing cool into the body but you're cooling off the core of the body more quickly.
And if you do that in between sets of exercise or during a run or cycling, you can dramatically increase your ability to continue. I actually use the coolment for cognitive work, but you don't
need a coolment, sorry coolment guys, you can just get a thing of ice water or just very
cold water and you, I know it sounds trivial easy, but you're actually just cooling your
core by putting your hands or even one hand on a relatively cold thing of water or ice,
but not so cold that it constricts the vascular chair there.
This is the incredible work of my colleague at Stanford,
Dr. Craig Heller.
Why wouldn't more people do this
if you can double the amount of endurance,
believe it or not, or double the number of sets
of exercise you can do, or feel more alert
and do more cognitive work?
Why wouldn't more people do it?
Because people just don't do it.
And it sounds crazy.
It really sounds crazy, but it's a real thing.
And I wish more people do it.
The athletes at Stanford do it.
People in the military do it.
So people who know, know, and they use it and enjoy it.
It's just, it's almost like, seems too off target
from what you're trying to accomplish.
I don't know.
For some reason, people are finally on board breathing.
In a specific way, as a useful tool a few years ago, no one was into that.
Just think of how far we've come.
It's incredible.
People are talking about psychedelics, meditation, breathing.
I think the pandemic, for all its pains and what a challenging period for all sorts
of reasons, did wake people up to the idea that you have to take control over your
Health because there's no magic fairy coming to do it for you and
With all due respect there's no government agency that's gonna like drop off the kit at your front door of like here's how you take good care of yourself
So it's just it's just not gonna. And it wouldn't happen under any circumstances.
So it's a personal responsibility issue.
Huh.
Oh, all right.
What lessons from skateboarding?
The failure part, you know, the failure failure failure.
I mean, for me, you know, skateboard,
never was a good skateboarder.
Still have close friends in that community
and our photographer and a guy who does all the visuals and the other guys who do the visuals for our podcast, Mike, playback, Chris
and Martin are all of that community.
You know, I think that for me, that community was really, as Michael sometimes say, skateboarders
hate everything.
Meaning they have a very high threshold for what they consider acceptable.
It's not just what you do, it's how you do it.
Super important. And I think in neuroscience, there's a lot of stuff. In science in general,
there are so many papers and there's so many experiments like, how do you navigate that landscape?
I think it helped me develop a sense of taste. But the taste that I'm referring to is not necessarily
a taste of which science is cool or not cool that to, but it came
through a few times tonight when I was talking about my mentors.
You know, I picked back then skateboarding because I really liked the people.
And also, you didn't need your parents to go to a game, and so that worked for me.
And you could kind of make your own schedule.
And I do think it's very important to the extent that you can in science and in everything to surround yourself with the kinds of people that you just really enjoy being around.
And so to me, the podcast running a lab feels a lot like skateboarding. It's the same energy. It's the same neurochemical systems firing.
So that's a, yeah, that one.
Next, favorite find, oh, oh, wait, no, that's inappropriate.
I do have a Feynman story, but it's inappropriate.
Darn it.
Maybe sometime.
This is why I don't drink.
A good decision-making.
Well, I read all of Feynman's books.
So I had the pleasure, I never met him.
He was dead before.
I was born.
But my dad did and he had good Feynman stories
and they were inappropriate.
So the cool thing about Feynman, right,
was that he didn't really care if people understood the specifics of what he was talking about.
He just wanted people to get turned on to how amazing physics was, and he loved general
principles.
And one of the things, you know, the example that's sometimes given, I don't know how many
of you are familiar with the Feynman books, but surely you're joking, Mr. Feynman, or
what do you care what other people think.
All of that stuff, it's wonderful. He picked locks.
You know, he worked at Los Alamos Labs. They were working on the bomb and he
basically well they're in elsewhere and every morning the offices used to
come in and he would spread all the top secret papers out on the floor. He would
break into the safes at night and then they were perplexed who could do this
and he like safe cracking. Literally, like national security secrets, just for fun, prankster.
He also bongo drum naked on the Rufa Caltech,
and he did most of his writing of theorems
in strip clubs, fact.
Learned to draw late in life,
was really into flotation tanks,
and very curious about, but never did psychedelics.
That's as I understand.
But one of the cool Feynman factoids is that when he was a kid,
he talked about when he was a child that his dad used to take in bird watching,
and he'd say, well, that's a whatever scrub J, and that's a whatever,
whatever thrush, and that's a, and his dad said, no, don't cloud your mind with naming
and taxonomy, that's not meaningful,
because then what if it's the different,
you know, the pygmy thrush or the lesser this or that.
The more important thing is to start to identify
principles of why certain birds behave one way and certain birds behave
another and to start finding the commonalities and the regularities. And that's a theme that I
obviously tonight have tried to impose. And it's actually something that I can't do in podcasts
necessarily because I can't thread across 40 episodes or something like that in the same way
that I could in an evening like this. So that's an appropriate Feynman story.
Also it just seemed like a delightful guy and he's kind of cool.
He's a little bit street, right?
Yeah, that thick accent.
He was from far rock way, but he didn't really care much what people thought or he did
and he pretended he didn't.
Careful when people tell you they don't care what people think.
I think he did to the extent that it's still to allow him
to get the message out there.
Okay, next question, please.
My horse.
Wow.
I love this.
I delight in all things animals, but especially horses
because my high school girlfriend had a horse.
And I, you know, they do that thing where people,
oh, horses can detect how they know more about you
than you know.
And then I get into the horse and the horse
like you're in this.
And it's like a litmus test.
Having a girlfriend with a horse was very intimidating
for me, actually.
I felt like I had to compete with the horse.
She spent all this time with the horse.
It was very large.
Very like, you know.
Anyway, eventually I broke the horse. The, okay, my horse does the double inhale long exhale.
Often, he's a bit of a stressy guy. Warm blood? Yeah. Warm blood. I used to work at the barn.
I used to shovel manure and work at the barn.
She brought her horse to college.
I should follow her off to college.
I never would have gone to college if she hadn't gone to college.
And the horses are interesting animals.
They do tell you a lot.
The horse does the double inhale long exhale often.
He's a bit of a stressy guy.
Do you suppose this physiological stress-regulated transcends?
We absolutely, absolutely.
In fact, I mentioned warm blood.
I'd have a colleague at Stanford.
She's amazing.
Her name is Sumacanol and she is an expert in dog genetics.
So you can imagine I'm always asking her questions.
And we talk about dogs and we talk about horses because she also thinks she raises warm
bloods.
And you hear about hot bloods and warm bloods.
And you also, if you have any familiarity with dogs, there are dogs like Costello, where
like a nuclear bomb could go off and Costello might open an eye.
That's the bulldog economy of effort.
They're not going to get activated unless there's a reason to do it.
They are very, as we call, parasympathetic dominant.
That seesaw of autonomic arousal is just really, really relaxed.
Getting them into action is more of an effort.
There are other animals like the Whippet, right?
Or the Italian Greyhound, like they do sit there,
like they're always cold, that are very sympathetic dominant.
And then, of course, within a breed or within a species,
there's a range. And humans also, out within a range.
I think anyone who's had children will tell you, you know,
he or she has been like this in birth, Calm, easygoing or like really easily stressed. I think that seesaw, we
didn't get into tonight too much, but there's a concept with the autonomic regulation of
a hinge. So don't think so much about being really stressed out or really relaxed, but
certain animals, the hinge is tightened so that the sea saw just kind of tilts mellow, like Costello. A bulldog almost seems like a
different animal than a whip it. They're so very different. And within the
the category of horses, and I'm not an expert in horse genetics, but they are
selected for, not just for their physical attributes, but for their psychological or
temperament attributes. And you see this in dogs too. In fact, the reason I picked Costello and Elvis
can verify their stories, I read, I wanted a dog for so many years and I went there and there were
all these puppies. And I was, I heard you need to take them in the other room,
a one by one, and then if it barks for its siblings,
and you're like, oh, it's a healthy puppy.
So I walk in and all the dogs are running around like crazy.
It was right around Christmas time, right, Elvis.
And they're running around, and then there's one in the back.
And he's taking advantage of the fact that all the other ones
are waiting, he's just eating out of all of their bowls.
And I was like, I want that one.
So I took that chubby little bastard in the next room and I thought, okay, he's going
to bark for his siblings and lay down and he took a nap.
And I was like, this one, I want this one.
Why did I want that one?
Well this completes the principle, which is I wanted a dog like that because I'm not like
that.
And I was very interested in a dog I could take care of, but also a dog that would help
regulate my nervous system.
And so for me, having a dog like that as opposed to a whip it or something that was going
to constantly around is a very calming effect.
And to this day, memory of his snoring still puts me to sleep.
So I think that your horse probably has,
it kind of idles a little bit higher.
Think about the RPM, you know, revs a little bit higher
to give more RPM at a given speed.
That's the way I think about the autonomic system.
How do you reset that?
Well, this is why a lot of exercise is good, right?
And certainly my girlfriend's horse was crazy.
It was gilded late and it was crazy.
Almost had nuts, but that like a bad pun. So right. It was not nuts, but it was crazy. It was gilded late.
Next question.
Is there any science behind staying motivated or developing discipline? Ooh, so this represents kind of the higher tier of where I think things are going to go in
the next few years, where we're going to start seeing this convergence of psychology and
biology, where we can get to these harder concepts.
You know, I like to think that we can stay motivated through a simple process that now
will make sense to you.
Because the last thing I covered was toggling back and forth between our ability to be gritty and lean in,
kind of in friction, maybe even a little anger, fear, competitiveness, etc.
That kind of urr, grinding in, but that the more sustaining you feel, the sort of hybrid version, right? Hybrid fuel model would be one in what you can
access that, but that's a depletable and not so renewable resource without a lot of rest, meaning
working hard out of anger, determination, and kind of grit will work, but when you are depleted,
it will work, but when you are depleted, you have to stop for a long while. Whereas if you can access this delight system, which is really one of dopamine, and serotonin
both.
In other words, and I want to think of a different way to put this, but to try and think about
what sorts of things and tools allow you to be and feel most loving. I know it sounds weak,
but it's anything but weak to be most loving in the verb sense of the word toward what
you're doing. I actually used to use this trick in college when I'd encounter a topic
I hated. I would tell myself, I'm really, I'm just going to fall in love with this by
trying to find the gems
within it.
Sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't, but the wish to do it that way, as opposed to,
okay, I'm just going to grind this out, at least for me at the time, was a powerful tool.
So motivation and discipline is a tricky one.
That's sort of the just do it thing.
You need tools to modulate your stress and to do all the basic things right, set the
right context for you to be in your best chance of being disciplined, and that it's itself
as its own form of discipline.
But in terms of continual motivation, you're not going to manage to go against the grain for very long.
People have managed to go against challenge for very long time, for very long times.
In fact, I was reading recently about the psychology of people who have been kidnapped.
And they have this odd trick that they used.
Have you heard about this?
It's sort of like Stockholm syndrome, but they actually convince themselves to fall in love
with their captors.
And then they come up with new ways to escape them,
which is kind of cool.
So there's something about mentally feeling
like you're trying to go from back on your heels
to flat footed that's very energetically costly.
So again, these systems are very susceptible
to the what we call context or top-down regulation.
Hopefully that helps.
I know it's a little bit abstract.
I wish I could give you a one-minute exercise that would make you motivated.
But we do talk about tools like to get adrenaline going and things like that.
But spend some time thinking about what would allow you to sustain effort through positive
feelings.
It's not a light concept at all.
Okay, next question, please.
What would be your biggest piece of advice for achieving one's dreams?
Oi, that's a tough one.
Again, this is going to be a little abstract.
Again, this is going to be a little abstract.
I'm a believer in this idea of a kind of a seed message. Robert Green has talked a lot about this,
that we can all kind of think back to an event
or stage of our life, typically it's
before puberty for other reasons that are
kind of interesting, but where we delight in something.
So for me, it was fish.
And obviously now I don't need to work on fish.
It wasn't about the fish.
I hope that came through.
I mean, Aquaria are really cool, but it's not about the fish.
It was something about the way they moved.
It was something about the way that it tickled my excitement.
I used to get dropped off of this little pet shop in California Avenue in Palo, it took
called Moni's Pet Shop.
My mom used it as childcare.
She would drop me off there and I had this book, and I would log all the tropical fish,
and which ones could be with which ones.
And then I would, I was obsessed, right?
But for me, it was something about organizing and being able to make reliable predictions.
It was about parsimony.
It was about principles, as opposed to, and the colors delighted me and all that kind of
stuff.
The equipment delighted me.
But then I had puberty, and then, like, it was something else.
And then I went to college, and it was something else.
And I got a girlfriend, and it was something else.
So it changes over time,
but this is why I recommended that young 15-year-old person
that they learn to tap into that sense of like,
oh, like this is cool.
Like this feels cool.
I know not everyone else thinks it's cool.
Maybe they do, but this feels good.
I actually have a somatic experience with this.
I'm not a very somatically oriented person.
I'm more or up here.
But I actually know if somatic experience with this. I'm not a very somatically oriented person. I'm more or up here. But I actually know if I'm on to something,
if this left arm just kind of starts fidgeting,
like it's like I want to move, or like some people,
you can start to identify ways in which you suddenly
have this positive energy.
It's not a fear energy.
It's almost like a magnetism to things.
And just don't be confused or misdirected in thinking that it's that thing
it's that
Again energy or that attraction to something that feels right that is your
You know, I wish we had these divining rod to find water. That's your tool. It's like on ten I you want to grow your antenna
So how do you follow your dreams? Well, I never thought I'd do a podcast.
I never thought I'd become a neuroscientist.
You have to be willing, of course, to take risks
and to iterate quickly, but not so quickly that you fail
out of the game, et cetera, if you do get back in, et cetera.
But it's really about developing an awareness.
Now, the key thing is you're not gonna find this
by going up a mountain and sitting there
or waiting for your passion to just kind of rock it,
you know, to just sort of piano fall onto your head.
It's not gonna happen that way.
You have to interact with the sensory world
and different kinds of people.
And you have to be a little bit of an adventurer
in a safe way, of course, an adventure and learn to recognize the signals.
And some people are very in tune with this.
You know, there's an amazing podcast with Rick Rubin recently on Joe Rogan.
It's a podcast where he talks about the creative processes, kind of this, like it seems like
whatever's going on in that beard of his is just connects to the world and he can just like
There like that's where you need to go and that's you know
But that's part of the magic is you don't really know and because it's it's all energetic
It's all energetic and when I say energetic I don't mean in the mystical sense
I mean you have to learn to sense those fluctuations in energy some people can sense them very easily because they're very
Mellow and if something gets them really excited,
they notice as a big delta, as we say in science, big change.
Other people, they ride kind of high all the time.
And so everything's exciting to them
and they miss a lot of the subtle fluctuations
in what's really special and right for them.
In fact, Mania is characterized by hyper elevated levels of dopamine.
And everything is a good idea.
Right? And depression is the opposite. Nothing is a good idea. Nothing is going to work.
Right? And those are the extremes and those are rough conditions, obviously.
But for most people, it's about learning to detect those subtle fluctuations in every time,
every single time you find somebody who is exceptional at their craft
and doing well in life.
Okay, there are a lot of people who are exceptional at their craft, but not necessarily doing
well on the whole.
Those people have a kind of intuition about what feels good to them.
This year's Nobel Prize winner in chemistry is my colleague Carolyn Bertosi, and all I know of her, except the fact that she's amazing chemist,
is they did this interview with her and she said that when everyone would go out in college,
she was finding excuses to stay home and read organic chemistry.
Now that to me sounds like a bad night.
But for her, it was pure delight. And she's wired for that. And I think her work is going to be vitally important
and transformative for humanity. I really do. So how do you succeed in in get chasing your dreams,
you succeed in identifying what they are, but you don't know what the outset, you want to find
the energy to find the right path and continually course correct
when you will undoubtedly beat off your path.
That's essentially what I've done.
I still look for the feeling of delighting in Costello
or the cuddle fish.
That's what I'm looking for.
It's not a template I have to match,
but that's my like, oh yeah, I know what that feels like.
It's like a texture.
It's like if you think about a bunch of different textures
of sandpaper, it's like this one that just feels really good.
And so you're comparing everything to that. Because the system that involves all these chemicals, you'll find it if you learn to pay attention to it.
But you won't find it sitting, staring at your belly button or going up a mountain, you have to be in sensory experience in order to find it.
Reflection is good, but you need to get into action.
Okay.
Wow, all right, well.
Okay, so Silasai bin, opinion of the psychedelics generally,
we just had an episode with my colleague,
Nolan Williams, who's a triple board certified neurologist,
psychiatrist.
This is a fun thing about working at Stanford.
It's also very humbling, because you're like,
well, who are these people?
I got three board certifications. You know, the, the psilocybin, first of all, not for everybody.
People with psychosis, it is still illegal decriminalize certain places.
You know, so obviously cautionary notes, people who have drug addiction issues or other kinds
of addiction issues need to be thoughtful about diving into a neurochemical landscape like that. But it does appear that the
clinical trials on one macro dose. This is what's interesting to me. A lot of people talk about
microdosing psilocybin, but the data, at least according to Matthew Johnson, who is also on the
podcast, the data for microdosing are not really there, frankly.
The data on single session macrodose,
the sort of heroic doses that have been talked about
in the psychonaut community, for depression
and to some extent PTSD and for eating disorders
and for end of life preparation are quite encouraging.
In fact, the current data suggested
about two-thirds of people achieve lasting relief
from one session.
Now, keep in mind, those are guided sessions
with physicians in the room, et cetera.
I do think there's a potential hazard of all psychedelics,
which is they alter, this includes MDMA or especially MDMA.
They alter the chemical landscape in you
such that a lot of things can serve as attractors
in that state, meaning you can get really
into the sound of music in an MDMA session,
feel connected to that and waste the opportunity
for some more meaningful transformative rewiring.
And I do think that that's worth paying attention to.
So that's the usefulness of having a therapeutic guide
there as they can continually steer you back
to what, at least for you, is the more meaningful work.
But it's very encouraging.
And Nolan Williams, who I trust,
is again, Triple Board Certified MD,
said that in the studies of lifetime perceived individual
and societal risk of all the compounds out there except for caffeine, psilocybin is at the
bottom of the list.
Whereas things like heroin, cocaine, alcohol, methamphetamine, sit at the top of the list.
Actually, alcohol quite high on that list at certain amounts of consumption.
So I'm very excited about what's happening
in the landscape of psilocybin,
but I'm not so excited about the micro-dosing data.
Very excited about the single heroic dose data.
One interesting thing there, perhaps,
what seems to be the unifying feature
of a successful psilocybin, excuseilocybin, excuse me, session is
that at some point the person feels as if it's like too much of an autonomic thing.
They kind of get to this point and then they are encouraged to quote unquote let go.
And I'm fascinated by this concept of letting go because, you know, I'm a neuroscientist.
We don't know what that means, but it seems like being able to ride the wave of autonomic arousal from top to bottom seems to be very powerful for trauma and depression
treatment. And this is interesting. A lot of people think that one of the major issues
in humans nowadays is we're stressed about a lot of things, but we never actually get
to go into the full stress response and then let it relax again.
And catharsis was big at one point, scream therapy, Steve Jobs is really in a scream therapy.
Whether or not catharsis is healthier or not
has been debated, but the data are kind of
pointing the fact that it may be provided
that the catharsis is not, obviously,
someone damaging themselves or somebody else.
So maybe we should all be screaming a lot more.
Why does my desire to eat disappear after I use the sauna? Oh, interesting. I can go in hungry and
get out with no desire to eat. I can only speculate, you know, the sauna or any kind of deliberate
heat exposure that's uncomfortable releases this molecule, dynorphine. This is actually the same molecule that's released in under
conditions of alcohol withdrawal. It makes you feel agitated and not good.
And then there's this rebound. What the way it feels good is later, it causes
this upregulation in the so-called muopioid receptors. So you're the
chemicals that you have, you're so-called endogenous opioids, not the opioids that are related to the opioid crisis, but the ones that you naturally
make are able to have a more robust effect after the sauna.
Dynorphin is an appetite suppressant, and for reasons related to kind of general discomfort
in the body. So that's the only reason I can speculate. There are a number of other things that sauna does, including massive increases in growth hormone provided you don't sauna too much.
So if you do it once a week for four, 20-minute sessions, spaced five minutes apart, you get these enormous increases in growth hormone.
If you start doing it more often, you get still significant, but smaller increases in growth hormone.
And my team, this is how the podcast goes to, at some point, Rob just goes,
it's enough. So if you think that the episodes are long now, they'd be a lot longer.
Listen, I just want to, before we part, I know it's Sunday night and people have to go.
I want to thank everyone for coming out tonight. I know that, at least for me,
I'm still sort of baffled,
but pleasantly so that people are interested in investing time to come out and hear hours
of a nerd like me talk about science and tools. And I'm delighted that people are hopefully
gleaning some useful information. Please do pass along the information. I didn't invent
this stuff. As I mentioned before, I was not consulted the design phase.
I have no domain over it.
This is the stuff of mother nature and whatever other beliefs
you have there here in us.
And of course, I'd be remiss if I didn't finish by saying,
have a wonderful night and thank you
for your interest in science. Thank you.