The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Moment 88 - Daily Habits That Everyone Needs To Hear: Will Ahmed
Episode Date: December 16, 2022What are the habits and hacks that can make sure that you are as efficient as possible in all areas of your life? In this moment Will Ahmed the founder and CEO of Whoop, the wearable technology that m...easures Strain, Recovery, and Sleep, discusses his daily routine that embodies his companies values and mission: to unlock human performance. It’s not alway easy, from morning workouts to ice cold showers, but by investing in himself everyday, it turns into huge dividends. Listen to the full episode here - https://g2ul0.app.link/Hel56MkXMvb Will: https://www.instagram.com/willahmed/?hl=en https://twitter.com/willahmed?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor Watch the Episodes On Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/c/TheDiaryOfACEO/videos
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Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly.
First people I want to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show.
Never in my wildest dreams is all I can say.
Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen
and that it would expand all over the world as it has done.
And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things.
So thank you to Jack and the team for building out the new American studio.
And thirdly to Amazon Music who, when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue.
You developed lifestyle hacks to help you
we talked about meditation which was a big one um
exercise big one uh i got into hot cold transitions gratitude's a big one
so take me through your day then,
because I think this will reveal a lot of your habits.
Sure.
So let's take a given day in Boston.
Yeah.
The day actually starts for me a little bit the night before
because I'm getting into a framework for, you know, the next day.
A few days a week I work out with a trainer early in the morning. So I'll actually pack everything up for that. Well, I've got my,
my workout clothes out. I'll have the, what I'm going to wear to work the next day.
Uh, I'll, I'll probably have written down like two or three things that I'm going to focus on the next day.
And then like sleep, because building Whoop, you think a lot about sleep.
I sleep in a really cold bedroom, a really dark bedroom.
Why cold and dark?
It's just shown to give you higher quality sleep.
Yeah.
And I try to go to bed at a somewhat consistent time.
This is a little trickier because my wife's kind of a night owl
and I like to go to bed a little earlier.
So I'll probably go to bed between, I don't know, 11.30 and midnight.
And then I'll wake up at around 6.30.
Controversial question about your wife then.
Does your sleep deteriorate with your wife in the bed? It doesn't because we have, we've got good intimacy. Like we've got good
bed cuddle habits, you know, it's like a... Cuddle and tan. Yeah, yeah. We've done a good job
coexisting in a bedroom environment. Although that's an interesting thing you can track on Whoop.
So if people really want to know whether or not
they sleep better or worse with a partner,
you can literally record that in the Whoop journal in the app.
So in a second, I want to hear what's in your Whoop journal.
And what you're tracking.
You can probably check.
What you're tracking against.
So cold room, consistent bedtime. Um,
yeah. And then I wake up and I'm, I'm like out the door, really quick shower, workout clothes,
got my stuff. I always give my wife kisses before I leave. That's like a nice relationship hack.
Uh, while she's, while she's sleeping. And then, And then I work out for an hour with my trainer.
I'll do a steam room after that, freezing cold shower.
I do a breakfast that's mostly like egg whites.
It's mostly proteins like egg whites,
like avocado, bacon, that kind of stuff.
Two points there.
So the first was working out in the morning.
Yeah.
Is there any like data or science
around that being advantageous?
So back to being able to control the controllables,
I like to work out in the morning in large part
because it means I can then stay at work later
if I need to.
Oh, okay.
What I hate is when I go to work
without having worked out in the morning
and I'm supposed to
like squash that evening. And then a couple of things come up around 6 PM and all of a sudden
I realized I'm not going to really get out the door. And so then, you know, you don't exercise.
So the nice thing about working out first is like, okay, I've checked that box.
And then the other thing was this, the cold water.
Cold water.
Yeah. Talk to me about why you do that and how that helps.
So there's something I think to be said for doing things that naturally make you happy,
even if in the moment they're a little painful. And for me, being in the cold is one of those
things. Like I feel a huge jolt of adrenaline from it. It also forces me to breathe properly.
And I think anything you can do that helps you breathe properly or forces you to breathe
properly is good for you.
And then I feel kind of happy after doing it, like this little injection of happiness.
And so I end 100% of showers that I take cold and as cold as possible,
the colder, the better. And then the, the steam room aspect or the sauna aspect,
depending on where I am is I mean, there's a fair amount of research that shows if you do
a steam room or a sauna a few days a week, it is likely to increase longevity.
I would say I like the cold more than the hot, but anyway. I'd say I'm the opposite. My girlfriend is a breathwork practitioner,
coach. So obviously you understand what comes with that. And cold water is a big part of
what she encourages on me. So she jumps in these ice baths and I'm like, I'm trying not to feel
emasculated. I'm like putting my toe in and I'm like coming up with reasons, but no, she's got
me into it. So. So what kind of breath work do you do? I don't even know the name of it. She's
got her own method. She teaches classes. She's doing classes in London at the moment, big groups,
one-on-one sessions. She's doing, she does sessions with lots of people that come on this podcast,
in fact. Oh, cool. Because they end up getting to know her.
So, but yeah, I don't know what type of breath work it is,
but it's an hour in a room, like the...
Yeah, the double inhale.
Yeah, game changer.
Just learning that we don't breathe.
I think it's amazing, yeah.
That's a huge industry.
That feels like a wave coming into shore
because this word
breathwork showed up like 18 24 months ago over here and now it's everywhere with like wim hof
that's a good point i mean wim hof yeah i think wim hof pushed a lot of it especially around the
cold and i look i think it's taking off for a good reason in part because again back to controlling
things you can control you can literally control your breath in a second. And there's an interesting
whoop hook to all this because one of the core things that led me to starting the company was
discovering this statistic called heart rate variability. And heart rate variability is
essentially this lens into your autonomic nervous system.
It's the amount of time between successive beats of the heart.
So it's a little confusing, but if your heart beats at 60 beats per minute, it's not beating
every second.
Like it might be 0.7 seconds and then 1.3 seconds and then 0.6 seconds and 1.4 seconds.
And it turns out that variability of time between successive beats is actually a
good thing because it's a sign that your body's able to regulate in its environment. And your
autonomic nervous system literally consists of sympathetic and parasympathetic activity.
Now, sympathetic is activation. So that's heart rate up, blood pressure up, respiration up. Often it's what's
happening when you're feeling a little bit of stress or you're exercising, right? Now,
parasympathetic is all the opposite. Heart rate down, blood pressure down, respiration down.
It's what helps you fall asleep. But where this all comes back to breath work
is literally inhaling. That's sympathetic. That's parasympathetic. So just by controlling
your breathing, you can decide whether you want to be sympathetic dominant, parasympathetic
dominant. You can increase your heart rate variability. You can decrease it. And that's
something that's in your control. And heart rate variability is one of the core statistics
that we look at as a lens into how restored your body is.
I noticed that because my friend Logan,
he went up for a night out.
He got drunk.
It was a wedding.
Yeah, and then he screenshotted his Whoop dashboard
the next day and put it into our chat and went,
fuck, because everything
was red. And, and he was trying to explain to me heart rate variability and why it was important,
but I couldn't quite understand. Um, and I remember trying to, trying to read about why
it was important, but I knew you were coming here. So I thought I'd ask you myself, because you,
I've heard you talk about the importance of heart rate variability. I understand now what it is,
but why is it such an important indicator?
And what are the things that we do that make it plummet? So the fascinating thing about heart rate variability is it's been measured since like roughly the eighties. And the physiology research
that I was reading in college was showing that Olympic power lifters were using heart rate
variability to determine how much they should lift.
So based on whether they had a low or a high heart rate variability in the morning,
and they'd get hooked up to an electrocardiogram, like this is an intense thing,
and then they would go decide how much they were going to lift based on what their reading was.
I was like, that's kind of interesting.
It turned out cyclists were doing it in the 80s.
The CIA was using heart rate variability for lie detection tests. Doctors,
cardiologists were using heart rate variability to predict whether former heart failure patients
were going to have a heart attack again. So I'm thinking to myself, this is a pretty powerful
statistic that I've never heard of that feels like everyone should be measuring. And so that's
really, that was one of the core insights in building WHOOP was that
you need to be able to measure heart rate variability continuously. And in particular,
it's going to play a huge role in helping us understand the status of your body's readiness
and how well you're sleeping. So those are two ways that WHOOP is primarily using
heart rate variability. You know, things that
decrease heart rate variability, dehydration, bad diet, we just talked about alcohol,
heavy exercise, you know, heavy psychological stress. Often people are surprised how just
the wrong conversation with their partner the night
before bed can totally throw their sleep out of whack or their heart rate variability out of whack.
So it's a very powerful statistic. It's a fascinating statistic. And
I'm mostly glad like a lot more people are measuring it.