The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The Man That’s Ageing Backwards: “I Use My Son’s Blood To Reverse My Age! I’m Now 18!” Bryan Johnson
Episode Date: August 3, 2023In this new episode Steven sits down with entrepreneur and anti-aging pioneer Bryan Johnson. In 2007, Bryan founded the payment processing company ‘Braintree’, and was soon 47th on Inc. magazine�...�s list of the fastest growing companies in America. Bryan sold Braintree in 2013 for $800 million. Since then he founded ‘Kernel’ in 2016, which creates hardware to measure brain activity, and most recently ‘Project Blueprint’ in 2021. ‘Blueprint’ is an algorithmic and automative approach to optimal health and ageing, Bryan is their first test subject. In this conversation Bryan and Steven discuss topics, such as: His early life in the Mormon church Why he chose to be an entrepreneur and how it fit his skillset His business failures and what he learned from them How he rapidly scaled his business His struggle with depression Why he is investing $2 million a year into his health His mentality for being remembered by history and meaningful work The daily schedule of his anti-aging process The future of the human race working alongside AI Why he thinks ageing isn’t inevitable You can learn more about Blueprint here: https://bit.ly/3DDtyN1 You can learn more about Kernel here: https://bit.ly/3DEFq1n Follow Bryan: Instagram: https://bit.ly/3rTLMaF Twitter: https://bit.ly/47hUDDi YouTube: https://bit.ly/3qbO9oP Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
Transcript
Discussion (0)
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 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. Those are all the pills
you take in one day. 111, because that's where the data led me this is how
you don't die brian johnson the man who spends two million dollars a year to slow down his age
he's managed to reverse his biological age already to an 18 year old projected to live to 200
the only objective we have is don't die i've opted into an algorithm that takes better care of me
than i can myself it sounds overwhelming
in the beginning but trust me on this so my bedtime is at 8 30 and you had 100 sleep four
months straight now what about hanky-panky not after 8 30 alcohol three ounces every morning
with breakfast for breakfast for breakfast my last meal of the day is at 11 a.m and every calorie has
to fight for its life you were very kind in bringing me some food. Presumably this is what you eat.
That's right.
If you ask the body,
what do you want to eat to be an ideal health?
This is the answer that it generated.
That is a mushroom covered in chocolate.
How fun.
Why is Brian doing this?
I was thinking about what your father went through
and I was wondering if there's some kind of link there.
It was always on my mind.
I mean, he's in pain and he's stuck
and he can't overcome this terrible thing
that's ruining his life.
You know, like...
Yes, maybe I've always felt like a protector of my dad, maybe.
Are you trying to keep him alive?
I am.
You're very, very clearly mission driven the ultimate question
becomes are you happy um
brian what mission are you on?
And why does that mission matter to you,
but also to everybody else listening to this right now?
My mission is for the human race to survive and thrive.
And it's figuring out what we do
that creates the highest probability of that being possible.
And why specifically have you taken on that mission
versus any other mission you could have committed your life and time to?
Why you?
And I want the long answer to this.
Yeah.
All the context going right back to the beginning.
I had this transformative experience when I was 19 years old.
I went to Ecuador and I was a missionary.
And I lived among
extreme poverty, dirt floors, mud huts, people not knowing how they're going to make ends meet
day to day. And I came back to the United States and my family was poor growing up, but it was
opulent compared to Ecuador. I couldn't believe that I had lived in a bubble my entire life,
unaware of circumstances of other realities like where I was at in Ecuador.
And I was facing decisions in college, what to study, what to become, who I was going to be.
You start creating these identities.
All I could identify was this fire that had lit within me that I wanted to spend my life trying to improving the human race at a global scale.
I don't know where it came from, but just coming back from Ecuador,
it seemed like that was what I wanted to spend my life on.
I didn't know what to do.
I was 21 years old.
I didn't have any ideas.
And so I thought I would become an entrepreneur,
make a whole bunch of money by the age of 30,
and then with that money,
try to figure out a plan to do it.
And so lucky me, I sold Braintree Venmo at 34
and made a few hundred million dollars.
It sold for $800 million, right?
And then I set my mind to this question of what one thing in existence could I do that would be
relevant in the 25th century? I grew up on biographies. And so I'm accustomed to thinking
about things on a century's timescale. So doing things that not that matter in the news cycle
tomorrow, but the intelligence in the 25th century would say, you know what, we appreciate what happened
in the early 21st century. Take me a couple of years further backwards in the timeline. I want
to understand before the age of 16, how would you describe the personality of that young man?
If you walked in here now and you sat down, how would you like of that young man if i if you walked in here now and you sat down how would you like characterize that young man friendly and fun so i think that the event
that activity maybe that defines me the best is i was in seventh grade going into eighth grade and
there was the kids started breaking out into different groups of identities stoners jocks
you know nerd nerds.
And it saddened me because I wanted to be friends with everybody. And people started creating these groups. And there was this conflict between which groups can hang out with which groups.
And so I made a map of the social structure of the entire school of what people were in what
groups and then where they're at within that group. So were they the alpha in the group?
And then you had the second tiers and third tiers.
And then I systematically went about and I became friends with everyone in the entire school,
every single group.
And it didn't matter who you were.
I was friends with you.
And so I really enjoyed connecting with people.
I enjoyed the friendships.
I enjoyed the interactions.
I enjoyed different people for different reasons. And I guess that's kind of stuck with me
where the idea of group structure and the hindering,
it's the same with ideas.
Like if you're in a certain idea
and you can't bridge to another idea.
The outcome wasn't the most telling part of that story.
The most telling part of the story was the process.
The process, if you made a physical,
like a physical diagram at school,
you didn't just do it in your head.
You went home as a 16 year old or something yeah uh yeah so i was um like 13 12
or 13 yeah you must be able to say objectively that that's unusual behavior for a 12 year old
to be that analytical about problem solving uh for a 12 year old that's not what i was doing
when i was kicking a plastic ball against a fence And you're dissecting the social structure of the pictures and then it has pins and it has threads, everything connected. It's like this madman's wall. That's how my,
my mind understands information is when I meet somebody or, or look at a given problem,
I instantaneously go to creating a map of all information of like, what are the centerpieces?
What's connecting to what, how is it structured? What's the dimensions of it? And so even if I
meet someone new and they tell me a story, like, you know, I was at the coffee shop and,
you know, like, what details do they include in this conversation?
What is their assessment of the person they're telling me about?
What about the reaction of other people?
What elements do they identify?
And that then enables me to create this structure of their mind
and how they package information.
And so, yeah, my mind just naturally hangs on to every single word and creates a
scaffolding of how the person understands reality that sounds exhausting to someone
whose mind does not work in that way it's exhilarating
so 19 years old you go from this this mormon mission to ecuador this ultimately culminates
in a question challenging your faith
um happened to me at the same age in fact i was very religious when i was younger
and then 18 19 years old that's all starts to fall apart what was your process like
uh it was torture and i think i'm not sure what religion you were in christianity or whatever
yeah okay yeah this was not a whatever thing for me.
When you're raised Mormon,
it is your singular reality and identity of existence.
It's not like you're casually involved.
It's everything you are as a human.
And so when you are,
like when you're born into it and then force-fed that,
and your entire community is built upon that,
it creates structures in your mind that you're not even aware of.
And so as I began breaking from it,
I would rationally be able to walk to the conclusion and say,
logically, I don't understand the situation.
But then emotionally, the brain was like, hold tight.
We feel the following things.
We can't quite structure in a logical format. And it creates this bizarre conundrum, the brain was like, hold tight. We feel the following things. We can't quite structure in a logical format.
It creates this bizarre conundrum in the brain.
I had that difficulty.
Then that got caught up in my depression where in my early 20s,
I got into this chronic depression where the brain was like,
life is awful.
Everything is hopeless.
Life is not worth living.
You should kill yourself.
In that moment, I learned
that I could observe my brain dropping these thoughts on me and that I wasn't my thoughts.
The depression was speaking, but it wasn't me. And when I learned that, I thought, wait a second,
if I am observing depression in action here, what can I trust for my brain in the first place?
So when a thought drops in my awareness,
where did that come from?
And can I trust it?
Under what circumstances?
And then I realized if my brain is doing this to me,
other brains are doing this to other people,
how can I trust their brains?
And so it's like this authority collapse
where in religion,
all the people who I trusted to tell me, to give me
wise advice about life, that fell apart. My brain fell apart. Other people's brains fell apart. And
I began arriving to this observation, who in reality can I trust and under what circumstances?
And that really started, that kickstarted the process of me trying to reconstruct my reality
in a way that I felt was stable versus like ping-ponging around to like this wild emotion and this random thought from my brain.
How long did your depression last and when did it start?
Age 24.
I remember I was in the parking lot one day with my brother.
We were working on a startup and something just broke in my brain.
I remember telling him like, Hey, like something just happened.
I feel it.
It's weird.
And he was like, just power through it.
And I'm like, okay.
But I, I physically felt something happened one day.
And then I just got in this funk for 10 years and I couldn't get out of it.
10 years.
And what did that funk look like practically day to day or week by week?
It was, uh, there's like all these different layers of problems.
So I was married.
We had our first baby at the age of 25.
So I've got a baby at home.
I'm not sleeping.
We're taking care of the first one.
Then I'm building startups on top of that.
And then I'm also working my way out of Mormonism.
But then that's a conflict because my wife is also Mormonism and and the communities around us and my entire world is this community.
And so then we don't have any money to pay our bills.
I'm in a startup.
I'm trying to figure out how to deal with the religion thing,
trying to keep my marriage together.
It just creates this disaster of a circumstance where I just am paralyzed
and stuck in the depression, in the relationship, in the religion,
not sleeping, depressed,
trying to survive in a startup world.
And that was kind of my state for about 10 years,
trying to navigate all those competing complexities.
When you look back and try,
you diagnose the factors that cause that depression.
Is it that pressure from all different sides
that you think caused the depression?
I do.
And so during that 10 years, I pursued solving my depression with equal rigor as I
have anything else. I tried everything known to humans to solve depression. Nothing worked.
The thing that worked is my relationship ended and I left the Mormon church and it just lifted.
And that was the most remarkable experience of my life.
I just thought it was like this permanent state I couldn't exit.
But those two modifications just lifted the cloud.
And what did that teach you
about the nature of your depression?
I was paralyzed
and those decisions felt unthinkable to me.
Even though I could logically conclude this religion was not something I was going to
follow and the relationship wasn't working out, the idea of becoming a divorced father
and being in that circumstance, the idea of leaving my entire community, of going out
and staking out a new existential reality, it paralyzed me.
And I couldn't get over the idea that it would be better on the other side.
And once I got myself there, that it's actually better for the kids,
that was the key thing for me.
There was one experience, I was in Turkey with some friends late at night,
and it snapped in my brain, the kids are better off with these decisions.
And that's all I needed.
And then the next day, I put everything into motion.
And why did that matter to you so much? Do you think?
I suppose that, uh, for whatever reason, I have been an intensely devoted father. Like I cared
deeply about being there for my children. For whatever reason?
Yeah. I mean, I don't know why, you know, like like it's just it's maybe it's part of my
identity maybe i'm trying to compensate for something i don't know but i i invested very
very heavily into my children and the idea of being a divorced father you know with like some
kind of split custody situation with some kind of weird thing between mom and me and like you know
that whole thing i just i couldn't i couldn't sign up for it and so i
stayed in the bad relationship i stayed in the religion trying to thinking that it was my kids
were better off because of it and i really they weren't somewhat links to your own childhood
doesn't it where your parents separated when you were super young yeah like so much is going on in
my mind when i'm three years old and my dad is no longer
present. And then my mom, she married at eight. My father goes through a bunch of problems. And
like, I remember my father, uh, I give credit to my father for owning up to his life. I remember I,
I knew my father was on drugs at the age of seven or eight and I would call him when I knew he was high.
I'd say, hey, dad, like, how's it going?
And, you know, like, I just knew it.
I'd write him letters and like he, you know,
yeah, we just worked through it together.
But it was always on my mind.
Makes you visibly emotional to say that.
Yeah.
Why?
I mean, he's in pain and he's stuck and he can't overcome this terrible thing
that's ruining his life.
And he's not a father to me.
And he can't pick me up
when he says he's going to pick me up
and he can't do the things he wants to do.
So it steals life from him and it steals life from me and it's something that
uh you know dominated his life for a long time
you make that decision to separate and to leave the community of mormonism what's life like from then onwards?
I mean, so it was, I, I sold Braintree.
Yeah. So within one year's time, I sold Braintree, got a divorce, left the church and overcame
my depression.
Wow.
And what a year.
What a year.
And I think maybe the moment that captures it the most is I was in Virginia at the time,
and I was looking at where I was going to live next.
And so I spent some time in New York,
and for the first time I went to a party in Brooklyn, a warehouse party,
or they started like at midnight or one. And I'd go there with some friends and I would dance
for six, seven hours. And it was, I think, one of the most joyful experiences of my entire life. I had never danced before, but for some reason,
this moment of eliminating all this weight that had been on me for all this time,
I just felt free and I can move my body like I never had before.
My friends would, they were in disbelief that after five, six, seven hours,
I'm like, let's go.
Let's find something else. But it was, I think it was probably an outpouring of
desire that I'd had for all these years that just was bottled up. And it was also the time that I
was starting to reconstruct. I mean, I had the money. I didn't care about spending the money
on anything. Like I didn't, like money has no value to me outside of the objective to do something meaningful for the
world. And so I really started spending an enormous amount of time thinking about through this
question. If you apply this filter, what matters in the 25th century? Like you go back and look,
what matters in the 15th century and 16th and 17th. And you find that 99% of all things that happen, I'm making up a number, is gone.
And we're left with these teeny little nuggets of information.
Now there's more because we're capturing more than we ever had before.
But time has a way to filter out non-essential relevance.
And so if you say that now, if we say what we're doing in 2023,
and you look at your life and you map out what's going to be left of your existence in 10 years,
100 years, 200 years, 300 years. And that's what I want to focus on is only those things.
Everything else is to me, it's not for everyone. For me, it's a waste of my capacity as a person.
When you describe dancing in Brooklyn, I mean mean i lived in brooklyn for three years so i i know the warehouse party is another vibe the very
low unsuperficial nature of the place and the energy you you describe it almost therapeutically
as being able to kind of shake out yeah weight that you were holding yeah specifically what is
that weight you were holding you've sold brain tree you're dancing in bro Specifically, what is that weight you were holding?
You sold Braintree.
You're dancing in Brooklyn.
What is the weight you're shaking out?
My entire life, I have been told by authority structures,
whether it be a religion or society
or a relationship or community,
you can do these things.
You can think these things. You can say these things, you can think these things,
you can say these things, and you can become these things. Everyone wanted to put limiters.
And after that, none. It was no longer a game of what you can't do. It was a game of what I can do.
And it just exploded. And now my entire life is what I can do.
Potential is terrifying.
And the moment somebody starts creeping on that, that they want to superimpose a label on me or
superimpose a norm or superimpose any tool humans have to say, oh, you stepped out of line. You
need to be punished. I can feel it. Like I know where people try to create
those guardrails and everyone does it because it's like, oh, if you're doing something that's
not normal, I feel uncomfortable. I want to bring you back into the herd because that's going to
make me feel a lot better. And so I'm attuned to the constant attempts at people trying to
normalize everyone else.
We do that in language, right? We say someone is weird. And, you know, I think of moments where I broke out of my community. When I say my community, I mean, like, you know, you have a group of
friends and then you say, I'm going to start a business. I'm going to be this guy. And they
use words to pull you back in, these facial little subtle you know exactly the little you're
the telling you you're weird and stupid and ridiculous without saying it with words um
people think you're weird don't they uh they don't know that's one word they use yeah yeah
now it makes sense to me now now it makes sense to me with the context of your religion
and how imprisoned you you say you felt in the context of your religion and how imprisoned you say you felt
in the context of that religion,
I can now understand your resilience
and your resistance to falling in line.
Yeah.
And not only that, it's play now for me, right?
It's like a mousetrap.
I want to push the part of the mouse trap that
makes it snap and pull my finger out before my finger gets trapped and it's just like this whole
little thing is a set of mouse traps i'm like this one today and then like by doing that you
really get a feel for these all these invisible layers we have in society so what you just said
is it's so you're i loved your comment it It's just like like the smallest facial feature and audio captures the whole thing. Right. Like I disapprove of a second of a gesture but it collapses the entirety
on your shoulders where you're like oh man i don't want to be part of the out group i want to be part
of the group i wonder how much potential is trapped behind those little facial expressions
and that little social conformity pressure you know like human potential of creativity and
ingenuity and thinking for yourself you know know, must be a, Jesus Christ,
most of human potential must be trapped behind that.
Yeah.
So this is the thing.
This is what I'm saying.
When you build this wall and you have images,
you have strings attached to each one,
you're trying to scaffold,
like how is information scaffolded?
You can use this, you can poke a system
and get the response back
and then get it, fill in the contours.
Like, oh, like this is what people think
and feel in this moment
of what the norms are.
Because otherwise, they're invisible.
So that's why when someone tells you a story
about their behavior at the coffee shop
and how some person was rude to someone
or whatever,
they're revealing to everyone else
in the conversation
all the norm structures they have.
And so if you listen carefully,
you understand how they have
scaffold information,
what norms they've accepted, which things they things are rejecting and where they play in that hierarchy
are there any correlations between the most successful people you've met or happy people
you've met and their ability to embody and take on these social constructs do you know what i'm
saying yeah my mother is one of the happiest people I've ever met in my life, and she plays exactly in the norm structure of the religion.
She's deeply religious.
She's still Mormon.
She thrives in the Mormon community.
Everyone loves her.
She's delightfully happy.
And so my mother does not need to push boundaries.
She doesn't need to explore other possibilities.
She has a singular reality.
It works for her.
She's happy.
She's joyful.
She's a singular reality. It works for her. She's happy. She's joyful. She's a fantastic mother.
So I guess there's like all these different archetypes of people who play in different spaces.
For me, that wasn't where I thrive.
You thrive.
My education has come from biographies.
And I've read, I don't know, over 100.
All throughout history. And I love learning about
people in their time and place who identify something impossibly hard to see and do.
And they did both. And when you do that, the algorithm of human behavior is so predictable
of defiance and hate and vitriol. It just goes
through the same cycle every single time. And so I have all these models in my mind of people who've
done these things. And so I know when I do this myself, I know what models to anticipate. I know
how that naturally winds its way through society. And also how to fingerprint what things are
inevitable. So you find a given thing, you say,
what are the characteristics around this idea
or invention or whatever?
And then once you have it,
you know its societal adoption is inevitable.
It does not matter what humans say.
It doesn't matter if they revolt.
It doesn't matter if they bring the pitchforks out.
It doesn't matter.
It's going to find its way through,
push all the way through humanity.
And that's the thing is,
what are the ideas you can't see,
what characteristics they have,
and when they become inevitable. And do you consider yourself to
be an instigator of new ideas? If I were to make a whimsical and flimsy statement, I would say I was
born to introduce these new ideas into society. And what is that new idea? It's that in the 21st century the only objective we have is don't die
don't die
it's that simple
but we're all going to die
I know
you don't think so?
this is the thing, so this is why
it sounds silly
because I was told everybody dies
the only thing inevitable in life is death.
We were driving past a graveyard the other day
and I pointed and said, great business, that.
Because you know, I think it was like a graveyard.
It was like a funeral home.
And I was like, great business.
They'll never have a customer shortage.
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so if you, let's think about the structure
of why that statement may be the rallying cry of the 21st century, those two words.
So we may think, like, we're inclined to think that genius or sophistication or whatever is in this much broader complexity of statement, it may be two words, don't die. So galaxy is 13.8 years old. Earth is 4.5, right? Something like that.
We're baby steps away from creating super intelligence.
We cannot model out what the future is going to be like in any way, shape, or form.
We do not have the intellectual capacity to predict, to model,
to anticipate. We're blind. It's an intelligence far superior than us.
In that situation, the only thing we can play is don't die, don't kill each other,
don't ruin our biosphere. Don't ruin planet Earth.
And don't underestimate aligning with AI.
The only objective of the future of our existence,
we have to figure out how all intelligence on this planet cooperates.
Humans and the planet, artificial intelligence.
It's this big tapestry of goal alignment, of cooperation.
That is the only task humanity has ahead of us. Okay, let's start with number one then.
Yeah. So the first one is don't die. So I guess, yes or no question, do you think it's possible
for us in the short future to live forever? Yes right i'm gonna go one step further back your
health journey before you came to that realization what did that look like in terms of were you a
healthy young man were you were you drinking alcohol yeah i mean as a as a kid my mother
did a did the best she could under the circumstances we were pretty poor she ground
wheat she made bread for us we also ate sugar. We put sugar on our sugar cereal. We were in the sun constantly with
no sunscreens. We had excessive sun exposure. We ate processed foods. It was the United States
cultural environment in the 1980s. We just were cemented in that cultural norm. So I'd say not
terribly healthy. Then 20 years of
entrepreneurship, depression, bad relationship, trying to leave religion. I kind of destroyed
myself, body and mind for 20 years. And how do you feel about that now? Because I remember reading a
quote where you said, it pains me to think about the damage you've done to your body up until now.
It pains me. Really? It pains me to see all the damage I've done to your body up until that up until now it pains me really it pains me to
see all the damage i did to myself really pains you it does
when i you know that's a phrase right but is there reality to that pain i i feel like i have
a relationship to my former self as though my former self were present i don't view it as a it's gone by because in many ways when i'm reversing my aging when i'm becoming more healthy
i'm moving back in time i'm moving back to a younger biological state so i'm occupying the
person that formerly occupied me and so i i have this relationship with time that is atypical where
typically i would normally say like,
well, that just happened and now I just have to go forward.
But given where the science and technology is at,
I do believe we can travel back in time.
Now it's, you know,
Blueprint is showing the possibilities.
We're not there yet on doing these dramatic things,
but I think it's coming.
And so, yeah, I literally feel pain
because I'm moving into that space.
You feel pain because you'm moving into that space. You feel pain because you're moving into that space.
Okay, yeah, that is, yeah, most of us consider the past to be gone.
Exactly.
I don't.
I feel like it's recoverable and that I experience it.
So take me forward from that point then.
I want to know when things started to change in terms of your health perspective and this do not die yeah well i started taking care of myself after i sold
brain tree in the divorce and all that kind of stuff i started paying attention to my health
more so than i ever had in my entire life and it came back to this question you know what one thing
do i do in existence that would be meaningful not five things or six things, like one thing that matters in the 25th century.
And I worked on, I came up with this idea that basically the core of it is
I can't trust myself to act in my best interest.
And it stemmed from depression.
I knew my mind, my mind was encouraging me
to commit suicide on a nonstop basis.
And I, yes, that's what chronic depression feels like,
is you desperately want to commit suicide every moment of every day.
You just want relief from the awfulness.
And you cannot imagine feeling not depressed.
And so I knew that I couldn't trust my mind when it was doing these things.
And so then also I had this problem with food, where I would feel so depressed and I would feel stressed from the day from work with
my kids. And so it was my inability to stop myself from overeating every single night and walking
myself into an early grave. So then I paired those two things together. Like, okay, first of all,
my brain's like, Hey, why don't you commit suicide? And two, my body's like, why don't you just eat yourself into oblivion?
And I couldn't stop myself.
I thought this is really weird that we humans are the most intelligent species on the planet,
yet I'm doing these behaviors that are not in my best interest.
This is really weird.
I can't stop it.
I'm totally helpless in doing it.
I started piecing together this philosophy of like, okay, this is interesting.
We kind of treat planet Earth like we treat our bodies.
My behavior is not too
dissimilar from what society is doing. And I thought, what is the larger implication of the
situation? We humans have a problem of acting in our best interest. Is there an alternative
structure of authority that could do a better job? And that's when I really came up with the
core of what Blueprint is, which is I said, okay, instead of my mind doing this on a regular basis,
I'm going to measure every organ of my body. I'm going to ask it what it needs to be in its
best space. So my kidney and liver and heart and lungs, I'm going to take the data, look at
scientific evidence, and then create an algorithm. And then I'm going to follow that algorithm perfectly.
And so my body is going to call the shots, not my mind.
And that was when it all kind of came together
with trying to piece together AI.
Maybe the revolution is we humans have done a wonderful job
to arrive at this point.
Maybe it's time for us to pass the reins to other control systems
that manage our long-term interests better.
And what are those long-term control systems
that you believe can manage our interests better?
I mean, for example, now, like my mind is not authorized
to look at a menu and order.
It's not authorized to have a and order. It's not authorized
to have a pizza party. It's not authorized to just on the whim decide I want to have a cookie.
My body is in charge. My body reports this data. It looks at scientific evidence and algorithm runs.
So I have opted into an algorithm that takes better care of me than I can myself.
My mind can chirp and can heckle from the bleachers, but it does not have the authority to
make the decision. But you must understand the mind is doing that for a reason. The mind is
also concerned with survival. It's not there to cause harm to you. That's not its objective.
You know, it wasn't, that makes no sense from a survival perspective
that you'd have this enemy in your head so how do you reason why the mind is telling you to do these
things if we just let the data speak so let's just say uh we're looking at dna methylation patterns
and it's uh these are this is data that shows how fast the body's aging shows your speed of aging
so i take my former self and say what does the data show how fast my aging and how fast the body's aging, shows your speed of aging. So I take my former self and say,
what does the data show? How fast am I aging? And how fast is disease progressing? And what's my,
what's my likelihood of dying then and now? And you compare the two, there's no comparison.
The system that's running me now, so far out competes the other version. It's ridiculous.
So just from a, from a, so let's just's just, I'll go one layer deeper on this.
What I did is I asked this broader question.
So we have AI, we have super intelligence being created.
We have to figure out alignment.
How do we use AI so that we humans continue to exist,
so we don't kill each other,
so that AI doesn't destroy everything.
So we're just trying to survive, right?
Society to survive.
How would you possibly go about doing that problem?
And so I started thinking about this alignment problem within me.
So I'm 35 trillion cells, thereabouts, maybe more.
How could I, as an entity, align my 35 trillion cells to cooperate?
And we're trying to do that with society, right?
You're trying to get this huge number of things to cooperate. And then I wanted to measure it and say, okay, what is
perfect cooperation on the objective of me slowing my speed of aging? And then I did hundreds of
measurements and we said, okay, here's actually what science can do in this moment with everything
with diet and sleep and exercise, all being perfect, here's the maximum amount of slowing
speed of aging for my 35 trillion cells to do.
Anything above that, I consider to be an act of violence.
Now, we use violence in society to, we typically associate people beating each other, like
physical acts of violence.
I expanded the term to capture my own behavior.
So if I ate something or did something that would increase
my speed of aging, that was an act of violence against self. Because my 35 trillion cells were
no longer aligned. It was like this one aberration be like, hey, I wanted to do this thing, but it
ruins 35 trillion cells. So I wanted to pose a question. We as a species are trying to figure
out how to cooperate. Can I do that with me as a single entity? And that's what I've been trying
to do. Goal alignment within Brian Johnson, 35 trillion cells to a single entity. And that's what I've been trying to do. Goal alignment within Brian Johnson,
35 trillion cells to a single objective exist.
So why is the brain our adversary?
Why is it being uncorporative
with the longevity of the 35 million cells?
I mean, let's just say,
like, let's just remove all story.
Let's just say if let's just remove all story let's just say if we
categorized as violence anything we did as a species that brought death closer to us whether
it be our personal death or whether it be the earth's death and we quantified that and we said
how much violence do we do we do in a self-destructive way? What is that number?
Huge.
So when you look at that frame, we are a self-destructive species. Now it goes back to this idea of death. If you say death is inevitable for everybody, it doesn't matter if I commit these
self-destructive acts. I'm going to die anyway, so why do I care? If it's 10 years earlier than
normal, whatever. I'm 35 now, and when I'm 70, I don't care if I live to 80. That's how you think.
So that's why this whole death idea feeds the self-destruction, because no one cares.
If death is not inevitable, you immediately come back to the thing that threatens the thing you
care about the very most, which is anything that threatens existence. And so the society we have right now, the majority of the philosophies say,
play by these rules and you get this afterlife. They said death is inevitable, but we're all
playing for this later game. And so everyone feels fine in this colossal self-destruction.
If you take that away and then you say you can live in this life,
it's an entirely different game.
And that's why the 21st century,
the singular revolution could be, don't die.
Because it flips the philosophical structure
of society on its head.
And this will lead you to Project Blueprint,
which is what?
Project Blueprint is an attempt
at don't die at every layer of society individually collectively with ai and the
planet so you're trying to reverse your your age or you're trying not to die or you're trying both
both and so the same thing is true. Just like I've done Blueprint with me,
planet Earth is
the body. So you'd approach
the same problem. You'd measure Earth with millions
of measurements at some interval.
You'd use scientific evidence to say, what is
the appropriate sustainable biosphere
of coral reef, of
temperature in the world, of
ocean acidity, of all the different parts of our
biosphere? And you apply the scientific evidence and that creates the closed loop system to say
this is how you don't die okay so let's focusing again on do not die which is actually the one of
the only rule in my first company now it feels like it has new meaning we wrote on the wallet
when we first moved into the office we just wrote one rule here and we just wrote do not die that's great we said it as a joke but you know maybe you're onto something
i was ahead of my time yeah when you think about do not die what are the things that stand the
greatest chance of killing us in order of priority like there's basic things on a day-to-day basis
like driving is among the highest risk factors we do all of us do on a
daily basis so every time i get into a car i have a ritual where i say driving i say it out loud
driving is the most dangerous thing i do as a reminder every time i get in the car
don't text don't be on your phone like pay attention to the road because like you you
forget every time you jump in the car you're so tempted to like do all these things that
imperil your life so you say that out loud every time i'd love to watch you
drive well you can drive me whenever as well because i feel like i trust you to focus on the
road so driving's number one of things that pose a really statistically high threat of mortality
what else i mean there are so people have built nice statistical models that show risk of death.
Insurance companies, of course, they do that.
I'm really after the cultural norms that we have built a society addicted to addiction.
We're all addicted.
So you just think about this from a 25th century perspective.
You put a human like us in an environment
and you encircle them with dozens of fast food chains,
dozens of stores selling sugary drinks,
of junk food, of porn, of infinite scroll,
of Netflix binging, alcohol, smoking.
Gambling.
Nicotine, right?
Masturbation.
Yeah, there you go.
Your list is, and then you say, okay, human, on your own,
with your own willpower, resist this.
And then around them, you've got the power of our godlike powers
pointing at the individual with the only objective is to
getting the person addicted to their thing, their app, their food, their show, their whatever.
Everything's pointing to the individual. The individual's like, I'm overwhelmed. I can't sleep.
You know, like I don't feel well. I can't exercise, I don't have any time. We were just sick as a society.
And it's because we've structurally built this around this.
It's kind of a disaster for us in the moment where we're trying to muster up soberness of thought of how do we navigate these simultaneous existential risks we face?
How do we not destroy our biosphere?
How do we align with AI? How do we humans not engage in nuclear war or biowarfare or whatever?
We're just, we have really serious challenges to solve and we're all impaired.
It makes you have a great deal of empathy for the human experience when you frame as we've
taken a human being you know baby is born and then we surround them with fast food chains and
sugar and all these things that are highly highly addictive and then we say to them be healthy do
your best yeah you know don't don't kill yourself and you know yeah good luck good luck it's sad
and then it's it's i say empathy because you have
when you frame it like that i go no wonder people are struggling you know with sleepless nights
obesity cardiovascular diseases porn addictions drug addictions you know because we've manipulated
the i'm not going to try and pretend i'm a neuroscientist but we've manipulated the
chemicals in their brain yeah to control them for often for you know corporate greed and other
things that's right you mentioned sleep and you point at this as being really foundational to
health yeah when i sit here with these you know psychologists and health experts and doctors and
heart surgeons and brain surgeons they always point at sleep as they all point at sleep as being foundational the other day you did a tweet
about your sleep do you know what i'm talking about screenshot yeah i think it was whoop right
yeah that's right and it showed that you'd had a hundred percent sleep for six months straight
four months straight now four months yeah 99 so yes 100 for four months
99 for their two months i'm going for a six month 100 streak why is sleep so important
because you you cite it in your work as being one of the the most foundational things i think
you actually called it the most important in one one interview yeah i mean if you and i were going to make a list of like the things that are most
influential in our lives in how we think about and feel about life i would put number one as sleep
nothing changes my conscious existence more than a poor night's sleep or a bad or they're a good
night's sleep i agree i've become incredibly
obsessed with my sleep some people's obsessions they become a little bit unhealthy but mine i
think is healthy because it certainly moved my life forward in every metric or area that i care
about um let's go on and go in and sleep then so what do you do to achieve this month over month perfect sleep?
Because when I saw that, I thought, oh my fucking God, like I use Whoop as well as you can see.
And if I contrast your data to mine, you know, some nights I'm having like 24% recovery, 50% recovery.
If I go to a hotel room, then it's even worse.
When I flew out here to LA, I had three, the first three days, my sleep was awful.
The fourth day it was fine.
What are you doing? Yeah. I'm so glad you have that shared experience for those who do try to track it. And even those with whoop, uh, many don't realize how hard it is. The most important
thing is I, I've built my life around sleep. Now that is the exact opposite of cultural norms, where sleep is the thing that
gets pushed around. So if you want to go out with friends, delay your bedtime. If you want if you
need to finish a work project or school project, if you want to hang out, watch your new show just
dropped, you want to watch a few episodes, we push sleep around from our earliest of days,
like it's always the thing that can be compromised.
And I made a rule that sleep happens every single night
at the same time, no exceptions ever.
I mean, that must come at a cost.
It does come at a cost.
What is the cost?
I mean, that cost is substantially less now
because I've made the hard decisions.
And so it's no longer, getting there is hard.
But once you do that and it's the norm,
it becomes much easier.
You just have to make the life changes.
So that's the first big one.
Then I did like a bunch of small things.
Like for example, my last meal of the day is at 11 a.m.
Sorry, what?
Your last meal of the day is at 11 a.m.
Yeah, so I eat between 6 a.m. and 11 a.m.
Okay.
And so then by the time I go to bed at 8.30,
I've got eightam and 11am. Okay. And so then by the time I go to bed at eight 30, I've got, you know, eight plus hours of digestion. So I sleep best on an empty stomach.
Now, some, some people don't like that. They feel pain. They do much better sleeping towards night,
but I ran a few hundred experiments of a time to eat, how much to eat, what kinds of foods to eat,
what kind of exercise protocols I've trialedaled hundreds of times and I found a protocol that worked for me where when I do this
and I lay down before bed, my resting heart rate is around 45. If I get that, I know I'm going to
have a near perfect night's sleep. If it's elevated at like 53 or 54 because of like a few events that
could trigger it to go higher, I know I'm going to struggle to hit deep and RAM goals
and I might be a little more restless.
I'll still hit my 100% objective,
but it's not going to be as the same level of quality
as if I hit something else.
So I know all the little teeny tiny tweaks
to get this to be perfect every night.
I asked you a second ago,
I want to make sure I get an answer to this.
I said, this must come at a cost.
Yeah.
What is the cost?
So my bedtime is at 8.30 because that's where the data led me.
I tried 11, 10.30, 9.
I tried all the different variations and this just worked.
So anything that happens past 8.30, I don't participate in.
And so sometimes my friends are doing things past 8.30 that I want to do,
but I don't do them.
So I miss out on certain social events.
Now, my friends have been cool enough
where they'll do things to accommodate my time frame.
So they'll do something in the late afternoon
where I can do things with them and hang out and have fun
and still make my bedtime.
And so my friends and family have been great to adapt
to allow me to participate in community
while still doing this.
So I've been experimenting as well. I mean, I can't help this. So I've been experimenting as well.
I mean, to tell you I've been experimenting feels like,
I'm not going to say my experiments,
but I've got a bunch of hypotheses around my sleep.
One of the big ones as well is the room temperature.
So during summer in the UK,
because most houses in the UK don't have air conditioning
because we don't expect the sun.
So it's a surprise.
Through those four weeks where we have have sunshine i don't my sleep is awful i'm sweating
in bed what would you say about temperature and also got a broken blind in the room yeah
so you know 6 a.m or whatever the light starts pouring in what would you say about all those
i agree uh temperature plays a significant role light does uh sound yeah whether you have a partner in bed with you or not yeah i want to talk
about this yeah because i actually was speaking to simon cynic last night about this we went to
dinner and i was talking to him about having sat with matthew walker and we discussed i think
matthew walker don't quote him inaccur but he said, when there's divorce and couples break up,
15% of the reason is attributed to sleep,
i.e. them compromising each other's sleep.
What do you think about sleeping in bed with somebody else?
It's a hard topic because a lot of people
don't have the luxury of sleeping in different rooms.
Yeah.
When somebody wants to have good sleep,
there are some things they can control.
Like trying to go to bed at a certain time
is something they have some control over.
They need to adjust lifestyles and family and stuff like that.
But sometimes that relationship,
but so people who do have the fortunate circumstances
to be in separate rooms,
it is substantially better.
Because trying to negotiate with another person,
their bedtime, their sleep hygiene is really difficult.
And wake events are very costly.
Once you get woken up and then going back to sleep is very hard.
So it's just extremely challenging
when you've got to coordinate with another human.
So do you ever sleep in coordinate with another human so do you ever
sleep in bed with someone else no what about hanky panky no you have no sex uh not after 8 30
okay so you've got to do like morning glory
yeah i mean so these are these are the kinds of things like you know uh so i'm single yeah
in circumstances where i've tried to date the first thing i do is i give them a list of 10 Yeah, I mean, so these are the kinds of things like, you know, so I'm single. Yeah.
In circumstances where I've tried to date, the first thing I do is I give them a list of 10 things.
Like, here's all the things you're going to hate about me.
And it's going to make me an impossible partner for you.
And like, you know, those are like, it's a big deal.
What is on the list?
Give me the list.
I mean, so sleep is one thing.
You know, I go to bed at 8.30.
My food regimen is another.
Now, I do compromise on food.
So if we go out with friends and we'll have dinner time,
then I will save up a certain number of calories and I'll eat something at the restaurant,
some steamed vegetables or something like that.
So I do try to be normal.
And also, when I'm out with people,
nothing makes people feel more uncomfortable than an empty plate.
It's like, what are you doing?
Are you on a fast protocol?
Are you on a juice cleanse?
And so I just try to blend into the environment.
There's no questions.
Everyone can enjoy being present.
So I try to do those things.
But other things, for example, like my desire to speak.
I'm not a talkative person. I don't do small talk. So my son and I have a protocol at the house where there's no exchange of like, good morning, how are you? I'm deep in thought. of concentrated thought where I can think about these really big pictures and try to pull myself
out of my situation and just be as sober as possible. Like what is really happening to the
best of my abilities? And that's actually probe myself to these, these deep levels.
And I, you can get knocked off so fast. Just like a little teeny interaction. Hey, how are you doing?
How was your sleep? You have to activate this mode of like,
I'm going to be a nice person. I'm going to engage with you. I'm going to listen to you.
And just shifting that knocks me off. And so there's, with the path that I've chosen,
that I really care about achieving these objectives, I break all these social norms.
And it's offensive to a lot of people you know that it's just not not an
acceptable situation for a lot of people that's another instance though where someone would say
oh he's weird yeah exactly right and when you so when i was just saying this i absolutely amapped
to everyone listening to this being like that dude it was awful i would never want to be with him oh
what a bore like i imagine i can see all the comments on social media now,
like dozens and dozens of people ripping me
to be like, oh, that dude.
And like making their meanest comment.
I know that's going to trigger it.
It's like throughout this whole thing, of course,
like people are going to grab what I say
and they're going to try to just dissect me
and rip me apart for all the things I violate
that they don't want to exist.
So it's a constrained romantic relationship we're going to have if we're in,
me and you together, Brian, because we can't speak to you in the morning.
We can't speak to you in the morning.
Can't really do any hanky-panky after 8.30.
So, I mean, there's kind of a small window for our relationship to exist.
We're going to have to get a lot done in that like three or four hours.
We're going to have to have sex and then we're going to have to resolve all of our problems and then i'm gonna have to offload
yeah what else is is important that tell me about your sleep regime so the things you do just before
sleep we know you don't eat near sleep anything else that's really important uh i'd say let me
take them off yes go to bed same time every night no exceptions.
Temperature controlled room and or
mattress. What temperature?
I currently am at
I think 71. I go to bed at
78 and then Fahrenheit
and then I sleep at 71 thereabouts. Then I
come up for REM at 73.
So temperature and then sound.
Sound. Yep. So
aware of potential sources of noise that could wake you up.
So if you're in a noisy environment of sirens, like a big city environment, or dogs barking or something, being aware because sound will wake you up.
And so you're really trying to minimize the number of times you wake up. If you need to do something to limit what
gets into your ears or doing white noise or whatever you're doing, then identifying when
you eat and what you eat. For example, I know from my experience in trying these things, if I were to,
sometimes I would try an almond crust piece of pizza,
like this is years ago when I'm really trying to start figuring stuff out, that would wreck my
sleep. Flour of any type wrecks my sleep. It elevates my resting heart rate into the high 50s
and I know I'm going to have about 50% less deep sleep. And it's all these little teeny tiny
understandings of how a particular kind of food
is going to guarantee direct my sleep or even three ounces of red wine anytime afternoon,
guaranteed to devastate my deep sleep. And so understanding how food intake affects that.
And then I know I try to have an hour wind down time every night.
If I go to bed, if I work right up to when I go to bed, I will ruminate all night long on that
topic. And so it will feel like I never actually go to sleep because I'm always just in that light
sleep ruminating on this problem. But weirdly, I found that if I follow my entire protocol
right before I go to bed now, I'll assign I follow my entire protocol right before I go to bed now,
I'll assign my brain a problem every night
before I go to bed.
And I now have my very best thoughts in life in my sleep.
My brain figures things out much more efficiently
in my sleep than I do when I'm awake.
So now it's become an asset to me
versus before it was just a terrible experience.
And if, if I, you know, I, I fucking know, sometimes I've got to be honest. Sometimes
I have snacks before bed, you know, we're amongst friends here. I can be honest. Sometimes,
you know, sometimes it just gets, cause I feel that cause I work quite late into the night and
then it gets to nine or 10 PM and I'll be sat there thinking I've not eaten yet and i've got this pain in my stomach so getting just going to bed on with the
pain in my stomach feels quite difficult so i'll just you know order something on one of these
little apps yeah don't tell anybody because you know um but then and then i eat it and
you're right 10 seconds it feels great and then after that i feel i feel like crap yeah you have
to pay the price the whole next day.
Is there anything that you can eat later in the day or you can eat at dinner time that has a
smaller negative adverse consequence in your sleep? Is it just like vegetables and stuff
without sugar? Vegetables are fine. And this is for me. I need to clarify what I do is for me.
Other people thrive on other things. So this is just a data point people can use in their mind
that you fine tune all these different things. But I think the data is interesting.
I've never seen anyone with a four month streak of perfect sleep. I'm in the 98,
99.6 percentile of recovery too. So it's not just my sleep quality, which people often say,
oh, you can just gain that. Not a big deal. People who know really know that's not true,
but then also optimize if your HRV and your respiration rate,
my recovery is also 99.6 percentile.
So I'm hitting all the markers on the highest quality possible performance in sleep.
And my body's recovering at the maximum capacity.
And so it's good data that I'm not just making stuff up.
The data shows I'm potentially best in world
on this measurement profile or among.
So it's interesting that it's a reasonable way
for someone to contemplate
what they might do in their life.
Do you think there's anyone better in the world
at sleeping than you?
Probably.
There's probably some people may,
I wonder if all the years of ruining myself,
if it has a carryover effect,
like I just can't make up entirely for all the things I did.
I wonder if that's the case.
And I wonder if people who haven't done that
naturally sleep better than me
and that I have to try extra hard now
because I'm compensating for all the damage I did to myself.
I don't know.
For those in my certain circumstances,
I don't think anyone tries those in my certain circumstances,
I don't think anyone tries harder at sleep than me.
HRV, you mentioned that.
Why is that important and what is it? Yeah, it's a heart rate variability
and it's a representation of your nervous system.
There's two parts, your parasympathetic nervous system
and your autonomic nervous system.
And you're trying to basically tether between being chill and being in fight or flight.
And so when you're stressed, your body's like, all right, we're ramped up.
We've called all the resources to do this job, but you can't be in that high state long.
You need to be in a relaxed state as well.
So you're trying to bring the parasympathetic nervous system on in time and to relax the sympathetic nervous system.
And so the HRV is a representation of,
are you chill or are you stressed?
Having a high HRV is better than having a low HRV.
I worked very hard at it.
It's been one of the hardest markers we've had to move.
I had a meaningful
increase in my HIV over the past 500 days. I started, I believe, in the mid-30s range,
and I'm now up in the low 60s on average. So good gains, but still not anywhere close where I want
to be. Where I thought we'd be at this point it's been really really hard to move and you hate heart rate variability right yes is that what it's called and
what is that as in it's the gaps between your heartbeats or something exactly yes the interval
between yep so it measures the interval between your heart beats and how much that varies or
that's right okay so you want high you want so if my heart rate variability is like 120
i think great it's definitely above 100 depending on you know what i've done that day i'm jealous
well yeah so maybe that's one thing i can teach you about but but what is that 120 what i've
always wondered i see it and i know that high is better. Oh, milliseconds. Yeah.
So 120 milliseconds variance between the heartbeats.
And there's a whole bunch of ways.
If you get into the actual math, you can measure them.
You can actually do this calculation a number of different ways.
It gets really technical and sophisticated.
But the general understanding is you want a higher number.
You want a bigger number.
You do some things before bedtime to improve your heart rate variability?
I do.
I've tried several devices.
I've used Sensate, which is a vibrational thing on the chest.
I've used Pulsato, which is a vibration on the vagus nerve here.
I've used Neurosim, which is on the left tragus here.
Any of them work?
A little bit here and there none sustain i mean i given the amount of effort i put into my health and wellness i should i would like to think i'd
be over 100 in my hrv i can't it doesn't move it's just a really hard marker i wonder if all
the decades where i was depressed out of my mind and really stressed out of everything, if I just ruined myself to degrees that are hard to come back from.
So we've been trying to find something more advanced that would do something outside of diet and exercise and routine and sleep.
We haven't found it yet.
It's crazy that one of the most pivotal moments in my life was when i put my whoop on and the
founder told me about this how important that hrv um marker is how much of an indicator it is of
overall health you know crack on with my life had a glass of wine one day i wake up the next morning
yeah and it's flashing red and i click on it and it's like, did you have some alcohol last night? And I'm thinking, oh my God.
Like genuinely that moment was,
was when I realized that these choices I make,
however small I think they might be,
especially with alcohol,
have my heart notices.
And it's saying to me,
you're either, it said,
you're either stressed,
you're either sick
or you had some alcohol last night.
I thought, I don't like those three things
being in a category together.
Alcohol, what'd you think of it i used to drink three ounces every morning with breakfast you used to drink three three ounces of alcohol every morning with breakfast
i enjoyed drinking alcohol i enjoyed drinking the wine for breakfast for breakfast because i had to
create the longest time period between my sleep to avoid it negatively affecting my sleep okay but then i got rid of it because it was too expensive
from a caloric perspective it was 72 calories for the three ounces and i couldn't fit it in
with my calorie budget so what do you think of it in terms of um in terms of longevity i i think the
science says in moderation is fine i just i don't drink it at all ever
anymore and you've only really been been following this protocol for a couple of years now right yeah
i mean my i guess i i really do understand myself as on a singular mission for intelligent existence to thrive.
That is what I am.
That is what I'm doing.
That's what I'm pursuing.
Nothing else matters to me.
The question, the ultimate question, I think,
in, you know, you just said all these people are going to say I'm weird or whatever else.
There's this ultimate question because you're very very clearly mission driven
and there's always a cost much of what i do here when i meet extraordinary people is to understand
the cost in fact the reason i start this podcast is because we we that's called the diary of a ceo
is because we see the ceo stuff but we don't see the diary that's why it's called what it is and
it started as me just sharing my diary and i shared everything from masturbation my mental struggles everything my issues with my family i shared it
all to put the cost out there to the world cost of my mission my calling my pursuit the thing that
was dragging me um the ultimate question becomes are you happy never more so in my entire life.
Unquestionably.
And what does that mean?
I've never felt more fulfilled.
I've never felt more stable.
I've never felt a more expansive consciousness.
I've never felt more free.
I've never felt more bold.
I've never in my entire life
been this alive. And you experienced the antithesis of happiness, right? You experienced,
I mean, maybe some people would argue that it's something else, but you experienced the bottom of
the crevice of depression. You know what that felt like? I do.
The voices in your head that were
telling you to do things the unthinkable actions of suicide what what goes on in your head now
what are the same voices saying it's all play i'm i've never had more fun Most of my life has just been a grind. It's like doing the things to achieve
the objective because that's what the societal role play says to do. And that what I'm doing now,
I'm not doing this for anyone's expectations. I'm not doing this to achieve anyone's acceptance.
This is the game I've selected to play.
I don't care what anyone says about it, sincerely.
I just feel free.
When was your last dark day?
It was about something I can't yet talk about.
I wish I could.
I will be able to soon okay i respect that yeah yeah but like i guess uh it's like my answer is a genuine uh in time this will be a good story
but outside of that yeah what are the things that, and are there things that get you down these days?
I was recently, I was pretty bothered.
The hate that comes my way is energizing to me.
It's thrilling.
When my father did something with me publicly with this plasma transfusions,
the internet kind of had their way
with him, you know, making fun of him and saying rude things and mean things. That really got to
me. Like hurl up my way. Cool. But I, my father was courageous enough to do this thing publicly publicly and put himself out there and he just got torn to shreds and it it made me feel very sad
and ashamed of humanity like my like my 70 year old dad you know
like he's not picking a fight with somebody you know
why does that hurt so much?
I don't know.
I guess maybe I've always felt like a protector of my dad, maybe.
Why?
Why?
It's just kind of how our roles developed i suppose
you know when when he was in a state of need i was in a state of ability to give
started off when we were young when i was young
you talked about plasma i i saw the image on your Instagram. When I was waiting for you in there,
I was going through your Instagram
and looking at all the captions on your posts and stuff
and looking, and there was that photo of you,
your son, who looks very much like you, by the way,
and your father, beautiful photo of you,
all of you wearing vests.
And this was one of the sort of experiments you did.
You had a hypothesis.
The hypothesis was, I don't know.
What was the hypothesis?
Yeah, we, as a team, we have scoured every scientific study
ever done on longevity and lifespan.
And we've ranked, prioritized all of them.
And we filtered out like which one, you know, animal models,
human models, and we tried to decide which thing to do and why.
And plasma exchanges surfaced as a potential option.
And people were doing it for cognitive decline.
And so it came up where I was talking to my dad and he said, Hey, Brian, I want you to know
something that when you begin experiencing cognitive decline, which I have, you don't know.
He said, I always thought that if I'm starting to lose my mind, I'm going to pick it up and be like,
Oh, I'm not as sharp as I used to be, but you don't know it's invisible to you, which makes
sense. And so he said, I've been on blueprint for a couple months it's come back so i'm aware of how fast i was losing my mental acuity i'm back
so in that conversation i said dad you know i've been looking at these plasma exchanges and there's
some interesting studies going on right now with cognitive decline alzheimer's and things like that
that are showing interesting results now the science is still emergent we're not sure it's
going to work but if you were interested in doing this,
I'd be more than happy to donate my plasma to you.
That's how it happened.
And so then I tell my-
Plasma is?
Oh, yeah.
So we have blood in our body and plasma.
So you take the blood out.
We're half blood, half plasma.
You take blood out, you spin it up.
It separates into yellow stuff, which is plasma,
and the red stuff, which is blood.
And so they're just different things in the plasma.
So it's basically taking plasma from the body.
And so I gave my father a liter of my plasma.
But I was talking about this to my son.
I was like, hey, I may give a liter of plasma to my dad.
And so my son is like, cool, can I be involved?
It's like, all right.
So it was like this really organic thing around my father.
And so it was a lot of people learn about this.
And then they immediately imagine like I'm in a dungeon drinking my son's blood and I'm like harvesting his organs. And the reality was it was a very is a whimsical, fun, you know, heartwarming thing that our family was discussing.
And so we did it.
And there was some sort of efficacy shown in mice or something, wasn't there?
Yeah.
Yeah, so the evidence is like not bad.
It's not terribly persuasive.
It's emergent.
So it's not like we were going in there and realized,
thinking that we had a slam dunk.
It was like, it's interesting.
It's safe.
So let's give it a shot.
And it didn't really work.
On me.
On you.
Yeah, which makes sense.
I mean, so I'm chronologically 45.
Many of my phenotypic markers are in their 20s.
Right, of course.
So my donor was 19.
And so it makes sense the age differential,
given I'm so tuned,
it would make sense that you wouldn't see a big change.
But for my father, maybe, because there's a much bigger difference I'm so tuned. It would make sense that you wouldn't see a big change.
But for my father, maybe,
because there's a much bigger difference between his health status and my status
and a different age range too.
Was there a difference in your father?
Did you not measure?
We're still waiting for the results.
Oh, okay.
Yeah.
His subjective reporting was that he felt phenomenal,
that we really want to see the data.
And you also need to probably do more of these, right?
One is not enough.
You probably need to do it successively.
So it ended up being,
even though we approached it as my father's cognitive decline
and we were looking at it through a medical perspective,
it ended up being a family bonding experience
where my father left the church when I was young.
He was ostracized.
I left the church.
I was ostracized by my children and their family.
So in my estimation, it was we are divided by the mind, united by biology.
This goes back to Blueprint, which is, are there control systems that help us cooperate?
Not the mind. Now, our mind, we want to create tribes.
We want to fight with each other, and we want to find good and evil and all that sort of thing.
Biology doesn't, I mean, biology maybe is a different control system.
And so we were just trying to optimize health.
And so you go back to that system.
What are the control systems running humanity, running our families, running you and me, running society?
I thought it was beautiful because it was an experience my father and son and I never would have imagined we'd have in our entire lives.
And it ended up being a spectacular experience for the family that we really appreciated. As you were speaking, I was
thinking about something I've just written in the book that I've been writing. One of the pages is
when I discovered my father's cigarettes. And it was this like earth shattering moment in my life
because I was suddenly haunted by this feeling that my father was going to die. Yeah. You know,
because as a kid, you know, cigarettes are bad are bad everyone tells you that and then when you find out your father is smoking them when i was like 14
years old it was this kind of crisis in me that my father's gonna die um i was i was thinking about
what your father went through and how that might have introduced the concept of death to you at a
young age then i was also observing how much he means to you and every word you say about him and
your protectiveness over him and i was wondering if there's some
kind of link there how did you reconcile with it trying to get him to stop smoking yeah yeah
there you go at all costs what'd you do i think i cried about it a few times but i think i just
made him feel bad about it right yeah i mean that's like the best tool you can use when you're 14 what about you
uh i'd write him letters really yeah every week i'd write him a letter tell him tell him how much
he means to me um i'm thinking about him yeah in the hope that that he it would give him the power he needed to overcome his addiction.
Did you think about him dying at that age?
Had the concept of death crossed your mind?
I just wanted a dad.
I wanted him to be a part of my life.
That explains why being a dad matters so much to you now.
Probably, yeah.
I noticed there's something on the chair over there. And I'm actually starving. It's just gone before a clock and I haven't eaten today. But you were very kind in bringing me some food.
So I want to talk about food. Jack, could you bring me the food, please want to talk about i want to talk about food um jack could you bring me the
food please and you can tell me what you've brought me to eat presumably this is what you
eat that's right good thank you okay so you've you've brought me a meal today i did just for
anyone that's looking i'll try and tilt it up so people can see um if anyone's watching on youtube
or spotify where you can get the video you can see what's in these bowls and you've bought me two little buckets of pills here and there's a drink here what is what
is this food this is this is the answer if you ask the body what do you want to eat to be an ideal health? This is the answer that it generated.
So this is not to say that is the only food you could eat. It is a version where you could eat.
So my daily caloric intake is 2,250 calories a day. Every calorie has to fight for its life.
There's not a single calorie in my entire life protocol that exists for any
reason other than serving an objective in the body. So dish number one is called super veggie.
It's broccoli, cauliflower, black lentils, garlic, ginger, hemp seeds. And over a month,
if you were to do this with me, you would eat around 70 pounds of vegetables per month.
70 pounds of vegetables per month 70 pounds of vegetables per month wow
wow and i think we also have in there extra virgin olive oil and chocolate yeah i can taste like
cacao like dark chocolate so we i pair the chocolate in here it's an unexpected pairing
the way we think about this is
you could say chocolate is good for you, which might
lead you to eat a Snickers bar. The more precise way of thinking about it is you want dark chocolate,
undutched, test for heavy metals, and has a high polyphenol count. If you don't do all five layers
to qualify the value of the chocolate, you have an inferior chocolate and nutritional value for
your body. So everything we do at at blueprint uses that frame of reference of understanding everything a full
stack way of how do you serve the body's objectives in the maximal way that is a mushroom covered in
chocolate how fun so interesting yeah those oh those are mataki mushrooms mataki mushrooms this is a normal
broccoli isn't it that's right you didn't put anything on it no no salt i use potassium chloride
uh new salt and we've got some broccoli in there so is that is that that dish explained
that's explained okay and then this is
looks like dessert to me nutty pudding it is many people consider it to be a dessert it's
macadamia nuts walnuts flaxseed sunflower lichen pomegranate juice berries and pea protein
and is this the entire meal you'd have in one day there's one more dish which we don't have
which varies day to day. Okay.
But this is really it.
I have three tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil.
One's in here.
Then I have an avocado and a third meal a day.
And this drink here that you've given me, what's it?
Yeah, make sure you stir that up.
That's the Green Giant.
So the way that it works is I'll wake up in the morning.
First thing I'll do is drink the Green Giant, take 60 pills,
work out for an hour, then eat super veggie, wait for an hour, eat nutty pudding, wait for one more hour and eat my third meal of the day. And then I'm finished for the day. How many pills were you
taking one day? Currently 111. Wow. And you take 60 of them in the morning? That's right.
Wow. Wow. That's an interesting taste. I've got to to say it doesn't taste amazing you know it's not
like something i'd i'd find in a like a juice bar or something right there's a little bit of a
aftertaste to it that's not not fantastic and um i mean i like vegetables so i like most of
this stuff the chocolate i think is a bit of a spanner in the works because it's not like a
chocolate that you'd get it's not milk
chocolate or a mars bar right it's um a very very dark bitter taste which is a strange thing to add
to a mushroom yeah you can also put the dark chocolate in the nutty pudding or you can have
it independently i find it's fun because it's a new experience for people to try. So it's really an optional thing. Oh, this is nice.
This nutty pudding is really nice.
That's really nice.
That's really, really nice.
So what are your principles for eating then?
You talked about calorific restriction.
How important is that?
Because I eat a lot and I don't count.
I just...
Just eat.
Yeah, and I'm like, you know,
I'm my heaviest on 15 stone fives,
which is what, about 100 kilograms or something.
So I'm quite heavy and I eat and I go to the gym every day,
but I eat a lot, kind of out of control.
It has compelling evidence.
Caloric restriction has compelling evidence
that it's one of the most effective
longevity interventions that can be done.
And what are your sort of wider nutritional principles that people can
very easily introduce into their lives?
I had this experience where I learned how to fly an airplane. I became a pilot.
And we'd get up at altitude, and I would use my hands and try to fly the airplane. And I'd go
left, right, up, down. I'd try to be perfectly on the attitude indicator of maintaining exactly the altitude, which I was pegged at and the direction.
And then I would engage autopilot. And it would this plane would just sit up straight,
and it would be perfectly pegged, it was so far superior to my ability to do it.
And that's kind of what how I think about my diet is if I use my mind, I kind of ping pong around
life eating this and that, like I hear this that there, and I hear this thing there, I kind of do whatever's available to me. If you
think about putting your body on autopilot, I call it my autonomous self, but the body report out
evidence algorithm in and it just runs. This is the result. This is autopilot for my body.
And so every single thing we do is tracked in the body. Every pill has to justify its existence. If
it can't be measured and quantified, we don't do and so it's a system a closed loop system that has an algorithm running
me which is so far superior to my mind which is going to do it's going to add the cookie to the
order it's going to eat blank because of whatever i'm presuming you're not going to take these back
okay so this those are all the pills you take in one day that's right 100 120 odd pills in a day almost
yeah 111 yeah that big one right there you can see that guy right there this one here yeah
jesus lord jesus what is in these pills a lot of things you would expect
basics like vitamin d and c uh more advanced things like alpha-ketoglutarate or metformin
or carbose or other things like that it spans from basic and common to some more advanced
drugs a lot of my friends when they when i well one of my friends in particular when he knew that
i was speaking to you he asked me about nad plus that's obviously something that's become quite
popular in the longevity culture what's your perspective on nad plus yeah he's trying to
modulate those levels in his body and there's nice age graphs so people to enter this into
an understandable frame people uh it's not commonly understood what a biological age is versus a chronological age.
Somebody can be chronologically, I'm 45, but I can biologically be different.
I could be either 30 or 35 or 55 or 70, according to the markers.
So in levels of NAD, intracellular NAD in particular, there are certain levels that would peg you at age 18, age 30, age 50, because they reliably go down
with age. And so when you supplement to try to change these, you're trying to peg yourself to
a more youthful state because it's a energy the body runs on. And so what I did is I,
people in the longevity community do have a lot of questions about how you increase your
intracellular NAD levels. And there's a big debate. Do you do NR or NMN?
I think there's this big debate and everyone's always wants to fight about it. And so I trialed
both. I did 90 days on NR. I did 90 days on NMN and I measured my intracellular blood levels
throughout. And I showed that both were basically effective in doing the objective. So I was able
to peg my intracellular NAD at the 18 year old mark on both supplements.
Oh, wow.
So it basically doesn't matter.
Just get it measured and just titrate your dose to make sure you're getting what you need.
Nice.
And I want to, I really want to make sure, because I feel like you're, if I'm never going to, you know, meet someone who I feel like is so well versed in how the things I put in my mouth have an impact on my biological age.
So what advice would you give to me about,
say that you could, I'm a blank canvas,
and I'm going to believe everything you say.
My objective is to increase my health span and to not age poorly.
What would you say about the things that I put in my mouth?
Give me some rules.
Do exactly what I've published.
I'm going to make it dead simple for you.
I say tongue-in-cheek that Blueprint is the best health protocol ever developed.
Prove me wrong with your data.
If someone can achieve better biomarkers
with their protocol,
it's going to be amazing for me and everyone else
because now we have a comparison.
But right now, the tricky thing for someone like yourself
is if you go out into the world
and you try to figure this out,
you've got to sort through a hundred gurus.
Everyone's saying a different thing.
And even now, if you give five anti-AGE experts
the same scientific papers
and ask them to develop a protocol for you,
you'll get a different protocol from every single one.
They're not going to agree.
There's no way to go out there
and get consensus in the world.
And so you need to pick a path and then measure.
And I've done exactly that.
So I've basically tried to punch through all the noise
and say, is there actually something I can do
which has some believability?
That's what I've done.
So I've published all my data.
And so Blueprint provides people a starting point
to say, I'm going to do something
that i can see works and i measure myself then iterate and improve upon it and so the health
and wellness is all like a religion where the king james version of the bible supports 100
different denominations they all say they're god's one and true only same with health and wellness
everyone claims are god's true health and wellness program and i've tried to punch the whole thing to
say it doesn't matter what guru status is share the data eat in the mornings uh if you if i was a blank canvas
i'd say trial i'd say follow my protocol exactly see how you feel and then try and experiment what
you do later in the day and then compare the two sugar zero zero sugar zero sugar why it does nothing useful for your body no like our body needs
sugar to run so if you eat sugar in berries which you're having now that's great but uh
process uh highly processed white sugar or cane sugar there's no value for your body
there's other things of much higher value for your body god it's hard to exist in this world
without sugar isn't it do you do anything with your testosterone levels yeah i do a testosterone
patch i supplement with a patch i just i supplement because i'm on a caloric restriction diet and when
you do that your testosterone naturally goes down so i keep my testosterone pegged in the normal
range between six and eight hundred i'm about 850 right now. So it's,
I'm not trying to get above it. I'm just trying to be normal.
One of the reasons why I said to you before you, when you sat down that men of my age start thinking about longevity is we noticed that our hairlines have started to recede. I mean,
getting to 30 with a receding hairline is actually quite good. Some of my friends started a little
bit earlier and then we start noticing these gray hairs in our in our heads you have fantastic hair and in fact a lot of the comments i saw were what's he doing with his hair
there was one particular comment i was like someone asked him this was online someone asked
him how he's got that hair what advice would you give to me listen i'm at that age now where i've
got to make a decision do i let this thing go back yeah or do i fight it don't do it yeah
fight fight with everything you've got in you really
yeah trust me on this i will trust me um you don't want to clean up
of uh you don't want to clean up aging damage that you can prevent right now
and i can prevent my hairline receding yes how i i started losing my hair in my early 30s
yeah and it's been a grind to try to keep it and so i my hair protocol here's what i do i have a
a custom formulation that we've built it basically has minoxidil and a few other things so people can
get that easily.
I have a red light therapy cap I wear every morning for six minutes in my morning routine.
I do PRF. So I inject, I get blood drawn, spun up, and then re-injected into my scalp once every maybe month or three. And then I take a supplements that that are listed online for the blueprint website so
basically like four things help prevent hair loss and encourage encourages hair growth i don't know
if i'm going to be able to do all of that and walk my dog so i'm like is there a is there like a
silver bullet like that i could so here's how it works is I know it sounds overwhelming.
If you build habits that just make these things, you don't think about it.
It sounds overwhelming in the beginning.
But if you just get into a routine where every morning you do your thing and when you're doing that thing, you just throw a cap on your head and it just is on for six minutes.
And then at night before you go to bed, you put a little liquid on your scalp and you rub it in. And then you take a few pills every day with your routine. It's entirely about
building systems so you don't think about it ever. So it's never a burden on you.
My friends are taking different approaches to keeping their hairline. And the side effects are
the reason, the proposed side effects are the
reasons why i've always been scared to do it one of the clear side effects that people talk about
is loss of libido i haven't had that so we do the dosage so if they're taking finasteride
which is an oral uh then it does have sexual side effects but I have not yet encountered any intervention that has compromised my libido
anywhere, in anything we're doing. How do you measure your libido? Or is that just kind of
anecdotal? Yeah, I mean, so I, this historically became known about measuring nighttime erections.
So I didn't know, I was talking to a reporter about this, and he had just done an article on
Blueprint. And he read it, and he came, and he had just done an article on Blueprint.
And he read it, and he came back, and he was like,
hey, my editors are asking about penis health.
And I was like, funny you ask.
I got to tell you something.
And so I just bought this high-frequency electromagnetic stimulation device working on, basically, I sit on this little thing.
It stimulates my pelvic floor,
and I was trying to strengthen my bladder
so I wouldn't get up to go to bed at night.
And it had this side effect of every time i woke up i was erect and i was like this this is like what
happened to me when i was 10 you know like when you're 10 years old you're always erect and i was
like i haven't experienced that for quite some time i'm always erect and so i was telling him
about this thing and then i didn't realize it was going into the article. And so then it came out.
I was like, oh, no.
And so it's like this guy.
Then it's like, this dude is so weird.
He measures his nighttime erections and he drinks his son's blood.
And he started stacking.
And people are like, this guy is nuts.
And so it just creates this pattern where people are like, yeah, yeah, he's just out there.
One of the things that's really distinctive about you is you have the best posture of any guest that's ever sat here ever like to the point where i was like slumped and i looked over and i
was like fuck there must be a reason why he sat like that so i corrected my posture but i keep
sliding back down why does that matter to you posture i wish somebody would have taught me
this when i was a kid it matters a lot with blood flow. I found out because I have these internal jugular veins,
which blood from your brain flows out. And I was born with narrow jugular veins. And so when I have
bad posture like this, it stops the blood flow and it builds up my brain, which causes intracranial
pressure, which is bad for your brain. I didn't realize I had that until I found in a normal MRI scan, we found that I had some bad things
happening in my brain. We're like, why is that happening? And we found these internal jugular
veins. So then it focused me on posture of how do I actually situate myself to have the proper flow
from my brain down into my body? And it became a whole thing. And so we started doing a bunch
of measurements, trying to look at my intracranial pressure, looking at my white matter hyper
intensities in my brain, like basically how bad is it? And it was bad. My team kind of went on
red alert for three months. Am I going to have a stroke? Am I going to have a seizure? We're
trying to figure this out. And so one of the ways we fix this or we've made positive progress where
my symptoms have lessened is this posture. So I became obsessed with posture
to avoid having some catastrophic event with my brain. And it's been useful and helpful. And so
I just got into posture and I learned how to do it. But it was really hard. I never realized how
many muscles have to be strong to have good posture. I'd wake up in the morning, I could
barely move. I was like, like oh my god everything hurts did you
think there's a correlation between our health outcomes and our posture the gentleman i work with
on this thing uh strongly thinks that there's not evidence yet but he thinks that
it's a significant influence on it yeah it was quite surprising to see that you've connected AI to the work that
you're doing. The fourth principle you said about not underestimating the necessity to align with AI.
Why? Why does AI come into this?
To me, it's helpful to think about these kinds of questions by doing a thought experiment and time traveling to the 25th century.
Imagine whatever form of intelligence exists in the 25th century, they're observing the early 21st century.
What clarity of insight do they have looking back at us that we can't see right now?
That helps me spin up certain frames of mind. And it could be
that there was this revolution in the human race where we said, don't die. And then two is the only
thing we have to do to figure that out is to figure out cooperation on how not to die. Now,
when you say that, you have to figure out how to get every single agent of intelligence
on Earth and maybe beyond to cooperate.
Cool so far?
Kind of.
Thanks for checking.
So we want the 25th century AI
to look back and see that one of the principles of our humanity was do not die in the hope that it won't kill us.
Okay, yeah.
So let me start building this up.
So the first take me as a first example.
I'm 35 trillion cells.
How do I figure out how to not die?
I go through this process to build an algorithm that maximizes existence.
We do this between you and me, where we have a cooperation algorithm, not figuring out how you
and I cooperate, and we don't die. We have the same kind of thing with planet Earth.
So for example, in my scenario, we say, can the organs talk and can they run me?
And can they keep my rascal brain at bay so it doesn't ruin the show?
Could the oceans run planet Earth?
We plug into the oceans with measurement and we say, you run the biosphere.
Kind of a weird idea, but not outlandish.
Now you have to basically think about the earth speaks,
our bodies speak, we speak with each other.
Now you have trillions of artificial intelligence agents around.
All agents of intelligence have to cooperate.
If any one of these agents or any group of them violates the cooperation,
it could be the end of you or me or the planet or everyone. We have to figure out coexistence
in this huge tapestry of goal alignment. It's currently framed of ai engineers need to figure out how to stop ai from killing everyone
that's part of the problem but it's not the entire problem so that's the only objective
we have as a species like there's nothing else that matters right now it's don't die
from every vector of potential death and you think by us doing that on our level
and then at an earthly level,
that this will, just want to make sure I'm clear,
that this will somehow feed into the artificial intelligence
or will create artificial intelligence
with one of its principles at its core to be cooperative.
Yeah, I mean, so you take the AI problem
and it's so high level,
you'd say we don't want AI
to be misaligned with human goals.
Yeah.
What are human goals?
Okay.
And then you start breaking yourself apart,
me apart,
and we realize we are a disaster set of goals.
Yeah.
We want everything all the time
and it always contradicts.
We don't have a line goal.
And this is what I was trying to align with myself.
Can I answer that question and say,
I have a singular goal to exist.
Now, if I'm aligning with AI
and if my singular goal is to get to zero self-violence,
like maximum life existence ability,
I now have a starting point to talk to AI about.
All of us do.
And if we say Earth,
it's maximum sustainability of this planet we're on.
We have a starting point for discussion,
but it has to begin with existence. And we have
to overcome the biggest psychological barrier in our current culture, which is we perceive
inevitable death. And so therefore, anything that happens, like whatever, we don't care.
And so we have to overcome. And this is why I've been playfully challenging the status and authority of Jesus Christ.
I made a joke that Jesus fed wine and bread, accelerating aging and inebriating,
and I will feed nutrients that will nourish and create life.
That why is Jesus the continued representation of a philosophical group of a billion plus people.
Why can't someone challenge that status and authority and say,
no, it's not the resurrection. It's not the afterlife. It's this life. It's don't die.
You're not a martyr for some higher objective of some rules to be completed.
This is the boundary conditions that people create.
They say, this is a philosophical thing.
It's sacred.
You can't talk about it.
You can't challenge it.
Why not?
I sat here with one of the founders of, Mustafa, one of the founders of DeepMind,
and we were trying to find solutions
to this issue of AI and containment.
And I want to make sure I'm clear that you're saying
if we change our goals on a human level
from being less self-destructive and more focused on do not die in our existence, then we have something that we can align with AI on, which will preserve our existence as well.
But we can't align with AI because currently we're self-destructive.
So for an AI to align with us, it would be self-destructive as well.
Exactly.
And if you peel back these layers.
Now, this conversation is if we actually got into the technical details,
it'd be much more nuanced.
I'm going to make an oversimplification of a statement.
Thank you.
Humans have this broad set of goals.
It's to make money,
it's to acquire powers,
to have influence,
it's to change the world they want.
And that's when you,
when you talk about containment,
you talk about corporations,
governments, individuals, about corporations, governments,
individuals, ideological groups, everyone's gunning for their own thing.
And this is why I took myself as example.
If I look at me as the same structure of the world, I've got evening Brian, morning Brian,
ambition Brian, entrepreneur Brian, lover Brian.
All these different versions of me want different things at different times, and they're all competing to achieve their objective. And I understand these different versions of me.
I had to basically say, hey, everybody, like we've got a really big problem. We're all fighting each other after these different things. And meanwhile, we're accelerating death. And I had to basically
say, we're going to compress the space and we're going to acknowledge I, as my mind, cannot act
in my best interest. And so what I'm really saying in the most extreme version,
I'm saying humanity, if we want to exist, has to contemplate handing over the reins of control to algorithms we cannot act in our best interest individually
collectively corporations nation states we can't do it we need new control systems of power
that acts in our long-term interests we're playing an existential game right now with existence.
We started playing that in the 60s with nukes.
And we're now playing it with AI.
We're playing it with our biosphere
potentially being an unsustainable place for us.
The Earth is going to be fine, not fine for us.
We're playing Russian roulette with our existence.
So are we lethargic as a species?
Yeah, we all think we're going to die anyways.
And this is why if we flipped it,
and it's like, maybe not,
and maybe we're walking into the most extraordinary existence
any form of intelligence has ever had in the galaxy,
we may get our act together and say,
you know what, let's think through this thing
from these basic principles,
like really easy, let's not die.
We don't want to ruin this chance we have
to exist in this amazing future.
A rebuttal you must have had is that
in the pursuit of not dying, I don't want to not live.
Do you see what I'm saying there?
Because when I think about the sacrifices
I would have to make to my life to not die in the same way
that you've reversed your age i think well then there's no point because i'm not going to get to
live and i want you to just greet that as like a rebuttal how would you respond to someone that
thinks that because i imagine a lot of people have heard the the protocol the blue they heard
about the blueprint and they're thinking well you know and i actually saw it i think i saw it on
rogan or something where the guy was saying like,
I'd rather just die at 90,
but having lived a fun life or whatever.
Who cares what your mind thinks?
Why is your mind the unquestioned authority that gets to say and do whatever it wants.
Why does your body not get a say in this?
Why can't your heart speak and your lungs?
Why do you, as a tyrant, rule and reign with terror on yourself?
This is the thing.
This is the unthinkable, most offensive revolution that could happen as a species.
Our entire existence, we've assumed our mind is the ultimate authority on all things.
Even in this conversation, nothing gets past your mind as having authority.
What if our minds, what if it didn't matter what our minds thought?
What if they were not the authority?
What if there are other authorities there? And why do we even trust your mind to be the thing that can decide on your
best interests? Is that where you are in your life? You've removed the authority from your mind?
Yes. So when you talked about your being upset and I could see the the emotion in you when people were attacking your father is that not giving your mind authority uh i don't feel like i have control of those things
there it's an emotional response that i based on thoughts yeah based upon a reaction that i have
this this relationship with my father and And so it's complicated, right?
In terms of like,
the thing I've isolated with Blueprint is,
can I take my self-violence to zero?
There's another layer of like,
how do I feel about my father?
And what is that relationship?
Different complexities.
This whole thing is incredibly complex.
But the simplest thing to do
is can I do this within the control systems that i have
can i take my life to zero violence and if i can do it as a 35 trillion sale organization
can we use this little teeny example and map it to a species and say can we take this multi-trillion
agent intelligent agent uh computational problem can we solve this cooperation problem for everyone
can we are you optimistic brian and i want the honest answer here because, you know, people often have grand plans, but the most important question is, do you
think it's possible? Yes. You think it's possible? Unquestionably. Do you think it will happen?
I do. I do. And here's why. I think that
if it were just the human mind in play right now, I would not feel bullish.
I would be pretty forlorn.
I'd probably give up.
Humans are no longer alpha on this planet.
And whether someone realizes that or not,
there's a new alpha on this planet
and it's artificial intelligence.
When we're going back to this conversation of the biographies,
this is inevitable. Artificial intelligence will run us, it will run this planet, and it will run
all forms of cooperation. It's inevitable.
And we're going to be superseded in our intelligence on a timescale that is surprising to us.
We think we have potentially more time than we do.
I don't think we do.
And that's why Blueprint to me is so urgent,
is of the urgent problems we're looking at,
of how do you get society to not kill each other with nukes?
How do you get AI to not kill us?
How do you get us to not die individually?
How do you avoid the Earth's environment,
biosphere from collapsing
and not supporting our existence here anymore?
How do you stop existential threats?
And the thought processes people have been spinning up is
we need legislation.
We need new laws. We are going to protest. We're going to make a big thing. And what I've tried
to say is I'm going to actually do the thing no one else is doing. I'm going to point itself.
I'm going to say, can I solve all of these problems within me? Can I solve climate change within me?
Can I solve AI alignment within me?
Can I solve cooperation within me?
And that's what I've been trying to do
is a end of one example
of how to solve a complicated system.
Now, Blueprint is like an analog version,
like its first version, right?
It's like it's, but philosophically,
it's an interesting model.
How do you take a complicated system of intelligence like me with all these different versions with proneness for
self-destruction? I mean, like if you say, what are the risks of AI? Like AI, are you just like
all the things AI does that scare us? That is exactly the same list that I'm scared of for
myself. And that you're doing to the 35 million cells. Yeah. Like I am AI and I am my own risk,
my own worst risk.
Like it's just,
the risk profile is the same.
I'm runaway intelligence doing things that is causing self-destruction.
And that's what I will do if it's allowed to run away.
So that's the thing.
It's so funny.
If we look at AI and we, and we're scared of it, we just look in the mirror. It's the thing it's so funny if we look at ai and we and we're scared of it we
just look in the mirror it's the same thing it's the same risk profile intelligence is
self-destructive if uncontrolled or and so how do you build intelligence that's actually sustainable
how do you build so it's not self-destructive how long do you think we've got you said
we've got less time than we think.
I don't know why we wouldn't spin on a dime right now and look at every existential threat
and go after it right now.
Like why wait one more day?
And why even try to calculate
the absolute last moment we can do something
before everything becomes catastrophic?
We don't know the second and third and fourth order consequences
of the biosphere changing.
We don't know when AI is going to emerge and what level.
We don't know what systems are going to, but we don't know.
You can't model it, you can't predict it.
So creating timeframes is ridiculous.
You're emotional about this.
I want to exist.
I really don't want to die.
It's really fun to exist. And I don't know what death
is like, but I've had moments in my life where I get these small glimpses into this expansive
of consciousness. And it could be the case that we are homo erectus, that we are so primitive,
it's just unimaginable.
And that if we can step into this future,
we could have this expanse of consciousness
that is mind-bending.
So far beyond our imaginations,
we just can't even comprehend it.
We could be right there on that cusp.
To me, it seems like we are.
Why would any other imagination be
practical to assume right now if super intelligence is in the game here and we're within that that
mesh of intelligence why couldn't we reasonably imagine that we might be along the ride in some
capacity are you scared no i don't have an emotion of feeling scared i don't experience that emotion ever
fear i don't i mean as people describe it to me i don't really feel it
very logical and analytical in the way that you see things right
you think differently right and obviously people that think different like people like elon musk
etc he's he's neurodivergent in some capacity you've got a divergence to your your neurology if that's even a word um which is very unique and are you aware of
that it's uh it's hard for me to see that i there's are there are moments where i was at a
dinner a few weeks ago and people were going around and talking about stuff and in the contrast
of like, whoa, I'm really different than like what's happening here.
So there are these moments of the sharp contrast.
But I, I generally view the world as crazy.
I view everything else.
And I'm like, this is nuts.
What's even happening here?
Everyone is weird. What's even happening here? Everyone is weird to you.
This makes no sense.
What the world is doing and how people are behaving makes no sense to me at all.
And so I know that if you flip it, people view me in the same way.
But goddamn, the world seems crazy to me.
People look at you, they think, oh, he's a bit weird.
And you look at them, think, God, he's a bit weird.
I think people, I think the world is crazy just insane someone's right it's either you or the world time will tell yeah time will tell what is the most important thing brian i imagine i'd
guess i reckon five million people listen to this.
That's my estimate based on the conversation.
What is the most important thing that we haven't discussed
that those 5 million people need to know before we close out?
That now is our opportunity to band to get together
and experience the most extraordinary existence
that we are aware of in the galaxy.
And that this opportunity is going to invite us
to divorce ourselves from every sacred idea
we have about ourselves and society and each other.
It's going to require more sacrifice than any generation,
and it's going to be incredibly painful. And it's going to test our fortitude on whether or not we choose to exist.
The fate of intelligence in this corner of the universe
may depend upon us right now
creating this bridge to this next evolution of being human
and of the fabric of intelligence.
It is our opportunity to seize, equally to lose,
if we don't recognize the moment and step up.
And step one in stepping up is fundamentally stopping the war against ourselves it's it's in
daily acts of revolting of revolution against the status quo, which is harming us and lessening our chances every day.
People are accustomed to seeing revolutions happen by storming places and using weapons.
The weapons at our disposal are to go to bed on time, to eat healthy, to not watch porn, to not get addicted to things. And it sounds weird
and weak and different, but revolting against the culture of death and a self-destruction with self, with planet Earth, and how we engage with artificial
intelligence. And these foundations map the future of our existence. And it begins with self. It's
not blaming someone else. It's not pointing at someone and telling them how they have to change.
It's looking at self and building the revolution within each one of us.
What would you do if you found out you were going to die next week in a tablet illness how would you feel
i would feel satisfied that i spent my entire adult life
searching for the singular thing i could try to do to create value for the human race. And I found it just in time
and articulated the ideas just in time,
barely well enough to kickstart this revolution.
Are you misunderstood?
Because the perception of you that I had before I met you
is different to the perception I have of you now,
specifically the perception I have
of why you're doing what you're doing because when i heard the tale of
this brian johnson guy he's trying to be 18 years old he's a narcissist he's just he was struggling
with the concept of death he's got so much money now he's fighting life so you know he's doing this
for himself he probably wants to date someone young and that's why he's doing what he's doing
it's all sort of self-centered.
The proposition you've given me today is very much more about humanity
than it is Brian Johnson.
It seems like the picture painted of you,
and I know how the press works, right?
Yeah.
It's the things that gets the clicks, right?
Versus the person that sits in front of me today,
I feel like two completely different people.
I'm not understood.
I would almost prefer to be misunderstood
because that assumes some level of understanding.
And it's not even a close approximation.
Like you're saying, it's so far off
from what I'm really trying to achieve.
Your father, 75 years old he's not going to live forever or is he
how do you contend with that a man you clearly love a lot but you understand that the there's
an inevitability to life for most people who aren't revolting against life in the way that you are
with your longevity routines and your anti-aging protocols yeah it's um it's impossibly hard for me to reconcile.
You know, like,
yeah, one time he,
I couldn't get a hold of him for a couple days,
and,
which is uncommon,
and I spiraled in concluding that he had died
and you know not being able to call him and hear his voice was beyond devastating and
death is a terrible thing. We've all experienced it,
and it would be wonderful if we could bring an end to it.
Are you trying to keep him alive?
I am.
How?
Both my parents joke that they get a package,
it seems like every single day.
I'm sending them everything I can.
And you're like, do this, do that.
Sometimes it's too much.
Brian, I can only take so many pills a day
and I can only do so many things a day.
And it's a fun relationship.
But I am trying very hard to take care of my parents
and my children and my family.
I care deeply about those around me.
And I work very, very hard for their well-being.
I believe you, Brian Brian I believe your intentions I think what you're doing comes from a very very good place um I I think you're wired
in a way which is unusual and that's not to pass judgment on whether we're all unusual in our own
ways right but you're wired in a very in a way that's unusual but because of your wiring it's very useful you know i think that when we think
about tribes and chronotypes and the differences within tribes it's useful to have people that
think differently within the tribe because it kind of covers all of our bases and you present
a new perspective um about humanity about the path forward and about the way to live and i think
any new perspective anyone who is um humble and under
you know is searching for truth would welcome a new perspective especially when it's not harming
others right you would want a new perspective if you are in the search of truth not enough
in the search of confirmation of your existing ideas or um the alleviation of the cognitive
dissonance we experience and that's what i when i experience you that's exactly what i think i'm
open i'm open to your perspective i don't have to accept it all
into my daily life but being open to listen i think is something we should expect of ourselves
at a very fundamental level and i would just wish there was more people that would just
you know have the fearlessness to present a new perspective because as i think we said earlier in
this conversation there's so much potential trapped behind the the fear of looking weird in life so we stifle opinions and innovations
and creativity because we don't want to look weird because there's a cost to that in our society you
get smashed right and for whatever reason you've made the decision that that matters less than
the mission that you're on so i i respect you and I commend you for that.
Am I going to have the 120 pills?
Can't make you a promise there.
I'm sure I'll take a couple of them.
This was nice.
Can't imagine putting the chocolate on my broccoli.
But you know, there's a lot to learn here. And I hope to make this sort of incremental steps
in some of those areas of my health
that we can all agree upon.
Yeah, I would thank you for the
conversation today the as hard as i try to be impervious to judgment you know in conversations
it's hard to fully go through the expression of ideas when the other person even is making the
most subtle of judgments or setting boundary conditions and i love talking to you because you
did none you just rolled with me and you embraced it and i felt uh welcomed to express all of it so
i appreciate that very much really means a lot to me to the point i just got goosebumps because um
i can't imagine what you've gone through in interviews with people and their judgments when
i'm actually getting emotional thinking about it i can't imagine what you've gone through in interviews with people and their judgments when I'm actually getting emotional thinking about it.
I can't imagine what you've gone through in interviews because of people's like their closed mindedness when they came to have a conversation with you.
And how like what a waste of conversation and discourse and progress that is when we come with a closed mind.
And so I'm so happy you felt that way because it really mattered to me that you did.
And because you did, you were able to share in such a way,
which I actually think is incredibly beneficial to me
and I think everyone that's listened.
So thank you for that.
That's one of the best compliments I've ever received.
So it really means a lot to me.
Thank you.
We have a closing tradition on this podcast
where the last guest leaves a question for the next guest,
not knowing who they're going to leave it for
in the diary of a CEO.
The question left for you.
Huh, I mean, maybe you've answered this.
Is it how many nighttime erections I have?
I actually did have a question.
What was the cost of you coming
and doing this interview today to your routine? I thought, you know know i'm going to sit with him for two hours which we've done
there's going to be a cost to your routine yeah none none because of the timing yeah okay good
appreciate that yeah we'll get you home before 8 30 for your curfew um the question left for you is
if all i think it says if all you could change is one thing about the world what would it be
i want to exist
a unwavering unconditional
maniacal want to exist
Brian thank you
really enjoyed this conversation and I'm sure
it'll be the first of many because I've got a lot to learn so
appreciate your time today
you Thank you.