Modern Wisdom - #1054 - Bryan Johnson - The 2026 Immortality Protocol

Episode Date: February 2, 2026

Bryan Johnson is the founder of Braintree, Kernel, a futurist, biohacker and an author. Is it possible for humans to never die? In recent years, Bryan Johnson has drawn global attention for the extre...me experiments he’s running on his own body in pursuit of radical longevity. So what does the latest science actually say about his quest to live forever, and how close are we really to immortality? Expect to learn why it is our human obligation to fight against death, the most life-changing pivots Bryan made that helped him the most, how to get perfect sleep, what it takes to build an anti-fragile routine, the most important treatments that help increase your changes of living longer, how to improve your vascular health, how Bryan deals with complex emotions life grief, Bryan’s strange prediction on how he might die and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: ⁠https://chriswillx.com/deals⁠ Get 35% off your first subscription on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom New pricing since recording: Function is now just $365, plus get $25 off at https://functionhealth.com/modernwisdom Get a Free Sample Pack of LMNT’s most popular flavours with your first purchase at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom Get up to $350 off the Pod 5 at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: ⁠https://chriswillx.com/books⁠ Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: ⁠https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom⁠ Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: ⁠https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59⁠ #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: ⁠https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf⁠ #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: ⁠https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp⁠ - Get In Touch: Instagram: ⁠https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx⁠ Twitter: ⁠https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx⁠ YouTube: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast⁠ Email: ⁠https://chriswillx.com/contact⁠ - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Good news. I'm going back on tour with a brand new live show in Australia, New Zealand and Bali. If you are interested in learning how to overcome imposter syndrome, reach your goals while not missing your entire life, my perspective on where true confidence comes from, everything I've ever discovered about discipline plus brand new insights that I've never spoken about on the podcast, then join me on stage as I explore all of these topics with you. And you can get involved during an extensive Q&A where we work through the biggest questions that you have right now. and Brisbane are completely sold out, but there are still tickets available for Sydney, Melbourne, Adelaide, Christchurch, Auckland and Bali, and you can get yours right now by going to the link in the description below or heading to chris williamson.com. Sorry to report, I have a new bono record. Three hours, 49 minutes. The fellowship of the ring is three hours, 48 minutes. Is that a good thing?
Starting point is 00:00:54 I mean, I guess, from whose perspective? Pick. Yeah. Your perspective? Is it good for you? Yeah. I mean, yeah, it's, it's substantially better than an elite 18 year old. What would an elite boner 18 year old be? Around two hours and 45 minutes-ish. What refers to elite? Like, vasodilation, like, yeah, like take an 18-year-old in peak condition. Okay. And let's say, what would their nighttime corrections be? They probably hover somewhere around like high to nearly three hours. That would be elite level. And so it just crushes that level. So, yeah, I mean, from a pure biological capacity, yeah, it's pretty good. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:39 What were you doing with it for three hours and 49 minutes? So this is, it's kind of like it's news to people, as I've been sharing this, that, I mean, people, men are generally familiar, the idea that when you are 12, 13, 14, you start having boners. And they happen a lot. You know, like, in class, you don't even ask for it. gust of wind. Yeah, it's literally anything and you can't do anything about it? Like, I mean, do you remember,
Starting point is 00:02:04 like I would walk in between classes and it's like, you got a bonner? Where's it going to go? We're going to go. We're going to go. Took it into the waistband. Exactly. Pull it up.
Starting point is 00:02:11 You exactly put a little book cover in front of it. But like, you can't control it. You can't really stop it. And then as you age, those things naturally go down. So people kind of forget about it as a phenomenon. But men and women have arousal cycles every night. Three to five erections every night. Men get erect.
Starting point is 00:02:26 Women have their clitters and gorge. And so it's this natural process. body says, like, I want to keep my sexual function alive and vibrant and it pulse it every night. And so it depends upon your quality of sleep, your metabolic health, your cardiovascular health, your physiological health, and your hormone health. And so if those things are not in place, it doesn't happen. And so if someone's bragging about four hours of sleep at night, and like they feel fine, they're doing great, they have no boners. You might have survived with the sleep, but your erection wasn't there?
Starting point is 00:02:57 This is why I started talking about these things. We were like measuring a whole bunch of stuff. But I was really, right now, sleep deprivation is high status. If you can basically flex and say, I only sleep four hours a night. I'm amazing. I work 18 hours a day. People like, oh, my God, what an amazing person. We admire you so much.
Starting point is 00:03:16 And so it has this really weird high status. So this frame of the boners makes sleep deprivation low status. Right? It's like, sure, you can brag about that thing. but also your body has shut down its sexual function, and you can no longer get boners. And so it's really like, that was one angle. The other one is like the erections really are one of the most representative biomarkers of overall health.
Starting point is 00:03:42 That you can have big muscles and you can have great skin, but if your boners are not there, then, you know, it's not, your body's not in good shape. You're saying that nighttime erections are like the weather vein or the canary in the coal mine that's an aggregate of a ton of other shit that's going on. Exactly, right. Yeah, it basically is a representative marker. And you can't do anything about it. Like, you can't go to the gym and, like, work out your boners, right?
Starting point is 00:04:05 You can't pump iron. You go to sleep, you know, there happens or it doesn't. You have no control over it. So it's this really great marker. What you mean is you have no control over making it happen at the time, but you do have control over your health, which is going to be indicative of whether or not that does happen in future. Because you could go to the gym and do a ton of zone too,
Starting point is 00:04:24 which I imagine improves cardiovascular health. and then make it some more bonus. Exactly right. Otherwise, when you lay down and you close your eyes, it's just like you say a prayer, it's like, I hope they happen. You can think of Lord of Rings all of you want, but it's not going to happen. It's not going to happen. I mean, like the company that does this, that makes this device,
Starting point is 00:04:41 they've got a 20,000 nice dataset. And my scores just trounce everybody in the dataset. Okay. And so we've worked very hard. Is that the thing you're most proud of? You know, it really is. I know it really is. In our society, people hear that and they blush.
Starting point is 00:04:58 Like, oh, my God, that's so, you know, like, why are you talking about that? But, like, it's like a biological function. Everybody has them, like we as a species. Our primary biological objective is to reproduce. It's like it's on point with what our DNA is meant to do. And it also is like the most counterculture thing you can be doing because we have this culture that has high status relative to sleep deprivation and having a shitty lifestyle, drinking a lot, doing addictive things, nicotine, vaping.
Starting point is 00:05:30 So it really is like counter to all those things. Trying to say those are actually low status, this is high status. Let's try to change the moral narrative on like what do you aspire to and what really is a flex. Great point. It's a weird trades like that. I think most people understand if you're smoking, particularly cigarettes, if you're drinking very regularly, if you were overweight, These are, there are visual markers right now that also suggest you're probably going to be pretty fucked down the line. Sleep deprivation is one of these weird inversions of that where you're rewarded for the sleep deprivation in the moment and the costs are pushed further down the line.
Starting point is 00:06:16 I guess it would be like a birth rate decline. Like you don't see it because the population can be getting bigger even while the birth rate is getting smaller because people live. longer and then this thing drops off a cliff or climate change. You can continue to do it and continue to do it and continue to do it until you reach some point where you can no longer handle it. It's like going bankrupt gradually and then subtly. It's like to beckon. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And you're right to call out the fact that there's this sort of pedestalization of it. I think about, especially watching you who is now the tip of the spear of sort of, you know, the canonical example in basically no time at all. You know, it would have been back in the day like a Ben Greenfield and then it
Starting point is 00:06:53 would have been a tear or a Huberman. And I guess these guys all have their own pockets, right? Your like hard longevity now moving into culture with like limited balance on I'm just doing what it takes to be as healthy as possible. Anyway, everyone's got their own little pockets. You've become the canonical example. What I've seen is this sort of the spiral is getting tighter and tighter and tighter of movement, counter movement, counter movement, counter movement, counter movement.
Starting point is 00:07:23 counter countercounter do do do do so um we don't know that sleep's important Matthew Walker comes out and says she'll watch how much you sleep that was the first time I ever learned about it right and I think we'd be right to say he was close to this sort of front modern push of that then that lasts for a good while and we get back to well you know like the Kustle and grind culture can come back in and take over and then you get back to no this is really really really fucking important and it'll improve your performance right now and now we've already gone back to like the next iteration of the hustle and grind culture, which is much more of a pushback against over-optimization. So there was, this is important. Fuck off. No, it's not
Starting point is 00:08:03 hustle and grind. You will perform better if you do sleep well and also you should consider your sleep, which is an elevated version of the first one. Yeah. Fuck off you're over-optimizing. Like we can just do it ourselves. Do you know what I mean? It's like this ping pong the like it gets tighter and tighter and tighter. Yeah. And it's like also they, I mean, I'm waging mnemetic warfare, right? And so, like, this is the classical thing that has always been done through our history is you take a given moral value in society. If you don't like that, that thing has power, you invert it. Right. So this is like Christianity would say the meek inherit the earth. Right. So this is like a counter to the rich and powerful have the ability
Starting point is 00:08:45 to push everyone around and do as they please. And so you can't really combat that. So if you can't compete on strength, you compete on virtue. So you invert that. Right. And so this has been done through religions. It's been done through all kinds of cultural norms. And so this is, I'm trying to basically do the same thing to death culture. And so death culture is, you know, we power, wealth, and status are the primary objectives of our society. We will do anything for power wealth and status, including killing ourselves. And killing yourself for power, wealth, and status is actually a virtue, right? Like, You're a hero. You're on the hero's journey if you do this thing.
Starting point is 00:09:23 And so to combat that, you have to take that, which is high status, and make it low status. And so the way you punch away at that is you do the thing where it's like if you get four hours of sleep in night, you have no boners, right? If you don't have a boner, are you a man? Right. And the same thing is for women, you know, like same cycle. Then you can also say, you know, if you're not well rested, if you don't have good nourishment, if you're not exercising, you have functional IQ 10 to 12 points lower. Nearly a false standard deviation. So it's actually making you dumb, right?
Starting point is 00:09:52 And like what do people care about more in that high status place than their intellect, right? Their ability to actually. Maybe only after that would be their erections. Yeah, exactly. I mean, like, it's so primal. It's like, how smart am I? And like, how sexually formidable am I as a person, right? Like, that's who we are as these animals.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And so I'm trying to take those high status things, bump them down to low status and invert the arc. Because otherwise, when you make these, like, good nature, like sleep because it's good for you, no one gives a fuck. You have to hit the heart of power because unless you speak to power wealth and status directly, nobody's going to change anything because they're locked in on the goal they've been taught to pursue, which is like, I care about my status and the tribe. I don't want to be ostracized. I want a high status, not a high respect. I want high power as much as I can get. Which is, talk to me about power, wealth and status. Is there a hierarchy to you? Is there a hierarchy to you? the one which is more seductive than the rest? Is there a sequence that people seem to move through on their evolution to wipe themselves, rid themselves of the slime? Yeah, I mean, you can just jump in between groups and just see it so clean. Like, for example, I spent some time in D.C. recently,
Starting point is 00:11:06 they're not after wealth. I mean, you can get wealthy being in D.C., but that's not the primary objective. You're really after connections and power and status from that community, whereas in Silicon Valley, it's really about wealth creation, right? That's like the ultimate objective. And so different communities have different levers. I'm impartial to whatever they are. Like ultimately, people are trying to, people playing this game are trying to superimpose their view on the world.
Starting point is 00:11:33 They're trying to muscle in and reorganize the world to somehow be trained by their mental models of existence. And whether that's done through a product or their philosophy or their presence or their personality, but everyone's trying to wrestle their memetic essence onto the world. What do you make of the
Starting point is 00:11:58 Harvard longevity study? I'm sure that you've become familiar with this. The world's longest running study on other life and happiness, and it does have some sort of longevity, life span, health span, predictions in there. Given that that's been going
Starting point is 00:12:16 already for such a long time and has had a lot, huge data set, right? I think it's like 80,000 maybe more. Yeah. Yeah. What's your perspective on that, given what you're interested in? Yeah, I mean, there's probably some truisms on like humans respond favorably to having robust relationships. Like, that's true long ago. It's true now. Humans respond favorably to exercise. There's a lot of truisms. Like, we know this shit's really, you know, the case. But I think it's like what may be interesting about this is that is a good retrospective study. I'm not sure all of it's going to carry over it into the future.
Starting point is 00:12:51 So in the coming years, if we figure out some of these new therapies to rejuvenate ourselves in ways we couldn't before, it may be an entirely different environment in which we look at long-lived species. And it may be less about those things and more about other things. Now, this is not to say that relationships are going away. It's not to say that fundamentals of being active, they're going away. But I do think we're at a moment in time where if you have that study going on and we were talking in 1960s, we'd be like, yep. Good data, let's carry on. But being in 2025 where AI is now starting to make novel discoveries,
Starting point is 00:13:23 I think the landscape is going to be very different. What are the specific differences that are going to have the most lever behind them? I mean, there's an open question, like, what is AI in our lives? Like, is AI a relationship or not? Do we have human relationships? Like, what are the contours of those things? What do longevity therapies do for us if we start playing around with gene therapies? What is it also?
Starting point is 00:13:44 I mean, for example, you look at OZempic, like these GLP ones, you take a shot, it alters your experience with hunger. Like it changes a fundamental part of being human. And so if we have the ability to change something so fundamental to our essence and we get really good at drug design, like what else are we going to change? So I'm talking about this on like a 10, 15, 20 year time scale. This is not like next two or three years, but still like we are in this open frontier where there may be some things that continue as universalisms that just as a biological species,
Starting point is 00:14:16 their true. Also, it's a radical change, and I'm more interested in what is going to be different than what has been. Yeah. Morgan Housel's book, same as ever, is an interesting one that people try to predict the future, but what is easier is to work out the stuff that's not going to change moving forward, because the future is as yet undetermined, but working out what from the past can be predictive. It's quite nice. There is this sense, right? Everybody's had this sense that, our generation. We are the one. It's the inflection point. It's the precipice. It's right now. It's always right now. Because it always does feel like that. If you look at a hockey curve, that graph at each point, it was the highest, most rapidly ascending, biggest, quickest
Starting point is 00:15:00 moving point ever. And then you just pull it along a little bit and then it zooms out and you go, oh, that was nothing. But now, now, and then you zoom out and you get and you go, but now. Yeah. Sure. Yeah. Yeah. Like we, we, we, I've read, um, I just finished 1929, about the stock market crash, also a tripping on Utopia, and also a history of Western thought. I finished those three books last week. And like the theme that comes through is that humans replay the same actual play every generation. It's the same cast of characters. It's the same archetypes. It's the same arguments. And they just roll through different ideological spaces. But it's the same dynamics.
Starting point is 00:15:44 So we experience this moment, like you're saying, like, we think it's novel and unique. And we imagine we're something that's pivotal, but really, like, it's just the same thing. It's really very humbling because then it goes back to, like, how much of your lived experience is NPC and how much is truly novel. And I have to, like, concede probably 99% of my lived experience as NPC. I probably have one shot at a novel thought. Or, like, it's just the state of play. And it's very hard to get outside of that. But once you realize that it's somehow relieving that that's the case, but also challenging.
Starting point is 00:16:20 You have to figure, like, how do I pull myself out and try to find moments of sobriety to see what this moment is? Yeah. Again, speaking of the Christian piece, the meek, the sort of humility, the you're less special than you think you are. It's grounding in that way. I don't think British people need more of that. Maybe Americans do. We're already going on. God, I love the Brits.
Starting point is 00:16:38 I love how, I love how. Honorary they are and brutally honest and acrimonious. And I find... Sanguine. I do. I find those personality traits be so charming. Well, I think everybody misses what they don't have, right? Americans would probably quite like a little bit more piss-taking and being brought
Starting point is 00:17:03 back down to worth. And British people want a little bit more enthusiasm and encouragement. Yeah. That's why I came over here and said, oh, my God. It's like being, you know, taking a drink and not knowing everything. I was thirsty. I was so nourished by this. And then for you, I've always wanted someone to tell me I'm a prick. Like, you know, finally, these people will say it to me straight. I'm interested, you know, sort of relating to the Harvard longevity thing, from the outside, a lot of what you're
Starting point is 00:17:29 focused on seems to be kind of the raw physiological. But there's a huge emotional piece to longevity, regardless of how much AI is going to change things. And some of that will manifest in like sympathetic stress, chronic stress, blood pressure, sleep, blah, blah, blah, more than that as well is what is your moment-to-moment experience of life like, too. So I'm interested in how you are thinking about the emotional and spiritual piece of longevity and health when you've got all of this focus on the physical piece. So are you and how are you looking at those two elements? Do you even conceive of them within your map framework?
Starting point is 00:18:14 Yeah, I mean, first, I don't really feel emotions, so no, I'm joking. I mean, people, that's a very common perspective. What people don't realize is that the entirety of my endeavor is about AI and how we as a human race survive this moment, like full stop. That is the only reason I'm doing this. Was it like that when you first started? Yes. Really? So you saw the writing on the wall with regards to AI before Normies like me did.
Starting point is 00:18:44 In 2016, I gave this talk and I was like, look, if we look at this graph, very clear, it's up and to the right, and it's big. What was the graph? AI. Whatever it is, it's going to be big. And so I didn't care to get into prediction game of when it's going to arrive and what it's going to be and all that, just that this is a moment. and I was trying to poke around given this it really does feel
Starting point is 00:19:13 like this is like very much like a feel intuition it feels big and it feels consequential and it feels like we probably want to be sober to get this thing right and so what I've been trying to do
Starting point is 00:19:23 more than anything is to say we need a new moral philosophy that enables us to survive this moment that basically the philosophy we have now that drives everything is one built
Starting point is 00:19:36 on death. We are inherently a die species. We seek death for the glory of immortality through our various games. And the new moral philosophy I'm trying to create is don't die. That is like when you get birth to superintelligence, existence itself is the highest virtue. And so back to this book of the history of Western thought, Plato, Aristotle, Christianity, medieval times, Renaissance, enlightenment, modern day scientific era, like big chunks of time for these big ideologies. We're due for a brand new moral philosophy. And it will be induced by AI. And so the opening is right now.
Starting point is 00:20:15 And it's not just like some small tweak. It's a really big opening. And that's what I'm really angling for. And so health is a vector to basically talk about it to say like, here's how you understand philosophy through these very practical actions. But that's really what I'm trying to do. And so above all, it's a health is a language to, communicate a new moral philosophy on what do we do as a species in this moment.
Starting point is 00:20:39 Before we continue, if your sleep's been off, taking ages to fall asleep, waking up at random times or feeling groggy in the morning, Momentus's sleep packs are here to help. They're not your typical knock-you-out supplement, just overloaded with melatonin, just the most evidence-based ingredients at perfect doses to help you fall asleep more quickly, stay asleep throughout the night, and wake up feeling more rested and revitalized in the morning. That's why I take these things every single night and why I trust Momentus with my life, or the very least my sleep, because they make the highest quality supplements on the planet. What you read on the label is what's in the product, and absolutely nothing else. And if you're still unsure, they've got a 30-day
Starting point is 00:21:15 money-back guarantee, so you can buy it totally risk-free. Use it, and if you do not like it, for any reason, they will give you your money back. That's how confident they are that you'll love it. Plus, they ship internationally. Right now, you can get 35% off your first subscription, and that 30-day money-back guarantee by going to the link in the description below. Are heading to livemomentus.com slash modern wisdom. That's live momentous.com slash modern wisdom. Yeah, I've got a miniature essay from you. People are confused by me and my intentions.
Starting point is 00:21:49 I'm called a narcissist, a tech bro, vampire, grifter and health freak. Let me be clear about what I'm doing. My goal is to build the world's next major moral framework, an ideology that bridges human and machine, biology and intelligence, the ancient and the emergent. The coming psychosis, real possibility in the coming years is that society becomes dangerously psychotic. Yes, we are already psychotic,
Starting point is 00:22:11 addicted, fragmented and self-destructive, but I mean clinically psychotic and on a civilizational scale. We are already showing precursor symptoms, record antidepressant use, rising suicide rates, rampant addiction, and global increases in loneliness and anxiety disorders. These are all biomarkers of a species whose cognitive environment has outpaced its biology. Human cognition evolved under conditions of slow change. Our nervous systems and social architectures were shaped for a world that changed near imperceptibly over millennia.
Starting point is 00:22:40 When things change faster than our native capacity, we lose coherence. The hippocampus binds the present to memory and the prefrontal cortex constructs a coherent future. Does that mean? Yeah. It means that we are going to struggle to keep up. And it's going to be so unnerving to us that
Starting point is 00:23:01 things might get chaotic and psychotic and it might just have the bottom drop out. Like, for example, when I was reading this book 1929 about the stock market crash, the focus was financial gain. You know, invest in the stock market, get credit to invest more,
Starting point is 00:23:20 like leverage yourself up. And then when that burst, it created all kinds of destruction in the economy. And we took us a long time to recover from that. I think the equivalent right now would be hope. that you have hope for the future, right? Like you have imaginations of what you want to be, become,
Starting point is 00:23:36 what you want to achieve. Everyone has that. And as society progresses, when AI starts doing various things, it's not that they're bad. It's just that change happens, and that creates uncertainty for humans. Like, what am I going to do?
Starting point is 00:23:50 Who am I? What's my identity? How do I feel secure? All these basic questions, if we can't answer those as fast as people feel insecure about it, then you kind of teeter on the psychosis, where like, can you keep your shit to get? And so people focus a lot on AI.
Starting point is 00:24:05 Like, is AI a threat? Should we posit? Like all these different questions, there's an equal and opposite concern of what happens to human society when all this change is happening so quickly. And we can't respond fast enough. Like, is, is the bottom falling out the real risk of, you know, then humans do human stuff, right? Like we- What's the bottom falling out in this scenario?
Starting point is 00:24:29 It's the sturdiness of law. an order of hope that I, my son, my 20 year old son, he can go to school, he can get a degree, he can get a job, he can make money, he can find his own apartment, he can get married, you know, if he wants to have kids, like the natural life progression, if he can't quite see that structure anymore, who is he? Or you take like my dad, who's like, now he's early 70s, he's on the other side, he's in the legal profession, the tools are getting so good, like he just can't hang. Like, it's hard for him to hang. and he's like, what do I do?
Starting point is 00:25:04 Like, I'm now out of the game and I don't feel any worse. Like, I don't have any identities. He's really, really struggling. And so you take any person at any stage in their life, you've got really serious existential challenges. This is not guaranteed. It's just as like a thought experiment of like what could happen. And so what don't die could be is like this,
Starting point is 00:25:21 this sturdiness beneath us to say it's okay. Like our identities are not tied up in our profession. They're not tied up in our status in the community. It's actually tied up by this virtue of existence that we're going to fight this new game as a species that don't die. And so it's trying to create sturdiness of identity, sturdiness of community, surdiness of like, we've got this. We have a purpose. We have a mission. We're here for a reason.
Starting point is 00:25:46 If the mission of being alive is simply mortality, does that not drop down much of the complexity that people find beauty in? It's like simply being alive. Like, there's two parts to this that I see in my mind. one is one which is very whole. It's about enoughness. It's about being okay as you are. But that's not how humans are wired. You know this.
Starting point is 00:26:09 Yeah. Like power, status, money. Like, we are going to try. And even if it's just, I play pickleball on a week weekend with my friends, I want to become better at pickleball next week. If I'm not better at pickleball, there is this sense of lack that comes through. Yeah. But on one side, there is sort of enoughness.
Starting point is 00:26:28 But when you get down to a more sort of raw. objective ledger, like your job is to be alive tomorrow. Yeah. It's like, fucking hell, really? Yeah. Like maybe if we were in a time of war or there was a lot of pressure or there's a pandemic, like, oh, that'll imbue me because I'm, there's resistance. But like, really?
Starting point is 00:26:49 Like the peak of my contribution is to not expire by tomorrow permanently until, you know, it does happen. Do you understand what I mean? How inspiring is that as a vision? Yeah. I mean, so to make a parallel example, think of capitalism as an objective function. So you say making money is your goal. Right? When you wake up, that's what you do. And now you see the entire world is engaged in that goal in some capacity. Everyone. Don't Die is a similar game where you say our goal as a species is to end death, not just for ourselves, for us collectively and the planet. And so you're basically taking on the the biggest challenge you could ever take on in this part of the universe, you're trying to solve for entropy. Let's just list out a few things we could work on. How would you go about building a global biological immune system? So let's say, we say a pandemic like COVID is not good
Starting point is 00:27:48 for us. Like we don't want those anymore. We don't want the plague. We don't want somebody in a lab, you know, cooking up smallpox again. Great. So how could we build out a global biological immune system where we have sensors around the world where it automatically detects any kind of pathogen that is threatening to our life, that's a pretty cool scientific project. Now, let's say we care about the oceans and the ocean help and the coral reef is burning up right now. That's bad for an environment. How do we stop that from happening and rebuild coral reef? And so you just start like ticking down the projects of how could you as a species solve for entropy, like solve for death? The list is endless. Like it's just like you have more to do than you ever. You ever
Starting point is 00:28:28 could in capitalism. It's a bigger game than capitalism. Can you flex it in the same way? Sure. I mean, you have the same rules, right? Like anyone who does something has high status in the community. Like if I'm making a contribution, like, for example, I started to, again, like my entire game is to make death related things that are high status, make them low status, right? That's my whole thing. And so in this case, you could start scoring companies that do something that actually kill you. Right. So that could be scrolling, endless scroll, inducing you to endless scroll. It could be alcohol. It could be vaping. It could be porn. It could be toxins, like all those things. Companies that introduce that into the world, you would quantify it and they would get a die score. Any fast food company represents death. They are actively introducing molecules into people's body that induce death versus more healthy ingredients. So like that's an example where, you start assigning a quantitative measure
Starting point is 00:29:30 on what an entity, individual or company is doing, into society. Like a carbon offset, but for longevity. Exactly. But it defined it this really granular fashion, and you tie, because right now,
Starting point is 00:29:41 if you make money and you're dirty the world, doesn't matter. Right? If you make money and you poison people, doesn't matter. In fact, you're kind of a hero. So, like, to tie social status with your actual effect
Starting point is 00:29:52 on life or death for the species. What have been the biggest, changes in your approach or beliefs about health and longevity over the last few years. You came in the show maybe three years ago and then we got to hang out in Roatan a couple of years ago, but lots of research, lots of experimentation, self-experimentation, what have been the biggest pivots? Yeah. I'd say one is do less.
Starting point is 00:30:22 Like most things in health and wellness and longevity don't work. and so people spend a lot of time doing stuff and I would say save your time and money and don't do a lot of stuff. Do a few things. And then two is the biggest yield is typically doing behavioral change. So like if a person has
Starting point is 00:30:42 everybody has their thing. Let's say somebody's thing is like they love skittles and they just can't help themselves to have a bag later night. then that's the biggest longevity therapy for that person is to stop eating the bag of Skittles. And so what a person will typically do is like if they have that,
Starting point is 00:31:03 if they're locked in on that battle, they will to compensate for that. They'll go to a gym. They'll go get red light therapy. They'll do a cold plund. They'll do all this stuff. That isn't the thing. But yeah,
Starting point is 00:31:15 it's basically to compensate for the fact that they feel so powerless to stop the Skittles thing, that they'll rather do those things. So most people are doing that compensation. Even though like those things are good, they're not the higher yield thing. The higher yield thing is to stop the bad behavior. But that's the thing that most people feel very hard. And what they don't realize in doing that is like the reason why that's hard is because
Starting point is 00:31:36 they're not sleeping. Not sleeping well just destroys your willpower. And they're not sleeping well because like five other preceding things are in case. So I try to help people understand like here's a five step process to nail your sleep. When you nail your sleep, your willpower. boosts. When you will power boost, you can tackle Skittles. That's your therapy. Okay. So it's sleep Numero Uno? By far. Okay. Give me, after all of the experimentation, what's the 30,000 foot view on how to get perfect sleep? You want to lower your resting heart rate before bed. It's the highest value
Starting point is 00:32:12 biomarker you can track on a daily basis. So you'll find that everything that increases your heart rate before bed besides sex is bad for you and everything that lowers your heart rate before bed is good for you. And so, for example, food, timing of food is really important. So if your bedtime to 10 p.m, you want to have your final meal the day at 6 p.m. So four hours. I personally do like 10 to 12 hours because I really like that digestion time. It lowers my heart rate to like 39 to 40 beats per minute. So food, four hours before, 60 minutes before bed, screens off.
Starting point is 00:32:41 So that's very hard because we're all addicted to our phones. But hard cut, phones off because you want to avoid scrolling, texting, working, and that's very arousing for the body. red light, amber light in the house. So whites, blue lights are really bad for miltonal release. You want to have a 60-minute wind down. So when screens are off, you want to use that 60 minutes to just calm yourself down. So this is very hard because people have, we created these habits where we're glued to our phones. And if we're not on our phones, we don't know what to do with ourselves.
Starting point is 00:33:13 And so it creates this panic. So the 60-minute time window before bed is really precious in that you just need to kind of be with yourself. Now, you can hang out with a friend, a family member. You can go for a walk, your breathwork, meditation, a hobby, like puzzle, journal, like whatever. But you just need to learn how to be with yourself without stimulation. And that will naturally allow you to calm yourself down. I do this process where I talk to myself. So like, I talk to my various Bryans. So like sleep Brian comes on duty at 7.30 p.m. because my bedtime's at 8.30 p.m. And then all the brines line up and they want to talk to me. How many are there? Oh, man. There's like probably a dozen. I probably
Starting point is 00:33:49 loud. It's like a Bonnie Blue meter. Okay. Yeah, so the first one's Ambitious Brian. Ambitious Brian is by far the loudest. Right? He's always like, he shows up and he's like, do more.
Starting point is 00:33:58 I got a bangor idea. Brand new idea. It's fucking amazing. And Sleep Brian says, I love you, ambitious Brian, right? Doing us a real solid, like, doing great out there. Also, we're in sleep mode. So I'm going to write down your idea and tomorrow we'll talk about this. And the next one is anxious Brian.
Starting point is 00:34:15 He's like doing all the checks. Like today, did you make any big errors? did you like, you know, do anything... Upside anyone. Do anything stupid? Say anything you regret. And so, like, doing that internal reconciliation of, like, do you have good self-awareness? And they all just line up.
Starting point is 00:34:28 But if you don't talk to them, then when your head hits a pillow, they show up and they're like, we're here. And we want to talk about our stuff. And then you go to bed finally, you wake up at 2 a.m. And they're like, we're back. And so you've got to have some kind of reconciliation process to calm those voices. So, like, those are the big ones, like food, light. wind down routine, screens off,
Starting point is 00:34:53 that, yeah, like, and then caffeine. So you want to have your final caffeine around noon each day. So he has a six hour half life. Those are the real big ones. So, but what you want is like for a man, you want to be like 50-ish heart rate, same with the, same with the female. If you're in that zone, you're doing pretty well. If you can bump down a bit more.
Starting point is 00:35:11 And once you get that nighttime routine knocked down, then you can start exercising very well. Like, if you sleep really well, your willpower skyrockets. If you sleep poorly, it, like, knocks your prefrontal cortex offline. You can't really have much willpower. So that's, like, number one. Okay, lots there. A quick aside, if you have been feeling a bit sluggish, your testosterone levels might be the problem.
Starting point is 00:35:32 They play a huge role in your energy, your focus, and your performance. But most people have no idea where theirs are or what to do if something's off, which is why I partnered with function because I wanted a smarter, more comprehensive way to understand what's happening inside of my body. Twice a year, they run lab tests that monitor over 100 biomarkers and their team of expert physicians analyze the data and give you actionable advice to improve your health and lifespan. Seeing your testosterone levels and tons of other biomarkers charted
Starting point is 00:35:58 over the course of a year with actionable insights to improve them gives you a clear path to making your life better. And unfortunately, getting your blood work drawn and analyzed like this usually costs thousands, but with function, it's just $499 and you can get an additional $100 off bringing it down to 399 bucks, get the exact same blood panels that I get, and save 100 bucks by going to the link in the description below
Starting point is 00:36:20 or heading to functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. That's functionhealth.com slash modern wisdom. How do you avoid an optimal routine becoming a fragile superstition? Yeah. People try to, they come back, they come with that argument, that's great. Like, the body loves routine.
Starting point is 00:36:48 Now, it does not mean that you have to always be in a routine, but the body is built for routine. So, for example, if your bedtime is 10 p.m., your circadian rhythm is locked in to 10 p.m. And your body expects sleep to happen at 10 p.m. This is what Jetlake is. Yes, exactly. And so, like, you have a garbage truck that rolls through your body at around 10.30 p.m. and it's there to pick up all the trash. What is that?
Starting point is 00:37:14 It's your, basically your cleansing system of, like, your lymphatic system is cleaning all the trash from your body. And if you're not asleep at 10.30 p.m. and in your deep sleep mode, it's going to, it's going to not come. So you've got trash built up. Like New York,
Starting point is 00:37:27 you've got the trash bags all over the place. And so people think, if I'm not in bed by 10, I'm going to go to bed at 1, that's okay. I'll sleep into my morning makeup. It doesn't work that way. And so the body has very specific rhythms that it wants to be on. And so when you lock in, it's good. And so when someone makes the argument,
Starting point is 00:37:44 like, I'm going to give my body some hormetic stress, right? I'm going to like push it to one and then it move back. The body hates it. Like inconsistent sleep is as bad as little sleep. I was going to say, do you, when it comes to prioritization, is duration more important than regularity or are they equal? Regularity by far is the best one. Yeah. More than duration. Oh, so I'm sorry. You said duration. I don't, I don't. know, I'm not sure on that one. It's kind of like picking your favorite child. Yeah, yeah, because you kind of need both.
Starting point is 00:38:16 Yeah, like, the lesson here is, because these are bad habits people have, you need to be on time. You can't make it up. You can't skip during the week and then make it up the weekend. It doesn't work that way. So you miss a garbage truck every day. It doesn't come back. Like, sure, maybe in the weekend, but then you're so off on your circadian rhythm that, like, now is a garbage truck given in service. Mm-hmm.
Starting point is 00:38:40 Okay. So I understand what you mean with regards to the timing, but the 60-minute window, what if you don't get it? What if you're out at dinner? You're doing something with friends. You're hanging out. You're around some bright light. I've got a great story from a friend when he was in his hyper-oper-optimizer zone, which everybody goes through, where it's like the stress of trying to be perfect kills you more quickly than your imperfections too. and he had this 60-minute wind-down routine, which was blue-light blockers on, and the mouth tape and the nose strip and the magnesium by glycinate and everything else. And he'd been sort of winding down for 60 minutes, and his girlfriend at the time had been downstairs, and he was brushing his teeth in the dark
Starting point is 00:39:28 so that he wouldn't have any light on. And she just comes like, tinkering in, hits the light in the bathroom. Lights come on. He's like, ah, he's blinded. He hasn't looked at light for an hour, goes to bed, and he's raging. and he's like, ah, is my entire routine's been messed up,
Starting point is 00:39:42 and I laid there sort of staring at the ceiling, doesn't sleep. And she drops off within five minutes, having just come in from like, you know, scrolling TikTok or whatever. The example is about the fragility of reliance on that and the fear that without it, what does that create? Oh, I mean, how am I going to be able to write my book today?
Starting point is 00:40:04 I didn't get my, you know, like, as you said, like, what were the stupid things that I said today that's anxious, Brian. But another type of anxiety is, oh, I didn't get my routine done. Therefore, I can't sleep, which becomes self-fulfilling. Sleep's one of the very few things that trying harder at it makes it worse. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:21 I mean, people can find their happy balance. I think if you look at the various archetypes of people, some people love that kind of regimen. They love to be regimented. They like structure. They like process, procedure, order. and that's just their personality type. Other people like the girlfriend in the story, she's not. And so I think
Starting point is 00:40:43 the thing here is for people to recognize their kind of archetype of where they naturally gravitate to where they feel good about themselves. If you're not naturally orderly and structured, like don't be that, right? If you're... So it's just like find your jam but understand there are principles
Starting point is 00:40:59 at play, which you can't just override. Regardless of whether you like structure or don't, like if you have a three-hour swing between bedtime across a week. Yeah. Yeah. Your body doesn't work in that way.
Starting point is 00:41:11 Okay. What are... What are the things that people focus on for sleep that don't move the needle? I really... I guess I take 300 MCGs of melatonin, which is like... So a third of a gram, a microgram, milligram. Yes. Okay.
Starting point is 00:41:34 Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I'm very light. People fucking way, way, way overcooked. Like one milligram, five milligrams, like... There's 30 and 50 milligrams. Yeah, exactly. I do a very tiny dose of melatonin. It's to offset the calcification that happens in my pineal gland.
Starting point is 00:41:47 Like as you age, your pineal gland calcifies. You produce less melatonin. So it's like a little offset teeny bit. So in 10 years' time, maybe you'll take 500 micrograms. Yeah, exactly. And so it's a very small touch. Otherwise, I don't take anything for sleep. And so I'd so much rather build habits.
Starting point is 00:42:02 And this is the same thing. Like Americans, just like we are, we take more antidepressants than any country in the world. Quick fix. We love pills. Like, we love pills to solve fundamental problems. A gummy or a powder. Yeah, habits are the strongest ones. So, like, that's why I focus on.
Starting point is 00:42:18 Just build your sturdy habits. In the archetype you are, that's the tried and true thing that delivers the best. Now, if you want to try to amplify with whatever you take, cool, but generally speaking, it's really about habits. Okay. Give me your formula for behavior change. If behavior change is so important, let's assume someone's taking the first red pill, which is sleep and I now have access to
Starting point is 00:42:43 the amount of willpower that I'm supposed to have as opposed to however much is diminished when I'm a shit sleep from the night before. I've arrived behold my litany of shitty habits like a guy in a side alley going would you care to peruse my words of shitty habits
Starting point is 00:43:03 someone has a shitty habit Maybe it's the Skittles. Maybe it's whatever. Pick whichever you think is a good one. Talk me through your James Clear approach to the Brian Johnson's James Clear at home. Okay. So actually, I'll show you mine, but I wonder if this resonates or not with people. But I had this issue where at 7 p.m. I would overeat every night.
Starting point is 00:43:25 Yeah, evening eating for me is the only time. And no one never overeats in a breakfast. Oh, yeah, it was just 9 a.m. and I gorged myself on Snickers. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, like maybe like in a weekend brunch where you order, you know, pancakes. You're like, oh my God. That's a one off. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:40 That was a bad idea. I don't want to do that again. Yeah, exactly. I feel awful. Yeah. So like your willpower goes down all day. It makes sense. Like 7 p.m.
Starting point is 00:43:45 like you have stress. You're worn down. Like you just want to like whatever. So that was my issue. I already ate at 7 p.m. And so I did it every day for years. And every night was the same battle. Right.
Starting point is 00:43:55 Like, I'm not going to do it. I'm not going to do it. I do it. And then like, you know, the top button on my pants, I can't be buttoned up. comfortable. So I tried so many things to stop that and I couldn't. And so the one thing that I did is one day I just kind of said in jest, evening Brian, you're fired. Like you, Brian, who occupied me from 5 p.m. to 7 to 10 p.m. You're an unreliable thing. Like every day. Yeah, Stuart. You basically come up with these rationalizations like tonight's the last night.
Starting point is 00:44:32 tomorrow morning we're going to exercise really hard, it's one bite, whatever your specific entry point is, you always convince me to do it. You're a slippery motherfucker. Exactly. And you basically make morning Brian miserable. You make dad Brian less good dad. Ambitious Brian is hurting because of you.
Starting point is 00:44:49 And so I said you're fired. And so that means from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m., you do not have authority to eat food. No matter what. Like, I don't care what's happening. You cannot eat food. because you're so shifty. And so I just made that rule.
Starting point is 00:45:04 And so I gave him a name. I wrote down his arguments. And so he would come into my mind to be like, hey, I'm here. And I'm like, hey, evening, Brian. Like, how you doing, man? Fuck you. Yeah. And like, oh, you're going to use that we're going to work out hard tomorrow morning argument.
Starting point is 00:45:17 Or like, tonight's last night, like, I see you. And I know what that is. And I've done this 100 times. I've never, my entire life felt satisfied with myself after doing this, ever. I've never felt proud of myself. I've never felt good. Yeah, you're selling yourself a lie. About how you're going to feel after doing this.
Starting point is 00:45:33 Exactly. And so, yeah, that was just, it was just a rule. And so I guess the rule is something like none is better than some. That we do like to rationalize that, oh, just like every once in a while is fine. Moderation is a principle of life I want to play by. We have all these very clever catchphrases to justify our inability to actually do we want. And so, yeah, that was a really clean hook for me. That's cool. And the reason that I like it is. because of this most recent iteration of, ah, the over-optimizing, can we not just fucking like,
Starting point is 00:46:07 how lame, how, like, you know, the stress of trying to be perfect is killing you more quickly than your imperfections. Moderation, man. And there is a kernel of truth in it, and this is why, like, a slower, more gentle approach to, I see you, I think there's something there. I see you, I think there's something there,
Starting point is 00:46:26 is, hey, man, your focus on these habits is a kind of fragility and it is destroying the enjoyment of life by obsessing it over how you live it, right? So I get the angle on that. The problem is that nobody scrutinizes
Starting point is 00:46:47 the just live by vibes man approach with the same like level of resolution because by design they're living by fucking vibes and nothing's being tracked. Yeah, yeah. But you've never even thought of it before but you've fucking nailed it, which is the, I just live by moderation, dude,
Starting point is 00:47:05 is not living by moderation. It's living by extremis. Yeah. Like you end up, the moderation, you put, I always use this example because I like biscuits, cookies. I like biscuits. If you tell me a pack of Oreos, there's one outside, you can eat none of them or you can eat all of them.
Starting point is 00:47:21 I'm like, done. Exactly, right? But you can eat two of them. Yeah, exactly. Fucking Superman. Yeah. No, I can't eat two of them. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:29 No, you give me a start. Maybe, I don't know, maybe some people aren't like this. Yeah. I'm a, eat all of them or none of them kind of guy. So you're what on the surface, like first order looks like the very bureaucratic dictatorial Nazi policy. Like how can you do this to yourself? Like, you're not balancing life. Like it would be much better if you just allowed yourself to treat like every so often.
Starting point is 00:47:52 It's like, okay, show me how every so often your every so often is. Yeah, exactly. It's not that every so often. It's actually most of the time. Yeah. You know, I just like, I'm a bit more flexible with my sleep. You know, sometimes I let myself sleep in. Sometimes I can give myself, I go to bed a little bit later.
Starting point is 00:48:08 It's like, okay, just look at when you're going to bed. It just keeps on shifting later and later, and there is no trend over time. It's just, and sometimes it's getting wider. So, yeah, I think I've never thought of it before, but the everything in moderation is not done in moderation. Exactly right. Yeah. So this is like, again, a medic moral philosophy warfare. So the person who's arguing for moderation is attempting to take a drive towards health
Starting point is 00:48:38 and make that low status and make their moderation high status. So if you look at the world through this lens, you realize everybody at all times is trying to take their position and they're assessing the battlefield. And they're saying anything that makes me feel low status, I'm going to invert and make that high status thing low status, and my thing high status, because I inherently want to feel superior to people at all times.
Starting point is 00:49:06 That is like literally everything that's happening at any moment in society. Ever. It's just like humans want to feel superior in high status. Okay. Do you know the Inner Citadel idea by Isaiah Berlin? I don't. Allow me to teach you.
Starting point is 00:49:20 I think this may be useful to you. Issaia Berlin says, when the natural road to one human fulfillment is blocked, human beings retreat into themselves, become involved in themselves, and try to create inwardly that world which some evil fate has denied them externally. If you cannot obtain from the world that which you really desire, you must teach yourself not to want it. If you cannot get what you want, you must teach yourself to want what you can get.
Starting point is 00:49:46 This is a very frequent form of spiritual retreat in depth into a kind of inner citadel in which you try to lock yourself up against all the fearful ills of the world. The different way to look at it is if your leg is wounded, you can try to treat the leg. And if you can't, then you cut off the leg and denounced that the desire for legs is misguided and just be subdued. That's right. Yeah. I mean, that's it.
Starting point is 00:50:06 I mean, basically, that's the exact articulation of what we've been discussing. Yep. It's a meetic and moral philosophy of warfare to feel superiority. Because nobody wants to feel inferior. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:50:16 It's like, you looked at Adlerian stuff much? Yeah. Yeah. And a lot of that is driven by this, I can't be inferior. Yeah. This is why getting into a relationship
Starting point is 00:50:25 with too much of a power imbalance. Yeah. One person is significantly busier than the other. one person is significantly better looking the other. One person has significantly more attention than the other. The power imbalance is so great that unless the second person is happy to only ever sing harmony and never sing lead and is there like in service and the service becomes their reward. If you have two people, you can't have two people singing lead.
Starting point is 00:50:49 Like one person has to sing harmony. And if your lead singing and their lead singing and theirs is his fucking way ahead or yours is way ahead, there's going to be tension. I think about those bridges that you see during earthquakes, and they sort of do this, they're like flex like that. And I think about that's the kind of visual. It's this sort of flexing and tension. It's not even necessarily a pulling apart. It's I'm going this way and you're going that way.
Starting point is 00:51:16 Yeah, yeah, exactly right. Yeah, I mean, 100% like, what is society? I mean, I guess like there's two macro games happening in society, like in that tension is, what is high status? And then within that game of who is high status, right? That's it. And then you've got everyone else playing to try to take the high status, make a low status. But like right now, the highest status game is wealth, right? Capitalism.
Starting point is 00:51:46 And this came from Adam Smith, a couple hundred years. So I'm saying, like, we look... Is it the highest status game, role wealth? What about renowned popularity recognition? because you look at somebody who already has lots of wealth, and a lot of the time they continue to pursue status. I spoke about this with Naval, and his, I think this is true. You're interested to get your perspective.
Starting point is 00:52:11 Money is evolutionarily novel, and yet it's a proxy for status, and it gives you things that status can't, but we should have raw status for statuses' sake, prestige, dominance, access, like recognition. That should be more deeply, rooted and therefore less easy to satiate than money. Yeah. Because money is more novel.
Starting point is 00:52:31 Yeah. And money is not direct access to the thing that you need, right? Money without status can make you live, and status without money can make you fucking miserable and kind of on the street in a way. Yeah. Yeah. But it seems like people who get lots of status rarely continue to pursue money, whereas people who get the fucking infinity money do always continue to pursue status.
Starting point is 00:52:53 Yeah. You see an asymmetry here? For sure. Yeah. trusted with your perspective on money and status. Absolutely right. I mean, I think basically, I think that's correct. I think money has more raw power. Just from a transactional.
Starting point is 00:53:09 Just raw power. Like the ability to do things in the world. To move the world, money is in this current context. Now, behind that, so again, like you remember two games. One is what is high status? And then two is who's winning within status. And so my comment on money is that that is within context of that is high status. But if you look at broader status of what is high status, right?
Starting point is 00:53:35 Like religion has played status, right? Like you look at Christianity where Jesus is like, look, guys, I've got a new status game for you. And it's not what you're being told. Like, I'm going to tell you a whole new rule set. And so any religion's done that. And so this is the game I'm trying to play. I'm trying to basically say, like right now, capital, capitalism is status.
Starting point is 00:53:57 Like it is, if we said like, this is the thing. And I'm trying to say, this is the thing that might lead us to make a terrible error in judgment on what we do in this moment. And that the flip is existence itself is high status. Interesting. And never to the exchange of anything else. It is never worth trading existence for anything else, wealth, power, or status. existence itself is the highest virtue.
Starting point is 00:54:27 In other news, if you're feeling tired, you might not need more sleep, you might not need more caffeine, you might just be dehydrated. And proper hydration is not just about drinking enough water. It's about having sufficient electrolytes to allow your body to properly absorb those fluids. Element contains a science-backed electrolyte ratio, sodium, potassium and magnesium with no color, no sugar, no artificial ingredients or any other BS. It plays a critical role in reducing muscle cramps and fatigue. It optimizes brain health, regulate your appetite, helps curb cravings, And that's why it's used by everyone, from Dr. Andrew Huberman to Olympic athletes and FBI sniper teams. This lemonade flavor, Nicole Glass of Water, is how I've started my morning every single week for years now.
Starting point is 00:55:14 They've got no questions asked refund policy, so you can return it and they won't even ask you to send the box back. Plus, you can get a free sample pack of their favorite flavors with your first purchase by going to the link in the description below or heading to drinklmante.com slash modern wisdom. There's no code. care about the box more than that. DrinkLMNT.com slash modern wisdom. Yeah, I do understand and I think what I like is that you are not trying to upend the game of status itself.
Starting point is 00:55:48 Yeah. That's locked in. Yeah, 100%. It's like saying, well, you know, rather than trying to work out a more efficient rocket to get us off this launch pad, we can just defeat gravity. Yeah. No.
Starting point is 00:56:00 Yeah. There are physics within the system, and one of the physics is, one of the physical laws is. Yeah, yeah. status. Yeah, so really the master game in society. Like, the ultimate game is determining what is status. Like, what is the highest status?
Starting point is 00:56:13 And then, of course, you have billions and billions of humans will play within the game. They'll just be like, oh, this is the game and the function and the reward system, like, I'm playing. They won't think about it. They won't realize that the game's been set up for them. They'll just play it. That's interesting. Yeah. So rather than trying to convince people not to play the game, you just change what the game is
Starting point is 00:56:33 pointing at. And they'll play the same fundamentals they'll apply to the new game. So when you say existence is the highest virtue, the same human behaviors that are stamped out throughout time, same archetypes, same players, same stuff, every single time, just get the game right. And that's what I'm saying. Like if this moment is so simple,
Starting point is 00:56:51 just get the objective function correct. It's like some sort of judo throw that uses your opponent's momentum against the type, so to speak. Yeah, that's right. Okay, tell me about your sauna experiments. Yeah. I was watching those unfold with intrigue. So we really, we discovered quite a few things that, I shouldn't say discovered.
Starting point is 00:57:11 We found out a lot of quite a few things. So one is for those who are new to sauna, dry sauna has the most evidence because you're trying to get your core body temperature up. And so infrared does not get hot enough and wet sauna will basically burn you at the temperatures you need. So dry sauna is the right. Traditional dry sauna. Yep. 20 minutes a day at 200 degrees Fahrenheit. Is that 83 Celsius?
Starting point is 00:57:37 93 Celsius? All right. 200 Fahrenheit. So three things we found. One is I was in L.A. during the L.A. wildfires when like 20,000. Yeah, that'll pay you up if you go close to them. Yeah. So I was measuring my toxins in my body when before the fires happened and then after the fires
Starting point is 00:57:53 happened. And I was absolutely baked in toxins. So I was in like the 99th percentile, as I'm sure other people in L.A. were two. of toxins. You could go down the list to be like, this chemical is used in PVC pipe for housing. This chemical is like a countertop. This chemical is, you could literally see the burned houses and cars. Breathing in Teflon and whatever else. And you could like down the list, you could look at the industrial solvent. As a Kea Sorrento.
Starting point is 00:58:21 Yes, exactly. So my body was full of all these houses and cars were burnt. And the sauna annihilated the toxins. It was remarkable. So that was cool. Two is we have been trying to get my microplastics down because microplastics live in the body, in the brain. And we were measuring microplastics in my blood and also my semen. And so microplastics hang out in the testicles, and that has all sorts of negative effects on testosterone, on fertility. You just don't want them hanging out there. So I have over a 90% reduction in my blood and my semen of microplastics. and that was a first in world demonstration of no one had ever done that before.
Starting point is 00:59:03 So because the microplastics test is actually kind of hard to do, right? Exactly. The test is hard and no one had done semen before, no one had had repaired blood and semen. Yeah. Yeah. Just hold, because this is fascinating. But you know why kitchen detergents, say, kills 99.999% of bacteria? Why?
Starting point is 00:59:22 It's not because they're unable to kill more bacteria. It's the testing tolerance only goes to. Yeah, exactly. then this kind of feels like not too dissimilar of the same. So one is we showed that sauna is a really efficacious detox protocol. Number two is we showed that, well, we think sauna was the reason why my microplastics went down so dramatically. We're relatively controlled across everything else. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:59:48 It was very controlled. Like we didn't do any of the therapy in that time frame that were meaningful. And then three is I had really great changes, improvements in my vascular markers. So it actually improved, even though I'm in really good health, it still had a measurable increase in my vascular markers. It increased my veg F. This is like you want veg F in your body because it helps produce more capillaries and build vessels.
Starting point is 01:00:12 Like you want a higher level. It increased it by 400%, which was amazing. I had a dramatic drop of petal, which is a protein in the brain that leads to Alzheimer's. So if that dropped dramatically, we also, I did a test on looking at when you're in that kind of of environment, you want to put ice packs on your testicles because otherwise it annihilate your fertility markers. It'll take down your count, your morphology, all the above. And even
Starting point is 01:00:38 men who say, like, I don't care, I'm not trying to have a baby, there's really negative feedback loops. So if you have smashed fertility markers, then it has negative effects on your health overall. So I did three weeks with ice, and then I went two weeks without ice. In that two-week window, I got smashed. So my fertility markers went down by 50%. The prices that you pay to uncover this stuff for the rest of us, mere mortals. So I went back on ice, and I've been back on ice for six weeks now, and I got these results on my drive here. Okay, cool. Tell us.
Starting point is 01:01:09 Yeah. So I'm going to go by memory. So it's the highest sperm count I've had ever. It's the highest mortality count I've ever had. It's the highest morphology I've ever had. So, like, they bounce, not later they bounce back. It's the highest I've ever been. And if you look at these are like off-the-chart numbers.
Starting point is 01:01:28 like six to ten times the level of normal fertility. What do you think is going on there? Is that just straight vascular changes? We're not sure. What do you think is going on? Come on, ballpark the mechanism for me. Have to play around. Yeah, I mean, I really need a deep dive into some more.
Starting point is 01:01:47 Yeah, I don't know. It's a really big jump. And I've been doing hyperbaric oxygen therapy. We've been doing the sauna. We haven't done really any other meaningful therapy. that could boost it. Okay, so let's go through the protocol for the sauna. You said 200 degrees, 20 minutes,
Starting point is 01:02:07 dry, the traditional sauna, ice pack on the balls. Yeah. Does time of day matter? No. Does what did you go for as a solution for ice pack on the balls? Yeah, so you can buy these from Amazon. They're like eight bucks, BPA-free, no toxins, reusable. So, yeah, they're blue.
Starting point is 01:02:30 you get a pack of like four and then you want them on the balls in the sauna. So put on cotton underwear and then cotton shorts and then slide them underneath the shorts. In between the two. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:02:43 Yeah. And then like, so just have two of them in there. But yeah, if you keep them chilled, like we wonder whether the chilling actually has an improvement. Like we can't.
Starting point is 01:02:52 That could be so interesting. Yeah. It's got nothing to do with the sauna. It should you put an ice pack on your balls for 20 minutes? We know sauna destroys, but we wonder like is, is the ice. Because we saw... Get out of the sauna, put the ice pack on the floor.
Starting point is 01:03:03 So, like, yeah, if you're working now, like, so we actually were going to do another experiment after this completed. I was going to start icing the testicles during the day, like, just when I work. Like, because we saw a, like, a 30% jump in my fertility markers in the first three weeks of doing ice. And we were trying to figure out, like, why? Did the sauna increase it? And then the ice just protected the increase or... So we're still trying to figure out what the cause is. So collaboration of the two.
Starting point is 01:03:26 Okay. What else have I got to ask? are you taking any binders like a charcoal, a colostyramine, a NAC flush type scenario, something to capture the heavy metals that are coming out of you? None. Right? No. So it was just two pairs of cotton shorts, an ice pack at a sauna.
Starting point is 01:03:46 And like a cotton towel, wipe yourself off as you're sweating, jump in the shower. Why to wipe yourself off? I'll just, if the toxins are being excreted via sweat, just snag it when it's like hanging out your skin so it doesn't dry and shower straight after? Yeah. That's it. It's the entirety of the protocol.
Starting point is 01:04:04 Yeah. Cool. I'm going to guess you were doing that seven days. Yeah, every day. Right. Yeah, I do it after working out. So I go work out for an hour. I immediately jump into the sauna and so I'm already really warmed up.
Starting point is 01:04:16 As opposed to spending the first seven minutes getting up to temperature. Also, this seems to be from Rhonda Patrick, there seems to be some pretty good evidence about, well, you kind of extending the sessions benefits. It's somewhat. So you're stacking a few things together. Exactly right. But I do like the idea of, talking about behavior change earlier on,
Starting point is 01:04:35 stacking habits. Yes. It's very strong. Exactly. It's like, look, if I'm going to train, and I know that when I get home from training, my training session is an hour, but I'm actually going to book an hour and 40 in,
Starting point is 01:04:45 and that gives me 10 minutes to get home, and then I'm going to get in the sauna for 20 minutes, or wherever I'm going to go to maybe the sauna in gym or whatever. And then it's going to give me 10 minutes for my shower, and then I'm done. And I've done both of these things, and I've done them in the right order.
Starting point is 01:04:57 I've done them together in that format. Anything else on sauna. Initially, I did sauna in the morning. So in the first two weeks, it absolutely wrecked my sleep. I destroyed it. I'm doing it in the morning. Well, I think just doing it period. Like, it's like 200 degrees is a lot.
Starting point is 01:05:17 Like, it's really, really warm. I had never done sauna before. So I think it was just the adaptation time period. I'm fine now. But just like note that there's initially an adaptation. time period. And then two is I tried at night initially erected my sleep, but then I tried it after I had the adaptation period and it boosted my sleep. So I found that there is some virtue in doing it before bed. So you just have to run the experiment. You have to see for you if it's going to
Starting point is 01:05:41 improve sleep or not. Yeah. That also means that you're going to have to be training later in the day, which is not always necessarily. Yeah, exactly. If you pair those two things, exactly, because you don't want to exercise within four hours before bedtime. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Okay, H-Bot, talked to me about that. I was messaging you. The day that I started my H-Bot was the day that you put your video out. And I'm in there and you were like, I can't remember what the fuck you replied with
Starting point is 01:06:04 20 and 5, 83% with natural, blah, blah, blah. Because I'm in this big fucking metal dildo and the guy that's there, Vance, from Beam Hyperbaric in Austin. If anyone wants to go to a great hyperbaric place, it's fucking sick, you can book it by the hour.
Starting point is 01:06:23 Vance is great. And I'm like, knocking on this tiny little portal out of my submarine and he comes in and I just showed my phone. I'm like, I couldn't be bothered to use the radio together. So I'm like, is Brian, Brian, Brian messaged, are we doing this? And you sort of went, that's so funny. Yeah, put his thumb up like that. So, uh, yeah, hyperbaric red pill. I mean, I was, when you messaged me, I was worried about you because, uh, like a week before somebody had blown up in Arizona. So, yeah. What does that look like?
Starting point is 01:06:57 Well, so in hyperbaric, the idea is you pressurize. So you're actually, so at atmosphere, at sea level, we're about 15 pounds per square inch of concentration of oxygen. At two atmospheres, you're at 30. So you pressurize. And some hyperbaric chambers, they pressurize and then they just push 100% oxygen into the chamber. So you're just hanging out and breathing the oxygen. but if you're doing that, you're sitting in a pressurized chamber and you're basically a flammable
Starting point is 01:07:29 ball. Or a candle weight. Like, so if something, if there's a spark of any type, you just blow up. Your phone or some device that you've got with you or whatever the fuck. Okay. No, no, no, no.
Starting point is 01:07:43 This was, I was not. I was, I had the, I was breathing the mask. Cool, great. Okay, cool. Yeah. So, yes, hyperbaric oxygen therapy. I think to date, it's fair to say,
Starting point is 01:07:54 has been the single best performing therapy we've ever done. And this is both good news and bad news, because the bad news is that it's expensive, it's inaccessible, it's time-consuming. So it sucks because I hate sharing this because people, it's very exciting, but then it sucks because people can't do it. I mean, if you're already to say,
Starting point is 01:08:15 I've got to find a sauna to use, and most people don't have a sauna in the house, oh God, now you're telling me I need to produce my own oxygen. This thing weighs fucking two tons. I don't, words, does it fit? Totally. Yeah, and like, who has 90 minutes in a day to go do this thing? So I would just say for people who have a serious condition,
Starting point is 01:08:37 and there's a variety of conditions that this could address, like even cognitive decline or, you know, wounds for diabetes. What would be on the list? Like, so there's a lot of emergent evidence for cognitive decline, that if you're entering the latter parts of your life and you're really struggling, this could have a meaningful impact on that. It is used for diabetics who can't heal very well. It's used for healing, so people who have had surgeries to accelerate the healing process.
Starting point is 01:09:04 If you have some kind of injury, you're really trying to overcome, that can be great. So, like, there are some- Just telling me that some athletes post-surgery are in 90 minutes, three times a day. Exactly. They're trying to get, they're trying to hit that 90-s session number within weeks. Yes. So, like, there are some specialized applications where, and people, where it makes sense for the person to do, but I just want to be very sense.
Starting point is 01:09:24 I understand like it sucks to hear something's really efficacious and you can't get out of exclusion. Yeah, that makes sense. So like we basically like we do with all things, we measure, we have this, we cast this really wide net. We measured everything we could. My brain, my microbiome, a full blood panel, saliva stool, metabolomics, proteomics, like, you name it, we measured it. And we just found improvements across the board. It was really, because most therapies will improve like this particular marker or that marker, but rarely do they have this broad spectrum improvement.
Starting point is 01:09:57 So we saw like the cognitive decline marker Ptel 217 drop. We saw my microbiome. I had zero dysbiosis in my microbiome, like no signatures at all of dysbiosis. We saw I had no detectable inflammation in my body. So like when my HSCRP came back, zero. No, the 99.99. Like he's beaten the test. Exactly.
Starting point is 01:10:17 Like it just like it was really remarkable across the board. And so it was really efficacious. I did 60 sessions. over 90 days. And I've continued to do it. I've now done something like 200 sessions over the past year or something like that. So I just have it as part of my routine. I do it. You want to be careful not to do it too much because you'll have oxygen toxicity. Yes. You want to have some kind of... But that's why the five minute break is so important, right? Yeah, and I also take a week-long break. I'll do a sprint than a week-long break. So you just need to be careful because you can overdo it
Starting point is 01:10:47 and cause harm. If you struggle to stay asleep because your body gets too hot or too cold, this is going to help. Eight Sleep just released their brand new Pod 5 Ultra, which includes the world's first temperature regulating duvet. Pair it with their smart mattress cover, which cools or warms each side of your duvet by up to 20 degrees, and you've got a climate-controlled cocoon built for deep uninterrupted rest. New base even comes with a built-in speaker so you can fall asleep to white noise or stay awake, listening to me, and it's got upgraded biometric sensors that are running health checks every night, spotting stuff like abnormal heartbeats and changes in HRV. It even starts warming or cooling your bed an hour before you get into it, which is why 8Sleep has been
Starting point is 01:11:25 clinically proven to increase total sleep by up to one hour every night. Best of all, there's a 30-day sleep trial. So you can buy it and sleep on it for 29 nights. And if you don't like it, they will give you your money back, plus they ship internationally. Right now, you can get up to $350 off the Pod5 Ultra by going to the link in the description below. Or heading to 8Sleep.com slash modern wisdom and using the code modern wisdom at checkout. That's e-I-G-H-T-Sleep.com and modern wisdom at checkout. What was the protocol of mask on, mask off? 20 minutes on, five minutes off.
Starting point is 01:11:58 Cool. Yeah, I was doing that. The one super fucking annoying thing there is, it's very relaxing to be in, it can be very relaxing to, once you've pressurized. But you can't sleep. Yeah, because. Exactly, yeah, you're busy. Got to put this, to take this thing on and off.
Starting point is 01:12:16 One of the things that I really enjoyed doing was HIV resonance breathing. Yeah. While I was in there. Have you got into resonance breathing yet? Have you been doing it in the H-Bot? Yes. So much fun.
Starting point is 01:12:25 Yeah, it is. So much fun. There's a product that I got sent. I think I'm the first person outside of the company to have got it. It's this little lamp. I wouldn't be able to take it in. It would all fucking hell would break loose. But it's basically a resonance breathing stone.
Starting point is 01:12:40 Yeah. And you pick it up and it's got an FDA-approved thing in it. And the lamp goes up and down. You put it back and it's done. So you don't need your phone. You don't need anything else. That's brilliant. But elite HRV is what I was using with the strap.
Starting point is 01:12:49 I'm going to guess you'll have. scene. One thing that I noticed about that, niche issue. The strap that came with the elite HRV thing, which you put on so that it can detect like real high fidelity, high hurts heart rate thing. The button that you used to press to turn it on has a tiny little air pocket around it. So I got into the fucking H-Bot and by the time I'd pressurized to get down there, the button had been smashed it and I couldn't press, there was no air to press, press, the button. And then I was like trying to press it and it's just yeah, yeah, exactly. It's like SpongeBob when he gets outside of the water.
Starting point is 01:13:27 So anyway, H-Bad. So I mean, a couple of questions on this. 60 sessions as quickly as possible, basically, to start to accumulate. It's not like a one and done type of thing. I think I asked you this at the time. I'm interested if there's any more information. Going from state change to trait change. Like, is this the sort of thing that locks in? I'm aware you haven't then tested coming off and seeing what the tale of this is. But the same thing goes for sauna. Yeah. Are you just fighting entropy with this? Is it something that you just need to do? Or is there anything? Because I think there's a, I certainly know in me, if I look at a therapy or a modality or
Starting point is 01:14:12 whatever, and I find that there's no carryover. Yeah. I feel despondent. Yeah, exactly. I'm like, fucking hell. Like I've just found this new thing. Here's another thing I have to do. Does that make sense? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:26 It's because both you and I are on the other side of the entropy curve. You know, like the deal you want is youth, right? Like when you're 12, you just keep on getting better. But once you cross over into your... Slow down. Slow down.
Starting point is 01:14:40 Exactly. Like, they just, every day, they get up and like, shit, she's better. You know, so like, but yeah, you and I are both on the other side where we're on this irreversible decline. Yes, you've got to keep it up. But like one thing people are not aware of with HBot is it's the best skin rejuvenation therapy in the world. So a lot of people...
Starting point is 01:14:57 Better than red light, better than microneedling. Everything. Like better than the vampire facial, better than any laser. It is because if you look at the data on the biopsies of it rebuilding collagen, alasthen and reducing senescent cell, it basically remodels your entire skin. It's not just face. Like every layer of skin you're remodeling is really remarkable. Like, if you look at people, like, if I see people now, I can tell a signature of H-Bot skin.
Starting point is 01:15:26 Like, it's very, very clear to me what it looks like. And so it just, it happens. So, yeah, that's the other thing is, like, a lot of women, you know, who I really care a lot about skin, H-Bot. Get in the fucking H-Bah. Yeah, I mean, then if you pair, like, the best bangor protocol is to, for skin, is to pair the best devices with H-Bot. So you basically, you do like a surface level, like a 1550 nanometer to resurface the skin for spots, wrinkles, stuff like that. Then you do H-Bot and you can accelerate the healing. Is that micranadling?
Starting point is 01:15:57 Is that what you're referring? No, just a laser. Like a 15-50-nometer laser where it's like, it's a very, very benign laser if you do it right. It has lower risk of like pigmentation issues. For wrinkles, spots, just like for texture. And then you can do a deeper device like a softwave, S-O-F-W-A-E, where, It's ultrasound where it's 1.5 millimeters below, millimeters below the dermis.
Starting point is 01:16:20 So you hit top layer and underneath the dermis. So you're rebuilding collagen and the entire scaffolding the skin. And then you do the age bot and then you accelerate the healing. So you basically do more sessions in this. Yeah. So that's like. You do an acute like skin rejuvenation thing and then fuck up. That's the best.
Starting point is 01:16:37 Are you still here? She's outside. I think I did software because I went to your dermatologist in LA. Which one? Fuck. I can't remember the lady's name. It was in, that was why I had a mustache. I grew a mustache because I needed to get rid of my facial hair
Starting point is 01:16:50 because they needed to do that in order to be able to. I'm pretty, I'm almost certain it was softwave. Yeah, yeah. Yeah, was it like, it felt like a cigarette burn that never actually got to a burn. Exactly. Yeah, like you're being singed by like a hot metal iron. Yeah, but it never actually peaks to the, it was a really interesting lesson in, and they're blowing the cold shit.
Starting point is 01:17:14 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It was a really interesting lesson in pain that because what you realize is you ride this crescendo for the people that haven't seen it. It's literally as if someone was to put something really hot out on you. And when that happens, there is a swelling, there is a crescendo, but it usually peaks at you can almost hear it. Yeah. If you ever put alcohol on an open wound, that goes like that. But it doesn't ever get above a six or so. So if she did, if she set the settings of 3.5 joules, which is the lowest setting,
Starting point is 01:17:49 then it gets pretty tolerable. If she goes to 4.2 top end, because basically it's a total energy per area. I think I had it at around about 3.6, 3.7. So I was being a weenie. Okay. Yeah. So if you have the 4.2 where it's basically like it cuts down the number of pulses by 30%, if you want to like zip through it, God damn, that is so painful.
Starting point is 01:18:10 No, thank you. Oh, man. It does. It just feels like a, uh, a red hot iron send to the face. No more, thank you. You've mentioned there about
Starting point is 01:18:22 a sort of vascular health and blood flow. Obviously we started talking off about erectile, nighttime erectile stuff. For guys to improve blood pressure, vascular health, and then I guess downstream from that,
Starting point is 01:18:37 the impact on erections, erectile dysfunction beyond like nighttime stuff. What have you come to learn about that? What's the, What's the protocol for a guy to improve that? Yeah, so I guess I would say to people listening, like, maybe the thing that's most interesting is when I started this when I was 42, I was pretty beat up. Like, I had eaten sugar cereal as a kid, soda, like, you know, down 70 grams of sugar,
Starting point is 01:19:02 like daily canned foods. I was, I did the entrepreneurial grind, right? Didn't sleep. I was depressed for 10 years. I was overweight. Like, I did all the. the thing. Starting behind the eight ball. Like all the bad things, right? And so I'm 42. I'm pretty beat up. My, my aches hurt, losing my hair. And so I didn't really know what could be done. I'm really shocked by how efficacious this entire thing has been. Like I'm just really stunned that the body really has this capacity to bounce back no matter how bad things are. And so one, for anyone listening to like who needs hope in their life, it really, really, like the body is too far gone. Totally. Like I just like don't give up the smallest of things can have the biggest yields. And so have hope. And then two is I've been jamming on this for, you know, five years now. My markers keep on getting better. And so we still like I've aged, you know, past five years in time, but I'm still hitting new record highs in like nighttime erections, in fertility markers, in my speed of aging, in my DNA, in my T, my telomeres. Like all these things.
Starting point is 01:20:13 are improving as time is passing. Doesn't seem to be a ceiling. So, like, I mean, on the grand skeletal things, I suspect these are, like, I'm, this is not going to get me to 200 years, right? Like, it's not on that kind of scale, but still, like, in how I feel as a person, like, I do feel extremely energetic, and I'm very clear-headed. I feel my mood is very stable. I don't get irritated.
Starting point is 01:20:34 Like, I'm just kind of cool with existence, which is, like, for me, that's the marker of health, you know, like that. So one, hope. Two is, I think it's really worth the investment of this stuff, like just paying your, your, like paying the discipline to do it consistency. And then that last thing is, you don't need to do what I do. Like, you don't need to chase these expensive therapies. You don't need to do H-Bot. The basic stuff has the dividends. And so I don't want, I want people to feel hope and not discourage. I want them to feel empowered, not like, damn it, that's out of reach. Because it really
Starting point is 01:21:09 is. Like, it's within people's reach. I hope they walk away feeling like, damn it, I can do that. Like, I'm going to do it. I can't do that. What are the big move? We've already said, sleep and you've given a good breakdown there. If there was a top three, top five, however many you need for, okay, the Pareto, 80% of the results come from these things. What are those things?
Starting point is 01:21:31 Yeah. So first I would frame this in a moral philosophy. So I'd say if. Believe. I guess. First, like, I would. your most prized possession is agency. Nothing values more than your agency.
Starting point is 01:21:48 And right now, most people's agency is compromised, that they are not the architects of their life because they compulsively scroll, they compulsively eat fast food, they compulsively do all these addictive behaviors. And then when pressed on it, they rationalize it as virtue because they're trapped. And so I would challenge everyone here to say,
Starting point is 01:22:10 like reclaim yourself. Don't do anything you don't want to do. And that the enemy is the motherfucker who's trying to get you to do something that is not in your best interest. Fuck them. That is the enemy. And so like that gives you real moral power.
Starting point is 01:22:28 Don't be puppeted. Now once you have that principle, like I'm going to set my bedtime. I'm not going to doomscroll. I'm not going to eat that fucking bag of skittles, right? Like I'm not going to eat the fast food. That's, they're going to trick me to thinking it's a treat or something.
Starting point is 01:22:43 But that's, I think, for me, the boundary conditions of, like, how you create the kind of energy state of, like, I can do this, and I have a moral will to do it, not just because of self-help, but I'm fighting an enemy, I'm overcoming adversity. I am a man standing on my agency or woman. That to me gives it the Jews, too. I have the willpower to do it. Okay.
Starting point is 01:23:09 Now that we've got the moral framework, what are the tactical things? Yeah. So once you have agency, you want to reclaim your willpower. You need to have juice in the tank to say, like, I can make decisions that I can do it. So one is you want to master sleep. You want to build your entire life around sleep. That is very counterintuitive, but you want to plan when you go to bed, when your windover team is, you want to set strict rules.
Starting point is 01:23:28 You want to plan your lighting. Again, you can choose your archetype, whether you're really regimented, whether you're more flexible, like, whatever your thing is, but just build your entire life around sleep. and if you need justification, realize those not doing that are 10 to 12 points stupider than you. Like they're actually dumb. So they take a retardation exercise for them. You're actually going to be smart. Once you do that, exercise, because that also is going to boost your willpower.
Starting point is 01:23:52 So boost it with sleep, boost it with exercise. And then once you get those two down, then tackle food. Because food is the most complicated. Food is where we go to soothe ourselves to do like self-therapy. So only tackle then, try to start just having a bit more good things for you. and a few less bad things, like slowly walk your way into it. Radical change is hard for a lot of people,
Starting point is 01:24:12 but it's like slow walk into. And then if you, again, have that in the back of your mind, like a rule, you will never, ever eat fast food, ever again. Like, none is better than some.
Starting point is 01:24:22 So there's no moderation. There's no once a day, the idea of a cheat mill is the worst idea in history. Like, don't do cheat days, don't do cheat meals, don't do cheat weeks,
Starting point is 01:24:31 don't do cheat anything. Don't cheat. When it comes to, exercise for longevity. Most people are already doing almost everybody that's listening is going to have some sort of training regime. I would imagine. Yeah. The vast majority of them are going to be something like a push
Starting point is 01:24:50 per leg split. And maybe other people are runner boys and runner girls. If you were to design the minimum effective dose, this is where I think the blind spots are for people what would you say exercise-wise? Yeah, I mean, I, because everyone's got their jam, well, there's Pilates, weights, like, whatever, just do it.
Starting point is 01:25:13 Like, just be active for roughly an hour a day, do cardio, to strength, do balance, to flexibility. Everyone's got their own preferences, but I think, uh, I don't go after the details here because there's, like, endless material to go after. Just be active and commit to be active. Some people like chicken, some people like salmon,
Starting point is 01:25:30 some people like kale, some people like spinach. Exactly. Like just, and the same thing with food. Like, I don't, uh, get, into the game of carnivore versus vegan versus paleo versus whatever. There are abstractions which are irrelevant. Eat what you want, measure your body, make sure you're good, and then fine-tune yourself. Like I have a don't-dive food guide.
Starting point is 01:25:48 We tried to look through all the scientific evidence and say, what are the very best foods in existence with the highest value of evidence that you can put into your body? So we just said by a power law perspective, here's what I'd put on so I can share that as a plate. Outside of that, like, do your thing. Like just eat what you want, just measure your body, make sure you're good. Right. Okay. Bethelene Blue. How'd you get on with that?
Starting point is 01:26:07 You know, I stopped it because I started 25 milligrams a day and then, oh, it was conflicting with, we started a therapy doing altitude training. So you take your blood oxygenation down to 80%. We did it and the two have conflicting mechanisms of action. And we realized it on day three. So we better stop methylame blue to do the therapy. Okay. Is methylene blue, it's like nicotine derivative, right?
Starting point is 01:26:29 Or it's something to do with nicotine? I mean, it's a synthetic diet. Initially it was built because the surgeons wanted to see like where they're actually in the surgical body. But it was actually FDA approved for, what was it? I forget to know. Yeah, the FDA approved quite a while ago. But overall, we don't think that's really, we don't think it's worth it as a therapy. Yeah. It's more, more for like mitochondrial health. Okay. Bracetosterone. Yeah. Testosterone, the fucking hormone of the 21st century. It is. What have you come to learn about testosterone? Yeah. So I'm in a
Starting point is 01:27:05 like the 700s naturally. So just by doing all the basic stuff. What were you when you started? Do you know? I guess like, when I was 42, I don't know. Right. You need to look at my data. Yeah, but if a man is low on testosterone and the natural approaches are not addressing it, it probably makes sense to do something about it.
Starting point is 01:27:26 Like being low in testosterone just has really negative consequences. So, yeah, good one to watch after. What are the ways to intervene naturally? Well, what are the biggest needle movers that you feel? Yeah, I mean, all the basics, right? Like, sleep. Like, I think poor sleep, four hours of sleep at night will knock you down something like 10 to 20% on testosterone.
Starting point is 01:27:48 So, like, really big drop. Less of a man, again. Again, yeah, like high status status. So then sleep, exercise, nutrition, like all the basics. I don't think there's a lot of proven supplementation that can move them needle. Without getting into pharmacology. Yeah, I think. people have been played a bunch of stuff. I don't, if I'm not mistaken, I'm not sure the clinical
Starting point is 01:28:08 evidence is very strong there. I need to look at it. I guess I have never had low testosterone, so I've never had to look at supplementation as it means to do it. So I guess I would be cautious and my knowledge is limited in terms of like the true evidence for clinical intervention. The thing that's interesting around sort of male hormone, and I imagine it's the same for women, but I don't, I don't know anything about them. The relationship between, it's such a fucking, like balance beam of LH FSH testosterone, free T. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:28:38 SHGB. It is, there is no, it seems to me, total fucking white belt. It seems to me like one intervention is not one intervention. It's, it starts to roll away into this domino effect.
Starting point is 01:28:53 Yeah. So talking about, I want my testosterone higher. It's like, well, do you? Yeah, yeah. Do you? Maybe RFH needs to out. I mean, people that go on in chlomophine or HCG
Starting point is 01:29:01 chronically. Yeah. What is it? Like 20% or some big percent of them talk about that inducing depression. Yeah. And you go, okay, so you're worried that you had low energy because of your low testosterone and you tried to take a non-exogenous solution to create that. So I'm going to kickstart my own production by using these compounds.
Starting point is 01:29:24 And in the process of doing that, I've made myself have depression, which almost certainly made you a fucking low, forget low energy. You've got low mood now. Yeah. And so, yeah, be careful how you intervene with that, I think. That's very true. Yeah. I guess the way we thought about it is we approached this holistically.
Starting point is 01:29:41 We just said our frame entirely is scientific evidence, just like what does the body of evidence say to do? And we took the most powerful molecules in the form of foods, supplements, and then lifestyle, sleep, diet, exercise, and then therapies, sauna, H-Bot, you know. And we just said, like, take the very best hyperformal ones, put it all into one package and do the entire package. And it makes sense. Like, if you're taking care of the entire body on every level, you have these systematic effects. They'll come online. Exactly. So I think people approach these things very narrowly.
Starting point is 01:30:18 But, like, our hormones, like, is a very, like, you see, like, microplastics, right? Like, microplastic in the testicles has a negative feedback loop for fertility and hormones. Right. The same is true with toxins. So, like, that's, when we talk about testosterone, we don't talk about microplastic intervention, which then leads back to sauna, which then leads back to. So, like, we try to just be holistic, like, give me the whole thing and let me build that into one daily practice. So I don't have to then try to figure out like this and that thing. Talking of daily practices, what's this 15 second phone call thing you're doing?
Starting point is 01:30:54 Oh, yeah, with my friends, yeah. So a friend of mine introduces it to me. So I became friends with this person, and he is, he's very powerful. And he would call me. And he'd be like, Brian, like, blank statement, I say something to him. And like, all right, man, I love you. See you. It's it.
Starting point is 01:31:17 And I was like, that is amazing. It was so clean. It feels so good. And we just did that through, like, a couple months. And we built this amazing friendship. 15 second friendship. And it was like, it was. like, but it was like this deep. And I guess I imagine in my mind, like I imagined what his day must
Starting point is 01:31:34 be like he's juggling all kinds of crazy things. He clearly does not have time for like sit down, hang out, do this and that. But yet he does such a great job of maintaining really meaningful, like deep relationships. So when he says he loves you, it's like, you feel it. It's like he's not like just saying it. And so I appreciated his model of friendship so much because I, before I was stuck in this idea like, hey, Chris, you want to hang out, you know. It's a big deal. Let's fucking Airbnb. I'll book a week off work.
Starting point is 01:32:03 Yeah, it's like a four-hour thing, right? It's like, hey, man, like, what's up? How you doing? And like, you can answer because you know I'm not going to be on the phone for 20 minutes. Yeah. Right. I mean, the, uh, I did this series life hacks on the show when I first started. And we do one every year now at Christmas.
Starting point is 01:32:18 And, uh, back in the day when that was one of the big thrusts of the show, we'd often get asked, okay, what, 500,000 life hacks that you do? Yeah, yeah. What are the highest impact ones? The first one is always sleep with your phone outside of your bedroom. Yeah. But it's an instant 10 to 15% improvement in quality of life and that one thing. So that's actually before sleep.
Starting point is 01:32:42 Let's take the charge of your table outside of your bedroom and put it in the kitchen. But the second one was text your friends when you think of them. Yes. And this is my equivalent of the 15 second friendship. Yeah. And it's just, hey man, like, thinking of you, hope you're well, like, miss it, whatever. Or a photo that you think about your friend and you find an old photo and you send it. And it really speed runs friendship.
Starting point is 01:33:06 You become tighter friends with people who you've known for less long than people that you've known longer that you don't do that with or don't do it with you. And I really loved it. And it really brightened my day and it felt like I was doing something good for someone at a very low cost. It was like high leverage friendship, right? It's very, very low investment, very, very high impact. A little bit of a giggle and it keeps it going. Exactly. And the other thing it does, which is, I guess, a hack from my world of running nightclubs,
Starting point is 01:33:33 it's an idea of assume familiarity. Yes. So assuming familiarity in this context is most people that don't know each other particularly well have this sense that any text has to be super verbose. Hello, dear Brian. I hope that you are in the family are well. I must congratulate you on the da-da-da-da-da-da as opposed to like funny meme or whatever.
Starting point is 01:33:58 Hey man, thank you. You hope all's good. Whatever, right? Like, not even, you can take it a little bit too far and it sounds a bit entitled or a bit brusque or like sharp, expectant. But if I'm like, dude, love the YouTube video. By the way, I'm an age, but how long am I supposed to breathe it for?
Starting point is 01:34:14 Like, that's, oh, thank you for fucking consuming my shit and for the respect. By the way, here's a thing. don't need to, we don't need four play. Yeah. Let's get into it. Yeah. I mean, since we hung out and Prospera, we've been doing that, right? Like, and it's bullshit. One, no talk for three months and then a, tick, tick, tick, tick, too. And I, and I feel as fluid with you as I feel with any friend I've had for any duration of time, like, we get each other, like we're on the same wavelength, we decide it's happening to each other's lives. It's like most of my friends, I'm actually,
Starting point is 01:34:45 I'm really surprised, most of my friends who are powerful and successful and, you know, and famous are lonely, right? Like they work all the time. They have work relationships, but the amount of time they have to be down and hanging out is so small. And so if you don't have some mechanism to create deep friendships,
Starting point is 01:35:09 and time is not your, you can't use time. You have to use something else. Yeah, it needs to be a longer lever to be able to work. Exactly. And so I'm just been surprised that people have this perception that they always perceive others like they must have it all.
Starting point is 01:35:24 But loneliness is a real thing. And so I guess, again, I say this for those who are listening, if you feel lonely, right? Understand, like, your pattern is pretty similar to other people's patterns, independent of resources or position or power status. People at the top of the tree are struggling with the loneliness just as much as you. And so, I mean, and this is the cool thing is, like, when I've talked to my friends, and, like, they'll disclose that.
Starting point is 01:35:45 And, like, it's a really, you have to be, it's a, it's a scary thing. thing. Sh shameful thing. Yeah, it is. To actually to school as I don't have any friends. Like, I had a friend of mine connected me with a celebrity the day. Like one of the A-list celebrities in Hollywood. I said, talked to this person.
Starting point is 01:36:03 I said, once you come over to my house, we'll do a don't-dye dinner. Get 10 or 15 of your favorite people. Come on over. And like, I'll do this whole thing and I explained it. And they said, I don't really have any friends. And yeah, it was just such a shocking moment because they are epicenter celebrity. And one, it was cool. They just said that.
Starting point is 01:36:22 And two, I was like, amazing. So, like, I will put the group together for you. Come on over. We'll have a great time. But, yeah, just like so people realize it's a very common thing in our modern society. So nothing to feel ashamed about or feel bad about. Like, you can make these corrective actions by doing, like, small things, like voice notes, quick calls. And also, by making the bar so low, if you swing and with it and this person doesn't actually really want to be friends.
Starting point is 01:36:48 Yeah, exactly. whatever doesn't think you're cool or they're too busy or whatever the fuck they're not on the they're not ready to be friends yeah um you haven't invested anything no you know you sent you tried to you met somebody you sent him a few texts like yeah whatever like yeah i would just look back to that thing i said about the emotions piece before so i i understand what you mean uh with regards to sort of creating a philosophy um but i am still interested in what the practices are and how you look to the emotional well-being, the social element, if there is a spiritual element to this too. And how you come to think about, how do I say it, off-spreadsheet markers of longevity and well-being.
Starting point is 01:37:38 Yeah. So in 2025, we did five Don't Die summits. We, 1,500 people, they were all sold out. We brought people together, and we did. We experimented with. different formats. But we brought them together. We did education courses. We did raves like 7 in the morning. It was amazing. We had so much fun. We did group exercises. We did group therapy stuff. So I think 2026, so we learned a lot by doing this. We're going to do this in 2026 where I've been actually piloting a don't die fam in my neighborhood. So I've got several friends and we had this format where we get together every week. First, we take a shot of olive oil. Ritualistic.
Starting point is 01:38:18 Yep. And then we each go around and we apologize to our body for something we did that week. Okay. And so it's kind of funny. I'm carelessly close to a religion here. It's kind of funny. It's kind of fun. And then we go around and each person talks about like what's on their mind or what they're struggling with.
Starting point is 01:38:35 And so it's a very like open floor, supportive. Alcoholics Anonymous for longevity. It's like YPO, AA. It's like it's a very similar format that's kind of stamped out through various organizations. But it's basically like small, intimate, trusted group. where you can be vulnerable, and there's a specific approach where you're focusing on Don't Die, but really it's about human connection, it's about sharing and what you're struggling with. So whether it's that or something else, we're trying to figure out how, if Don't Die is to become
Starting point is 01:39:03 the fastest growing ideology in history. We're trying to figure out what is the path for that to happen. And so it can happen in small clusters around the world. We could even have physical locations. We could have something like a sovereign fund where we have a, we pull our capital and we start funding things together. So we're sorting on community connection, emotional, social in 2026. The past couple years have been like, how do you create something novel, sticky, distinct, and create a structure around it?
Starting point is 01:39:36 And now we're going to create the rappers. So it's just like the next stage of where we're at. Very cool. When we first ever spoke, however long ago that was, I asked you a question about, I didn't use this word, but the grief of not starting earlier, the potential resentment that you can place at your caregivers and your friends and your culture of this didn't happen earlier. And the entropy, you started on the other side of the roller coaster, right? You're like, oh, fuck, like I'm fighting against it as opposed to improving it.
Starting point is 01:40:11 You know, like I can't get younger in the same way as I could have gotten, you know, or at least slowed it down. whatever. Yeah. I'm interested in your relationship with that dynamic now, a few years hence, more time to think what could have been, but also to think, well, I can't, by focusing on that, I'm losing the very time which I'm claiming is now being more limited. That seems like a very stupid way to spend my life. Yeah. Where have you come into land with, you said before, and I think it's a really good point, it's not too late. You can reverse or you slow down, like you can really, really make great progress no matter where you are. But the emotional connection to what could have been, had I have started earlier, what I've done to my body, the grief, that stuff,
Starting point is 01:40:56 what's your relationship with that like now? Yeah. I mean, as you might guess, you know, I now, I view this question through the moral frameworks, right? Like, basically the premise of the question is that I'm in a low status position because of these preceding events, you know, that I didn't I didn't have parents that knew health and wellness when I was a kid. I didn't understand health and wellness myself in my 20s. I fell prey to cultural norms that said, destroy yourself, right? And so the way I'd evaluate any person answering your question is, how skilled are they in taking a low status position and converting it to high status?
Starting point is 01:41:40 Like, how do you flip the question for me to find virtue in my place and attribute, you know, charity to what's, what's preceded. Because really, it never makes sense for a person to wallow in grief. Like, yes, it makes sense to reconcile. Like, to be honest, like, we can acknowledge that may have been a mistake. You know, we can contemplate, you know, we wish it wouldn't have happened. But really, you don't want to sit in negative emotions. It's just not good for you.
Starting point is 01:42:10 It's, you don't want to beat yourself up. And so you can either take a. a step where you say I'm reconciled, I'm neutral, like I'm fine with it, or you can say I'm going to invert it. But that's what I've really learned more than anything in my life.
Starting point is 01:42:27 This is what I try to train my kids is don't be subject. Don't lose your agency and be subject to pain that is self-induced. You can choose how you feel. This is kind of like Victor Frankl's mansertraming, right?
Starting point is 01:42:42 He's in the concentration camp And he's like, I'm not going to let these conditions determine my state of mind. I'm going to choose that state of mind myself. But that's really ultimate agency. And so I'd take your question and I would invert it and be like, this is the most interesting time in the history of 4. Whatever billion years that we've been on this planet. I am so fortunate to be alive right now. And I'm like in my 40s where I'm still like in my prime.
Starting point is 01:43:11 And I can have a meaningful impact on what has. happens to the human race. Like, that is a possibility. So I wouldn't trade anything under any circumstance to trade the position I'm in right now because it's the coolest moment in the history of the human race. And so, like, quick inversion. And now I'm like, damn, pretty cool. I'm pumped about this situation. My shoulders have relaxed a little bit. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I remember you tweeting a while ago, do you think you're going to die in a super ironic way? Of course, guaranteed. Yeah. How's that not possible? It's, for sure. I mean, like, so this morning, when I was coming here, I was opening a glass jar of sourcrow, fermented sourcrow.
Starting point is 01:43:50 I popped it and it sliced my fingers in three places, it bleeding all over the place. And I was like, you know, what if I die from like a glass bottle of fermented sourcrow? Like, wouldn't that be just like beautifully ironic? So, yes, like, I hope it's spectacular. I hope it's really something epic and not something lame. Sourcrowt would be a cool way to go. I mean, I guess like, you tell me, what would be like an, epic.
Starting point is 01:44:15 Oh, wow. What hits the timeline where you're like, okay, like. Ready to go with that. That would be cool. I mean, sort of car action, a 70s action movie rolling down a huge cliff would be, that seems like a pretty cool way to go. Certainly not being the passenger of a plane where the pilot decides that he's sick and he just wants to crash it into a mountainside.
Starting point is 01:44:39 That would suck. Something that's just me, something that I don't want to take anybody else with me. If I'm going to go up in flames, like, you know, hit by a bus, but the bus goes on. Yeah. Like, uh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Like caught in the action, caught in the act of adventure, right?
Starting point is 01:44:54 Like, like, you're on, you're doing your thing. You're pushing the boundaries. You're in your happy state. Eating fermented foods. Yeah. You know, like I, I think of Shackleton, you know, and I think of his going through the Antarctic and their survival to that whole, like, you know, they were all ready to have a noble death. Like, we wouldn't have found out about it. would have been gone to history, but still, you know, they were, I like that kind of, uh,
Starting point is 01:45:18 I love those stories. There's a book that you may love if you like Alfred Lansing's endurance, which is the best retelling of Shackleton's crossing, I think. There's a wonderful one called The Forgotten Highlander by Alistaircard, uh, British soldier Scottish, uh, captured by the Japanese bridge over the river Kwai, forced labor, Hiroshima bomb blasts. Yeah. Like everything, everything, everything. And then I read, um, Unbroken. Louis Zamperini. So I only, I'd never even know, because I'm not American, right? So I would get Shackleton and I would get Alistaircar, but I'd never get Zamperini. I didn't even know he existed. And he like meets Hitler at the fucking Olympics. And he goes through all of this stuff. So if you like Unbroken, dude, the forgotten Highlander will take your head off. Yeah, unbroken. That broke me. I mean, like, he's like on his raft getting shot at from the Japanese airplanes. Underneath the out. raft getting eaten by sharks, back on the raft of bullet holes. And that's like on day 142 of not
Starting point is 01:46:19 eating food. Yeah, and the dude's eating all the chocolate. You're like, you're your best mate. Yeah, yeah, I ate all the fucking chocolate. Yeah, dude. Those stories to me are wonderful. I've ruptured in Achilles 2020 playing cricket, fully British. And I asked a couple of friends that had been through some sort of similarly traumatic injuries, you know, big fuck off. severe thing. Yeah. And they said, The Obstacle is the Way by Ryan Holiday.
Starting point is 01:46:49 Forgotten Highlander by Alistair Urquhart. Ross Edgeley's book, The Art of Resilions, which is about his swim around, he was the first person to swim around the UK. Oh, yeah. Six hours on, six hours off. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 01:47:04 And then an Amazon Prime documentary called Resurfaced with Andy Murray. Andy Murray's tennis player, Scottish tennis player, Lidda Scott. And he gets a hip replacement. That lateral movement means that hips really get tested in tennis players. And he's aging out a little.
Starting point is 01:47:22 And they try and do rehab. They try and do surgery. They try and do surgery. It's just not working. And really the only solution, I think, is maybe ceramic socket with a steel joint. But it's not meant for high impact sport. it's very smooth and very reliable and the outcomes are great, but not if you're pushing it to the sort of steel up against ceramic like porcelain or whatever it is. It's not going to less,
Starting point is 01:47:53 or maybe it's not. And it's just this journey of him going through it and he's working in his house, just obsessive, just so like unrelenting. And those sorts of stories, I think, are really empowering and really enlightening and very inspiring. And it's the ability to be What I'm really interested in playing with now is the ability to take that kind of inspiration. Be like, fuck, like, I've been kicked in the nuts a good bit this year. All right, you got this. Like, you can lean in. You can do this thing.
Starting point is 01:48:25 And then being able to, I switch it off. That's right. I need to be able to switch it off. If I can't switch it off, then I am pressing the accelerator driving downhill. Yes. I'm giving myself more of the thing that I already have too much of. Yes. So playing with that time.
Starting point is 01:48:42 tolerance, like a dose-dependent inspiration in that way. Yeah. That makes sense. Yeah. It's a U-shaped curve. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You need just, like, too little, you're not doing anything. Too much, you're wide but tired.
Starting point is 01:48:53 Like, just about the right. It's probably the skill set society needs the most help on right now because everyone is right up to the red, actually in the red zone, and just there constantly. It's, I think it's probably like a chronic thing of our society. Brian Johnson, ladies and gentlemen, dude, you're great. I really appreciate you. I appreciate your friendship. What can people expect next however long of years, months?
Starting point is 01:49:17 What's coming up? Well, this is my prediction. AI is center stage already for society. It will continue to be center stage. I'm not talking about time frames of six months or 12 months, but over the next few years, it's going to just continually to be evolved to be the primary thing of our attention. And as that happens, we are going to want
Starting point is 01:49:41 the stability to understand the world in ways that makes us feel safe, that we have meaning and purpose, that things are stable. And I think this is where don't die, we'll step in. It will be a structurally sound, coherent, emotionally resident ideology and moral philosophy that actually answers the most important questions for us as a species. Individually, collectively, with AI, with the planet, like we're just due for a revolution. So yeah, in the coming years, that's what I hope. to bring to the world is like that we actually can find coherence in our existence and realize the spectacular nature of this moment, the most precious thing it's ever existed. And it's like really ours. We, I guess an invitation to sober up, realize how special this is. And for us, like we, we need to prove ourselves worthy of the future. We oftentimes don't think about, Like we want to be, we want to demonstrate our value to our peers, to our coworkers, to our family, to our partners.
Starting point is 01:50:47 I think that same relationship exists to the future, that it really does ask us to rise up. And so I hope, above all, I hope I'm a positive influence of people's lives that when they find themselves in moments of struggle or weakness, they've got somebody in their court saying like, you can do this. And yeah, so I'm just really excited about what's happening. I feel like I've been working my entire life at this moment, and I'm excited to play the game. I'm excited to see what happens, man. Just don't do the fucking, don't start wearing white robes, grow your hair out. Like, I don't want to see the cult leader pivot. But what I do think is cool is the, like, sanguine self-awareness thing.
Starting point is 01:51:25 I think that's really important to, like, just read it out. You mentioned a couple of resources, like a food guide or something. Is there any cool lead magnity bits that people can snag? Yeah, so I'll give you the food guide. I'm also, I'm publishing, I have a website protocol at brianjohnson.com, and I'm hopefully in the next couple weeks, I'll repost all my updated stuff. So if you want to just see my journey and what I'm doing now and why, I'll have it there for you.
Starting point is 01:51:54 So like a free guide. Yep. And then I'm also writing a book. So, uh, don't die. So I'm halfway through. And it's basically going to be like, hopefully a guide. and then yeah, I'm trying to make this easy. I know it's a lot.
Starting point is 01:52:06 And also, we just raised $60 million for Blueprint. Oh, yeah. What's going on with that? What is that? Yeah. So basically, Blueprint is don't die in action. And so in the same way where you say, if I want to go to this destination, I put in an address, go, and it tells him what streets go down or where's the construction, where's the crashes. Blueprint is going to be basically like AI for your health.
Starting point is 01:52:30 It's like you say, I want to be healthy. and we say, come on in, we got you. And so it will take us some time to build that, but that's what I have today with my team of doctors. Like, I just follow a practice where we measure me, we get the data, we look at evidence, and we say, do this, do this, do this, do this. You do this at scale.
Starting point is 01:52:46 Exactly. So I don't have to chase all these esoteric hard things. So Blueprint is basically like autonomous health for humans, where I just say, like, I want to be healthy and you get into a system and now we just run the data, evidence, repeat again. So hopefully, like, that's like the... Siding time. So it feels like an... You know, you're going back to where you started back into founder mode.
Starting point is 01:53:03 I hope that you don't take your eye off what the ball is supposed to be with regards to that. Like the temptation man to be, ooh, we could build it more. This is time it's good. This time it's for humanity. Yeah. You go, well, yeah, the service is good, but so is looking after, like serving you first. Yeah, you know, like the one thing I care to accomplish in life. Like, everything else can go by the wayside.
Starting point is 01:53:27 The one thing is what is high status? that's the only game I care to play. And so specifically from the frame of from the perspective of the year 2,500, when they look back at this moment and they're looking at moments to say Plato, Aristotle, Renaissance, they'll say a new era was born
Starting point is 01:53:47 of a new status seeking thing. And that's otherwise, like, the entrepreneurship stuff, I really enjoy it. It's been my jam, but that's not where I want this to work. I want to be successful. It's actually a practical manifestation. but I have one objective in existence as that. Fuck, yeah.
Starting point is 01:54:03 Ryan, I appreciate you, man. Until next time, I'm looking forward to the book. Thanks, man.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.