Modern Wisdom - #836 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The New Science Of Longevity, Resilience & Breaking Bad Habits
Episode Date: September 9, 2024Dr Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist, Associate Professor at the Stanford University School of Medicine and a podcaster. From personal dramas to scientific uproars, it's been a wild year for the big...gest health & fitness podcaster in the world. And today we get to discover his biggest new insights about life, relationships and protocols. Expect to learn whether you actually should drink coffee within 90 minutes of waking up, how to get the best sleep of your life according to the latest science, how to become a morning person, what Andrew has learned about the perils of fame and public scrutiny, what new research says on the world of longevity supplements, why you should always do your research when testing with peptides and much more… Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a Free Sample Pack of all LMNT Flavours with your first box at https://drinklmnt.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a 20% discount on the best supplements from Momentous at https://livemomentous.com/modernwisdom (automatically applied at checkout) Get a 10% discount on Marek Health’s comprehensive blood panels at https://marekhealth.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
There's been a lot of controversy over the last few months.
The internet's been ablaze with speculation.
I think it's important to get it up top.
What is happening with the state of the adenosine system research
within the first 90 minutes of the day?
Adenosine is an incredibly interesting molecule.
It exists in the brain and body.
It accumulates with the number of hours that you're awake.
So the longer you're awake, the more adenosine accumulates with the number of hours that you're awake.
So the longer you're awake, the more adenosine accumulates.
It does many things in the brain and body.
One of the most important things that it does
is to give us the subjective experience of feeling sleepy
and the objective feeling of our body being fatigued,
of feeling literally heavier,
requiring more energy to move ourselves.
When we sleep and when we allow ourselves
to go into states of deep rest that are similar to sleep,
we can talk about this,
the adenosine system is adjusted
so that there's less effective adenosine circulating
or bound to adenosine receptors, okay? So this sort effective adenosine circulating or bound to adenosine receptors.
Okay? So this sort of adenosine 101.
There's a lot more to it, but that's sufficient
for what we need to talk about for now.
The drug, the most commonly used drug,
the drug we're using now and that we're on right now,
caffeine, which is consumed by, it's estimated,
more than 90%
of the world's adult population,
effectively works by blocking the adenosine receptor.
There's some nuance there, but we can think of it that way
for simplicity sake.
And in doing so, it prevents the sleepiness
inducing actions of adenosine.
However, when caffeine wears off,
the adenosine that was around trying to bind to those receptors is still around. In fact, it's accumulated even more, which at least partially
explains the so-called caffeine crash or the dip in energy, the fatigue that is that we experience
maybe three or four hours after consuming caffeine.
Okay.
As I mentioned before, when we go to sleep at night,
adenosine is cleared from our system.
There was a lot of debate over the years about why we sleep.
In fact, the great Matt Walker wrote the book,
Why We Sleep.
And a lot of that has to do with the cell biology
of regulating potassium and other ions that are in neurons.
And for those that are interested in the cell biology, it's about
readjusting the amount of potassium inside and outside the cells, which is happening on an
ongoing basis. But you could think of the time that we sleep as doing many things, but one of the most
important things is to bring those adenosine levels down.
Whatever adenosine has accumulated to bring it back down
such that when we wake up in the morning, we feel alert.
Okay, there are a lot of reasons why we feel alert.
Some of them we can call pro alertness mechanisms
like the release of cortisol.
Some of them are about removing the brake on wakefulness
like reducing adenosine. Here we're talking about removing the brake on wakefulness, like reducing adenosine.
Here we're talking about removing the brake on wakefulness
by reducing adenosine.
So let's say, what time do you go to sleep at night?
Typically, if you add your way.
10 o'clock.
10 o'clock, and what time do you typically wake up
feeling great with no alarm clock?
6.30, 6.45.
Great, so let's say you go to sleep at 1030 and you wake up at your usual time.
Chances are you will have cleared a lot,
but not all the adenosine that's required
for you to wake up feeling very alert.
Let's say you stay up a little bit later.
Maybe you stay up until 11, maybe you wake up twice that night
to use the restroom for whatever reason,
you consumed a bit more fluid.
Maybe it takes an extra 10 minutes
for you to fall back asleep the second time,
and then you wake up in the morning,
and you didn't get the total amount of deep sleep
and rapid eye movement sleep that you're used to getting.
Without question, your levels of adenosine upon waking
are going to be slightly higher than they normally would, okay?
Once you understand what adenosine does,
you think about that scenario, it's kind of an obvious thing.
However, most people don't sleep
until they naturally wake up feeling refreshed.
Most people are using an alarm clock.
Most people are not going to sleep as early as they need to
or sleeping as late as they need to or both.
So as a consequence, when you wake up in the morning,
your adenosine levels are not zeroed out
to the place where you would be maximally awake.
There is a lot of or some residual adenosine present.
What do people typically do?
Typically people get out of bed,
might look at their phone.
As you know, I encourage them to go find sunlight
if the sun isn't out to turn on bright lights
and then get outside and get sunlight in their eyes
as soon as they can.
But chances are they're going to grab some caffeine.
They're going to pour themselves a cup of coffee or they're going to have some caffeine. They're going to pour themselves a cup of coffee
or they're going to have some, if you're me, yerba mate.
They're going to perhaps have an energy drink,
all fine and good.
But now think about what we just said,
which is that what you're doing then
is blocking the adenosine receptors effectively.
And whatever residual adenosine was there,
because you didn't sleep enough to clear it out, persists. Plus you're now starting to accumulate more adenosine was there because you didn't sleep enough to clear it out, persist.
Plus you're now starting to accumulate more adenosine
such that by mid-morning, that adenosine has accumulated,
the caffeine has worn off,
and maybe by early afternoon, especially after a meal,
many, not all people experience an afternoon crash
in energy, somewhere between 1 p.m. typically and 4 p.m.,
somewhere in there.
For me, the trough in my natural energy levels
in the afternoon is consistently between 2 and 3 p.m.
Regardless of how well I slept the night before,
many people also find a consistently placed trough
in their energy, independent of all this.
Okay, so what can we do?
Some years back, I started suggesting
that people consider if they have an afternoon crash in energy,
that they delay their morning caffeine intake
for 90 minutes after waking.
Some years after that, an academic review was published
saying, well, there's really no evidence
that that specific practice is necessary,
but I still think, and I stand by the fact
that it can be very useful for those that experience
an afternoon crash, Why? Why?
Well, two things.
First of all, by delaying caffeine
for the first 60 to 90 minutes after waking,
there's an interesting phenomenon whereby,
even though you are out of bed and walking around,
you're not asleep,
if you don't block those adenosine receptors,
there's still clearance of adenosine occurring,
in part because you're-
It's like residual rest.
You're sort of still asleep.
Wow.
The other thing that works remarkably well
to clear out residual adenosine is upon waking,
if you don't feel rested enough,
to do something I've talked also a lot about,
which is another one of these zero cost tools
that has a growing amount of impressive science
to support it, which is non-sleep deep rest or NSDR,
also called yoga nidra, which is its proper name.
The ancient practice is yoga nidra.
So we want to be fair to its proper naming.
A 10 or 20 or 30 minute yoga nidra or NSDR,
if you prefer, done upon waking,
but before getting out of bed,
or maybe you go into the living room
and put on your headphones or listen to an NSDR script,
they're available all over the internet,
done by me, done by a woman named Kelly Boyes,
who has a really lovely voice.
If you prefer a woman's voice,
it's actually the one I typically use,
you will emerge from that feeling much more rested.
Now, Dr. Matt Walker himself and I are collaborating
on a project to evaluate how NSDR impacts brain states
to see if it actually mimics sleep.
There's some beautiful studies already published
out of Scandinavia showing that
longer yoga niger type practices, non-sleep deep rest,
can replenish dopamine stores in an area of the brain
called the basal ganglia, which prepares you
for mental and physical action.
So this is a very well-established tool
from the sort of yogic perspective.
It's a tool that's gaining increasing scientific evidence.
And for everybody I know that has tried this
who reports back to me about it,
it's a remarkably energetically replenishing exercise
that requires no payment, no nothing,
just 10, 20 or 30 minute and an NSTR.
Now what could be happening in that state?
In that state, the body is still, the mind is active,
which mimics very closely rapid eye movement sleep.
So the test that Matt Walker and I are doing,
the experiment is to see,
is having your body completely still,
but your mind active, able to clear adenosine stores
in the same way that being deeply asleep is.
My guess is that it's not the same,
but that it might be a midway effect.
That's the hypothesis.
We could be wrong.
I look forward to seeing the results.
So by delaying your caffeine
for the first 60 to 90 minutes after waking,
but making sure that you hydrate, get your electrolytes,
you know, something like element,
which we both enjoy and make good use of,
you are clearing out the adenosine
that is residual in your system.
Now, why do I also keep harping on this idea
of going out and getting bright light in your eyes?
Ideally sunlight, especially on cloudy days,
but if it's not out yet, you can turn on bright lights.
Well, when one does that,
you actually amplify the naturally occurring peak
in cortisol that occurs soon after waking.
So about 30 minutes before waking,
your cortisol starts to rise.
It's part of the mechanism that wakes you up
without an alarm clock.
As soon as you get out of bed and you start moving around,
that cortisol increases further.
Your body temperature, by the way,
is increasing in parallel.
When you view bright light,
and these are very well-established studies in humans,
as well as animal models, but in humans,
when you view bright light, 10,000 lux indoor light,
if you're using a seasonal effective disorder
treatment lamp, or getting outside even on a cloudy day
and looking toward the sun, looking east in the morning,
without sunglasses, eyeglasses and contacts, fine.
You induce a near 50% increase
in the height of that cortisol peak.
That might sound like a bad thing
because everyone's afraid of cortisol,
but that's not a bad thing.
It prepares your day, prepares you for a day
where your immune system is bolstered,
your energy and alertness is bolstered
and your ability to learn and your mood,
I maybe said mood twice, forgive me, are bolstered.
And in addition to that, there are interactions
between light and the adenosine system.
Light impacts the functional availability
of the adenosine receptor in very interesting ways.
Light increases, bright light that is,
viewed by the eyes,
increases the height of that cortisol peak.
And then the cortisol peak also helps
to counteract the adenosine system.
Now, in addition to that, when you get sleepy at night,
part of that effect is due to the increase in melatonin,
which is released from the pineal gland,
a pea-sized gland, midway,
you're sort of deep in the vestiges of your brain.
When you view bright light at night or during the day,
and especially in the morning,
it quashes those melatonin levels.
So when you wake up in the morning
and you haven't slept enough, or even if you have,
your adenosine levels are still not to zero,
your melatonin levels are still not to zero,
and your cortisol is rising.
So you've got a pro wakefulness system, cortisol,
that you can accelerate or amplify rather
by viewing bright light.
You've got a anti-wakefulness system
in the form of melatonin and adenosine
that are pushing back on your wakefulness.
You're in this kind of like grogginess
and you can further suppress those systems
without caffeine by viewing bright light.
So viewing bright light both increases
the pro-wakefulness systems in the brain and body
and suppresses the anti-wakefulness systems
in the brain and body,
both pushing down on the accelerator of wakefulness
mood and alertness and reducing the break, right?
Otherwise you're sort of trying to drive
with the emergency break on.
Then if 60 to 90 minutes later, you ingest caffeine,
now you're blocking the adenosine receptor.
Sure, that's fine.
I love caffeine.
I certainly drink a lot of caffeine and enjoy it
for all its effects.
And you're now in a position where the arc
of your wakefulness is going to be a nice concert
with the also increase in adenosine
that's naturally going to accumulate throughout the day.
And again, there's no requirement to delay your caffeine
60 to 90 minutes after waking.
But for people that experience a marked afternoon crash,
it's an incredibly effective way to offset partially
or eliminate that afternoon crash.
Well, that's pretty much everybody.
Who doesn't get tired in the middle of the afternoon?
Tell you what I've done with...
Jaco Willing doesn't get tired, period.
Ever. Ever.
Do you think he's got that genetic mutation?
I don't know. You know, I went down to visit him
after his podcast.
I actually did a sauna session with his family
and some of their family friends.
And they had heard that I've been pushing the heat
in the sauna a bit more.
And by the way, I don't recommend this
unless you're very heat adapted.
I'm not great at the cold.
I'd put my cold plunge at about 48, 45 degrees.
Rogan and other people make fun of me for this.
Lex is Russian, so he doesn't have to cold plunge.
He was born into the cold of Siberia.
There's a photo of this actually on the internet.
From the time he was young,
they were cold conditioning him.
That's why he has such a warm heart.
But in terms of the heat, I'm pretty heat tolerant.
So I've been cranking my sauna, traditional sauna,
to about 210, 220, but mostly 210.
I went down there and Jaco challenged me
to what he calls the factory reset protocol,
which is 30 minutes at 225, brutal.
And we had about eight or nine bodies in that sauna.
So it was probably-
Clostrophobic.
It was probably hotter than that.
I was the one guy down on the floor.
All the others, it was men and women,
were sitting up there laughing at me.
And I almost tapped out. And then they do a five minute cold plunge
and they go back and forth three times.
I did one round with them.
So I don't recommend it
because if you're not heat conditioned,
you can give yourself brain damage.
By the way, for people that don't know,
if you put a towel over your head
or you wear one of these Banya hats,
it actually insulates your brain
so you're able to stay in longer.
People think, oh, it must be that much warmer.
It's making me longer.
But you're actually insulating the brain from the heat.
So, yeah, so Jocko, you know, he's obviously tough.
He's, you know, legitimately battle tested, you know,
and at the same time, it's remarkable to me
how much energy he has.
He finished dinner.
So we did the sauna, we did a four hour podcast,
then we did the sauna cold thing I just described.
Then we did dinner.
And then he went off to see a Chrome Ag show
starting at like 10 o'clock.
And then the next morning, of course, he posted his watch.
So he does seem to have more energy
or he just forces himself to ignore whatever fatigue is there.
Chronically, that seems so unlikely
to be able to continue to do that, just sheer will. It feels like your body would eventually come in.
Perhaps I'm not accounting for the will of Jocko.
But, yeah, there's, what is it?
It's a very small number of people,
but there is a genetic mutation that allows certain cohorts
to exist on between sort of three and five hours sleep,
and that's just where they're at.
Yeah, very rare.
Probably they have very fast adenosine clearance systems
viewed differently.
Perhaps they don't accumulate as much adenosine
during the day.
Someone test Jocko, get his blood, get his,
I imagine that when you try and get him with the needle,
it just bends.
I've talked about some of these before,
but the comments on YouTube about Jocko are the best.
Like when Jocko was born, the doctor looked at his parents and said, it's a man.
When he does a pushup, he doesn't lift himself.
He pushes the world away.
Right, he doesn't do pushups.
He does earth downs.
That's it, I've seen that one.
And there are a bunch of other ones
that are really amusing.
He's the new Chuck Norris.
Yeah, but I think those guys are selected for the teams
in part through their ability to, you know,
cognitively and physically push aside fatigue.
I think for most people, you know,
they need six to eight hours of sleep per night
unless growing, teen years, battling some illness,
that sort of thing.
You know, if ever you're used to going to sleep
at 10 PM or something and suddenly at 7 PM, you feel incredibly tired,
you're probably battling something
and you should go to sleep.
I need about six to eight hours,
but the other night I got nine, I rarely get nine.
Felt like a superhuman.
Yeah, typically for me, it's about seven hours
and then I do this 10 to 20 minute non-sleep deep rest.
On the drive over here,
I did a 10 minute non-sleep deep.
Have you ever seen that meme
where it talks about the different hours of sleep
that you have and it's got a sort of a face of a guy
and it's zero is sort of face is falling off one hour,
his face is falling off.
And it really accurately represents exactly how it feels.
Six hours face falling off,
seven hours face falling off, eight, great. But for some reason, and I
totally agree with this, two hours, the guy's fucking super
human. The dudes and what is it about that period? It just
seems like maybe it's the 90 minute, like up and down, it
allows you to really align that one sleep cycle. And you're
like, well, okay, if you're sleeping two hours, you know,
that you're going to feel like shit. You know, that this is
just okay, I'm in I'm in sort of war mode.
But thinking about the teams guys, Jocko and-
Well, sorry, just what I think you're seeing
in that somebody sleeps just two hours
every once in a while and feels really great.
You'll notice that they get hyperverbal.
It's a mild form of mania before the crash.
No way.
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
And you know, we don't talk about this terribly much
because rapid eye movement sleep is critical
for removing the emotional load of previous day
and previous day memories and experiences.
But rapid eye movement sleep has also been used
as a clinical treatment for depression, right?
Which is kind of odd
because one of the primary symptoms of depression
is waking up at three or four in the morning
and not being able to fall back asleep again.
So, you know, there's a kind of a mystery
in the relationship between sleep and mood,
but I think it's fair to say that on average,
you need to get sufficient amount of sleep for you.
And for most people, that means six to eight hours,
plus or minus two hours, right?
Depending on your age and what else
you're dealing with in life.
And I think it's also fair to say that
if ever you had to stay up all night
or you only get two hours of sleep,
you will probably experience some sort of hypermania
for you and then, or hypo, excuse me, hypomania,
talking a lot, feeling really energetic,
and then boom, a crash.
You're going to get smashed.
Yeah, and then a crash.
Yeah, I mean, I've tracked my sleep
in one form or another for a decade.
SleepCycle, the app on mobile, which is really great, by the way.
If anyone's sort of on the road and needs to use an alarm, SleepCycle is fantastic.
If you pay for the premium, I'm not a partner, no way affiliated, but I've used that thing
for probably a decade.
I'm not a fan of using your phone as an alarm clock, but if you're on the road, I've been
in hotels a lot recently,
it's a good, it automatically triggers recordings
when you begin to snore, when you begin to sleep,
speak in your sleep, and you can play those back
and it just records them and puts them on the cloud
for the rest of time.
So I have a couple of friends who have full sentences,
entire conversations, a very well-known podcaster
and previous guest
of this show has entire debates in his sleep.
People should post them. We should do the sleep,
the actual sleep podcast.
I'm trying to get him to put them online
because they are so funny.
But I love sleep cycle and that's great.
I think I've averaged over a decade,
about six hours 45 of active sleep.
But I was a club promoter for a long time.
That six hours 45 is closer to. But I was a club promoter for a long time.
That six hours 45 is closer to probably six and now seven 30. So I'm kind of splitting the difference from my previous life to my new one. One of my favorite tweets from you is don't ask
people how they are doing, ask how they are sleeping. you learn a lot more. Yeah, you get a window into what's really going on for them
because we have this throwaway response
to how are you doing?
I'm like, I'm okay, or I'm great, or I'm fine.
When you ask how people are sleeping,
it speaks to a bunch of previous day and week experiences
and how they're integrating all that.
You know, the mighty Rick Rubin always asks,
how are you feeling? Which I really love. I'll get Rubin always asks, how are you feeling? Which I really love.
I'll get these like texts like, how are you feeling?
And I'm like, that's interesting.
I start responding, you know,
responding forces you to think a little bit.
You know, when we are emotionally in trouble,
we sleep less well, obviously.
I mean, I feel like there are a lot of us,
myself included, that would like to just take a long nap
until after this upcoming election. A three month nap. I mean, I feel like there are a lot of us, myself included, that would like to just take a long nap
until after this upcoming election.
A three month nap.
I mean, it's really important to see what's going on
back and forth, but sometimes it just feels
so emotionally distracting.
And I think, I definitely chart my sleep.
I use the tracker inside of eight sleep.
You know-
Have you got that new thing that lifts your head up?
I do, because I have a snoring issue.
I didn't know I had a snoring issue.
Yeah, I mean, it's not terrible,
but I didn't know I had a snoring issue.
And then I started using the nose strips.
That helps me.
Yeah, but then I made the mistake
of taking one of those off far too quickly
and I had a nice like linear size strip removed
from my nose.
That was good.
They can help.
They actually can really help
because it reduced the percentage of my night
that I was snoring from something like 22%
down to like 11%.
Is that based on what the eight sleep report was?
Yeah.
But now with the new eight sleep, it tilts you up
and that really helps.
Wow. That really helps.
Intake make great nose strips.
So there's a hard piece of plastic.
It's a molded piece of plastic.
And then you put two magnets either side of your nose.
Pulling your nostrils.
And this shit locks you in.
And then Alex Hormosi, who has two deviated septum.
Is that why he always wears that?
Correct.
I was wondering why he wears it in the daytime.
He can't breathe really very well without it.
He's like one's a hundred percent blocked
and the other is something else.
And he's found some other thing that goes inside your nose
and opens it out from there.
He says he can only use it two nights in a row
or else it starts to sort of cut away
at the inner lining of his...
Oh goodness.
He's like those two nights, really, really good breathing.
You're getting a lot of oxygen to your brain during sleep
is part of the optimal sleep routine.
It's just that sometimes the number of different things
that one needs, you know, earplugs, eye masks, you know,
nose, it can get to be a bit much.
Whenever I'm on the road, I know some,
the most important thing for me in hotels is to try
and get a hotel where the window faces East in the morning
and the window opens.
I have this weird kind of morning anxiety
if I can't get fresh air.
So you can always go downstairs and go outside,
but the little things make a big difference.
I think this is one of the things that's so dreadful
about being on a plane for many hours is that you can't,
it's all the short wavelength light, the blue light,
plus you can't open the window, then you're in an airport,
then you're in an Uber.
And you really think about just how unhealthy that is. So as I, you know, I'm 49 next month
and I feel pretty good.
Probably haven't been getting as much sleep
as I should have this last year,
but getting more fresh air, just that simple,
I can't even call it a biohack, right?
Just getting more fresh air and sunshine
has made an enormous difference in my nighttime sleep.
It's the sort of advice that your mom
would have given you, just get more fresh air.
Yeah, she used to kick us out of the house.
We'd come home, we were watching cartoons or something,
and then she'd just say, like,
all right, you're leaving. Like, we're kick...
I'm kicking you out for her own peace of mind.
And then, you know...
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Just sort of related to what we've spoken about there.
How can people become a morning person or learn to get up early more easily and more regularly?
Yeah, three days of pain, the rest is easy.
So it takes about three days to shift
the biological mechanisms to make you a morning person.
Now, if you are a very strongly
genetically determined night owl.
That's a thing.
That's a thing. That's a thing.
So there are genetic mutations,
they call them polymorphisms
that make some people night owls.
They feel best psychologically and physically
going to sleep at about one, two or 3 a.m.
and waking up somewhere around 10, 11 a.m. or noon.
That exists, not just during development or teen years,
but that exists, not just for social reasons.
Other people are true morning people.
They feel absolutely best going to sleep
around 8 PM or 9 PM.
10 PM will be late for them,
and they feel great waking up at four or five or 6 AM.
Okay, most people feel best going to sleep
somewhere between 10 and midnight
and waking up somewhere between 6 AM and 8 AM or so,
maybe 530 to 8 a.m.
Okay, so those are three bins of the night owl,
the morning person, and then the more typical schedule,
but it's heavily weighted toward that typical schedule
if you look at the general population.
So if somebody wants to get up earlier,
you need to stack the four primary,
what are called zeitgebers or timekeepers.
So named because some of the early chronobiologists
that discovered this stuff
and the underlying mechanisms were German, as it were.
So the number one zeitgeber,
the number one way to shift your circadian clock,
which is this cluster of neurons
that sits a few centimeters above the roof of your mouth,
is to view bright light at a time
when you want to be awake, AKA the morning, okay?
So that's why I say get outside,
look at the sun, toward the sun,
don't force yourself to stare at it,
don't damage your eyes, blink as needed,
no sunglasses, eyeglasses, corrective lenses
and contacts are absolutely fine,
even if they have UV protection, okay.
However, if you combine that with another zeitgeber,
the second most powerful zeitgeber is exercise or movement.
So if you do some jumping jacks, you skip some rope
or even just take a walk while facing the sun,
now you're starting to stack different zeitgebers.
And I'll explain the mechanisms in a moment.
If you then also add caffeine,
now this spits in the face a little bit
of what I said a few minutes ago,
but if you were to add caffeine,
you can entrain as it's called the circadian clock
to be alert at that time a bit more.
And I'll be honest,
if I'm going to exercise first thing in the morning,
I need caffeine.
I can't wait that 60 to 90 minutes.
If I need to jump right into exercise,
I find it's easiest for me to do 30 minutes after waking,
three hours after waking or 11 hours after waking.
And a lot of people find that the same,
but of course exercise when you can
because it's that important.
But if you want to quote unquote,
optimize your energy levels for exercise,
typically people will notice that has to do
with your temperature rhythm.
Okay, so we've got sunlight,
we've got exercise or movement of any kind.
It could be jumping jacks, could be walking.
You don't have to do a full workout.
And then caffeine and in some cases, food.
I'm not big on eating first thing in the morning.
I don't like to eat until 11 a.m. or noon.
That's when my first meal arrives for me.
Just naturally, that's when I get hungry.
It's all caffeine and hydration prior to that.
But if you were to eat something first thing in the morning,
that's part of the way you entrain your circadian clock
to wake up, to essentially wake you up earlier.
And then the fourth one is a social rhythm.
If you're interacting with other people,
you're going to entrain your clock to that as well.
So, yes. No way.
So there's a social component to circadian entrainment.
Now, the pathways for these are from the eye,
in the case of viewing light, to the circadian clock,
the super-chiasmatic nucleus.
In the case of caffeine, it's more general.
In the case of exercise, there's literally a brainstem
to circadian clock connection,
a big, superhighway of neuronal connections
that then so-called entrains your circadian clock.
Remember, your circadian clock generates
an intrinsic 24-hour rhythm rhythm such that if we put you
into constant dark or constant light,
you would still sleep for a given bout
and then be alert for a given bout
with a little bit of a nap.
It just is what we call free run.
It would drift a little later each day.
This is what happens when you go to Vegas.
This is what happens when you're in an environment
without a lot of cues about the day,
the sunlight rising and setting cycle.
Sunlight, exercise, caffeine and eating
and social interactions bring your circadian clock
into alignment with all of those zeitgebers.
So when I said it takes three days,
if tomorrow you wanna start beginning the process
of becoming an early riser,
you'd set your alarm for 5 a.m.
No matter what time you went to sleep the night before,
you're going to get up and you're going to do the four
things that I described.
Maybe leave out food if you don't want to eat.
Maybe leave out caffeine if you want to delay by 90 minutes.
It's going to hurt.
And then by the early afternoon, you'll be dragging a bit.
And you just have to be careful to not overindulge
in caffeine, which will then cause you to fall asleep later.
Then you want to go to sleep
at your now naturally slightly earlier sleep time.
The next day, you'll notice,
it'll be a little bit easier to do
the morning routine I just described.
And by the third day, you ought to be waking up
with or before the alarm by a few minutes or moments.
Because your circadian clock has phase shifted, okay?
It's phase advanced as we say,
your circadian clock intrinsic to you
generates a 24.2 or a 24.3 hour rhythm.
It's not perfectly 24 hours.
And that we believe, we don't know,
but the just so story is that it's such
that you're able to then shift that clock
in one or the other direction.
You can phase advance,
you wake up earlier and go to sleep earlier,
you can phase delay.
How do you phase delay?
Well, you're probably doing this already.
Everyone nowadays pretty much qualifies as a shift worker
by the strict and not so strict criteria of shift work,
which is, are you doing any kind of cognitive activity
after 9 p.m.?
Are you viewing any kind of bright lights after 9.30 p.m.?
Most people would say yes.
So the diabolical thing about the circadian timing system
is that it requires a lot of bright light,
ideally from sunlight, but a lot of bright light
early in the day to make you a morning and daytime person.
But it requires just a little bit of bright light,
even from an artificial source, after the hours of about 9.30 PM till 4 AM to quash your melatonin
and make it difficult to sleep, or if you sleep, to make that sleep not as effective.
There's a simple remedy, however, which is, and this is a beautiful study published in
Science Reports in 2022.
If you view sunlight in the afternoon,
even for five minutes or so, could be late afternoon,
could be sunset, take off your sunglasses,
look in the direction of the sun, so now looking west,
you adjust the sensitivity of your retina,
the neurons in the back of your eye,
such that bright light later at night
doesn't have quite as much effect to suppress melatonin.
It reduces the melatonin suppressive effects
by about 50% or offsets those.
So I think of this afternoon viewing as,
well, first of all, it's nice to look at a sunset.
If you're indoors in an environment like this,
even if there are bright lights on,
get outside for a few minutes before the sun sets.
This is especially important in winter.
Even if you can't see the sun as an object,
get some sunlight in your eyes,
and that will at least partially offset
the effects of bright light in your eyes at night, partially.
And I refer to this more or less as your Netflix inoculation,
so that that night you can be on your phone
or watch Netflix, and it's not going to disrupt your sleep
as much, but it will still disrupt your sleep somewhat.
But let's, you know, unless, like Rick Rubin's very diligent
about wearing the red lens glasses,
I've started doing that as well.
But if you don't do that,
I'm guessing he also sees the sunset in the evening.
He's very attached for good scientific reasons
to the sunlight thing.
But these are little things that take just moments, right?
They're essentially zero cost
that can really improve your sleep.
But that's how you become a morning person.
If you want to become a night person, you do the opposite.
You view bright light between the hours of 4 PM and 10 PM,
and then you will phase delay or phase shift
in a delayed way your circadian clock,
making you want to wake up later the next morning. I wonder if dogs count as a social interaction.
Absolutely.
And they have all of the same mechanisms
we just described.
So I just think how can we stack that everything
first thing in the morning, morning walk.
If you're in a place that's not Iceland
or somewhere that's super high north,
dog,
social interaction, moving around,
and then caffeine if you do or if you don't want it.
If you have a dog that likes to run,
you're even better off because it'll force you to run.
You're gonna have to chase after it.
If you have an English bulldog like I did,
you'd be lucky if you get out of it by 10.
Yeah, you're in gear one.
Their eyes are droopy and they don't like to move,
but it is the case that dogs
will naturally orient toward the sun.
And people always ask,
do dogs have the same mechanisms?
Absolutely, the intrinsically photosensitive
retinal ganglion cells,
the one that projected the clock
and carry all of this thing
about circadian entrainment to sunlight
are present as far as we know
in every extant mammalian species,
every mammalian species that's alive today.
And this is a system that evolved from bacteria
that's very similar to the opsins,
the light absorbing molecules that are in the insect eye.
It's a very primordial system.
It's organized very differently anatomically in the retina.
And to me, it's actually one of the more beautiful systems
in all of us.
In fact, the one thing that no one can seem to defeat,
you're never going to biohack away is circadian biology.
This 24-hour fluctuation in energy and focus.
Some people require less sleep,
but we're all more or less a slave to these mechanisms.
And it's a good thing that we are
because it forces us to rest.
Neuroplasticity occurs during sleep.
They push down a denicine.
It takes us through these natural ebbs
and cycles of cognition.
I'm obsessed by the idea that in sleep,
the conscious mind obviously is not in control.
The unconscious mind can geyser up thoughts.
The brain is organizing things more in terms of symbols.
Time and space are very, very organized
very differently in dreams.
And there's a lot of information to be gleaned from dreams.
It's just that we don't yet understand
what the symbols mean.
The kind of classic Freudian Jungian interpretations
are certainly not going to be complete,
but you know, I'm so grateful
that we get this thing called sleep.
And I think thanks to the great Matt Walker,
we now understand that the whole thing
of, oh, sleep when I'm dead, is a really dumb mindset.
And, you know, my team at the Huberman Lab podcast,
we sometimes joke that we win by sleeping.
You know, when we're in the peak of things,
we all encourage each other to, like, get rest.
You know, get rest. Like, we really prioritize sleep.
It's so essential.
One of the best little cliches there,
which is too much of a generalization,
but I think works is,
there's no such thing as being overworked,
only under rested.
I like that.
I like that a lot.
I also think that, you know,
we know a lot about the different stages of sleep.
We know less about the different stages of wakefulness.
I've recently started embracing my natural cognitive and physical cycles.
And I've come to realize,
and I think Ed Mylett says he does this,
but he thinks of his day as consisting of three days,
which is awesome from the productivity standpoint.
I noticed that also, cause he mentioned these time blocks.
So I just want-
Yeah, you've got a new daily routine.
Yeah.
What's your routine?
Yeah, so I came to realize by observation, right?
I didn't force this.
So this is something I observed in myself,
which is that from 6 a.m. until noon,
my brain is very capable,
my body is very capable of doing certain things
far more easily than at other times of the 24-hour cycle.
So I consider that sort of the first phase of my day.
Sometimes I'm up by six,
sometimes it's seven, sometimes it's eight, usually it's about six, six, 30.
So I consider that one opportunity block. The second opportunity block is between noon or
because I eat lunch typically around noon, between one and 6 PM or noon and 6 PM. So a
second opportunity block. And then the third is between 6 PM and bedtime,
which for me typically is 10 30, but sometimes late.
I'm half Argentine.
Sometimes I go to bed at midnight
and I just got all taken out the next day.
I mean, you have to live.
I mean, come on.
So what I started to realize is that I can do
really focused work in two,
but not three of those blocks consistently.
I also noticed that if I exercise early in the first block,
like between 6 a.m. and before 9 a.m.,
I have more energy all day long.
This is what I observed experimentally on myself.
But if I exercise starting at nine or starting at 10,
so halfway through that block,
the second opportunity block is diminished.
I'm kind of dragging, maybe it's related to when I eat,
but that wasn't changing when I eat or what I eat.
So I do think that people could benefit tremendously,
not necessarily by following the schedule that I follow,
but by paying attention to their natural,
cognitive and physical rhythms.
And so as a consequence, what I now do
is I take a look at the day, like for instance,
this is afternoon, we sat down together here at one,
I think we're probably somewhere around 2 p.m.,
I don't know, somewhere around there.
But I realized, okay, I could work before I got here
in this early day block or this evening.
What I chose to do this morning
was kind of more procedural things.
Took care of some posting for our Monday episode,
took care of some phone calls.
I took a walk, took care of some email,
made sure I ate some food before I came here.
On the way here, I did a brief 10 minute NSDR
because I didn't sleep quite as much last night
as I would have liked, but I walked in feeling great
and I don't get paid to endorse,
but nor did we have any kind of arrangement to say this,
but this new tonic energy drink I'm loving.
It's really good. It's also got an eye on it.
So I'm hyped.
Love it. Really tasty.
It tastes so good.
So I can work two or three of these three blocks.
And then the third one ends up being kind of a mishmash
of procedural stuff.
So today, the early part of the day,
the 6 a.m. to noon block was kind of like handle doing non,
it's work, but it's not like focused work stuff.
And I didn't train today because I trained yesterday.
And today was a day off in any case.
Hopefully we'll do some sauna cold tonight.
So now we're working, I'm focused.
And I imagine that, you know, two, three, four hours of this
and my brain will have, you know,
expended some pretty serious cognitive effort.
And then I'll take a little bit of,
I'll expect a sort of dip in energy, I won't force it.
And then this evening, I'll get some work done
and then hopefully we'll do some sauna cold.
So I'm very aware of the fact that I get sort of
two opportunities from these three blocks.
Now, my ideal schedule would be to work
in the first two blocks, really, really hard.
Still eat, still train, train early.
So it would be train early, work in the first block.
So get the training done by 8 a.m., no later.
Work, super focused work.
Then eat something, super focused work in the second block.
Maybe do an NSDR to recover my mental and physical vigor.
And then in the evening-
Social time. Social time, relax.
I've been watching a lot of documentary.
What have you been watching?
I watched Anthony Bourdain documentary yesterday.
I've not, I obviously knew who he was.
We have friends in common.
He, you know, he's a few...
Sadly passed away, but took his own life,
which is tragic.
But I was aware that, you know,
because Joe's talked about him a lot.
David Cho, the artist has talked about him a lot
and is in that documentary.
He also was part of the New York City,
you know, 70s, 80s punk rock scene.
So the Ramones, I'm a huge Ramones fan.
Joe Strummer, like kind of of that ilk.
And the documentary is called Road Runner.
And it's very, very good.
And it's also very interesting to see
how he was such a sensation seeker. is called Road Runner, and it's very, very good. And it's also very interesting to see
how he was such a sensation seeker.
You could almost feel him veering toward something.
And then, you know, and...
I've never watched any of his documentaries.
Yeah, very, very good. And very, very good.
Have you seen, just to interject,
have you seen World War II from the front lines?
No.
So this is Netflix. Netflix have done at least two or three
colorized World War II documentaries.
In fact, there's one that's World War I.
I saw that one.
Yes.
So at least three, World War II in color,
World War, the Great War in color and something else.
All of these will be available on Netflix.
Watching archive footage, there's something distancing
about seeing it in black and white.
It sort of reminds you that it's not now,
and they've used a combination of AI and manual recolors
to be able to sharpen the image.
Everything's 4K, the facial appearance of everyone,
the emotions that you can see on their face,
the smiles, the teeth, and now in color as well,
to me just drives home that story in a manner
that I've never watched a documentary
about something from that era
and felt so emotionally connected to it,
which is interesting.
So I've really been enjoying that.
Shane Gillis- World War II from the front lines?
Yes.
Okay, because the World War I doc I really liked.
I read All Squad on the Western Front, of course,
when I was in school.
I'm fascinated by World War I.
Yeah, documentary, it's kind of an obsession.
I love the Oliver Sacks documentary.
I've seen some others recently.
What about True Crime?
Are you a True Crime guy?
I used to watch that stuff when I was living alone
and then it was like, then you're kind of like,
you're checking closets and stuff.
I don't know if it's good for me to watch that stuff.
It can be interesting.
The one that they did about Richard Ramirez,
the Night Stalker.
Fucking brilliant.
Terrifying, terrifying, especially given that
it's in Los Angeles and just the brazen nature of his attacks.
There's a new one I just watched called American Nightmare.
Yeah, I don't want to see this, man. Oh, it's really, really interesting and harrowing.
But Shane Gillis warns that watching World War II documentaries is early
onset Republican.
That's what he refers to having an obsession with World War II documentaries
as early onset Republican.
So you just need to track that in your mind
if you start sort of shouting magger in your sleep
and your sleep cycle picks it up.
Yeah, unlikely, but I'll look at it in an unbiased way.
How's that?
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We're in an election year at the moment,
I think as much as you might wanna fall asleep
for the next three months and...
No, I was just sort of joking. I mean, I, the political process is critical. It's just,
it's just been, um, it's been a lot. I don't think that it's unfair to say that. I don't think it,
I think a lot of people hold this sort of cognitive superposition, which is, I understand
the future of the country is very important. And I, as a person with a vote, need to be an active
participant. That's the whole reason for doing it.
And also this is exhausting and it's sapping an awful lot of my will to live.
And I feel kind of overloaded.
Have you looked at any strategies spoken to anybody that has any
psychological tools to be able to deal with a rapid media cycle, sort
of very activating stories.
Basically, how can people psychologically manage
this upcoming period?
What would you suggest?
Yeah, I actually hosted a guest
who is expert on the psychology of politics.
It was super interesting.
And we looked at all of this through the lens,
a completely nonpartisan lens,
because we have listeners on both sides of the aisle
and probably some who are undecided.
First of all, the fervor around this upcoming election,
the intensity of everything certainly convinced me
that I'm never gonna run for office.
Despite some speculation out there from friends and family
and some occasional calls from reporters.
No, it's not my arena,
but it's obviously a very important one.
And one of my concerns is that if the intensity
around all of this continues to increase
as much as it has.
I can guarantee you it's going to.
Yeah, that young people who would consider running
for office out of a genuine desire to serve
might be dissuaded, you know,
because you hear these things like,
oh, it's impossible to get anything done
or in order to be effective,
you have to be the other kind of person.
And that's a terrible message.
It might be true, but it's a terrible message
because I think ultimately what you want in any field, right?
Whether or not you're talking about music or sport,
I mean, we're seeing this with the recent Olympics
or podcasting, you want a big pool of people
funneling into it so that you can discover
the incredible talents and virtuosos.
And so that's what you need is a bigger applicant pool,
right? To reveal talent and for a field to progress. Okay. Enough editorializing.
I think the best thing that one can do to navigate this whole cycle is to
pay careful attention to what draws attention. And what I learned from this expert,
is a political science professor, is that what you're listening for and what people are
orienting towards is a dominance language. But the dominance language over others is far less effective, believe it or not, in shifting people's minds
than the dominance language associated
with expressing one's true beliefs.
So their argument was, if you look historically
at presidential and other forms of election,
and by the way, I'm paraphrasing now,
so that you could predict who was going to win based on who told you
what they really think and believe
as opposed to telling people what they want to hear.
Like I think that we have a sensor
for when we're being told what people think
we want us to hear versus what somebody really believes,
even if we disagree with them.
And this probably gets to our origins
as a old world primate species,
but we tend to put leaders into office
who can communicate either through their words
or through the, you know, timbre of their voice
or through their gestures or a combination of things.
Maybe it's redundancy and how often they hammer on a message,
what they really believe,
as opposed to flip-flopping, you know,
according to what the polls say or...
-"Blowin' with the wind." -"Right."
So, I think we hear the words dominance language, flip-flopping, you know, according to what the polls say or- Blowing with the wind.
Right, so I think we hear the words dominance language
and we default to, oh, it's about one person kind of,
you know, dominating the other person.
Now, ultimately it's a competition
between mostly two people.
We have a third party in this country,
but it seems to be boiling down to two at this moment.
And so this thing about dominance language
is often couched as dominance over the other
in a given scenario, over a given topic,
in separate venues, you know,
at one gathering versus another.
But what this, I consider brilliant
political science professor was explaining
is that the dominance is really exerted
and impacts voting at the level of one
or the other candidate, perhaps both,
expressing what they really believe about something
in clear terms.
With conviction. With conviction.
And it being true.
I think this is the sort of thing
that they can't fake ultimately.
And that where people lose faith in a candidate
is when that candidate, you know, says,
well, at one point, you know, I said this,
but now I'm saying this, and they don't give a reason
that feels legitimate to their actual beliefs,
or they don't address it, right, or they don't address it,
or they simply focus on the beliefs of the other candidate.
So my strategy in this current election is to put,
as I do for many, not all things in life,
much to the dismay of people
in my life, a neuroscience lens, a psychology lens, a science-based lens on what's happening around
me. And I'm listening for, does that sound true in the sense, does it really sound like
that candidate really believes that? Or does it sound like they're trying to tell me this? Or are
they spending more time talking about what the other candidate believes or doesn't believe
in an effort to sway me?
Because ultimately, yes, there does seem to be some,
and this guest pointed it out as well,
that there is a tendency to orient towards people
that we recognize, that feel similar to people
we grew up around, but that's not actually the thing
that impacts voting in the end.
That ultimately, the people who are undecided,
because there is always gonna be a group of people
who are voting against the other party, period.
Like they're just literally voting against one party.
But I do think that there's this group in the middle.
What, you know, and I didn't coin this term,
but Dr. Paul Conti, who was on my podcast,
is a psychiatrist and yours,
talks about the league of reasonable people,
which are, which is, it has nothing to do with politics per se,
but this is a group of people
who are really evaluating evidence on the basis
of what they see and what they feel and what they hear
and trying to move away from-
The silence middle.
The silence middle that, you know,
and so people that are trying to evaluate evidence
and are really paying attention to,
does this person feel genuine?
Do they really believe this?
Or are they telling me this
because it's what I want to hear?
I think that's the way I plan to navigate this time.
How will that help with psychological health, using that?
You're still gonna be peppered with the story
and the worry and the concern,
and oh, here's a new,
and I've got to forget the last thing,
but it's still in my mind and there's a new thing,
and I got to spin all of these different news stories?
Yeah, great question.
In a very Paul Kantian way, it gives you agency.
It gives you a sense of control
over the fire hose of information that's coming at you.
You can say, okay, I'm going to,
there's nothing I can do about the fire hose.
There's nothing I can do about getting just blasted back
with all this information,
but I'm going to apply a very specific filter
to try and hear what people are saying
about specific issues that matter
and paying attention to whether or not
they're telling me what they really believe.
You can disagree with them and vote against them,
or you can vote for them, but ultimately,
the data show, as I understand,
that people ultimately are voting for the candidate
that they believe has the greatest conviction.
And what I think has been lacking, frankly,
in the political discussion, and I say this as a citizen,
not as a political scientist, but as a citizen who votes,
has been a clear picture of what the future
could look like if a given candidate wins.
I want a vivid picture of the world they imagine.
I don't want this like surface level stuff,
like imagine a day when this and that,
like, it's like they start each sentence correctly,
and then it just kind of goes to like, bleh.
It just kind of... And you know, as a scientist,
and somebody who's a public health,
public science communicator,
you know, I'm constantly under the scrutiny of like,
wait, what exactly is the protocol?
What exactly justifies the protocol?
Okay, delay caffeine 90 minutes after waking.
If you crash in the afternoon,
well, what's the randomized controlled trial?
I'll be the first to tell you there isn't one.
I'll also tell you the mechanisms that support my statement.
Now, if you talk to Dr. Lane Norton,
someone who I respect tremendously,
he's been on my podcast twice,
I have tremendous respect for him.
He'll tell you, unless it's a randomized controlled trial,
that doesn't meet his threshold.
And I'll tell you, well, you know, I don't eat seed oils.
I avoid them most of the time,
because I like olive oil and butter.
I'm not afraid of them.
But you know, it's not based on a randomized controlled trial.
I just feel better when I don't.
So I'll tell you my reasons for believing strongly
why I suggest A or B or what I do.
Does it meet the same standard that Lane requires?
No, but I'll tell you exactly
what I'm grounding my statements on.
And what I want as a scientist,
what I want as a citizen is for the candidates,
presidential candidates, all candidates,
just tell me what you believe, tell me the rationale.
The rationale could be,
listen, they're telling me to say this,
but just tell me what you believe and why.
And when you do that for somebody,
certainly when that's done for me,
I just feel an immense relief and an immense trust
that the person actually understands their own process.
They're letting us look at the underlying mechanics.
And I also wanna know what they envision for the future.
Right now, I'm hearing very little about that.
I'm hearing a lot of aspirational things on the one side that are very vague, and I'm hearing a lot of
kind of like dogmatic language on the other side, also pretty vague. And so I wanna know,
I wanna list, like send me the one page PDF. I wanna know like, what are your protocols
for making this a better country? So that's my threshold, and I do get worked up about this,
but not enough to run for office.
I found this really interesting study that's been done recently. Stories don't care about
your statistics. In controlled experiments, researchers documented a pronounced story
statistic gap in memory. The average impact of statistics on beliefs fades by 73% over the
course of a day. The impact of a story fades by only 32%.
So it's 73%, average impact of statistics on beliefs,
32% on a story.
So in short, people's beliefs are more durably impacted
by stories than statistics,
huge implications for how voters' beliefs
can be more easily swayed during the upcoming elections.
Yeah, part of the reason I love you,
I really mean that.
Like you have an unbelievable ability to find studies
that are relevant that I would never find.
Here's why I believe stories are more impactful
than just citing statistics.
The reason is that the brain organizes memories
of all kinds in beginning, middle and end.
And a graph has a structure,
but it doesn't really have a beginning, middle and end.
Now it can be a time course plot.
It can be a time course plot.
There are all sorts of caveats to this, right?
And the scientist in me always has to mention
all the caveats, but we, from the time
that we are little children, we organize things
in terms of beginning, middle and end.
The best example of this is the ABCs.
When you learn the ABCs, you don't do A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, H, I, J, K, L, M,
M, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z.
For a moment there, I was worried I wouldn't remember.
But I'm so far so good. And I've been drinking my new tonic.
So, um... So...
But how do children learn the ABCs?
-♪ A, B, C, D, E, F... -♪ Right.
So the brain is learning the inflections.
It's learning what's prosody, right?
The inflections, the Lilton fall of voice.
And we know that this is one of the ways
that we organize information.
My friends who are like world-class musicians who sing,
I always say like, I remember lyrics really well,
and I always say, oh, what about that lyric?
And they go, oh, like, I can't remember.
And then they'll start with the first line
and then all of a sudden they remember the whole song.
Sequence.
That's right.
That's the way memories are organized.
They sort of peel back.
You know, like some people are very good
at memorizing lists where acronyms can help us,
but in general, we sequence our life
on the basis of a beginning, middle, end type structure.
So, you know, I think when people,
now the exception to this would be flash bulb memories. Like for instance, about a month ago, right?
One of the presidential candidates,
there was an assassination attempt on his life.
I think that was the first time since 9-11
that I recall everyone in the country
being tuned into the same event online.
Wild.
I mean, there may have been intervening things, but-
Wild.
You know, there was an earthquake
this morning in Los Angeles.
Did you feel it?
I was busy preparing and I had my AirPods in.
All right, great.
And everybody else went, ah!
I was a little one, but I grew up in California.
This one was kind of a, it was a ripple, not a rumble.
So usually if it's a bigger one, you'll hear it
like a train coming through the environment.
In any case, not a flash bulb memory, right?
Obviously, but you remember what you were doing.
But a few weeks ago, or about a month ago
during that assassination attempt,
we had a flash bulb memory.
I can recall, it was a Saturday,
I was sitting on the couch.
My girlfriend and I were talking,
and then all of a sudden I was like, oh my goodness.
She's like, no, oh my goodness.
And all of a sudden we were on the phone.
Right, exactly.
So flash bulb memories are an exception to what we're on the phone. Right, exactly. So flashbulb memories are an exception
to what we're talking about
and they grab all the context around that.
I remember when my mom picked me up on 9-11 from school.
I remember listening to it in the radio.
My memory, I know yours,
I really want to get into this later on about
you have a very self-identified,
very good memory of life experiences
going quite a way back into your youth.
Yeah, for better or worse.
Yeah, for better or worse, I'm the opposite.
But I remember that one, light bulb memory,
like in a big important event.
But yeah, the story thing's so interesting.
And I think-
By the way, sorry, I didn't mean to interrupt,
but you know that the origin of flash bulb memory
is adrenaline.
You know, it's adrenaline released from the adrenals
and in the locus coeruleus,
sort of a quote unquote alertness center,
although my neuroscience colleagues are gonna be like,
there he goes, calling brain structures by the function.
But you know, it releases epinephrine into the brain
in kind of a sprinkling fashion.
You know, there's, we know,
and there's a beautiful review by James McGaw,
one of the leading researchers in memory about this,
that dating back to medieval times,
if they wanted kids to remember something,
I'm not making this up, they would,
I can say it's an annual review of a neuroscience,
starts off by describing they would take kids,
they'd give them a tutorial,
typically it was a religious tutorial back then,
and then they'd throw them into cold water.
So you get a spike in adrenaline
and then you remember what you had heard prior.
So it's, when you have a spike in adrenaline, and then you remember what you had heard prior. So it's, you know, when you have a spike in adrenaline,
the brain, the nervous system knows something's different.
It cues the memory system.
So just to think about why that might be adaptive,
ancestrally, any dump of adrenaline of that kind of size
would probably be indicative of such a important
strategic learning moment, opportunity.
Do not go near that cave that happened to have that bear
in it again.
Right.
We'll make sure that you actually hold,
is that the justification?
Right, so much so, yeah.
And so much so that there's what's called
condition place aversion.
So in fact, if you see a drawing of that cave
or you go back to that cave,
you start to experience some of the same somatic stuff.
What is the same somatic stuff?
Well, the nervous system is fairly nuanced,
but it's also crude.
You're releasing some adrenaline
as the increase in heart rate, the increase in breathing.
It's like, oh, that cave.
Now the issue becomes it's not nuanced enough
that such that some people then they see any cave
and then they think that could represent danger.
So, you know, the adrenaline system is a way
to obviously cue alertness very fast,
milliseconds fast,
but also to change the chemical milieu of the brain
so that whatever memories or experiences
were being charted in the brain
now are locked into your memory.
So for instance, let's say we were to walk out of here,
we walk out to the car
and we're not thinking about something bad
that could happen and all of a sudden, crack, crack, out to the car and we're not thinking about something bad that could happen.
And all of a sudden, crack, crack, crack, crack,
and someone gets shot right in front of us.
Whoa, okay.
Now, you know, all sorts of things are going to happen.
Okay, hopefully no one's heard of it.
Let's say it's a bad tragic incident.
Now, the adrenaline released into your system
grabbed and consolidated the memories of this house,
of the lawn, of walking out there.
This is why people who experience trauma oftentimes
have kind of odd recollect, like seemingly odd
or unrelated recollections about the things
leading up to an event, okay?
So, because ultimately, what did you need to learn?
Not to avoid streets, not to avoid this street necessarily,
but like, what were you doing?
What brought you?
Your brain is trying to grab something.
That's right.
What brought you to that location?
What things brought you to that location?
What things brought you to that incident?
Oh, interesting.
And of course, some people dump these experiences
more readily than others.
Part of the logic behind a lot of, not all,
but a lot of trauma therapies,
is to literally bring the brain and body
back into a state of high-
Safely.
High intensity, and then to re-script the story.
Others are designed to bring you back into the story
but keep you calm.
So there's sort of two general approaches,
just as there are approaches to treating depression
that involve, you know, bringing a lot of salience
and emotion to the surface, the cathartic approach,
these are tested and some work very well,
as well as the use of drugs like ketamine, you know,
FDA approved drug for dissociating your emotions
while in the presence of the MDMA.
Right, or MDMA, which just recently,
day before yesterday, did fail to pass approval by the FDA
for the treatment of PTSD.
I didn't know about that.
Yeah, big deal in the community, the psychiatric community.
This could be summarized as very impressive clinical trials
showing up to 67% even remission of PTSD
or significant reduction in PTSD
from people that did two sessions of MDMA
with a qualified therapist in a clinical setting.
But the FDA had a number of different stated reasons,
including lack of control group.
It's very hard to have a control in the sense that people can take no MDA,
as a... M-D-M-A, excuse me,
methylene dioxide, methamphetamine,
or, but then they knew that they were in the control group,
right? This whole business of how do you blind people
to the drug.
And you know if you've taken MDMA, you know it.
Yeah. And then there were some other issues, sadly,
that seemed, at least by my read,
not unique to MDMA therapies,
but that unfortunately it happened
during the course of the trials,
which made the results not satisfactory enough
for the FDA.
So I think that the effort needs to continue.
I another-
Do they get another crack at this?
Will they get another-
Yeah, one hopes.
They can submit again.
Yeah, one hopes, but there are a lot of people out there
with PTSD and intractable types of stress disorders
that now are tractable with treatments like MDMA, provided you have the right therapeutic
support. And that's the issue is these drugs without the proper therapeutic support can send
people down bad trajectories. And so this is the big thing. And you can tell I'm kind of agonizing
over this because we need to support... The this because, you know, we need to,
like the way these things move forward
is we need to be very objective and say,
okay, why did the FDA say no?
Why? We can kick and scream about it,
but that's not gonna do any good.
Why did they say no?
And then address those issues.
Like a scientist, you get a paperback,
you think it's the greatest paper in the world,
you get the reviews,
and they have issues with certain things,
you go, well, wait,
but, and you just, you have to go systematically
until those issues are dealt with.
It's very- You're gonna get the same result.
You're gonna get the same result.
So we need to be very objective about this.
And I look forward to a day when the FDA is satisfied
based on the best criteria.
Yeah, yeah, I'm not being political there.
I just like, I think these drugs can really help people
in the right circumstances,
but it's been a slog for the community of people
trying to get these drugs through.
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Yeah, one of my friends, her husband has suffered with PTSD, with alcoholism.
Oh yeah, I get the switching out flavors.
Wild citrus.
Well, you know what's weird is I study the visual system.
I have an appointment in ophthalmology after all,
and I can see great at a distance.
I can read small text at this,
but I'm actually running into trouble
seeing things up close recently. Like if I put it here, I can read small text, but I'm actually running into trouble seeing things up close recently.
Like if I put it here, I'm blind to it.
Well, I told you last time about my Lasik, right?
And I can see absolutely everything.
Ancestral trauma at 500 yards, I'm like Tim Kennedy.
I'm sorry, I'm not laughing at him.
I'm not laughing at him at Tim Kennedy.
Lord knows I'm not laughing at Tim Kennedy.
Tim, don't hurt me, I'm a fan.
I'm just, the fact that you could see trauma
at 500 yards is, that's a high acuity condition.
So, thank goodness.
Like Tim, like-
He will come and find you.
I've got a story.
I'll tell you a story that he told me
about him and Brian Callan.
And-
It was good too.
Good, happy days.
So, uh, Brian went over to the UK with them.
He was going to go, uh, surfing.
They were doing some sort of adventure in the UK and Brian arrived late.
And Tim said, um, we're going to go swimming in the morning.
He's like, no, it's him.
I'm, I, you know, I, I just got in like my flight.
You've been here for a little bit longer.
And he said, no, grabbed him by the arm like that and said, no, no, no, it's him. I'm, you know, I just got in like my flight. You've been here for a little bit longer. And he said, no, grabbed him by the arm like that.
Said, no, no, we're going swimming in the morning.
Looked him in the eyes and Brian was like,
Tim, I don't want to, I'm going to be tired.
I'm going to be whatever.
Anyway, Tim made the threat sufficiently plain
that he wasn't joking.
So six in the morning,
Brian hears this little knock on his door.
Six in the morning. Brian. this little knock on his door. Six in the morning.
Brian.
So Brian pretends to be asleep.
Brian's an actor.
Uh, Brian's been in Hollywood movies, big Hollywood movie.
Comedian too, right?
Comedian and actor.
Yeah.
He, and he said he channeled every single ounce of acting ability that he had.
So he's a lady on the side and even so give a, like give the little
snort here and there and he heard the door open side and he even so give a... Like give a little snort here and there
and he heard the door open.
And then he felt the bed move one side to the other
like that, it sort of rocked from left to right.
And then Tim's face came down to his ear and he said,
Brian, do you know how many terrorists I've stood over
when they pretended to be asleep? I know.
Next thing you know, he's in the water swimming.
Correct.
Sure enough, you know you're talking
about the cortisol spike?
That is a reliable way to give.
That's the ultimate alarm, the Tim Kennedy alarm.
Forget using sleep cycle, forget everything that I said,
just pay Tim Kennedy to come and pretend
that you're a terrorist.
Yeah, it actually raises an interesting
and relevant biological point, which is that,
if you wake up at five in the morning
and you glance at your phone,
something I don't recommend doing,
and you see a troubling text message,
you'll be wide awake in a moment.
And that's adrenaline, epinephrine.
In the brain, we call it epinephrine.
In the body, we call it adrenaline
for uninteresting reasons.
But that structure of neurons, that cluster in the body we call it adrenaline for uninteresting reasons. But that structure of
neurons, that cluster in the brain stem called the back of the brain area, let's just stay with,
you know, broad nomenclature, the locus coeruleus has, there's cluster of neurons that do many
different things there, but some of them provide, you know, these wire-like axonal inputs, as we
call them, in a kind of sprinkler fashion to the brain.
And when there's something that alerts us
that we need, you know, it's triggering to us, if you will,
it just, it's sprinklers the brain.
Yeah, it sprinklers the brain with epinephrine, adrenaline,
and boom, the brain wakes up.
And then in parallel, your adrenals release adrenaline.
And within, you know, a couple hundred milliseconds,
you're up, you're able to move.
And you're not thinking about fatigue
and the denisine doesn't mean anything.
And, you know, and sometimes I think that the, you know,
earlier we were only half joking, Jaco,
about Jaco Willings and the sort of 430 AM thing
and waking up, you know, you can train these systems.
Earlier, we were talking about in-training
the circadian clock to different stimuli
to become an early riser or a late shifted person,
as it were.
All of these neural circuits are subject to kind of
conditional plasticity, right?
So like the alarm, boom, like you can be wide awake,
or in my case, you're like hit the snooze, right?
Nothing is like the sleep that you get during a snooze.
It's so good. It's so good.
But you know, you can be conditioned to,
you can condition these locus coeruleus systems,
the adrenaline system. In fact, we were talking about it
a minute ago in the context of PTSD,
in the context of fear, in the context of non-nuanced
alertness on the basis of a broad stimulus.
Like, you know, if something terrible happened to you
in a garage, we're in this beautiful garage
with all these vintage cars around, but if something terrible happened to you in a garage, we're in this beautiful garage with all these vintage cars around,
but if something bad happened to you in a garage,
it doesn't have to be that garage.
It can just be garages, the smell of metal,
you know, different sensory cues get embedded
in those memories and then can feed
into these alertness systems.
And this is why, you know, it's such a challenge to undo,
to unpeel a trauma or a chronic anxiety.
You have to sort of get to the combination of things
that is the combination lock that lets you undo it.
That was one of the most interesting things
I learned from Paul Conti.
I told him a story when I was 20,
I was in a head-on collision with a snowplow
at 60 miles an hour
on the main artery motorway of the UK going up to Scotland.
So they were driving the snowplow.
And they sort of listed gently across into our lane,
only clipped probably...
You're driving a little MG or something?
It was a Ford Focus with my business partner in.
And they only clipped maybe about a foot or so into the car.
But for him, what we think happened was he was probably looking at something, not looking like pink and what was that?
And just kept on going.
Didn't even notice.
For us, all hell broke loose.
And I said to Paul, you know, I had a little bit of travel anxiety for a short while after
that and it dissipated about six weeks or so.
I was uncomfortable with a contraflow traffic.
So I didn't like being on that lane.
I would always be on the, or on the other side of the road in the UK.
So on the other, I would want to be on the outside lane, not the inside lane.
And he said, well, one of the interesting things about the way that trauma can repattern
memories, old memories, is that you could have convinced yourself, well, I've never
liked driving.
I've always been uncomfortable of this.
You can forget that there was ever a time before the incident, when you felt differently.
And this is where I think, first off, our brains aren't always
necessarily our best friends.
And secondly, the story, what's the story that you're telling yourself?
What's the story that your brain is telling yourself about these memories?
Paul was adamant.
He said, you absolutely could have begun telling yourself because I like I love driving. I
miss not having a car in the US. I finally did get a car at the start of this year. And
I really enjoy being back on the road. It's the time where I get to listen to podcasts
and I can't use my phone. And I really like it. And he said, you know, how did it have
been a more significant issue? Or had you dealt with it in a different way or you could have convinced yourself,
I know I've always been a nervous driver.
I've never enjoyed driving.
And then what, you know, how sort of infectious
and pernicious is that kind of a memory?
You know, these individual instances,
which I think are why it is so important
to connect with those emotions,
to look at the things that are driving you.
What are your unspoken assumptions about the world?
What are- Oh man.
So I'm just wrapped with attention as you're telling this.
So I have this notebook.
I like these bound notebooks.
And I started writing kind of journal format,
but then recently I started just jotting things down.
Sometimes it's podcast notes.
But the other day I had this thought,
it's gonna seem very, oh, this is a funny one.
You wanna hear a funny one?
I do.
So a long time ago I used to make a joke, but I decided to just, it's gonna seem very, oh, this is a funny one, you wanna hear a funny one? I do. So I, a long time ago, I used to make a joke,
but I decided to just script it out.
This is only a three word entry.
It said, you know, my goal in life has been to go
from like, oy, to oy, to just peace.
So I have oy, no, I have oy, and then I have,
no, I have oy, and then I have oy,
and then I have just like peace.
Like that, like basically, aside from sleep, like these are the three states that I can be in, then I have just like peace. Like that, like basically aside from sleep,
like these are the three states that I can be in, right?
So in any case-
Idiot, aggression, chill.
Yeah, so assumptions about the world.
So the one that I woke up the other day,
well, I spent a lot of time the other day
explaining to a friend that,
because they were going through something
that was really unfair.
And we were parsing, I'll get back to this,
but we were parsing the difference between mistakes,
misunderstandings and betrayals
and how some people respond to mistakes and misunderstandings
as if they were betrayals.
And some people mix these up, you know?
So that was an interesting one, but to me anyway.
But the thing that you say, assumptions about the world,
I know it's in here someplace.
I wrote it down and it felt so true.
This is it.
This was the other morning I woke up and I was like,
oh, I don't feel right.
Like I don't feel right.
Like I've got all this stuff to do.
Like something just, and I was like,
I can't remember a time.
This is why what you just said cued me.
I can't remember a time. This is why what you just said cued me. I can't remember a time when I woke up
just feeling like there was nothing
bearing down on me that day ever.
But now based on what you're telling me,
perhaps there was a time and I just don't remember.
But then I was lying in bed as I do,
keeping my eyes closed.
Rick Rubin taught me this trick.
Not in the same bed, but he taught me this trick.
He said, if you wake up and you're having a dream
right before you wake up and you wanna remember the dream
or you want to stay in a mental state,
keep your eyes closed and stay completely still.
However, if you're having a nightmare
or you don't like the way that you feel, move your body.
There's something about the movement that dispels it.
Absolutely, and if you think about rapid eye movement sleep,
which is the most dream-rich sleep,
your body is paralyzed and the mind is active.
So I've started doing this and it's made it very easy
for me to remember my dreams.
So Rick, who's not formally trained in science,
but is Rick, gave me that tool
and it works exceptionally well in my experience.
But I woke up and I said,
maybe the illusion is the pain. maybe the illusion is the pain.
Maybe the illusion is the pain.
Maybe the mental anguish I feel,
maybe the challenge of life,
like maybe that's the illusion, right?
Because we hear so much about how, you know,
the pleasures are the illusions.
These, you know, now dopamine's a real thing
and chasing dopamine is a real thing.
At its extremes, it can be addiction.
At its less extremes, it can be compulsions
and it can also be a joyful life.
But I was thinking to myself,
maybe pain is the illusion, right?
Maybe the idea that there's all this like challenge
and just maybe that's the thing
that we're supposed to remove.
And then I thought back to something that a friend
who's a very, very talented trauma therapist,
his name is Ryan Suave, he's out in Florida,
runs a trauma treatment center out there, once told me,
he said, yeah, you know, in some of the Buddhist traditions
they talk about that your work in this life is in part,
not completely, is to burn down, I think they call them,
I'm gonna get the pronunciation wrong,
but someone will tell us in the comments,
the scumsaras, like burning down to the roots,
like the weeds of life,
like your misperceptions about what things are.
And I started thinking about this,
especially after Martha Beck was on my podcast,
who I really love, she said,
you know, you're not here to suffer.
And I thought, I'm not? And she was like, you know, you're not here to suffer. And I thought, I'm not?
And she was like, you know, you're not here to suffer.
You know, I've endured a lot of suffering in my life,
more than some, less than others.
But I think we all endure a lot of suffering,
largely as a consequence of what happens between our ears.
Unfortunately, some of us also because of things
that actually happen to our bodies,
but we're self-induced or otherwise.
But, you know, maybe we're not here to suffer. Maybe a lot of the suffering that we experience
is this illusion that we create.
And so I started really, I wrote it down.
Maybe the illusion is the pain.
And so maybe we need to challenge this.
Like maybe it's okay to be joyful, a little more joyful.
I have so much.
Is that, I mean, it's great.
And I have- Too wishy washy?
No, not at all.
I have so much to tell you. So overthinking creates more problems than it solves.
Definitely.
And-
Unless you're solving a really hard problem.
Correct.
But on average, as everything is.
Joe Hudson, do you know who he is?
I don't.
Art of accomplishment, phenomenal guy,
really, really interesting dude, came on the pod
and he has this very unique definition
of efficiency and he thinks of joy as efficiency.
So efficiency is how much you get out
for how much you put in, right?
What is the return?
What is the output that you get for the input
that you've had to expend?
And if you do something, which is joyful,
you have to expend less and on the other side,
you get out more.
That's like what a lovely redefinition.
So joy, enjoyment for him is the ultimate version
of efficiency that if you're using your passion,
if you're doing something which you find enlivening,
you are by definition
helping to make your system more efficient.
So his question, while we were doing this podcast,
it was a virtual one, and he said,
this is one of his favorite little cues that he asks.
He says, what would this be like
if it was 10% more enjoyable?
I love that.
What's this guy's name again?
Joe Hudson.
And I wrote down joy is efficiency, Joe Hudson.
Joe Hudson, yeah.
And not that it matters, but what's his training?
Is he a psychologist?
I would have, it's very lengthy.
Okay.
So what would this be like if it was 10% more enjoyable?
And that is a cue, 10% achievable.
And what he said there, so I'll notice when I said that just now,
I sort of shifted in my seat a little bit.
My back, my t-shirt was a little creased under my lower back,
so I'd move that and maybe I'll get a little drink. I'll back, my t-shirt was a little creased under my lower back, so I'd move that.
And maybe I'll get a little drink.
I'll look after myself.
I'll look after my body.
Maybe I'll allow the peripheries of my gaze
to just sort of open out a bit.
Or maybe I'll take a slightly deeper breath
and I'll oxygenate a little bit more.
Yeah, like I'm having fun right now,
but we're going to have 10% more fun.
10%? Just 10% more enjoyable.
What would that be like?
Loosen the bolts 10%.
So that's one thing.
The other thing, an insight that I've been thinking
about a lot recently, things are not what they are.
Things are what we think they are.
For instance, doing a hard workout
gives you a signature feeling.
You're laid on the floor, panting, heart rate at 180,
sweating from everywhere with the taste
of metal in your mouth.
This is oddly enjoyable.
But if this exact same sensation was to spontaneously occur in your car while you were sat in traffic,
you'd call the ambulance for fear that you're having a heart attack.
Framing is everything.
This is a quote from Rory Sutherland.
Do you know who that is?
One of the greatest living advertisers on the planet, Vice Chairman of Ogilvy Advertising.
This is, he's the only man I've ever heard swear in a Ted talk.
And this is a direct quote from his TED talk. He
says, sometimes you just want to stand in the corner and stare
out of the window. The problem is when you're not smoking and
staring out of the window, you're an anti social friend
less idiot. If you stand and stare out of the window with a
cigarette, you're a fucking philosopher. The power of
reframing things cannot be overstated. It's significantly
easier to find a way
to reframe your experiences as enjoyable
while you improve them, rather than waiting for them
to be done before you give yourself license to be happy.
That's like alchemy. It's kind of alchemy.
I like that. Um, I'm both taking notes
and listening very carefully.
Yeah, I think, um think people exist on a continuum
of bias toward more joy or bias toward more pain.
And I agree that we have a lot of cognitive control
over the middle range, right?
Because of course there are experiences
that are awful traumatic.
Unequivocably. Unequivocally, yeah.
Excellent or terrible, there's no question about that.
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I turned 49 next month, trying to think about like what I've learned, where I'm headed.
And I have, unfortunately at times, but also fortunately my memory is very good.
How good? What's good? I mean, I can close my eyes and hear conversations that I had with people
with a fair degree of accuracy, I believe.
How far does that go back?
Oh, I can remember walks I took with my dad when I was five or six years old. I can remember
the layout of my room to like find detail when I was a kid. I faces, I have a strong recollection of faces
and facial recognition.
I don't track time well.
You know, as a professor, we get some leeway,
but I, you know, I perpetually run late.
I don't track time.
And until recently, I didn't really have a sense of death.
I mean, I knew it existed.
I've had people close to me die.
All three of my academic advisors died,
you know, suicide, cancer, cancer.
You know, the joke in my field is,
you don't want me to work for you.
I was going to say, if that's what you think you ought to...
Yeah, and you know, for a guy that didn't grow up
in the inner city or military,
I've had, you know, quite a few friends die.
Drug overdoses, suicides, you know,
and it's kind of hard to know if it's on average, more or less. You know, I was a teen inides, you know, and it's kind of hard to know if it's on average,
more or less, you know, I was a teen in the, you know,
in the late eighties, early nineties,
and there weren't a lot of people doing therapy.
There were no psychological meds for the treatment
of different conditions.
Maybe that's it.
Who knows?
In any case, if I spend any amount of time thinking
about anything of the past, I can easily drift into it.
In fact, until very recently, very, very recently,
much of my cognition each day was a battle
between trying to anchor in the present
and thinking forward and being pulled into memories
of the past, kind of orienting towards the past.
Such a rich opportunity to ruminate.
Yeah, and just, and we're seeing in, you know, even music from the past, acting as a cue to the past. Such a rich opportunity to ruminate. Yeah, and just, and we're seeing in, you know,
even music from the past acting as a cue to the past.
Something happened in like the last eight, nine months
where I feel hyper-focused on the present.
Very, very little focus on the past, very little.
I have exquisite memory of the past, but very little.
In fact, one of my journal entries was,
I was trying to think of, and this is somewhat embarrassing
because it's not the way I would have scripted it,
but I was thinking about from the time,
as early back as I could remember,
the different animals that I felt like I sort of related to
or embodied it.
You know, when I was a kid, I had the same voice I have now
and they called me Froggy, you know,
cause I was like the kid from the Little Rascals
is a show that most people now don't know.
You'd like the kid talk like this.
And I had, you know, my Adam's apple was out
when I was a little kid, I had hair on my Adam's apple.
It's like, there's a, I have a, I'm a heterozygote
for a certain genetic mutation.
I overproduce androgen from my adrenals.
If you have two copies, it can make you infertile.
Fortunately I don't, I have one copy
and it doesn't result in any other like bodily differences
or anything like that.
I'm very fortunate in that way.
And I'm aware I can reproduce.
Let's just leave it at that.
Okay, so, but then, you know, there were different animals
at different stages of my life.
As I grew and matured and experienced different things,
I was like at one stage of my life,
I felt very oriented towards the mustelids.
And then at other times towards like a certain species
of cat and like, I just identified with them
in a number of ways.
And then recently I was on this long run.
I do these long Sunday rucks and runs.
And I was seeing myself like, where am I at right now?
And all of a sudden I just went, oh shit.
This is about the least exciting animal
I could think about.
And I realized like right now at this stage of my life,
I don't know how long this will last.
I'm, and this is very personal, but whatever,
F it, like lately I'm just kind of opening up
on podcasts, my own and others.
I realized and know it has nothing to do with butterflies.
I realize I'm in total caterpillar mode and it has nothing to do with butterflies. I realize I'm in total caterpillar mode
and it has nothing to do with becoming a butterfly.
Not that that would be a bad thing.
It's that I'm able to orient towards the tasks of the day,
the day divided into three parts.
I can basically have vision about this far in front of me,
despite what I said a few minutes ago.
I can think about what I need to do.
I know where I'm headed.
I can move forward, not backward,
but I can't seem to bring my thinking any further than that.
And it's such a new place for me.
I can't think in,
I have to consciously try and think into the past.
I'm like, that was yesterday.
It was yesterday.
I can't do it.
Now I'm not in denial.
I can do it if I need to.
But for me, this is a very functional way
to be at this point in my life
because of the enormous number of tasks in my life.
Fortunately, the enormous number of people that I love
and that I want to spend time with and make time for.
But somehow I have just like...
So I drew it out. I was like,
I'm a catabiller, you know? And we'll see what happens.
And, you know, and where this goes.
But, you know, the other animals in here,
there was a rhinoceros phase that was interesting,
moving very slowly, but with a lot of force
on anything that was in my way at one stage.
There's been times when I've felt like a raptor
where I was just kind of like placed and really observant.
I spent an entire year speaking very little,
believe it or not.
People in my life will be like, what year was that? I didn't talk to you that year.
Exactly. You didn't talk to me that year,
and I didn't talk to you.
If you're wondering where I was.
So right now, by sort of like identifying
with this kind of mode of caterpillar vision and movement,
everything is in small increments.
You know, I even feel it in the way that I talk
and the way I parse ideas.
I'm writing the bonus chapters for my book,
which comes out in April of next year.
Like everything is line by line.
Everything is iterative.
And I am not oriented toward the past.
It's there if I need it.
It's like a book on a shelf I can go grab and look things up.
But until now have existed very much in like sort of thinking
about the losses of past, the winds of past,
identifying with that.
And I don't know what caused this.
I can't point to one single psychedelic journey.
Not that I've been doing a lot of psychedelics.
We could talk about that.
I was involved in some psychedelic trials,
but I don't think that's it.
I think it's that I've matured.
I think the brain matures your whole life.
I don't think we have childhood and adulthood and then death.
I think we have a developmental arc
that starts when we're born, probably before we're born.
I mean, after all, you know, we were embryos with,
who knows if we have consciousness,
but we were alive, right?
Born and then we have a developmental arc.
And the great psychologist Erickson talked about
at every stage of life from birth until death,
until one to eighties and nineties,
you're working out some core conflicts of agency
versus autonomy versus having to do
what other people have you do.
And I forget the stages off the top of my head
because it's not my area of expertise,
but look at my dad who's turning 81 in November,
who fortunately, God willing is going to live
another 20, 25 years with immense vigor.
And he's still cognitively super sharp.
And he's working out whatever it is you work out
when you're 80.
I'm working out whatever it is now,
but right now it's like caterpillar vision.
And as a consequence, the past, while important
and informs a lot of who I am and what I do,
it's like, it's not like,
it's not in my consciousness at all.
And I must say it's a great place to be
because throughout my thirties, I felt very stricken,
very like pulled in different directions
based on past, present and efforts toward the future.
So if anyone's, I say this in part,
because if you're struggling,
like kind of feeling stuck in your life story,
there's great advantage to just letting some time pass.
Just getting older.
Just getting older is the best.
As long as you train with weights three times a week,
run three times a week, long, medium, and short, it runs.
And you take a cold shower
and you eat mostly unprocessed and minimally processed foods
and you try and get sleep and you limit your alcohol
and you deal with any addictions you might have
and you work on your traumas.
Like you're going to have a great fricking life.
You know, you're going to be healthier
than 90% of people in the world, right?
Are you going to take gold at the Olympics?
Are you going to be Cole Hawker
and take the gold from fifth position
in the final hundred meters of the 1500?
No, unless you're Cole Hawker,
but like you can still have an amazing life.
And so I think there've been so many years
where I've just been like,
God, like this just feels like a battle.
This just feels like, you know, and I can't complain.
I've been given so many opportunities and gifts
and like trying to make the best of those and share.
But like, I just feel like,
listen, that's a freaking caterpillar, it's a caterpillar.
And then I got back from that run and I was thinking to myself,
oh no,
now I gotta like think about the butterfly thing
and like this is turning out pretty soft.
And then I thought, hey, well, that's pretty cool.
So I started researching caterpillars
because this is me.
So I started reading about caterpillars.
They are amazing.
Like some of them have adapted different poisons
so that the birds that eat them don't die,
but literally survive and transmit the discomfort by feeding their young.
And then the young are like, ugh.
And they actually know they form a permanent memory
not to eat those caterpillars.
So I now look at caterpillars completely differently.
I spent a lot of time drawing caterpillars.
I haven't yet watched a documentary about caterpillars.
I'm sure you'll find one.
But anyway, I'll avoid going down this hole
any more than I already have.
But I think there's great wisdom
in trying to think about different animals
and how we orient toward them as people.
I certainly look at other people and think,
like what dog are they, et cetera.
And in part, because I think that other animals
in the absence of their kind of self-awareness,
they're displaying to us how different,
the biases of different components of the nervous system.
So like dogs that move their tails a lot
and have a lot of spontaneous movement, right?
Like the pit bull breeds versus a bulldog,
which doesn't move unless it has to,
they have different spontaneous temperaments.
And then you look at people, I have a colleague,
he's Hungarian, he has a lab in Switzerland,
and the guy is all staccato movements.
And he's like this thin
and has like 5% body fat naturally, right?
And then I have other colleagues
who like more resemble melted candles.
They don't move so much, you know?
And they need to exercise more
because I love them.
And you don't see many overweight 80 year olds.
So it'd be nice to have you around longer.
So three times a week, resistance training and cardio.
Thinking about the last few months for you,
probably one of the most difficult periods
that you've gone through.
I will say, not to undercut where I think we're going,
definitely a challenging time
based on what I perceive as a lot of misunderstanding.
But fortunately or unfortunately for me,
I've been through a lot of hard times, more than some, less than others, but hey, it's all
in reference to our own nervous system. But definitely hard, but not the hardest time,
certainly not the hardest time. Certainly not the hardest time.
The hardest time was probably years earlier
when I had so much less agency
and my community wasn't as established.
But definitely not a joyful time, yeah.
Talk to me about what you learned about yourself
and your own psychology and the motivations
and sort of dynamics of public scrutiny
and pressure like that.
Yeah, so if I may, I'll lay then to this
from a bunch of perspectives.
And this is usually the point of discussion like this
where like audiences are like,
oh, this is where he prepares the diplomatic talk.
Like, look, I've done a number of sessions
talking about this kind of stuff publicly
and privately since then.
So like, I'm just showing up to this,
how it feels and my read with the understanding
that language is sometimes deficient
at like conveying what's really going on, but I'll do my best.
So I learned a couple of things. At a kind of basic factual level, I learned that while
there are wonderful aspects to media, there are also a lot of lies in the media. I actually didn't know that or believe that before.
You hear about it, but I didn't really understand that stories, literally,
fiction can be woven from lack of context or from outright lies. And that for me was an eye-opener.
It was like, whoa, like, no, that's not true.
That actually didn't happen that way.
Or, well, yeah, but you left off the second half
of that sentence, which would put it all in context
and make this seem completely different.
I mean, for a scientist, it was extremely jarring
because it was like, I could see what they were doing,
but if you tried to do that in a scientific paper
or in a talk, you wouldn't be giving
that scientific paper or talk.
You wouldn't make it 10 feet into the business
because that's called cherry picking.
It's data selection. It's not what we do.
Doesn't mean people don't have biases of conclusion,
biases of interpretation, but you reveal those biases.
Again, as we talked about earlier,
you reveal the origins of your thinking and decisions.
You state your motivations.
So it woke me up to that.
And that was a bit of a,
oh, man, like, really?
Like, that sucks.
Like, I wanted to believe that all media was
wholesome in its intentions.
I also learned that if you have a, you know,
this is hard to say with, you know,
you know, I say this with humility, but if your face and name clicks, then you're a target.
What's that mean?
It just means that if, you know, the bigger your platform,
the more attention your name or face draws,
and therefore your name and face is leveraged for clicks,
people are making money off of you.
It's a profit driven business.
Okay.
I also learned that many people are very reasonable
and they can see through BS.
They can see the like tawdry efforts
or the attempt to spin a narrative
that just isn't right,
isn't true.
And what I'm saying there is,
whereas I definitely had to face stuff
where I felt I was being badly misconstrued
or misunderstood, our audience, the podcast audience
and people outside that audience reached out in droves
and supporters at all levels reached out in droves. And supporters at all levels reached out in droves
to say, listen, we see what this is.
Like, we love what you're doing.
We get it. Not a problem.
You know, and that was great.
It also brought forward my friends
and people in the community,
both podcasters and academics, family and friends.
You know, I mean, basically, the essence of it was
when my dad and I, who in the past,
we've had some challenges in our relationship,
but now are really good,
when he called me and said,
they tried to pit us against each other.
And I'm like, yeah. And he was like, I can't believe it.
I mean, he had 80, he couldn't believe it.
And he's a very smart guy, okay?
He's a theoretical physicist by training, he's a first-generation immigrant, he's not here on accident, he had 80, he couldn't believe it. And he's a very smart guy, okay? He's a theoretical physicist by training.
He's a first-generation immigrant.
He's not here on accident.
He had to work his ass off to get here.
And he worked very, very hard to provide for us as kids.
So he was like, I can't believe that they would do that.
I was like, well, this is apparently what they do.
And you know, and he said, I'll never forget what he said.
He said, well, he's very logical.
He's a physicist after all. He said, well, he's very logical, he's a physicist after all.
He said, one trial learning.
One what?
One trial learning, meaning
we're not gonna make that mistake again.
So that was the sort of the media side of it.
And then I also want to acknowledge
that there are people in media
and they're both journalists and news platforms
that I think really are well-intentioned.
It also provided this amazing contrast for me.
And then I'll get into the more personal aspect, I promise.
But it made me realize why podcasting and podcasters
like you and Joe and Lex and Whitney and David Senra
and Tim Ferriss and Richroll and on and on
are so amazing.
Rick Rubin, it's real.
Like we're not pretending to be somebody else.
We're not doing this to get clicks.
Sure, you want the success of your platform,
but you're being you, I'm being me.
Lex is being Lex, Joe is being Joe.
And that's why it works.
And it's been so interesting to compare that
and contrast that to traditional media,
which has its merits, certainly,
but for which like it's become this kind of senator
of a thing where you're not sure what the motivations are.
And like, why would they go after you?
You said this in a clip,
like why would they go after you?
Well, you generate clicks,
but they're going after you because you actually have,
you have two, three, four, five, 10X their reach.
Why?
Because people know when something is real,
if somebody is being genuine,
even if they disagree with that person.
And we like realness, we like authenticity.
We love that as humans, we want that.
It's the artistic expression.
And it made me realize that like the obvious,
which is that we're in the golden age of podcasting
right now.
And never before in my life have I sort of been
in the golden age of something.
I came up early, I wanna be involved in skateboarding,
friends made as professional skaters, I didn't.
Okay, I wasn't talented enough, fine.
Got into neuroscience, caught the wave in neuroscience,
meaning at a time when you could,
I always funded my lab with grants.
I even still have some grant money, you know?
And even though I still teach, teaching again next spring,
you know, I've definitely shrunk my lab down.
You know, the media said, oh, you know,
he doesn't have a lab.
Yeah, I shrunk my lab down.
Like- What's that mean?
It just means I got my students in postdocs jobs.
We published two papers,
including a clinical trial in 2023,
but I've shrunk my lab down.
Like, so I teach and I'm still tenured at Stanford.
Your lab's still going.
Well, I have grant funds in a new department
where we're doing some human clinical trials, okay?
But I no longer run experiments on animals.
That was a very personal choice for me.
And also, when you have students in post-docs,
you need to be able to give them a certain amount of time
in order to nourish their development.
And then they all, all of them,
every one of my students in post-docs has gone on And then they all, all of them, every one of my students
in postdocs has gone on to jobs or positions they wanted.
So I took care of my academic children.
I think they would say that if they don't,
I'll hear from them, you know,
but they're doing phenomenally well
and I'm very proud of them.
They deserve the credit.
So it made me realize that, okay, I'm still a neuroscientist.
I still read papers.
I'm still on editorial boards.
And yet right now we're in the golden age of podcasting,
this new form of media of people being themselves.
It's not like radio, it's like radio, but different.
It's not like television, it's like television,
but different.
In fact, this arc might be of interest to you.
I watched this documentary about game shows recently
hosted by Alex Trebek.
The documentary frankly is far too long, but it goes Trebek. The documentary, frankly, is far too long,
but it goes like this.
During the World Series, when DiMaggio was making
an effort towards the home run record,
was the first commercial, okay, to sell a product.
And it was designed to grab the housewives
and people that purchase things for the home, okay,
back then.
Then came eventually game shows.
And game shows.
And game shows were just an excuse to sell products.
But they eventually found that the human narrative
in the game shows, the Price is Right host
kissing the contestants,
something that would never happen nowadays.
Okay, things have changed, matured.
Eventually it was the human story.
Then it became reality TV shows, right?
And then now I see social media as the reality TV show
that we're all casting ourselves in on a daily basis.
And then podcasts are sort of the umbrella
around and within social media, right?
I mean, I think Elon sitting down with Trump.
Today. Today, right, exactly.
We didn't mention that just to really track back,
just in case you thought that things were going to calm down,
Trump's back on Twitter.
Right, I know they released his account.
Has he tweeted anything?
Yeah, today, for the first time since his mugshot.
What did he tweet?
A couple of videos, one mocking Kamala,
one bigging himself up, and two announcements
saying, I'm going live at 8 p.m. tonight with Elon on X.
Okay.
I wonder if they'll correct the Rogan narrative, because over the weekend, there was this narrative
that Rogan had endorsed RFK and it turned out not to be true.
No, he just said that he liked him, which he said a million times before. And then Trump post socialed, truth,
I don't know what you call it, posted on truth social.
I wonder how much Joe Rogan's going to get booed
the next time that he goes to the UFC.
That may be fact check false.
I'm pretty sure that that's that,
but I mean, that's a tone deaf.
Rogan is the hero of the UFC.
Yeah, it's Dana White.
It's like small Dana White and big Dana White.
Happy birthday, Joe.
His birthday was over the weekend.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I guess the point is this,
that the fans, the listeners of a podcast
are part of the podcast in a way that no medium
has existed before because they can comment and give feedback in a way that no medium has existed before because they can comment
and give feedback in a way that has not been available
before now that's the media side.
So it gave me tremendous appreciation for all of that.
The personal side, how do you personally deal
with a furor like the one that you want?
And also I'm particularly interested in the lessons
that you've learned longer term,
but what does it feel like to wake up that day?
You know, you understand the neurochemicals,
you understand the hormonal response,
but you've got this just flood of phenomena
going through you.
Yeah.
So, and I think one of the hardest things
is being misunderstood and then understanding,
you know, the motivations of the media or
the motivations of the people that gave stories to the media, the blatant lies. Although there was a
portion of what was said that was absolutely true and that's the part that I was overly doting on
my bulldog. That is absolutely true. That is absolutely true. But well, what I decided to do
is what I've done at numerous times in my life
when things felt potentially overwhelming,
which was to get a committee of people around me
that I really trust and rely on their optics
when I couldn't rely on my own.
So that meant my podcast producer, Rob Moore.
That meant other people, including my family were amazing.
People from my high school, you know, it was interesting
because they interviewed many people from my high school,
but discarded with those narratives
because they were positive.
They interviewed many former girlfriends of mine
who I was in touch with regularly and still am
who were very positive, and they discarded with those narratives.
And you're not looking for yes people,
but you're looking for people that can really help steer you
through something and help you see where, hey,
like maybe you need to pay attention to this aspect
of your life a bit more or that a little bit more,
but you know what?
No, there's a thick black line here and that's simply false.
Lex Friedman literally showed up in my home, showed up.
I just looked up, there's Lex, jacket and tie.
Hey, what's up, brother?
He's there.
So my home during that week and the weeks following,
the weeks following consisted of many people coming to stay.
I recall very clearly one day walking out in the yard,
I had taken a little nap and must've been 15 or 20 people there,
including my good friend, Tim Armstrong, other people there supporting me, just being there, right?
We also continued to work in that time.
We released solo episodes, we released posts,
we released podcasts.
We were not gonna stop working.
Are you-
How were you able to get yourself
into the right mode of mind?
Are you not, have you not got a split brain problem there?
Half of you is over here,
the other half's trying to be professional.
I learned in that time,
but I took some tools from prior experiences
to take five to 10 minutes,
take the first couple of minutes and meditate,
concentrate on one's breath,
try and get as present as possible.
Your mind is always flitting to these other things
that are trying to distract it,
realizing every time you can hold on
to your present cognition,
bringing things present for a millisecond longer,
you're doing that much better, ratcheting back,
and then getting into action, doing generative work,
teaching science and health information,
because that's why the people
listen to the Huberman Lab podcast.
I don't think they listen to it to hear anything
about my personal life or attempts to malign my past story.
I will also say there were some things that infused
a focus and energy into me that I didn't anticipate
that were very beautiful, for instance.
You know, one of the narratives that was getting spun
out there is that my backstory about growing up in the skateboarding thing, getting into fights, that maybe that had very beautiful, for instance. You know, one of the narratives that was getting spun out there is that my backstory
about growing up in the skateboarding thing,
getting into fights that maybe that had been constructed,
which is categorically false.
Those are true stories, in other words.
And Steve Ruge, the guy who was my team manager
at Thunder and Spitfire,
just skateboard companies back then, wrote to me.
And he said, yeah, you know,
I got this outreach from reporters.
And they kept kind of trying to pull
and get me to change my account
of you calling me from being locked up and saying,
hey Steve, like I'm in this place
and me saying, you're the most normal person I know.
And you know, that whole thing.
And he's like, and I don't understand why they're doing that.
And I was like, I don't know either.
And he's like, well, I told them the truth.
I told them exactly what happened.
You called me, I remember where I was at the deluxe office.
He's like, okay, fine. And then he goes, and I told him
that I had put you on thunder and spitfire.
And I was like, do you realize what you just did for me?
From the time I was 14 years old,
I was still uncertain whether or not
you had put me on the team.
And I was too embarrassed to ask.
And he's like, of course you were on the team.
And I was like, oh man, I waited my whole life
to hear that, 30 years plus.
I listened.
So there was, it was like, you know,
these things that had kind of vexed me for years.
Like, was I really part of that
or was I not part of that team?
Like, so what ended up happening
is people from my past showed up,
not just my family.
Jim Thebo from The World Is Gaping, Steve Roogie,
people from my past, people from my present.
And then I just got outreach from men and women in droves.
Some very high profile people, very, very high profile people. And then I just got outreach from men and women in droves,
some very high profile people, very, very high profile people,
some lesser profile, some no profile,
reaching out by email, by phone, by text,
showing up at my home
and encouraging me to continue on the mission.
And at that point I was buoyed by the fact that I'm like,
okay, you know, people can see, they can see the truth.
They understand context being warped.
They understand lies versus truth.
And they understand that a single-sided story is never,
ever, ever the right way to resolve issues.
And so it was amazing to see. ever, ever the right way to resolve issues.
And so it was amazing to see,
and then what happened was we started growing.
And I was like, oh my goodness, you hear about this,
you're gonna grow from this.
I always thought that just meant psychologically
and internally, but then it was like, we grew.
Then the next thing I know, I'm on Jimmy Fallon, okay?
Some people might've thought that came about before.
Uh-uh, next thing you know, we're a jeopardy question.
Like all of a sudden, like things started growing
and then I started realizing, let's just get back to work.
Was that the fastest period in the show's growth history?
Among, I don't know,
because I don't track the numbers that closely.
I decided early on to remove my dopamine circuits
from the numbers.
I do my own Instagram, I do my own Twitter.
And I manage, I don't have someone manage my comments,
I manage all of that myself.
So yes, if I say thank you in the DMs, that's me,
but it was definitely among the sharpest inflections
I've ever experienced.
I think Joe said something similar
about the CNN horse pace dewormer scenario
that although, you know, might feel back.
So he, he, he had a sort of a one-two punch.
He had his infamous, uh, N word video and the CNN thing within six months of each
other, uh, but he said the quickest period that they've ever had was the CNN thing.
So if, if you were one of the sensations, I imagine you must have is indignation.
Well, this isn't true. And I want to correct the record is he said one of the worst things is being
misunderstood. Was it a strategic decision to not issue a statement? Here we go. Here's the four
hour long breakdown. You know, you've got the tools, you've got the platform, you've got the
followers. Why not get it out there? Yeah, well, I certainly was tempted at times,
but the consultation I got and what I eventually arrived at
was that no matter what I would say that...
Well, first of all, there were elements to some of that
that needed to remain private to protect other people.
So in that sense, there were a few things
I had to take on the chin to protect other people's lives.
Not their actual lives, but their wellbeing.
The other piece was that it was made very clear to me,
and I wholeheartedly agree that the media
will cherry pick statements and colluge together things,
they're still doing it, in order to spin a narrative, right? That makes it such that no
matter what you say, it won't be understood the way you want it to be understood. And that was
extremely frustrating to me. Extremely frustrating to me.
In fact, last night, late at night,
I had a conversation with a male friend and colleague
with whom we had a misunderstanding.
This gets to something I mentioned a little bit earlier.
Not a betrayal, not a mistake, a misunderstanding.
And we actually didn't speak to one another
for about a month and a half.
And it was very frustrating for me and for them.
And then he and I, I wouldn't even say hashed it out last night. We just brought to the table. I said, listen, I think there and a half. And it was very frustrating for me and for them. And then he and I,
I wouldn't even say hashed it out last night,
we just brought to the table.
I said, listen, I think there was a misunderstanding,
not a mistake, not a betrayal.
I own my part and I'm sorry.
And I've learned, you say you're sorry.
That was it, you say you're sorry.
And he said the same thing.
He goes, you know, I think I overreacted.
And I said, I didn't say no, you didn't or anything,
even though I have my feelings about it.
And he said, I'm sorry.
And I said, we're good, we're good.
We had done the work internally, right?
Now, unfortunately, when things are done at scale,
you don't get that opportunity.
You don't get like an immediate scale.
And I think also personally, I mean, obviously I'm human,
there was the need for reflection on the things
that have passed and present that I wish I had done
differently and that I, you know, you make the change,
you know, and you move forward.
I'll also say, and people can roll their eyes if they want,
or they can come up with any theories they want,
but prayer was extremely grounding for me in that time, just to not meditation, not seeking approval, validation,
and support of others, although support from others was critical, as was constructive critique, but prayer to just spend time in prayer listening to any messages that I needed to hear about what
needed changing in me, in my personal life, in my family life, in my work life, in my public-facing facing life. And that was honestly the cornerstone. That was the center of it all. That was the piece
that allowed me to go, okay, you know what? This sucks. There's silver linings. There's
misunderstanding, outright lies, lack of con- and you know what? I see all that. I see the changes that need to be made.
I see where I also draw a thick black line and say,
no, that's not that.
And we're not going to pretend it is.
And prayer was the thing that helped me calibrate
my compass 10 times a day.
And it wasn't just praying like, oh, please make this stop or anything like that.
You know, please, it was more help me see with clarity.
This is the way I would do it.
And again, people can decide what they want.
I'm not telling anyone what to believe.
It was like, you know, literally on my knees,
God, please help me see and feel and think
with the kind of clarity that's going to allow me
to make the best decisions now and going forward.
Let me get through this morning,
making the best possible decisions given what's happening.
I'm turning over all control and agency
over the things I can't control to you.
And I'm going to put every ounce of effort I can
into trying to continue teaching people about science
and health and becoming a better person as I go.
And that's still my prayer among other things before I go to sleep at night. I'm on my knees at the side of the bread prayer kind of guy since the new year, since just before the new year.
Before that, it was kind of in my head a little bit kind of here or there. And before every podcast,
I just went in the bathroom now and prayed before this. I go there for privacy, not because it's the bathroom,
but, and I know for people thinking like,
okay, this is a scientist,
or now he's kind of claiming the God thing.
I'm not claiming anything.
Like for me, this has been the most powerful thing
that I've ever experienced
because it's just given me peace and a compass and a rudder
forward even if I have to be at caterpillar levels of, you know, horizon view like this
far out in front of me inching forward.
You know, I'm just grateful to God.
I'm grateful to God for the chance to keep going forward.
What would be your advice to somebody
who's going through an emotionally intense period?
It seems to me like if I was to try and deconstruct the,
not to make protocols out of a nightmare scenario,
but social cohesion, groups around you,
not being on your own too much.
Yeah, and if you, you know,
I'm blessed to have a huge network, but I'll say this.
I have that network because I put work into that network.
Yeah, some of these people I work with,
but you know, Jim Thebo didn't show up at my house
because I'm a podcaster.
He showed up there the same way he did two years before
when I got slammed to the concrete in life.
He showed up when I was 14 and I was a depressed kid
sitting at the Embarket Arrow with a busted foot
because I couldn't skateboard and he just sat with me
and gave me a book to read and encouraged me to write.
You know, I took what Jim did for me
and did it for other people.
So I like to think perhaps it was God returning the energy,
returning the favor.
People, you build your support system in good times
and when they're down, you support them
and you don't do it because you might hit bad times.
You will hit bad times and that's one reason to do it.
You just do it because you might hit bad times. You will hit bad times. And that's one reason to do it. You just do it.
And so there's that.
So if you're up, build your support network,
doesn't have to be huge, but make it strong.
Make it strong by doing the right thing, setting examples.
And if it's medium, fine.
If it's huge, fine.
Definitely, I definitely use tools, right?
The physiological side works to limit stress, get sleep.
I didn't rely on pharmacology to get sleep.
I know some people need to.
I just didn't want to go that route.
Once months earlier, I took a little,
it was prescribed to me.
I took a half Xanax to try and sleep
and the sleep I got felt like crap.
I woke up, I was like, I'm not doing that again.
I use breathing tools, I use NSDR,
I use some supplementation to sleep.
But sleep is key, you win by sleeping.
That was one of our mottos during that time and all times.
When we're out on the road doing lives,
it's like we're going from one city to the next,
and we're podcasting and we're doing AMAs
and we're busy and we're talking all day and go, go, go.
Like we were like, we're sleeping and we don't drink
and we're serious, we're like professional athletes, right?
So there's that.
Training, hot, cold?
Definitely did some hot, cold.
In really stressful times,
I'll pair back on training a bit.
I train as preparation.
So for me, lifting three times a week, I love training.
Yeah, I do my legs, I do my torso,
I do my arms and calves and neck.
Okay, sure.
I do my long run, I do my medium run,
I do my sprint day, I do the cold and heat.
But I do that not as a means,
I do that in part as a means to an end,
so that when it's time to sprint for the airplane,
when it's time to take a week
and just lean all your physical and mental energy
into a crisis, you can do that.
And then I go back to training.
That would have been, I think I would have struggled,
I think I would have struggled to regulate
without training each day.
Listen, taking a walk, getting a good shower,
getting your hair cut, these things make a difference.
The other thing is I learned to be able to call on people,
to pick up the phone and say,
hey, listen, I'm spinning here.
I can't make sense of this strategy or that strategy.
What do you think?
And then writing down what that person said,
taking a few things and then just going inward? There is this tendency, especially with text, to constantly be
increasing the size of your committee. I'll say, this was interesting. Some people
came to me immediately and said, you should do blank. And I was like, really? And they're like,
absolutely do blank. And then I didn't do blank. And then a week later, they're like, oh, you absolutely did the right thing. You should do exactly the opposite of blank. And then I didn't do blank. And then a week later, they're like, oh, you absolutely
did the right thing. You should do exactly the opposite of blank. And then I realized I was like,
oh, goodness, you know, like, not that I'm never going to listen to advice from that person again,
but they were just saying stuff. So you need to be a selective filter and it can be very hard.
And I will say anyone going through a crisis of any kind, any kind, You need a committee, however big or small.
And if you don't have people, you need people in books,
you need people in podcasts.
And, you know, I'm not a recruiter,
but you might give prayer a try
because there's real peace at the center there.
And from that peace, you can see the right decision.
And from that right decision,
you can make the right decision for that circumstance.
And there are just too many circumstances to say,
you should always say this,
or you should never say anything, and this kind of thing.
What I do know is that, God forbid,
if they come for you, Chris, or anyone, like we got you.
Like I don't know what the best advice will be
in those circumstances, but we got you.
Like, and we got you because you're a truly good person
with your heart out there being you, right?
Up until now, you've just been being you
and that's why you're successful.
And yeah, I mean, I got calls from, you know,
people can guess the names and there were some names also.
I couldn't believe it.
I was like, these are people with enormous stature
that like I thought were probably would fall
on the opposite end of the spectrum
would be calling me to yell at me.
And in fact, we're like, you're doing all the right things.
Don't let it get to you.
Keep going.
Think about X, Y, and Z, but, and I was like, whoa.
So what you will find in hard times like those,
God willing, they won't happen to you,
is that you'll find your inner resolve.
The world will come to you and show you
who your real friends are, who your real supporters are.
And I wasn't counting off who stuck their neck out for me
and who wasn't.
It was beautiful to see people who did
and the ones who didn't, I get it.
Like they have their own incentives.
They needed to do whatever it is they needed to do.
I think I regretted not messaging me that day.
And the reason that I didn't was it's kind of like
on somebody's birthday and you think,
fuck, does he really need an additional thing?
So I texted Rob instead,
Rob can be the filter for this.
Yeah, and he passed it to me.
And thank you.
And listen, it's also a felt thing.
And you raise a very important point that goes,
and I hope people hearing this can understand
that the reason to have this discussion is not about me.
It's that we all are going to go through these sorts
of things at different scales and in different contexts.
Is that, you know, it's like when somebody dies,
everyone's like, my condolences, so sorry, so sorry.
The time to reach out to them is also afterwards.
And again, call me non-scientific, fine.
I have enough science under my belt
and to be totally confident in what I'm about to say,
which is like last night in my prayers,
I prayed for somebody who had posted something
about losing their mom.
I actually didn't know his mom,
but I just like, it came to me.
I was like, you know, like we all flooded in
and there are condolences thoughts and prayers,
but like he's probably hurting like crazy right now.
And so you pray for that person.
Now you say, well, how does that prayer impact them?
I don't know, but I believe in that.
And you reach out to somebody by text, they just checking in.
And this is the beauty of what you do.
And it's the beauty of what podcasters do in general,
which is you're creating things in perpetuity.
The AI is gonna be trained on these conversations.
You know, your great grandchildren will be able
to glean knowledge from things that you've shared.
And I think that putting that out into the world
in a way that other people can benefit from
is nothing short of spectacular.
You know, when I was a junior professor,
I'd listen to the Tim Ferriss podcast.
At that time, it was just that.
And like, I remember thinking like,
this podcast is like my friend in a city
where I don't know anyone.
You know, now I'm fortunate to call Tim a friend, right?
I could actually call on Tim,
but I think that the loneliness and isolation
that people feel, especially people that are striving
and don't have a big network
can sometimes feel so overwhelming.
But I was that guy.
I was that kid who didn't have anyone to call
or I was confused about something that was happening.
And I didn't have the network of people to call.
You build that over time, but podcasts
and what people being themselves out there in the world,
mainly podcasts, it's like, I really care.
I hope that if Bullet, Bus, or Cancer takes me out tomorrow,
that some of the things that I've shared, hopefully many of the things that I've shared
could help people now and going forward.
That's a real thing.
It's not about selling us an advertisement
or a supplement, like that's incidental.
It's about the material.
So, I'm kind of spooling it now,
but like within me, I feel immense gratitude.
I wouldn't change the experience of the last year
for anything.
I don't wanna experience it, you know, for its own sake,
but what it brought me was huge gifts.
And yeah, it grew us like crazy, but shit.
I mean, if I could have done it a different way, I would,
but you know, God served up
this meal just the way he did.
And you know, have I ever told you my idea of the lonely chapter?
I told you about this.
No, but I feel like I've had a few of those.
Yeah.
So I learned this with Alex Hormozi last year and the lonely chapter describes a time in
which you're growing, you're changing as a person,
and you're now so different that you can no longer resonate
with your old set of friends,
but you're not sufficiently developed
that you've got the new set of friends
that you're going to grow into.
And this is the lonely chapter.
And the problem with it is that you're always,
the desire to sort of regress back to where you were
is always going to be there.
And you're gonna the desire to sort of regress back to where you were is always going to be there. And you're going to have you're going to have uncertainty. There's not even the promise of
glory or success or triumph. When you get through the other side, what am I pushing toward? You know,
I you're telling me that I'm not going to go out on this night out with my friends, which I've done
for the last five years or 10 years in the town that I grew up in, or went to university and or
whatever. You tell me that I'm not going to do that that because I'm going to get up and I'm going to
meditate or read? Who even knows if meditation works, right? Like, you've got all of these
questions in your mind and all of your friends and all of the dynamics and the temptations pull you
back toward that. It pulls you back toward the old version of life. So this lonely chapter is a period
through which I think everybody needs to squeeze.
Anybody that decides to go from a place they are to a place that they want to be
is going to have to let go of people who can't go there with them.
And this isn't a value judgment about the people that are doing the personal growth thing
are better than the people that are already fine as they are and are happy leading a different sort of life.
It's that if you know that there is something
that you're meant to do,
if you know that there's something
that you're meant to change,
you will have to let certain groups, friends,
routines, places, activities, recreations that you do,
you're going to have to let those go.
And there is this, you know,
the Rocky cut scene lasts for 90 seconds in the movie,
but it can last for five years in your life.
And you have no idea whether or not it's even going to work.
And that's the bit that always got to me.
The bit that always got to me was I didn't even know
if there was going to be any glory on the other side.
It's like ordering an Uber and never knowing
if it's going to arrive or not.
You think, well, I'm just stood here doing the thing,
but I don't know if it's going to come out on the other side. And I can promise you, anybody that has done
anything moved from any place they were to any place that they want to be has gone through
this lonely chapter. And I think about personal growth, like the velocity of a rocket that's
taking off. So you've got people moving and as you start to take off, you can begin to
move a little bit more quickly. And as you start to pull away from people, there's a tension between the two of you because sometimes your behavior, especially if it's positive and you're moving yourself in a more developed direction can throw into harsh contrast, the behavior of the people who maybe aren't doing that. And then you start to sort of become friends with some of the suburbia. And then the worst or one of the really difficult sensations is if you then do that, and you got past somebody who previously you were with and there's this sort of sense, well,
I'm on the journey too, but maybe I'm not moving in the same kind of way that you are.
And I came up with this idea of personal growth guilt, like survivor guilt.
You know, somebody comes back from war and they were sat in the back of the Humvee and
the piece of shrapnel that was supposed to kill them and killed all of their buddies,
hit the engine block and they come back and they feel like
they should still be back there, but they're not.
And it's almost the same with the personal growth stuff
that I feel like I'm almost sort of betraying
this older version of me, this past version of my life
that I should be there.
And there's this scene in the matrix
that Alex talks about where Neo doesn't know if he wants to move forward.
He doesn't know if he wants to take the journey that he's called to.
And he opens the door and Trinity says, you've already been down that road, Neo.
You know where it takes you and you know that's not where you want to go back to.
And I think about that a lot, that lonely chapter.
And for me, it lasted for a good amount of time transitioning from being, you know, a
guy in his twenties that does the reality TV thing, does the party boy thing, and then
goes, okay, I need to decide to stop drinking, which 10 years ago was revolutionary, especially
as a club promoter.
It's now very common to do low and no, but pretty different back then.
And all of the incentives were for me to go back to partying.
Well, why are you doing that?
Are you going to be boring on a night out?
I realized that, that, you know, if you need to drink to be around your friends,
you don't have friends, you have drinking partners.
And the most, if the only way that you can bear to be around your friends is to
drink, then you really need to find yourself a better social network.
And all of the things I used to leave the front door of a nightclub, and I would
sit and I would wedge my phone into the top of the steering wheel. So I have, you know,
a party with 1500 people that all it's my party, my company, right. And I would leave
to go watch a land about on school of life philosophy videos. And it was evident that
I just had this odd sort of discordance
in my mind.
I was being ripped away from where I was to where I am.
And yeah, I think, you know, The Lonely Chapter is one
of the most important insights that has come out of the show
over the last 18 months, because it's reassuring to, I think,
a huge portion of podcast listeners.
Why is it that people resonate and have
this parasocial relationship with some bloke that's on the other side of the planet?
And I think it's because while they're struggling to resonate with any of the blokes that are girls that are around them, where they live.
And, you know, you end up finding solace in this person that speaks to you because you struggle to find solace sort of personally. So yeah, the overarching lesson
is just keep going. The lonely chapter is a feature,
not a bug of personal growth. It is a...
It's the cost of doing business if you want to develop yourself.
Yeah, I love that. You know, I recall in high school
when getting hurt, skateboarding,
realizing I didn't have a future there,
which fortunately was a good thing for me. I mean, it was God again intervening saying, nope,
you're going to get broke off again. You're not going to, this is not going to be your path.
Following a high school girlfriend to college and then realizing after the first year that,
you know, drinking and getting in fights was not a good path and get my life in order. And then
studying a lot at a school where at that time people weren't terribly
studious and it was incredibly isolating.
I even lived alone, lived with my girlfriend
or I lived alone and being very isolated.
And then in graduate school felt more social connection
but then as a junior professor, you know,
there are boundaries between you and the people
you work with and those are important boundaries.
And so not having many male friends and, you know, my...
Fortunately, at the time, my romantic partner,
who I'm still good friends with,
you know, was a great source of family and support,
but feeling cut off from friends of other types.
And then, again, you know,
in this more recent iteration of entering the podcast world,
but then you find your community.
I also think while I totally agree,
you can look to podcasters, to books,
also to people who are no longer alive,
that mentors like the great Oliver Sacks
who I've never met,
but I've reached out to people that knew him
and that have given me information about him
that's given me,
gotten me through many hard times
based on his life experiences, biography is autobiography.
This is why I like biography and autobiography so much.
You can feel a kinship with people.
That's why David Senra's show is so great.
That's one of the reasons Founders podcast is so great.
I just got to meet Senra himself recently.
Is it just amazing?
He's amazing. Amazing podcast.
He's amazing.
Highly recommend that podcast.
You know, Rick Rubin's been a great source of support.
Tim Armstrong's been an enormous source of support. Jim Thebo's been an enormous source
of support. Joe Rogan's been an enormous source of support. Lex Friedman's been a big source of
support. You've been a great source of support. Whitney Cummings, yeah, and on and on and people
showing up and people from entirely other industries, investors, people in...
Let's just, I want to, because it's only fair
to protect their identities, people in media
that are not of the podcasting ilk, for instance.
People who I never thought I would meet, you know,
explaining the commonalities of their experience.
You know, and if you're wondering,
okay, well then, you know, those are all these people,
but who's going to come for me?
Well, I'm going to, and Chris is going to. You know, when you're coming up and you're wondering, okay, well then, those are all these people, but who's gonna come for me? Well, I'm going to, and Chris is going to. When you're coming up and you're in your thing,
like reach out, right?
I mean, it's kind of incredible the way that humans
will move in to support one another when they need it.
Good humans.
Good humans, and it's kind of incredible
how good humans help lift each other up
even when we don't know each other, right?
And I don't want to get into it here
because it's not appropriate for here,
but where I look at people that have really just disappeared,
not always, but a lot of times it's like,
their motivations weren't right in the first place,
something happened to them and they're gone.
And you go, well, what happened to them?
And it's like, again, there are exceptions to this,
but I don't know, their heart probably wasn't in it.
Their heart probably wasn't in it.
Or there was enough of a terrible circumstance there
that it had to go that way.
But I think it's just a,
I heard from a former postdoc of mine recently
and another one, both of whom are professors now.
And through the philanthropy arm of my podcast
and some donors, I'm able to support scientific research.
We do this, like we don't do it for public recognition,
we do it because I want to support the best science
and we're able to do that.
And I can't tell you the joy,
just pure joy that it brings me to hear about them
and their students that they're mentoring.
Like there's a passage of this stuff over time.
And look, none of us live forever,
except Brian Johnson, just kidding.
And by the way, if you want to know my take on Brian,
I've known Brian for a long time, we go way back.
And I think it's wonderful that he's doing what he's doing.
And I think he's, you know,
I don't know him well enough to say like,
people always want to know like, what's he, you know,
I think it's great that somebody's exploring the field of longevity
from the perspective he is and other perspectives.
So for that matter.
I got to give you my take on Brian.
So I was at, I've seen Brian in person,
maybe two or three times.
I was at Roatan, an island off Honduras with him
at the start of this year.
And then I did a Jeffersonian dinner breakfast with him.
Very Bay Area to do a Jeffersonian dinner.
Yeah.
Well, he brought, he brought some of the Bay Area over and I had some of his
nutty pudding and I had a sit down with him.
And the way that I think of Brian is kind of like a scout in an army.
So it wouldn't do to have an entire army filled with scouts.
It would be a pretty shitty army.
But I'm more than happy to have that one guy who apparently is built to be a scout,
go up that really dangerous hill over there that maybe the view's beautiful,
uh, or maybe slip and a catastrophe occurs or something,
and come back and tell us what he found.
I love that. Thank you.
He's a bit of an astronaut.
Correct. Yeah. You expend time and effort and resources and all of that. Thank you. He's a bit of an astronaut. Correct, yeah. You expend time and effort and resources
and all of that, finding out stuff.
I'm all for him doing that.
And I'll take the top 20% or whatever
that gives the 80% of the insights from him.
Yeah, he's part of this incredible tapestry
that's being built of public facing
health and science information. Never before in of public facing health and science information.
Never before in human history has health and science information been dispersed in the
way that it is now through podcasts, through traditional media, from physicians, from scientists,
from ancient wisdom stuff.
I can sit back from all of it, see Brian, see my position in the field, see the Lane
Norton, see the people that attack us, see the FDA, see the NIH.
And I can look at it and, you know, I mean,
listen, I was on a grants review panel
until, you know, a little over 12 months ago.
I was a regular member on there.
I've reviewed grants, written grants,
fortunately gotten many grants funded,
plenty of grants didn't get funded too.
I understand the process
and I understand people's different orientation
and realize that we're all after the same thing.
We all want to live longer, healthier lives with more vitality. Like we're all after the same thing. We all want to live longer, healthier lives
with more vitality.
Like we're all after the same thing.
And what I'm interested in is the overlap
in the Venn diagrams.
So if you call it yoga nidra or NSDR,
if you're talking about REM sleep
and the dynamics of spindle waves in the brain,
or you're talking just about your dreams
and you're doing a dream journal,
ultimately I'm interested in the practices
that are true now that have always been true
and that can evolve through technology
that are going to allow us all to be healthier,
mentally, physically, et cetera.
That's the mission.
So you nailed it.
You want a Brian Johnson on the mission.
You want a Lane Norton on the mission.
I like to think you want an Andrew Huberman on the mission.
You want Chris on the mission.
You want all these people on the mission
and the FDA and the NIH, and you want the arguments.
What you don't want, and what I see
is incredibly counterproductive, is people taking the stance
that only their view is the appropriate one.
As long as people voice their motivations
and their logic for proposing what they propose,
it's mostly all good, except the stuff
that's dangerously bad, okay?
That's not good.
But listen, I chuckle at the idea
that any one of these perspectives
is going to be the perspective.
And in fact, I throw my head back and laugh
because if you look historically, all you have to do
if you really are having trouble sleeping
or if you really want a dense book,
The Prince of Medicine is a beautiful book
that talks about Galen and how our understanding
of the human body in medicine really evolved
from really people being allowed to do more and more
in terms of human dissection and analyzing the human body,
something that wasn't allowed prior
because of rules about dissecting human bodies.
And the understanding that government bodies
plus funding plus curiosity have all, curiosity have all been these competing forces.
And that the acceleration of science and medicine
is now taking place at a rate that is unprecedented,
CRISPR, brain machine interface.
And yes, I'll say it, psychedelics and supplementation,
they're just compounds.
People go, supplements, none of that's regulated.
Yeah, and you could also have a conversation about SSRIs,
which have huge value, but can also do huge damage.
So any qualified psychiatrist will tell you that.
So right now we are on an accelerated path.
And I think the challenge for most people
is they're drinking from the fire hose
and they don't know which filters to put up.
And so all I can say is it's super exciting, right?
It's super, super exciting,
but you want to argue about these different orientations
about as much as you want to argue
about what genre of music is best.
There's just no answer, right?
Most people love Taylor Swift
and there are people that also love other forms of music.
And you're always going to find outliers at the extremes.
So unless something is dangerous, right?
I think that most of the ideas I see out there
warrant further exploration
and some are just really darn good.
So I'm glad that Brian came up
because I think he represents one spoke on the wheel
and it's an important one.
In his absence, I think the field will progress less quickly.
I just wish that people would look at things
through these lenses.
I also think for the generation coming up
that were weaned on social media,
it's very important that they realize something
that David Goggins has said.
I just feel like it's appropriate to say this right now.
Right now, because most of what's happening online
is a consumer-based environment.
I think he said it's easier than ever
to become extraordinary now.
That it's hard to overstate the power
of putting away the phone and doing some writing
or putting away the phone and doing some musical training
or putting away the phone.
And then using social media as a place
to put your efforts out into the world
as opposed to place your efforts
while standing there obliviously in the real world.
Like the people that realize that the direction of flow
needs to be from real world into electronic world and out,
as opposed to the other way,
are going to be the ones that are going to succeed in life.
Barring some accident or injury, you're almost guaranteed success relative to your peers.
It's that simple.
I remember, and we've spoken about this before,
but I remember when NMN, rapamycin, NAD, sublingual,
mix it in the yogurt, do all of the stuff.
I remember when that was, you know,
going to make us all live to 150,
and what is the state of the world
of longevity drug supplements now?
What's happening with that?
Yeah, I just did an episode with Peter Atiya.
So here's the deal as I understand it.
Peter is pretty bullish on rapamycin.
Remember that mTOR, which is expressed at very high levels in
essentially all cells of the brain and body during development, declines across the lifespan.
mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin, that's named after the drug that targets that receptor.
that receptor. Rapamycin targets the mTOR and in some sense, it mimics fasting. Okay, this is broadly speaking. Keep in mind that the studies showing extension of life in different species,
including mice, show that being fairly dramatically sub-maintenance caloric extends lifespan, but you're also
potentially sub-happiness when you're that sub-caloric, potentially pretty weak immunologically,
too, potentially, potentially physically weak. Okay. So yes, starving yourself within reason
can extend your lifespan, but you also starve yourself of joy and vigor, right? I mean,
at some point you are subcaloric enough that testosterone levels plummet in men and women,
libido plummets, fertility plummets in men and women. So, you know, it's a trade-off.
I don't take rapamycin. I don't take metformin. I don't even take berberine,
which is poor man's metformin. It makes me very hypoglycemic for reasons that make total sense based on the
mechanisms of metformin and berberine. I do take sublingual NMN, but it's very important,
but I don't take it to extend my lifespan. I take sublingual NMN. And by the way,
I have no affiliation to any supplement company that sells NMN. I take it because it has, for me, in my experience,
again, this is not a randomized control trial.
This would not meet Nortian criteria,
lay Nortian criteria.
It causes my hair to grow very, very fast, which is odd,
but other people I know who've taken it
report the same effect.
Nail's very thick and gives me a lot of morning energy. Yeah, me too.
Yeah. So that's the reason I take it.
But I don't expect it to make me live longer.
Now, the history around NMN is worth paying attention to.
It was David Sinclair that popularized NMN.
Remember, NMN is a precursor to NAD.
NR is the precursor to NMN.
So there's a phosphate group that gets removed.
People that are not David Sinclair
are fairly bullish about NR being preferable to NMN.
But the people who are proponents of NR,
true niagen associated folks, et cetera,
tend to focus more on the anti-inflammation effects of NR
and point to the fact that NR has been shown
to convert to NAD in cells more readily than NMN.
Now, all I know is that when I take sublingual NMN,
my hair grows faster, my nails grow thicker and faster,
the two effects that I wasn't seeking,
but that I'm okay with, and I have more morning energy.
I've also taken NR and I didn't notice any tangible effect.
I don't take it because it's very expensive
relative to NMN.
And even though I probably could afford it,
I didn't subjectively feel much,
which is not to say it isn't worthwhile.
People might be interested in taking it.
The NMN was popularized
because David Sinclair
started talking about it on various podcasts.
And then he started a company that is evaluating it
as a drug in a clinical trial.
Therefore the FDA said the NMN could not be sold
as a supplement, that's the way the laws work.
But then supplement manufacturers continued to do so.
And it does not seem like the FDA is clamping down on it,
at least not hard, because you can go on Amazon
or you can go to any one of these different companies
and buy NMN if you wish.
So that's the story there.
In terms of other things to,
oh, and why don't I take rapamycin?
Not enough human data.
And honestly, my goal is to live to be 100 or 110
with vigor and I'm not so interested
in living to be 150 at least.
Mentholman?
No, not interested in plummeting my blood sugar.
Berberine, not interested in plummeting my blood sugar.
Gives me headaches unless I'm eating
a lot of carbohydrates with it.
The only time I've taken berberine
and I might take it again is I used to do cheat days.
I don't any longer.
But I could eat a dozen donuts
if I take 500 milligrams of berberine first, I feel fine.
Otherwise I feel like my eyes get blurry
and I want to pass out.
That's kind of fun to do every once in a while.
But if I don't eat a lot of carbohydrates
or sugar with berberine,
then I get a massive hypoglycemic headache.
And I feel like it almost feels like my head is made of stone.
It's very strange feeling.
I don't like it.
Other things for longevity, taking good care,
don't get hit in the head, avoid excessive stress,
you know, all the basic kind of like things
that we all know.
So the longevity field is a peculiar one.
I mean, it could be that Brian is onto something
with the exosomes and with the,
again, I don't want to throw out things
that I'm not aware that he's doing.
I think it's some PRP exosomes.
I do red light.
I think there's enough data for red light therapy,
whole body red light, you know, yep.
Naked in front of the panel, 10 minutes,
five minutes facing, five minutes from behind
or facing away as it were.
For sake of eye health,
the data from Glenn Jeffrey's lab
showing that red light therapy,
especially in the early part of the day
may offset some age-related vision decline.
This is my colleague Glenn Jeffrey
at University College London, beautiful studies.
He might be a fun person for you to talk to.
He's been in the game a long, long time.
Red light therapy for mitochondrial health,
these sorts of things.
And then, dosing with stress appropriately,
but not overdoing stress,
making sure to get enough sleep, having a joyful life.
I love this, joy is efficiency and longevity,
perhaps as well.
You know, I'm bolstered by observing my dad,
who, you know, might have a glass of wine
every once in a while, but never drank very much,
who exercises, but never overdid it,
who always worked nine to five
and then would put down the pen,
and he's a theoretical physicist after all,
and would focus on walks and getting sunlight and thinking.
He would often take walks and think about science,
he would tell me, but didn't overwork himself,
but was very, very consistent.
I think he just filed like more...
He's in excess of 70 patents, and he's going strong.
You know, he was also somebody that in the,
moved to the United States in the era of the 1960s,
and told stories about people, you know, passing joints.
And he was like, no, like I worked my butt off
to get out of a, you know, a country
where they didn't support science.
He had this opportunity from the Navy
to come here and study on scholarship and decided,
you know, he's sort of like all drugs bad kind of guy.
Whereas I think nowadays I and others have a kind of a more
adapted, nuanced view of things like cannabis.
Probably okay for some, probably good for others,
and probably terrible for others.
So I think that moderation goes a long way,
including in exercise.
I mean, if you look at people who marathon in ultra,
they don't age as well as, in my opinion,
as people who, certainly better than people
that are sedentary.
But when you look at, for instance,
people who are very heavily muscled,
they don't age very well.
You look at people who would do a ton of ultra endurance, they don't age terribly well. You look at people who do a ton of ultra endurance,
they don't age terribly well.
You look at some of the older sprinters out there,
older gymnasts.
I'll pass you a clip of this guy.
He's 98 years old.
I sent this to Rick Rubin the other day
and we were just blown away.
The guy doing a two fingers of each hand, doing a pull-up.
I think the guy is Chinese.
And then doing a skin the cat.
So rolling his feet in, you know, shoulder extension,
skin the cat, then back out, and then a chin up,
and then walking away from it.
Now, he looks 98 at the level of his skin sag
and his face and his gait, but holy moly,
does he have grip strength and flexibility,
and I want to be that guy at 98.
I don't know what he's doing in the other domains of his life,
but I'm pretty sure it's impressive.
What is the reason for the concern on ultra athletes?
Is that free radicals?
I've heard that. I don't even know what they are.
It's just stress.
Right.
I mean, and I think at some, and you know,
I went up to the Olympic track and field trials in Oregon
and it was amazing.
And I met some of the best marathoners in the world.
And I know Cam Haynes well as you do,
and he, you know, and Cam pushes himself hard.
I think that, again, better that than to be sedentary.
I think for Cam, I can't speak for him,
I don't think he has a choice,
but to push himself that way.
But, and he's pretty-
I don't think he's pushing, he's being pulled.
He's being pulled, yeah.
Well, and he's got it up.
I think it's all coming through him.
I know probably some people are like,
oh God, here we go again with that whole thing.
But there's something about when you
access these sources of guidance and energy
that are outside you that feel bigger than you
and are bigger than you.
If nothing else, we can agree on that.
Kim carries a fair amount of muscle as well,
which I think is protective against some of the muscle
wasting that occurs when people are running really far,
really long, you know, over and over and over.
It's stress.
Stress on the body.
Do you see that guy that ran the entire length of Africa?
No, but that's super impressive.
World's first, world's first guy.
Yeah, from the Cape, Cape town, you know,
the absolute bottom to Turkey.
And it can't be a straight line.
No, no, no, no.
It's a huge way.
Cause there's a lot of jungle and water.
He ran for a year.
Run for a year.
So this is some forest gump kind of stuff.
Correct.
Um, and Ross Edgeley, do you remember Ross?
He swam around the UK.
He was the first man to ever swim around the UK.
So he's just completed.
He would be great. I'm going to try and twiddle the dials on Rob to see if you guys want to speak.
He's just completed the world's longest single distance, nonstop swim.
How far?
300 miles without touching land, without stopping, without sleeping.
It was 50 over 50, eating in the water,
pooping in the water. The first time he had to go to the first time he had to go to the
bathroom, he's got like a butt flap on his thing. Uh, he missed the butt flap. So then
just churned his poop for the next 50 hours as he did this swim. Uh, apparently they,
they cut him out of it and he was, there was like this sort of gray dust inside of him,
which is what if you churn your own feces for long enough, apparently that happens.
Um, but Ross Swat, he was first man to swim around the UK.
So he did six hours on six hours off for six months.
Six hours on six hours off for six months.
The human, you know, that the human spirit is like one of these
things that I just marvel in.
I'm curious, Chris, um, what, what do you see as your long arc?
Have you thought, are you, like I'm in caterpillar mode.
I'm thinking about the microplastics episode
that I'm preparing.
Well, now I'm focused on where we are right now,
but you know, and a book and some other things
in the not too distant future.
But like, do you, how old are you?
36.
Man, you're young.
I mean, you look young, but,
so do you have aspirations for politics?
Are you, that'd be great.
No, no, no, no.
Very flatteringly, Rogan and Kam Haines said
that they would vote for me if I ran for president,
but they can't because he's British.
No, none of that.
You could run in the UK.
Yeah, I'm sure that, I mean, the UK is a whole other,
a whole other challenge at the moment
that I don't intend on stepping foot into.
One of the interesting things that I've learned,
I think over the last two and a half years
since moving to America is,
if there's ever a period of sort of rapid growth
or development, optionality in life opens up so rapidly
and the potential universe is branched so quickly
that any real long term plan is kind of pointless.
This is maybe a cope because I struggle with long term planning.
I know that the way that you're supposed to live the most fulfilling life
from my
productivity bro background is to write your obituary and then, you know, you're
in 25 year eons and then you're in seven year phases and then you're in one year
sprints and you're in 90 day blocks and you've got your daily actions which
contribute to you and so on and so forth.
I've never been able to really think more than about six months ahead.
And the last two years, I would have never thought
two and a half years ago that I would have been living in America,
that I would have been doing this sort of a thing,
that the show would have been where it was,
that I would have had the opportunities I would.
And especially if the things that you want to have happen
start to happen to you, the pace is so unimaginable
that you need to learn to develop the skill to say no to
things that you would have only dreamt to have had the opportunity to have been in the
room to have pitched to have said yes to six months ago.
And you're, it's like reverse hedonic adaptation.
You're permanently having to reset your baseline of what you should expect from yourself, from
your life, from the
way that you show up and the challenges completely change.
So, uh, I know that I want to have a family.
I know that I want to be a dad.
I'm very excited about that.
Um, I know that I love learning and having these sorts of conversations.
Uh, I know that it's incredibly gratifying to be seen as a peer by people that you also admire and that you aspire to emulate.
Uh, you know, that's unbelievably cool.
I think that.
Especially because I grew up in, you know, a town in the UK famous only for having
the highest teen pregnancy rating in England.
And then it lost that.
So I didn't really even have that name of the town stocked in on T's.
And it's just, you know, classic Northern working town, nothing spectacular.
That part from the railway was actually invented there.
But, uh, when I was growing up, I didn't have a massive number of.
Role models like the person I wanted to be like, but I had a lot of people
like the person I didn't want to be like, but I had a lot of people like the person I didn't want to be like.
So I came up with this idea of the reverse role model, which is if you are in a kind of a role model desert, we hear about food deserts.
If you're in a role model desert, that's not great.
But I think more people's lives are sideswiped by making errors than by expediting success.
And it meant that I was able to grow up and say,
well, I don't want his relationship with his family.
And I don't want the way that he uses alcohol
to cope with his problems.
And I don't want his issue that he's got with gambling.
And it creates these sort of way markers in the ground,
not ones that you go to, but ones that you avoid.
Sort of helps you to map out the mind sweeper territory. And- Can I just in, one thing that's extraordinary about what you're saying is deserving of a
neuroscience analogy. I started off as a developmental neurobiologist. So I teach embryology
and brain development to medical students and graduate students, among other things in neuroscience.
And one of the things that we learned
over the last 20, 30 years is that the brain,
the nervous system, so brain and spinal cord,
without question, the most complex and incredible object
in the entire universe, without question, right?
I mean, just think about what human brains have created
in terms of other technologies.
Those are all the product of the brain, right?
Elon's Rockets, X, this podcast, everything here, these cars are the product of this object, this
two and a half pounds or whatever, depending on the size of someone's head and brain.
The nervous system starts off from, you have sperm, meat meets egg. What happens before that is it varies, but it has certain required elements.
Sperm meets egg, and then there's duplications of the cells.
And some of those cells become limbs,
and some of the cells become fingernails, et cetera.
But a certain number of those cells
become designated as nervous system.
And then you have literally trillions of neurons,
nerve cells, that are independent of one another,
little spheres that need to connect to one another
in immensely precise ways in order for you
to be able to see the world around you,
to smell the world around you,
to make sense of when milk is coming
and when food is coming, to form traumas
and to have dopamine-related reward experience.
A big mystery in the field of brain development
for over a century was how is it
that the neurons find the right connections,
given the exquisite precision that allows
for all these incredible abilities of the brain,
the most magnificent object in the universe.
And for a long time, it was thought that,
oh, there would be what are called chemoattractants. There would be things that would lead the neurons
to steer in the right direction and wire up.
And indeed, those chemoattractants exist.
They go by the names of things like Netrin,
which means to guide or Efrin or et cetera.
But far and away, I would say by an order of magnitude,
most wiring in the nervous system
occurs by selective repulsion.
In other words, by neurons growing out,
looking for something to connect to,
and chemical labels saying,
-"Uh-uh, not here." -"Wow."
-"Not here." -"Nope, not here."
And neurons trying so hard to form connections
wherever they can.
And these, as they're called repellent, not repulsive,
because repulsive seems like, you know, egh,
but repellent forces,
corridoring them into progressively more precise
and more precise and more precise connections
so that by time a baby is born after nine months or so,
the wiring of the brain and spinal cord
is such that they're ready for life.
And then more wiring occurs,
and most of the wiring that occurs after we're born,
the so-called neuroplasticity,
is a selective removal of connections
as opposed to the formation of new connections.
And so as you're describing your experience
of growing up in this town,
whose name I can't remember right now.
Stockton. Stockton, the origin of the train. Ruining. And so as you're describing your experience of growing up in this town, whose name I can't remember right now.
Stockton.
Stockton, the origin of the train.
Yes.
You describe all these repellent forces.
I don't want to be like that.
I don't want to be like that.
I don't want to be like that.
And it highlights such a key principle,
which is that, you know, we think of a really good life
as being the consequence of selective decisions for, you decisions for running toward, not away from type decisions.
But I think what you raise is incredibly important and is not discussed enough, which is that
so much of a good life, a right life, an incredibly successful life involves the no.
Definitely not that, definitely not that, and a selective pruning, in a selective repellent mechanism
away from the wrong territory.
And so forgive me for waxing poetic on brain development
in relevance to your life experience,
because your life experience is far more, you know,
rich in terms of what it means.
But I think that if ever there was an analogy
for how you've emerged and the trajectory that you've taken,
it's the wiring of the central nervous system.
Yeah, I think avoiding catastrophe
is significantly more profitable
than trying to expedite success.
Amen to that.
There's this idea from mathematics, uh, which is never multiplied by zero.
So if you take 20 multiplied by three, multiplied by 400,000
multiplied by 1.3 multiplied by zero, you get zero.
So you can do all of the good work in the world.
You can avoid eating seed oils and you don't put any fucking sun lotion on your testicles
and you get all of your light in the morning.
Some sunscreens are safe.
Despite what the internet says, I believe in some sunscreens.
I lost friends for saying that, but it's true.
What was your thing about people will lose so much sleep and friends over debating seed oils.
Oh goodness.
Seed oils are the sunscreen thing.
Look, mineral-based sunscreens, everyone agrees are safe
except the few people that don't like sunscreen at all.
But I'm not one of those people.
I believe in sunscreen.
I wear zinc oxide sunscreen.
But according to the internet,
you find all sorts of lies about the opposite.
So anyway.
Yeah, so you multiply by zero.
You've done all of this stuff.
You've been resistance training three times a week,
listened to the Human Lab Podcast,
even subscribed on whatever your thing is,
podcast thing, and got the additional AMA.
And then you decide one day to just drive
without a seatbelt on.
Or what happened to me two weeks ago.
Head into the podcast.
I've got to get my run in.
I love running.
I'm going to take a quick run. I run down my street and live on a hill. I'm heading to the podcast. I've got to get my run in. I love running.
I'm going to take a quick run.
I run down my street and live on a hill.
I run into the park nearby, run into a podcast fan.
We hang out for a little bit, jog together.
I split off and head home and I'm heading home
and I'm thinking, how am I going to get home
and do my five minutes meditation, shower,
and get ready and make it to the podcast studio in time?
I'll just do my meditation now.
Brilliant idea, Professor Huberman.
So I close my eyes.
While you're running.
Yeah, and I'm striding up the hill
and it's a big wide street.
And I'm thinking, and all of a sudden, brah!
And I go right into a box truck and I'm thinking,
oh, now I've been hit before.
I boxed a little bit, skateboarded, I've hit my head. I'm not tough, but I've hit my head. I reach up and I'm like, oh, now I've been hit before. I boxed a little bit, skateboarded, I've hit my head.
I'm not tough, but I've hit my head.
I reach up and I'm like, oh, good.
And there's enough blood on my hand.
I'm like, oh boy.
It's a big one.
It's a big one.
And then I feel like gape.
I'm like, oh boy.
So it turned out it was like ocular bone exposed,
not good, no bueno, ran right into a parked box truck.
Okay. Hey, I'm the absent minded professor at times. No bueno, ran right into a parked box truck, okay?
Hey, I'm the absent-minded professor at times.
Meditate when you get home, folks.
Fortunately, I have a friend who I know through training
and common friends, his name is Jason Diamond,
and he's one of the world's best facial plastic surgeons.
I didn't care so much about a scar,
but he assured me we can do this without a scar. He said, you have to get in and get it stitched up
within six hours.
You're kidding.
So I go to his clinic, fortunately, they flushed it out.
He wasn't there that day.
Meanwhile, Rob's waiting at the studio.
Yeah, with the guest from Stanford,
amazing professor named Jamil Zaki, who's brilliant.
And they put a couple of injections in Novocaine,
suits you me up. And you know, a week later in Novocaine, suture me up and you know,
a week later I'm pretty good.
That was a week ago?
Yeah. Jason and his clinic are absolute phenoms.
Yeah.
Did he explain to you the importance of the six hours?
To avoid infection. To avoid infection.
It's the infection that gets in there.
They flushed it, put some local antibiotic.
All I put on it was a little bit of Neosporin, Polysporin
after it was stitched, got the stitches out.
It stitches out, so it's been a week and four days.
Yeah.
You're like Wolverine.
Yeah, normally I don't heal that well.
Now I will say this for the record,
I've been experimenting with BPC 157
for which there are basically zero human data,
tons of animal data, and anyone that's taken BPC-157,
by the way, you don't wanna take it continuously.
And if you're gonna take it,
get it from a compounding pharmacy
and get it prescribed by a doctor
because there's a lot of contaminated versions out there.
I would never take an oral version.
It can cause, it does cause angiogenesis,
growth of blood vessels. So if you have a tumor, it does cause angiogenesis, growth of blood vessels.
So if you have a tumor,
you could cause angiogenesis of the tumor.
So, but I do take, I was taking it sub-Q.
And I do heal noticeably faster when taking BPC-157.
But were I not to have had that injury,
and I had a little bit of a calf thing
I was trying to repair,
I would not take BPC-157 continuously just to take it.
And nowadays I hear about a lot of young guys
just taking it the same way they just take
testosterone-sipunate, which is just foolish.
Yeah.
Two stories.
I ruptured my Achilles three, four years ago.
I took TB 500 and BPC-157 for the six weeks after that.
So you tore your Achilles?
Complete detachment, yeah, full rupture.
I mean, you can even see if you lean over there,
you can just...
Oh, he's not lying. That thing looks like a zipper.
I've got the scar. It looks like a zipper.
I've got the scar to show it.
Oh, Ross. How do you do that?
Playing cricket, the most British way.
Oh, yeah. That's a confusing sport.
Yeah. So I did that at TB 500, BPC 157,
six weeks, and the recovery was very good.
It was also during a pandemic, I had nothing else to do
and I was beyond psychotic, like probably 95 to 98%
compliance with sets, reps, recovery, everything.
Everything.
Did you, curious, because there's no clinical studies
on this, so when I talked to Peter Attia
about BPC 157, he's like, no clinical studies on this. So when I talked to Peter Atiyah about BPC-157, he's like, no clinical data.
But then you talk to, let's just say X-game athletes,
or let's say you're me and you talk to Olympic athletes.
And people are-
BPC is still allowed, right?
Cause it's naturally gastrointestinally-
I don't think it's allowed in the Olympics.
I will tell you that many, many athletes used
and used BPC-157 to recover from injury more quickly.
TB-500 is very restricted,
but BPC-157 seems to be less restricted.
Yeah, I worry about any conversation about this
only if people think, oh, I'm just going to take this
so I can like recover bigger biceps.
Like don't, like just, cancer is nothing you want.
So that is this, that's the second,
this is the second thing I want to tell you about.
So Chase, who isn't here today,
lead strategist for us,
he had started to hear about some of the great effects
that you get from BPC-157.
I think that he took an oral version of it.
Yeah, those that are out there.
Have you heard about this
anthymia response,
where it just creates a persistent feeling
of hopelessness that is inescapable.
No, but that sounds horrible. Don't do it, folks.
Taking BPC-157 or injecting testosterone-sipinate,
because you just want more gains and a recovery in the gym,
is absolutely foolish.
You know, I've talked about these things before.
You know, I was 45 before I touched anything,
and you need to bank sperm if you want kids.
You need to take HCG if you want to maintain sperm production.
You need to keep dosages low.
I also did an experiment where I went on and then went off.
I would not take these things continuously
unless you're working with a physician
and they say you need it.
I'm living proof that you don't need to do it continuously.
And I would also say that when it comes to BPC-157,
the angiogenic effects are really the most concerning.
Again, you could get vascularization of tumors.
The one peptide-
Is that, sorry, is that mediated
whether you take it orally or sub-Q?
Nobody knows.
So I was going to ask, did you inject it locally into the,
because I wasn't injecting my eye.
No, so I was shooting your typical sort of love handle spots.
TB 500 just because I was trying to get it as close.
So it was sort of the fat on the inside of your calf.
I was shooting it in there just in case it would maybe
some sort of site.
There's probably some local effect.
Here's what we know about BPC 157.
It's from the animal studies.
It seems able to detect injury
in some very interesting way and lead to fibroblast,
there's a certain kind of cell type
relevant to tendon, et cetera.
It's actual Achilles tendon ruptures in the mice
or the rats that they're using.
That's right.
So I thought, well, God,
if it's ever going to work for anything.
And sciatic nerve as well.
Okay.
And what's also interesting is there are a couple of peptides
that I think are going to be discussed more and more.
You know, BPC157 and Ozempic are the ones
you hear the most about.
Those are after all both peptides,
as is insulin by the way.
For sleep, pinealin, which is related to regeneration
and support of the pineal gland.
Very interesting.
Maybe we talk about this in a year or so
when there's more data.
Cortigen, things that are relevant to the TREC1 pathway
and can accelerate nerve growth.
Not track, track receptors, BDNF, not that pathway,
but TREC1.
There's a lot of interest now.
Brian Johnson, very interested,
and others interested in cerebral lysin,
which is sold in Europe, but not the US.
I'm taking cerebral lysin at the moment.
Are you?
Yeah.
How do you feel?
I've only shot it once, so that's IM.
So you're taking cerebral lysin?
Yeah.
Okay.
I've taken once.
I've never tried it.
No, so I've used it once, I need to shoot again.
I have to say, I just get nervous
with IM injections generally.
It's a fucking big old needle to be shooting in,
and it's a hot...
Why use a big needle? Because it's a pretty big old needle to be shooting in. And it's a hot... Why use a big needle?
Uh, because it's a pretty hefty, um, dose.
It's five mil.
Five mils?
Five mil.
You're not gonna put that through an insulin pen.
You know, unless you're gonna draw it up each time,
you know, five individual injections.
That reminds me, it takes...
We didn't close the hatch on NAD.
Have you ever done an NAD infusion?
Yes, a number of times.
And it feels like an elephant is stepping on your legs.
And you're getting kicked in the groin.
Have you tried that with,
what's the stuff that stops you from, Zolfran?
Yeah, I don't like taking medication if I can avoid it,
so I just...
You do it without the Zolfran?
I do it, but I didn't infuse it that fast.
Now, I will say this, I've done NAD infusions.
You feel horrible while it's going in,
you feel better afterwards, but it's always hard to dissociate from the, you know,
saline that you're bringing into your system.
Cause the saline direct to you is pretty good.
Could be, we don't know.
So we, there's a place in Austin Cuyah,
which I go to, which is really great.
You've been, cold plunged.
The salt baths there are great too, the flotation tanks.
So they do the NAD infusions
and they'll do it with Zolfran.
So I'm there with James, a newtonic guy, my housemate, Zach.
And she says, do you want the thing to stop you from feeling?
I was like, yeah, yeah, of course.
And classic three guys in a row,
we just start opening up the taps on this thing
to the point where it's just pouring in.
Yeah, the idea here that Chris is referring to
is that when you do an NAD infusion,
they'll offer to give it to you
over the course of three hours, two hours, one hour.
I heard, and this is just lore,
that Rogan does it in like 30 minutes.
I think he does it in less.
The faster you put it in, the faster you infuse,
the more painful it is.
And if you don't take the Zoltran it's called,
something like that, the anti-nausea medication,
you feel like you want to vomit, you feel irritable,
but then when it's done, the moment it's done,
you definitely feel better.
I just don't know what the source of the effect is,
but the rationale there is that unlike NR, NMN,
which need to be converted,
which need to be converted, excuse me, to NAD,
the direct infusion of NAD,
either by some lingual electrophoretic patch
or by IV infusion is supposed to get
into your cells more readily.
But again, and it tends to be pretty expensive.
It's a couple hundred bucks or more.
It's really expensive.
Yeah, I haven't been doing NAD infusions consistently.
These days I'm back to real basics. I mean, I still do,
the basics. I will give you my review on what I'm doing at the moment, but right now,
BPC 157, thymus and alpha. Are you injured? Thymus and beta. What's the rationale? I'm doing
this mold detox, very aggressive mold detox. So- Mold detox. Yeah. I've heard this like that people who are like,
I remember people that I know from Austin claim.
Particularly a bad thing in Austin.
So I haven't spoken about this.
It's the damp, damp nights hot ways.
Correct.
Yeah.
I haven't spoken about this on the show yet.
We're kind of tracking everything
and I'll bring it up at some point,
but that cerebral isin,
MOTC.
So I've got a,
peptides is a very important part. I'm also doing ozone therapy.
Have you ever tried that?
No.
So half a pint of blood is taken out of you,
put into a bag with an anticoagulant
and then a antimicrobial gas is pushed into the bag.
So it almost looks like it's carbonating your blood.
Yes, you're doing sci-fi.
Oh, this is, I've got everything.
I'm doing 25 gram IV.
And you don't even live in Los Angeles.
No, no, but there's places alive and well in Austin.
It's phenomenal for this.
Glutathione IV, phosphoacetylcholine, red light therapy,
lymph massage, everything to try and fix.
I've got my brain fogging up.
You look healthy.
Thank you.
You seem very sharp. I don't feel it, but it try and fix. I've got my brain fogged up. You look healthy. Thank you. You seem very sharp.
I don't, I don't feel it, but, uh, it's, it's working along.
What one thing that I, uh, did want to loop back to that you mentioned earlier on.
You're teaching an undergraduate course.
How, how is that not going to be the most oversubscribed cues out of the, I mean,
you know, people go to see you do talks in
Australia.
How are you able to organize a course at a university?
Surely that's just going to be everybody in their sister is going to come along.
Yeah.
We'll see what happens.
You know, I've taught consistently.
I've never taken a sabbatical, a formal sabbatical.
I have sabbatical time accrued where I could not
teach. But during the pandemic, we were mostly remote teaching. I was directing our course in
neuroanatomy for medical students and teaching. I did some in-person lectures. Last year,
I did a remote lecture. Because my main appointment is in the medical school,
you either have to teach or do research in order to
fulfill your obligation. So at Stanford, we have the option to teach undergraduate courses. And I
spoke to my new chair, I'm in three different departments now, but the chair I'm currently
under. And we decided I would teach an undergraduate course in neuroscience and health
in particular. It's also going to have some guest lectures
and we're going to make it a big course.
So anywhere from 400 to 600 students have taught lectures
that big before when I was...
You've got theaters of that size?
Oh, yeah. Yeah, they're, you know, they're not really
amphitheater, but yeah, certainly big enough.
When I was, before I was at Stanford, my lab,
I trained at Stanford as a postdoc,
but then when I was a junior professor,
meaning before I got tenure, I was at UC San Diego
and I taught a course called
Neural Circuits in Health and Disease.
Evening course started as 50 students
and very quickly grew to 400 students.
So I'm familiar with this kind of format.
We read papers, we evaluate papers,
we have guest lecturers.
I'm also getting some help from the students.
This is pretty cool.
I was gonna say, how many TAs are you gonna have for this?
Probably gonna need somewhere between six and eight TAs.
And what's interesting is that-
It's a fucking platoon, it's like SEAL Team Six.
Yeah, and the TAs are amazing.
I mean, they handle so much of the work related to kind of the mechanics,
but obviously, as an instructor, you need to coordinate that.
And when I directed the neuroanatomy course,
I had TAs in there.
There was a laboratory component as well
where they dissect brains and things of that sort.
Again, all made more difficult by the pandemic situation.
It was really complicated, but they're phenomenal,
so it worked out.
the pandemic situation, it was really complicated, but they're phenomenal, so it worked out.
I've reached out to some of the students
who are helping me devise the curriculum,
which is gonna be a lot of fun.
You know, learning from the students,
like what are the things that you really wanna understand?
And they are phenomenal.
I mean, obviously Stanford students,
as our students elsewhere, just like phenomenal.
What age will these be?
So undergraduates, I suppose,
when I went to college, I'm a fall baby.
So I was born late September.
So when I went off to college, I was still 17.
I turned 18 my first month in school
because we're on the quarter system as is Stanford.
So they're going to be somewhere between 18 and 22.
It's going to be a lot of fun.
We're going to get people in from computer science and AI.
We're going to get people in from obviously neuroscience,
bioengineering, chemistry, psychology.
You should come up for a lecture.
It's gonna be a little bit of a challenge.
We are definitely going to be checking IDs at the door.
I was gonna say, it's like a fucking capacity problem.
People are gonna be sneaking in.
You're gonna have to have a turnstile.
We will, I don't wanna give away too much about this,
but we will have a turnstile. We will, I don't wanna give away too much about this,
but we will have a format by which enrolled students
will be like, it'll be clear who those are.
And, you know, but we're not gonna announce
the location of the course like each day or anything.
So, yeah. Wow.
But yeah, it's a lot of fun.
And people often wanna know like, you know,
can I come to Stanford and see your space and this?
And, you know, unfortunately that can't happen.
I heard a rumor.
But these are gonna be filmed, I should say,
that very likely Stanford media is gonna put these out there
separate from the podcast.
If they ever wanted to get some free plays on YouTube,
that's a pretty easy way to do it.
Bob Sapolsky's lectures at Stanford
are some of the most popular Stanford-
The number of times that you see
introduction to evolutionary biology,
that one famous photo of him in front of the board. Yeah. How compatible have you found the life of a
influencer, very well known podcaster with being a sort of responsible and in-depth researcher?
Is that challenging to navigate those two things?
Yeah. So keep in mind, just to give people an orientation of how this went,
you know, in 2019, I started posting clips to Instagram,
just because.
In 2020, I started going on podcasts.
I think I went on close to 30 podcasts in 2020,
including Rogue and Rich Roll and Lex Friedman's podcast,
Whitney Cummings' podcast.
And then we launched the podcast,
the Huberman Loud podcast in January of 2021.
From the time I've been 19 years old,
I've been a student and working in a laboratory.
I started my laboratory as an assistant professor
when I was 35.
I got tenure when I was 40
and I've been at Stanford since I was 40.
I'm 49, tenured there.
And I ran my laboratory to pretty big capacity.
At one point I had a lot of students and post-docs
and technicians and things of that sort.
During the pandemic,
I definitely shrunk the size of my research laboratory.
In part, that was related to the pandemic.
In part, it was related to the fact
that I was doing more and more public facing work.
The Huberman Lab as a research lab still exists,
but we do human clinical trials.
And we published a paper in 2023
with my collaborator, David Spiegel,
who's in the Department of Psychiatry,
where we started doing those experiments remotely,
people wearing whoop bands and other devices
to monitor their sleep and HRV, et cetera,
while they were doing specific practices
to mitigate stress.
Currently, I'm involved in the generation of experiments
in humans to evaluate non-sleep deep rest
as it relates to patterns of activity in the human brain.
Those are experiments that are spinning up with Matt Walker.
They'll be done at Berkeley, as well as studies at Stanford
through the department of ophthalmology
and some other departments looking at visual repair. So, this is a long-standing interest of mine
trying to understand and cure glaucoma,
the second leading cause of blindness in the world,
second only to cataract.
So, I still have research funds,
and so the Huberman Lab exists now in that realm,
working with clinicians.
So, gone are the days we, now, only recently...
Despite what you might read, but gone are the days now
where you can walk into my laboratory
and see mice that express green fluorescent protein
and glow, that was not long ago where that was true.
Or we had brain bow mice that glowed 12 different colors,
not developed by me, but developed by others.
But we use those tools where people were recording
from neurons using extracellular electrodes.
We've recorded from human brain in collaboration
with Dr. Eddie Chang at UCSF,
recording from the human insula while people are in VR,
looking at great white sharks
that I filmed while doing the...
So I've been involved in a number
of different styles of research,
and I still am very much interested in research.
I'm still on advisory, excuse me, editorial committees
and so forth.
These days, because of the demands of the podcast
and the fact that we're soon launching,
in addition to the standard podcast,
30-minute, what we call essentials,
30-minute versions of the podcast,
in addition to the long form, okay?
Because I'm also writing the bonus chapters on my book,
which is out next April, because I am going on podcasts
and still very much involved in science philanthropy
through SciComm, my company, and through a bunch of other venues. And I'm very much involved in science philanthropy through SciCom, my company,
and through a bunch of other venues. And I'm very much interested in lobbying for advancing
treatments for the PTSD and other psychiatric challenges. Because I'm spread over a lot of
things, I'm basically restricted to doing one or two studies per year or two. And I'm fortunate to have excellent collaborators
and clinicians and post-docs that can carry that work, but we still have to look at data
and analyze data and write papers. So, you know, I think one of the people who has been
very important as an example, but also a mentor, I've never said this out loud, was from an
early stage, the Dr. Robert Sapolsky has been very generous with advice about how to navigate these sorts of things
about being public facing and transitions
from laboratory and teaching, et cetera.
And I must say that Stanford has been wonderful
in their support of the podcast.
They've been wonderful in support of me
evolving this new course curriculum.
They've been wonderful in terms of embracing
these new types of philanthropy to bring laboratories
other than mine, the kind of financial support
that allows them to do really cutting edge science.
So, one of my missions,
and this wasn't discussed much publicly,
but it should have been,
is during the Obama administration,
there was the brain initiative.
It infused over a hundred million dollars
into brain research.
During the Trump administration that followed,
that funding was maintained, although it changed names.
Just this last year or so, the Brain Initiative was cut.
The budget was cut by approximately 40%.
And as a consequence, a lot of neuroscience laboratories
were not able and are not able to do the important work
that they need to do to develop treatments for Alzheimer's,
for Parkinson's, for eating disorders, for addiction
and on and on, autism, et cetera.
So a big part of my effort these days
is to raise awareness and money from donors,
but also from SciCom, my company,
the parent company of the HLP,
to bring money to researchers so they can do that work.
And, you know, I'm very passionate about this
because as somebody who wrote grants for years,
as somebody who ran a laboratory for years and still does,
although in a more minor extent,
the academic has to work two jobs.
They have to work like a demon to raise the money
to even begin to do the work.
And oftentimes the best work takes years to evolve
and many granting agencies sadly will not fund work
until it's already basically done, believe it or not.
So I've become very, very passionate
about raising more money for the best science.
And one of the things I love about doing science philanthropy
is that I can direct money to laboratories very quickly.
In fact, I have one rule for giving funds to a laboratory.
First of all, right now we're only funding human work,
not animal work.
Second, of course the work has to be of excellent value
and quality, but the grant application
has to be one sentence and no more.
You write me two sentences, you're not getting the money.
I don't want a budget.
I trust the best researchers to do excellent work.
And then we give them the funds and they are unrestricted,
meaning they have to spend them on research,
but they can do the great work they wanna do.
What's the coolest sentence that you've received?
Oh, we've given money to Joanna Steinglas's laboratory
at Columbia University School of Medicine
and her stated goal is to find a cure for anorexia nervosa,
the most deadly of all psychiatric illnesses, period.
Now that's a grant application
and it's one that I was happy to fund
and that we're gonna be happy to continue to fund.
And it's been marvelous to see these billionaire donors
and hundreds of million dollars in worth donors
put their money into the pot.
They've now forexed our initial contributions from SciComm
and it's continuing to grow.
And it's just all the, like the ecosystem's perfect.
Where can people go if they want to throw some money at the... Yeah, so we fund it in part through our premium channel,
which I do these AMAs.
If people want to give to SciComm philanthropy directly,
they can. If people are of,
have money that they want to put towards science
and they want to bypass all of that,
they can, they could do that by contacting...
Let me give the proper name. It would be Ian at SciCom with two M,
scicommedia.com. This is not money that I'm seeking for my own laboratory. This is me acting as a hub
to distribute money to excellent laboratories. And so this is a very important mission in my life,
because I can tell you as a researcher who
wrote grants for years that the amount of time and energy that talented researchers put into
raising money to be able to do their work is extraordinary. And it's not that with money,
you can do successful science necessarily, but you can afford a lot more risk taking,
healthy risk taking in science, and you just get more time to develop and analyze data.
And we have a dearth of funding.
In this country, there's more funding for research
than anywhere else in the world.
The UK is pretty good as well.
Germany is pretty good as well.
Switzerland as well.
There are other countries, but the more money
that goes into research, the faster cures are found.
We know this.
We know this from every disease
that's ever been looked at.
Where there's time, energy, a healthy dose of emotion
and money, you get cures for the most challenging diseases.
This is absolute fact.
I've been thinking about this sort of,
a little bit of a juxtaposition
that I see happening with you, maybe recently,
or maybe it's always been there but bubbling below the surface, which is between cerebral
horsepower sort of cognition, rational, material science and intuition, something which is a little
bit more sort of ephemeral, it's kind of embodied. It's a good- Yeah, there's no language for it. Good instinct in a way. As someone who spends a lot of time thinking about thinking,
thinking about science and how it works, what is your advice for people on how to
follow intuition more, how to blend the cognitive with the intuitive?
Yeah. Yeah. I can feel ideas in my body. And it's like, I can remember driving as a graduate student to visit friends in San Francisco,
because I was in graduate school, north of San Francisco, and feeling in my left arm,
so weird, feeling in my left arm that I was going to do something new.
And I ended up doing some writing for a,
some music write about music for a skateboarding magazine
that led and led to a set of ideas
that eventually led to this, the podcast,
philanthropy and so on.
The nervous system, because it includes the brain and body,
I think has a more ancient form of response
and acts as more of a rudder
in our sort of somatic awareness in our body.
Our thinking obviously can be very structured
and I indeed try and train up both.
Here's the exercise that I think is very useful
and it's gonna seem really squishy and new agey,
but it was given to me by the great Martha Beck, who's triple
degree from Harvard, who then developed a bunch of self-help personal development tools to figure
out right path, right life for whoever you are listening to this. And the exercise that I did
based on one of her books years ago was you sit quietly and you imagine something terrible,
something really terrible,
and you observe and feel how your body responds to that.
The feeling of contraction that precedes
the movement of your limbs or covering up.
Then you relax it a bit, you shake that off,
and maybe at a different time, maybe a few minutes later.
So you do that several times, maybe for five, 10 maybe a few minutes later. So you do that several times,
maybe for five, 10 minutes, set a timer.
Then you do the opposite.
You start imagining things that are absolutely,
the word that comes to mind is,
and it's very Martha Beckian, delicious to you.
Things that just feel so good, right?
And don't limit yourself.
And you experience in a way preceding any bodily movement
how your body, your face,
your nervous system responds to that.
And what you're doing is you're tapping into the more,
in some sense crude, more broad,
but in other ways, more sensitive aspects
of your nervous system to detect yes versus no.
You know, so many of the circuits of the brain
work in a yum, yuck, meh kind of fashion
where you either want to move towards things, yum,
away from things, what we call aversion, yuck or meh,
kind of neutral.
Ambivalence.
Right, ambivalence.
The body has the option to move toward,
to remain where it's at or to move away.
And paying attention to the signals
that precede those intuitive decisions
and practicing them through these, you know,
she has this perfect day exercise,
which has been very, very useful to me.
I've started doing it again where you take 10 minutes
and you just know limits.
You just go perfect day.
What is your perfect day?
And you just allow that to come up.
What is the bed you wake up in?
Where you look around the room, what's there?
Allowing surprise and unanticipated things
to enter the room.
Maybe you wake up alone, maybe with one person,
maybe with two people, maybe you have a dog,
maybe you have a cat, maybe you have a fish.
But you let some of that geyser up
from your unconscious mind.
As Paul Conti would say,
the unconscious mind carries a wisdom
based on your prior experience,
maybe even the experience of people before you
that your conscious mind can work with,
but you need to be able to access it sometimes through dreams.
But this perfect day exercise that Martha talks about
allows this emergence of what's inside you
and the directions that are really right for you.
Okay, there's no limits on this.
Now, what you're watching for in these different exercises
is again, how your nervous system responds
before the action that you would take.
So you're withholding action.
So you're not going, oh, that feels terrible.
And you're not going, oh, that feels great.
You're paying attention to the neural signals
that precede the impulse to do that.
And you're playing with it.
And I would say this is a great way to build your intuition
and to learn to respond to it
when you're conscious and moving through space.
The other day I was on a phone call
and I was just all of a sudden I realized like,
I don't want to be on this phone call.
I don't know what's happening.
I don't want to be on it.
I thought, yeah, Andrew, like quit being such a wuss.
Like, don't be so emotional. And I realized, I was like Andrew, quit being such a wuss. Don't be so emotional.
And I realized, I was like,
this is very energy draining to me.
And I got off the phone call.
Other things moving toward,
I think that intuition in science,
my dad talks a lot about this when we talked.
Einstein talked a lot about this,
not to put us in the same bin at all,
but there's a story about Einstein,
I know, because my dad talks about him all the time,
where someone gave him a picture to sign an autograph,
a picture of Einstein.
And Einstein put an arrow to his nose and said,
the source of all my ideas,
like he could sense like where things were.
You need to develop,
everyone needs to develop a sense for themselves
of what steers them in a particular direction.
What are the somatic signals?
Again, the somatic signals, the signals of the body
are more crude in the sense that they are more divorced
from language, but they are more sensitive.
It reminds me of the neural retina.
We have two systems of vision in the retina as humans.
One that is the rod system, which is very sensitive.
It's the one you use at dusk and at night
to sense if there's anything in your environment.
It's very sensitive.
It can detect one photon, one photon,
but it has very poor acuity.
It's not very nuanced at the level of seeing boundaries
or edges, but it will tell you if something is moving
from behind a tree to get you.
The cone system, as we call it, is far less sensitive.
The cone system in contrast is far less sensitive, okay?
It can't detect such subtle differences in luminosity,
but it is exquisitely good
at deciphering boundaries and color.
In fact, it's the system that allows for trichromacy,
which is what allows us to see this as yellow.
And dogs see this probably as kind of a blunted orange
or a burnt orange,
because they are dichromats, not trichromats.
So I think I know that within the body,
we have a sense of intuition
that we can learn to listen to.
The signals are very, very sensitive.
You're like a tuning fork to your environment. Most people learn to listen to, the signals are very, very sensitive. You're like a tuning fork to your environment.
Most people learn to suppress this
and we override it with thinking and cognition.
People that can combine thinking and cognition
with this more coarse language of the body
are able to parse their life experience
in the direction they're going to go in
with exquisite sensitivity.
And when you read, shit, you don't even need to read.
You can just listen to something Rick Rubin says,
or you could do better and read his book.
What you realize is that Rick is somebody who,
he's like a sensor for music.
When he talks about his taste, he's able,
I mean, he has this incredible ability to get,
really let things waft over him and experience them and go, yes, more of that and less of that. He's like, he has this incredible ability to get, really let things waft over him and experience them
and go, yes, more of that and less of that.
He's like, he's a conductor.
And he can say more of that, do more of that.
But what's so unbelievable about Rick, so spectacular,
is that when he steps away from that experience,
he's boundary, he's still himself.
So it's kind of like empathy,
but he can engage and disengage it in a very adaptive way,
which is why he can create LL Cool J, Beastie Boys, Slayer.
There Rick, I mentioned Slayer
because he gives me a hard time about not listening
to Slayer.
Slayer, right?
You know, Adele and on and on.
He's able to sense what is good, what is extra good.
And that's what taste is in the same way that,
you know, somebody who is expert in wines,
how are you pronounced?
sommelier, sommelier.
The sommelier or the chef or the food taster
or the neurosurgeon, they know the precise movements.
They know the chemistry and the ingredients.
That's part of their training.
But ultimately it's the gestalt.
It's the whole picture that's taken in.
You sip the wine, right?
You have to understand how the cut that you make
in a neural circuit leads to changes network wide,
brain wide, body wide.
And so being able to straddle those two levels of analysis
is really the essence of being a virtuoso, right?
And I'm not calling myself that,
I'm referring to these other people that way, right?
A virtuoso is somebody that can embrace
all the levels of granularity in an exploration,
all the details, but also the macroscopic picture,
and then combine those in a way that that's really unique.
And I think that, you know, the basic training of anything
is a layering up of formal training.
I do believe that, that most people need a formal training.
And then at some point you get to a level of expertise
where your intuition is guiding you
because it's grounded in all that knowledge.
It just, it comes forward
in what look like very simple blocks. But those simple blocks are built on
incredible depth of knowledge and understanding.
And for myself, you know, I spent a lifetime
exploring biology and the nervous system.
That's where my depth of expertise exists.
But why are we now soon going to do,
in addition to long episodes, shorter episodes?
Well, some people only have 30 minutes,
and they want to know how to sleep better,
and they don't want to have to listen to four episodes
at four hours long.
So I want them to know the basic things to do.
So I think having the offering
and the understanding of different levels
of granularity is key.
And you do this, Chris.
Listen, three years ago, I said to Rob, I go,
in addition to all the podcasters
that are already doing phenomenally well,
I said, David Senra Founders Podcast and Chris, they're the ones that are going to be
next, next level in a year. And I'm not saying I have a crystal ball, but boom, you guys are
killing it. And I know that you're pointed at the sun and you're just going to continue along this
trajectory. It's like, it's a felt thing
because I can tell by the number of different topics,
the number of different venues,
the emphasis that you put on production,
how you treat your team, the nuance that you put,
the way that you articulate,
the emphasis that you put on like the details of like,
you know what's in your energy drink
down to like the milligrams of,
this is like when you meet someone who runs a laboratory,
they know at the beginning where everything is placed.
At some point, they don't even know where the antibodies are
because it's not their job to know,
it's the student's job to know.
But they knew how to know that when they needed to.
And so I don't care if you're talking about Yo-Yo Ma,
Rick Rubin, you, Rogan, Lex, it's all the same thing.
And what you need to, what people need to understand
is that you have to get the formal rigorous training,
or if there's no degree in what you do,
it's just hour upon hour upon hour upon hour.
And then eventually it starts to look like
a kind of shorthand and just natural,
but that's built on deep, deep, deep expertise.
If you never learn the rules of the game,
there's no such thing as breaking the rules.
You're just playing the wrong sport.
So you have to have that grounding.
Yeah.
I mean, you know, my background in nightlife, we always wanted our guys to come up from
being a guest list.
That's what we did.
We gave out wristbands in the rain, in the cold, asking people, where are you going tonight,
darling?
And after six months, then you get to stand on the front door. And then after you stand on the front door,
you get to work out how the tills work.
And then after you've done that and you work all the way up.
And I think that there's something very reassuring
about hearing somebody, maybe they don't know
as much as the audio engineer or as the director
of photography or as the producer or as the whatever,
but they can hold the conversation.
They go, I was there when it was at a lower resolution and now you're beyond my skillset, but I can hold the conversation. They go, I was there when it was at a lower resolution
and now you're beyond my skillset,
but I can hold the conversation all the way up.
And there's a kind of respect that that commands.
And I really liked that.
I've always wanted to sort of embody that
and develop that in myself.
And I guess there's some disadvantage,
many disadvantages to kind of being obsessive
and very attentive and very vigilant,
but there's a ton of advantages as well. Huge advantages. I mean, my friend Eddie Chang is the chair of neurosurgery
at UCSF. Okay. He's one of, if not the best neurosurgeon in the world, at least in the top
three. He's constantly evolving his craft as is Joe. You know, and this might seem as if it's some
sort of a promotional thing, but I just want to point out, you know, because it's relevant to the conversation we're in
and some of the things that have surfaced, you know,
like in terms of like sponsors that I'll work with.
No, I didn't say you can go from a two to a seven,
that was AI, you know, I didn't promote that company.
You know, there's a lot of AI and bullshit out there
using our face name and likeness,
but the sponsors that I work with,
whether or not it's AG1,
8Sleep, Element, these sponsors,
the reason I work with those sponsors is,
yes, I use those products,
AG since 2012.
But in addition, in particular with AG1 and 8Sleep,
they are constantly improving the product they're making.
You know, it's very interesting to see how the companies
that are doing best are the ones that come under
the most scrutiny and are also the companies
that are doing the most innovative iteration
year after year after year after year.
Why?
Because they've been in the game a long time
and they continue to iterate on more or less the same thing
over and over and over.
Now, some people would say,
okay, creatine monohydrate, right?
I'm not involved in any company
that promotes creatine monohydrate.
I take creatine monohydrate.
I have since I was 17 years old.
At that time, everyone said it was gonna blow out
your kidneys or whatever, but anyway, I read about it
in a MM2000 issue, for those of you that remember.
I was like, whoa, this stuff really works.
Turns out it doesn't destroy your kidneys.
Okay, it's also good for cognition, it turns out.
But, you know, does creatine monohydrate
need to be evolved?
No, it's a single ingredient type of formulation
that some people might find benefit from,
no requirement to take it, I'm not selling it anyway.
But when it comes to things that are blends of things,
or it comes to a sleep technology,
so like AG1, like sleep, and again, people might think, oh, this is just a, you it comes to a sleep technology. So like AG1, like 8 Sleep. And again, people might think,
oh, this is just an ad in disguise.
No, I will only work with companies
that are telling me, yes, we're constantly working
to make the purity better and better and better.
99.9% isn't good enough.
We're constantly trying to make a cooling bed better.
It's now going to help you offset snoring.
Amazing. The SleepTracker onSleep is exquisitely good.
It's laboratory grade sleep tracking.
The companies that succeed over time, like Apple,
I mean, I'm from the Bay area after all, like Apple,
or we see YouTube, I mean, they're constantly updating
things, constantly updating the algorithms, Instagram,
constantly meta, and X is evolving.
And so I am an absolute fanatic about anything
that mimics the scientific process,
which is you come up with a hypothesis,
you develop something or you develop a technology
and you're constantly trying to improve on that technology
over and over and over, which is why I use these things,
why I know they're gonna continue to get better and why I already believe in their value now.
And this is, I think, something that's often lost
in the discussion about, oh, does this really work?
Does it? Yes.
And the point is that you want to surround yourself
with colleagues, with sponsors, if you need them
or use them, with people in your life that are really, you know, we hear the word optimization,
but that are optimizing for the now,
that also includes a balanced life, right?
And it's reasonable about, you know,
what you can do in a given day.
And that are constantly trying to do better.
These are the things and products and people
that evolve health, that evolve science,
that evolve creative activities.
And, you know, I can even look to Rick as somebody
or my friend, Tim Armstrong.
Tim writes a song every day.
He had platinum records back when.
He doesn't need to do that,
but people who are just obsessive about their craft
and lead balanced lives and are healthy.
These are the people that we need to look to.
Joe too.
I mean, three or four three hour podcasts per week, okay?
Plus UFC, plus standup, plus he has a family,
plus he's a healthy guy.
And he just did the special.
The special was super entertaining.
I could feel the catharsis in some of that.
And you can be sure he works like a demon.
Yes, he does the cold plunge.
Yes, he does his training.
Like I know you do, I know Rick does, I know I do.
I know Whitney does, I know Senra does, I know,
you know, there are many other examples.
And so forgive me for not naming it.
Jay Shetty works extremely hard
to make their craft better and better and better.
And so for people coming up,
it doesn't mean you have to devote 12 hours a day to it
or 100 hours a week,
but you gotta put in, you gotta, you know, chop wood, carry water.
I think everybody needs to pay the entry price at some point.
Yeah, chop wood, carry water. Everyone's gotta do it.
Yeah. And there are no...
There are very few shortcuts to the top.
Is that not what it says on the steps of the mothership
going up to the main stage? Have you ever been backstage?
Okay. I think it says, uh, it's a long way to the top.
If you're going to do something, but I think it's from the ACD.
So it's all it's a lot.
Maybe it probably, I mean, it's on, it's on brand with everything else.
Andrew Cuban, ladies and gentlemen, dudes, I really appreciate you.
I love getting to catch up.
Uh, it's, it's so interesting appreciate you. I love getting to catch up.
It's so interesting seeing where all of this is going,
what you're doing with Andy Galpin's show,
what you're doing with Matt Walker,
what you're doing with Rob, with the book.
My prediction is that you're gonna do something.
I know that your mom does kids.
There's books. There's definitely...
Yeah, good intuition.
There's definitely some kids' content and ideas. I've had a longstanding interest in animation and puppets.
And that's about all I can say about that right now.
Awesome.
Because it's poorly formed.
I'm not being cryptic.
It still needs iterating, but I've had outreach
from some amazing puppeteers and some amazing animators.
And I'm super excited.
I also just want to say, you know,
I'm both extremely grateful to you,
and I kid you not, I am extremely in awe
of what you've done and what you continue to do.
You showed up like a force, and you are doing it,
and I have...
I feel a little bit, I've said this before,
you know how in an Indiana Jones movie,
the big sort of ceiling is coming down
and he's gonna get crushed underneath it,
he's sprinting, sprinting, sprinting,
so it does a little slide underneath.
I feel like-
And then grabs his hat.
Yeah, and then gets the hat.
I feel like me and that hat are kind of just sneaking in
at the last thing and then now we're moving
under our own steam.
Well, whatever you're doing, it's awesome
and I really appreciate you having me here today.
Every time you pop up on my screen, I'm like, yes,
like I'm gonna learn something.
From you, I'm gonna learn something.
It's your openness and also the fact
that you have this razor like mind
to be able to pull things out.
I wish I was as succinct.
I can't even say the word.
I wish I was as succinct as you.
And I agree with those other guys. I wish you could
run for president, but since you can't, you're just going to have to keep podcasting for us.
So thank you so much for doing it. I appreciate you, man.