Modern Wisdom - #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain
Episode Date: October 30, 2023Dr Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist, Associate Professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine and a podcaster. It has never been so easy and also so difficult to remain healthy and perform... at your best. The right tools and insights we all need to avoid pitfalls and maximise our outcomes are thankfully at our finger tips, and today we get to go through some of Dr Huberman's favourites. Expect to learn how breathing can change the shape of your face, what Andrew thinks of the “Huberman Husbands” kink, just how bad vaping actually is for you, how to increase your willpower using science, what everyone misunderstands about stress, his opinion on Tom Segura’s transformation, how to be more productive and much more… Sponsors: Get 10% discount on Marek Health’s comprehensive blood panels at https://marekhealth.com/modernwisdom (use code: MODERNWISDOM) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://www.drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get 20% discount on your Mud/Wtr subscription & freebies at https://mudwtr.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get 5 Free Travel Packs, Free Liquid Vitamin D and more from AG1 at https://drinkag1.com/wisdom (discount automatically applied) Extra Stuff: Get my free Reading List of 100 books to read before you die → https://chriswillx.com/books/ To support me on Patreon (thank you): https://www.patreon.com/modernwisdom - 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
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Hello everybody, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Dr Andrew Heuberman, he's a neuroscientist, associate professor at the
Stanford University School of Medicine and a podcaster. It has never been so easy and also so difficult
to remain healthy and perform at your best. The right tools and insights that we all need to avoid
pitfalls and maximize our outcomes are thankfully at our fingertips and today we get to go through
some of Dr Heubman's favourites.
Expect to learn how breathing can literally change the shape of your face,
what Andrew thinks of the Huberman husband's kink,
just how bad vaping actually is for you,
how to increase your willpower using science,
what everyone misunderstands about stress,
his opinion on Tom Seguris' transformation,
how to be more productive, and much more.
This episode is so good.
I absolutely love Dr. Heuberman's work.
The guy is the biggest health and fitness podcaster on the planet, and with good reason, he's
made every bro biohacker look very silly over the last couple of years by using science
and evidence to work out exactly what we actually need to do to improve our outcomes, our longevity, our health, literally everything. I really appreciate
all of the work that he puts in and there is so much to take away from today. Don't forget that if
you are new here or a long time listener, you might be listening but not subscribed and that is
trez bad because it means you will miss episodes when they go up the next two months has got a stacked lineup of huge guests that you don't want to miss.
So, navigate to Apple Podcasts or Spotify or wherever you are listening and press the
subscribe button.
It does support the show, it makes me very happy indeed and it ensures that you will not
miss episodes when they go up.
So go and press it.
I thank you.
But now, ladies and gentlemen gentlemen please welcome Dr. Andrew
Huberman.
What were you just teaching me about mouth-reading and how it changes the shape of the face? So I arrived carrying a copy of the book, Jaws, a hidden epidemic.
This is not Jaws the Shark.
This book was written by my colleagues at Stanford, Sondra Khan, and Paul Erlich. And it has an introduction by Jared Diamond,
who won a Pulitzer for Guns, Terms, and Steel,
and a forward by the great Robert Sapolsky,
also a colleague of mine at Stanford.
So, four heavy hitters on this book,
just to credential it first.
This book centers around a couple of core concepts,
but the first being that people,
and in particular children,
who overuse mouth breathing as opposed to nasal breathing, have changes in the structure of the face
that, let's be quite direct, makes them far more unattractive than if they were to mouth breath.
It also discusses the chewing of foods as essential to mouth and face development.
Sandra Conn is an expert in cranioffatial function and structure. And the fact that if your parents
and you did things right, you should be able to place your entire tongue on the roof of your mouth
with your mouth closed.
Now I can't do that.
So when you were teeth closed, some of the roof of your mouth I can, but I still feel the
back of my teeth a bit.
So yeah.
But that's the second point that we want to chew hard.
Chewing foods is essential to tooth and mouth and face development. These days,
many children slurp their food, many adults slurp their foods, many adults are eating like babies,
and of course babies before they develop their mature teeth, and even before they get all
over their teeth in need to, obviously, breast milk and putting like foods.
But so that's the second point.
So nasal breathing, good mouth breathing,
bad for criniofacial development, chewing hard foods,
chewing a lot on both sides of the mouth,
great for criniofacial development,
oral development, tooth development, and tooth health,
which by the way are correlated with a number of other things
like cardiovascular health and metabolic health,
very interesting links there.
And then the third point is that the book argues that the entire field of orthodontia, things
like braces, things like headgear, things like retainers are the byproduct of poor breathing
and let's just say over consumption
of soft foods in place of hard foods behavior.
And so there's this guy who's from your side of the pond,
Mew, Mew method of restoring normal craniofacial development.
The book is Chocoblock full of impressive photos
of before and afters, impressive because in some cases
you'll see kids that were mouth breathers or we're eating a lot of soft foods and then they
recovered their behavior so to speak and became those breathers. Of course, we have to mouth-breathe
when we're exercising really hard or when we're eating or speaking we're going to mouth-breathe
but at rest we should nasal breathe is the argument and that greatly improves craniofeatial
nasal breath is the argument, and that greatly improves cranium facial aesthetics.
And the good news is this stuff is modifiable
across the lifespan.
And so the book isn't arguing for anyone to purchase
anything, you don't need a jazzer, sizer.
I'm saying that explicitly because they took clips
of me talking about this and productized it
and I had nothing to do with that.
So hopefully you'll keep this in the episode.
And they even admitted they were breaking the law
and he said, we don't care,
we're gonna continue to do it.
So, sales, sales, man.
Yeah, but now those, you know,
to the credit of products for exercising the jaw, sure,
there are muscles of the jaw that can,
well, what you're talking about is,
it's a headache, but it's a food.
Yeah, it's a food is,
if you don't have a sufficiently tough diet,
I guess you could replace it.
But it's explained to me the mechanics of how the difference in whether you breathe through
your nose or breathe through your mouth changes the shape of your face and head.
Yeah.
Well, and it goes beyond that.
If you breathe through your mouth as opposed to your nose, the first time you bring in
less oxygen, then you would have.
So you're limiting, you're effectively putting yourself
into a state of apnea, right, which is bad during sleep
and guess what, it's bad during waking states also.
You get less oxygen to your brain, bad.
The sinuses, you know, here are,
my sinuses are clogged, or my sinuses,
the sinuses, wish I had brought a skull with me
because one of the most impressive things about a skull,
human skull being no exception,
is that the sinuses are literally these little tubes or channels through which fluid and
air can move.
And the sinuses, even though they are essentially created by the fissures between different
bones, so like there are two or three different bones that are inter-digitated and create these
tunnels, they're actually fairly plastic
in the sense that they can be modified
in terms of their shape.
And so people will say, well, I have a deviated septum.
Guess what?
You should try and emphasize breathing
through both nostrils in order to undiviate your septum.
Now, someone has a broken nose
or something that's really structurally abnormal.
They may need corrective surgery,
but purely through deliberate nasal breathing. So it could be mouth taping at night, but
also just deliberately nasal breathing during most of your cardiovascular training, unless
you need to really hit the gas, in which case mouth breath is going to help dilate the
sinuses and lead to better airflow, which makes nasal breathing easier.
The other thing is that nasal breathing, we know, well, first of all, there's a nasal
microbiome.
There's also an oral microbiome, but the nasal microbiome is particularly well-suited to scrub
or capture and destroy viruses, bacteria, and even some fungal infections.
So in other words, when you're breathing in through your mouth, you're more susceptible to infections.
This is an important heading into winter as well.
So there are a number, I mean, we could talk about this for hours, but
the point is nasal breath when you can. Kids especially, but adults as well, chewing foods that
require, you know, eating foods that require some chewing and really working at it and chewing away.
They have some impressive images in this book of kids that were twins that were raised separately,
one by a group that eats a lot of, let's just say tougher foods that require chewing versus one that's slurping their food.
And I mean, one kid is literally incredibly attractive, perfect dentature with no orthodontia
or dent or regular dentistry.
And the other kid is teeth is like snaggle.
They have the horse, like the horsey smile.
Even though they've got the same genetic predisposition.
Right.
Right.
It's not a perfect experiment because there are other factors as well.
And none of this is the cut for better or worse.
None of this is really amenable to kind of in laboratory type stuff.
So as these are naturally occurring experiments, as we say, there are also some very impressive
images in the book, or if we could say depressing, of kids that were pretty attractive as kids.
And then there's an example of a kid who got a pet hamster.
He was allergic to the hamster.
He switched as a consequence, he becomes a mouth breather.
And then the characteristic change in the face when one over does mouth breathing is that
the chin forklomube recesses, toward the neck and the rest of the face was out, but
also the eyes become droopy.
But as you say, why would the eyes be affected?
It's not just musculature, what's happening is there's less use
of literally the sinuses towards the upper mandible
and up towards the eyes, because if you ever had a sinus
infection, it's painful up here in your forehead
and around the eyes.
So again, it's pretty straightforward.
No products required to chew your food well,
chew on both sides of your mouth, especially if you're a young person,
but even if you're not being nasal breather, really chew at your food.
Try and probably also as benefits in terms of limiting
an essential or low-loat, low-nutrient density calories.
You know, it's slurping your food all the time. I mean, I love-
Don't drink your calories, man.
Yeah, I love a good Greek yogurt, you know, but
but drinking and excess of calories is probably not good.
And eat like an adult, I would say.
And one of the things is I don't know,
like to me growing up snack food
was something that kids indulged in.
You know, once you hit 18 or so,
you know, eat like an adult.
I'm still waiting to learn that lesson.
You mentioned Sapolsky that I had him on the show recently.
Yeah. What do you think most people misunderstand about stress? the way to learn that lesson. You mentioned Sapolsky that I had him on the show recently.
What do you think most people misunderstand about stress? Obviously, he's contributed
an awful lot to this and you've thought about this too. What do you think people don't
understand fully about stress?
Yeah, the findings that I think are overlooked tremendously are the following experiment.
There's an experiment in animals where a rat is given the opportunity to run on a treadmill
and rats and rodents of all kinds love running on treadmills.
You know, there's these interesting, we'll see who catches this fly first.
I'm ready, man.
I think, you know, there's even a study from Hoppy Hofstra's lab at Harvard that showed
that if you put a wheel, running wheels in fields, that rodents will run there in the middle
of the night and run on them.
That's how insanely obsessed with running.
I just end up just like they want to go.
There's something rewarding about it for them.
But in any event, it lowers their blood pressure,
it leads to improvements in a number of metrics
that you expect.
And you see the same thing in humans, right?
We run on a treadmill or run outdoors
or swim in cardiovascular exercise.
Okay.
Well, Sapolsky and I love to talk about
an experiment where they took two different cages
with animals, one is running voluntarily,
but then that running wheel is tethered to a running wheel
and another cage that encloses an animal forces it
to run every time the other one runs.
So forced exercise versus voluntary exercise.
And the takeaway is very straightforward.
Voluntary exercise leads to all sorts of improvements in health metrics,
resting heart rate, blood pressure,
blood glucose, resting blood glucose, et cetera,
waking blood glucose.
The animal that's forced exercise, you see the opposite.
So it's not exercise per se.
It's something about being forced to exercise.
It causes decrements in a number of health metrics.
And you see the same thing in humans.
So what's wild is my colleague, Dr. Ali Krum, Department of Psychology at Stanford, has
done these beautiful experiments on mindset and belief.
These are not placebo effects.
And what she's shown in a just absolutely spectacular way is that if people watch a short
video about all the ways in which stress can really diminish your health, well then indeed
stress diminishes their health. Whereas if a separate group watches a factual, also five minute,
also factual tutorial on all the ways that stress can enhance performance by harnessing your
ability to focus,
memory formation, etc. Which is true. That's indeed what you see.
Can I give you my favorite one that I learned about over the last year?
Yes.
So the Boston Marathon bombing, about 10 years ago, 2016 maybe. Anyway, Boston Marathon bombing,
a study was done comparing people who had been at the actual marathon while the
bomb had gone off and people who had watched 90 minutes or more of news coverage about
it. And the people who watched 90 minutes or more of news coverage about it showed a
greater stress response than the people who literally lived through it. Interesting. Interesting. Yeah. The mindset and belief effects are absolutely extraordinary
and very real, right? I mean, I think, you know, recently I've been reading and researching
a lot about and did a podcast on tenacity and willpower. There was this idea early on from
Balmyster and colleagues that willpower is a limited resource. Some of the ego depletion?
Ego depletion.
Yes.
It was controversial.
They showed that replenishing glucose in between hard tasks could restore willpower.
They showed that was it juries or judges that were low in blood glucose were more likely
to give hosha sentences, stuff like this.
Yeah, it sort of wicked out to a number of naturalistic situations. And it made
good sense. And then my colleague Carol Dweck also in the psychology department at Stanford,
most famously known for her work on growth mindset, did an experiment in which they essentially
asked whether or not tenacity and willpower are limited in terms of being some sort of resource.
And also whether or not it was somehow linked to glucose availability fuel in the brain
and body and found that if people thought or were told that mind that excuse me, will power
was a limited resource, that's indeed what they observed experimentally, but that if
they were taught or were told that will power is unlimited and divorced from glucose levels.
Well, then that's exactly what you saw.
So you're saying that learning about ego depletion and believing that willpower is a limited resource
is an information hazard that is self-fulfilling?
Potentially. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no showed himself to be pretty determined and countered the the the Dweck counter by showing that if
indeed if there's a hard task followed by a hard task then your beliefs about willpower
can impact your performance on the second task. So the aka Dweck is right. But that if you have
a hard task hard task and then hard task, so back to back
to back tasks or more, which is a lot of what life is like, well, then it seems that the
willpower is a limited resource, and glucose supporting willpower theory holds up a bit better.
What have you come to believe about the difference between willpower and motivation and discipline?
How do kind of all of these fit together in your mind? Will power and tenacity are related to motivation, but they're not quite the same. I think we
should think of motivation as the verb state that moves us from, let's just say, apathy to tenacity.
It's the verb function that moves us along that continuum.
Appity at one end, tenacity and willpower, strong exertion of willpower at the other end.
One of the most interesting structures in the entire nervous system is one that gets
very little coverage, unfortunately.
In fact, most neuroscientists aren't aware of what its function is.
And it's called the AMCC, which is the anterior mid-singulate cortex.
You have one on each side of the brain.
The name isn't really important, but we want to, you know, to the credit of the structure.
We should name it the AMCC.
The AMCC receives inputs from a lot of interesting brain areas related to reward,
related to autonomic function.
So how alert or sleepy we are, to prediction, to prediction error, it's a hub for many,
many inputs and outputs, hormone systems, et cetera.
Beautiful experiments done by my colleague Joe Perivizi at Stanford have shown that if
you stimulate this brain area, a tiny little brain area in a human, they immediately feel
as if some challenge is impending and they're going to meet that challenge. It's a forward center of mass against challenge response
This has been seen in independent subjects. They do controls where they then tell them they're stimulating
But they're not actually stimulating and they're like I don't feel anything you can turn on and off tenacity and willpower
So there's literally a hub for this now. Here's where it gets really interesting
I'm gonna list off a bunch of peer-reviewed published results in rapid sequence and I'm happy to point out the substantiation
for this or the references. Okay, individuals that are dieting or resisting some sort of tempting
behavior and are successful in doing that, the size and activity in their AMCC goes up over time
and the structure gets bigger. Dieters who fail, flat or downward trajectory of the size and activation of the AMCC.
This can be taken too far.
Individuals with inter-exe-intervosa, the most deadly of all psychiatric disorders, where
a self-deprivation of food activates excessive reward.
There's this kind of loop of reward.
Their AMCCs are significantly greater
size than others. So there's, you know, this can be taken too far. Super-aggers,
which is a bit of a misnomer because these individuals are people who maintain healthy cognitive
function similar to people in their 20s and 30s into their 70s, 80s, and 90s. Their AMCC
maintains or increases in size into their later years.
Typicalagers, the size of, we always hear that you lose brain mass across your lifespan.
Well, most of it is from the AMCC.
And beautifully, and this is two of my favorite results that really bring this around to a protocol or a takeaway.
If people are given an easy task, the AMCC isn't activated.
If they're given a hard task, in particular,
a hard task, physical or cognitive,
that they really don't want to do,
the AMCC levels of activity go through the roof.
And here's what's really cool.
They give aging, people age 60 to 79,
the task of adding three hours extra per week
of cardiovascular exercise.
Now, that's a lot, right?
Three one hour, they call them aerobic classes, but getting their heart rate up to about
65, 70% of maximum.
So it's getting into like zone three, isht area.
Yeah, people can look up zone three, but you nailed it, zone three.
The size of their AMCC increased across that six month protocol and offset the normal age
related decline in this
spreading area in terms of its size.
The theory that starting to emerge is that the AMCC isn't just about tenacity and willpower
to push through hard things, that it may actually be related to one's will to live, one's
will to continue living.
And I think these are some of the most important results.
By the way, I didn't participate in any of the research that I just described. I spent
a lot of time with that literature, but I think it's so important. I mean, we hear about
the amygdala, the hippocampus, the Broom Rundle Cortex, all of very important brain structures.
But if nothing else, hopefully this conversation with the AMCC on the map, literally could create
your will to live is the one that's being overlooked a little bit. And it can be, and what's
interesting about this structure is that it's involved in generating tenacity and willpower
for all things, not just for one situation.
And what's really wonderful, I think,
about the research literature on this,
is it's so clear what we need to do.
We need to do, let's say, like me,
you're a person who enjoys weightlifting
and you love running.
I love those two activities.
Well, guess what?
Those activities, even if they're hard,
like a hard run that I'm really enjoying,
or some hard sets in the gym,
not going to increase the size or activity of the AMCC.
People love to over-romanticize the utility
of those final two reps.
Sure, okay, pushing to failure.
Great.
Running hard till your lungs burn great,
but if you enjoy that,
you're not increasing your amount of tenacity and willpower, at least according to the research data.
What's going to do it is doing something what I call microsex or macrosux. And so microsex
could be all the little things that you don't want to do during the day. Macrosux could
be the larger things. But of course, you don't want to do things that are going to damage
you psychologically or physically, of course, of course. But everyone, I believe, would benefit from picking a few microssucks to do some
of your microssucks, a microssucks that you could sprinkle throughout the day.
Okay, so on a household maintenance level, I maintain a very clean home, I'm constantly
throwing things away as well. But there are a few things, like once I exceed a very clean home, I'm constantly throwing things away as well.
But there are a few things,
like once I exceed a certain number of dishes in the sink,
it becomes this, okay, I'll load the dishwasher later,
type thing, like a microstuck for me would be like,
it's especially if something's been in there for a while,
it's kind of gross, and then you gotta like work through it.
And of course, I try and put each dish away
as I, you know, dirty them up.
But so little things, the things that,
I really don't want to deal with that right now,
that's the kind of thing, those harder tasks
where you have to breach some barriers,
some resistances to put it into, you know,
Stephen Pressfield language, or our friend, David Goggins, right?
You know, this idea that one has to callus the mind.
I mean, David said that, right?
He's probably got an hypertrophy to AMCC
that's bigger than most peoples.
Probably. And the beauty hypertrophy to AMCC that's bigger than most people's. Probably.
And the beauty of having an AMCC that's highly available for activation is that through
the micro and the macro sucks of the day, you have this thing.
It's like an engine that you can devote to other things.
So then you can devote the AMCC to other endeavors.
I have this thing I called email anxiety. And it's when my unread inbox reaches three figures or more
and that's when it just,
it kind of follows me around like a poltergeist
throughout the day and that absolutely for me,
that's probably a macro suck.
To get through that, it's probably three to four hours,
a lot of it's scheduling, when's this guest coming on?
I need to speak to this partner, we go blah, blah, blah.
So yeah, I feel that.
What else?
What is subjective, right?
I mean, what's what sucks is something else
might love emails.
Yeah, someone might, and I think that,
you know, you've talked a lot on your show
with various guests about, you know,
when we're in too much comfort,
we're not meeting our goals.
I love deadlines for that reason.
I love deadlines, I love pressure.
I think Parkinson's Law is as close to a thermodynamic of productivity as we can get. Do you
know what I mean? Like, when you have a deadline, you will meet it. If you do not have a deadline,
you will manana manana until forever. That's right. And some people I think preload the deadline
by procrastinating. And then that's what you know gets their activation energy to a level where they can they can engage. So I started thinking about this a lot lately. You know, I love running. But it's interesting. I like to finish it my driveway and I live on a hill.
And actually this morning I was out for a run and the gate at the end of the cul-o-sac is my sort of.
gate at the end of the cul-de-sac is my, sort of, designated stop point.
So it actually sucked to do the last, you know,
20 meters this morning.
So there I probably got a little bit of AMCC activation
because everything was, the number of negotiations
I went through when I turned up my street
at the end of this run, whether or not I was gonna run,
this extra 20 meters was ridiculous.
I mean, the human brain, you know,
struggling to not do this extra 20 meters, it was so silly.
So it's gotta hurt a little bit again.
You don't want to damage yourself, but I think in the context of, for instance, cognitive
learning, getting to the point where you finish something and then forcing yourself to do
one little extra bit there at the end.
So I'm not looking for any credit for it, but I want to be very clear that the scientific
literature doesn't call these things micr-sucks.
I call them micr-sucks.
And I put that out there just to make it
clear as to what we're referring to. Do you know Nick Bae?
I don't. In Austin, he's an athlete and
supplement company owner. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like a hybrid athlete.
A larger guy, but he runs really fast. Does bodybuilding shows, does powerlifting also runs?
To be clear, I know that large guys run fast, but typically they don't run fast for 20 miles.
Correct. And he does.
That's accurate.
He his little catchphrase is go one more.
And it's interesting what you're saying here is,
it's not just about the completion of the thing
that you're doing because a lot of the time,
the thing that you choose to do,
even the thing that's difficult,
is done under your own volition.
Don't get me wrong.
If you do a difficult
crossfit workout, Fran, whatever 21, 15, 9 of thrusters and pull-ups, it is, or it's hell,
right? There's literally a name for what your throat feels like once you finish called
Fran cough, the people get from having taken their heart rate as high as the...
Spasming of the... Yeah, yeah. That taste of metal in the back of your throat. But what people are doing that,
although they're doing something that's difficult,
it's like volitionally difficult
and it's within their domain of enjoyment.
And what you're saying here is that
we're looking to just push ourselves
a little bit past that.
It's like an unnecessary amount of challenge.
And I think that go one more,
makes quite a nice reminder for us
with the micro sucker, the macro sucker,
that's push ourselves just a little bit
beyond where we would've got our sense of satisfaction
because presumably you get the dopamine,
I've completed the task, fuck yeah.
And then it's like, and then I do just that tiny little bit
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Yeah, and we're related we're cousins. You're kidding me. No, no, no we're cousins. I can see it now
His commitment to fitness has been pretty fascinating for me to see and he's kind of treating his body
Like an athlete to facilitate his chosen pursuit of comedy. I think even Burt is trying to sort his sort of health and fitness
out one step at a time too. Bert's the control experiment. If the experiment is about willpower
tenacity and discipline, Tom is the is the is the is the active condition and Bert is the control.
But I'm seeing more and more people now, especially performers that aren't using,
that aren't within the realm of physical fitness, really starting to understand
if I want to perform outside of this, I need to think like an athlete,
I need to be looking at my hydration.
I mean, Tom had his train and travel with him on the road for months.
Yeah.
Yeah, Tom's really serious about his craft as is Bert.
They just have different approaches.
And when it comes to fitness, by the way,
I know as Bert is training, he's working out,
I've been trying to get Bert to quit drinking alcohol
for a while, not because I'm the arbiter of who should do what.
I never tell people what to do.
By the way, provide information,
people can do what they want.
I'm a live and let live.
I want to be very clear about that.
But it's out of care and affection for Bert that, you know, excessive
alcohol consumption over long periods of time, bad. I mean, we can keep that one pretty brief.
So, but Bert is working out. But Tom, I know, because we talk and I spent some time with
him that he trains, he trains hard and he sees it as integral with his, with his writing,
with his ability to show up for his family and business, et cetera. I mean, I think we're finally approaching a time in human history where
we accept at the level of, you know, the scientific community all the way through to wellness and
just generally that the brain and body are are intimately linked at the level of what you, you know,
if you want to improve your body, do something for your mind. If you want to improve your mind,
do something for your body. And it's so improve your mind, do something for your body.
It's so clear now what we all need to do.
We can get into the details, but at a macro level, it's clear that we should all be getting
that 150 to 200 minutes of zone two per week or walking a lot.
If you live in a big city, you're probably getting that.
Then also getting your heart rate up to max heart rate once a week, doing some sprint type
stuff on whatever format is safe for your body,
some people swimming, some people throwing,
some people running, for me it's running,
but not everyone will enjoy running or can do it.
And then everyone should be doing at least six sets
of resistance training per muscle group, per week,
minimum, hard sets, two failure, okay,
maybe, maybe not close to failure, yeah, probably.
And it's especially the groups that have been,
let's just say a verse to weight training, right?
Typically women, older folks,
although now more women weight train,
because they understand that in the absence
of a lot of injected or prescription anabolic hormones,
they're not gonna get enormous.
That's the funniest thing for me.
That's funny.
I think, right?
That concept that, you know, if you one lifts weights
that they're going to be getting used to.
Become bulky.
Do you realize to all of the women who are out there
that are concerned about lifting weights
because they're going to get too bulky,
do you know how hard I've worked
to try and desperately become bulky for 15 years?
Like, I've worked really, really difficult
hoping that one day I'll become bulky.
And there is, I think it's dissipating a lot now.
But there was for a long time, this fear that I would do
a couple of bicep curls and you're gonna look
like the incredible Hulk.
It's like me and my friends have really, really prayed
for that to happen forever.
You do not need to be concerned.
It's not gonna creep up on you.
And one day you're gonna wake up and be the sort
of vascular beast.
Right.
A couple of things about that.
I mean, from a longevity standpoint,
we know that maintaining healthy nerve to muscle
function, neuromuscular junctions is one of the things that resistance exercise does, and
it's highly correlated with cognitive function into older age.
And for those people, I guess going back to our earlier conversation, we'll probably do
this a few times in the course of this episode.
But the thing you want to do the least, that's actually the thing that where you stand to build up your AMCC the most. So for me, that would be language learning,
or learning a musical instrument. Two things that I love music, but I just, it's just so hard for me.
So it sits there on the shelf as a possible way to activate the AMCC. But in terms of actual
resistance training, resistance training has an interesting property
that haven't heard discussed before,
that pertains to men and women who do it,
which is unlike cardiovascular training.
During resistance training bout,
because of the blood flow to the muscle, so-called pump,
you get a little window into what the potential progress
would look like.
That pump dissipates post-workout, and then if you allow sufficient rest and nutrition, flow to the muscle, so-called pump. You get a little window into what the potential progress would look like.
That pump dissipates, posts work out, and then if you allow sufficient rest and nutrition,
et cetera, you'll get a hypertrophy response.
But it's so unlike other forms of exercise.
Like, if I go to a yoga class and I stretch or I'm doing some movement, I get to that limit
where I'm quaking and I fall over, it's very different than getting a picture of just
how flexible I will be the next time,
and then losing that until I adapt.
With running your lungs, sometimes your throat burns as you pointed out, and that's showing
you your limit, and of course, then there's an adaptation response that then allows you
to perform at that level without the burning in the next time, right, if you allow sufficient
recovery.
But with weight training, it's kind of interesting.
The whole pump thing was never something that I really drew me to weight training very much,
but it's interesting because you get a glimpse
into what the progress might look like.
And so for, I would say for anyone who's worried
about getting too big,
unless your pump is bigger than you want to be,
you're not gonna get that, right?
And so you actually get a window into
how much potential size increase you're gonna create,
but it's so different than other forms of exercise in that way.
It's like what other thing in life?
Like if you took a language class and you're like, oh, I'm going to learn Japanese and you
go and during the class, you actually become fluent for a moment, then it's taken away
and then you become fluent.
So it's a very special form of exercise that offers some unique gifts to us as incentives
for going back.
But look as I say this, I realize some
people hate resistance training. They love running. Some people hate running. They love
resistance training. Some people, I realize hate exercise. But if you hate exercise, you
should do it anyway. AMCC. And you're getting the AMCC.
So going back to what you think might be happening to someone like Tom, who like a cognitive athlete, right? But largely the physical realm.
Comedians, apart from, I guess, until Joe, which is part of the beginning of like the comedian
bro, bro left a revolution, before him, it wasn't exactly like, I wasn't looking to comedians
as being the vanguard of health and fitness.
No, I was like, that, I mean, look at Baluci, right?
I mean, he was the epitome of lack of health and sadly. No, I was like, I mean, look at Balushi, right? I mean, he was the epitome of lack of health
and sadly died, right?
What talked to me about what would be happening
to the brain of somebody like Tom,
who pivots from being maybe 40 pounds overweight,
I don't know how big he got it, it is biggest,
but lost a good bit of weight
and it wasn't just losing weight,
it was then gaining muscles.
So Dr. Gabrielle Lionel, world of muscle-centered medicine,
he's gonna benefit from that, the insulin sensitivity.
There'll be like some physiological changes,
but talk to me for the people who are cognitive athletes,
what's gonna happen in someone like Tom's mind
when he changes his body?
Yeah, so improve blood flow to the brain.
I mean, the brain is most metabolically demanding organ
in the entire body.
It consumes a ton of glucose.
If you eat carbohydrates, yes, it can run on ketones,
but blood flow through arteries, veins, and capillaries
to the neurons of the brain is inseparable from cognitive function.
So when you improve blood flow to the brain,
you improve cognitive function, period.
When you restrict blood flow to the brain,
even at a micro level, you impair cognitive function.
In addition to that, we know that several forms
of age-related cognitive decline in dementia
are considered nowadays.
Some people will even call it type three diabetes,
although that's a controversial term,
diabetes of the brain.
This is why a number of people who have Alzheimer's
go on ketogenic diets and get some degree of relief.
It's not that, by the way, it's not a cure for Alzheimer's, but some people do better
when they switch the major fuel source for the brain.
But in the case of Tom as an example, but someone who gets into exercising regularly, both
resistance training and cardiovascular training, you're getting improved blood flow, you're
getting far less inflammation of the brain.
Inflammation is cognitive depleting, reducing inflammation, cognitive enhancing.
We all, that's absolutely true across the board, right, in animal studies in the humans.
In addition to that, there are a lot of bloodborne factors, two of which I'll just highlight
now, just for sake of time only, two.
First of all, when we do cardio, that positively impact brain health, in memory in particular.
So when we do load bearing, cardiovascular exercise, so running as opposed to swimming, anything
where the skeletal system is under some load, there's a hormone that's literally secreted
from bone. I know we don't normally think of bones as endocrine organs called osteocalcin.
Asteocalcin is released from the bones under these load bearing conditions.
It can cross the blood-brain barrier,
and we know that it plays an active role
in promoting not just new cell production,
but because that's a more minor component of neuroplasticity,
but enhancement of nerve health and function
in the hippocampus, which is an area
that's instrumental for the formation of new memories.
So there's something about movement of the body that signals to the brain.
Ah, we're moving, you actually need to maintain or perhaps even enhance your ability to remember
things.
And this probably is an evolutionary conservative circuit that exists, we know it exists in
mice as well.
So that's one example.
The other is that my colleague at Stanford, Stanford Tony Weiss Quarry, is best known for these young blood experiments where they'll take the blood or plasma from a young
rodent and put it into an aged or demented rodent and see improvements in cognitive function. And
outside the United States, there are some clinics. By the way, I'm not recommending people do this,
that have shown improvements in cognitive function or even offsetting of Alzheimer's and age-related
cognitive decline. This is led to the idea of vampires and baby blood in this...
The green and chrome.
Yeah, which is all crazy and conspiracy.
I'm going on record saying that.
But there's a recent paper that also from Tony's lab showing that if in animals that exercise
regularly, if you take their blood or plasma and you supply that blood or plasma
to aged or cognitively deficient animals,
they, their cognition or their cognitive abilities improve.
So there's something about blood of the exercised body
that enriches the brain and could be many different growth
factors, it could be BDNF, brain derived,
nitrophic factor, it could be things like IGF1
and something like growth factors, probably give be BDNF, brain derived, and a trophic factor, it could be the, you know, it's like IGF1, insulin-like growth factor.
It's probably gonna be a cocktail of different things,
as well as osteocalcin.
And so what we wanna think about is that when we exercise,
and that's a broad statement, exercise or word, rather,
cardiovascular resistance training,
it creates a cocktail that then crosses into the blood
brain barrier that then creates a milieu
of general growth, health, or at least maintenance of cognitive
that's there. So Tom's incredibly sharp and of course comedy requires not just memory, but also writing of new jokes.
He's got to do Netflix specials for a long time and I actually went and saw him and asked him a small venue. I flew out there
to see him because I want to see him in a small venue because in small venues is where comics often work out their new material. And I mean, just, you
know, to me, it was just astonishing, like to see the number of different thought threads.
And one thing that makes Tom's comedy so wonderful and other people like Richard
prior to this exceptionally well too, is that he can switch personas very fast. So he's
doing his voice, then he switches to his son's voice and switches back. And the speed and
precision with which he does that very agile makes it seem
We forget that they're very agile and then we we've he creates a panel of characters and then wipes that board away
Right, he's the only guy up there wipes that board away and then creates a panel of new characters
and so I mean that requires a lot of dex like cognitive dexterity
so
exercises
Absolutely one of the best ways to improve brain function over time.
And in addition to that, there's been so much interest in, you know, should we do crossword puzzles?
Should we, you know, why is it that some people maintain cognitive function? I think what's very
clear to me based on all that literature is that it's not one specific thing. Crossword puzzles
are social engagement or exercises, all of those things. But let's not forget specific thing, crossword puzzles or social engagement or exercises,
all of those things, but let's not forget the super-agers.
The people who are constantly trying things
that are difficult, that are pressuring themselves
a bit to do things that are difficult,
those people are offsetting.
As far as we know, all of the major shrinkage
of these brain structures that normally would shrink
as people age.
So we have a lot of control, but it does require effort.
And I'll tell you, there's never going to be a pillar injection.
Whether or not it's ozemic or something like it, but for the brain, there's just no way.
There's no way that you're ever going to recapitulate learning and effort.
And yes, it requires time, but it's so clear.
I mean, I don't know how many more papers in preclinical models and in humans, one needs
to see before they finally just bite the bullet and go with lift weights and run or end
due cardiovascular training.
It can't be one or the other.
You know, the stereotype of like the big, let's just say a big guy who's dumb, you know,
I don't think it's entirely, I mean, you meet some big folks that are smart, right?
But there is something in the kind of broad correlations
of people who, you know, people who tend
to only do cardiovascular training.
You know, maybe it's a selection bias.
Like the people who are already avid readers
are more in kind of intellectual leanings,
maybe get more involved in tennis swimming,
running type sports, rowing,
because of the schools they went to or whatever.
But people who just slip weights,
it does seem as if over time,
I don't know, maybe Derek Witalisley,
their neck is getting too big,
they have sleep apnea,
they don't seem as sharp,
and they're often mouth-breathing,
there's look at the really big guys in the gym,
they're often not strong. Not just between sets, not just after hard sets. I think they're also, they're
fixating themselves in sleep. We know this. And then you look at runners and the people
have the kind of like the really svelte and they, and sure they might maintain cognitive
function, but their bodies are very vulnerable to injury.
And they always seem to be complaining about what hurts.
You know, is it like my friends who do a lot of extended
training, unless it's David,
Goggins who doesn't seem to have the circuit for complaining,
at least certainly not online.
Yeah, they always seem to be complaining about injuries.
So I think a combination of resistance training,
cardiovascular training is, let's just face it,
like you can't do one and not the other.
If you wanna be healthy all around,
healthy of heart, healthy of body,
healthy of mind, cognition improved
or at least maintained as we age, you gotta do both.
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Coming back to the discussion about alcohol, which is one that you try to interject with
Berton, I think your episode that you released last year, back end of last summer, I think
that really opened a lot of people's eyes
to some of the risks of alcohol.
I've been kind of flying the flag of it
as a tool for productivity.
Quite a wide alcohol.
Yeah, that I think, when you're entirely,
or do you drink at all?
I brought it back into my life now,
but I did six months sober, three times,
and then a thousand days without alcohol, too.
But yeah, I'm seeing right now a huge pushback against unseen, unintentional drinking.
And I think that your episode last year opened a lot of people's eyes to it.
Thanks. I mean, again, I don't tell people what to do. I give them the facts and so they can make the best decisions for them. I mean, it's very clear that unless you're
an alcoholic and provided you're an adult that, you know, two drinks per week maximum is about
the upper threshold beyond which you're going to start getting some health. That's colder.
That's that's called a warm up to a warm up in England. Yeah. So, you know, I've never been a
big drink. I don't drink. I'm lucky that it's not something that's that's a warm up in England. Yeah, so I've never been a big drinker. I don't drink.
I'm lucky that it's not something that's a strong draw for me.
I've been to.
I've friends that are recovered alcoholics,
and their lives are so much better as a function of being sober.
But for non-alcoholics, I mean,
I think everyone should just know the health risks,
especially women where the risks for breast cancer
and other types of cancers are elevated so very much.
And what was interesting to me about the response to that episode is that I think many people
took it, the impression I got was that many people took it as permission to finally stop
drinking or drink less because they didn't enjoy drinking.
And as you, so beautifully put out on social media, drinking is one of the few activities
that if you don't partake,
people assume or accuse you of having a problem.
And it's just wild, I mean,
then why would that be?
And I think that, I think it also makes,
once actually I was out to dinner with a colleague years ago
and I declined drinking,
that even I was just talking to the visiting speaker.
And she said, how that's so boring. I declined a drinking, that even I was just talking to the, the visiting speaker.
And she said, how that's so boring.
And I, well, first of all, I don't have a problem saying what's on my mind without alcohol,
right?
I don't have, I don't have a excessive gabbardic inhibition.
So I'll say what I want to say, you know, as, as best I can.
But you know, I think drinkers don't like people who don't drink because it takes the fun out of it for them
because there's this idea that's, you know,
prolific on college campuses, like if everyone's drunk
that somehow, like the entire vibe of the party
is gonna take on a new flavor.
And frankly, I went to a college,
UC Santa Barbara, where at the time people drank a ton,
a ton, you discovered alcoholics, you're right.
And I used to go to parties sometimes,
I'd look around on things like everyone here
is just blasted.
Like if anything happened,
did you drink it?
Yeah, I drank in college, but not that often.
I had to have it, and I don't recommend this.
I had a habit of going out about once a month,
and I would tie one on, you know, absolutely.
In frequent, but binge. Yeah, I never, you know, my tolerance to alcohol was always such
that I would get drunk quickly and then sober up really fast. So I was drinking late
into the night, but then I'd sober up really fast. Now, of course, we know the sleep you
get after even one drink is vastly diminished. Every single person that's got a oral or a whoops strap or something is feeling you right now.
And I think that alcohol to me never felt good.
I never liked it.
And it was a recipe for, you know, there was a lot of fights.
There was a lot of, you know, there were a lot of bad stuff
happens when people are drinking too much.
I've run driving to say nothing of poor decision making.
I mean, to me, it just feels like there's so,
there are so many better ways to have a good time
that alcohol isn't necessary,
but I do understand that it's a big part of many cultures.
And I do understand that for many people,
it's so part and parcel with relaxing
and with festivities and with feeling comfortable
and with drawing a boundary between the normal day
and the rest of the day.
That's interesting.
There's a ritualistic aspect to it.
Yeah, there's a sort of it divides the day
in an interesting way.
So I'm not judgmental of it, but for me,
I mean, I'll go to a party where people are drinking
and just hang out, I'm perfectly good.
Dude, I've stood on the door of a thousand club nights
in my career, right?
There's a club promoter.
And I can promise you, for the people that are thinking, I like the sound of a thousand club nights in my career, right? As a club promoter. And I can promise you, for the people that are thinking,
I like the sound of this justification,
this excuse that I don't need to drink anymore.
Dr. Huberman has said that, you know,
maybe it's not for you, maybe it's not as enjoyable.
Nothing good happens in nightclubs after one in the morning.
I am patient zero, I have the,
I am the doctor of late night parties, okay?
Like that's one of my expertise.
Nothing good happens in a nightclub.
It's this sort of messy, sloppy fights
and kissing people you shouldn't
and stumbling all over the place and stuff.
If you go out and you don't drink
and you go home at one in the morning,
I think you probably get to capture about 80% of the enjoyment of the event that you would have
done had you have drank, pre-drinks, gone out, done the whole thing. And I got a bit of push,
I got quite a bit of pushback from a sobriety community a few years ago. I did this
thousand days sober as a club promoter, which was, I guess, I could kind of a big deal in
some regards for, like, pushing the sobriety community forward. But I was never doing it because I had
a problem. I was doing it because it gave me more consistency and more time and more money
to spend on things that I cared about. So it was a productivity tool, like the Pomodoro technique,
right, or going to bed on time or something. And they had a little bit of a problem. They had a
big problem with the fact that I said, there is something to the enjoyment of drinking on time or something. And they had a little bit of a problem, they had a big problem with the fact that I said,
there is something to the enjoyment
of drinking on a night out.
I think anybody that says alcohol has no role
in improving the quality of a night out ever
just hasn't been on enough good nights out, right?
There are ways that it can improve kind of loosens people up,
it can reduce their inhibitions. If you wanna go and dance, you know, you're dancing at a rave or at a festival,
which I think there's one going on quite close to here.
If you're there, it's really great.
But if alcohol wasn't so widely distributed,
I think people would ask a lot more questions.
It's like you can't see the word for the trees, right?
You don't question it.
It's such a baked into the fabric of just human life. Every single time that I take a,
like a macro dose, but low of psilocybin, one where I can still function.
But what is, what is 0.75, 0.75 to 1 gram?
So that's about, it's a little less than half of the macro therapeutic dose for,
for intractable
depression, which is something like 2.2 grams or so.
So you can still hold a conversation, depending on what strain you've got, but every single
time that I do it, without fail, a thought comes into my mind, which is, why does anyone
drink alcohol?
Why does anybody do it?
Because I'll go to bed, my HRV, my recovery is fine.
The next day, maybe I'm a little bit tired.
I've had a lot of activation.
I've been super energetic.
Very little hangover.
On the evening, I don't do stupid things.
It makes me want to say nice things to all of my friends.
My thoughts are sharper than they were before,
sometimes they're silly, but they're sharper.
And then you compare it with alcohol
and it's this kind of sloppy, muddy, very unadjial.
It's just, I totally get what you mean.
When you've taken a little bit of time away from it and you look at it in the harsh light of day,
the effect that alcohol gives you just aren't that enjoyable and it's been folded into people's lives through tradition
and through just anchoring bias and continuation.
Yeah, and marketing, you know, the idea that like someone can
quote unquote hold their liquor is such like it's been made
synonymous with, you know, masculine ideals.
It's like, I mean, it's kind of crazy because we know it also
like crushes testosterone levels.
What's interesting is that, you know, I forget who said this,
but you know, there's a very different picture of a young drunk versus an old
drunk.
Someone who's been just drinking for too many years, it's not a pretty picture.
They become infantile.
They become really infantile.
And again, I'm not the anti-alcohol crusader.
I did that episode not expecting much of response, actually.
That shows just how out of touch sometimes I can be.
I think it just reiterated, man,
I think it gave people the excuse.
What did you do?
You gave people the justification, you legitimized them.
It's like the best bucks tell you something
that you already know.
It was like, everyone always,
lots of people always had an idea.
Probably shouldn't be drinking.
Maybe I don't enjoy it that much. Maybe these aren't my friends, they probably shouldn't be drinking. Maybe I don't enjoy that much.
Maybe these aren't my friends that just my drinking partners.
Maybe I don't like the way that I feel the next day.
Maybe my life could be better if I stop drinking.
That's the justification.
Well, I'm happy to hear that for those folks,
so you know, now that the information is out there,
I've, I was accused several times on Twitter, slash X,
of taking all the fun out of parties,
in the, at least in the Bay Area, but I'll tell you, I grew up in the Bay Area, the good parties ended a long time ago. on Twitter slash X of taking all the fun out of parties
in the at least in the Bay Area,
but I'll tell you, I grew up in the Bay Area,
the good parties ended a long time ago.
But there still exist, you know, I mean, I think they're,
you know, and when I say other ways to have fun,
I don't mean like, oh, everyone should sit around
and do math or read neuroscience,
although for me that's fun.
You know, I think, I think in a broader sense,
I think there's a shift nowadays
that people really think about, you know, how to engage socially in ways that are interesting.
I mean, perhaps it's again a sampling bias because of the topics that I cover and who talks to me, but like in the Bay Area,
there are these Russian bonias in New York, there's Spy 88.
By the way, they don't pay me a say this, but I like to go this Russian bonia down in Wall Street.
You go there and you know, got hot saunas
and coal plunge and people are,
you know, young people are there enjoying themselves
and they actually serve alcohol
so they'll have sometimes they'll do
like little gimlets of vodka or something there.
And so, you know, people sometimes,
that's part of the tradition.
The most Russian thing that I can think of,
shot of vodka whilst hot.
Right, so that, and you know,
and they've got theories as to how that can help.
And listen, I think some of those traditions
can be really be wonderful.
But people are starting to combine
socializing with health promoting protocols
and going out and eating good food together,
like eating really wonderful food
with the social component.
I'll go into the grave talking about getting morning sunlight,
something that maybe we should talk a little bit more about
and as people roll their eyes, I'll just say there's this incredible study now just out in
nature.
Mental health published about 80 that has 85,000, 85,000 subjects showing that the ratio of
getting a lot of sunlight during the day to getting minimal artificial light exposure
at night, it really sets the tone of your overall system and is associated with brain and body that is,
and is associated with better mental health outcomes across the board. And the inverse,
if you're getting too much artificial light at night, we're not enough sunlight or both,
is associated with everything bad, elevate depression, anxiety, etc. Now, I do believe people should
get out and have a good time, don't avoid the bright lights of a city or a club, have a great time,
like dancing, socializing. Those are great reasons to stay up too late.
You can get minimal sleep in the next day.
Great reasons.
So everyone's in a while, sure,
and 20% of your life you're gonna do that.
And you're probably some percentage of time
is also gonna be raising kids.
So you're out because you have to keep them alive
which is important to our species.
So thank you.
But I think people, you know, forget that yes,
you can go outside and get morning sunlight
and which I highly recommend.
People do that as most people know,
but I mean, so many benefits on mood and mental health
and improve sleep, and it's completely zero cost.
But I often get accused of, okay, well,
but what if you have kids, like how do you do this?
Well, you take the kids with you,
because guess what, they need it too.
You take them outside, you eat breakfast outside,
or at least facing a window indoors.
It's not gonna be as good as having the window open
or being outdoors,
but even if the sun's on the other side
of your apartment building,
I mean, these things have an outside's positive effect
on health, and I'll lay your both upper limbs anyway,
that many, many, many of the mental health issues
that we see nowadays in young people and in adults,
is the consequence of disrupted circadian rhythms because of a lot of time in a two-dimensional
screen space, which I'm not condemning.
I spend time on and put out most of my content on social media and YouTube Apple Spotify,
right?
And in addition to that, the lights are too bright at night and they're not getting enough
sunlight during the day.
And an important thing to understand
about our circadian slash health,
the circadian system in health is that
throughout, in the morning and throughout the day,
your eyes are less sensitive to light
and you need more of it in order to get what you need.
Okay, broadly speaking.
And at night, your eyes are far more sensitive
to artificial lighting and you need far
less of it in order to disrupt your circadian system in bad ways, disrupt your mental health.
Now, does that mean you have to walk around with sunglasses at night and you know, dim all the
lights in your house? Well, no, but you could afford to dim them a little bit. You could afford to
switch to the red light function on your phone. There's actually a triple-click red light function on
every phone that maybe I'll pass the throughput of what to do to your phone, which allows you to accessability
functions on iPhone. My goes to grayscale when I do that.
Yeah, so you can have it switch to grayscale or to purely red. You know, you eliminate the
blues, a trick that my friend Rick Ruben-Tommy, I was like, oh, this is great. You know,
you don't necessarily have to purchase blue blocker glasses or anything like that.
We'll get back to talking to Andrew in one minute,
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So there are a bunch of little things that we can do that make a vast improvement in the way that our biology and psychology
function and
It's amazing when you start to think about how most people exist now
It's too damn not enough light for them during the day, especially not enough sunlight and that's too bright for them at night
And they're also living mostly in a two-dimensional world of screens. What's the problem with the two-dimensional thing?
We're also living mostly in a two-dimensional world of screens. What's the problem with the two-dimensional thing?
Well, we have an epidemic of myopia of nearsightedness, and it's been shown in a bunch of different
clinical trials now.
The first couple of them that were attacked, like most studies, something comes out, then
it gets attacked, then there's a retaliation study, et cetera, that kids that spend two
hours or more out of doors per day have a far lower lower incidence of myopia near-sightedness, and
even if they're on iPads and books and computers, there's something about far viewing, about
viewing things further than three or four feet away from us, for a significant portion
of our day.
Doesn't mean you have to be staring off into the horizon, but as opposed to near viewing
where you're looking at something within about four feet of oneself, this distance that
we're sitting across from one another is probably about four and a half, five feet.
It's not quite far viewing,
but you think about, watch people's behavior,
look at how they go through the day.
They're spending most of their time looking at things
about a foot to a foot and a half away.
And as a consequence, the eyeball gets longer.
This is a well-established fact in animal models and humans.
And then the visual image isn't focused
onto the retina, the light sensing portion at the back of the eye,
the image falls in front of the retina,
so-called near-sightedness, right?
It's falling too near to the lens, okay?
There are other, some people claim that near-sightedness
has to do with the actual perceptual changes,
but in any event, so fortunately,
that the eyeball actually can change in length,
so viewing things further away
can actually, especially early in life, allow the eyeball to adjust its shape.
Amazing, just like the sinuses.
There's plasticity of a lot of different organs.
The point is that we need to get out and view things at a distance.
If you're walking down the street looking at your phone, you're degrading the functioning
of your visual system.
I told you, I think I texted you before I did it.
I got laser eye surgery.
I'm on the computer.
Yeah, so you got the l before I did it. I got laser eye surgery. I'm on the computer.
Yeah, so you got the laser. Yes, great. And that's, so the laser just to educate people was
to actually change the shape of the eyeball somewhat in order to make it more perfect optically
in a way that for many people allows them to not have to wear corrective lenses of any
kind. Yeah, I can see everything. I can see your ancestral trauma and and and full works now at a hundred yards.
Amazing.
Your vision is super sharp.
Correct.
Oh, it's 2015.
What was the surgery painful?
It's very interesting.
So I actually videoed it.
I haven't put it up because it's kind of it's probably pretty uncomfortable for people
to watch.
That's never stopped you before.
That's true.
That's true.
So they numb both of your eyes using numbing drops.
And then they come over the top with a kind of a large box on an arm.
They rest the valve of the front of this box on the eyeball itself and then suck the eyeball onto
the actual valve so that it can't move. They then use one laser to create a flap in the cornea,
which is at the precise distance based on all of the tests
they did in the days prior to that.
They then take it off.
You're still lying back.
You have to keep looking at a green light that's above you.
The surgeon will lift the flap, the front flap of the
cornea up, using kind of a soft pair of tweezers. The laser will then come in behind now the
open part of the cornea, do the corrective surgery. The flap will then get replaced, and it needs
to be very, very precise, so that any slight nudge, I actually had to go and
get the, I had to get my flap relifted a couple of days later on my left eye because a tiny,
tiny, tiny little bit of oil from the top of my eyelid had been caught underneath the
flap and it was causing a flaring of bright lights. And so I had to go back and actually
get the flap relifted, get this, the flap that they make can still be relifted up to three
years later.
Amazing.
It's fascinating.
And yeah, had it done on both eyes, a couple of one day of recovery, it feels very gritty
for the people that are concerned about whether or not it's going to hurt them.
My recovery period was one day and I was able to, I recorded a podcast 48 hours in bright
lights, 48 hours after.
Was it an expensive procedure?
For grand, GBP, so five grand USD.
Not a trivial sum.
Not a trivial sum, but also given that it's literally how you navigate the world.
And I was squinting.
A lot, I was squinting at screens to have read the text.
I was using really large text.
The only reason I found out about this is because I went in for a checkup
and they got me to do my eye test
and the lady turned and said,
yeah, you, you legally can't drive without glasses.
And I was like,
what are you talking about?
My vision's great.
Like my vision's always been like this
but she got me to do the thing and I thought,
yeah, it shouldn't be,
I should be able to read those huge letters
that are only 20 feet away from me,
shouldn't I? And sure enough, after this corrective surgery, 2015 vision, everything's razor sharp.
The only considerations that I would say are night time viewing of bright lights, specifically
street lights, cars coming towards you. You get a little bit of flaring around them.
And that's because it's now passing through not just one
piece of material, but there is a second cut. That supposedly dissipates a little bit over time.
But I am flying the flag for a laser eye treatment man. It's been a complete game-changer. My pickleball
game's improved, which is obviously what was most important. Everything's, it's really, really good.
And I'm very, very impressed. And thank most important. Everything's, it's really, really good.
And I'm very, very impressed.
And thank you to my surgeon for doing it.
Yeah, so that this little flap, do they tell you how big the flap is?
I can just show you the video.
I can show you the video once we finish up.
Interesting.
Thanks for sharing that.
Yeah, I think it's an interesting procedure.
And we did an episode of our chair of ophthalmology, Jeff Goldberg.
And he was a proponent of it for people that have the genes.
I texted you to make sure that like the the ophthalmologist guy with all of the dudes
that know it, am I all right to do this?
Jeff's amazing. Actually, we trained it in the same lab.
He was a graduate student. I was a postdoc.
Then he ended up in Miami and then we converged in San Diego.
Then he moved to Stanford. I moved to Stanford.
So I said, we sort of, he'll argue I was tracking him,
I'll argue he was tracking me,
but he's my chairman, so I'll just say I was tracking him.
But a very, very smart guy,
and I think, yeah,
getting, keeping your eyes healthy is key.
This actually comes back to light.
So there's some really beautiful data
of Glenn Jeffree's laboratory at University College London.
I'm known Glenn for more than 20 years.
He's a spectacular vision scientist showing that exposure to artificial red light, you
know, there's a lot of the, you know, like the jube and these other red lights that are
out there cozy and these other red light systems, which by the way, I don't have any financial
relationship to.
You know, the idea that red light could somehow enhance different functions of art tissues
or preserve different functions of art tissues. People think it's really biohacky.
Like, oh, people under red lights.
But there was a Nobel Prize given for the use of long-wave length light
for the treatment of lupus almost a hundred years ago.
So the idea of phototherapy is not a new concept,
but people love to kind of push it into the realm of biohacking and slash pro-science,
but it's not.
The red light therapy has been shown to have some positive outcomes for the treatment
of acne, for scar healing and wound healing.
Red light is long wavelength light, which can penetrate further through tissues than
short wavelength light.
So that's sort of the argument there is that when you look at red light or red light is
placed on the skin, some of it is actually getting into the deeper layers of the dermis.
How deep is questionable.
Some people argue they can even get into the blood supply if it's like on the wrist or
so in any event.
Glenn's lab has shown two really important findings.
And the first one they've shown twice in separate studies, and this is all in humans, the first result is that if people look at red light
for two or three minutes, once or twice a week,
in particular early in the day,
it can offset some age-related vision loss.
How?
Well, the photoreceptors at the back of the eye
are some of the most metabolically consum-
metabolically active in, let's just say,
energy-consuming cells of the entire nervous system,
which is saying a lot because the nervous system is the most metabolically consuming,
metabolically excuse me, active organ.
And so as a consequence, these really active cells create a lot of so-called reactive oxygen species.
And that impacts, negatively impacts the functions of mitochondria.
So viewing red light seems to restore some of the mitochondrial function by limiting
reactive oxygen species.
In the photoreceptors and offsetting, and they've shown this, some, not all, but some age-related
vision loss.
Presumably, you're not talking about looking at one of these red light panels, because
these things are like a fucking flat.
It's huge.
It's so run.
I actually am referring to that.
But you want to do it in a distance
that's comfortable, so several feet, right?
Those panels for the people that don't know
these things, they even provide you
with the, like the, yeah, the stuff for the sunbed.
That's right.
It goes with them.
Yeah, so you don't want to do this
for more than a couple of minutes
and you do want to blink and you do,
and probably through eyelids closed,
if your eyelids are thin enough and it's bright enough,
it can probably get in nonetheless.
But let me very, very clear.
Well, I'll tell you the other result, and then I'll tell you why you don't necessarily
need a red light.
The other result, which is more recent, and is still under review, so I want to be very
clear, but the data look interesting to say the least, is that there's this old theory,
like old theory that the French have really expounded
that eating food outdoors is metabolized differently
than eating food indoors, which sounds crazy, right?
I mean, that's some level.
And yet, this study shows that if people do this red light viewing
while eating, or in the minutes just after eating
for just a few minutes, that the post meal blood glucose level
is significantly dampened, which is a good thing.
You don't want big elevations in blood glucose
or excessive elevations in blood glucose.
Now, that all sounds a little bit at the edge
of what we consider valid or reasonable.
And yet, if you think about sunlight,
sunlight is full spectrum light. So this isn't saying you need to run out and buy a red light.
If you get outside and get your morning sunlight, yes, it's going to set your circadian rhythm for elevated mood, focus and alertness during the day, improve sleep at night.
But in addition, that you're getting red light to your eyes. Now, in very densely overcast days, say in the UK,
or elsewhere, if it's not,
you're gonna really filter out the clouds
you're gonna filter out the red light.
The joy, the will to live.
And as a consequence,
some people choose to supplement their light
with these red light devices.
But this idea that the French and others have argued,
and I'm sure as I say the French said it,
then the French will nod and everyone else will say sure as I say the French said it then you know
The French will not and everyone else will say no
It's like it was us first or us also. It's probably multiple people throughout history groups throughout history
But it does seem that there's something different about the way that food is metabolized
If under different lighting conditions which sounds crazy and I can already hear Lane Norton stomping in with his you know
They basically yeah lanes Lane's brain sort of has like PubMed ideas lighting conditions, which sounds crazy. And I can already hear Lane Norton stomping in with his,
basically, Lane's brain sort of has like PubMed ideas.
I think it's great, by the way, Lane, we love you.
And I love his sort of adherence to PubMed ideas.
But these are published studies.
I'll send along.
You can tell me what you think, Lane.
But the point being that there still
needs to be more work on this, right?
But it's always nice when some nicely controlled studies
done by well-established laboratories
that people in a field trust, like Glenn's lab,
start seeing things once or twice over in multiple studies
that really work well with what we know
from kind of naturalistic conditions.
For instance, they're hunters, people that are adventurers
that are whose job depends on them
being able to see into the distance.
Kamhanes.
Kamhanes, these people maintain vision
well into their older age.
Nerves like me who spend too much time
in front of a book or a screen
who spend most of their time and have for many years
looking at things down, I mean, for years I looked at things down a microscope.
That was where most of my life was,
down looking down the microscope,
but also reading things at close distance.
Well, you know, it makes sense that the eyeball would lengthen
you and end up with, near-sightness.
I do wear corrective lenses at night,
especially if I'm driving at night.
I've really worked hard to try to not succumb
to the need for corrective lenses,
because I'm trying to keep my vision health good.
I don't want to become reliant on it.
But you know, at night I have to work corrective lenses.
Talking about the red light stuff, have you heard of hubam and husbands?
Do you know what this is?
Yeah, unfortunately.
Well, I should say that the most unfortunate thing about the Hubertman husband's post is that it was about,
is that it was taken by certain media outlets to amplify the idea that the audience of my podcast is just male. When, in fact, it's 50% male female, at least in the listenership. YouTube
skews male, but we knew that anyway. But the listenership is 50% male, 50% female. A few
months, the Hubertman husband's thing was really about how a woman was saying that she
thinks she's the human husband because she does all these different things that are
taken from that.
But they got taken from that for the people that don't know, the metamine around human
husbands, which you can search on TikTok right now, is that the hot new thing that all
of the wife's want out there
is a husband who's into red light therapy
and he does cold plunges and he does sauna treatments
and stuff.
So I wonder.
So you guys I'm trying to help you out.
Look dude, I wonder how you feel of a bunch of guys
potentially cosplaying as Andrew Huberman
in the bedroom, like the price of long sleeve black shirts
has gone through the roof.
You now have people fully lapping as you, maybe they're telling the,
telling the wife that they didn't get enough sunlight in their eyes as dirty talk in the bedroom.
I'm not sure. I wondered how it feels to have this army of Andrew Cubumans from wish
now existing on, on the internet.
So, so we covered the AMCC. It means interior mid-singulate cortex.
But I confess, even though I know that, I don't know what cosplay is,
and I don't know what lurping is.
Cosplay is dressing up, it happens that a lot of conventions,
someone will go as Anakin Skywalker or Pikachu or whatever,
and lopping with life.
It's life.
It's life-sexual titillation.
Sometimes, but not always.
So this is like the action hero variation on furries
kind of yeah but it's not freezes more lexes domain precisely yeah we know we know that well
and then lobbying know that but we don't know it well fortunately live action role playing
lopping so that again is this kind of I'm'm saying there is potentially a market out there if a guy is struggling
in the dating world to take the aesthetic, get fully huban and piled, and then there is a huge
potential demand amongst the wives out there. Okay, so this is news to me. One thing that's come
up recently in discussions
with some traditional media outlets,
but also just generally, right,
is to what extent is all this focus on health?
Does that change something about masculine, feminine,
dynamics?
The traditional stereotype of men was
that they're tough enough to not need to engage in
any self-care, right?
They don't need sleep, they can drink a lot of liquor, they'll eat when there's food, they'll
eat whatever, they don't like going to the doctor, right?
It's like runs very counter-current to the kinds of things I talk about in my podcast,
like, hey, get up in the morning, get some sunlight, right?
Lift weights run, and I should point out that none of what I've talked about with exercise
ever, of course, is an aesthetic component, limiting body fat to some extent, not having
excessive body fat.
Resistance training, as we know, is an incredible way to adjust those ones' aesthetics if they
feel like their proportions aren't where they want, or by the way, guys train your neck.
Clearly, Chris does.
I mean, nothing looks more ridiculous than like
why do you hold the big body neck?
And a little head with a little neck.
Handle neck.
I mean, it's just, it's crazy
because this is proportionally,
you see it and you're like, this is,
it's the, it's the male equivalent of the BBL.
If you have like a, I'm teaching you.
I'm so happy that I get to teach you.
This is all like class for me.
I've got a class for me.
Make sure that you've got your notes.
So this is the Brazilian butt lift.
It's kind of like the bum equivalent of a boob job.
And they have an implant for the glutes.
I think that they actually take fat from elsewhere in the body
and then put it into the, it's the risk,
the surgery risk if this is really quite high.
They just do like hip thrusters or something.
No, no, no, no.
Isn't there that there's a, that takes too long? There's the Brett Contreras, thrusters or something. No, isn't there that there's...
That takes too long.
There's the Brett Contreras, a glute guy.
Yeah, he's very popular.
He puts glutes on people, but they actually put them on themselves
because they're the ones doing that.
I think the doctor technically puts it on them, but yeah.
And it kind of looks, because there's no associated leg development
with the glute development, it's kind of like if you put two basketballs
on upturned baseball bats.
So you have like a leg and then you have like that.
It's, I've seen some, I went to Miami for the first time a few months ago
and I saw one that kind of terrified me.
It looked like a bag of cats from behind in a set of leggings.
You know, like you could kind of see sort of paws coming out like this.
Pooly finished. I would say. I would say.
I just, it wasn't good.
Anyway, my point being, neck for guys need to have it
proportional to the shoulders.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, I'm sort of taking digs at people
that don't train their neck.
It's also life insurance, right?
I had an accident a few years ago where I fell off
a second story roof, and I walked away from it
because I've long done neck training because I injured my neck when I was younger
and even if you don't do fight sports, I don't do fight sports but wouldn't be aligned
with my role in needing my brain.
And I got nothing against people that do fight sports but that's a choice that I've actively
made, not to do them anymore.
But neck training is really important for just...
What's the AT-20 of neck training?
What's the biggest move as for improving your neck?
Well, first of all, I'll tell you in a moment, but I think that, remember that your neck
is your upper spine.
So people are big on training their abs, you know, for spine stability and lower back
hopefully as well, for spine stability, the mid-thoracic regions as well.
But you know, it's your upper spine
and you want it strong and you,
you'll get much stronger in other things as well.
Everything's better, people's posture is far better
when they train their neck.
It actually changes the tone of people's voice.
And I had a guest on my podcast, Dr. Eddie Chang,
who's chair of neurosurgery at UCSF,
I've known him since we were kids,
is a phenomenally smart and creative guy.
And I've asked him about this offline,
you know, why is it that neck training does that?
Well, you know, the voice change that occurs in boys
when they, when they develop and go through puberty
is a thickening of the vocal cords that's
androgen dependent.
I have this weird mutation.
I've talked about this a little bit,
but maybe not that on a program as broad as this
that I actually have the same voice I always had
from when I was a little kid.
My voice never actually changed.
I have an, I have an angiogen receptor alteration.
Okay.
So fortunately for me, like,
doesn't cause any other issues,
but this was my voice when I was five years old.
How terrifying.
Yeah, they call me froggy.
Yeah, it was kind of a joke.
I go like the kid on the little rascals that was froggy.
In any case, but for most people, they hit puberty and then their voice changes
because of the thickening of the vocal chords. But obviously I had some early androgen exposure.
That was clear because I also had hair on my Adam's apple when I was like four years old.
So there was some early androgen exposure. I'm not going to fuck with that foliar.
No, I was a kind kid until I was a teenager and then I eventually...
Angry teenager. I went through it, but I was kind nonetheless.
But in any event, when you train your neck actually, it does improve posture and it actually
changes the timbre of your voice somewhat.
But for people who speak a lot for a living, podcasters, singers, actors, etc., lawyers
and lawyers seem to talk a lot.
You don't want to do a lot of really heavy neck training because it actually changes the
way that your jaw moves and the way that you speak.
You know, especially like my solo podcast, someone who's taking me 11 hours to record.
So, you want to maintain healthy air flow through this region, right?
But the best way to develop a strong neck safely
is to unfortunately stay away from bridges, which wrestling coaches love to give. The discs
can be injured. You can cause dysfunction in the discs and then the pain comes on in a moment
and then you're your hose. Best thing to do is take a plate and start really light lie on a bench,
stabilize yourself by putting one arm down.
So you want to close the chain, so to speak, if you can get a foot down as well.
And then put that plate, you know, probably start with a five or a ten pound plate wrapped in a towel,
so you don't end up with an imprint of the five or ten on the side of your head or face.
And then you're just going to go from neutral position, which is your head, you know, essentially straight up and down,
but you're lying on your side, to just, you know, essentially straight up and down, but you're lying on your side to just, you know,
about maybe 30 or 45 degrees. You aren't like really cinch into it. And you want to keep this is important. Keep your tongue on the roof of your mouth, your jaw shut, so that your jaw and moving around because some people do
neck work and then they'll get clicking of the jaw, they'll get pain in the ear.
There's a, I've spent a lot of time with skulls and I can tell you, human skulls and other skulls by virtue of my work in neuroscience and
dissecting stuff and I've kind of obsession with craniofacial stuff as well. And, you know, there's a lot of musculature and ligaments of the skull that have to be contended with.
So, tongue on the roof of your mouth, and you're just going to, you know, nasal breathe, and you're not going to failure, you're not training really heavy, higher reps in the, you know, 10 to 25 repetition range. Three sets. Yeah, three sets.
And then the other side.
And then, you know, rather than doing a lot of forward
network, which people are already doing, because they're doing a lot of phone reading
and shaping themselves like a C, you want to lie on your stomach and put a plate on the
back your head and get into that, you know, the neck extension straight back.
Okay.
But not pinching or wrenching your head back.
Movements like where you're creating some torsion
up into the sides like this is a little more dangerous.
I don't recommend.
The person has great tutorials on this
and many other things as well as Jeff Cavaliere,
Athlean Axe has a great neck tutorial.
May you good link to that's where I learned it.
Over time I worked up from a 10 pound plate.
I can do five or six reps on each side
with a 45 pound plate.
Like hitting me.
You put a 40, that's 20 kilos.
Sure. Anglicans. Yeah, a 45, that's 20 kilos.
Sure.
The Anglicans.
Yeah, so I'll do that.
And I don't say that to be tough raining.
But the idea for me is to just have a really strong neck so that also for pressing movements
and pulling movements, you'll get much stronger there.
Well, listen, the bar has now been set for the fledgling cuba and husbands out there.
They know that the neck training is a important part, black shirt, neck training, bit of a
beard.
Well, the black train, well, to be clear, and women should probably train their neck as
well, but lighter, you know, for static reasons.
And if they want to have a bigger neck, they can do that.
But I think most women don't want their neck.
This is one muscle group that does tend to grow pretty quickly.
Is that right?
Yeah, it does. And then the other thing, and this looks ridiculous, but that
but fighters know it's very useful, is that there's the kiss the sky thing where they'll
actually look up and, you know, and you'll feel it in the deeper muscles of the neck.
Wow. So that kind of thing is, again, you know, some people use a towel for this stuff
that they don't have access to weights, but neck work is really key. Just like ab work
is key. Just like lower back work is key. Just like ab work is key. Just like lower back work is key.
Just like tip work is key.
And he's overtoes guy.
You know, love his content.
Ben's amazing.
So the smaller muscle groups are not going to be the mainstay of any workout.
But they become so important when you're thinking about longevity because they are the muscle
groups that tend to cause if not trained shin splints, kink in the neck.
The kink in the neck is obviously not a technical term, kink in the neck, the kink in the neck is obviously
as not a technical term, but pain in the neck,
the turning in the shower after doing heavy pressing
and then like you're out, your neck, you can't turn your head,
the lower back pain, sciatica, often lower spine stabilization
issues.
I really think Jeff Cavaliere has some of the best
zero cost content on this that I followed his content
for years.
And, you know, if you put in in for instance, sciatica low back pain
He has diagnostic tools there that really helped you establish whether or not it's truly lower back pain or it's a media glute
Issue and gives you the proper things to do and neck is just one piece of the equation getting back to Hubertman husbands
Yeah, I chuckled the first time I saw it. I think it was a little frustrating to me because I thought, wait, there are a lot of
women that do these protocols too.
Our protocols, we have had some male hormone health episodes, some female hormone health
episodes, but in general, we're just talking about stuff that's applicable to everybody.
But listen, I don't control the internet.
I don't make the rules out there.
And then traditional media amplified the Hubertman Husbands piece through a couple of.
Right. So, and the next thing, you know, that's right. The black shirt, I should just say,
is because I try and, as we've talked about before, I don't want to add my tattoos to
distract. And I got a lot of them. I want to focus on content and teaching and people
hearing the content. And, and the black shirt is something I did long before I had a podcast.
And that's because the great Joe Strummer singer
for the clash, my scalero,
was wore a black button down shirt
while he would do full shows and he'd be soaking wet.
It was like the punkest thing I ever saw
that he was like doing full shows,
like belting it out.
And like in long sleeve Black shirt.
And he was just literally the shirt was like stuck
to his body and I was just saying,
like not only is he an amazing
humanitarian writer, poet, singer for the clash,
creative, missed him, he's gone,
but he's still here through music, right, as they say.
And he, you know, he's just so punk,
he's just up there in his 40s or late 40s,
and soaking wet.
And I'm thinking like, that guy, like he's got,
he's got it figured out.
I'm gonna do.
So anyway, and I like the black shirt, what can I say?
Well, get back to talking to Andrew in one minute,
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Dr. Huberman himself is a massive fan
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How concerned do you think we should be about vaping?
Spoke about alcohol. It seems like there's this big vape is on Netflix at the moment. It's a
documentary about the rise of dual and
I'm only one episode in but it seems like vaping is now
Catching an awful lot of attention. What how concerned you think we should be about vaping? Yeah, I'm just taking a note here I take notes during our podcast
Highly intense.
It totally makes sense.
Just the things I can go back to.
We should be very concerned.
So when it comes to smoking or vaping,
there's the thing that's being consumed,
the thing that people are trying to put in their bloodstream,
nicotine cannabis, et cetera.
And let's just set those aside.
I've done episodes on nicotine and cannabis
and they have their application.
They also have their problems.
Vaping is terrible because of the other chemicals
that delivers to the lungs.
It's also very clear, and we haven't released this episode yet,
but I talked to a female hormone doc from Austin,
and Natalie Crawford, so OB-GYN.
Vaping is associated with disruptions in egg health and what they call egg quality
can create certain mutations in eggs and serious endocrine issues in women.
Okay. Personally, I find it disgusting. Like, I just find it like, I don't do it, but when
I see people vaping, like, to me, and listen, I used to, when growing up, I, I quit smoking
a long time ago, but I used to smoke a bit of nicotine growing up. Remember, and listen, I used to, when growing up, I quit smoking a long time ago,
but I used to smoke a bit of nicotine growing up.
Remember I was a wild one, but that's not why I did it.
I just, you know, nicotine works for me as a drug,
and I don't do it anymore.
But vaping is so addictive.
It's a mutagen.
It mutates the genes of cells.
It mutates the genes of rapidly dividing cells
most. So breast cancers, ovarian cancers, egg quality, sperm are constantly turning over. So people always say, oh, I vape all the time and I got so-and-so pregnant or whatever.
When I say I have a perfectly healthy kid, that kid might have been much healthier. And also,
the kid's not grown up yet. Introducing me to the kid later. I wish for that kid. I pray for them, but that they're healthy as can be.
But it is so clear that you're introducing a laundry list of toxins to the lungs, and
they're getting into the bloodstream, and there are a number of them that cross the blood
brain barrier.
And once they cross the blood brain barrier, those neurons, by virtue of the fact that
neurons don't turn over across the lifespan, you've born with the ones you're going to die with.
You might add a few across your lifespan, but you're mostly born with the ones that you're
going to die with.
Well, they're going to harbor those chemicals and those particulates.
And yes, we have a grandparents that smoked and lived to be 90, but those are generally
the outliers.
So I can't find one good reason why people should vape.
If people want nicotine in their system that badly and hear I'm not recommending that,
they would be much better off relying on a troture of patch. Yep.
Um, or even toothpicks or, you know, or injectable. I know people I'm not going to out any,
nicotine. Oh, I'm not going to out anyone here, but I know, um, people in our podcast community
that rely on nicotine
injections for potential clarity.
That is so hot.
Yeah, I don't.
It causes elevation and blood pressure.
It causes these constriction, but it also will robustly increase focus and attention.
That's vegetable grill.
We'll tell you.
Mainlining nicotine.
Yeah, you're starting to see some companies that offer things like NAD infusions also offer
subcutaneous or nicotine injections. Going back to see some companies that offer things like NAD infusions also offer subcutaneous
or nicotine injections.
Going back to the...
Or patch or gum.
Smoking for a very long time, everyone knows.
Huge campaign, which I think was pretty effective.
Actually it's kind of discouraging people from smoking or at least making them aware about
the...
Do you remember how they got kids to stop smoking?
They told them for years it was bad for their health,
that didn't work.
They told them that it was putting money in the pockets
of these old cackling white guys that were like,
rubbing their hands in a kind of bluer room
and making a ton of money.
And then it became the rebellious thing
to quit smoking.
That would be effective.
I think about this all the time that there was a big push to both disincentivise and make
more different smoking.
Make more difficult smoking.
Go to go outside, there's the smoking area.
I remember I worked in clubs for one year before the smoking ban came in in the UK and
then people had to go outside, you know, just friction, friction, friction, all the way down.
And then vaping came in and vaping is way more enjoyable of an experience than smoking
ever was.
You can have a higher dose of nicotine that tastes, you know, enjoyable, bubble gum flavor
and raspberry unicorn dust and whatever, whatever.
I don't know.
And it's not going to stink the house out.
You know, you don't have any of the externalities of that.
So I wonder whether we have ended up in a net benefit
on net cost for public health from switching,
from smoking to vaping.
Yeah, there's an analog here with, you know,
Crateum and opioids.
If you really want to, we just got to put ourselves under attack by even bringing up the topic, but I did it intentionally.
You know, there are things like smoking and opioid addiction, which are it's unequivocal. It's just terrible right crushes lives destroys lives.
Yes, there are those rare individuals who smoked their whole life lived into their
90s, and okay, but they are outliers. So the question is, is vaping allowing fewer people to
smoke and therefore improving their health? Maybe if they're hell-bent on getting that nicotine
or cannabis into their system and they're opting not to smoke and they're going to vape instead,
cannabis into their system and they're opting not to smoke and they're going to vape instead.
Then maybe we have to be objective and say, okay, if there are absolutely intent on getting it in through some inhalation device, vaping is probably better, but we don't know that for sure.
We actually don't know that. And then since I brought it up and I really put the target on
myself with this one, you know, I did a post about cratum, which is over the counter.
People will say, it's not an opioid. It taps the opioid system. It taps other
systems as well. And a number of people have indeed
managed to get themselves off of opioids using cratum as a bit of a bridge,
kind of like the methadone heroin thing. But the
cratum advocacy groups are really growing strong right now because there is the possibility
that Cratum will be made illegal and they're not too distant future.
And there is the reality that some people who were never opioid addicts have taken Cratum
and then get addicted to Cratum.
And then people start arguing, is it real addiction, is it habit forming, etc.
So I think the next year or so is going to be an interesting time for dialogue about
Cratum. I have a couple of guests coming on my podcast. Maybe you'll do it as well,
and I'd love that if you would. There's one thing, by the way, folks, that's so great about
the podcast space, unlike other professions. We love it when one topic or one guest shows up on
multiple podcasts because it actually doesn't hurt any of us. You've sent me in the last few months,
you sent me Paul Conti, you sent me Rick Rubin Rick Rubin, and everyone's got a different flex, right?
The conversation you're going to have with Rick or Paul
is going to be way different to the one that I'm going to have,
which is going to be way different to the one that Joe's going to have.
Yeah, it's a very different thing than academic science,
than journalism of other kinds.
Zero sum.
The idea, it's a no scoop, like in academia or journalism,
they say, oh, you know, who got the scoop?
Or you got scooped, someone else put it out first.
And in podcasting, it's quite the opposite.
So I think the cratum versus,
I mean, the cratum topics can be really interesting
and important to cover.
But I think, look, my vote is to not vape.
I think I'm just shocked at how many people vape.
And first of all, it's actually not unlike cigarette smoking.
It's expensive.
That's not the main reason people avoid it.
But it's a significant expense when you add it up across the year.
It's clearly addictive.
There's another question about it.
It's clearly detrimental to lung function.
And then people like how it makes their brain feel.
And they think that if they're already pretty active,
physically active, then they can offset some of that.
And they probably can, but I think in the next five years
or so, we're just gonna see a slew of studies showing
that vaping is just bad for us,
especially for the developing brain,
because it's bringing in at a very rapid rate,
high potency nicotine and high potency cannabis.
And you know from Monolemchi's work,
and we know, my colleague at get, Stanford, that the slope
of that increase in dopamine and epinephrine adrenaline and acetylcholine is so important.
The sharper that slope, the faster the rise, the more addictive potential these compounds
have.
And so it's so far and away different than the kind of dopamine or epinephrine or acetylcholine
increase that one sees with exercise or with cold plunges
or with sex or with these other things with friends.
And things, you know, so, and, you know,
one of course could be addicted to any of the other things
I just mentioned too, but the potential for it is far less
than something like vaping.
Here's my stance on it that I understand maybe
of the two evils vaping is less of an evil
than traditional smoking would be, but I think the enjoy the two evils, vaping is less of an evil than traditional smoking would be,
but I think the enjoyability, the accessibility,
the fact that it isn't as stigmatized, all of that,
I think that it wouldn't surprise me
if more people are now going to vape
than ever previously smoked.
And even if the difference between the two is,
is that vaping is better,
that the total area under the curve of public health, degradation, I think that we've netted a loss overall for vaping.
And I see, dude, I go to a comedy show and I find myself going and getting an escobar
before.
And I'm like, why is it just habits?
It's like a disposable bag.
So you do, babe.
I do it if I go to a comedy show and I'm not drinking and I'm tired.
So there's like a certain little decision tree
that I go through.
I'll do it maybe once a month, something like that.
What do you vape?
Whatever disposable, unpronounceable horse shit
is available.
What if it's in my friend's pocket?
Nicotine or cannabis?
Nicotine.
Nicotine.
We're in California, so people talk about cannabis.
Right, right.
Not in Texas. Interesting. Yeah, I think
rapid onset of these neuromodulators in the brain concerns me. It's just, it's just so different.
Also with behaviors, you can titrate. People will say, video games cause a huge increase in
dopamine. Okay, fine, but you can limit the total amount of time that you engage. I
think with substances, even though you can control dose or number of, what do they call
it on? It's not going to be like a toque on the vape pen. What is it? It's going to be like
a draw. I don't know. I have to go to the language. Vaping, larping, cosplay. I've got
that. You know, we're teaching you everything today. Everything I need to know. This is
good because I'm going to be able to navigate the internet.
Fantastic.
So talking about the internet, how worried are you about how technology is impacting people's
ability to focus?
Adult ADHD is clearly upon us.
It's just clear and so very.
I'm very concerned.
You think that that's induced or facilitated or worsened by technology?
Like tell me what's going on in the brain.
If how is technology able to make such a dramatic change?
Yeah, I think if we, let's turn it on its head, I'm not changing your question because
I don't like it when people do that to me.
And so what you want?
No, it's only the last question on my podcast and people will flip.
And they're like, I'm going to give you a different question.
Answer that one.
I was like, okay, like, I'm going to answer your you a different question. Answer that one, and I was like, okay, like, I'm gonna answer your question a different way.
The circuits in the brain that are required
for setting and maintaining focus
are inhibited by the process
of deliberately shifting one's focus
over and over and over throughout the day.
In other words, if ever there was a physical activity
that could undermine your cardiovascular exercise,
I mean, it turns out not to be the case,
but there was this idea a few years ago
that if you sit a lot during the day,
it doesn't matter how much you exercise,
it's not gonna make a difference, that's not true,
exercise still helps.
But we also know that moving and standing, standing,
and standing up and sitting down quite a lot throughout the day,
getting as much walks and things like that
is extremely beneficial,
and can amplify the already known positive effects
of exercise.
Okay.
Well, when it comes to focus,
I mean, much of what our schooling is about growing up
is not just the content that we're taught,
but our ability to sit still and pay attention,
to keep the body still and to focus,
to some extent, keep the body still. Some people just circulate more of the Italians and the,
you know, in certain Arab countries and things like that. And other people are far more still.
And we get back to this about body stillness a little bit later because there's some emerging
ideas on that that are worth touching out. But the point is that if one is constantly moving their attention
from one thing to the next,
it undermines the stability of all the circuitry
in the brain that's responsible for prolonged focus.
Now, I partake in social media so to you,
but the scroll function is a practice of shifting focus
while maintaining gaze in one location, right?
Normally we would shift focus by looking here, by looking there.
I mean, just for try this for 30 minutes tomorrow.
If you're folks listening to this, take 30 minutes of your day and decide you're
that you're only going to exist in the three-dimensional world, meaning you're not going to
look at screens for 30 minutes.
Okay, obviously screens your phone has a depth to it, but you know what I'm talking about.
You'll notice that your attention is shifting all the time. You're looking at brick wall, then there's this and there to it, but you know what I'm talking about. You'll notice that your attention is shifting all the time.
You're looking at brick wall, then there's this, and there's you.
But it's all harness by some sort of conceptual goal or physical goal, trying to get here,
finish a conversation, complete an answer to a question that's all within a tunnel of
motivation.
When you're on your phone and scrolling, and I think scrolling itself is the major issue,
when you're scrolling, you're essentially putting yourself into new context after, new context after,
new context, and the brain has to adjust to all of that. And the way that the brain works in
addition to controlling heartbeat and on an obnox function, et cetera, is think about sort of like a
like a hair. I don't want to diss it, but I went, I took my sister to see the Harry Potter play
recently in New York,
and while I wasn't a big fan of the script at all.
Was this the half blood something?
What was it called?
Yeah, what is it, the like the cursed child?
Cursed, yeah, me Jordan Peterson and Douglas Murray
got thrown out, nearly got thrown out of that during COVID.
I've got to tell you the story once you're done.
It's one of the phenomenal thing that I saw.
So you went to go and see it.
My sister likes theater and we go to New York each year
for her birthday and I took her to this show.
And I wasn't a big fan of the script, to be honest.
I only read one of the Harry Potter books, liked it,
but then abandoned it.
But she really likes the Harry Potter stories.
I wasn't a fan of the script.
It's just my uninformed opinion.
But the effects were spectacular.
And one of the things that occurred to me, they had this library there where the books
are alive.
And as I was watching this, I realized that's very much how the brain works.
That for instance, when you walk into a room, it's a new context.
And it would be the same as if you were walking through a library.
And let's say you go to a soccer, your football game, and you sit down.
And also, your brain calls up all these books about your opinion soccer.
And your favorite team is right there.
And then you open that.
And then all of a sudden, you're looking at that, something about your favorite team,
what's your favorite team?
Newcastle.
Newcastle, okay.
And then unbeknownst to you, unbeknownst to you,
this is the important part.
The books all around you, not the one you're looking at,
are now changing to the competitors and the history
of that team, but also who's the directly
antagonistic rival team?
Sunderland.
Sunderland, Sunderland. Sunderland.
Okay, Sunder, it is, baby.
Okay.
So that's the way the brain works.
It's calling up context so that it makes it very easy to flip to a discussion about a
particular rival, or even a particular year in a particular match, in a particular point
and player.
That's focus.
Focus is not about maintaining a single tunnel of cognition.
Focus is about calling to mind all these additional contextually relevant batches of information
that you might need.
And, you know, the reason I, the analogy of the Harry Potter library is that it's a dynamic
library.
So the moment we're done here and we walk out, yes, some of the books, so to speak, of this conversation will linger with us. But whatever we're focused on next,
whatever goal-directed behavior we have, making it to dinner or through traffic or wherever
we're going, we'll call up a new library. Now, some people might say, well, duh, of course,
it works that way. But it's not duh because it's very dynamic. Now, social media is the
opposite of that. It's one library. Next account, another library.
Next account, another library.
Next account, another library, another library, another library.
And the brain is calling up all these different libraries
in rapid succession.
So when I look like, I'll be honest,
the selected choice of things to click on
tells me a lot about what I've been clicking on, right?
That, I mean, obviously, the algorithm is telling me
to tell me myself, I confess, and I'm really embarrassed to say,
but not so embarrassed that I won't reveal,
that what I find now on that gallery of things to select
are street fights, so beat down and really adorable,
strange animals or cute animals.
I love the floor and final.
The duality of Andrew Cuban.
Yeah, right.
And not the capybarabar. Like if ever there was an
uninteresting animal, it's the capybar. However, yes, the raccoon
accounts are delightful to me. The nature is metal account is
very cool. Yeah, there's an extensive community of capybar
enthusiasts on Instagram, which you're a member of. No, I've actively avoided Capybar accounts.
You're a big octopus guy though.
I like cephalopods.
I like cuddlefish.
My lab used to work on cuddlefish and octopuses.
Octopuses.
And it's octopuses.
It's octopuses.
I've been taught for so long that it's octopuses.
And actually,
this is the most,
I can, this is the most around.
I was just gonna kill me because there was a meme about this
because we did a live, okay,
so I know too much about this
because my lab used to work on cephalopods,
which are one, which are in the category of mollusks
to include cuttlefish and octopuses.
And so its octopuses is the correct plural.
And more,
this is the most like groundbreaking piece of information that we've got so far.
Moreover, the great Oliver Sacks,
who's now unfortunately dead,
is a neurologist and popular writer
about the brain function the man who mistook his wife
or his hat, et cetera, a real hero of mine.
Talked about this that it's also platypusses.
And that he wrote about, you can look this up, he wrote about traveling to Australia
and then going to the far north where they have a breeding program to reestablish the platypus
and that the location of the breeding program, excuse me, is literally the platypusory.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah, Oliver Sacks wrote about this. So I've long been interested in
the platypus as an interesting animal. They're very interesting. The osteopopuses. Yeah. It's okay.
You know, I'll get that. I'll get that. It's it's in revolution. So does that mean that the plural
is the or that the location where they breed octopuses is the octopusory? I hope so. I want to go
that. Yeah. Well, according to Oliver Sacks, this is the correctopusary. I hope so. I wanna go there.
Yeah, well, according to all of our sacks,
this is the correct nomenclature.
And he's the neurologist expert in cephalopods.
So we can return to this at some point.
I'm gonna show you.
I'm sure people will put in the comments
where we're right, where we're wrong.
I'm absolutely so.
But either way, they will have gone out
and researched and learned.
And that's what the way to do it.
That's what we're here for.
I wanna show you, I wanna show you this video.
We can put it up on the screen. just press play on the middle of that.
And let me know what you think. Right. So the for those listening who aren't watching this is an
image of a kid flipping back and forth between an iPad and a phone
with incredible dexterity. This is a family out to dinner
and the kids are watching screens.
There's another kid without any phone as hands crying,
attempting to swipe the phone that is not in his hand
as if scratching at an itch, but not successfully.
And a kid actually tapping a screen in their sleep.
Yeah, yes, indeed we are in the up, thank you.
What do you think is going on there?
Yeah, and thanks for getting me out of the animal fights conversation.
What's happening is very clear, which is that, you know, the brain,
the human brain is an incredible organ because it's a map of our experience.
It has certain parts that are hardwired that govern our heart rate and control of our heart
rate, our control of our breathing, certain immune functions and on and on, but then a vast
percentage of the human brain is open real estate that is designated as one function or another,
depending on what happens to you during development. So we know this for sure. My sign
to the Great Grandparents won the Nobel Prize for this day with Hugh Wollentorn's
and Weasel, that what you see during development, really between the ages of birth and about age
14 mainly, but certainly extending longer creates a set of modules
or maps within the brain that allow you to predict what's going to happen in the future.
So if kids are growing up doing a lot of swiping behavior, this is, remember, we're in the
first time in human history where people have written with their thumbs also, right?
Texting.
There are entirely different maps of how language is encoded, and motor, I should say,
how motor functions and language interact, you know, in the past, meaning for tens of
thousands of years, if not longer, gesticulating a court and speech and grunting and shouting
and pointing.
It's one of the primary modes of communication.
It's not surprising, therefore, that the representation of the hands and the digits, which is a nerd speak for fingers, is
right next to the areas of the brain they're responsible for generating language and speech and language.
So we now have the ability to speak with our thumbs, so to speak, no pun intended, by texting.
We now have the ability to see many different contextual
landscapes, as we talked about before, by swiping typically up, sometimes down typically up.
Right? So the up swipe is become, you know, as perhaps as hard, not as mapped into the brain as
the wave. Hi, what do you say to babies? Hi, people try and get their attention,
get them to go wide, I'd smile.
They do peek-a-boo, these kind of people
have been doing this for a very long time.
Now, the swipe function is one of the ways
in which human beings engage in the world.
It's almost, it's not as fundamental
as opening one's mouth to eat, but it's pretty close.
So, the brain has just adapted to this.
There's real estate set aside for whatever your experience was.
And so what you're seeing there is just kids
very adept at doing this because it's always a trade off.
Human visual, in part,
when the Nobel Prize for showing that plasticity of the brain,
mapping of the brain for one particular sensory experience
or function, say swiping or the ability
to switch back and forth between multiple screens,
is always, always at the expense of some other potential function.
You can't do everything.
So, when children are inculcating that particular habit, there is the Thomas Soul quote, like
there are no solutions on the trade-offs.
Yeah, I think I've got written on my whiteboard on my fridge at the moment, the five most
common deathbed regrets, and it's things like, I wish that I'd not worked as much, I wish
I'd let myself be happy, I wish I'd stayed in touch with my friends.
It will be unbelievably surprising to me if in 40 years' time, I wish I'd spent less time
on my phone isn't on there.
I would bet pretty much everything that I have, that that would probably appear on average
on people's five top deathbed regrets.
I wish I'd spent less time on my phone and we can see this happening in front of us.
And the best way that you can tell that this is going to continue to happen is that you
can reflect on what you did over the last week. And one of the most common things that you wish that you'd done less of over the last week was,
shouldn't I got captured? I did a couple of YouTube holes or TikTok scrolls or Instagram,
whatever. And you know that this is happening in the micro,
spread that across a lifetime. I think that very much we're going to look back at this.
And hopefully there is some kind of solution.
Maybe it's Neuralink.
Maybe we have a way that we can kind of ethically engage
with technology and get the communication and the stimulation
and the exploration of different ideas and communities.
But yeah, right now kind of feels a little bit like,
maybe a little bit like when cigarettes first came out,
like your doctor smokes camels, you know, like we didn't, nobody knew what the bad effects of
this were, they didn't know long-term what it was going to cause. And did that video,
I really wanted to show it to you because you taught me, I was, I think correctly, incorrectly
categorizing people's phone use as an addiction.
And I think that you said it's much more like a compulsion.
Right.
And that is a child that's asleep or nearly asleep,
like compulsively scrolling through that phone.
Yeah, because a compulsion does not,
the, an obsession is mental.
This is a classic definition of compulsion as a behavior,
but the compulsion in classic OCD
doesn't relieve the obsession, it actually exacerbates it.
The payoff, lack of.
So you're not, it's sort of like an itch that you scratch
and just get it itch is more, right?
And there is something like that with social,
I don't wanna say social media, but with phone scrolling.
Now that said, I mean, you know,
of my waking hours, most of it is spent foraging
for organizing or dispersing information.
And much of that is done on the phone or computer.
But I do read books, you know, hard books,
meaning physical books.
I brought you one today.
Thank you.
I like audio books too.
I listen to a lot of podcasts.
I watch your YouTube videos.
So I learn when I'm on the internet, but yeah, occasionally it's the, you know,
well, I learned from nature as metal, but I haven't learned anything from the
raccoon post.
Nothing of substance anyway.
Well, he's the thing.
They've said that they're very cute and very...
They do that thing when they scoop food up like this.
They wash food in my pool now.
I moved to a place, I'm renting a place as a pool,
I've never had a pool before.
I've skateboarding a lot of empty pools,
but I've never had one that had water in it.
And they come through in the night,
it's raccoon Olympics in the middle of the night. And they're coming through, they make a ton of noise, and then they're washing their food, and it's pretty cute the first time you in it. And they come through in the night. It's raccoon Olympics in the middle of the night.
And they're coming through.
They make a ton of noise, and then they're washing their food.
And it's pretty cute the first time you see it.
But once they wake you up the third or fourth time, then you're...
That's the time raccoon.
Yeah.
So, you know, I haven't learned much from that, from the raccoon videos.
Certainly, the fight videos haven't really taught me anything about self-defense or
anything useful, except how, you know, just kind of cruel people can be. So I'm trying to change the algorithm by clicking on other things,
but it seems to be slow to change. I got to tell you this. It's got me on, I've never been into
Star Wars. I've seen some of the movies or whatever, but I've never been into it.
For some reason, it started delivering me short content about Star Wars law. Like, who would have
one between Darth Vader and Dark Maul and all it? Like, who
was more powerful as a Jedi Master and all this stuff? Interesting. And I've never been
interested in this. And yet, it's created in me, the desire to actually be like, well,
yeah, like, would Master Yoda have won, like, however many eons ago, if he was at full power
when the, the, the Sith was, I don't even know what I'm talking about, but it's like
created in me this thing. The interesting thing that you're talking about there
is that there's, when you're foraging,
you spend enough time on the internet,
and you do find something that gives you that,
oh, wow, I never knew about that before,
and it's that sort of needle in a haystack
that you're looking through.
And that trigger of, wow, I found so I can talk about it on a podcast. This is really
interesting to me. That is the carrot I think that gets dangled for very many people who want to
feel better about their social media use. And think, well, okay, I wasted 90 minutes, but I did
get that thing out of it. I read that sub-stack post or I found this new person that I really care
about, you know, the variable schedule reward of intellectual satisfaction
is also in there, right?
It's not just the shock, it's not just the cute,
yeah, pocket.
For me is that, PubMed library,
the only guy who thinks that PubMed
is variable schedule rules.
I remember when PubMed first came out
as a very searchable database,
and some of the journals later became electronic,
and now they're all available at try.
And I could not believe it.
I was so excited because I used to go to the library
and I have to pay with put money on the card
and Xerox copy and stuff.
But also in the library, I love libraries.
And I'd spend so much time when I was a student
and graduate student and you'd find something.
And it's like, I'd look around.
Like, did anyone like, did you see that?
You see that?
But since I was a little kid,
I was discovering stuff in books
and then talking about it to everybody,
even if they didn't want to hear.
And so I was professing from a young age
in class on Mondays and things.
So for me, it's hardwired into my system by now.
And I think that, I do think that social media
holds certain gems.
I think we're talking about like mining for gems
of social interaction too.
You know, I've gotten to know some people
through social media where it's really enriched my life.
I've reconnected with some people.
And it's really enriched my life.
It's allowed me to connect the dots,
going backward in ways I hadn't anticipated.
And I think going forward, if you're asking about
the kids in the video that you showed me,
or you're talking about the kids in the video that you showed me, or you're talking about adults
or anyone, the success is largely going to be determined
by who has the most self discipline.
I really do, now it's always been the case,
but I don't think it's ever been the case
to the extent that it is now.
So this is why I'm such a fan of taking some space
from all action. This is actually something I learned from Rick Rubin.
You know, I'm fortunate to call him a close friend.
We communicate pretty much every day.
And I went and spent a week with him abroad this summer.
It was the worst time to travel.
And I decided to go over to where he was in Europe and just spend the week with him.
We had no plan. And first of all, on the way over there, there was nothing Europe and just spend the week with him. We had no plan.
And first of all, on the way over there, there was nothing to watch on the plane, but there
was this Tom Petty documentary.
I turned it on.
I'm not a huge Tom Petty fan, but it was interesting enough.
And then Rick Rick is in the documentary.
And he's in the documentary lying down doing the interview, typical, like typical meaning
unusual for most people, typical because it's unusual for Rick to be lying down.
And I thought, okay, so get there, I know his family well and I love them and it was really
wonderful, it was beautiful, it's a beautiful part of Europe.
But you know, I noticed, so we had this habit of, we would tread water in the pool and listen
to podcasts in the morning.
And there's a wonderful podcast, by the way, that we should all be aware of, I think,
is a history of rock and roll in 500 songs by Andrew Hickey.
Super nerdy, it's like getting a graduate degree
in rock and roll.
It talks about the music, but also what's happening
and like organized crime, how it impacted record sales,
very contextual, very quamberate into that lately.
And then this show on Netflix, have you seen spy ops?
Yes, very good, right?
Because it's not just like shoot them up type stuff,
it's really about how spy operations,
let me put this way,
it can teach you a lot about history,
international history and geopolitical history.
So I go over there and we do some treading water listening
to podcasts, I learn about this history of some treading water listening to podcasts.
I learn about this history of rock and roll 500 songs podcast.
We talk about a little bit.
And then I notice that Rick has a practice.
I hope he doesn't mind me sharing this because I'm about to.
You know, Rick has a practice.
He has many practices, but one of them is he'll spend a good amount of time just sitting
and thinking or lying sitting and thinking,
or lying down and thinking.
And it didn't occur to me at the time, but later after I returned, I thought back to our
first guest episode of My Podcast, I hosted a guy named Carl Dice Roth, who's probably
the finest bioengineer on the planet.
He's also a fully active clinician psychiatrist.
He's got five children. He's one of these phenoms. He seems to be able to do everything. And's also a fully active clinician psychiatrist. He's got five children.
He's one of these phenoms.
He seems to be able to do everything.
And he's a true genius.
He went to school at medical school at Peter T.
in Paul Conti.
They were all in the same class.
Yeah.
And I know him very well.
And he's a colleague of mine at Stanford.
And everyone knows he's a super,
he's like the Michael Jordan of neuroscience,
except he's still active.
And that is not a statement about personality, just in terms of successful hit rate.
Carl described a practice that he does after he puts his kids to sleep of where he sits deliberately,
sits completely still, and forces himself to think in complete sentences. And this set off
on a light in my head when I realize Rick does a
form of this and Carl does a form of this. If you read the new Elon Musk book, they talk about
Elon doing a form of this. The great Richard Feynman physicist, Nobel Prize winner, talked about going
into flotation tanks and doing a form of this. Einstein did a form of this. So what are we talking
about? So I'm a neuroscientist, but I'm certainly not as smart as any of those guys.
What we're talking about is body still mind active.
Now, I've become increasingly curious
about psychedelic therapies,
one of which is, and by the way,
only in a clinical context, et cetera, legality, et cetera,
not in kids, et cetera.
But the practice is essentially macrano psilocybin,
but with the IMASC on completely still mind very active.
Okay, contrast that to a different behavior,
slash protocol that I'm very familiar with,
which is I like to do long runs or rocks on Sunday.
Body very active,
mind not directed at anything in particular.
Sometimes I'll do it without a book or podcast.
Sometimes I do it with a combination of both.
Many people talk about swimming or in the shower or cycling, some sort of rhythmic movement,
drumming.
The great Joe Strummer was really big on campfires.
You know, I was going to mention this earlier, but I'll mention it now that as an alternative
to alcohol consumption, get your friends together around a fire.
By the way, the fire light, the light from fire does not disrupt the circadian system.
This has actually been shown.
Candle light, moonlight, fire light, as bright as it is.
It's just very low luxe.
So, that's where great things happen.
Independent to alcohol, right, around a campfire. That goes way back in our lineage.
So, there are these two states of mind and body that I find fascinating to the point of being
intriguing to the point of having modified what I do now, because they're the inverse of one another.
Body completely still, or close to completely still, mind very active. Could be with still a
siphon, but that's not the protocol I'm recommending. I'm talking about some very, very smart,
extremely accomplished people who all did the same thing.
The other is body very active,
mind isn't still, but is not deliberately channel
to any particular linear kind of story
or something like that.
There's a state in sleep where our body is literally paralyzed
and the brain is extremely
active.
It's called rapid eye movement sleep.
So I'm raising a flag for this potential protocol slash practice.
I don't have any peer reviewed science to support what I'm about to say, but I have
enough examples of extremely accomplished people now in front of me to realize that there's
something special about divorcing mind
and body function, temporarily, deliberately sitting there and just thinking.
And recently, I had a conversation with the great Paul Conti, and the addition of the
words, the great in front of him are appropriate.
Here, he's, I believe, based on my observation of his clinical work and intellectual
acumen that he's the finest psychiatrist
of our age, clearly integrating from so many backgrounds. It's worked with a ton of interesting people.
Coming on the podcast and disembodied. Amazing. And he's just phenomenal, right?
Not just about trauma, but about everything. Personality type is narcissism, gaslighting.
People throw those terms around like crazy. Pug will tell you what it actually means, okay, what those terms actually mean.
But the ability to think and to access the unconscious, Paul refers to the unconscious
as the supercomputer of the brain.
For the unconscious mind and the conscious mind are always in a dialogue, but here's the
theory, here's the hypothesis that when we bring our body into states of stillness in
REM sleep, in these deliberate states that I just described that these other people actively engage in and have for a long time,
that the unconscious mind can start to
take over a larger percentage of that conversation and we have access to new ideas, new ways of structuring thought,
etc. And I don't think one requires psilocybin to do it, but I do think that is one avenue into it.
Reliable.
That's reliable.
It also carries certain hazards, right?
Because it's like being put on a mental rocket ship,
to some extent, it's not like DMT,
but very little control over where one's cognition goes,
although there is some in there.
Anyway, I just wanted to throw this up on the wall
because it's always fun to talk about new things
and kind of what's coming,
what I think is coming next. I think, if I were to make a prediction, I think in to throw this up on the wall because it's always fun to talk about new things and kind of what's coming, what I think is coming next.
I think, if I were to make a prediction,
I think in the next two years,
you're not just gonna hear about meditation,
non-sleep deep rest, something I'm a big fan of,
yoga, knee, dra, hypnosis,
but also whatever we wanna call this,
you'll probably come up with a better name
that I can body still mind active states
to access different aspects of our unconscious and cognition. And I must say that
we do this with the phone, sorry, I just, because I realize you were about to say something. And when
you speak, you say interesting things. And I learned cosplay, little larping. So don't put those
ones as the most interesting things. Oh, no, you say many interesting stuff. There's, you know,
what, in terms of new terms, new terms, new castle. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, you say many interesting stuff. There's a, you know, well, in terms of new terms, new terms, new castle. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Sun go. Sorry. That was one of the most injured concepts. I, but I'm learning is the point. I
wasn't, I wasn't being sarcastic. Um, that when you, we sit and we're just scrolling. Yeah,
we're, we're, we're more or less bodies still mind active, but guess what? None of it's coming from within.
It's all coming from the outside.
So whether or not it's still siphon in the eye mask or Carl sitting there, eyes closed,
deliberately still thinking or Feynman in the salt equilibration chamber, you know, the
float, flotation tank or Rick, lying there thinking, whatever it is, he happens to be thinking,
whatever amazing album he's going to now, you know, help produce more Einstein. I mean, you know,
we can think of the phone and the scrolling as lending itself to less ability to focus
in AD issue, but just the real crime, the real insult to humanity. For me, the real
cost is what about all the creative imagination of things that come
from inside that could be generated by people in that time.
So I've started doing a practice of 20 minutes a day, or just sitting, and eyes close typically,
sometimes it's right as I wake up, but usually it's not.
And just trying to think about certain topics and hold those topics in a kind of a linear way,
or sometimes just laying stuff guys are up.
Anyway, some people might think of this as
like completely Waco-Woo, new AG stuff,
but the list of names I read off there are people
that do that and have been doing this for a long time,
and attribute this practice as one of the major sources
of their best ideas is a non-trivial
list.
When I think about that, there's a few different ways that slightly similar, the number of
people who've had great ideas whilst walking, and attribute an awful lot of their success
to walking and thinking.
I'm aware that you're talking body still mind active, but it's like body mostly still,
it's not exactly like that.
Or perhaps there is a unique way to access this too.
Maybe it's a different channel to a different brain state.
Maybe it's a different channel to the same brain state.
Like, I love doing long rucks and long runs on Sunday.
That's my goal on Sunday.
Get out as much as possible into the nature and just move
in some sort of repetitive way.
Like, I'm new all through on a rucksack
because Peter or Tee got me into that.
Sometimes it's with other people, sometimes alone.
Sometimes I listen to a podcast, sometimes I don't.
Sometimes in audiobook, Sometimes I don't. Sometimes I audio book. Sometimes I don't. But something about motor repetition.
So this is not sets and reps. This is not restacking the play. This is, you know,
minimum amount of cognition required to don't free mental space to do other things. Yeah.
Could be on the row. So again, I think different people do it differently. I've been hanging around with a lot of musicians lately. I've become good friends with one of my
favorite musician songwriters, Tim Armstrong, Lee Singer for Rancid, Transplants, he and Travis
Barker did Transplants. And, you know, it's clear that musicians, especially drummers, but other
musicians, well, they're always in a rhythm in their head. They're actually Tim and I the other day,
we went someplace and we walked out,
he said, did you hear that?
Like to hear what?
He's like, you didn't hear that.
I'll say what he's like, you know,
they had the news on and the radio on
and he's so tuned into the audio environment.
I'm not, right?
I'm not that audio oriented, more visually oriented.
But, you know, people who have an internal rhythm,
that they're noodling on something in their head. I mean, this is, this is
the substrate of creative work, right? And I, and again, the
phone isn't evil, but the moment you're taking in sensory
input from that includes things that have already been
creative, excuse me, created your, yeah, you could argue
that those are the macro nutrients that you're going to
combine for your own creative thing, the gems and the
internet. So studies, a sign of studies for me,
are interesting things on YouTube.
But there's also just the raw materials of creative work
that come from limiting sensory input
and just going inside.
Self-generating it.
Yes, I've been thinking one of the things
that people want a lot more of, I think,
is focus, attention, productivity.
As someone who values the work, output that you do, productivity is a word is quite nefarious,
quite nebulous, quite sort of ephemeral.
How have you come to think about the concept of productivity and its constituent parts?
Have you got any tools, any strategies, tactics that you use to kind of drop yourself
into a productive state and stay there?
Yeah, so I do all the things that I profess at the level of the basics.
Morning sunlight, non-sleep deep rest, if I didn't get enough sleep, physiological size
when I need to bring my level of autonomic arousal, AKs, stress down.
These are all things I've talked about
Three days a week of cardiovascular training three days a week of resistance training one day a week of deliberate cold deliberate heat minimum
Usually on the day after leg day. I do all that stuff
And it creates a structure and yes, it takes some time and a lot of that stuff can be combined
combined excuse me with consumption of podcasts and audiobooks at the same time and a lot of that stuff can be combined, excuse me, with consumption of podcasts and
audiobooks at the same time and social time.
But for me, the process of writing, and I'm working on a book now, but also just the
creative process has been greatly enhanced and productivity overall by setting in this
20 minute period where I force myself to just stop and have deliberate thoughts that are
within a single context.
I don't let my mind wander. So it's very different than maybe the psilocybin journey where it feels.
It sounds to me a little bit like active meditation or kind of like narrative meditation in a way.
You know, you're forcing your mind to come back to the, you're not just allowing yourself to branch
off onto a current, to a new thought, okay, here I am. This is the trunk of the tree and I'm going to
try and follow this trunk as high as I can.
What about, you know, you're sitting down at the desk, you have the research to do, the
emails to write, the whatever.
What have you got tactically in terms of a priming or a structure for that specific situation?
Yeah, I used handwritten sticky notes and I'll put the thing that I'm supposed to do and
I'll keep looking at it because I'm amazed at how often my mind will flip to other things.
I was like, oh, I have to transfer some money to somebody that I owe them or I have to
pay that bill or I have to, I mean, the number of excuses that leap to mind is outrageous
for everybody, unless we're under deadline, fear, or extremely rare, but, you know, high
motivational states because we just simply love it.
So I give myself five minutes or so to break into the work,
or five to 10 minutes.
I don't expect full focus in that first five to 10 minutes,
but here's what I tell myself,
because I know from 30 plus years of experience,
the feeling that I'm going to get after I complete something,
having like really to push against the grain
to force my attention back to that thing.
The feeling of having accomplished even a, you know, one hour bow to work is so incredibly
rewarding for me. And the feeling of having done basically nothing is such an incredible
sense of disappointment and lack of life, like such a, like, vitality drain for me.
of life, like such a like vitality drain for me. I'm not as hard on myself as I gather some people out there are like David Goggins talks about his self-talk and how he can be
very hard on himself at times, but mine isn't like that. But I know how great it's going
to feel when I get to the job.
So you're projecting full with the reward that you're going to fail and trying to bring
that into the now?
That's very smart. I've got written on my other, I've got two, two fridge whiteboards.
The other is, what would you tomorrow want you today to do?
Right.
And that to me is the...
It's like a panacea for avoiding bad decisions.
Mm-hmm.
You know, because you live with the story that you tell yourself
about the decision for way longer than the enjoyment
or lack of of the decision.
There is a cookie on the table.
I promised myself I wouldn't eat it
and I make a decision about whether or not I eat the cookie.
There is either enjoyment or reward, enjoyment in eating it
or reward of satisfaction of discipline
for not eating it that happens now.
But what's really important is the story
that I tell myself tomorrow about being the sort of person
that is a cookie eater or is not a cookie eater.
And I think that framing that we place
around the present moment largely determines
our experience of it.
And I find myself trying to live for future Chris more
and the more that I do that, the better that my life seems
to get. There are very few situations in which I make a decision today that I tomorrow
would have wanted me to that turn out to be the wrong decision. And that projecting forward
how am I going to feel in future. This is difficult now. Rick Hansen, you know, neurons that fight together, wire
together, like, can you sit with some of the satisfaction after you've done something
that's good? Can you maybe even bring that forward a little bit? Give yourself a little,
oh yeah, that's how it's going to do. Yeah, one other thing that I've just been so fascinated
by recently, you have been a big proponent and I think have really helped people in getting
sunlight in the eyes early on. Let's get ourselves outside.
Walk, I think you taught me about the lateral eye movement can down-regulate the amygdala,
response, all stuff that I'd found on my own just through doing a morning walk.
And then again, like with the alcohol thing, gets legitimated through the science.
You know, it's something that I did, found it myself, and then I'm like, ah, this wasn't
just bro science or some weird quirk of my physiology,
this was actually something that can be shown up
in the literature too.
Reandoris from the flow research collective
has the flow morning routine.
Have you seen this from him?
I have it by no Reand.
Reand is an absolute monster.
His morning routine developed with Stephen Kotler
to get yourself into flow specifically for deep work
and writing is to begin working within 90 seconds of waking because the state of flow and the state of sleep
not far away from each other in terms of brain frequency, delta and theta.
Yeah, there's sort of liminal state. Yeah, I haven't seen that yet, but I'll check it out.
I am a big believer in the moment you wake up
if you were dreaming, keep your eyes closed
and keep your body completely still.
Also, similarly, if you wake up from a nightmare
and you don't, and you wanna forget about that nightmare,
you need to move your body.
There's something about body movement
that discards the prior cognitive map.
It's like it clears the library.
We're talking about the dynamic Harry Potter-ish library.
I don't wanna give too much credit to Harry Potter.
Certainly not to that play. But one thing that I'll just about the dynamic Harry Potter-ish library. I don't want to give too much credit to Harry Potter. Certainly not to that play.
But one thing that I'll just about the productivity piece
before I'm reflect on this further,
the, because something you said
really, really struck a chord with me.
You know, I can project to the future me,
but that's not exactly how I do it.
What I'm, I just know because I'm so familiar with it,
the feeling that I get having actually accomplished
some small percentage,
to large percentage of what I would set out to do,
feels so unbelievably rewarding to me.
And I know that it also enhances
the social interactions I'll have.
It's like a feeling of self-satisfaction
that transcends to an ability to show up
with more clarity of mind.
I'm one of the problems for me in terms of productivity,
is I'm very strongly affiliative.
I'm very fortunate to have a lot of close friends.
So if I get a text message from someone,
I feel compelled to write them back,
not out of responsibility,
because if it's someone I'm closer,
I love that person.
Like I love my family, but I love my friends.
I love my co-workers colleagues at the podcast.
I mean, it extends, and this has to do with my upbringing
in the fact that my non-biological family became my family
before I sort of reconnected with my actual family
in a really deep way.
But the one exception being my sister and I were tight,
tight the whole time.
But for me, a text coming is into distraction.
That's the good stuff in life.
That's one of the reasons I'm there.
I have this practice sometimes of imagining that my crew, as the kids say, were pretty crude
up these days, which is great because it wasn't always the case.
They want me to forge off to where I need to go and collect the gems and come up with the ideas
that are going to be the next post,
the next podcast, the next scientific study.
They want that.
I tell myself they want that for me.
Like they're cheering me on.
Because I know I'm cheering them on.
Some are musicians, some do other things.
I'm cheering them on.
I want them to know like I'm here
and I want you to go get the stuff
and do your thing.
And so I imagine that they're doing that for me
and I turn my phones off.
And there's some anxiety in doing that.
I'll put in the car sometimes
because it's not that I'm gonna,
I need to neurotically check the phone
because I don't feel safe if I don't hear from them.
Like, I love these people
and I don't want them to feel as if I'm not available.
That's really how it is for me.
But I know that, and I think someone said it and I forget the quote, so forgive me. But, you know, if you're going to
create anything of value in this life, you're going, even if it's with other people, you're
going to have to be willing to be on your own for a bit, to forge on your own, to take
walks alone, and then return to people, to your tribe, so to speak, and share with them
what you've learned, or maybe even just show up with whatever energy shift has occurred while you were off doing your
thing.
And so, you know, the phones are a wonderful tool, but I think over the years, I lost the
ability to be truly on my own and dropped into work, and it's something I've recovered
a lot in the last few years by telling myself that indeed they want me to do that and indeed I
Show up so much better to all the relationships in my life if I've done some real
That is fine with a good taste walk. Yeah, it's sad as you know, it's just that you know got over that that barrier of resistance
You know that the Stephen Press field thing of resistance that you I wrestled with resistance and one
I think we should all want people to win.
And I also, and I confess, I'm gonna lose some friends with this,
but I have variable latency in terms of my text replies.
Sometimes it's a day, sometimes an hour, sometimes a minute,
sometimes it's the month.
I love being on a plane and scrolling through an old text.
I'm like, hey, how's it going to miss this?
And people are like, that was a month ago.
Yeah, it was.
And you know, I've been guizzy, you know,
and, you know, emergencies are dealt with, but it happens.
What's happening in the brain and body when we procrastinate? Oh, um, yeah. So procrastination
is super interesting. There are actually some data that Adam Grant shared with me recently
that people who procrastinate actually have, um, tend to be have access to certain creative
states that non procrastincrastination don't.
Because they haven't.
Don't start justifying the procrastination crowd.
That's a dangerous line to go.
Yeah, procrastination, I mean,
what the origins of procrastination
are complicated and varied to really say
a single concise statement as to what procrastination is.
But the way to overcome procrastination
is to do something harder than the hard thing
that you're putting off.
That's very clear. Do something harder. Don't go clean your, like suddenly if you want to do their taxes, clean their room,
clean the garage, organize the gym, whatever, when they don't want to write a chapter in their book,
but you have to pick something that's worse than writing the chapter in your book and do that for five minutes.
That's the way that the dopamine reward system works
and some of these stress systems work.
What would be an example?
Give me a tactical example of this.
So I need to write a chapter on focus
and tools for focus for my book.
I'm finding I'm doing everything but doing that,
unless just set it a kind of a fun example.
I'll do anything but that, okay?
So then you have to find something worse than that.
So for me, worse than that is anything involving a spreadsheet.
Just the idea of a spreadsheet gives me hives.
So I would force myself to do five to 10 minutes of like, like, like establishing a spreadsheet
of my expenses and taxes related to, I don't know, some segment of my work life.
I mean, I can't think of anything worse in that moment that doesn't involve physical
or psychological damage.
So doing that, and then you'll see, it will make writing that book chapter very accessible.
It's a downhill cruise from there.
But people find themselves doing all these things that they would normally want to put off
as a way to avoid doing the harder thing.
So it's about understanding that what is difficult and what you want to put off or do is a dynamic
hierarchy.
I think you can think of it as dynamic subordination.
You know, I don't know if that's borrowed from cosplay or from a military or a BDSM.
I don't know.
I heard it someplace.
Yeah.
But all the places that you mine for information most frequently
No, it's raccoons and street. No, none of those none of those communities are communities that I know very much about but
It was saying it facetiously, but but the point being do something harder than the thing you're trying to avoid now
Some people really like deliberate cold exposure for that reason because you know and here
I'm gonna really if I've taken heat for no pun intended for the deliberate cold exposure for that reason. Because here I'm gonna really,
if I've taken heat for no pun intended
for the deliberate cold exposure thing,
now I'm really gonna get behind it for the following reason.
People who are really into exercise
of various kinds, but not deliberate cold exposure,
love to push back on people that do posts
about deliberate colds.
Oh, that's not doing anything.
It's not much metabolic lift.
Okay, but let's really step back and be honest with ourselves.
The adrenaline, the pattern of adrenaline release over time from deliberate cold exposure
is something that's very hard to recreate safely with other endeavors.
You know, it sure, a hard workout is going to spike your adrenaline into dopamine also,
but is it going to spike it the way that deliberate cold exposure is? No. Also, the amount of a mental barrier that one has to get over
in a moment, not, isn't it like three warm-up sets, like walk on the treadmill, pre-workout
show me the pre-cold plunge drink that makes it easier. Okay, it's called willpower. Okay,
and now some people come to love deliberate cold exposure, but that's usually for how
they feel afterwards.
So I think there is so much utility to deliberate cold exposure.
Now do people have to do it?
No, but deliberate cold shower, deliberate ice bath, deliberate cold plunge, is a world apart
from all the other self-imposed stressors because of the speed of onset of the stress.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's even more so than a sauna.
That's right.
You get into a sauna and it takes time for you to heat up.
It takes time for you to get on top.
I mean, it's so it's a very potent tool because of the amplitude and the timing of adrenaline
that it creates.
What else in the procrastination dissolving toolkit?
So we've got do something that is harder than the thing that you're trying to get away from. that it creates. What else in the procrastination dissolving toolkit?
So we've got do something that is harder than the thing that you're trying to get away
from.
If you can do cold exposure, that's kind of cool.
If you like, I got to sit down and do this.
I find myself at 10 minutes kind of fluffing about trying to do so.
I go upstairs, I have a cold shower.
Okay, that was way more miserable than this is going to be.
If it's miserable, if you like it, then no, but if it's way more miserable than that's
the thing to do.
Pick the miserable thing. I mean, sometimes it'll leave me like hard conversation you didn it, then no. But if it's way more miserable, then that's the thing to do. Pick the miserable thing.
I mean, sometimes it'll leave me like hard conversation
you didn't want to have.
Some people are, you know, certain hard conversations
are harder than others, easier than others.
But, you know, in business,
I've never had a hard time having hard conversation.
People slaying all sorts of demons
in an attempt to get away from their procrastination.
That's right.
Here, one of the things that I really wanted to talk about was the peril of overoptimization.
I think that before we knew about all of these sign space tools, everyone had an excuse
not to be optimized, right?
And now we're all educated about this stuff, and I think that a lot of people feel guilt.
They can feel guilt because the gap between how effective they are and how effective
they could be is felt between them. So given that you spend an awful lot of time thinking
about the tools that people can use, how can someone get over this guilt of lack of not
being where they should be with getting all of the things dialed in. Well, guilt is rarely an effective emotion,
although sometimes guilt and shame
can really help us make significant change.
The word optimization and optimize,
I think needs clear definition,
and I'm not suggesting that you are the one that said this,
but a lot of people think it means
being perfect all the time.
Optimization is something that we need to look at in the context of the moment, the hour, the day, the week.
Right?
You have a viral infection or you're sick or you're tired or jet lagged.
Optimization is whatever you can do to manage the basic five of, you know, sunlight, sleep, nutrition, exercise, relationships, work productivity that you can.
So it's about it's a it's a verb function. It's not a state to be in like floating around optimized.
It's optimization. The verb is a process that we're continually in. I mean people who are raising kids are
exceedingly busy raising kids and they're trying to optimize raising the kids and hopefully taking care of their health as well.
So I think people see or hear the long list of science informed protocols that I talk
about and think, oh my goodness, how am I supposed to do all of that?
That's why I keep coming back to the basics, right?
And look, a little bit of sunlight is better than none.
A little bit, dimming the lights a little bit is better than, you know, keeping them on
a full blast at night.
You know, making, you know, eating a few fewer heavily processed foods.
They're highly palatable, it's better than not doing that.
But, and there are certain people
who have immense amounts of self discipline.
I mean, one thing that's, and they're gonna do all the things,
I mean, one thing that's absolutely clear
is that there's a pattern of people discovering things
that make them feel much better, and then a need to tell everyone about it.
And that creates a bit of a divide for people. One thing that I've tried to do is to say, yes, I do these tools, I do these protocols, but I'm not just sympathetic, but I empathize with the fact that sometimes things happen, travel, kids, illness, you get into an argument with a significant other,
or at work, or you're just feeling off.
And so it's important to try and do these things
on average, is my belief.
And to be gentle with oneself when the time calls for it,
and then there's other times you need to just scruff
for yourself and say, like enough for this,
like enough, you remember,
like it's time to sit down and write this thing.
I don't care if your phone is ringing or not.
I don't care if you want to or not.
And you build up your AMCC while you're doing it, right?
You know, if ever there was a carrot
for doing the hard thing, it's that AMCC activation
that makes your AMCC larger,
which makes your willpower more accessible in the future.
So it's not that I'm unsympathetic to people
who are like, wow, this just feels like a lot.
But we also have to remember that we should all, I think, as a species be in an individual
and as individual, excuse me, be striving to do better each day, better than yesterday
and on the backdrop of what we happen to be dealing with today. I really, really do. I mean,
last week I had a great week up until Thursday,
and then something happened Thursday. It was a purely professional thing. And it was like,
everything got derailed. I literally didn't sleep that night. Very rare for me, very rare.
And I was, and it's interesting, the pattern that emerged. I did some reflecting on later
after this event passed, which was there's always this moment where we're like,
where we don't want to do damage control, where we're thinking, where we don't wanna do damage control,
where we're thinking, gosh, if I just hadn't done that
or with that person just hadn't done that,
you're trying to control the past.
So there's that moment
and I've learned you have to let that process take place.
Unless you have the amazing abilities of a special
to your one special operations person,
it seems to be able to just live in the moment.
By the way, those guys, I know a lot of them,
very close to them, tremendous respect for them,
but a lot of them have trouble when they return
from that kind of landscape where,
well, that's done, you gotta focus on the next thing
because real life involves sometimes
ruminating over the thing that happened
and just living in that space of,
I wish that hadn't happened.
Now, you try and compress that to be a limited amount of time
and then you get to okay damage control.
And damage control sucks because there's the opportunity cost of all the other things that you're not doing while you're doing damage control.
So, you know, the human animal, including me, needs to accept that there are certain things that we just aren't going to get perfect.
And I hate doing damage control, like everybody does, but I probably hate it a little bit more.
And under those conditions, I just think, okay, you know what?
This isn't 72 hours lost, this is an opportunity to learn.
And indeed, we came out of this situation better,
had then we not gone into it.
But I'll tell you, that realization didn't arrive
until Sunday, and I was pretty upset on Friday.
And I'm not a bad mood guy, I'm not a moody guy,
I don't get headaches, I don't get stomachache,
I'm not moody, people don't grade on me, even people with very different opinions and things. I'm like living that live.
And I like caught my bulldog Costello. So I guess to answer your question very directly here at the end, I think
optimization is not about removing all negative emotion or physical states. Optimization is about working with what's right in front of you with with the understanding that the human brain and its capacity to think about the past, the present, or the future,
in some combination sometimes. Occasionally, the anchor is still stuck in the sand a few hours
or days back, or a years back. And we have to accept that as part of our normal neural functioning
and psychological functioning and try and get, you know, and try
and get unword and move forward. But that when we're in those moments, you know, we have to
know that we're in them. And one of the most useful tools that for this was given to me
by a podcast guest episode doesn't come out yet. Dr. Lisa Feldman Barrett, who's done a
lot on the neurobiology of emotions and psychology of emotions. And you know, she said, and it's so powerful,
anytime you feel a high activation state of any kind,
you should stop.
Because what's happening is it's revealing to you
something very important.
And if you don't stop to think about why I'm so upset
or why I'm so happy, you're gonna miss an important lesson.
So this could be positive states too.
Anytime you feel like you're getting above eight out of 10
or seven and a half out of 10 on some scale of internal arousal
for good or bad reasons, you want to reflect.
What is the lesson?
Gosh, I really love this person.
I love this interaction.
I love this aspect of my job.
So that's going to inform the next job I take
because I don't love the rest of the job.
Or this really sucks.
And there's a lesson,
and I learned a very important lesson
in that last Thursday,
but I didn't realize it until late Saturday,
but I remember on Thursday,
this thing hit and I was pissed.
I don't get pissed very often, but I was pissed.
And I remember hearing Lisa's voice in my head,
and thinking, okay, what is this revealing to me?
Strategic learning opportunity.
Three days later, I had in my journal,
and I still have in my journal.
I have many journals, but I have one that's permanent
that kind of is the distilled out things
that kind of rise to the top as truths for me.
And it revealed to me that I care,
oh, so very much about certain things to the point
where they're not about my
career, they're really about my life, my quality of life.
And that small cluster of things is something that now I protect inside, I'm stealing
Paul Conti's language here, but inside the castle walls of what I consider important,
like I brought some things in that I think before I wasn't reckless with, but I didn't
realize it would be like if you have a prized horse or child and you're laying them play outside the castle walls and you
know that my rudder is out there. But also in one takes a, you know, an arrow through the heart
and you're like, and it's a huge loss. Well, what do you do with your other horses or children?
You bring them inside the castle walls, right? But you, it would be a shame to have to have that
experience in order to recognize how important they are to you.
But there were certain things that I was just not protecting.
And now I feel so secure. I also feel like I gained a huge lesson.
So the short list here is when the shit storm hits to put it in scientific nomenclature,
know that you're going to be focused on this for a while.
Except that as quickly as you can,
but understand that accepting that itself
is its own hard process.
Be, pay attention to those states of higher-alasal.
There are lessons there, even if this is good stuff.
Even if this is great stuff, the love of your life,
you're now getting engaged.
There's lessons there.
There's things to be gleaned that you'll want to go back to later.
And then three or four days later,
go back to those things and then three or four days later, go back to those things
and examine them from some different perspectives.
Because I think they're huge lessons in these higher
rousal states, whether or not it's higher rousal
because of terrible things or higher rousal
because of good things.
And I think having a process for moving through that
is something I didn't have and I'm still learning
to cultivate.
And, you know, gosh, if you wish the end spent as much time
on the phone or other people's wish they haven't spent as much time on the phone, I wish I had known
or had a process for dealing with things that happened to me or that I created that were
unfortunate for myself or others. They created for me a process of moving through that
semi structure that accepts that you're giving up some degree of control, but that there's
the opportunity to regain control and establish lessons that you never, ever would be able
to access purely retroactively.
Yeah, that's kind of like alchemy.
Taking something which is objectively a pretty crap situation and turning it into something
which is really, really useful.
There was a quote that stuck with me that you tweeted last year.
Or maybe you just told it to me.
I can't remember.
Advice I got early in my career.
Don't over engage in any controversy unless you are willing to stake your entire reputation
on it.
Rather, keep focused on discovering new things and creating or else you become known for
the controversy and nothing else that is no going back.
Right. Right.
Yeah, this isn't about avoiding being canceled because I think some people might translate
it to mean that, which is why I say it's not about that.
It's about, you know, we're given this enormous privilege to communicate our thoughts very
fast now through social media.
And whether or not you have a big following, small following, or no following, it is still a
privilege. And it's something that I've learned to really think through and guard and protect as an
asset that we have. And I've thought about this from the beginning of posting on things online
and set up certain rules for myself. For instance, I try to ensure that 90% of my posts are really
for the pure benefit of the audience and not for my own entertainment. Occasionally,
I'll see something and I'll have one of these like, you know, I'll see something, an animal
post or something like, oh, that's so cool. Or the other day, I saw something on an
X account about, you know, bumblebees that sleep inside of flowers and it was really
cool about how they look at polarized light and stuff.
But I just was really tickled by this fact.
I thought other people might be as well, but it was more for my own entertainment, frankly.
But 90% of what I put out there, I'm really trying to think, will people benefit from this?
Will they learn from it?
Not are they going to be interested in it, but are they going to learn from it?
Will it get them thinking or doing something beneficial to their mental health or physical
health.
Lord knows I've been attacked for, you know, saying, hey, this is an interesting study about
deliberate cold exposure and then people will like, oh, it's underpowered and, you know,
it's a marginal effect.
And I love this because I come from the field of science.
It's sort of funny.
It turned people loose on a paper.
Because you know, you're going to get a range of opinions because no two people read the
same paper the same way.
Everyone would like to say that they are the arbiter of truth and how to read papers,
which just makes me chuckle.
Normally those people have not published very many papers themselves.
It's sort of this inverse relationship.
But nonetheless, I like to put things out there that stimulate thinking, positive thinking.
I don't like controversy for sake of controversy, but you and I have colleagues in the podcast space,
and there are many people who are public facing
who see a current event, and they just say what they think,
and you know what, more power to them.
But it is, and I will say it is a distractor
from a larger message that they likely have
if they have one at all. But, and you see this, and it's not that they likely have, if they have one at all.
And you see this, and it's not that they go down,
what happens, they take their audience
that has been built around a certain set of topics,
and suddenly they're talking about current events.
I guess what I'm basically saying is,
I don't talk about current events.
Yeah, you've never, as far as I'm away,
you've never commented on politics, you've never made any.
No, actually, this is, I've, politics Politics came to around to me in an interesting way. I'll just share this because it's exactly how it happened
Rogan had Robert Kennedy Jr on his podcast, okay, and I
liked the post and I commented and the comment was the following I said I hope all
I hope all presidential candidates
go on long form podcasts because I happen to believe
that it's a great way to get to know candidates.
Poor old.
No, so didn't someone edit you Wikipedia page?
So this is interesting.
So I got calls from colleagues of mine at Stanford.
I got literally calls and texts.
I got calls from major media outlets asking whether or not I'm a RFK
supporter slash anti-vaxxer to which I said, I don't know how you concluded that.
Okay. It's certainly not my stance, right?
My politics are my politics, but, but there was a huge leap from, and I said,
and I, in my comment, I said, you know, I look forward to listening,
and I hope all the candidates go on long form podcasts.
I also see Robert in the gym,
and it always looks like he's training hard.
He trains hard.
He's in good condition.
Yeah, he wears jeans, which I don't understand when he trains,
but anyway, but he trains hard.
Odd choice.
Odd choice, but free country.
So be it.
So be it.
So was I commenting on the content of his podcast?
No, was I commenting on...
You probably hadn't even listened to it yet.
I hadn't listened to it yet.
So what was interesting was in the subsequent days,
I got an onslaught of assumptions,
or presumptions, really what they were.
And then yes, I mean, this isn't about,
maybe this is the time,
I published over 70 peer-reviewed articles
that are indexed on PubMed,
many of which had secondary
sources in time and other major outlets that covered the findings for the relevance to
the general public at the time, around 2016, mostly, but in the subsequent years as well.
That was scraped from my Wikipedia.
Scraped from Wikipedia.
You mean like scrub removed from Wikipedia?
Remove from Wikipedia.
My research contributions are not there on Wikipedia.
Still.
And then it was there were assertions
that I was an anti-vaxxer.
There were assertions that I was supporting
certain political agendas and so on.
And then the page was locked by the editorial staff.
I've had communications with the founders of Wikipedia
who the page has been adjusted somewhat
But not none of my research has been put back. I actually am at this point
I think it's sort of interesting because it's such it's more actually
It's kind of fortunate that it happened in the sense that it's more telling about how the kind of editorializing around
Wikipedia exists
Then this is really not about me. I'm telling this this anecdote
around Wikipedia exists, then this is really not about me. I'm telling this anecdote as a way to sort of reveal what was my experience makes it very clear that now it includes some positive,
some negatives about the podcast. That's fine. We cover supplements. Some people are and promote
supplements in certain contexts, mostly behavioral tools, but supplements too. And so I'm perfectly fine with that being included, because that's true. But it is very interesting to see how when a, the way that sort of people will
pick up the ball and run with things. And it's been super useful for me to understand this,
because what it's allowed me to do, at first it was like, hey, like what's this about? Then I tried to figure it out.
Then I went straight to the top in terms of trying
to understand, and I realized,
it's like, what do I really love doing?
I love forging for information
that can benefit people's mental health
and physical health.
I love organizing that information.
I love dispersing that information
to the best of my abilities.
And those are the things that make me happy.
And those are the things that make me happy. And those are the things that seem to resonate with a certain number of people.
Those are also some of the same things that seem to irritate a certain number of people.
And I love doing it.
And so what I'm going to do is just return to doing that.
And I learned a lot about the landscape of online information in the process.
Very formative experiences.
Very formative.
And as an academic, you know, all my papers are on PubMed.
There's no, unless a paper is retracted or corrected, there's no removing things from
the library.
Yeah, so your Google Scholar will just be kind of like no one's going in there.
Yeah, my H index is fixed.
And it's not, it's to be very clear.
I want to be very clear, because I don't want to contradict the very thing that I opened
up the question, which is this is not, this is not something I want to like die on the
sword of. But it really alerted me to the fact that so much of the information that's on the
on the internet has been massaged in a particular direction based on presumptions. So one of the
reasons I'm taking this opportunity to talk about this is not to counter major media news out.
They're just trying to make a living. It's kind of interesting. They have a lot of the same advertisers
that my podcast does.
You know, I don't advertise Fendi bags,
but you know, they use advertisers,
we use them, it makes it free to everybody as a consequence.
But I think that it's really important
for people to realize that this question of like,
who can we trust, what can we trust?
We all have to learn to be good scientists
and foragers of information.
And the macro for me is that hopefully
people are learning to forge for information better
as a consequence of understanding that like,
yeah, no one person holds the truth.
This is not Mount Olympus, right?
So I think the interesting thing,
well, one of the reasons why you might have seen
an outsized response to this is people aren't used to
you being in anything, right? Like the biggest conspiracy that Andrew Cuban is going to be
a part of, it's like some new study on sunlight in the eyes or something. It's like, is there
was the p-value and stuff? It's like, it's not accessible to the normal person.
Cold plunge mafia. Precisely. Yeah. There is, by the way, a cold plunge mafia.
Who are they?
Well, I'm not going to talk about that.
Oh, it's like what's it called?
The sicarros, you've got the brotherhood,
you've made a blood supply.
Yeah, I probably shouldn't have said that.
You can keep it in, but it's a pretty,
it's a strong relationship.
Undistinguishable.
Undistinguishable.
Undistinguishable.
Very powerful.
Very powerful.
I understand why people are nervous about the cold plunger.
It's me too.
So lots and lots of people online get known for their expertise within one area and then
start to think to themselves, well, why shouldn't the world know about my opinion on the Ukraine
conflict?
Like, I've got lots of things to say and everybody thinks that it's very, very valuable.
So maybe I should contribute to what we should do about climate change or what we think should
happen in the next election. And I think that, you know, to your credit, you've done a really good
job because you will have opinions. You've just chosen not to share them presumably, right?
Right. I vote. Yeah. So, but you've chosen not to do that.
And I think that it's almost like
the sensitivity dial was turned up so much.
It's like, where's the first ever society?
We knew, we knew that it was the tattoos and the beard.
We always knew that that guy was like an RFK,
or do you know what I mean?
And any opportunity for somebody to jump on this, right?
So this is something that I've been kind of noticing in myself.
Somebody asked me this, I'm doing these live shows at the moment,
so I know that you do live shows too.
Great, I want to come to one of your live shows.
We're not doing LA, I'll find you a date.
Live shows are so different than podcasts, and I learned.
What is your arousal state before you step on stage?
I mean, I have a whole set of protocols.
Would you send me them?
Sure.
Yeah, I would love.
I spend the whole day basically in a rhythm, and I talk to only a limited number of people,
and I've got a rhythm in my head, and I'm in an SDR hypnosis part of the day.
I've sent in, received a few texts of Rick, my friend Tim Armstrong, my friend Jim Thibault. I touch base with my team. I do prayer. I'm like, I'm in an altered
state. And I need all the help. Looking forward to the protocol. I've got my tour, my first
UK and island tour is happening in November. And then I'm going to Dubai. We've got a huge
2000 person showing Dubai. Then we're going to do Canada and the US. Anyway, I got asked recently,
I'm doing work in progress shows like a comedian for these.
So I'm doing 40 person shows at East Austin Comedy Club,
all of the profits go to charity.
I wanted to work out my material, right,
before I went on stage.
Even though it's not comedy stuff.
But I wanted to do it, and it's been really, really useful
because I've been able to watch,
I shouldn't really open with that story. It's not so, we can move that a bit later. It's a bit
heavy, it's a whatever, whatever. I have a lot of thoughts about this, yeah. So,
somebody asked me at one of these shows what some of the unseen prices are that you pay
for building a platform of this size. And what I realized was,
for building a platform of this size. And what I realized was,
both you and I just like doing the shows that we do.
Like I love, there is nothing that I would prefer to do
at 4.23 pm on a Friday afternoon
than sit down and have this conversation.
There is nothing that I would rather do, right?
And if you do that for long enough, you end up accumulating the size of an audience that
carries with it responsibility that you didn't ask for. I didn't ask to have my like and
comment on my friend Joe's Instagram posts scrutinized by mainstream media and trended
across Twitter.
Not only that, I'd call each calling the saying, not what is happening to you, but literally what happened
to you.
Right.
It's not awesome.
But the same week that we published a clinical trial,
so it's not as if like my scientific career.
So it was pretty interesting.
I actually had very fruitful conversations with those people.
I know what I eventually figured out what the answer is
to the crushing us before, which is still in in this vein which is
Here's the thing
There's a certain segment in fact a very large segment of listenership viewership and media
that want to see you and
me and other people do what they would do in a given circumstance. For instance, why didn't you
counter so and so when they said blank? Why didn't you stand up for this group when you have the
opportunity on that situation? What they're basically saying is they wish they had to have the opportunity
and they're angry that you're not tip of the spear for them in circumstances
that they don't have access to.
I get it.
But one thing that I learned early on by observation
is that a sense of justice and a sense of strong opinion
about certain things is incredibly important.
I mean, that runs in my family.
But you have to know when justice needs to line up with action or when justice is time to walk away.
When you're not the best suited for something. The other thing that, and I have to say,
Joe Rogan is the best at what I'm about to describe. And I admire it so much. First of all,
I'll go on record saying that I think Joe Rogan has been clearly net positive for science, bringing about lots of different conversations, about tons of
topics. Let's just leave the vaccine thing aside for the moment, but sleep, the, the, the
cause of.
He won't go alone on a Lemke, right? Peter Atia and on and on. Okay. It's very clear whether or not he's aware that he's not going to be leveraged
by anybody. No one's going to come on to show it. He doesn't allow himself to be used,
right? So when someone gets upset that you're not taking a stand that they would take, they're
upset that they can't use you to reach their ends. And, you know, I have many flaws, like anybody,
but maybe a few extra.
I really do.
And, but one, but included in that extensive list of flaws,
is not the capacity to be used.
It just is not.
I have strong opinions and there's time for justice
and action on all particular lines.
And I prefer to do that, not using my social media platform or podcast platform.
In part because there's a tremendous number of things that I want to learn about and teach about
guess I want to have on to educate as many people as possible. So I'm not being political or diplomatic.
I'm being extremely strategic. I'm saying I'm not going to be used to achieve somebody else's end.
I want to, that's basically what it is. And so I think very hard about like the things I want to take on and they're mostly about
helping people regulate or circadian rhythms, stress, sleep, eating disorders, depression,
understanding of self through a mental health series, addiction, sleep, you know, I said
sleep multiple times, um, and on and on.
And the other stuff is really barbed wire.
You can get snagged on it and stuck there.
And then you're tossed up against the barbed wire
and you're fighting and you're bleeding out.
And guess what, a bunch of really great stuff is happening.
So that you could be focusing on.
Dude, I often, I always think.
That's really what it is.
I always think about how much of some of the smartest minds
of our generation's time has been taken up,
arguing over, pick your topical issue headline of the smartest minds of our generation's time has been taken up, arguing over, pick
your topical issue headline of the moment. Like, what else could have been achieved if these people
who, outside of the myopia and, like, catastrophe that is most of pop culture headline stuff,
Astrophy that is most of pop culture headline stuff are phenomenal thinkers and yet they have a
It's like the kryptonite that there's something that pulls them away. I want to rip them back in Well, my thumbs start buzzing, you know, there's the pre-motor circuits that get me wanting to put something
How often do you how often do you um type and delete?
Does that happen much three times a day? You're kidding now, but not because of political
Yeah, yeah, but um or sensitivity issues, but um, yeah about three times a day? You're kidding. No, but not because of political reasons, but more sensitivity issues,
but yeah, about three times a day.
There are a lot of posts that just don't go up
because it's not gonna land right.
I don't touch on current events.
I mean, our friend, like Friedman,
covers a lot of current events
and gets right in the middle.
I mean, he likes to, he'll travel to current events.
Yeah.
He'll land himself in dangerous territories.
I think also something that's really helped me.
I had great scientific advisors and mentors coming up.
Also, I understand the limits of having one brain and one personality and one history.
I have a council of people that I refer to often.
It's funny, I brought my notebook today, which I'm always carrying around one of these
little notebooks.
I'm writing on cards and things.
In the front of this notebook is a list of names.
I didn't think we'd get into this at all to say,
but a list of names of people that I look at this list.
That's the council of Hebeman, right, though.
It is.
Who's in the count?
Well, I'll give you a non-exhaustive but accurate list.
I mean, it includes Rick Rubin, close friend, Peter Atia,
close friend.
It includes Joe Strummer, Oliver Sachs,
both the fume are dead and who I never met,
but I've consumed their writings
and I know people close to them
and I have stories about them.
It's got a couple people whose names
I'm not gonna disclose.
There are a few others here that maybe
my dead advisors, all three of them,
my dog Costello, he couldn't be, he was so stubborn.
You could not get him to do something he didn't want to do.
It was like, he wouldn't, you couldn't move him.
And he always was right about the things he didn't want to do.
He had an incredible sense of understanding about his environment.
My sister is on here.
And then, you know, my team, who isn't just my team, but Rob, Mike, Ian, Chris, Martin,
Gary, Greg, like Sarah, who isn't just my team, but Rob, Mike, Ian, Chris, Martin, Gary, Greg,
like Sarah, they're here, right?
So these are like any time I'm gonna put something
into the world, I look at this list
and I think like, okay, I don't need you in anonymity,
but like what would they say about this?
And because I don't need to text them,
most times, nine times out of 10, I know.
And for it, just by knowing them?
Absolutely.
This is something I really wanted to kind of touch on
because you've gone.
And there are others on that list.
So for those that I didn't include,
it's like a, I wanna be a little,
Jim Thibault, right?
They know.
Yeah, Joe's on here, you know?
It's like, it's like,
I mean, doing an award ceremony.
Yeah, Lex is on here.
I mean, you know, so, I mean,
it's just so clear to me that my brain can't do it right all the time.
And I need to call on people alive and dead,
like known and that I haven't known to help me.
And you know, it feels sort of corny to talk about.
But if there's one thing I've tried to do with the podcast,
it's to normalize some of the conversations
around things like anxiety, stress, sexual health.
We've been doing a lot about hormone sexual health
for women and men, communication. You know, normalize some of the discussion around these practices that,
that some people might seem kind of hokey, but to me, I mean, this list isn't like three out of ten
in terms of the potency scale of like my productivity and feelings of safety and life so that I can go do my best work. It's like 11 out of 10.
11 out of 10.
And it's the kind of thing where most of these people
don't even know that no one knows they're on this list
until now.
But I've always had this list in different forms
and it's updated over the years when I was a kid.
I mean, growing up a hero,
listen to him every day of my life from
13 on Tim Armstrong, lead singer for Rance, Operation Ivy, Transplants, and then like,
literally every day. And through some magical stroke of luck, we've become very close friends.
So he was guiding me all along, but he's about, he's 10 years older than I am. He has deep,
he's extremely smart, extremely smart. And he has deep understanding of human dynamics
and how to be in the world while trying to do creative work.
Now he's a musician, not a scientist,
but his level of curiosity, intellect, memory.
I mean, it's, like, it doesn't just,
it for years it inspired me, but now, like,
all text or call to him, I did that last week, like,
hey, this is a tough situation, really helped me.
I called a few other people too.
But he's on this list and he has been since I was 13.
How wild is that?
And it turns out, you know, never meet your heroes, right?
Well, it turns out this hero ended up like wildly exceeding
my expectations in the positive direction.
You do know that there's someone listening to this.
There's probably millions of people listening to this,
at least not thousands to whom you're that person, right?
They have this parasocial relationship with you,
even if you didn't ask for it, even if social.
I like that.
It's almost like paranormal, but it's just parasocial.
That's the time.
Get it in there, along with whatever it was, cosplay and...
We've got a good list.
And Cuba husbands.
Cuba daddies.
I'm really fascinated by what it's been like
to be a relatively unknown academic working in the annals,
just doing your thing, doing your research,
to now as a byproduct of a passion to share
science-based tools for people,
now being sort of thrust out into the public.
What's the felt sense of this rapid increase in exposure and scrutiny and fame been like?
So I'd love to tell you that it's disorienting, but truly by virtue of feeling very aligned
with the work and purpose of the work that I'm doing. I feel like I'm at least in terms of my daily activities and where my mind is at.
I'm exactly where I, for the first time, I'm like exactly where I, I feel like I'm exactly
where I belong.
Not because I'm known and the podcast has achieved this recognition for which I'm very grateful
and humbled by, but because I love foraging for organizing
and dispensing information.
So 95% of my cognitive powers are set toward
like the episode I'm preparing for next week or the week after.
And I have to like literally pull in my impulse
to now take off on a tangent about my use of toe spacers
to fix this like imbalance because of like foot health.
And like, I'll go there.
That's the thing, but like it's all getting teed up.
I'll, I prepare it for podcasts.
I someone asked how long it takes me.
And I realize in total, because I start so many months ahead,
somewhere between very low end,
the lowest ever would have been 12,
but it's typically more like 150 to two hours of preparation.
And I love every friggin' second of it.
And so for me, it feels great
because it allows me to do what I'm doing.
Now in terms of being public facing,
I mean, I'm a pretty introverted person.
I love close dynamics.
If I think for a second about meaning one on one dynamics
and small group dynamics, small parties at my house
and things, comfortable in crowds, but I'm not interested in being in them per se.
But if I think for a second about how many people are going to listen to something, I'll just,
I don't know, I don't think about it because it's not to do it.
You know, it's changed my life dramatically and mostly for the positive, in positive
ways.
You know, getting filmed while you're in the gym is funny,
because I always, if ever I need to use perfect form,
like now, I really need it.
I'm the guy on the tibre, is what you're doing.
That's the real scandal.
It's not that you like to Joe and Dara FK post.
It's the fact that you can't do preacher curls
with perfect tempo.
I'm a four-range emotion guy.
I'm a four-range emotion guy.
But I am the guy on the TIP machine every day,
not every day, but any damn in the gym.
You're getting filmed when you're not aware
that you're getting filmed.
Some security breaches, not directly towards me,
but towards members of my family and community.
Those have been annoying,
but that goes with the territory
and it'd be mostly lucky.
99% of interactions are immensely positive.
When people come over and say hello, I enjoy it. I don't always have a lot of time. So there are those kinds of things,
but I'm somebody who's genuinely curious about other people. So in those interactions,
like I want to learn about them, or you know about me, I want to learn about them. I've always been
genuinely curious about other people. This isn't a line. Like I've been friends with the garbage man,
the janitor, the, you know, my dentist,
like, you know, well, there I've got stuff in my mouth,
so I can't, it's a one-way conversation.
But, you know, learning about people,
I think allows one to also deliver information
in a way that's more accessible to people.
This is something that I'm, I would guess,
I would go as far as to say that the level of fame
and recognition that I have now is about as
like Goldilocks zone as it's possible to get.
It's maybe once every 10 to 15 minutes
if I'm walking in a crowded area somewhere
and it'll be a 10 second conversation of High Mate,
really love the podcast.
Or like Amazon Prime Delivery driver shouted out of the window.
And those are the people that that that allow us to do what we do, right?
Like, like, though, I'm so grateful that people are interested in the kinds of
information that you put out and then I put out.
I mean, I look at them.
I look at anyone I interact with as the students in my classroom, the same way I
would, the way I manage my comment section on social media, classroom rules.
You can say whatever you want to me, but don't be uncooled other people, or I'm going to block you. Why? It's not like I can't take it. Listen, I grew up in skateboarding. I grew up in academia.
The hazing process in those communities, very different, was intense. It was physical, psychological,
emotional torture at times.
And so you develop a very thick skin.
I mean, skateboarding, if you do something
and you don't make it look right,
or something is a little off,
you're gonna own that reputation for years.
And so...
That's your new nickname.
Yeah, you have to have your,
I don't know, I'm not gonna say it the way I'd say it,
but like, I mean, you have to have...
Every, your kit has to be right.
Everything has to be right.
And yet you have to try things.
And so it's, you know, learning to work
through the narrow constraints of social media
is nothing compared to trying to come up
through academia where people say,
oh nice, nice, great to see you.
And then they kill your papers or grants behind your back.
It's a game of backstabbing.
Now they put reviewers on names on papers.
So it conditioned me for it.
I will say this, I'm very grateful
that all of this happened in my 40s, my mid 40s.
It started the podcast when I was 45, I'm 48 now.
It's been three years.
Why, why that timing?
I just think about the young brain, the 20s, 30s.
You know, so much of our identity is formed earlier in life,
but we're still trying to figure out who we are.
I know exactly who I am.
So you go together.
I'm the guy that since age five has been gathering,
organizing, and disseminating information.
I like lots of different kinds of people.
I like misfits and runts and win it in like,
and, you know, and jocks and punkers and hippies.
And I have gay friends and straight friends like,
live and let live.
I love it all.
And so I oriented towards skateboarding and punkers and hippies and I have gay friends and straight friends like live and live. I love it all. That's why I oriented towards skateboarding and punk rock
because it was like all the styles, all the hair styles.
So I mean, people think of like just like bullet belts
and mohawks and no, then you got your peace pong
seeing it, your vegan pong seeing it,
I was like, and I have my thing, what I liked,
but I love the variety because I love the flora
and fauna of life.
I don't love raccoons or capybars per se,
but I love how they fit into the animal kingdom and I have an obsession with animals and weird
animals and cephalopods and the octopuses and the you know the platypus is and all of it. And so for
me like being on social media I get to step back and look at all of it, but I'm not going to let
anyone decide who I am or who I'm not.
Like I'm the guy who was wearing black shirts before.
My colleague, David Feldheim, will tell you this.
He's a professor at UC San Cruz.
He wants to be the, he was like, he always wore the black shirt.
And I was like, yes, it's true.
I didn't change at all.
I didn't feel like I'd modify myself.
I know, you know, I always, I'd hold the door for people.
I tried.
Am I perfect?
No.
So it's changed things a lot and yet it hasn't changed me at all.
I love it. Dr. Andrew Hume and Ladies and Gentlemen, dude, I really appreciate you. Very much appreciate the support you've given me over the last year. When I've needed to text you,
when I've needed a little bit some pieces, it really does mean a lot to me.
So what can people expect? Remain from 2023, what have you got coming up?
Okay, well I can tell you,
but first can I just please just take a moment
and say thank you for this opportunity.
Thanks for the kind words.
I will say something very important about you,
which is that coming up in the various sports
I did, skateboarding and science,
I have a really good eye for the person like,
I'm gonna put my money on that person,
to be at the top, at some point, down the line.
And it's interesting because I'm not talented at many things.
I'm proficient at certain things I work really hard, truly.
If I have any inborn abilities,
it's my memory has always
been sharp, but loving the thing you're learning helps. Early on when I saw your content,
it created some sense in me based on how you were delivering it, the passion, the honesty
behind it, and the ways in which you were moving through and trying to figure it out that I was like,
this guy is going to be like at the top. And I was right in that you're a scent trajectory predicts
that. Like I mean, okay, there's still room for upward trajectory, great. But you know,
everyone's in a while someone comes along where you're like, he just loves what he does. It's so
clear that he's meant to do this.
Like, you love, and I think it has a lot to do with the genuineness
which you invite on and meet your guests.
Like, you're not going to put someone on because they're going to get clicks.
You're going to invite people on because you really want to talk to them
and that's very clear.
And I think I know that resonates with people.
So I've been truly an avid consumer of your content from Go,
and it's been awesome to see your
Ascent and I'm sure that this is just the beginning. So I want to say thank you. Thank you. You know, thank you
And I look forward to deepening our friendship and that's a real thing because early on when Lex and I became friends through
Podcasting at some point I realized I was like we need to hang out without these microphones in front of us
I went out to Austin for two weeks. We just hung out. We just hung out.
It's also where you did the Jiu-Jitsu thing or you choked your mouth.
Jiu-Jitsu. Yeah. Yeah. So got me there. I get you back, Lex, but not with Jiu-Jitsu.
Psychological Jiu-Jitsu. But I hope we get the chance to spend time. And I really just want to say,
whatever you're doing, keep going because it's awesome and it's clear that you're really working hard on your craft and I'm really excited about the lives and we can talk about that.
Thank you.
Rest of 2023, I'm going to try and finish this book that I've been procrastinating on for a few years now.
It's mainly going to be a book of protocols, so it's very straightforward as to what to do.
It's kind of the what to do stuff, not so much story.
I think there's a need for that. So I'm told.
That's gonna break the world and not think of that.
Well, I'm putting my heart and soul into it.
I got an idea of completion date and then publication date.
Yeah, pre-sales should probably be February
and it should come out end of 24.
So, and I'm putting everything I've gotten to that book.
While still podcasting, we're gonna do a series.
We've done these guest series. We did one
with Dr. Andy Galpin on fitness. We did one on mental health with Dr. Paul Conti. We're going to do one
with Dr. Matthew Walker on sleep and one with Dr. Anilemke on addiction and dopamine soon so that the
guest series are that going forward. And then, you know, there were times when we thought, okay, we need to do something else.
Like, do we need an app?
Do we need it?
And we've really taken a step back.
And we're just like, we're just gonna keep searching for,
organizing and dispensing information mainly
in the form of the Monday podcast occasion
of these guest series.
We do have a premium channel that generates revenue
that is directed towards scientific studies.
I'm gonna talk too much about this,
but a significant portion of that has been put to philanthropy
to laboratories working on eating disorders
on mind-body states, on intermittent fasting.
Didn't you recently read to your website?
Isn't your website-
Did you read to your website?
Yeah, so if you go to HeuronLab.com,
the engineers have done a great job where it's highly
searchable now and take you to specific timestamps.
You could even say, like dopamine procrastination,
I'll take you to that particular timestamp.
And I think as the AI tools get better,
there'll be more things like that.
But really, it's gonna just be more of the same.
Live shows, anymore live shows this year?
We got live shows coming up in Australia.
So the first one in Sydney sold out,
the Opera House one sold out,
but there's another one being announced soon.
And then there's a Melbourne and Brisbane.
Where should people go if they want to sign up for the?
It's huermanlab.com slash tour to get tickets.
Oh, yeah.
And those are fun and they're very different than the podcast.
And, but you know, I'm not a joke to a few months back
with traditional media.
I wasn't joking that, you know, I might run for office someday.
Like, from what I've seen of the experience of politics,
like, I want to retract that statement.
I have zero minus one interest in running for office.
But I have every interest in just continuing to indulge this,
this obsession slash delight that I get from learning
and teaching and sharing information.
So, like, yeah, that's the plan.
And, you know, keep the main thing, the main thing, man.
Yeah, that's the thing, you know, and I never know,
like I come from a long line of academic advisors
that all died early, like I hope I live a long time,
but I don't know if it's gonna be a cancer, a bullet,
or a bus that's gonna take me out, or old age,
I have no idea, so I'm just, you know,
I'm just leaning into this as hard as I can.
Hell yeah, I appreciate you, man, thank you for today.
I appreciate you, thanks Thank you for today. I appreciate you. Thanks so much Chris