Modern Wisdom - #822 - Dr Andy Galpin - The New Science Of Heart Health, VO2 Max & Sleep Hacking
Episode Date: August 8, 2024Dr Andy Galpin is a professor of kinesiology, exercise scientist, and an author. Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and poor sleep is affecting almost everyone. Andy has ...some of the best, evidence-based strategies for improving both, while becoming fitter and more resilient. Expect to learn which metrics matter most for health, the best ways to train your VO2 Max, what the most optimal daily routine for peak VO2 max looks like, advanced techniques to enhance your sleep, what happens when you over optimise life, whether breathwork can replace your afternoon nap, how to improve your sleep with nutrition and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get $350 off the Pod 4 Ultra at https://eightsleep.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period from Shopify at https://shopify.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get up to 37% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hello everybody, welcome back to the show.
My guest today is Dr. Andy Galpin.
He's a professor of kinesiology, an exercise scientist and an author.
Heart disease is the leading cause of death in the United States and poor sleep is affecting
almost everyone.
Andy has some of the best evidence-based strategies for improving both of those while becoming
fitter and more resilient.
Expect to learn which metrics matter most for health, the best ways to train your VO2
max, what the most optimal daily routine for peak VO2 max looks like, advanced techniques
to enhance your sleep, what happens when you over-optimise life, why breath work can replace
your afternoon nap, how to improve your sleep with nutrition, and much more.
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But now, ladies and gentlemen, please welcome Dr Andy Galpin. Talk to me about the metrics that matter most for health, in your opinion.
We've got an unlimited amount of data that we can access from wearables and beds and
breath work and CO2 tolerance tests and everything else.
What are the ones that you think are most important?
Yeah, sure. I think the easiest way to start this is go over a very large picture and then to stop us from being very general the entire time, which is sometimes a bit boring.
I'll let you pick whichever one you want to go hardest into there. So when we start looking
at things from the perspective of how long you're going to live and how well you're going to live,
most people are pretty keen on that idea now and those things are different and it's not just about
living a long time and you want to live well. So what's that mean? Well, we actually can pull from
multiple data sets here in the sense that it's everything from your sense of connection to the
world, your sense of purpose, social
belongings.
Those things are incredibly important and depending on the papers you pull from, some
could argue those are the top predictors of how long.
Now mental health and such is not my expertise, so I will hopefully not spend all of our time
on that.
But we have to acknowledge those, the way you ask the question, that is a true and honest answer.
It is the things that go into making you feel like
a sense of purpose and belonging.
That's great.
Independent of that, in terms of your physical health,
now we can just really run through the gamut
of what does your body have to do to survive and perform?
Well, right?
Well, it has to have some functionality
of cardiorespiratory fitness.
Easy metric we talk about here very often,
and people are really keen to this fact now,
which makes me smile because for 25 years
I've been screaming this and no one cared.
And like the podcast of Stan Universe took over
with it three years ago, and I'm like,
oh great, now it's out there.
So VO2Max is a very strong predictor
of how long you're going to live from that perspective. Other
research is going to look at things like physical strength, both your grip strength and your
leg strength. Also very, very important. Backing down from that, now you have things like muscle
quality, overall muscle size. Of course, you have negative regulators. So what I mean by
that are these are things you don't want to have. So as I've been going through this, I realized, I've been giving you things that you want to make sure are high. And you have negative regulators. So what I mean by that, these are things you don't want to have. So as I've been going through this, I realize, realize I'm giving you things
that you want to make sure are high.
We have a whole subset of things you want to stay away from obesity.
You don't want to have metabolic disease.
You don't want to have sleep disorders.
You don't want to have that.
So I tend to leave that stuff.
I always forget to mention that.
But yeah, like don't have any of those.
And then be fit, be strong, and maintain
a sense of proprioception.
And so if you look at the research on things like brain
aging, what's critically clear is you don't
want to lose your sense of smell.
You don't want to lose your sense of vision
or your hearing, because those are all
tied into the global idea of proprioception.
And that is a fancy way of saying your body's ability
to understand where it is in space.
This is translated often into things like balance.
So if you were to look at the research on fall prevention,
it's very clear you do not want to fall and have an accident
after the age of 60.
I don't mean to be a bit dramatic here,
but it's quite literally almost a death sentence
if you fall and break a hip or something like that
after the age of 60.
Well, what causes that?
Pure accidents.
But then outside of that, it is things like loss of balance.
Then once you lose the balance, you
have a lack of foot speed or hand speed
to get your hand in the right position
to brace yourself from a fall.
And then if you do do that, it's the lack
of eccentric strength to stop yourself
from hitting the ground and collapsing
and smashing a bone.
And so I just sprayed you with a whole bunch of stuff to answer your question.
But from just the physical side of the equation, those are generally the things we're looking
at in terms of an exercise scientist's perspective.
I don't really spend much time in my career honestly on medical stuff.
I'm not a medical doctor.
I've talked to Peter Atiyah or Gabriel Lyon. If you want to know about APOB,
I don't care about those things at all.
I look at the human performance side of the perspective
on that question.
Where has this recent pivot to prioritizing
VO2 max come from?
Is this just that I was a normie
and totally didn't know what was going on in the literature?
Cause it felt to me like up until maybe three years ago, maybe even less, it was
all go slow to go fast.
It's all zone two.
We must accumulate a very, very high amount of aggressive walking per week.
What's happened with this VO two max revolution?
Okay.
That's a really nice question.
We have known this answer since the late 1980s.
There's a very classic, and he just passed away actually,
actually a scientist named Stephen Blair
out of South Carolina.
And he published these data, 1989, 1990, 1991.
We had a million people databases on this.
I actually remember as a graduate student in 2005, sitting in
a lecture from Jonathan Myers at Stanford, presenting incredibly clear evidence of VO2max
out predicting diabetes, out predicting blood pressure, out predicting cholesterol, out
predicting heart disease, out predicting heart surgeries. We've known this stuff for now
well over 20 years.
Do you mean out predicting all of those things for longevity?
For all cause mortality, dying for any reason.
You want to call it longevity?
Fine.
Scientifically, we'd say mortality.
All cause mortality.
So yes, thank you.
So the point being, as an extra scientist community, again, we've known this answer
for an extremely long time.
There was research in 2004 and 1999 in JAMA as well,
showing that leg strength in a handful of studies
out predicted even VO2 max in terms of, again,
predicting all cause mortality, clinical prognosis,
how long you're going to live,
who's going to fare best post surgery,
anyone who randomly shows up to the hospital.
If you give them a leg press test,
or leg extension test rather, that will be the most significant
predict well knowing any other information of what's gonna
look like how serious your problems gonna be. Right? Like,
again, this is in JAMA not in like the journal of dudes who
like to lift weights. Like that, Mike, you're just telling I
started that journal, by the way, that's, that's our Yeah. yeah so okay we've known this for a very long time so your question why did
it get so popular well a handful of things I think we screamed from the
rafters about this stuff for forever in the medical community never cared or
didn't listen or whatever the case was why they started turning the attention I
think at some point the tsunami of data just starts to overwhelm me.
And then when these data started getting published
in medical journals, and then really, I
believe the true key was this.
And I'm being quite arrogant here.
But I think it is my generation of scientists.
Because you had, when I was a graduate student,
everyone who was a scientist in this field
was from the 1970s and 1980s
generation. This is your steady state, long, slow cycling, swimming, jogging. That's what
they do for exercise. Those are the sports they follow. That's the research we did. And
then you had Arnold come along and strength training became this thing. And you have this
whole generation of kids from the 1980s who liked science, but then also like
lifting weights and started going like, why is there none of this stuff in the science?
This stuff was not exercise science. And so we went on to become students. We went on to go to
graduate schools. And then we started doing, open up our own laboratories and started doing research
on these types of things. That's a 30 year window,, right? Takes a long time. And then those data finally started coming out.
And so the last 20 years, you've seen this just enormous increase
in strength training and higher intensity stuff.
Now, the last couple of years, I think
that's just kind of the wave of science,
where it takes a long time of like 10 years of data
to accumulate people getting awards,
becoming big names in the field where they are respectable,
coming out of the big labs from the big, you know, okay, like, I guess there's, there's
something here going on. Why that took off in the pop culture. I don't know, per se.
But I think it's probably has to do with the idea of going, hey, one of the biggest barriers
to exercise that we're aware of is people's time, right?
They say, I don't have the time for it.
And so then when Marty Gabala's research started coming out,
and he started saying, hey, we can
get the same cardiovascular benefits
in four total minutes of accumulated work
throughout a week as four hours.
And again, not one study.
It's dozens of studies now coming out
in different areas and populations. That grabbed a lot of media attention.
And that's when high intensity interval training really took off media wise.
And I think that's, that's what landed us in this position.
I think it's probably gone too far in that direction, but nonetheless,
if I had to guess, this is why things got to where they are now.
Can you tell me about that study or the, the protocol that was followed by a sequence of studies?
The four minutes thing?
Oh, there's been dozens and dozens of them.
This is everything from 20 seconds of work and 20 seconds of rest repeated, you know,
four to 12 times.
I'm summarizing a bunch of different papers and protocols.
Higher ones up to one minute
on one minute off. Like all the classic, again what most people would call high intensity interval
training. This is actually a good way to get yourself confused on the internet because back
in my day, HIIT training, it was H-I-T training. This was an old Mike Menzer bodybuilding, very,
very, very, very slow repetition stuff,
right? And then when hit came along the second hit, there's an extra I in there, it's high intensity
interval training. So people have like, we always I see people all the time fighting about this stuff
and always laughing like, man, you guys don't even know you're not even saying the same thing.
Like, this is not, this is two different things. But yeah, tons and tons of protocols, some of them
have longer rest intervals.
So for example, one minute as hard as you possibly can,
recover for four or five minutes.
Repeat that four times in a day.
These are typically on things like a bike.
So you're cycling almost always.
But some of them are shorter intervals.
And Tabata came on board.
Those studies came out over 25 years ago.
But again, people just got wind of them a few years ago,
so that got big.
But the way I'm saying is I want people to be really clear here.
There is absolutely no magic protocol there, none at all.
There's no magic duration.
There's no magic respirable.
And there's no magic number of times you have to do it.
Because there have been, again, countless studies
over a huge range of all those variables. of times you have to do it. Because there have been, again, countless studies over
and sending huge range of all those variables.
And almost all of them still show benefit with one key.
If you truly take those intervals at a max effort,
it'll work.
Now, if you're doing 30 on 30 off
and you're just kind of going like 80%, 85%
through that 30 seconds of work, then you're
not going to see the same results.
So the one key, and Marty would say this too,
is if you're trying to get tons of benefits, cardiovascular benefits,
especially from a very, very short amount of work,
that amount of work has to be, like, you've got to get it done.
You really, really, you can't just be like,
well, I went way shorter and I kind of worked a little harder.
Like, nope, you've got to do it work of worked a little harder. Like, Nope, Nope.
You got to do it work one way or the other.
You got to do work over time or you got to do the work in real hurt.
What are your favorite protocols that you either suggest to friends, clients, or
that you use yourself, um, for improving VO two max Rhonda Patrick was on.
She extolled the virtues of the Norwegian four by four.
I've been doing that. Uh, I thought that was fun, but I am, I'm, I'm non-monogamous, man. I'm a,
I'm a whore for this. I'll take, you give me something that you think sexier. I'll slip into
that negligee and I'll get on it. Yeah, this is a, like I, I apologize for like rolling my eyes.
You said that Norwegian. sure. That's great.
Peter and Rhonda talk about it.
Awesome.
It's just one group of scientists put one protocol out.
There's nothing magical about it.
And the same thing happened with Tabata 20 years ago.
Everyone's like, oh, Tabata, you have to like, OK, fine.
If you want to do the Norwegian, that's just excellent.
I'll do those things.
Honestly, that's the old school run a mile, walk a mile.
That's really all it is for the most part, right? So it is a similar thing of
there's an old protocol called fartlick, right? You can do a fartlick thing. That's
at least 30 years old if not longer. There is the, you know, sprint the
straightaway, walk the corners sort of thing, get a mile of work done.
Those are awesome. You asked which ones I use, I use all of them. I use the ones I just talked about. I will do personally as well as in my coaching practice with our athletes, as well as
with our executive non-athletes. We will use all these. I will do very commonly very short max effort, 20 seconds or so with even up to 60 seconds to rest.
A lot of recovery and in those 20 seconds, like you have to get after it. And we're typically
going to do somewhere between eight to 12 rounds of that work. Right.
I would just from a motivation standpoint, I think there's something about the
30 seconds to one minute sort of mark.
Like if I was just doing 20 seconds, I, it's going to be, I'm going to have to
motivate myself to get back on the horse so many times, eight rounds, 12 rounds.
By round seven, I'm like, Oh God, go fuck yourself.
I don't want, I don't want to do this again.
I have to say from a psychological standpoint, the Norwegian four by four to
me is actually quite enjoyable.
Uh, reason being that there's fewer rounds.
Yes, you've got to hold and yes, you're actually probably not hitting peak as
much, um, is to actually ask a question on that, cause I guess maybe a good few
people on the show that listening to the show will have started doing that.
Cause of what Rhonda and Peter have been talking about. What is the upper bound for the work duration in order to
improve VO2 max beyond which you're no longer hitting the peak that you need to? That presumably
if I said, oh, it's 15 minutes on 15 minutes off. Well, what are we doing here? Like that,
that can't be the case. Four minutes to me seems like it's probably close to the upper bound of a work interval. No?
No, no, much higher, much higher. You can extend that. So let's take a quick step back. What is VO2Max?
So essentially what we're looking at is the max amount of oxygen you can bring in and utilize.
And that has two components, a central and peripheral component.
Peripheral meaning it is your lungs and heart.
Okay, so it is how much air can you bring into your lungs?
How much of that can you get from your lungs to your heart?
And then you've got to pump that out of your heart
into your blood.
That's the central side of it.
The peripheral side of it, you've
got to get that to your working tissue.
Your ability to extract that oxygen from your blood
into your tissue is the AVO2 max side of the equation. So this arterial
venous difference, so it's the difference in oxygen concentration going into your muscle versus out,
which tells you how much your muscles extracted. Okay, a typical way to test vo2 max is on a treadmill
or a bike on a metabolic cart. So you have your face hooked up to a machine and we collect every
you know, milliliter literally of air you breathe in
or out. Those protocols, those tests take somewhere between 8 to 15 minutes to complete.
It is hard to get up to your VO2 max in the time shorter than that.
Such as to say this law of specificity tells us it's called SAD, S-A-I-D, specific adaptation
to impose demand. What that says is the best way to ever improve
a physiological marker is to do exactly the challenge.
So the best way to improve your VO2 max
is to run a VO2 max test or equivalent, period.
That's specificity.
It's not practical.
It's not realistic.
But it is like by the, if we were robots, I'd say that is your number right there.
8 to 12 minutes long of progressively getting harder.
Now, if you're super fit, sometimes that takes longer, 15 to 20.
If you're unfit, that can certainly happen much lower.
But typically, if you're hitting a peak and much lower than that, it's often not a trivial to max
because you're failing for other reasons like muscular endurance, like your quads blew up,
your calves blew up before you could truly get there,
whatever the case may be.
So I'm not indicating you can't get to a VO2 max
in four minutes, you can.
And certainly in the data are clear,
the Norwegian protocol will absolutely work.
Okay, so we have to make sure we're going after the right thing, though.
Right. And so if we understand eight to 12 minutes is eight to 15 is a very typical one.
This is your one mile repeat.
Run a mile. Most people that's going to take eight to 10 minutes
and little as four minutes and maybe higher rest.
Do it again. Do that every single day.
That would be your most specific and direct protocol.
That said, when we understand the physiological limitations,
the way that I will always teach this is.
And the place of adaptation is the place of limitation.
Whatever limited you in your performance is the thing that will adapt to that training.
So if you and I both went out and did the Norwegian protocol,
you and I might adapt differently because what we're failing in those four minutes
might be different. You might be my lungs might have blown up, but your, your legs
might have blown up. Bingo. I always, I've run, I don't know how many know,
know how many fields of access I've run, but I will always ask people afterwards.
Why'd you stop? Right. And I was like, I'm like, why you quit? And it is either my legs, well, couldn't take another step,
or it felt like my heart's going to blow out of my chest, something like that.
OK, I'm asking that because now that's leading my coaching decision.
Like, what is our limitation?
What did we fail?
Was this stroke volume?
Was this heart rate?
Was this position?
Was this fatigue?
Was this technique breakdown?
Maybe this is respiratory muscular failure.
And where is actually driving the problem?
This is where I'm going to go with my coaching then.
And so this could and our clients will see this all the time.
Some of them will get a lot of long duration, lower intensity stuff.
Some of them will get the opposite.
Some of them get a combination of both.
Some of them will get like maybe some
kettlebell intervals and aerobic stuff with weights.
Some of them will get strictly, you know, rowing, walking, stuff like that,
because you can improve your to max in all of those cases if that's the place that's
being limited. You see what I'm saying?
Like that is my like I'd like to try to get more direct answers.
But my honest answer, because I do coach people at this point,
is we do all of that depending on what their actual specific problem is. If you don't know your problem,
my recommendation would be to do some one to twice per week of some lower intensity
movement stuff. I do not care what zone you're in at all. We never test like hardly ever pay attention to that.
I'm sorry, Neegu. I just don't care about those things. Something low, okay, whatever that can be.
Something that's going to be insanely high. And so this is almost always less than two minutes
duration. The problem with four minutes is it's very hard for people to really get work done on
four minutes. Most people who like yourself,
I could, I mean, I know you've been up to the top of the mountain with the rock on your shoulder.
I know you probably have the ability to, to really get after it for those four minutes,
but most people in our experience struggle with those four minutes to do anything besides kind of
just coast. So that's not really doing enough work. So the four minute one is a little bit dangerous
for me because it's just way too easy for people to kind of just cruise enough work. So the four minute one is a little bit dangerous for me because it's just way too easy for
people to kind of just cruise.
Right.
So the hardest hard stuff, I want it truly hard.
Now we're still going to coach people.
If you tell me, hey, literally psychologically, I'm not okay.
Great.
I'm not going to force you to go to the 30 seconds thing because you're like, we'll pick
something different for you.
Another person is like, you know, I just cannot get myself to work that hard for four straight minutes.
Fine. Let's cut it down to 45 seconds.
Unless you repeated 45 seconds, whatever we're going to have to do it.
Right. But that's component to some real true high intensity thing.
Component three then is more of that middle ground.
Give me four to 15 minutes of continuous work by the end.
We're going to peg and we might do one round of that.
That might be it. Like the whole protocol today, which we've used a lot in our professional athletes minutes of continuous work by the end we're going to peg and we might do one round of that.
And that might be it like the whole protocol today which we've used a lot in our professional athletes and our non-athletes. Nice good solid warm-up probably a 10 to 15 up to 20 minute
like good warm-up and we're gonna do one round and that might be a one mile max you're gonna
run a mile as fast as you can. If you can't run, we'll do something in the equivalent of a six to 15 minute max effort by the end, that's it.
And we're probably shutting it down.
Doesn't mean we're doing all three of those in the week,
but over the course of the month,
we're gonna understand like where are we getting an A, B,
and C and how does that fit
into this person's protocol and plan?
That's the most honest answer I can give you
how we actually do it.
That's great. That's a nice protocol.
For the people who want to
integrate VO2 max work into their weekly routine.
I'm imagining most people will be on some form of push,
pull, leg splits and kind of body parts split,
but maybe they're realizing that I should pay attention
to my heart and I do sometimes get out of breath
doing a set of stairs and I look good,
but I probably should do a little bit more fitness stuff. What are
just a couple of protocols, Norwegian four by four, something
that we've spoken about on versus off with rounds and then
frequency per week. What's a couple of common favorites that
you might suggest that people try?
Can you ask that again? I'm not sure. I was tracking exactly
what you're saying like the whole week, what would train
it was so so what would be saying. Like the whole week, what would you call it?
So what would be a couple of different VO two max optimizing workouts that people could
do in terms of the intervals of work and rest?
And then what would the frequency per week be?
Okay.
All right.
Let's just maybe sketch out a week.
If and that'll be like a theoretical week, which would be a little bit easier.
Okay, great. So let's just say you're going to start on Monday.
And I always like to do the hardest thing training-wise
on Mondays.
Just like, get out of the way, right?
So maybe Monday is your day where
we're going to do that one mile test.
OK, great.
It's a 40-minute workout total, because for 20 minutes,
you're going to be laying there in agony.
So we got a lot for 40.
But we're going to do a solid 10-minute warm-up,
very, very good one.
And then we're going to run an eight-minute test.
You're out of there.
It's done.
Pick machine.
Pick the rower.
Pick the assault bike.
Pick whatever you want to do.
If you don't have a mile, fine.
Set it for eight minutes.
Great.
Let's just do something as hard as we can.
And you're not progressing. You're not backing down. You're just pegging it for eight minutes. Great. Let's just do something as hard as we can. And this is, you're not progressing. You're not backing down.
You're just pegging it for eight minutes, right?
You can kind of use minute one or two to kind of ramp up a little bit,
but then you're just going to enter death and see how long you can play in death.
You'd be happy for somebody to use an assault bike, a ROA.
Oh yeah. Yeah. A ski erg, walk, run, swim.
Fuck a ski erg. No one's doing a ski erg. That's insane.
But yeah, the assault bike or the row maybe.
I almost always do it on the assault bike.
It's by far for the top end stuff.
It's, it's by far my favorite.
I think, uh, one of the problems that I encounter, uh, a lot of the time is getting
my heart rate up sufficiently high without blowing my legs out, doing
something.
And the challenge that I often face is if I'm doing it on just
a static bike, my legs are like, if I tried to do it on a bike
erg, my legs are absolutely smoked.
If I tried to do it on a true form, my hamstrings feel like
they're going to fall off.
I just can't get my heart rate up sufficiently high without feeling,
without not feeling that sort of muscular fatigue.
And then also that's all by the way, that's very easy to fix.
Okay.
That's super easy.
One, you're not warming up appropriately.
I promise.
And then you're not progressing into it.
Heart rate wise, you think you do that and that problem will go away almost
immediately.
Okay.
So I'm not going to do that. I'm not think you do that and that problem will go away almost immediately.
Okay. Okay. Am I right?
Uh, five minutes at like a moderate pace. That's a warmup, isn't it? That's not a warmup.
I'm pretty sure that's a warmup.
Not for, not for max effort. It's not.
I mean, that's a laboratory. We use that protocol all the time in lab, like five minutes, a low level aerobic exercise, and then you jump
in and do a max effort. Like, well, why do you think you're thinking about it this way? Do you
think that's the protocol I would use prior to somebody walking into the octagon to fight for a
UC title? This is not for the bike, we see for five minutes. No. And there's a reason.
Okay, I feel seen.
All right.
All right.
Okay.
So I'm actually glad you're doing that up.
The reason I cut you off on that, honestly, is because we see that all the time.
I wanted to put that out there is like, hey, that's actually not normal.
That's common trap door.
And the reason why it matters is you're not actually going to get as much out of
your train because of that, right?
If you, if, if I had you do the same thing with weights, you'd look at me like
I'm like, I'm the same.
I was like, okay, great.
Let's just stretch out a little bit.
And all of a sudden let's just go through a three 15 on, let's just do set of 10
on squats and you'd be like, like you'd be childish, right?
But then when you're going to do that on the salt bike, you're like, yeah, that's
normal, that's totally fine.
No, no, it's a blatant. It's a, it's a like blatant disregard for the difficulty of cardio work. It's like a middle thing. It's a middle finger to cardio stuff. It's
like, ah, no, this is bums and tums. It'll be fine. It's also because you're one minute in on
the bike and you're just like, oh my God, this is terrible. And so you're like, yeah, five minutes
was a lot. It was hard. Yeah, it was.
Yeah.
Okay.
So they won day one, hardest one.
Got our work done.
Okay.
We're out of there.
Tuesday.
Now we're going to build back in our lower intensity, easier thing.
Right?
So maybe you're going for your hike.
You're going to go rock.
You're going to go do whatever you want to do.
Um, I will typically personally, uh personally do like a 30 minute station of
three nasal breathing only. What I mean by that is 10 minutes on a bike, 10 minutes on a treadmill,
10 minutes on a rower, something like that, right? Because I don't want to sit in a row for 30
minutes. I can't, I actually can't handle any of those. Something's gonna hurt on me afterwards
for the most part. So I'll do whatever. I might jump rope.
I might do all kinds of stuff like that.
With our athletes, we will actually even do shorter.
So we'll do oftentimes like five minute things.
We'll set up five to seven stations.
It might be bench press at 50% of your 100 max.
It might be push ups.
It might be an active walking lunge sort of
thing, five minutes, and it's going to be nasal only to keep
things down. I don't want any muscular endurance, we're not
sweating that hard. But we're moving in a lot of different
ways, we'll do Turkish get ups, or more athletic movements so
that we're not just like lifting weights up and down sort of the
whole time. So we try to move and your joints honestly tend to
feel better. Afterwards, you kind of finish that and you have
more energy. Or you can trust that the Monday
you finish that you have less energy.
You're in the hole today.
You're actually feel like, man, I should go to work right now.
Like I feel locked in.
I feel pretty good.
That can be 20 to 40 minutes.
It can be longer.
If you really think go two hours, I don't really care, but I would say
under 20 is, is just kind of moving.
It's not really going to be enough to stimulate
what we're looking for here.
So we would plug that in.
Wednesday is probably where we're going to incorporate.
You mentioned lifting, so there's
going to be some lifting in there.
Whatever we're doing, if you're trying to get stronger,
do your strength training stuff.
If you're trying to simply improve VO2 max,
then we might do some corrective exercises here.
My corrective, I mean, this could be overhead press,
this could be heavy rows, this could be big hip thrusts
or leg press, whatever we're doing to feel strong,
feel joints, whatever that thing is we're trying to do.
We're not going to go to max effort here,
but we're not just warming up either.
We're going to get work done, right?
Because we're going to make sure that muscular endurance-wise,
that's not causing our problems.
And so this would look more like somewhat of a bodybuilder
workout, though it's not single joint.
It's not joint isolation stuff.
It's typically more compound things.
And it's still going to be, we'll call it that 8 to 15 rep
range of your big things, probably two to three sets.
With that first set being, you know, six, seven RPE, six out of 10. That can set maybe a little
bit higher, but you're not going to nine at all. Right. So we're gonna get some work done there.
You're gonna leave the gym filling a pump, you're gonna be sweating, but you're not going to be
destroyed either. And then if you have a few isolation exercises for a lagging body part or a body part,
you specifically want to emphasize, especially if it's upper body, then like trash it.
I don't care. Like, you know, just zero or zero or ER, just just get it after.
Who cares, right? Try to push down so you're dead. Like, go ahead. Right. All good.
So that would be probably Wednesday. If you want
to also add in additional day two, so you want to do another thing, but this is what I would
encourage walking. So on this day, we should have done a 10 minute, 15 minute walk in the morning,
another 10, 15 minute one in the afternoon, really, really low level stuff. If you can do three in a
day, great, but we're going to get stuff in. Okay. Now that leads us to Thursday. So
Thursday is probably when we're going to come back and it's
going to look closer to Monday, or it's going to be our shorter
higher one, but we're not going to go all the way up to that
ceiling. It's it's very difficult for people to go to
max heart rate more than twice per week, the average person.
Pro athletes. Yeah, every day, right. Or close. But most people,
especially if you're in a job that is sympathetically driven or any life, I should say,
not even a job. If, if there's just a lot of processing, sympathetically, you walk out of that
thing and you always redline yourself all day and you read it, you're just letting them something,
Jim, um, we end up, people end up spending a lot of money to unwind that problem.
Because it gets to a bad spot pretty fast.
So, but we're gonna work here.
And this would be more of like this in the day
for no region, this is four fours.
You don't have to actually get all the way to the top end
here, but you're gonna put in good, consistent, hard work.
We're gonna get there.
If you wanna do a slightly different protocol, that's fine.
We're going to get there. If you want to do a slightly different protocol, that's fine. But this could be a call it 85% day. And so if you wanted to do 30 on 30 off, you're moving. But this is not like motivational right? Or distance of sliding down. So call this, just call this four by four day,
if you want to make life easier and we're good there.
Now into Friday, and by the way,
any of these days could have been a pure off day,
if you wanted, of course, or needed to travel day,
whatever the case is.
Friday, we're gonna go back into Tuesday, right?
So now when our longer duration thing,
probably picking up the intensity just a little bit
on those 30 minutes.
Still nasal breathing, but trying
to get some real work done.
And then Saturday, we're going back into movement.
So this is we're lifting again, and we're basic movement.
And that leaves a Sunday for any additional stuff you want to do.
If you want to slide into the lift-in,
you want to slide more recovery stuff in,
you want to slide other stuff in.
Honest reality is that's a buffer day.
Cause probably something happened in those six days where you didn't get your training in.
And so now you can kind of slide things back one day and make sure you get six good training days done out of seven.
One of the things that you mentioned there was motivation to do this.
I would imagine that for a lot of people, one of the biggest hurdles to doing top-end
VO2 max work is fear of the difficulty.
It's the trepidation that you have as you walk into the gym, knowing if I'm going to
do this properly, it's really going to hurt and that means my heart rate is going to be
high and that's kind of scary and I get anxious thinking about that. And that sucks from a motivation, sustaining, um, the will to train over
time, intra session or intra workout VO two max motivation, what have you come
to learn as leavers and ways that people can kind of really sink in?
Yeah, that's a really great question because you have people that go into one
of two big camps on this one.
Camp one is we'll call this CrossFit camp, which is if I'm not throwing up
there in the workout, it didn't count.
Right.
And it's not, it's not, I'm not taking a shot at all, but these are people that
do not have the problem you just described.
This is actually the opposite.
I feel like I didn't do anything.
If I don't peg myself all the way to the end every day
That that's a problem. And then you have the other group, which is more like you described which is going hey
I just worked all these hours. I had this going on and like now my whole workout hook
No, like I won't work out today. I can get it done, but I can't do that
There's this no it that happens to me all the time
But I can't do that. There's this noise that happens to me all the time
That's 27 jobs and kid like that. Sometimes I'm just like, oh god, I have 30 minutes. I can get a workout But that's not gonna happen and I just know right? All right, great
So I personally and the way we often coach is
I this is why I don't like having set workouts on set days of the week
Example I gave you was like Monday is the hard day. I never do that. I just have the workouts in order
and I just do the next one in order regardless, right? And so if something came up on Monday
and I couldn't train, I'm not doing Tuesday's work on a Tuesday. I'm doing Monday's workout.
So there are no Monday workouts. It is just, is the order we do them in and I try to
Get 20 in and 30 days
Sometimes that's seven in a row. Sometimes that's you know, one one hot sometimes it's 14 days in a row because I got a break and
Line up that way. I never take a day off unless I'm forced to
Because my schedule forces me to do it often enough. Anyways, it works out
Right. So that's how I end up doing it
That said this gives you the ability to win that flight got delayed and you land it in and the other thing happened your kid
was sick all night and you're like yes today is supposed to be that max effort one mile not doing
it today I'm just going to slide in that lower intensity one. And there's a game you're going to
play here right because if you do that often enough you end up just in a 30 minute kind of easy one every day when you didn't have to write.
At the same time, there's also I'd rather people do that than choose nothing.
Right. If the option is OK, then I don't have time to do that perfect workout at that intensity.
And therefore, Dr. Andy said if I don't do it at all the way up to max, it doesn't do any benefit. So therefore, I'm just not going to do it. That's not the case. Still working at 8% still has benefit, or can a 40% still has benefit over 0%. There is never a case in which exercise is doing nothing. That does not happen. It's not the optimal benefit potentially, but it's
never zero. And so I always want to make people, especially if people that are like struggling,
if exercise is new to them, if it's just even not new, but it's not a huge passion, like
it is ours. I want I still want to win. I want to win as many times as we can. And if
we see it sliding into that spot
where it's like, all right, it's been three weeks, we haven't done anything hard. Then it's time to
reassess what we're doing. But often is the case, as you know, this, once you get in there and get
moving, you're like, all right, I can do this. And then you end up going and doing the hard thing
anyways. But if you never show up in the gym, that answer is going to be zero every time.
So I just, I just don't want people not training is the
primary thing I'm worried about.
Yeah.
This is one of the, I guess.
View to max training is the cardio equivalent of one RMS and well, like
one R M days are scary and you know, it's the one, it's the one that you're
tempted to miss the, the hurdle to doing it is like embedded
in the difficulty and the difficulty is precisely
the signal for the outcome that you're trying to get.
So it's this sort of very vicious cycle
of the thing that you want to do being the thing
that discourages you from doing the thing.
So yeah, I mean, I'm speaking to myself here
as someone who's trying to improve my cardiovascular fitness
after many
years of just lifting heavy things.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, we're the same here, friend.
You know, that's us.
I see.
One thing I will often describe is think about the month.
All right.
So I got this from a friend of mine, Kenny Kane, many years ago, actually started one
of the first CrossFit gyms, Top 10 or something like that,
CrossFit, I like for many, many years.
And he realized this problem of,
hey, you can't just go redline every single day.
And so he set up a structure.
We said 70% of our training,
however many trains that is,
70% of them are going to be practice.
What he means by that is you're still gonna work.
You're still gonna get sweaty.
It's gonna be hard.
But the goal is to get better at something, get better at technique,
get better at holding your rib cage.
When you get tired, you're getting better at something,
much like if you were to go to play sports and you go to practice every day.
You're not thinking you're trying to win that practice.
You're you're potentially doing a drill where someone's holding your arm behind
you or there's six basketball players against your you're setting odds against you on
purpose, you know you're not going to win, but you're trying to specifically get
better at something. 70% of a basketball practice or whatever is
practice related, right?
Great. That leaves you then 20% or so of the time
where we're going to practice competing.
OK, so we're going to scrimmage. We're going to actually try to get the best score possible.
So here, here's our 20 minute test, Chris. Let's see how can you get the highest amount of mileage,
whatever the thing is we can be right. We're going to compete and this is we're going to pace
ourselves. We're not going to go as hard as we can. We're going to try to win, right? We're going to
try to beat the person, the leaderboard, whatever the case may be, right? We're going to change our technique and our position. We want to
get the highest score on the bench, right? In terms of a weight up there, that's 20%.
That leaves us 10% of the time where we're going to touch death, right? We're going to
touch this, which means we might do that same 20 minute workout. And I want you sprinting
step number one. I know you're going to blow up in three minutes. I know the point is you're going to get a worse score. You will do way better if you
pace yourself, but I don't want a good score here. I want this to, I want this to be how,
how horrible can you feel? Can you put the rock? I saw your, your Bo rack hat and I just
got back from cam. So I'm using this analogy, but oh wow. He made you do the thing.
Yeah. I begged him. I'm like, come on, dude.
We had to reschedule. He's like, oh, we'll just skip it.
I'm like, no, no, like I will come back up later.
We are going up that mountain.
Yeah. Right.
Like we're going to put the 70 pound rock on your shoulder and we're going to sprint.
And yeah, that means we're going to triple our time.
It's going to take us two and a half hours.
But this is today's point, right?
That's 10%.
And so mentally, if the athlete and the client knows that, hey, I just need you to get there
mentally 10% of the time, think of the average person working out four times per week.
Okay, over the months, that's 16 workouts.
10% means twice, twice a month. Can you give me that? Can you give me that max one mile
twice this month? I'm not feeling this week, not feeling today. This okay, cool, cool,
cool. 70% is still going to be practice 70 70% still going to be or 20% still going to
be compete. We're going to pace twice though. So between once and twice, I need you to get
there. And now we have that like, okay, you have the breathing room, but then we also have
a context of going at, I don't know the last time I really went, who knows?
Cause we have a set schedule.
Yeah.
That's nice.
I like, uh, I was talking to Mike Israel about fat loss a couple of weeks ago and he was
saying that he treats his step count across the week the same way as he treats his calorie intake across the week, that if he has one day
where he only hits 5k, then tomorrow he maybe tries to do 13 and the day
after that he tries to do 13 and then he's like, Oh no, we're back.
We're back to where we're supposed to be.
And, um, yeah, I like the idea of not being so dogmatic with a week, which
is just an arbitrary measure in any case,
but taking a slightly broader window.
And then within that, it allows you to kind of play around
with things a bit more.
Yeah, this is actually a really important thing.
I know you've had Mike on, I don't even probably know.
I feel like I see you guys posting clips from your show
three times a week for the last year and a half.
So he must have been on your show. 20 times. He is, he is, um, my biggest fan.
Uh, I believe that I do believe that.
Yeah.
And he, yeah.
Do you even return his calls or texts anymore?
I bet you never, I haven't, I haven't spoken to him in months, actually, not directly.
Yeah.
I bet if we looked at your phone, there's probably three or 400
unanswered messages from him to you.
It's the picture messages that are really concerning.
That's really what we should be worried about.
But
very much understood.
Uh, the point being, this is the, one of the things that separates people that
are either plateauing or struggling to get results with training, despite working
hard, like, man, I'm really getting after it.
I am whether it's the nutrition side of the training side.
Are you just worried about one workout? Are you just worried about one week and your entire programming thinking is just on a 70 window?
These are the kind of problems you run into right? We have to step back and look at what's the month look like?
What's the two months or three months at minimum?
And now if we're playing that kind of a game, if you're playing your step count per month game, that's way more effective than playing just today. And now you
have to put the work in today to eventually get there, I think in the 30 days, but really taking
a big picture back and going, okay, great this week, how did that layer on the last week and the
week ahead of that? And then what's this month look like? We actually do it, we program it by quarter. So what's quarter Q1, Q2, Q3 with all of our stuff with everybody? Or in season, off season,
post fight, like whatever the case is from the different athletes. And that's, that's really how
you don't make missteps like that and how you can make small things that feel like nothing.
Like one extra 10 minute walk today, all of a sudden make big things or, Hey, you know, it's okay to back off
right now because we got this and we got this or whatever. This becomes huge for our boxers and
fighters because it's just like, they feel like they have to fight hard every day. And then we
can show them, no, though, this is what we're going to get done in the next 60 days. It's like, Oh,
there's sense of relief there because like, I know we'll get after it when we need to get after it,
but I don't have to just randomly take days off and I feel like death.
Who are some of the fighters that you work with that people might know?
Can you talk about them?
Yeah.
I mean, I've worked with plenty of, um, different fighters, boxers, UFC fighters.
Right now I still currently work a lot with Brian Ortega.
So I've worked with him for many years Tatiana Suarez for many years
but even Matt Brown recently who just recently retired. Matt should be in the Hall of Fame
any day hopefully. I think he has the most wins in UFC history or most fights most knockouts as
well. So those folks Mike Lee fought for World Championship of Boxing. I just actually started
working with Jordan Panthen who's a really high level boxer.
So we've been around a ton of them, lots of wrestlers, uh, much of things.
So a whole number of them, those are the ones that like I'm coaching right now.
What else is there to say about VO2 max, any other common assumptions, errors
that people make any unclosed loops that you think that you need to dial in?
One thing, part of the reason I pushed back so hard on the
protocol thing is because I really wanted people to not see
those as limitations.
And what I mean by that is thinking, Oh, because I didn't do
the four by four perfectly.
Therefore I can't train or I'm not going to get better. And I've made that before, but I like being or that point earlier, but I like being very direct in that you have
unlimited options with the two max.
It is really equivalent, in my opinion, to bodybuilding training, where I almost call it idiot proof
in the sense that the training is hard for sure.
And the programming at the highest levels gets complicated. But at the entry point, midpoint,
moderate point, if there's any part of a protocol you're heard on a program that you feel like you
can't do, oh, I'd love to do that. But I, my knee, I'd love to do that, but I can't, I don't have
access to you're okay. You're totally fine. You can still get whatever needs to do that, but I can't, I don't have access to, you're okay. You're totally fine.
You can still get whatever it needs to be done regardless of the exercise equipment
you have, regardless of the time limitations you have, regardless of the weather outside,
there are still lots of options at work.
So if you get inspired by Rhonda doing her awesome stuff or peer or whatever, and you
hear the exact protocol and you go, I can't do that.
Therefore it's not going to work.
I want to make sure you know that that is not the case.
You can modify these things in a ton of ways and still get all of the benefits, if not more.
What else or what do you wish that more people knew about cardiovascular fitness?
It seems to me that with in part of this VO2 max revolution that we're seeing at the moment,
massive proliferation of heart disease, big concerns that people have over protecting
their heart over the long term. What do you wish that more people knew about cardiovascular fitness?
You would be stunned how little effort it takes to see benefit. Like really quite stunned how little exercise has to happen
for you to see big results, especially if you are in those bottom 20 or 25% of fitness. So if you are
really in a bad spot, it takes nothing as little I'm talking about as 20 seconds. So there's a
handful of studies.
Out of Canada that have been done on things like exercise snacks.
So these are literally 20 second bursts, one to three times per day
in office related settings. So imagine you're in your suit and you're tying all that.
You get it from your desk, you sprint 20 seconds up a step
and you go right back to work.
Those have been shown in multiple studies from multiple labs to enhance VO2 max.
Now it's not going to do it if you're a highly trained athlete.
I'm not saying, oh, don't do any other workouts.
All you have to do is this 20 second sprint once.
What I'm going all the way down to the bottom is that's how little
your stimulus you need for your body to actually pay attention.
Now, the benefits of you to Max to a protocol like that are small.
You're talking a few percentage points.
But look at the power of that, right? It can certainly maintain where you're at.
And so if you are in a situation where.
Whatever you can't have access, can't afford a gym membership or who.
Now, I told Andrew, he remembered about this a couple of years ago and still this day,
like I'll see him in the studio, just like sprinting on the studio full get up.
That's him running away from his demons.
He's not doing VO2 max work.
Of course.
Yeah.
Oh, running away from his cell phone or whatever else.
Yeah.
So yeah, these things can really, really help. So if you, if you just do the bare minimum,
that will matter. And it will matter for about as many physiological variables as one can think.
Sure, your longevity, sure, your heart disease. Yes, of course. But blood sugar regulation,
energy throughout the day. In fact in the studies
I'm mentioning not only they look at VO2 max, but they also looked at executive function decision-making and word recall all that improved
So, I mean you really can't enhance your life in whatever metric matters to you some people like you and I to be honest
Like death related stuff doesn't do much for me like alright. all right, I'm young, I'm pretty I'm OK.
But then improving my word recall by 20%.
That's fantastic.
Make better decisions.
I don't have to redo my work.
That would be nice.
There's data on money.
People make more money like you.
No, for sure.
Like you see those with sleep all the time, too.
I think the number with sleep is actually like in America.
Most recent estimate was poor sleep is causes a $400 billion
loss in America alone.
On average people lose something like six working days because of slightly
not, not like massive bans have just slightly more sleep causes a total
throughout the year of about six equivalent working day.
And we actually have a client. Is that productivity loss in productivity errors, bad sleep, just slightly worse sleep causes a total throughout the year of about six equivalent working day. And we actually have a client.
Is that productivity loss in productivity, errors, car crashes, full works?
All of it got sick more.
Yeah.
This, you know, kind of checked out that 10 minutes early today and went home
because I was a little tired today.
It was the redid my work faster.
All those things.
We have a client in my, uh, in my sleep company who is a financial trader and he,
he tracks, we have his sleep data track for a long time with his financial trades.
And that is a very statistically significant correlation.
So he keeps, he keeps re-upping.
He keeps repaying cause he's like, no matter what I pay you guys, I make more money.
Just like sleeping better.
We're like, great.
So what's your, what's your sleep company?
It's called Absolute Rest. Okay. Um, is that sleep coaching? Is that a product? What is it?
It's both of it. So at the height, we have two things, actually one of them, we just released
like a month ago as more consumer grade version. But for the first handful of years where it started is this elite program where we come in
and we can actually build full sleep labs
in people's houses.
So you can get a full clinical grade,
FDA approved sleep study done every single night
in your house or take it with you,
take it wherever you want.
So we have full, it's all wireless too.
Like you've ever seen people in the sleep clinics and have the wires like all over, like all that stuff's gone, you know, needing
those things. So we can run all that from your house. But we, in addition to that, now we've
got the highest fidelity understanding of how you sleep, right? We're not missing data and making
assumptions. And because of that, we now want to go, why are you sleeping that way? And so we're
not just stopping and being like, well, your sleep's shitty. And people are that, we now want to go, why are you sleeping that way? And so we're not just stopping and being like,
well, your sleep's shitty.
And people are like, great, I got a sleep study done.
They told me how that, like, that didn't help at all.
Why are you sleeping that way?
Well, number one, then we're going to start off
by looking at your environment.
So we have a full environmental scanner
that sits next to your bed,
and it's scanning your room at all times
for CO2 concentrations, humidity, particulates, volatile organics, dander, mold, pollen,
allergens, all those things are being continuously scanned
in your room to make sure it's not environmentally related.
We're doing blood work specific to sleep-related physiology.
We have psychological evaluation.
One of our co-founders is a Harvard psychiatrist of sleep.
And then we have any pathology screened, of course.
And so we have an understanding of exactly why you're sleeping.
It's all positionally done too.
So if the problem was on your left side or right side
or whatever that thing is happening.
So all those data come back to our scientists
who are the most published scientists in the world in sleep,
folks that handle the astronauts in the space station and all that.
They go over all those data, give you your results back there,
and then put you on a several-month-long coaching program
where you can check in and see.
And we fix sleep very successfully because of that.
So we have been doing that for a very long time.
And then just about a month ago, we released what's called Sleep Lens,
which is a fingertip version of, of our
sleep program. And so now we can do this at about a 10th of the
price. And so we can run a full FDA approved equivalent to being
in a sleep lab from your fingertip. It's not a wearable
side of tracker. You're gonna like check your sleep score. You
we can medically diagnose sleep disorders on this thing. And
we can look at hundreds of measures per second, as opposed to like one measure per five minutes.
Wow. So sleep is, you know, between VO two max, uh, I think it's 11 episode 1109 or 1159
was a Matthew Walker on Rogan. And that was the day that I got red-pilled about my sleep because I'd
been a club, a good sleeper.
Not that I'm not a good sleeper.
I was, I was a club promoter for so long and baked into my weekly routine from
the age of 18 until the age of 32 or 33 when COVID came along was I was awake until at least three or four
in the morning running a nightclub.
And the beautiful thing about being a club promoter is that the very final task you have
to do is the most cognitively demanding one.
So you have to count the till, make sure that all of the money is where you say it is, enter
into a spreadsheet.
So you're looking at a beautiful bright screen for a little while, drive home, put it in
the, or drive to the office, put it in the safe, make sure that everything's
okay and then within 20 minutes go, right, okay, brain, I know that you just did all
that mental arithmetic, best of luck getting yourself to sleep.
And I did that and that was just life.
That was life for me.
You know, those are the times when we'd be driving, we ran events in Manchester, which
is about two and a half hours from where we were based.
And I would do that drive every other week for half a decade.
Uh, and I'd get back at, I get back at 5 AM.
There was some times where I'd hit rush hour, leaving New
Castle, going to Manchester at 5 PM.
And then I would hit rush hour getting back home, uh, the next day,
which felt particularly unfair.
But yeah, I, um, I think that that was a big turning point for me.
I don't think that I'd really considered sleep.
It sounds so stupid in retrospect.
It makes me sound like a total idiot, but I just hadn't considered how important
sleep was for cognition, for performance, for mood, all of this stuff.
And, um, I think, yeah, between VO2 max and sleep, that's been probably two of
the biggest red pill changes that I've seen in terms of prioritization over the last five years.
Yeah.
I mean, we coach.
They made big baseball players.
I coach NBA players.
I coach Travis Barker, the drummer for blink 182.
I was just with Travis last weekend.
So we had a five K in the morning.
So, uh, let's see, we were probably there at 7 AM getting warmed up
and all that stuff.
Travis ran 20, just under 22 minutes per 5K.
It's pretty good, right?
And then-
Better than me.
We were in a Staples Center, or in Kiev for whatever,
SoFi Stadium in front of 70,000 people until.
I don't know, I left at midnight, I think something like that.
And then who knows when he got home, got to sleep and all that. Right.
So I'm dealing with he's on tour right now.
He's in Salt Lake today.
Like, OK, playing for the 70,000 people, be a fucking drummer
and for the 70,000 people on the stage and then go to bed.
Good luck. Right?
Like absolutely good luck.
And he is a maniac with his health.
He's, he's dialed.
He runs every day.
He's up super early, but it's the same problem.
It's like, by the time we get off stage, you get wound down all that stuff.
It's five in the morning.
Like who knows what to do, right?
Not cause he's out partying, but just because again, I literally am on stage as
a rock star until
midnight and they're like, now try to come down and see, you know, okay. So we deal with
those problems really routinely as well as our, our executives that are running companies,
different time zones working in, you know, all those things. It's like we have to land
and golfers too with live now, man, I coach John Rom and he's in Liv now. So he's all over the world. Time change.
Right. So we do we deal with this problem a lot. And funny enough, man, we're having this, I don't know when this
show is gonna come out. But just yesterday, episode five of my podcast came out all on sleep enhancement. And so one
of the things you will see really consistently is, yeah, I mean, Matthew
Walker has done such an amazing job helping people understand that if you don't sleep well,
everything in your health goes down. But there's an entirely different side of the equation,
which is the performance enhancing ability to go from okay sleep to good sleep. There's a whole
bunch of studies that have been done on sleep banking and sleep extension.
So these are people that are already sleeping OK,
and they go from good to what I call great sleep.
And you see market and massive improvements in everything
from reaction time to three-point free throw
shooting accuracy in Division I basketball players,
professional tennis players having 20% reduction
in cortisol, serving accuracy improving, body composition, VO2 max, cyclists, rugby players.
There's lots and lots of data going from I sleep seven, seven and a half hours to I sleep
better than that.
It's not just duration.
I'm just giving a number.
And then look what happens to physiology. There's probably 30 plus studies out of Walter
Reed that have been done on looking at things like sleep banking and sleep extension prior
to sleep that department. So you know, you're going, this is oftentimes the military, but
this is you're going to do training camp. You're going to do some situation in which
Say you're gonna be traveling internationally in meetings and speaking events and you're gonna be in a do a seminar
Okay, great. We know that because that cognitive function physical performance is going to go down
But if you can get a head of sleep before you go the drop will be attenuated
So you'll have much less of a reduction in your performance when you know the
shit's going to hit the fan one way or the other.
Right.
So before season, before going back out on tour, we're taking a ton of advantage
of these things in between sessions.
So there is a lot you can do.
And as much as VO2X is cool, nothing has a more ubiquitous benefit to every
aspect of anything you care about your body.
Then sleep well.
Assume that most of the people listening have been red-pilled on
most of Matthew Walker's stuff that look, I know that I should be aiming to get eight hours a night. I know that eight hours of sleep is not derived from eight hours in bed because
sleep efficiency is a thing
that being consistent, cool, dark room, et cetera, et cetera.
You mentioned there's this entire other world of enhancement.
What are what are the big moves there that most people don't know about?
Great.
I love the way you say that, because I feel like every time sleep comes up,
people tune out because they're like, yes, cool, dark, quiet.
And that's like all true.
Correct. What else can we do?
OK, well, let's go backwards.
Why don't people sleep well to begin with?
All right. That's actually causing most of your problem.
So we're going to look at this in different parts.
Sleep duration is one thing, honestly.
It's the variable we probably pay the least amount of attention to.
Really? Yeah.
Miss, it's fine.
But like either people sleep, you know, five hours. And it's like, Hey, do you want to spend 10 grand? Because I can also just tell you go, it's like you have to sleep more. Like, like, I could do that. But here's a problem. What's more interesting is the like, I'm in bed for eight hours. Here's the problem starts right here falling Falling asleep problems. I get up a lot.
It is often things that are benign.
There are people think benign that are not.
Oh, I sleep.
I snore a ton.
Oh, really interesting.
That's not normal.
Doesn't necessarily mean you have a sleep disorder,
but it's very generally likely that something bad is happening.
Oh, OK.
I wake up two or three times to go pee in the night. Oh, that's not normal either. Like, should not is happening. Oh, okay. I wake up two or three times to go pee in the night.
Oh, that's not normal either. Like, should not be happening. That number should be basically
zero. Right? That that is I'm just getting old. Nope. Nope. Nope. Nope. Those are not
answers either. Shouldn't be happening. We see a lot of Oh, I feel terrible all day.
Energy is low. libido is low. Focus is low. Brain fog is low. I think I have COVID related
long COVID something like okay, all possible. Right? Sure. How's your sleep? I sleep pretty well. Really. Take a look at it.
This happened actually with one of our professional athletes used a wearable, we'll say,
and had like a 90 plus percent score on the wearable consistently. We run them through stuff,
immediately clinically diagnosable sleep disorder.
Like this is not, it's just not a test.
Um, we get this. Well, what was the sleep disorder that was missed so obviously by the wearable?
Well, wearables can't diagnose any sleep disorders.
Of course.
But I would, I would have, I would have guessed that if you have a disorder, it
would show up somehow in some of those markers.
No, it won't because the vast majority of cheap consumer wearables are going
to be looking at so low resolution that any it's an X-ray.
So imagine you fell off the mountain today as you're running and your knee is
destroyed, you got hella back down and they took you down there and then like,
Oh man, his knee is torn up and it will take an X-ray.
And then arch comes back and goes, no broken bones.
You're fine. Like, well, okay. But your MCL is torn up and it will take an x-ray. Then arch comes back goes no broken bones. You're fine.
Like, well, okay, but your MCL is torn.
ACL is torn. It's knee caps is located.
It's an x-ray. It can only look at a few things.
And it's looking at it at very, very low resolution.
Typically, wearables are going to take a measurement once every five minutes.
So if you had any event that happened not within that very small time window, it all gets missed.
That's something I remember I had a fuck who's elite HRV. Joel Jamieson. Oh, yeah, with Morpheus.
Yes. I remember speaking to him and he was telling me about how HRV when you do it in
those bracket windows like that, if you're laid on your
front versus if you're laid on your side, if you're at a particular stage of sleep
and you can kind of do this odd dance routine during sleep that gives a really skewed set
of data, which I found particularly interesting.
All right.
So I know that I'm branching off, but I promise I'll bring you back.
What are the metrics that you guys, when you do your sleep studies are
looking at, which are being missed?
What are the things that pick up these sleep disorders?
Okay.
So you want to think about this this way.
When most people are, this is cool.
Having fun.
Um, when most people think about sleep, right?
We're thinking about duration and their sleep score
and your wearables and I can go on,
but I think you get the point that those are not a good way.
One of the main reasons why is what people tend to be concerned
about is how long did I sleep and how much time did I spend
in various stages, deep, REM, things like that.
Bro, all that out of the way, it's completely garbage.
Not only from like a technology perspective, but what I simply mean is the construct, the
idea of sleep stages is almost nonsensical for everybody. The amount of time you spend
in a sleep stage, I'm not going to say is totally irrelevant, but it's way less important
than most people think. Because of a handful of things. Your brain is going to engineer what we call the architect.
So the architecture of your sleep
based upon the demands of what it needs.
And so you are not going through the same physical or cognitive
demands every single day.
Thus, you don't need the same sleep staging every single day.
When your brain is doing something with your sleep
staging, it's doing it for a reason.
And then you're going in there and listening to Andrew Huberman and taking a
supplement to hack that sleep stage. And now you're going against what your brain
is trying to do. You're causing problems.
The sleep staging is not accurately depicted. They also change the record.
It's like they are change arbitrarily. Uh, this is now deep sleep.
This is now not deep sleep. So we see people consistently
over time like, Oh my god, my deep sleep is gone way down. What? What do you mean? Oh, no, no, no.
One and algorithm could have been just changed in the background. Now like your two years of data
is gone and that happens all the time. But I mean, even medically, the medical side of the equation
can change their definition of these things and has happened many times.
So we don't also even know at all how much sleep staging you should be in for any given
sort of purpose.
It would be the equivalent of saying you should do this exact type of training every single
day the rest of your life.
Why?
Well, because that's the average type of training the average person does.
Well that's fucking unhelpful.
That's about as unhelpful as it could possibly get.
And so that's not going to provide you any insight into what's going on.
More importantly, then the time you spend.
Let's just throw all that away.
Let's say you could accurately measure your sleep stages.
It's not the time you spend in those stages.
It's the depth in those stages that matter.
I don't know where of any tracker or wearable that can actually measure any of that. And
so if you and I both spent an hour in deep sleep, whatever that means, but your amplitude
within that is five times higher than mine, you're going to have much more restorative
sleep than I. And this is your classic, my scores are okay. I'm in the right time, but
I'm still feeling lethargic.
I'm still feeling whatever other thing we're issuing.
And we have seen this a ton from TRT clinics.
So people that have gone on testosterone, because energy is low, you fill in the blanks
there.
It's fine.
Like not against that at all.
When we come back, we're like, why did you think you needed testosterone?
When we take a look at your sleep, you're? Like if you're tired, the first place we
should look asleep. This is pretty obvious, right? Like
what's energy intake look like food, nutrition, and what's
sleep look like? Those are the that's our mountain, right? We
don't need to think we're in some weird spot. And so again,
testosterone is fine. That's don't want to take us off
track. That was not the point. But the point is going like,
Whoa, we have to really pay attention to how sleep
actually works.
So when I say like duration, like it is what it is.
I am more looking at things like what is the amplitude within these sleep
stages? So what's the quality of that?
What's the consistency of your sleep wake cycles and rhythms?
What is the actual next day feelings?
What's your symptomology, right?
How's that actually doing?
And we're gonna measure that cognitively.
So I'm not just gonna like ask you, how do you feel?
We're gonna measure cognitive speed, processing speed,
reaction time, things like that.
I was gonna say, what are the tests that you do for that?
Now we have, we don't do anything without testing
for the most part.
Like we're gonna track metrics on on this is technology and performance.
This is our game, right?
So we're not messing around with any of that stuff.
So we're going to test all of those.
We're going to look at things like respiratory rate.
We're going to look at HRV.
And now, since we do this as a tie variability, I can differentiate
and tell you, oh, this was a problem of you're unfit. Right. So I can give you that example. Maybe I, okay, I can, we can very easily
triangulate and say, all right, you're resting. And I take a look at you. And I say, All right,
symptomology is there. We're not feeling refreshed. We think something's going on. Obviously. All
right. Awesome. Now we look and you don't have any clinical insomnia. We're not having these obvious signs of that.
But just because you don't have clinical apnea or whatever
doesn't mean you don't have subclinical.
So maybe we see a little bit of subclinical apnea.
OK, well, you're kind of a bigger guy.
Body mass tends to go up.
That tends to start happening.
All right, now why are you having that apnea?
Interesting. Well, apnea could
be done for, could be anatomical. So we're going to actually run a scan of your face and we're
going to be able to see, is there any anatomical things going on? It's a naval cavity thing.
It could be a tongue later issue. And so there are tongue, believe it or not, there are tongue
strengthening exercises we can do that'll stop your tongue from flopping back in your neck.
Flaccid tongue. I knew I had a flaccid tongue.
I mean, I didn't want to say it,
but if it never gets used,
It's pretty obvious, man.
It's pretty obvious.
Right?
So we just need to firm you up a little bit.
Is, you know.
Turgid, nice turgid tongue.
Turgid tongue.
It could be as simple as that, right?
It could be as simple as position. So maybe all of your happiness are happening
when you're laying on your right shoulder.
Now all we have to do is teach you to stop laying
on your right shoulder and all of a sudden
your sleep changes instantaneously.
And we've had this, I can't even count how many times
things like that have happened.
It could also be things like environmental.
So one of the things I've talked about a lot in the past
is the fact that when you take a breath in, you inhale oxygen.
You take a breath out, you exhale CO2.
Okay, now in a normal situation, that's fine.
As you're sleeping, you're not exhaling very hard.
So that breath, if you're watching the video here, is coming just kind of like seeping out of your mouth.
That stays right in front of your face and forms what's called a CO2 cloud.
And you take your next breath and you re-reathe back in some of that CO2.
Most people, that's not a big deal.
However, if you're highly sensitive to CO2
or if the CO2 concentrations in your room start getting really high.
Why? Because all your doors and windows are shut,
because you have a sleeping partner, because you have an animal in there as well.
Your kid is in there, too.
More bodies in a room, poor ventilation.
When that number crosses 900 parts per million, you will see consistent
research showing poor sleep onset, wakeful events, next day restfulness,
next day concentration, next day cognitive function, all when CO2
levels start to rise above 900.
So it could be simply that. It has nothing to do with anything else going on besides the fact that all when CO2 levels start to rise above 900.
So it could be simply that. It has nothing to do with anything else going on
besides the fact that you're choking yourself on CO2.
CO2 levels rise in your body.
That's one of your primary levers that kicks you
from autonomic to parasympathetic nervous system.
This is fight or flight to rest and digest.
You've been taught me about this test that they do
where they get people to take a single
breath in from some mask that's got a really high concentration of carbon dioxide and it's
able to reliably bring on a panic attack.
A single breath is able to reliably.
There's been many, many decades of research in psychiatry that uses CO2 to induce panic.
That's like one of the most standard models for anxiety and panic disorder
research is inhaling co2. Wow. Yeah, it's been around for a very long time, a lower
level version of that when you have poor ventilation and high amounts of co2 in your in your room.
Yep. Or if none of that's happening, and you're simply intolerant to co2, you're hypersensitive
to it, your concentration in your bedroom could be very, very low,
but it's still kicking off that entire sympathetic cascade
because you're overly triggered to your CO2.
Right? So I can see that because I can see your HRV.
I can see your heart rate and I can see your oxygenation.
So I will very quickly be able to be like, this is the problem.
To hell with your tongue exercises, to hell with your supplementation
and all those other things or whatever. In your particular case, this is simply about you developing
better CO2 tolerance. We see this one really routinely. The opposite could be the other
the case. We see that those things are fine. Heart rate is actually so the way I can triangulate
this is because we can look at HRV, we can look at CO2 and we can look at O2 concentration
and I can look at your VO2 max. Now I can identify, oh, if you're resting hard, it's really, really high.
But your HRV is also high. That means you're nice and down regulated and your respiratory
rate is low. You're not over breathing. Right. And then I look at your VO2 max and your VO2
max is shit. I know. Oh, OK, you're unfit.
You're just unfit.
We have got to get that's our problem.
You're not over breathing.
It's not an O2 issues on environment.
It's not a tongue thing.
You're just unfit to a position where you're having any deviation.
That smile, the apnea you have, that small amount of apnea you have rather
is causing such a big effect because you don't have any breathing room.
The view to you need to have just to sleep
is just barely below your threshold when you're awake.
And so slight deviations cause you to choke
or to get slow.
And now you're having this response or the opposite.
And the last one I'll give you.
But we could be super fit, very low resting heart rate.
HRV is high and or respiratory rate is high.
You're not downregulated.
You're exhausted, so your sleep
onset is really, really short.
You're falling asleep immediately,
but you wake up often.
When you wake up, you have a hard time
going back to sleep and or when you
even sleep through the night,
you still feel very fatigued the next day.
And we look respiratory rates over the high.
You're dumping CO2.
You're getting rid of
it too much.
This causes respiratory alkalosis.
And I can confirm this by looking at your hydration status because in response to respiratory
alkalosis, your kidneys will put you into metabolic acidosis, which means it's very,
very hard to retain electrolytes.
And all of a sudden you're waking up and peeing a ton often, but there's not a lot of volume in it. It's not super clear. You're not overly hydrated. We're consistently seeing signs
and symptoms of dehydration in your lab work and your blood. And now we know bada bing
bada boom. This is all simply coming down the fact that you're overly sympathetically
driven. You're over-breathing. We correct that. Sleep problems go away.
Wow. Dude, I love the 360 view of all of this. It's very impressive, very impressive and comprehensive.
Okay.
Getting back into sleep enhancements, not for noobs, sleep enhancements, not for noobs.
Yeah.
So this is where it comes down to going, okay, we're sleeping.
Okay.
You're falling asleep.
Fine.
And you're maybe waking up a couple of times.
And we'll just call you sleep, you know, kind of like the way I call your podcast.
It's okay. It's not great, but it's just like, it's okay. Right? Like,
it's all right. If I have to, I'm going to watch it, but then I can go out and wait. Right?
So what we're looking at there could be duration, could be timing, could be consistently,
could be any of those things. And we're just going to go there and polish it all the way up.
Right.
And so this is making sure we want to change the rhetoric here.
This is not about you getting the most sleep.
This is not about you having to have a 90 minute routine to get to bed every night.
I want to actually develop the most resilient sleepers possible
That is our goal. We always shy away from optimization. That's like the most anti science word you could ever develop it
Like sometimes you just use it. We would rather be resilient. What's that mean?
Even when you do have a slightly crummy night or a suboptimal night. We're still performing at the highest level possible the next day
When we don't have our environment when we're not in the same position, you're not in your
house today, you're out traveling, right?
I won't tell the world where you are.
Right?
I know the groupies.
So just never leave you alone.
All of the women of Bozeman, Montana will come with their cows.
Now I'm going to be wait, I'm going to be back home by the time this comes out.
So they can send, they can send all of the cows over to Hilton wherever
the fuck I am in Bozeman at the moment.
That's a trick.
You guys know that, right?
He's still in Bozeman.
He just tried to throw you off the track.
KG.
Yeah.
So we want to make you as resilient as possible, right?
You're in a different environment, different bedroom.
I want to make it such that when you are traveling, when you're on the road,
we still get in there
and we still have a great night of sleep or pretty good.
And what you'll tend to see happen is
if you can just keep people out of catastrophe with sleep,
you're okay.
You don't have to have these perfect nights.
What really gets people is those really big dips
and you can't come back out of those holes.
Recovering that sleep debt is really, really challenging.
So we just want to make sure,
it's the same thing we use with our,
for example, our baseball players.
The key to having a good ERA and winning a Cy Young,
every time we've been able to do that with somebody,
it's just we avoid them giving up 10 runs in one inning.
You just can't have a terrible day.
You don't have to throw a great every single day.
No horrible days.
And that's really what we're after is super, super resilient.
That baseline starts to come up just a little bit over three, six months.
It's a complete game changer.
So what we're doing is we're making sure.
Number one environment as, as, as consistent as possible.
And so we will engineer their bedrooms at home such that it is
transportable with minimal effort.
And the reason that matters is one of the biggest problems people have with sleep on the road is what's called the first night effect.
First time in a new environment, whether you travel all the time or not, even if it's an environment you've been in, it's your second home, it's your vacation home, it's your parents' home.
A lot of people will struggle with sleep the first night and it's a whole host of things going on. But one of the
things you can avoid that is making sure that environment
smells and looks visually and sounds like your house. Most of
those problems go away. So what do we do? You engineer a
particular sound in your house that can be transportable, you
engineer a particular smell.
This can be as simple as you take
a little bit of a lavender, very subtle lavender scent,
and put it next to your bed at home.
Take that with you on the road.
You put that thing down.
You make the visual the same thing.
You make the hearing the same thing,
whether you're using a very light noise machine.
Keep the noise machine under 35 decibels, by the way.
Above that actually starts hurting sleep. So it's very, very quiet.
Now the environment is mimicked on the road and it doesn't matter where you go.
You can avoid not all the problems, but you can avoid a lot of them.
Pillow sheets is another really common one, right?
Take your pillow sheet with you.
You can't typically take your full eight sleep and you're, you know,
all that stuff with you. But if you take your pillow sheep, that stuff can go a long way.
And then lastly, keep the same routine.
So if you shower and then do a B and C do that exact same thing, take your same soap with you,
take your same smells as much of that you can.
That is not again, completely unbearable.
That will go a very, very long way to that.
So just that step alone for our NBA guys
that are traveling new cities every three to five days,
that stuff makes a big deal.
Our corporate people who live on airplanes, same thing.
Like you spend actually more of your life in hotels
than you do at home, it makes a huge deal.
So that's one small example of how we can make them
a little bit more resilient and just take that baseline
and keep it high.
I love the idea.
And I think that you are out ahead of the trend
that I'm starting to see a good bit of pushback.
We spoke about this for a long time yesterday
on this stupidly long hike I did yesterday,
which was the perils of over optimization andimization and kind of pushing back against protocol, maxing.
And, um, you know, for all of the brilliant things that
we've been given by health information and the
democratization of access to scientific studies and
what you should do and what you could do.
Uh, I think lots of people are made more sick by trying to be optimal than they would be
by just embracing their suboptimal habits, this sort of rumination and,
oh my God, I didn't get my, my friend George tells this great story.
This was when he was first red-pilled.
I think it was Matthew Walker.
So he has this elaborate 90 minute wind down routine before bed.
And he's got no lights anywhere in the entire room.
And he's had his red light glasses on for ages.
And, you know, he's been doing his four, four, eight breathing
to down regulate everything.
And he's brushing his teeth in the dark.
And then as he's doing that, his then girlfriend bursts into the room,
turns the light on blinds him because he hasn't seen any fucking light
for the last 90 minutes blinds him. he's seething, he's raging
because he's just spent 90 minutes trying to do this. They get into bed, she falls
asleep straight away and he's laid there staring at the ceiling hating her and
that's it just perfectly encapsulates this fragility that gets built into the
system when you rely on a too elaborate of a routine.
I have many things to say about this.
So I'm not sure how long you want me to go, but I will say just a few things that are short.
I wrote a book, my one and only ever book seven or eight years ago now with Brian McKenzie.
And this was the entire premise of that book.
For the most part, you really want to stay away from optimization.
You're going to play a game at all times.
On this side of the equation, you've got optimal.
On the other side of the equation, you've got adaptation.
If you're playing on one, you're not getting the other one.
Sorry, explain that to me.
Yes. If you are optimizing, let's just say it this way.
You have that 90 minute routine, okay?
And you go through this and that gets you a perfect night of sleep.
Amazing. Every time you do that, you are making yourself less and less resilient
to any change in that routine.
Okay. Now, the girlfriend was the opposite.
The girlfriend. If you said, Hey, I need you to have a perfect night of sleep.
Everything is on the line tomorrow.
You're going to get $50 million based on your sleep score. She wouldn't know what to do,
because she is all in resilient adaptation phase, right? It's just like whatever happens,
still be able to get to sleep. But you have no ability understanding what makes you.
So it's not one is better than the other one. But if you spend all of your time optimizing,
think of this in the perspective of eating sugar. Okay. Think about this.
Another way to say this is immediate versus delayed
gratification. Okay, if you're always choosing immediate
gratification, if you're always choosing, do the thing that
makes me feel the best right now. Optimize for today. Okay,
you're gonna go, all right, I'm gonna wake up, I'll have
some ice cream. I'm gonna turn my phone off. I'm gonna play video games. You're gonna do
the thing that makes you feel the best right now. That is maximizing how you feel and perform
in this very moment. You're optimized. It's immediate gratification. But you know, by
doing that, you're making life a little bit worse, right? You're gonna you do that every
single day, you're gonna get unhealthy, you're gonna get unhealthy, you're making life a little bit worse, right? You do that every single day, you're gonna get unhealthy.
You're gonna get unhealthy,
you're not gonna get productive,
you're gonna lose money, you're gonna lose your job.
So long-term wise, you're compromising the long-term.
You're compromising your adaptability, okay?
If you do the opposite,
which is you never live in the moment,
you're always worried about tomorrow,
you're never having a break for today,
you know the problems that are associated
with people not being present, not being grateful for what they have,
not so on and so forth.
OK, so you don't want to always be worried about 50 years
from now, and you don't want to always be just worried
about this exact day.
The same thing happens with optimization and adaptation.
If I want you to play the best round of golf
in your entire life, we would relax today and get a massage.
We do some breath work.
We would not talk to anybody else.
We maybe do some light warmup and we chill.
If that's all you did every day though, eventually your golf
game will get worse and worse and worse cause you're never
actually practicing and getting better.
Okay.
So if I wanted you to get up on mountain yesterday on your
hike and have a great, the greatest hike of your life, we
would have had a completely different strategy the five days before. Or we would have gone campaign
style and we've done the opposite. We don't give in like the hell of all of this. We're
going to get up that hill with the most difficulty possible. We're not going to perform at our
best what we're going to see. Now, that challenge is going to cause adaptations because you're stressed more,
you're more fatigued, you're more challenged. That's going to push you to grow. When we
get close to the Olympics, all of our athletes in the Olympics will be optimizing, maximizing
recovery. What's it going to take there right now as we're still a few months out, we're
still adapting. I don't care if I'm skidding their best scores ever.
We're not PRing today. I don't care. We're doing stuff that causes fatigue. Their performance is
going down because we're pushing adaptations. We're causing stress in the system intentionally
for a longer term adaptation. That's the game you're always playing. So every single choice
you make every day, you're causing adaptation or you're peaking. Okay.
Immediate gratification, delayed gratification.
You can't always choose both are the opposite.
How much time you spend on each is not an easy answer, but you have to
acknowledge both of those are going on.
I love the, just this idea of optimizing building fragility into the system and
adaptability being robust,
I think is absolutely bang on.
Two things.
First one, for the person who has access and understands a lot of the ways that they should
be optimizing, how do you advise someone to emotionally let go of that fear of control?
And then second thing is I need you to explain how that makes sense to me with regards to sleep,
given that there are so many things in sleep that are, are routinized.
All right, great. I'll do those both at the same time.
So are you familiar with the idea of orthosomnia?
No.
This is an insomnia induced from sleep trackers.
Okay.
Okay. I just answered both your questions.
Here's what's going to happen.
In some folks, not all, not even most,
just some folks. And I can tell this story because he gave me permission to do so. John Rohn,
one of the best golfers in the world. We just went through this and he was like, man, I went
back and listened to your thing. Boom. He's not looking at a sleep tracker anymore. Now he still
wears it so I can track, but he doesn't look at it. He doesn't have the app or whatever. He doesn't, he doesn't access it himself. Yeah,
that's right. So with our stuff at absolute rest, you don't even like, there are no sleep scores
anyways. Like we have high fidelity data, the data matter. They don't care about your score.
So here's what can happen. If you're very compulsive and you're worried about optimizing
your sleep score and you're going after a sleep. Or what can start to happen is your physiology and psychology will realize the first thing
I'm going to do tomorrow morning is check that score.
And there's a lot riding on that score.
My happiness, my unhappiness, my sadness, my joy, all of this is being driven by that
score that will create an anticipatory response.
Your brain will start back feeling that thing and you will start having worse sleep the
night of will wake up earlier because you're waiting for a big
emotional up or down 6 AM the next day when that alarm goes off.
That can in the worst case scenarios, then lead to insomnia all night laying
around restless.
We see this in people trying to work on their sleep before sleep.
It's eight o'clock.
You go to bed at 10 and you put the kids down,
you shut the laptop up and now all of a sudden panic sets in. And you're like, fuck. Okay,
two hours from now, I'm going to have to go to sleep. And I know I never get to sleep on time.
And I'm trying to really work on it. I'm doing these things. And I just got to hope I fall asleep
tonight. I hope I don't let you see where I'm going with this, right? I can keep going in this
example, but this is really, really common with people who are struggling with sleep and are really trying
to work on it. It's almost like you're working too much on it.
And now you're creating an anticipatory response.
I gave you the anticipatory response and the wake up,
but now this can happen prior to going to bed as well.
Both cases are the same thing. You've created a physiological pattern
that is now compromising either falling asleep or waking asleep, all based on the result, the score, the metric.
Okay.
This is the anti-layered Hamilton.
This is the fragile.
This is you are not resilient.
We should be able to have a great night of sleep.
Regardless, when we work with our special forces folks,
we have to be, get sufficient sleep in any situation.
I'm an outdoorsman. Like I love my whole setup,
but when I'm out hunting there,
like you need to be able to sleep in a tent at a 45 degree angle and sliding
off the mountain all damn night. Like I just had to do pretty recently, right?
Raining on all those things.
The goal is to get enough quality sleep in those situations when I don't have the sun is
still out and all that stuff's going on, right? And it's like, you still have to be able to sleep,
period, because you're going to be up in four hours to go chase an elk or whatever you're going to do,
right? So all that stuff's going on. So going back to our examples, that's two situations
which anticipatory responses ruin falling asleep and or staying asleep. So in someone that's having that problem
Just like we do a John actually John did it to himself and he told me afterwards
but
In the other folks that we're coaching we will often take that score away from them many times
I'll say again, can you continue to to wear the thing?
But actually one the nice thing about the old days in aura is manually on the backend coaches could go turn that off.
So if I was coaching you, I could go turn off your thing.
You don't get to see your score.
Yeah.
I mean, we've been talking about this a lot.
George had a self-imposed bout of insomnia and went through a lot of the
lessons I think you're talking about here.
He did some CBT, CBT for insomnia too.
And he found this study where they paid people to two different cohorts.
They paid one group to fall asleep quickly.
You're nodding.
I'm guessing that you know this study quite well.
Yeah.
Shock, shock horror, the group that was paid to fall asleep more quickly, fell
asleep less quickly than the group that it didn't matter.
That was just the control.
And yeah, there's it sleep is this very vicious, uh, sort of counter
intuitive, the harder you try, the less quickly it comes, at least in the moment.
I guess you preparatory, you can do things in advance, but even in that, if
you've, oh, this is my first night on my new eight sleep, I really hope that this
goes well and maybe the physiological improvement of being in a temperature
controlled mattress helps, but this sort of rumination in the
brain and all the rest of it, it's wild. It's wild. This sort of vicious feedback loop that
you have. And one of his suggestions, one of G's suggestions is to imagine if whoop
or aura gave you your score for the entire week of sleep
with the end of the week, um, because you don't have this rapid iteration.
Oh, I feel great today.
And you look and you go, what?
70%?
I was only asleep for six, six hours and 15 minutes, but I feel, Oh,
maybe I'm going to have a bad day.
And you go, Oh, what the fuck?
And then you do sleep well.
And if you have a bad score, the only time that it's good is if you have a
good night's sleep with a good score, that's it.
It's the only time that you ever actually went.
So the second half of that John Rom story was he was like, you know, he was
dealing with that and then he goes, yo, I just left, I don't remember what he
went from like Singapore to Houston or something.
And he's like, and he doesn't, he's very health conscious.
So I don't want to misrepresent how he acts normally, but in this case, he
was like,
I drank a whole bottle of wine.
I changed four time zones.
I got home for a couple of hours
and I said my sleep score was 90 something.
He's like, this is bullshit.
Gonna add it there.
So to your point, okay.
Some people, these problems can happen
because of anticipatory response.
Other people though, will still see benefits.
So I don't want this to come off as all this stuff sucks.
It doesn't work because there can be accountability benefits.
You know, I have seen this a lot with our app.
It's like, hey, we need you in bed by midnight or whatever.
Like they know Andy's going to look and they know that you get a text
from me in the morning. They're like, they were going to play
that next little game of Call of Duty.
But all right, they go to bed.
So accountability really does and can help.
Awareness can be a huge benefit.
Some people think they're sleeping well, think they're good.
And they're really, really not right.
So there can be simply, OK, some ability to go.
I'm trying a BNC different nightly routine, different nutritional protocol, whatever.
How do I know if it's okay?
So there can be benefit there.
Most people on aggregate do better when they pay attention.
So we just do want to recognize some people though, will be in these
situations like we talked about where it can create a, a, a bad
physiological pattern or loop.
And one of the ways you can get around this is probably what your friend
George did or a version of this.
And this is extreme.
It is not our first or second or third or fourth or fifth or even
10th stop on the train, but it is a stop on the train.
There's research behind it.
And anyone who's dealt with true insomnia personally, or, or has worked
with people in this will be very familiar with this and
it can be quite effective. But there is something called sleep restriction training that you
can do. So if you're struggling to fall asleep or stay asleep, then one of the worst things
one can do is roommate on that. And so I gave you the example of the hours before going
to sleep, you start already ruminating on the fact that you're not going to fall asleep
very quickly. People have talked, Matthew Walker has talked about if you're going to sleep, you start already ruminating on the fact that you're not going to fall asleep very quickly. People have talked, Matthew Walker has talked about if you're going
to lay in bed for an hour, get out of it. Right? Do not set yourself in a pattern up when you get
into bed, you close the lights off, you're exhausted. You feel like you're going to fall
asleep immediately. And then you get into bed and you lay there. Right? This happens for many
reasons, but one of them is this is a physiological pattern that's been made. You have to break that pattern.
So one way to do that is you do not get into bed at all until you are ready to absolutely fall asleep.
And if you're there for more than a few minutes, you get out of bed. And you just do not allow yourself to be in that position.
With the case of sleep restriction training, what one would do is just one example. You could do this a lot of ways,
but one example would be you're going to set the alarm for 5 a.m.
And you're not going to get into bed until midnight. Period.
And no matter what you will get up at 5 a.m. and you'll get out of bed.
And we're going to do that for an entire week. What's going to happen is.
Yeah.
Well, you say that, remember, you know, anybody who's ever dealt with insomnia?
Except for George, not really.
They're not sleeping five hours on it anyways.
Right.
So for you and I, it's like, I've had kids and I've been a mini hunting thing.
So like, I don't want to do it, but.
This is not the like I'm already sleeping eight and a half hours.
Why would I go to like, no dummy?
Of course, don't do that.
Like this is I sleep for a few hours a night anyways.
So I don't even sleep for five as it is.
So great. OK.
And we're going to get up.
And those first few nights that we are going to going to be brutal.
And you may lay there for your hour like you normally do. And so you may get four and a
half hours. You might get four, you might get three and a half hours and you're going
to get up. Well, what will eventually happen is you will start to fall asleep quickly and
you will fill in after three, four or five days, you'll fill in those five hours with
a perfect sleep, sleep architecture. Cause your physiology will realize we do not have any options.
There's no room to get up and pee.
It's like down out.
Cause it knows five is coming.
It will know when five function.
Yes, yes, sir.
It's forcing it to happen. Right.
And then every week you add 15 minutes back.
So next week you get into bed at 11 45, you know, what will happen?
You'll fall asleep immediately.
Ooh, we got 15 minutes early.
No, you'll still.
But the bot, that's what the body's going to think. The body's going to think, Oh wow, we've got, we've got an additional little bit.
We better take advantage of it.
Hell yeah.
It's going to go, we're so damn tired.
Get in like immediately, right?
It doesn't always work, but it's honestly quite effective.
And then you add 15 minutes back and then you keep backfilling until you can get to
your seven or seven and a half or backfilling until you can get to
your seven or seven and a half or wherever your nine and a half, wherever your target
number is.
So you can keep running on that for a very long time until is needed.
And it is brutal.
You can just do the math there.
That's going to be five, six weeks.
Thank you for this.
And you can't nap throughout the day like you can,
that that's a bad thing.
And so, making sure, one often sleep restricted training,
but the point I'm bringing up there
is that really highlights how patterning
matters to physiology.
And so going through a 90 minute routine like your friend
is nice in the sense that it does set up a nice
productive, positive pattern,
but you don't want to put yourself in a position where you've optimized so much
that you've lost all resilience. And so if you don't have that,
you can no longer fall asleep for hours and hours and hours because things are.
So while I typically will coach, it's the same with counting calories. Right.
Like what? That's an abrupt change.
I will categorize people nutritionally as either cooks or bakers.
Okay.
I'm going to tie this back in our second.
What I mean by that is, do you know the difference between cooking and baking?
One makes really good donuts.
Good answer.
Yes.
Which one would make the really good donuts? Bake. Obviously, you don't cook a donut. Do you? You don't know something's gone wrong. Okay. It's detail and precision.
For the most part, right? If you're baking, it's not unless you're a really high level chef. It's
not my feel. Right? It is a quarter of a teaspoon, an eighth of a tablespoon. And do you say tablespoon or teaspoon? Ah, fuck it doesn't matter. Just
throw one of them in there. Like your doughnut is going to be terrible. It's not going to
come up, right? Baking is high precision in specific order at specific measurements. Cooking
is the opposite. Cooking is what probably, I don't know you very well, but probably what
you and I do. Open the refrigerator, find some meat thing, put it in a pan with some
oil and some sort of vegetable or starch or meat thing put it in a pan with some oil
And some sort of vegetable or starch or something else and then hit it with some hot sauce and cheese and plate that shit And we're out of here right like that's cooking to me and you right. It's gonna be delicious. Everyone wins. We're happy, right?
now if you are a
baker and
I give you cooking like instructions or coaching
You're gonna have huge anxiety. Right? If I'm like, all right, what are we gonna do? Get that out? Make sure you're
down regulated to just get cool and hot and cool. No, no, no,
when should I go to bed? When should I brush my teeth? What
type of light? What's the wavelength? Like you want all
the protocol protocol? Okay. If I don't give you that, it's
going to give you anxiety, gonna make your sleep worse. If I
don't give you that level of nutrition detail, if I go, Oh,
how have some almonds, how many almonds?
Like there's an actual example that happened. Nothing in mind.
Like you, you, you, it was like a panic text. It was like, talk, talk, talk.
How many units, how many elements you didn't say?
How many you said like a small handful, whatever was a small handful.
And I was like, uh, and she was like, was that eight? I was like, yeah, it was eight.
How many did you have? She's like, I had eight. I'm like, Oh, thank God.
It wasn't six. She's like, no, no, it was eight. I was like,
this is like an actual story many years ago, right? I'm like, yeah, okay.
She was a big, like she needed to know exactly other athletes are the opposite.
If you're a cook and I give you that level of detail,
I need you to weigh and measure every single thing. I need you to have this exact routine by this, this it's stifling.
It's overwhelming. It's like, Oh my God, it's too much control. I don't have much freedom there. I
feel like I can't do all that stuff. Right. And so we want to match people's general
personality trait with the type of information and the style.
So some of our people are getting really rough concepts, maybe one thing to pay
attention to with their sleep stuff, with their nutrition and other folks are
getting very specific timed protocols based on if I feel like that time protocol
is going to send you into a world of negative, I take the details away.
If I feel like the loose structure, like here's you too much freedom and you make
bad choices. I take your freedom away. Right.
So Brian or take is a great example of that.
Like I have to take his freedom away. I have to take everything away.
He has to feel like he's in prison again. He's just like, dude,
I have to have a like, those are his words, not mine.
It's just like, bro, like it has to be, I can't have words, not mine. It's just like, like, it has to be,
I can't have any I want because he doesn't want to make choices. He doesn't lack self-discipline at
all. He will follow exactly what I say endlessly. But he's like, I don't want to make any choices
throughout the day. With this stuff, I want to train and only think about fighting. Right. Okay.
Other athletes I coach like NBA players.
Like now I have a single NBA player who wants to be coached
like that. Not one. Like they will be like to help me I'd get
middle fingers and get fired right like it's just like it's
got to be concepts and one or two things to pay attention to
per month. And that's it right. I can enable the guys NFL guys
some of the opposite some are you know, whatever Okay, you get to point. So with sleep, NFL guys, some of the opposite, some are, you know,
whatever. Okay. You get the point. So with sleep, we want to think of the same thing, right? And when I brought up calories is okay. I think it's important,
regardless of whether you're a cook or a baker for your sleep, for your training,
for your mental health work, for your breath work, for your nutrition,
you should start by going through a phase as a baker.
You need to weigh and measure all your food for 30 days, at least once.
We need to try very specific sleep routine. We need to,
I need exact repetitions and video film of your lifting.
How much did you get? What? I need all of it. Now I'll have to do it for forever,
but you really never know what's working. What's not working.
I don't know if you really are calibrated.
Do you really know what a spoonful of peanut butter was? Right? That's the,
that's the common example up there. I'm saying, we've got to know,
how did you sleep though? I feel good. No, no, I need more detail.
I need to know exactly what's going on on everything. And then from there,
once we've got calibrated, now we can back off if you want.
I know high level people who still weigh and measure their food.
20 years and they're not even competing in.
It's like, okay, great.
Some people give me 30 days or 14 days.
What's it going to take?
Let me get real data.
Let you get real understanding.
And now we can back off and go by feel more, but you can't just start by going by feel.
Dude, I talk about this all the time.
I it's such a, uh, I feel like we're best friends.
We are now, we are now as long as, as long as Mike is, we're talking, come along as well.
I'm sure that that'll be fine.
No, that's not negotiable.
He's out.
It's me or him now.
Right now.
It's you.
It's you.
Sorry.
You're not Jewish.
Are you?
No, my kids are.
All right. Oh, they, they, they're allowed once every other time. I need to get rid of my
hair. No, that's fair. I'll do that. That's a deal. I say that everybody should go through
an obsessive period of, uh, of productivity, um, time tracking, time blocking, Pomodoro technique,
because it is impossible for you to play with the rules of the game if you haven't first learned the rules of the game.
Like what the fuck are you doing here?
Trying to be free flowing with your pick, your fucking discipline of choice.
You didn't, you don't, what are you free flowing with?
That's just not, that's just not knowing how to play.
You don't know the rules.
You don't know the physics of the system.
So yeah, I think focus on precision. And then for some people,
they stay in precision. Maybe the people that need a little bit more control.
And then other people that are a little bit more creative,
artistic-y right-brainy type person, maybe they, they sort of,
they play with it a little bit. Uh,
taking it back to the enhancements for sleep. I love that idea.
I love the idea about, uh,
recreating the environment
as best you can when you're on the road.
That's definitely something that I'm going to consider.
One question on that, and then let's get into some stuff
that you can do at home.
Earplugs.
I've become a huge fan of earplugs since moving to America.
Main reason being that it just seems to be
a really loud country.
Even like the wildlife is loud.
The birds are at least three times louder than those of the UK.
Everything's bigger in Texas, including the volume of the fucking wildlife.
Earplugs versus white noise.
Have you got any concerns around earplugs?
Obviously my thinking being that you can replicate the environment pretty
precisely in that it's silence.
Yes.
This is personal preference.
So I don't, I'm not aware.
We actually have a paper in review right now
on sleep environment.
And I don't know of any data specifically indicating
one is better than the other.
The only knocks against white noise is oftentimes
it's too loud.
As I mentioned earlier, 35 decibels is the limit.
And you actually see sleep problems when you get above 35.
So don't turn your sleep noise machine up too loud.
In addition to that, there's a whole host
of papers coming out on a new technology called pink noise.
And that seems to be much more effective.
I don't know of any pink noise machines that are available
commercially yet.
But you want to keep your eye on that as a, as a plausibly better solution than white noise. We have some folks that
use earplugs. Um, one of my business partners, Dan Garner uses them every night at home.
Nonetheless, I will use them a lot hunting and in other activities, camping, because
you're sleeping next to somebody who snores, things like that. Um, but I don't use them ever at home.
So I have no fundamental issue with them as long as they're not causing any pain,
you know, things like that.
And there's so many different companies making good earplugs at this days.
That's generally fine.
There's a pair, a pair that I got,
I tried 10 pairs from Amazon, uh, and settled on, uh,
one specifically for sleep.
And they've got little rubber fins on them and they're fucking brilliant.
And they can just go, there's a pet everywhere in the bag that I try to take
on planes in my toiletries bag in my house and my bedside drawer everywhere.
And yeah, if push comes to shove and the neighbors next door are having a party
or some, some, something else happens. It's just, boom, everything.
I honestly don't use them at home because I have two little kids.
Security.
Yeah.
I understand.
I'm, I'm relishing in my time where I can be totally like just totally disregard
personal safety because it's only me that is the potential culprit.
As soon as the kids come along.
Yeah.
It's, it's, that was jealousy out of my mouth in case you didn't hear that.
That was what it is.
All right.
Let's get back into advanced or moderate like purple belt techniques for sleep enhancement in the home.
Okay, great.
So past all the top level stuff, quiet dark, be consistent with your timing is another one.
Try to go to bed and wake up around the same time every day,
plus or minus 30 minutes is what we say.
Realistically, 45 minutes is where you're at.
Specifically, try to keep your wake up time really consistent.
That's almost always easier.
Sometimes it's hard to fall asleep
when you're not ready to go to sleep,
but it's always easy to wake up at the same time,
because you can engineer that.
So start there.
Now, all that stuff you can engineer that. So start there. Now,
all that stuff out of the way. Other things you want to think about are extending sleep
throughout the day. So this could come in one of a couple of forms a nap. There's a
lot of research benefits on refreshment, cognitive function, reaction time, physical force, production, endurance, sport performance, all are enhanced with
napping during the day. 20 to 90 minutes is the typical one. And you almost always want to be
done with your naps before 4pm. Just a rough guideline depending on how when you train like
having a coffee too late in the day. Bingo. So what happens is throughout the day you build up
sleep pressure. And if that pressure is released too late in the night. Bingo. So what happens is throughout the day you build up sleep pressure.
And if that pressure is released too late in the night, you don't have enough
time to build it back up and that's why we're going to struggle with all the
sleep. So, uh, I don't nap ever.
I can't stand napping.
It doesn't work for me at all.
I don't like it.
And so I won't ever choose that option.
If I need extended duration, I'm either going to bed earlier.
That's my preference.
My wife, Natasha, prefer to sleep in a little bit later. I cannot stand sleeping.
I cannot stand it at all. I'd rather go to bed at 6pm.
Like, I'm not sleeping and it's never going to happen.
I will never nap either. What I can do though, is this is when a breath
work, a down regulation session is highly effective. So if you
can't nap, don't want to nap. Actually, I just dealt with this
with them. We work with a lot of people who run venture capital,
run things like that. And they're like, yo, we're in
Manhattan office, like I'm not I'm not fucking taking a 20
minute nap, like on Wall Street, where like, no, I'm like, okay, cool.
Can we do stuff that looks like you're at your desk?
And so this is, if you're watching, you're gonna see me do this right now, right?
You can simply be at your desk.
Your eyes can be closed or open and you can close your mouth and you can do very
structured, very slow breathing, right?
This could look like meditation.
This could be not meditation.
It could be NSDR or not.
NSDR is super easy to do.
Progressive relaxation techniques.
So if I'm sitting at my desk, my eyes are open,
my mouth is closed,
and I'm progressively squeezing the tip of my toes
and relaxing it.
I could have earphones in going through an actual script.
I'm going to walk it from my toes to my ankles, to my knees, all the way up and
down my head and back down. No one even knows you're not working.
Those things are not the same as sleep, but they are somewhat equivalent.
You can get sleep like responses,
they do logically from stuff like that. And it can be seven minutes long.
20 is better, but I'll take what's your favorite.
What's your favorite
N S D R or rejuvenation practices?
Is there a YouTube video that you keep coming back to?
Is there an app that you like to follow?
So we use. Yeah, that's a great question.
We use a handful of different ones.
So we will use Andrew's got a few scripts out now
that that will use specifically where he's doing N S D R.
Andrew has those. I will use Sam Harris has an
app called Waking Up. We use that a lot. A ton of our people
will do that. And you can just go through any number of things
there. There's another organization, a company I've
been a part of since the very beginning called XPT. XPT has
an app that was founded by Brian McKenzie and Laird
Hamilton and Gabby Gabby Reese.
They have a ton of protocols. Some of the protocols are very yoga-y sort of, you know,
that feel. And then some of them are from actual Navy SEALs or people deep in the military. So
depending on which type of just voice or cadence or whatever makes you feel more than the thing.
And so I will pull that thing out pretty consistently.
And they have a bunch of them. They have four minute ones.
They have 45 minute long ones.
Those ones are really common.
I personally don't use any of those very often.
I will always do my own thing.
I'm always going to lay down for that for the most part.
I'm going to be closed and I'm just going to do basic stuff, right? So like that's, for me, that is very much as simple as just regulating in
and back out. And I try is it's kind of my version of transcendental meditation,
or I'm not actually focusing on my breath per se, but all I'm paying attention to is breathing.
And I don't care what the cadence is. I don't actually count, because I don't want to be actively engaged in that. I'm just worrying about chilling and
chilling in any thought that comes in my head. I push out. I just want to be neutral. I don't want
anything going on. So it's kind of like the opposite of focusing on breath. It's the focus on
nothing. If my mind drifts, it drifts, it's fine. But then
we just come right back to this is your scissors end time. If I'm really not able to do that,
which is very often, I'm going to do that outside. So what I'm going to that means is
I'm going to walk and I'm not going to have headphones in. I'm not going to listen to
podcasts. I'm not going to listen to music. My mouth is going to be closed. I'm probably taking the dogs and we're going to walk. I don't
know where I'm going or how long I'm doing. And I'm doing the same thing. Mouth is closed,
breathing through my nose. And I'm very much intentionally not working. That little bit of
rouser reduction is insanely powerful for me personally. I can't speak to anybody else,
but for me, given the fact that I have, I don't think I have any more work than anybody else has to do, but I just have it in so many different
areas.
I like oftentimes feel like I just can't ever get out of it.
And so I just need some time where I can just be like, you're not doing anything.
You're not doing research.
You're not doing coaching.
You're not worried about your companies.
Nothing right now.
And that can be seven minutes, six minutes.
Can be one lap around the block, but that is
given that you're, you're also trying to get sleep.
You're trying to get your step count in throughout the day.
You're stacking that on top of it.
You're getting a little bit of sunlight, you're locomoting,
you're moving your eyes from left to right.
Your, um, uh, ocular focus is being changed.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Uh, passive gaze, whatever it's called.
Um, all the stuff is like hearing is all changing.
Yeah.
So like neurologically, I don't even count that to my step count stuff.
I'm simply doing it as a mental reset and, and try it.
Like I'll notice too, when I'm my, my restaurant rates starts getting
pretty high when I'm working. my rest of our race starts getting
pretty high when I'm working.
It's like, what are you doing?
Running a marathon or, or writing a paper?
Like what's, what's happening?
Uh, what is it?
E email apnea that people get.
Yeah, sure.
Right.
Like mouth drops, chins open, like hunch forward and you're just going nuts.
And so then in turn, I'll try to just go, boom, go out there.
You've mentioned a couple of times.
I, I had it in my head.
I'm remember, I definitely didn't make it up.
I definitely heard it from someone that sleep banking basically wasn't a thing.
Has this changed?
Was there a camp of people that was saying that sleep banking wasn't a thing?
Have I totally fucking hallucinated this? I'm actually really glad you brought this up because
man, I have been taught by so many people on the internet how wrong I am about this one.
This is crazy. So I'm glad that I can teach you my learnings of how internet people can educate scientists on science. So great. This is a
bunch of knuckleheads who I don't think have the ability to
listen and comprehend what Matthew Walker says. So it's
actually very straightforward. And there is no argument and
change here. It's people that I'm sorry for being a bit
sardonic there. But this one is holy clito. I'll give you the
backstory. So many years ago, when math came out this book, it was great.
Like one of the things he talked about is sleep debt and you can't repay sleep
debt. And I remember seven or eight years ago, I was speaking, um,
I think for the Seattle Sounders and Steven Lockley was up there.
Steven's at a Harvard.
Steven works for my company now, but this was years ago.
He's the one that built up, built all the circadian rhythm stuff for the International
Space Station, the light and all that stuff. Excellent scientist. And I talked a little
about this and he was like, well, yeah, no one has a time machine. So yes, if you sleep for five
hours tonight, you can know ever, ever, ever go back and regain those three hours. Yes. Yes. Yes. Yes.
No one's arguing that point at all. There's a basic physics problem.
Of course that's exactly what Matthew was saying.
What, what he was trying to tell you is just because you sleep for five hours
a night throughout the week, and then you sleep 20 hours a day on Saturday.
And your total amount of hours are the same.
That's not, that's not equivalent
and he's 100 correct again i don't know any scientist in this area who would make a cogent
argument that that's incorrect we all agree on this point he's he i think he was on i think it was
his episode with joe that this sort of all started and probably his many other but he's like you can't
repay sleep debt you can't repay sleep debt
You can't repay sleep debt and that's what he meant and he's a hundred percent correct. However
As I mentioned
There are now no probably over 50 studies on sleep extension and sleep banking if you go to any
professional sleep society
Scientific conference and clinic.
Like you're going to see these things very routinely come up.
This is very, very well accepted in the field that you can sleep longer.
Think about it this way.
Imagine you slept for five hours last night.
I slept for less than that, I guarantee you.
I've slept for five hours in the loudest fucking campsite in all of Montana. Yes.
I can't stand that.
You go to Montana and you're thinking like big sky country.
How the fuck are you around other people?
Oh, this was, this was wildlife.
This wasn't, this is the fact that the sun rises at, oh, it starts to get
lighted about 4 AM and it's your birds wielding megaphones, but, uh,
I was, uh, come up,
I was in the Tetons last year hunting elk and the first night before we went to
bed, uh, one of the guys out there was like, I just say, no, uh, we'll have some
visitors tonight. I was like, okay.
And it could have been two, three in the morning and just bang, bang, bang on the
tents. And there was a moose that was coming through camp every night.
Just smash him.
Just wrecking everyone.
Damn it.
His name is fine.
So I have a, I have a friend who's been on the show a lot, a guy called Youssef.
He has, you, you will may know the name for this medical issue.
You may know the name for this medical issue. If he is woken suddenly during the night, he makes a yelp, makes a loud yelping noise.
And it's quite common.
Apparently, he's the perfect avatar for the person who deals with this.
It's a male in his sort of around about 30, in his early 30s, no previous history of psychiatric disorders.
And so this has happened a number of times.
It's happened when he went to go and see George in Dubai.
And he heard, George, George's first thought when he heard this yelp was,
I hope that that girl is okay.
That was his first, first instinct.
We went to a bachelor party in the UK a couple of years ago, classic British
bachelor party where we're sharing twin rooms of single beds.
So I'm like, right, okay, whatever.
Like, you know, I'm, I'm in it.
I'm, we're doing it.
Uh, and we've been out for dinner and we've had a couple of beers and we went
go-karty, whatever the classic sort of stag do thing is, and, uh, it's three
in the morning, I roll over and rip one of the biggest farts
that I've ever ripped.
That wakes him up.
So what you hear is, whoo, from him in bed next to me, which fucking killed me.
But yeah, the number of different sleep maladies that you can have from mooses to birds wielding
megaphones to a friend that makes a shrieking noise when he's woken suddenly, there's lots of ways that you can have from mooses to birds wielding megaphones to a friend that makes a shrieking noise when he's woken suddenly.
There's lots of ways that you can be disrupted.
Yeah, yeah.
That's great.
Thankfully, the moose never banged on my that trip.
But no, I get it.
Um, what was your point?
What were we talking about?
You would say that you'd had you'd had limited sleep last night and you're talking about
banking.
That's what it was.
Okay, great. So you you and I slept for five hours last night.
Just because we didn't get our, our eight, if that's the number,
does not mean we are now going to be in sleep that the rest of our lives.
Right? So like, tell me how that would work. Like, okay, if you ever miss a minute of sleep,
you're therefore going to add that on. So by the time you're what? Four years old, you're now in 75,000 hours of sleep.
Like, like, how does this work?
Of course it gets reset.
Right?
So there's this, yes, if you sleep for five hours tonight and you sleep for more
hours tomorrow night, you'll feel better.
Like that's yes.
So again, I don't, I don't think it's really difficult to comprehend both of those two things.
I think logically, logically, it kind of makes sense when you think about, I
always think about this to do with money, that if I buy that sandwich for five
bucks, I will never get that five bucks back ever.
And if I eat that sandwich, I will never not be able to have not consumed those
calories, those calories are in me for the rest of time.
But I think when you start to,
it's like a deterministic view of health or finances or sleep.
When you start to think like that, it might be right.
It might be truthful, but functionally it's false.
But the way that it actually shows up to you is, is, it's kind of pointless.
Yeah.
I feel like it's people who have perhaps need to set out a campfire, have a glass
of whiskey and go, wait a minute, does that make sense?
Like, let's just slow down for a second.
Does that make sense that that debt is just going to accumulate every minute
the rest of your life and you can't do it?
And which is certainly not what Matthew was saying. So
The sleep jet thing is that it is yes, can go back in time
To yes, you can't just sleep terrible and sleep more and those will be equivalent. So four hours one night
12 the next and all of a sudden you're back to even that's not how it works either
to be equivalent. So four hours one night, 12 the next,
and all of a sudden you're back to even.
That's not how it works either.
But it's also not this permanent debt
you carry the rest of your life and you'll never recover from.
So the idea then with sleep banking and sleep extension
is two things.
So banking, the way I define it is getting ahead.
So sleeping extra time prior to known sleep death.
Extension is simply going, adding more time throughout the day.
So these are the studies that have taken people and said, you're already sleeping again eight hours.
Can we get you to nine and a half for 10?
Can we add somewhere between 45 minutes to 90 minutes per night?
The research there is little as three days up to seven or eight weeks.
I think the Cherry Ma, who did this classic study I'm referring to now out of Stanford with basketball players. This was in the division of basketball players. And she got them to sleep 90 extra minutes per night for five to seven weeks. So it can be done. Some of the athletes chose to sleep in some chose to go to bed earlier, some chose to add naps. But you extended sleep and most of of the research will do that. They'll say however you want, try to ask, you know, up to 90 minutes, some added 10 minutes, some added two hours, right? So not everyone's going to get 90 extra minutes, but you're going to get some on there. Now, those tend to be optimization strategies. It is very hard to sleep 10 hours a night without a sleep disorder for forever, right? And it's so
certainly many can argue it's not necessary. It's definitely
not necessary to do that. Most of the research on high
performing, high energy expenditure athletes will
indicate nine plus hours per night is generally the what we
go after.
There is not a perfect correlation
between caloric expenditure and sleep needs,
but there is some relationship.
Jeffrey Dermers done a ton of stuff in this.
He was the sleep scientist from the Atlanta Falcons
and Team USA and things like that.
And he's got good data on this.
And again, it's not a perfect relationship
between caloric expenditure,
but there is a relationship.
People that are in sports or activity levels that burn way more calories will
perform better when they generally cross nine plus hours of sleep.
If you're fairly sedentary, but you work out pretty hard,
you don't probably need nine hours, right?
We're thinking about folks are training twice a day
or running a hundred miles per week,
like some other activities with large, large amounts
of caloric expenditure.
So that is extending sleep.
The banking one, as I mentioned,
I know of again, of at least 30 studies or more on this
where you lead prior to training camp,
prior to pre-season trainings, prior to,
especially in the military,
tons and tons of work in the military where we make sure that we are getting a maximum amount
of sleep for the week to month prior to known sleep deprivation. And you see those problems
that happen when the sleep deprivation comes on, those are attenuated. So I just don't, I don't
know how much more research one needs to say like's a real thing you're shooting accuracy in terms of firearm shooting neurological control.
Mental cognition decision making memory recall it just holds on that when you go through those known periods of sleep deprivation so we have a lot of athletes and a lot of sleep coaches sleep scientists.
have a lot of athletes and a lot of state coaches and sleep scientists.
We'll have their athletes in the pre-season try to bank, right?
You get as much sleep as you can. So the, at least we're not going into our season and sleep that.
Yeah.
That's the biggest way to think about it.
Dude.
So interesting.
I did a tour last year and I wish that I'd been red-pilled on sleep banking
beforehand because I was wrecked for a full month. Is there anything else that we haven't talked about from a purple belt
sleep enhancement perspective that are other big movers?
Yeah.
Nutrition is a really big one.
Okay.
There's a lot of focus and conversation on supplementation for sleep and that's
fine, but nutrition should be paid attention to far before that.
So the timing and type will have a huge determinant upon the quality of your supplementation for sleep and that's fine, but nutrition should be paid attention to far before that.
So the timing and type will have a huge determine upon the quality of your sleep and you can
run a lot of self testing on this, right?
So here's what I mean.
The classic thing we'll say is you generally don't want to have a large meal in the two
to three hours prior to going to sleep.
That's mostly true, but it's also not always true.
And so you can test that.
Some people will respond eating before bed much better.
Generally never going to be a big meal.
That's going to lead to digestive issues.
But blood sugar regulation is a really big key to grogginess.
The sleep inertia, so what you feel that next morning when you wake up,
and you're like, man, I'm like,
feel like a truck hit me, that kind of thing.
A large portion of that is determined by blood glucose.
And so if you're waking up with very low blood glucose,
then hey, like nutrition is our play here,
almost surely, unless we've got a sleep disorder, some guy.
So you wanna tinker with that.
There's lots of different things.
I mean, go all the way back.
I think I'm pretty sure I don't.
Can't guarantee it, but I'm pretty sure Tim Ferris wrote about this in four hour
body, right 15 years ago, whatever, right?
Having an apple before bed, having some sort of slow releasing glycemic index
carbohydrate can really stabilize blood glucose.
And he nailed it.
He was, he was dead on man.
Like those things can be really, really helpful.
Last thing I'll say about this is carbohydrates.
So one way to really help people sleep at night
is a nice amount of carbohydrate in their last feeding.
There's a lot of dogma over the years
about don't have carbs at night because of fat
and like all this other stupid shit.
And hopefully the door is closed on that because we have thank you, Mike Ormsby.
And all the folks have done all the research and that's just like not happening
at all. As long as calories and all that is equated for.
But having a nice bolus of carbohydrate
prepared to bed is really, really helpful.
We recently are not really saying actually, it's been a while now,
but we had a client a couple of years ago who was struggling with a handful of things. Sleep, sleep, sleep was
falling asleep, fine. Shooting awake at two, three in the morning, right? Just like, boom,
could, and this was happening. And the guy's pretty down, has a lot of resources in this
space. Couldn't get it figured out. Like, all right. So we start taking a look, we pull
up his blood work. Clear, clear thing happens here. We look at insulin insulin is low
Okay, interesting sex hormone binding globulins way up
There is a known inverse relationship between those two
Insulin is low shbg is gonna go up
Because the sex hormone binding globulins up testosterone is down
Okay, so free testosterone is down. All right, so it's another classic,
like in mid 50s kind of guy or early 50s.
High runner, very successful dude financially.
And it's like, okay, maybe it's time for me to do testosterone.
Fine if you want to choose that, but I know your answer.
I know why you're shooting away.
Now what's going on?
Okay, we start looking at melatonin and serotonin.
We start looking at B vitamin status.
We see all these things and we see classic sign of
insufficient carbohydrate
Let me guess and I can tell him you're probably trying to keep it under 150 grams of carbs per day
Yep, hundred percent pretty active dude to not insane but pretty active. I'm like great
What you need is another 75 grams of carbohydrate at dinner
It's like what all we did was that insulin went back up, sex hormone buying
glab and went back down to testosterone and went right back up, slept completely
through the night, instantaneously, basically always.
And guess what happens to serotonin melatonin.
They go right back in normal cortisol curve is perfect.
Waking up, grogginess out of the way.
Problem solved by just, what would you, What would you say to people who maybe like the idea
of a little bit of carbs before they go to bed
or in that window?
What are some of your favorite sources that people can eat
for digestion so they're not in too much discomfort
when they get horizontal and timing before bed?
Yep. Timering, tinker with it. If you need three hours, timing before bed. Yep. Timering tinker with it.
If, if you need three hours, three hours, fine.
If two hours is fine.
If an hour's fine, whatever it is, start at three and work your way back.
If you have to now we end up dealing with a lot of people who three hours is not an option because you're training twice a day, or again, they're playing a game
at night and then it's like, okay, great game got over at 10 30 and now you want me to have dinner when, and then go to bed when, so then I'll
have dinner at 1130 and I guess I'll, I'll stay up to 230 just because my three
up, it's not going to happen. Right. So we don't always have that, but Tinkerwood
started three, work your way back. If you'd like, you can also then try a very
small snack right before bed and by right before bed, that could be 45 minutes before bed, right?
Whatever it is to you.
I will eat pretty much like right before bed a lot.
And I'm just fine out of it, but not everyone necessarily.
So timing wise, three hours is a fine
starting place, adjust as needed and see what works for you.
In terms of amount, almost always if you're having some sort of
starch rice potato whatever sits well with you quinoa it means that wealthy great like
what what are the natural more star cheese fruit is fine there's a actually there's a
lot of research on kiwis kiwis are very effective for helping people fall asleep.
So that's another great way to fruit to try.
This could be your before bed snack. Kiwi could be a part of your dinner.
You could try it that way. So don't worry. Don't be scared about fruits.
With dinner fruits in the evenings, we will do that. In fact, if we're trying to manage carbohydrates,
oftentimes we'll restrict them during the day or in the morning
and put more at night, better recovery, better sleep, feeling better.
And you'll feel just as fine the next day.
So those would be the types as well as the timing that I would start people with.
Fuck yeah.
Andy Galpin, ladies and gentlemen, dude, I'm a, I've been, oh yeah,
absolute headshot today.
I love it.
I had 10 things I wanted to talk about yeah, absolute headshot today. I love it.
I had 10 things I wanted to talk about
and we spoke about VO2 max and sleep for two and a bit hours
and I couldn't be happier.
Dude, you're great.
You're really, really fantastic.
I can see why Rob and Andrew pushed you to get cracking
because I think it's a much needed rebalancing
Cause I think it's a, a much needed rebalancing to, um, some of the sort of in the weeds, uh, deep stuff.
And I think, I think you're fucking great.
So why can people go?
They want to keep up to date with all of your things.
They want to check out your stuff.
Why should they head on the internet?
Yeah.
Uh, obviously the podcast is the best place.
Perform with Dr.
Andy Galpin is the name of that and
like I said only 10 episodes there so that's season one you'll be able to get
through it all and then maybe if those guys can talk me back into season two
next year we'll come back for another round but that is up and live on all
your podcast places and YouTube as well and then on Twitter and Instagram of
Dr. Andy Galpin or the easiest place to find access to that, um, I pretty much
use those for science communication exclusively.
So that's where we'll put out all of our stuff and you can go from there to find
all the links to absolute rest and our blood work company, vitality, and our
coaching programs at rapid and all those things are pretty easy to find. So so we got it all
Hell, yeah, dude. What a good first little foray into becoming best friends. Yeah, man. Appreciate it
We're gonna get to we'll connect afterwards here
We'll make sure that sleep is getting truly dialed into you because I'm not fully convinced you're there
Okay. All right. All right, dude. Thank you so much for today. All right, man, good to connect.