The Joe Rogan Experience - #2450 - Tommy Wood
Episode Date: February 6, 2026Tommy Wood, PhD, is a neuroscientist and athletic performance coach. He is a host of the “Better Brain Fitness” podcast and author of “The Stimulated Mind: Future-Proof Your Brain from Dementia ...and Stay Sharp at Any Age,” which will be released March 24 and is available for preorder now.https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/751292/the-stimulated-mind-by-dr-tommy-wood/www.thestimulatedmind.comwww.betterbrain.fitnesswww.drtommywood.com Perplexity: Download the app or ask Perplexity anything at https://pplx.ai/rogan. Make your sports picks with DraftKings Predictions, available in California, Florida, Texas and more. Download the DraftKings Predictions app today. Sign up using promo code ROGAN or at https://dkpred.sng.link/Ereb8/jbhu/dogs GUS III LLC d/b/a DraftKings Predictions is a CFTC-registered Introducing Broker and NFA member. Event contract trading involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for everyone. 1 per new customer. Opt-in req. 100% trade match. Max. $75 issued as non-withdrawable Predictions Dollars that expire in 1 year. Ends 2/15/26 11:59 PM ET. Market availability varies. Eligibility restrictions apply. Terms: https://predictions.draftkings.com/en/promos. Sponsored by DK. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
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Joe Rogan podcast, checking out.
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day.
Nice to meet you, sir.
Stimulated mind.
A future proof for your brain.
Is that possible?
Future proof, why can I say that?
I already have dementia.
Future proof your brain from dementia and stay sharp at any age.
First of all, what prompted you to write this?
So I've spent a long time working in a whole range of different spheres related to the brain, how to treat newball brain injury, how to treat and maybe even prevent certain traumatic brain injuries and concussions, looking at what affects long-term cognitive decline and dementia, as well as working with elite professional athletes, particularly Formula One drivers, trying to help them, you know, stay on top of their game for as long as possible.
And I saw across all those different areas, there are these core things that the brain seems to thrive on that are required either for development or maintenance of cognitive function.
And these are things that people can apply to themselves on a day-to-day basis, improve their focus and well-being now.
And then long term, that translates to a lower risk of dementia.
So is dementia and is it is a genetic?
Is it a genetic thing or is it a function of atrophy?
Is it a combination of those things?
It's a combination of those things.
Certainly there's a genetic component.
So maybe we'll zoom out to start with and just think about it.
What is dementia?
Dementia is the clinical diagnosis of losing so much cognitive function that you're not able to take care of yourself on a day-to-day basis.
There are several different types of dementia.
the most common is Alzheimer's disease.
That's something like 60 to 80% of cases of dementia.
The next most common is vascular dementia, something like 10 to 20%.
And then there are others like frontotemporal dementia,
lewdotid dementia, dementia you get with Parkinson's disease.
But those first two, something like 70 to 90% of dementias,
they are directly tied to lifestyle and the environment.
And right now it's estimated that somewhere between,
45 and maybe even 70 or more percent of dementias are preventable,
and most of those fall into those two categories.
There is a genetic component.
So Alzheimer's disease has two broad types.
There's early onset Alzheimer's disease.
That's caused by a single mutation in a single gene,
something like the amyloid precursor protein gene or one of the prestenedlin genes.
Those people get Alzheimer's in their 30s to 50s.
It's a very predictable and quite rapid decline sometimes, but that's maybe 1% of Alzheimer's.
The vast majority, like when we think about Alzheimer's, we think about an age-related dementia.
And this is much more related to the environment.
So there is a genetic component.
You might have heard of ApoE4.
Yeah.
So you can have three different flavors of ApoE, Apolyphoprotein E, 2, 3 and 4.
You get two copies.
Which is the one that makes you more likely to get CTE?
Is that two?
No, so that's four as that's four as well.
Yeah, so four essentially has an effect of amplifying certain inflammatory effects in the brain.
That's probably why it makes CTE worse, makes it more likely for you to get CTE because if you're getting repetitive impacts, repetitive injuries, then it sort of exacerbates or makes that inflammatory response worse.
but when you think about that in terms of Alzheimer's,
if you have one copy of APOE4,
your risk of Alzheimer's is increased by sort of two to six times.
If you have two copies, it's six to 20 times,
depending on how you look at it.
But all the data suggest that APOE4 is a risk multiplier, right?
So it's not that if you have a copy of APOE4,
you're definitely going to get dementia.
it's that in the setting particularly of the modern environment,
risks of dementia or risk factors for dementia are amplified,
like excessive alcohol intake, physical activity, low quality diet.
So that also means that if you have,
if you then address those risk factors, you have greater benefit, right?
Because you're offsetting some of that additional risk.
So however you look at dementia from a genetic standpoint,
And it can also be family history, right?
If you have a family history of dementia, you have an increased risk of dementia.
But a lot of what comes with family history is shared environment and shared lifestyle, right?
You eat and sleep and move like your parents did.
And so if they had a lifestyle that might increase their risk of dementia, you get that as well.
So even if you do have an increased genetic risk, you can offset a large part of that through lifestyle and other environmental factors.
Okay.
So for some people, there's an increased genetic risk, but,
Do some people who do not have this increased genetic risk?
Do they still have a possibility of getting dementia just from atrophy or just from sedentary lifestyle, no stimulation whatsoever?
Yes.
So the kind of the way we would say it is that not everybody who has ApoE4 gets Alzheimer's, and most people who have Alzheimer's do not have ApoE4.
So absolutely.
Okay.
So is it just like everything else, like your muscles atrophy, your bones weaken when you don't put load on?
them. Is that what it is? Yeah. So that's like the core thesis of my book, right? It's called
the Stimulated Mind for that reason. I think that in the, and the title is slightly provocative
because in the modern world, we are hyperstimulated. Over stimulated. But with nonsense.
Exactly. So we're overstimulated and understimulated at the same time. Right. We're getting
a lot of input, but we're not doing any calculations. We're not formulating new ideas. We're not
being creative. We're not problem solving. We're just being inundated with nonsense.
Exactly. So the function of any tissue in the body, right? You mentioned the muscles, the bones, the liver, the immune system. Their function is dependent on the stimulus you apply to them. Right. And so the brain is exactly the same. And if you want functions and networks in the brain to perform well, you need to challenge them in order to enhance capacity in them. Do you think you need to keep your liver working healthy by drinking every now on them?
So it's the example of yes if you drink a lot of alcohol your liver gets better at metabolizing alcohol
So it kind of it proves the point but that doesn't necessarily mean that the alcohol is there to keep your liver healthy
Probably not didn't they used to do that with people that had
If they had lung problems they would give them cigarettes yeah like people with asthma yeah and
They didn't turn out so great
The theory was okay but I think they should have just been breathing
heavy. That would have been a better application of that, right? Because it's just like,
you don't want to torture. Your lungs aren't a filter to like torture you.
Yeah. So when you started studying this, do you have someone close to you that has Alzheimer's?
Or is it just a field of study that you were interested in? Yeah, there was two different things. One,
I focused initially on the brain early in life and then, you know, elite level cognitive performance in athletes.
And you kind of see that these things sort of tie together.
Like what happens early in life, what happens during life, affects what happens later in life.
But I also had my grandfather died of dementia.
He was an alcoholic and he had a combination of alcoholic, you know, alcohol-induced brain atrophy plus vascular dementia.
I really wonder about people today.
And this is one of the reasons we're also interested in this because what we were just talking about before,
that people are being oversaturated with nonsense but not stimulated in any way the challenges your mind.
I mean, this is a constant state today.
And then on top of that, you've got a lot of people that are using AI throughout their day to solve all their problems where they don't think at all.
And there's been some studies on that that show that it's a decrease in cognitive function.
Like when they ask them to actually use their brain, the brain works less well than it did before they're.
start, so you're not getting educated by chat Shp.
No.
Or any of these, what you're doing is you're letting it think for you.
Absolutely.
So this one, maybe one of the studies you're thinking of was a study they did at MIT.
And they had students write essays.
And they could either just write it using whatever they had in the head already or using Google or using an LLM.
And what they showed was that as you increase the amount of like outside support you've got,
you know, Google and then, I think it was chat GPT,
then there was less activity in the brain networks associated with actually doing the task
and students remembered less well afterwards.
So, I mean, this isn't surprising.
Not at all.
You're not using your brain, therefore it doesn't engage in the task.
But what's interesting is that they found a version.
So like some of the students who had previously written an essay just for themselves,
then they asked them to go back and use chat GPT on top.
And what they found was that the final output was better.
So the way that we can use these tools,
rather than just asking it to do all the stuff for us,
which is what most people are doing,
and I think will cause skills and maybe even parts of the brain
to atrophy because they're not being used,
is we use them as orthotics.
Like they can expand our capacities, right?
You try writing it all first,
and then you say, hey,
what did I miss? What am I not thinking about? And you can kind of build on it from there.
And that might perhaps actually stimulate your mind to think, why didn't I think of that?
Like, next time I'm writing a paragraph, I'll consider these options.
Yeah, exactly. So you actually have to fully engage your brain in that process.
But then the end result might be better.
Well, it's just such uncharted territory for us, right? All this, especially social media.
I mean, completely uncharted territory that people are staring at their hand for eight hours a day.
I mean, that's really what you're doing.
You're staring at your hand and you're hoping, usually unsuccessfully, to get something that really excites you and something that's really unique and changes your perspective on things.
I mean, I think maybe when I was using social media every day, maybe once a day I would get something that was really interested in that I would save.
I'd go, oh, that's actually interesting.
And I would think, okay, that would be a good subject to bring up on the podcast.
But the rest of the time, it was just horseshit.
Well, part of the algorithm, and I'm not an expert in training algorithms to do this,
but part of the goal of the algorithm is that you don't get everything that is perfect
that immediately captures your attention up front, right?
Because you want it to be random.
And there's a method in the randomness that keeps you scrolling.
Right.
Because eventually you'll get those small bumps that then keep you keep you going.
But what's particularly interesting about social media is it leverages the fact that we are social beings.
So we prioritize information that is called the acronym is prime, prestigious, in-group, moral and emotional.
And this is even greater in social context, right?
Because we are trying to learn about our social environment so that we can survive our group and be fitter.
And so social media makes us think that we will get that information whilst at the same time offering us the exact opposite, which is essentially isolation.
But it leverages that desire of the human brain to find this social information and this social connection whilst not giving us any of that.
Also, without it getting any feedback from another human being while you're communicating ideas.
So you could say the most horrible shit to people in a comment or a text message.
and you don't think about it because it's like there's not a person there.
Yeah.
Not right in front of you.
Yeah.
It's a design for like, it's like an anti-human device.
Very weird.
But, I mean, if your goal is to capture attention, they're doing a great job of it.
Well, not just that.
They're acquiring enormous wealth and also enormous influence over the just all sorts of things,
politics, economics.
I mean, some of the richest corporations in the world, they gather.
other thing that we never thought of was valuable, which is data.
Yeah.
I mean, when people first started using these things, when people first started using the
internet, nobody really thought that data was going to be one of the biggest commodities
in the world.
Yeah, but now, if they know what captures your attention and what you'll spend money on,
and, like, that's a perfect way to get as much out of you as possible.
So the concept is future-proofing your brain.
what are the things that you think people should be doing to try to future proof
other than avoiding social media and avoiding a lot of this stuff that we're talking about here?
So I think every tool has a possible use.
So like for instance, social media, if you have crafted a social media that allows you to
maintain connections that you wouldn't have otherwise, like the original version of Facebook,
as it existed 25 years ago,
was just like posting pictures
and you could like chat with some family members, right?
Right.
So if you use social media like that,
and there are studies that show that if you're using online tools,
including social media,
and it increases communication and connection
beyond what you would have had otherwise,
that can be a net benefit.
If it's all you use and it's replacing in-person human connection,
then it's a net negative.
So there can be ways that it could be beneficial.
And, you know, if your Instagram feed is just like,
like cute dogs running around in the snow, which is what most of mine is right now, right?
That can be a nice five-minute break in between like cognitively demanding tasks.
Right.
That's fine.
But when you think about future-proofing your brain, this idea that there is some unknowable future, right?
We don't know what the future is going to look like.
But if we want to exist in that future, we're going to need good processing speed, good decision-making skills.
good working memory, good emotional and social skills, right?
And so in order to maintain those, we need to challenge and stimulate them.
So I think the most important thing most people can do is think about new challenging
and often creative skills.
And there's a lot of evidence for creative arts, music.
what they do is they improve the function of networks in the brain that are at risk during the processes of aging,
particularly because they're important for attention and social connection.
And so if we really invest time in doing these things that we suck at and get better at them,
we maintain these broad cognitive skills that we're going to need in the future regardless of what happens.
and some of that is also personal.
So the goal is to build as much cognitive capacity as possible.
I have this idea of headroom,
which is the difference between what you need on a day-to-day basis
versus what you're truly capable of.
It's the difference between, like on a day-to-day basis,
your legs need to be strong enough to get you up off the toilet, right?
But your maximum capacity is, like, what's your max back squat?
The difference between those is your headroom.
And then that gives you capacity to,
perform when you're injured or sick or you need to like lift your car off your buddy because it got
flipped in a car accident like all those things like when you need to draw on greater resources you want
those resources to be there because we are going to be stressed sleep deprived sick and we still want
our brains to function so investing in like really challenging tasks and skills builds that capacity
so that we have access to it when we need it what what is the function and like what what is the
effect on the brain when you learn a new skill, like sucking at something, which I always tell people
is one of the best things you can do. A lot of people don't enjoy it because their ego, they don't
like being frustrated that they're terrible at something, but there's something about not being good
at something and dedicating yourself to it and seeing market improvement that stimulates all sorts
of areas of your mind, which I find really interesting. So most people don't realize that the process of
learning, which in itself is like the core process of neuroplasticity, right?
The brain making new connections and cementing new connections.
That whole process is driven by failure, essentially, and making mistakes.
Because your brain is a prediction machine.
It's constantly predicting what's going to happen next based on the world around you and
what you're trying to do.
And so imagine that you're trying to do some kind of new move in jiu-jitsu or something.
and you have no idea how to do it.
You're going to try it,
and there's going to be this big gap
between your expectation and reality.
That's going to be frustrating, right?
That's the feeling of failure.
But that's what diverts resources in the brain
to say, hey, we need to close the gap
between what we hoped would happen
and what actually happened.
And that's what drives neuroplasticity.
And this is also then what drives the cementing
and function of these networks in the brain
associated with that.
So the idea that you,
you start sucking at something and you get better at it over time,
that is exactly the thing that the brain needs in order to improve and maintain its function.
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How many of those things should you take on at once, though?
This is my issue.
I have a problem. I wish I could have
four lives, but I could run simultaneously.
I would do four. I'd have four to
occupation so I try to smash as many things into a day as possible but there's many
times where I think boy I think I'm doing too many different things that I'm trying to
get good at yeah and maybe it would be better if I just concentrated on one so there's a
few different ways to look at this I think that a broad base and a broad range of
different skills is probably something that we should all hope to have like talent
stacking yeah yeah exactly and if you think about like one of my favorite
books is range by David Epstein, which talks about the broad range of skills that people who
then really succeed in academia or sports have, right? They didn't specialize really early.
They had like a broad base of talents that they can then draw upon as they, as they specialize
later in life. And I think that's something that we can all aspire to. But equally,
what's probably more common is that we try something and we do it for a little while and then we
just kind of like give up on it and we try something else. And yeah, there's like a little bit
benefit to that. But when you look at some of the studies that really examine the effect of learning
some of these creative skills, and they've done it with tango dancers and painters and video gamers,
when you compare an expert to an amateur and where you're seeing the benefits of expertise
in terms of the function of some of these networks in the brain, it really is the development
of some level of expertise is probably required to see the maximum benefit. Obviously, the learning
curve is steepest at the beginning, right? Right when you're beginning to learn something,
that's when you'll learn the fastest. But there is also some benefit to expertise. So some of that,
just to say that pick one or two things that you're actually excited to continue getting better
at for a long period of time. And so then maybe you do have to like try a bunch of different
things until you find the thing that like really like gets you going. But across all those different
skills, they have similar core effects on the brain. So you don't have to do one or both. You can just
pick the one that you enjoy the most. So it's just about the struggle of trying to get better at
something essentially. Yeah. Yeah. And my wife is learning a new language right now. And she's been so
excited about it. And it's like it's really interesting because she starts talking around the house
in French. And it's one of those things where you like, I was, I'm watching her deal.
She wasn't doing it and then she's been doing it over the last couple months and I'm seeing this like excitement in this like new project and we were talking about it
About how that is one of the things that's very difficult to do
But it's it's it's more complex than learning because it's learning and interacting
It's not just learning you're learning but you have to you it requires like this back and forth with another person yeah you have to yeah
You have to understand sentence structure.
You go to, it's just like calm.
And especially French is so different than English.
There's so much weird shit involved in it.
But you could see, like I could see in her that like this is very stimulating to her mind.
Yeah.
And it made me go, oh, man, I should learn a language.
I'm like, fuck, where do you have the time to learn a language?
But then I thought about like, when I was on social media all the time, I would look down to my phone some days and it would say screen use today, six hours.
I'm like, fucking six hours.
That's where your time is.
Right.
If you spent six hours just learning Spanish, you'd be fluent.
I'd be able to go to Takaria and order in Spanish, you know?
Yeah.
It's like we spend so much time doing nonsense that anything that you can do that requires your brain to be in that uncomfortable state of, what is the, oh, what is this?
Oh, it's this.
Is that this?
Got it.
You know, that, that dance, that firing of the synapse.
and forcing your brain to figure this puzzle out,
so many people don't have that.
And I see it in people that get stagnant,
where they're doing the same thing every day.
Their job is fairly mundane and kind of boring,
and maybe they like it, but there's nothing stimulating about it.
They're talking the same boring-ass people.
They don't exercise.
They go home and they watch TV, and then they shut off,
and they do it all again.
And then you talk to them like five, ten, ten,
10 years later and it's almost like they're slipping.
Yeah.
Like you see it.
You can see it in people that have mundane existences.
Like their stimulation is so low that their ability to be stimulated is low.
I think that that thing you describe is so baked into our society that we've started to believe that it's normal.
Right.
So when you look at the trajectory of cognitive function over the, over like your entire,
entire life. Imagine like a graph where on the one side you have cognitive function and it could be
something basic like processing speed. How quickly do you, does your brain process information? On the
bottom is age, right? It tends to peak sometime around our sort of mid-20s to early 30s. It's usually
the peak on average tends to be higher and later the more time we spend in education. So the more
time we spend essentially as professional learners, the more we can build that kind of final capacity.
after that it's just sort of like an average decrease downwards.
And a colleague of mine, Josh Turknet and I, he's a neurologist,
we wrote a paper a couple of years ago where we theorize that the reason why we see that
decline at the population level in cognitive function from about that age is because
we go to work, we do the same thing again and again and again.
and then everything else that life gets in the way
and we never spend that same time
investing in building our cognitive capacities
the way we did when we were kids and when we were in school.
And so the decline is partly because we just stop doing that.
So one of the theories of aging
is that it's just the continuation of development,
like process of development.
And most of the process of development.
Most of the processes of development in the brain are refining connections based on the environment and the stimulus the brain receives.
So if you start removing stimuli because you're no longer engaging in these like cognitively challenging things,
the brain's going to start removing connections.
Hey, I don't need that, right?
I'm not using this part of my brain.
And as a result, you start to see decline.
And so there are studies that show if you have a very stimulating job, it's very complex, problem solving skills,
lots of social interactions,
you have a slower rate of cognitive decline as an adult
and a lower risk of dementia.
You see in individuals who continue to engage in reading,
reading, writing, lectures, dancing,
you know, a whole bunch of hobbies.
Again, you see a slowed rate of decline.
So some of what we just expect to happen with age
is because of the way we stop engaging with the world
and we stop challenging ourselves.
Well, it completely makes sense, right?
Like, if you think about physical activity, it goes along the same kind of path.
Exactly.
You see, I have friends.
I'm 58, which is crazy to say.
It sounds so old.
But I have friends that are 58 that are basically, they're skeletons with, like, meat hanging around various parts of it.
But my physical ability is very similar to what it was when I was in my 30s.
The only way that I could really test it is like physical competition, and I'm not really interested in that.
I don't want to get hurt.
But my capacity for work is very similar.
Yeah.
And I know that because I force it.
You know, I make myself do it.
And I would imagine the same thing is true with the mind.
I mean, it has to be.
I think it's all together.
It's like use it or lose it.
Yeah.
And if your mind doesn't have a need to be constantly intrigued and stimulated, like you
get to think for survival, right, one of the things,
that's speculated. Maybe I can ask you about this because this is one of, I think about this a lot.
Like, what is ADHD? And I, whether or not it's actually a problem, I think it's a superpower
because I'm pretty sure I have it, you know, but yet I can focus. I'm very functional. I can focus
on things. And as long as I tire myself out from activity, I can relax and I can concentrate
on things and I'm very interested in certain things and I can lock into them and concentrate.
But if if I was forced to be in a classroom with a very boring teacher teaching a subject I'm
not that interested in and I was a child, if I had the wrong parents, luckily I didn't,
I would be medicated.
Yeah.
Right?
But I think that that is this ability to focus on certain things like hyperfocus was probably
a function of a persistent hunter, right? Because if you wanted to catch an animal, you couldn't be a person
that gives up quick. You had to be a person that you keep looking for tracks, you keep trying
to find sign, you're trying to figure out a way like, I've got, keep pushing one more hour,
we've got 20 minutes of daylight left, I've got to figure this out, right? That thing had to be
in you in order to be a successful hunter.
So I'm sure that that's part of it.
The current picture of ADHD, I think, is quite complicated.
So I have family members with ADHD.
When they then started on medication, they were like, oh, actually, all of a sudden, my brain works.
Right.
Right.
But that medication is Adderall, right?
If I took Adderall, I would say the same fucking thing.
I don't need a stimulant.
Yeah.
But if I took a stimulant right now, I'd be like, dude, I'm so much better.
So, no, but you know what happens?
In certain individuals with ADHD, when you give them stimulants, they calm down.
They calm down.
Right.
So I think there's a combination of multiple things.
Some is, yes, like these can be very beneficial traits in the right settings.
But you also have to consider that we're layering on a modern environment that's like bright light at night, a whole bunch of caffeine and stimulants, right?
And yeah, of course, some of it is, I think.
Right, the teacher is boring and they're like, they're just not engaged because, you know, the majority of people with ADHD can still focus, right, on things that they're interested in focusing in.
Yes.
Or on.
Even without any kind of medication.
Yeah.
So, but there's like a sliding scale.
And I think there's a whole bunch of different reasons why for one individual they might experience symptoms of ADHD or not.
So I think, I think it's complicated.
Can I ask you, before you go any further than that, can I ask you how much of that is dependent on physical activity?
Like, do we study ADHD based on whether someone is physically active or not?
Because, look, if I'm not physically active, I'm a mess.
Like, if something happened and for some reason, like, I got a court order, you're not
allowed to exercise for six months or you go to jail.
Like, oh, God, I would probably be a fucking complete basket case, right?
And maybe I would have full-on ADHD.
Maybe I wouldn't be able to concentrate on anything.
My brain would be bouncing all over the place.
Like, how much of it is a biological.
requirement that your body has to release energy.
So I think you can, I would expand that out even further than that because physical activity
is a core requirement of our biology and physiology.
Right.
There's a, there's a nice quote by Enigo Sarminal Milan, who's a well-known exercise physiologist,
who says that physical activity is baked into our evolutionary development so much so that
Now we've had to invent exercise in order to like, like to prevent what happens when we don't move.
So it's the lack of movement is a disease-causing pro-aging situation.
So to stop you there.
Yeah.
What if, I mean, or do they, when they treat kids with ADHD, do they take that into consideration?
So as I'm not an ADHD researcher.
I genuinely don't know.
But I would think that before you would give someone a stimulant, maybe track and field.
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
And maybe play badminton, do something where you've got to run around.
Yeah.
Where you're like, ooh, boy, I can focus now.
I think that that's, again, I would say that that's needed for all kids regardless of any potential diagnosis.
So, of course, we need, I think that should be taken into consideration.
Whether that's going to be enough for every kid.
kid, hard to say, but we know that all humans require significant amounts of physical activity
just for their biology to work properly.
So certainly if that's not being taken into account or it's not available or it's not
encouraged, there are a whole host of conditions where that's going to become a problem.
Well, it just only makes sense, right?
And I mean, this has been talked about forever.
The Stoics used to talk about it.
There's quieting the mind.
I mean, Samurai used to talk about it, like that physical activity.
Just what, you know, one of the main benefits the Chinese used for Kung Fu thousands of years ago, quieting the mind.
And the propensity that we have in the society, this direction of almost immediately prescribing a medication for something, when it seems like what you're doing is you're dulling a biological requirement.
You're dulling the impact of this biological requirement that you're not needing.
Why wouldn't we prescribe exercise first and then think about those things?
Like, for instance, like hormone replacement.
If you have a good doctor, an ethical doctor that is working with someone and they find out you have low testosterone,
one of the first things they do is adjust your diet.
They say, well, you have so much food in your diet that causes inflammation.
You have a very high rate of complex carbohydrates.
You have a lot of sugar in your diet.
you drink too much alcohol, you smoke cigarettes.
Let's remove those things first.
And then let's see what happens.
And then you increase your protein and you start drinking water and you go, oh, look, your
hormone levels are going up naturally.
Well, because you're fucking poisoning yourself, right?
So wouldn't you, I mean, why don't they prescribe exercise for kids?
Other than the fact that you can't make money off of it, wouldn't it be a good idea?
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So I think that all kids should absolutely get, you know, several hours, ideally, of movement and physical activity of different kinds every day.
Part of the problem, it's not that scientists or doctors don't think that's important.
Right now, the systems that we have make it very difficult for those things to be put in place.
Right.
So making sure that every kid has the time and the resources to be able to exercise and the right kind of people so that they know what they're doing and they're supervised.
and it's the same with, say, with testosterone replacement if your testosterone is low.
Like most, right, the primary cause, or one of the most common cause of low testosterone in men is, right,
that combination of metabolic disease, being sedentary, poor quality diet, like, we know that.
But creating the systems that allow people to change those things and then supporting them to do that is really hard.
Nobody has solved the behavior change problem.
Right.
If we think about the modern environment and we think about what that drives us to do and not do,
but we have all this information, right?
We know how to prevent these diseases.
We know how to reverse many of them.
And a lot of it is driven by lifestyle and the environment.
But supporting people to change those behaviors and make sure they have the resources and time to do it,
That's really hard.
Nobody solved that problem yet.
Boy, that seems like a problem that's easy to solve.
It's just based on personal responsibility.
No, but it's not.
But if you can tell someone, this is your requirement for the day.
I want you to run one mile.
I want you to do 100 push-ups and 100 sit-ups and write it down.
But first of all...
But you're saying it's like it's impossible.
I'm not saying it's impossible.
I'm not saying it's impossible.
I think that those of us for whom...
this has become a part of our personality and our lives like you and me of course it's like of course you just do that like you just go for the run you do the hundred pushups right but for people who like have never had anything like this and it's never been a part of their environment it's never been a part of who they are changing that actually requires a ton of work um and coaching and it's actually it's actually really difficult when i when i say it's difficult but it's totally doable physically it's not like a
I'm asking to breathe underwater.
Like, people have done it, and you can draw inspiration from, like, my friend Jelly Roll.
You know Jelly Roll, the musician?
Yeah, yeah.
Jelly Roll was 500 pounds, and he's lost 300 pounds.
And he did it with no Zempic, no GLP1s.
He just started walking and started cutting sugar out of his diet and slowly but sure, not even slowly,
over the course of just a couple of years.
He shrunk to like a normal size human.
It's fucking amazing.
but he drew inspiration from a lot of other people.
You know, one of them, he's good friends with my good friend, Cam Haynes,
who's an ultramarathon runner and endurance athlete.
And so, you know, he's taking him on runs and worked out with them and helped him
and just watching YouTube videos and just all he started doing was just walking,
you know, where he couldn't walk up hills.
And he would just walk around his block and walk up the hill when he didn't want to do it.
And he did it.
It's like it's not, you can do it.
You just have to start doing it.
And I think the starting doing it is the most difficult.
I don't think it's difficult to do it once you gather momentum.
Because there's a thing that happens with people when they start doing something, they get
excited and then they look forward to doing it again.
As long as you don't, like, you don't take a guy who's 500 pounds and say, today we're
going to do 100 push-ups, 100 sit-ups.
We're going to do kettlebells, and then we're going to do laps around the block.
You can't do it.
It's not possible.
Yeah.
But you could just go for a walk.
and then tomorrow we're going to go for a walk a little bit further.
And then in two weeks, we're going to double that walk.
And then in three weeks, we're going to incorporate some light body weight squats.
And along the way, we're going to adjust your diet.
And then write these things down.
Like, this is, it's not impossible.
It's just they need motivation.
So I agree.
It's not impossible.
But, you know, I've worked with several digital health companies who are working in the
behavior change space.
And people don't need more information.
they know that they need to walk more,
and they know that they could eat better,
and they know that they could sleep better.
Right.
But the process of trying to, first of all,
understand, like, how should I do that?
What should I do that?
When should I do that?
And then, right, some people may absolutely not have the time
or the environment, maybe they live somewhere
where actually they don't want to be walking around outside, right?
Right.
that's relatively common or they don't have a kitchen right so then how do you how do you cook food
like how do you navigate that that food environment so i i agree i completely agree with you
all of this is doable it's just that different people are going to need different levels of support
to do that initially right gain that momentum understand understand how that feels how it changes
them and right now the majority of people don't have access to that that kind of support and
I absolutely hope that that changes right the food environment changes so that it's much easier
to change the way that you eat and that the built environment changes so it's it's much easier to go
out and have a walk and and do a lot of that so I think that we just have to consider that it's
both right there's there's an individual component right but there's also like a societal component
where we have to make this as easy for people as possible and sort of like build it into their lives such as they are.
Okay. So let's consider the societal aspect of it. Let's consider the like how would you implement something?
Like let's imagine that you get appointed to some committee that's in charge of trying to facilitate this growth and improvement in people.
What would you do?
So I think you need a few different parts to it.
One great part would be to say through, you know,
if you could dramatically improve quality and access of education at all levels
and make physical activity just be a regular part of that.
That has been slowly removed from many educational curriculums around the world over time.
Right.
So bring some of that back and it just becomes part of day-to-day life.
And then you would also teach people the skills involved in some of these other things.
So like teach people how to cook and how to do that within the bounds of what they have access to their, you know, cultural preferences, dietary preferences, you know, financial abilities, that kind of stuff.
Right, that should be a part of a school curriculum.
Yeah, absolutely.
Just like you should teach kids about taxes and all these other things.
And so I think if you start early on and you do this with sort of curiosity and skill building,
then you release people out into the, you know, I think that's the place to start.
Because when you get out into the real world and you're working three jobs and you live somewhere where you don't want to go for a walk outside and like you can barely get six hours of sleep every night and, you know, you've got three kids that you're trying to look after saying, oh, hey, you should do 100 pushups every day.
Like that's not going to happen.
Like other things are going to happen that are more important.
So I think there's that part, maybe the skill building part.
Then it's thinking about like how people have opportunities to do those things.
And then I would think about, you know, access to high quality, you know, healthcare, psychological care.
Like these things that sometimes people need help that they can't get access to or it's expensive or whatever.
So I think giving more of that so that they get support when they need it
It would definitely help as well
I think one great way would be to devise a website
Maybe like even a government website where you
Put in like your body weight when was your last physical activity
What this that the other thing all the what's your diet and then they implement a program and you could follow online with a bunch of other people
able to do
doing the same thing
and post your results.
Yeah.
So you have a community
aspect to it.
You have a dedicated
program that you can follow
so you don't have to think
about, oh, I don't want to do
that.
I don't want to do this.
Like, it'll just tell you.
Just do this.
Oh, you weigh 400 pounds.
You're 39 years old.
You haven't worked out in 10 years.
Okay, here's day one.
Yeah.
And follow along.
Post your weight.
Post what you're eating.
I mean, that, I mean, and with AI,
I mean, that's one of the good things about an LLM, right?
With AI, you could ask it to formulate adjustments.
Yeah.
And you could say, okay, what nutrients should I be consuming?
What how much protein do I actually need?
How many calories do I need?
How many calories are in this and that?
And, you know, how much protein do I get from, you know, 20 ounces of broccoli or whatever the fuck it is?
You know what I mean?
Yeah.
So when you look at some of the most successful trials of behavior change,
And most of them are based around weight loss studies, right?
That's a very typical way to do it.
When you want somebody to change their behavior and feel good about it,
one of the sort of constructs is self-determination theory, you've probably heard of, right?
Humans need three things.
Autonomy, competence, and relatedness.
So autonomy is the, like, I am in charge of my life and I'm in charge of my decisions.
So what are the things that I want to work on today, right?
I have some choice there.
Competence.
Like, how do I help somebody feel like they know what they're doing?
Like, a lot of the hurdles with exercise or diet is like, I don't know what I'm doing.
And like, this guy says that I need to do sprints.
And this guy says I need to lift weights.
And this guy says I need to do X amounts of zone two.
But I like, what does that even mean?
Like, do I even know what I'm supposed to do?
So how do you build competence in people?
And then relatedness, that's the point that you were making, right?
you have a group like you support each other maybe you do stuff you do stuff together so um one of the
most successful weight loss trials of all time was called the broad study and one of the things they
did so they they lost a lot of weight and they kept it off and so most weight loss studies people
regain it afterwards is they they met several times a week they did like potlucks group
activities like they helped each other yeah community yeah community um the one downside of that
is that there was an app.
I can't remember the name of it.
They tried to build that for exercise.
So, like, you'd have these buddies and they'd be your accountability buddies.
But what happened was that when people started to slip,
they left the platform much faster because they were like,
I don't want my buddies to know that I'm not doing what they are supposed to be helping me do.
So you kind of have to, like, build in multiple buffers and different ways to help people,
depending on what it is that motivates them or not.
I mean, we have public education, right?
We have universities. We have public high schools and middle schools. Why don't we have public gyms?
Why don't, I mean, how much money would it cost to have community gyms set up where you don't have to have money to join where it's paid for by your taxes?
You're not talking about something that's outside of, you know, like, financially it wouldn't be feasible.
Yeah. It's not that hard to do.
So I think that was the, I don't know what the financial model is now, but that was the idea of like the YMCA's things, right?
It becomes a community focus point.
My wife grew up in North Carolina.
She talks about how they were down the YMCA all the time, like playing basketball.
I used to have a YMCA when I lived in Boston that I used to go to.
It was really cheap.
They had weights.
They had a track.
They had a swimming pool.
They had all sorts of stuff.
It was way cheaper than a regular gym.
And they had classes you could take.
Yeah.
And there was something very similar close to where I grew up in the UK.
Just like for a couple of pounds you go do some kind of martial arts class.
or something.
Yeah, they had that too.
Does Austin even have a YMCA?
Yeah, definitely.
Oh, yeah, there's one,
there's like a big one downtown.
I've driven past it once,
like big glass front.
Like, I don't know what it costs.
How much does it cost to get into the YMCA in Austin?
Let's find that out.
I mean, that should be paid for by taxes.
Yeah.
I mean, if we pay for all this other shit
that we don't need, why don't, you know.
When a big hurdle is accessibility and...
One year, new progress.
Pack, join today, how much?
$125 value for a year?
Is that what it says?
How much it does it cost?
It doesn't say how much it costs.
What is it gross?
Join today.
How much are you click on?
So the secret of most membership for gyms, they don't list their prices on.
Yeah, but it's a YMCA.
Click on Join that, join today.
I'm telling you.
They want you to come in and say hi so they can talk to you.
Oh, is that what it is?
That's how everyone works.
But it's probably cheaper than most.
Well, why don't you put it into,
perplexity or something like that.
Say, what is, how much does it cost to join a YMCA?
Here we go.
Let's guess.
How much you think it costs?
20 bucks a month?
Yeah, I think it can't be much more than a planet fitness, right?
Planet Fitness is pretty cheap.
But the thing about Planet Fitness is they kind of,
a lot of these big gyms, not just singling out Planet Fitness,
they kind of hope that you don't show up.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
You're generally looking at $40 to $80 per month,
depending on age and household type.
That's not too bad.
Yeah, but for some people, that's a lot of money, right?
40 bucks a month.
Yeah, like that's a good chunk of their food bill.
So I, there should be some slightly scale where this becomes very, very heavily subsidized.
Yeah.
Or free.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, why wouldn't it be free?
Yeah, I think it should be.
But then homeless people go in there and shower.
There are.
Well, I mean, I'm okay with that too.
Depends on who they are.
I mean, if they shout.
I'm okay with some of them, you know, fucking crazy people, shit in the sub, in the, in the shower.
Blue Cross Blue Shield,
blah, blah, blah, blah, blah,
many health insurance plans
offer gym membership
through reimbursements.
Discounts or programs
like active fit or global fit.
Benefits can include
$20 to $400 annual reimbursements.
Some people can use their health insurance
to get some of that fee covered.
Okay, well, that's nice.
But the thing is, again,
it's just like Planet Fitness
or any of these places.
The thing is, like,
they want to recruit you,
and then you go, and you're like,
okay and then you never go again yeah yeah yeah but we genuinely want people to go like that's
right that's the whole idea well the thing is like there's one thing like for someone and i've taken
friends to gyms before that don't work out and they're like what do I do they have no idea what
to do classes yeah classes is what should be absolutely like learning new skill right move
make a friend like so much amazing stuff happens yeah yeah and and they should have multiple
different classes available yeah at the same time right there should be a
class for people that have done nothing.
Like, okay, these are dumbbells.
This is, you pick up a light one.
I'm going to show you how to do a shoulder press.
And then it should be for, you know, more advanced people, intermediate people or something.
And a whole range of different skills, yoga, Zumba, Pilates, Tai Chi.
Slightly different.
Not dumbbell weights, but in Austin, they have a bunch of public, free gym equipment and
different parks.
Playgrounds and parks.
Yeah, that stuff's great.
Well, New York City has a whole
Look at these guys
Yeah
Look at staring at each other
Talking shit
I think one of the problems is that
Well first of all
Like a lot of people might just like look at that
And be like
What do I do with that
And then the second is that
A lot of what we see
Around fitness and movement
Is kind of the extremes
Right?
They're idolized professional athletes
Like this is what the best of the best do
And we often
We internalize this idea
That's what we need to do
And if we're not doing that
than we're not doing anything.
Right.
Whereas all the data suggests
that literally any type of movement
above what you're doing right now
is beneficial.
Cardiovascular health, cognitive health, dementia risk.
So I think some of it is just like
letting people know
and having people understand
that it doesn't take that much to move the needle.
And then when they start to do a little bit, right,
you get a bit of a bug,
maybe you enjoy it,
you find a thing that you enjoy,
you do more of it.
And so that's part of it too.
Like having people understand
that it doesn't take that much to really start, you know, having an impact.
Yeah, and it's also for a lot of people, this is a society that really emphasizes quick fixes on things.
And it's not a quick thing.
You have to trust in a process.
And so that has to sort of be, that has to be, people have to be educated to be educated to that.
It has to be taught to you.
Like, this is a process.
And you're on a process.
You should be very excited about being on this process.
It's going to be weird because it's going to take a long time before you see any results.
But that long time, like in that in that time period, you will eventually see results.
And then you'll be excited.
You'll feel better.
You'll have more energy.
It'll help every aspect of your life.
You just got to do it.
One of the things that I like when I talk about movement in particular or exercise and say cognitive function is that,
you will start to see benefits relatively quickly.
So if you go and do a six second max sprint a couple of times, right,
and there were studies that show this,
you will acutely, like immediately see an improvement in cognitive function,
better blood flow to the brain.
You've created arousal, which is really important for focus and attention.
If you, you know, go for a walk outside, right,
you will sleep better that night.
So you'll feel better the next day.
And so, yes, you're absolutely right that this is a lifelong thing, right?
You can't just do it for a couple of months and then hope that it's going to translate to benefits for decades to come.
But you can see immediate benefits if you start to do some of this stuff and you can feel it very quickly.
So I think that that's going to be important because not everybody is going to feel in the position to invest in their future selves.
Right. So if you start to see benefits straight away, you're more.
more likely to keep going with it.
Okay, so that's for people, we were just, I mean, I'm glad we covered it, but we're
essentially talking about people that don't know what to do.
For people who do know what to do, you said you work with a lot of Formula One athletes,
and what do you do for, like, what is, Formula One is fascinating to me.
I've been to the Cota racetrack.
We're actually putting up a studio.
We're going to have a studio at Cota.
We're going to have a second studio at the racetrack.
And the idea is to take people around the racetrack.
I think it would be like stimulate their mind and then come in and do it.
a podcast, it'd be a lot of fun.
Yeah.
Right?
You'd be like racing.
Like your mind, you'd be like, woo.
Uh-huh.
That is an incredible sport where it's fractions of a second, split-second decisions.
Your ability to react has to be, like, incredibly fast.
Like, have you ever seen the thing where they drop things?
Oh, yeah.
And they have to, like, grab them.
Lewis Hamilton is, like, better at anybody.
Oh, yeah, of course.
He's just fucking intense.
What do you do with them?
So you already have people that are primed, right?
They're the best in the world.
But they are constantly looking for an additional edge.
What are you doing for them?
Yeah, so there's a few things there.
My work with Formula One drivers happens mainly through a company called Hintzor Performance.
It was founded by Hintz.
Is it Hintz? Hintza, H-I-N-T-S-A, named after Aki-Hinsa, who was a Finnish orthopedic surgeon.
He worked with Harley Gabri Slasi, with Mika Hakenen.
He was a two-time Formula One world champion.
And then now this is sort of like a big sports enterprise, and I'm their head scientist for motorsport.
So that's all motorsport categories from like carting in kids up to Formula One.
We work with several Formula One drivers.
And we provide coaching and medical services.
each driver, or most of the drivers, have a coach, right?
So, like, you know, when you watch Formula One, there's, like,
somebody holding the umbrella, holding the helmet, right?
That's usually, well, that's often one of our coaches.
They're usually a strength and conditioning specialist,
or they might be a physio or a nutritionist.
Like, they have a ton of, you know, really high-level skills.
And they're there every day, right?
They do the sleep.
They do the training.
Like, they're traveling with them the whole time.
They sort of can manage as much of their life as possible.
and when you're thinking about that level of skill,
the stimulus part has taken care of itself, right?
One of the reasons why these guys are so good
is because it's all they've done every day for two plus decades,
four decades, if you're Lewis Hamilton or close to that.
And that's slowly building these skills first in coming,
then in these different formula categories, Formula 3, Formula 2,
up into Formula 1.
And so the kinds of things that we might work on.
And so, like, I'm helping the coaches, working with the drivers.
We have a huge team, you know, a doctor who works with a bunch of Olympic athletes as well.
And so it's a combination of are there any individual performance limiters?
So we might do some blood tests, look at nutrient status and various other things.
make sure they're really on top of that with their diets.
But then in that kind of world, and like, I'm sure you experience this yourself,
everybody's got a thing for you to try or a thing for you to do, right?
You're constantly been bombarded with the latest, greatest technology,
and like this guy wants to study this thing.
So a lot of what we do is, like, be really careful about the things that get added.
and maybe even like take stuff away if we need to.
Like what are we trying to work on?
What are we trying to build?
What does this one driver need?
Because they're all very different.
They need a difference, you know, they have different diets.
They have different training programs.
They have different warm up strategies for when they get in the car.
And so a lot of what we end up doing is focusing on the other side.
Right.
So if you stimulate your brain, it adapts when you rest and recover.
afterwards. So because they're essentially jet lagged nine months of the year, right, they're in a
different country every week. That's a factor. That's a huge factor. And like on top of like every
race weekend, they've got to go meet sponsors. They've got to do media days, right? They're constantly
moving. So it's what can we do to maintain their level of performance throughout the season? And this is
something that the coaches do a ton of work in like how can we what kind of exercise and how can we do
targeted training to like maintain performance throughout the throughout the year.
And then the other part is how can we get as much recovery as possible?
Because if we want them to adapt to all the work they're doing and come back each weekend
at the top of their game or as close as possible, we need to get them to rest and recover
and come back and do it again.
So often we're not focusing on the stimulus part.
We might be in driver training.
We might be thinking about how can we develop cognitive skills and these kinds of
things and these driver physical skills in in Formula One often it's how can we get these guys to
recover better how can we get these guys to sleep better and then that that might be technology but
it might also be you know just like how can we nail the basics again and again make sure they're
getting enough time in bed right especially when you're traveling a bunch that gets that gets really
difficult so we're often focused on the on the recovery side and how we track like how do we collect
those data how do we know when something's starting to slip and get on top of it early
that's the kind of stuff we tend to focus on.
So let's talk about the jet lag aspect.
What are the strategies for mitigating jet lag?
And like how do you, let's say if they fly in for a race,
like if they're going from Europe to the United States and they have to race,
how many days in advance do they arrive and how do they shift their circadian rhythm
and eliminate jet lag?
What are the strategies?
Yeah.
there's the time for them like the the number of days they come before the race will
depend on how long it was since the last race plus what other things they've got going on but
it's often like two or three days right they'll try and get it come in the beginning of
the week at least like Monday Tuesday if the race is then going to be on Sunday and then as
much as possible you might start to try and shift things earlier so shift your light exposure
so that it aligns more closely with your destination a couple of days before you travel,
shift your sleep if you can, shift exercise and caffeine timing.
Again, because those things shift circadian rhythm so you can kind of get closer to what you're going to do when you land.
And so those are probably the primary tools is exercise, light, caffeine.
You can use some of them use melatonin.
you can also change when you eat so like food timing is a zeitgeber it's a fancy word for like timegiver
like helps to drive circadian rhythm so often when you're when you're flying they'll give you a
meal that's happening like in the middle of the night in the time that you're going to land right so
often you might try and avoid eating while flying and then have your next meal in time with like a normal
meal timing when you land. I've heard that one of the things to help the jet lag is just eliminate
meals when you're flying, period. There's something about eating, even if it doesn't have
anything to do with the time. Like, say if you're flying from Los Angeles to New York, one way
to eliminate jet lag, they say, is just to not eat on the flight. Six-hour flight, don't eat at all.
Usually, I think most of that is to do with circadian circadian timing, because you're usually
flying at a time when you wouldn't normally eat or like you're often like they give you dinner at like
nine p.m or it's even midnight right so if you see but is that all it is because but ways explained to me is it
just there's something about your body processing food when you're flying that actually
exacerbates jet lag so i can't think of a you know other than the fact that i mean you're obviously
you know sat still for long periods of time which might not normally happen at the time of day as well
I think the majority of it in terms, certainly in terms of jet lag plans, is thinking about the timing of meals relative to circadian rhythm because you normally, you know, break your fast at a certain time of day, have dinner at a certain time of day.
So I think most of it is related to circadian timing.
Okay.
What about rigorous exercise?
Because one of my strategies, like say if I have to fly to London or something like that and I want to avoid jet lag, I immediately go to the gym.
That's the first thing I do.
I put my stuff in the hotel room.
I go right down to the gym.
no negotiation whatsoever and I get in at least an hour.
Yeah, I have to.
That's a great way.
That's a great way to help to offset some of the jet lag.
Because you start to tell your body or hey, like even though it's whatever, midnight in Austin, right, this is the time when I want to be awake.
So it starts to advance the circadian phase.
So exercise.
Some people like to do cold exposure, right?
It does a similar thing, right?
Increases adrenaline, increases heart rate, increases arousal.
can do it with light, can do it with caffeine.
And so some combination of those things can definitely help.
Okay, so there's the sleep, adjusting the sleep, there's the light exposure, there's exercise and food.
Is there anything else?
Like what kind of supplementation is effective to mitigate that?
Yeah.
So they might use melatonin.
One of the issues that we have, it's not an issue.
It makes perfect sense is that.
the supplements that we use with the drivers have to be third-party tested, right?
NSF for support certified.
Yeah.
Informed support certified.
So some of the things that we might like to try.
Is that because the drivers get tested?
Because the drivers get tested.
And what do they ban?
What's banned?
Everything.
It's the same as all the water drug drugs.
Oh, okay.
It's the same.
They're under water regulations.
So are they allowed to use peptides?
It's a gray area in general.
I don't believe, I don't believe anybody.
does and we certainly don't recommend
it for that reason because we just don't know what's in there.
Are they tested for peptides?
So they're not tested for peptides.
Then take them.
Well, it depends on whether there's actually a peptide
that has good high quality evidence in humans.
Well, there's also, you should get them from a real good
compounding pharmacy.
Make sure you're getting it from a quality source, which is
the real problem with peptides today is that since they're not
regulated, there's a lot of gray market.
There's a lot of real, you know, bullshit corporations that are selling you stuff that's nonsense and even things that are tainted.
So, yeah, so the main thing that you're worried about is contamination.
Like, what else have they put in there?
Right, right.
To make it, to get better.
Same thing as supplements.
Yeah, same thing as supplements.
But in reality, like, there aren't many peptides where I'm like, where I would say, or actually, I couldn't think of any, where I'm like, this will have a definite benefit based on high quality studies.
in humans, right? Those studies just don't exist.
And so, until we get to that point, plus the sort of like the gray area of the sort of legality
of it, we tend to focus on, you know, the real, I mean, it's the basics, but we know that
they work.
But there are peptides that have shown to increase sleep and increase REM sleep.
In humans?
Yes, in humans.
Boy, I wish I could tell you because they talked about it, but I know.
never tried it.
I know Tom Segura's on it.
See if you can find what it is, Jamie.
It's, uh, boy.
It's fucking with my head.
Is that what it is?
I'm asking.
No, um...
Delta sleep inducing peptide.
I like, I want to see the randomized control trial.
I have to.
I can't, I couldn't recommend it unless I know that it's third party tested, it's legal,
and there's a high quality trial in humans.
Like, all those things have to align.
The high quality is just,
The problem with high quality studies is they take time and money.
Yeah.
And these aren't FDA approved, so you're not going to get those things.
But that doesn't mean they don't work.
And this is the problem is that, like, you could try it.
And then if you show benefit, like...
And not setting I can't try it.
You can't.
No.
Well, you can't because of Formula One drivers and all that stuff.
Yeah.
So with the way drug-free sport works, which is the governing body of the UFC drug testing,
they don't allow anything, unfortunately.
But there are studies that show that BPC 157 increases tissue recovery and helps you heal from...
Not in humans.
True.
But there's, look, the same thing with the COVID vaccine.
They weren't tested in humans either before they started trying them.
There were some, for the first wave of COVID-19 vaccines, there were some pretty good quality trials in humans.
Right.
But all it showed is that it showed an antibody.
It didn't show that it...
Oh, no.
Against hospitalizations and death.
In the first waves.
We could argue about that.
Because it's very sketchy.
Okay.
It's very sketchy data that has been disproven.
I think that those, I think those first waves were high quality.
But they didn't even say that it increased hospitalization and death.
It was stopping transmission and infection, which was just a lie.
So that's what they claimed.
So it's all sketchy because it was based on profit.
The whole thing is weird.
It's a weird one.
It's a weird one to cover.
I can't.
But we don't talk about that.
Yeah, I can't talk about motivation.
Maybe it's not a good example.
Yeah, yeah.
But with, there's plenty of anecdotal evidence, especially with professional athletes, with BBC 157 and TB 500, particularly, for tissue injuries, for recovering quicker from tissue injuries.
So I know, I know there's anecdote.
I know that people say it benefits them.
In the environments that I operate in, that's not enough.
I understand.
You're an actual doctor.
Dr. Tommy Wood, he's legit.
I'm just a dork.
I'm allowed to just say, try it, fuck it.
But so with drug-free support, like with the UFC, they use Thorne supplements.
It's with the UFC recommends, which are very good.
Yeah, yeah.
So you have to find whether it's pure encapsulations or some legitimate, well-proven, established company that provides you with third-party tested supplements.
What supplements have been shown?
for I would have let's stick with Formula One drivers reaction time is critical your your ability to
function at a very high cognitive state right you're you're thinking constantly you're always
calculating and movements what supplements are these guys taking that benefit them so there
when you think about complex skill performance and there's a there's like a whole chapter on this
in the book the the most important
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Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So the curve is bell-shaped, right?
It's the Yerkes-Dodson curve named after a couple of guys who actually did studies in mice.
that then translated actually surprisingly well over to humans.
And so what it says is that if you're sort of under aroused,
you're kind of disengaged, a bit of lethargic, right?
You're not really going to perform well.
If you're over aroused, you're sweaty, anxious, right?
Again, you're not going to be able to sort of pay attention to the task.
So there's this sweet spot.
At the top of the curve, you're capable of flow states,
clutch states, which is where you can perform at your best,
but it's still like, it's hard work.
And so what you're talking about,
trying to do is get the guys to the top of that curve. And this, for many, involves some element
of routine, right, knowing that I've done the thing that I know that's going to make me feel good.
And so it's a combination often of the things that we've already mentioned. They might use
some warm-up sprints. They might use music. They might use bright light. They might use breathwork.
They might use cold. Certainly, if it's going to be a hot race, they might do some pre-cooling
to bring down cool temperature. That improves endurance during the race.
Oh, do they bring cold plunges to Formula One bays?
Yeah, yeah.
So some of them have a cold plunge or, you know, you can fill a wheelie bin with water and ice and jump in that.
It doesn't need to be that cold, actually.
So for increasing endurance performance, like 20 minutes at around 20 degrees Celsius or like 60-ish Fahrenheit, that significantly improves, like endurance.
Is there a benefit to 20 minutes of 60 degrees?
Fahrenheit versus three minutes at 34 degrees?
So the problem is that when you get too cold,
you can actually decrease cognitive performance.
So there's a fine line when it's really cold
that what you want to do is you want to decrease core temperature
without negatively affecting cognitive function.
And so that's easier to manage at slightly less cold temperatures.
Oh, I see, I see.
Because just like if you did really, really exhaustive exercise, right,
you go out.
And so I was a rower in college.
So like a 2K test on a rowing machine.
Like after that,
my brain doesn't work for like hours after it's right.
And so like very,
very cold ice baths for several minutes for some people that can decrease cognitive function.
So you can find a sweet spot.
That makes sense.
That makes a lot of sense because my mind is very bad after brutal workouts.
Yeah.
Like if I have a really hard workout and I come in and do a podcast,
there's a moment where I like,
um,
it's just not firing.
Yeah.
And that's perfect.
And that's normal.
We know that.
If you do very fatiguing exercise,
for a period of time,
you experience a declining cognitive function.
But a light exercise stimulates.
Exactly.
So like one of the best studied exercise modalities
to improve cognitive function
is literally just like a 20 minute jog.
Right.
It's light job.
Exactly.
But you're always kind of warming everything up,
you know, increasing sympathetic activation,
increasing release of all those hormones you mentioned,
and that increases arousal, that improves cognitive performance.
So they might be doing some of those things.
In the car, right, there'll be differing types of caffeine use
depending on sensitivity and timing.
Are they taking it in pill form so that they could regulate it quickly?
Or accurately, rather?
Yeah, so some do, sometimes pills, sometimes gels,
some guys just like cappuccino.
Some might use like green tea because the thionine in there might.
balance some of like the jitters that you can get with caffeine. Some some people find
creatine stimulating or mildly stimulating so they might take creatine before they get in the car.
Well there's been studies on creatine and cognitive performance that are really
interesting. Particularly in the setting of sleep deprivation. Yeah. And so when they're jet lagged
like I think that that one makes sense. There are some newer caffeine-related compounds that if we
can get them when they're third-party tested, you know, some may try those. So,
thia cream or teakrine and parazanthine which is a metabolite of caffeine
some of they they may have some fewer of the like anxiety promoting high blood pressure
high heart rate effects but maintain some of the cognitive effects especially in
combination with caffeine so you have a little bit less caffeine plus a bit of those
they're harder to get sort of third party tested and stuff but and that some of the
evidence is newer but that that's looking sort of promising as another thing that
people might try. You mentioned Thienine, which is a nutropic. There's quite a few different
ones that people enjoy, you know, beta-coline. There's a bunch of different ones. Do
Formula One drivers, do they supplement with that kind of thing? So you think like alpha-GPC?
Yeah. Yeah. So like a, it's a coline type of coline that's like, it's preferentially
turned into astol-coline. And Astol-Col-Coling is really important for like focus and attention.
Um, some of that stuff isn't, isn't regularly used, like, mainly because, um, it's hard to get a third-party tested, uh, source.
Is it really?
Yeah.
Like, most of the things that you take that there probably isn't, uh, or that anybody would take,
there might not be a, an NSF for sport, a certified version.
There's very few companies that do that routinely for all their supplements.
God, you'd think that that would be really accessible.
Yeah.
Because neutropics are so common now.
So there's that.
Plus there's the,
when we're working with different drivers,
they each have very unique needs.
So it's trying to,
it's a combination of what do I think is really going to move the needle
and not overcorrect.
I think most coaches I've spoken to in Formula One
have a story where their driver
had three espresso before it got in the car
and then he overcooked the first corner.
Right, right.
So it's a really tricky balance
of trying to make sure that they can systematically get in the zone to perform well in the car
without sort of pushing them too far over the other side.
And so that's where supplements become trickier because it's very easy to downregulate
if you've overcooked it through some of those physiological means, right,
I can do some breath work or something to kind of calm myself down.
But if I've like stuffed myself full of caffeine, it's going to be hard to like come back from that
and then you sort of step in the car and it could cause some issues.
So we tend to focus on some of the physiological stuff and then maybe a little bit of supplementation
because that seems to be the sort of best balance across those different needs.
Well, it seems like Formula One would be a great place to develop framework for this
because there's so much money involved.
It's such a massive sport.
And you would think that they would have that dialed in.
Like you're 168 pounds.
This is when you woke up.
This is what you need right now.
You need this much protein, this much this, stop eating X amount of hours before the race.
So, yes, we do a lot of that, but it's different for each guy and nobody wants to share what they've got.
Oh, it's that kind of deal.
So, like, even like your biggest rival is your teammate in many respects, right?
Because that's the only guy you can go up against truly head-to-head because you're in the same car.
Right.
So, yeah, you know, a lot of what we do, we have to, we have to size.
within a driver. Like, this is the stuff that works for this guy. And I can't use that to help
this guy, right? That's one reason. That's one reason why HINC... They don't share information.
Yeah. And that's one reason why HINC has been very successful as a company is because
they've been, we're very good at walling this stuff off. Like, we know what's good for this guy.
We know what's good for this guy. And we sort of leave those separate because different frameworks,
different approaches might be needed. Well, it's such an extreme example because any little deviation
that you wouldn't normally feel in everyday life
could be disastrous in a Formula One race.
Yeah.
What about different things to stimulate cognitive function,
like playing chess or doing,
is there anything that those guys engage in
specifically to improve the way they think?
Again, it depends a little from driver to driver.
a lot of them
play some kind of video games
which actually have some interesting
evidence to support them in terms of
improving cognitive function
I think for them though
a lot of that is
it's almost like relaxation
like when you drive a Formula One car for a living
like playing a video game
is
relaxing
isn't necessarily as challenging
right
and so a lot of it
tends to be very car focus, right?
They get tons of time in the simulator.
Like during the season, they get a lot of time in the car.
So there's nothing that, like, consistently would work or that everybody does.
I think a lot of where the cognitive training side comes from is during driver development, right?
How can we get more sport-specific or sports-specific, supporting cognitive challenges in younger drivers as they're developing?
So we might use some cognitive training tools and some other things to try and support some of those development processes.
Because by the time they're at the top, especially if you want to maintain it, the main thing that you need to do is obviously maintain those driving skills,
which you'll get through the day-to-day aspects of the job.
Plus then it's really continually paying attention to sustained physical health, physical performance, especially because of the, like, arduous schedules.
and all that kind of stuff.
So often, again, they're focusing on the other areas
because they know that will help them stay at a high level for longer.
So they're focused on recovery from all the unavoidable aspects
that are going to mitigate your performance.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
So sleep, some of them use different meditation or breathwork or other devices
just to kind of help maybe you like gamify it slightly
or you make it a slightly more enjoyable experience.
It's easier to do, easier to switch off.
if you're doing things related sort of like vibration and that, that kind of stuff.
You mean like pressure plates, like those standing on things?
Shaky plates?
No, there's, um, turbosonic.
There's a, there's a chair that, that some guys use.
And I mean, this is used in a ton of different sports and like in other military groups as well.
It's called the shift wave.
Have you heard of this?
Yeah, I have one.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So some of the guys have a shift wave.
Um, it just kind of depends on what works well for them.
in terms of allowing them to downregulate,
allowing them to kind of sleep better.
And again, we sort of often focus on the more sort of physiological environmental side
rather than, you know, trying to throw a bunch of supplements on it.
Well, it seems like that's a great place to study Formula One drivers
because you're dealing with these like fine lines,
this tiny differential between success and failure.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And one of the interesting things is that the real performance stuff
is kind of siloed within the team.
So then, right, because that's related to performance in the car
and that's sensitive information.
So a lot of the time we're kind of thinking about,
and this actually, across most sports,
the best predictor of performance is subjective well-being.
How does the athlete feel?
And so, like, there are tons of studies, even, like, coming out now.
Like, you compare that to blood tests and HIV and all this other kind of stuff.
how they feel.
Am I tired?
Am I achy?
Do I feel alert?
You know, all that kind of stuff.
That seems to predict performance really well.
So how can we, or and better some of those other things.
The best is a combination as much as possible.
But so we do a lot of work aggregating data.
But then really the rest of the time is, how can I make sure this guy feels good every day, right?
And it feels confident when he gets in the car.
And so then we have psychology.
just they're a big part of that plus like keeping an eye on their body and all that you know all
those sort of things to sort of put them in the best spot possible when they get in the car do you coach
them to avoid toxic relationships I'm not I'm not sure if anybody's ever gotten into that
there for fighters it is like one of the number one predictors of poor success in a competition
I've seen it over and over again guys with horrible relationships yeah you know whoever's fault
it is both fault both parties whatever it is but
those are the ones, like when they have, like, really bad relationships.
Like, there was this one guy that I know that was a really high performer, very good fighter,
but he had this crazy girlfriend, and she required so much attention that it would drive her nuts
when he was getting ready for a fight because he was spending all his time concentrating on the
fight, and it would peak literally the night before the fight.
Like, their relationship was so toxic.
She would always start fights, and all the coaches knew it.
She would start fights after he weighed in.
because he was so locked in on the fight the next day that he wasn't paying attention to her.
So she would storm out of the hotel room and go down to the bar by herself and he would freak out
and he would always wind up performing poorly.
At least I personally haven't seen the evidence of that in that world.
I will say that fighters are kind of crazy though.
It's an interesting group to study because it's a very bizarre activity to begin with.
The way I describe it is high-level problem solving,
with dire physical consequences.
Yeah.
And,
you know,
although you could say that Formula One is,
is similar in that respect, right?
Very similar.
The,
there are certainly,
you know,
a lot of drivers come into,
into the sport with,
is often driven by family relationships.
So,
so I think that that may,
may be an influence sometimes,
right?
Overbearing parents or another one.
Coaches,
overbearing father coaches.
Yeah, yeah,
because they come in with this long history
of,
right,
of like,
what got them there.
Uh-huh.
So maybe that affects some of them, I'm not sure.
What are the most challenging athletes?
I assume you've dealt with a bunch of different athletes from various sports.
What are the most challenging ones to deal with?
The one, I think the ones that I found most challenging are, it's usually because they're pulled in so many different directions.
that it becomes difficult for them to like really engage in in the things that we know
are going to is going to help them perform long term.
And so as and like I have friends who work in the NBA, for instance, where I think this
is amplified even more, right?
You have teenage millionaires who can literally do whatever they want, right?
But you have to like keep them on task.
And we see that in a lot of professional sports.
And so it's that kind of stuff, is what's distracting them?
What are the other things that they're doing that's stopping them from being able to engage in these processes?
And so you can have like really good conversations and put together really good plans.
And like in the moment they're really engaged and they're interested in right, they want to do well.
Right, this is their job.
And they love it.
But when other things start to come into play outside of that conversation, they don't engage with things.
They don't do it.
They don't see the results that they want.
They get demotivated.
But it's usually because other things in their life, right, could be like the toxic relationships, but it tends to be other distractors.
They kind of pull them away from that sort of like core goal.
Unfortunately, success is a big one, right?
Because the motivation to succeed in the first place is you want.
financial gain, you want recognition, you want all these things that you're chasing after.
And then once you get them, now what?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
And some people, like, maintain, like, really, they maintain dedication to the craft.
Like, this is the thing that I love and I want to do it every day.
And the longer you do it, the more you have to take care of, like, the little details.
Like, early on in your career, you can train however you want, eat however you want.
if you have a certain set of skills and training up to that point, you'll do pretty well.
But you want to sustain that for a very long period of time.
It requires an increasing amount of dedication to the other areas of your life to make sure that you can still do that.
And I think sometimes people just aren't honest with themselves in terms of what they really want to do or what they're going to spend their time doing.
So that's the most frustrating thing is when you sort of you hear one thing, but you see.
another thing because of like the other areas of life that are that are taking over.
So what do you do if you have an athlete, like say an NBA athlete and you see all this talent,
all this potential, but then you notice that they're getting pulled in all these different directions.
Maybe they're just like spending money all the time and partying and hanging out with girls
and how do you get them back on track?
So I don't do a ton of work in NBA when I, um,
intersect with that. I'm generally advising on like the data portion rather than like the interacting with
the human. So I don't have good tips. But luckily because I've never had to deal with that,
because I imagine it's quite frustrating. So what athletes do you deal with? Like what sports?
So Formula One is the one where I primarily am like face to face with athletes. In other professional sports,
I'm like an advisor to the team that works with them on like a data, health, nutrition.
Oh, okay. Got it. Got it. Got it. And when you compare notes, what are the differences between like
dealing with Formula One athletes versus dealing with like NFL or NBA or baseball.
A lot of the stuff comes down to differences in travel schedule and training and the ability to
to capture data, for instance. So data capture in Formula One is really hard because of the
types of travel and right you don't get to aggregate across a team. Whereas you're part of a big
team, there's several people you can kind of work, but you work with an aggregate data across
to kind of understand what's happening with individuals as well as like overall. But I think
that Formula One is unique because it's so individual in terms of each driver has their one
specific team. And it's often very difficult to capture some of the data that we might want to
capture like getting blood tests on guys who are in a plane every other day, right?
Really difficult.
Whereas other places where they have a home base and this kind of stuff as usual,
you might be able to get at that better.
So I think that's maybe one of the biggest differences is the travel schedule
and how easy or not it is to like capture and aggregate data.
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When you're working with these Formula One athletes,
like how much are you changing the methods that you use like year to year?
It will depend on whether, so, I mean, my job is to stay on top of the latest research, right?
So what's come out recently that we think will meaningfully move the needle?
in reality, and I think this is the case in the majority of professional sports that I've interacted with,
the main thing is getting the boring basics done consistently.
And like again and again and again, like we know that's foundational to sustain performance.
And yeah, like some of the tools and technology for recovery and some of the supplements,
especially if you're trying to address nutrient insufficiencies based on an adequate diet,
which is also very common.
Right, those things do make a difference.
But the main struggle, at least from the guys that I regularly see,
is having an environment and framework that allows them to keep doing that stuff,
like stay on top of a specific training program or stay consistent with a specific training program
or stay consistent with a certain sleep routine that allows them to sleep well.
Those are the things that make the biggest difference.
And so it's like that's where we tend to focus.
And then, you know, maybe every year or so,
we're constantly improving our data capture and our data analysis.
We're constantly, you know, trying to improve sort of like the support processes
because we know that with the better support,
we can make sure they're more likely to do the stuff that's going to make a
difference. And then maybe every sort of like year or two, there's a new thing that comes in.
And we're like, oh, yeah, we're fairly confident this is low risk, high potential benefit.
It's not going to take a ton of their time. Right. That's another thing is when I first,
when I first walked into the paddock in, it was here in Austin. That was the first time I went to
Formula One to like start working with these guys. I like, I showed up and I'm like,
I've got like a hundred things that these guys are going to love. It's going to be really important.
It's going to revolutionize everything.
And then you speak to, like, a coach for the first time.
They're like, we've got time for maybe one thing.
And you better be really confident that this thing is going to make a difference, right?
Or else you wasted our time.
So how do you decide?
So a little bit of it is, of course, there's going to be some trial and error.
And it does depend on.
But the error is, like, consequences are huge.
Yeah.
And you just have to acknowledge that up front.
And the error is biggest when you're telling some guy to do something before he gets in the car, right?
Because that's going to immediately have an effect.
So there are ways to offset some of that, right?
They have practice periods.
And so it's like right now, it's a new generation of cars for this season.
Nobody's driven them before.
They're getting more extended track time to practice with them.
So like that might be a time when you could try a new supplement or something before you get in the car because it's a much low.
lower risk setting. You're not racing. There's not 19 other guys or now 21 other guys trying to get past you.
And then, right, so that, so some of it is that, right? Try and error, you acknowledge that you, you just have to be really confident that you know what problem you're trying to solve and that it's an important problem, right?
So I've worked with coaches and their driver where like reaction time was a very specific thing. Like off the line, we think we need X amount in
improvement. So then it's a combination of practice, maybe tinkering with some supplements,
maybe tinkering with some of that arousal stuff that we talked about earlier. So you need to
make sure it's an important problem. Then you need to think about what's the hierarchy of things
that have the highest likelihood of benefit and the lowest risk and then sort of work your way
through it. And I realize that this is all kind of in the abstract because it just like really
depends on the problem that's in front of you. What about the psychology aspect of it?
I mean, this is a very controversial aspect of mixed martial arts in particular.
Because there's kind of two schools of thought.
There's, like, I have a good friend who's a coach that recently told me he's not working with any fighters anymore that need a mental coach.
And I said, why?
And he's like, you just can't count on them.
He goes, they're just too fragile.
They need a mental coach.
He goes, I want a motherfucker who just knows that this is what he's supposed to be doing and just go out and do it.
I'm like, boy, but that kind of limits.
your athletes, right?
Like, do you think that there's benefit in mental coaching?
Or do you think, like, to reach a championship level, there's an inherent mindset that
you must have going into that.
And you can improve upon that.
But if you do not have that mindset, you're not going to be successful.
This is my friend's idea.
I don't want to call them out because you know the athletes he worked with.
Yeah, yeah.
But, you know, he recently had a bad result with one of his athletes.
He's like, I'm done.
No more guys who need mental coaches.
I want killers.
So I think that you're going to need some element of a mindset to get to that level to begin with, right?
But we have psychologists on our team who work with the drivers regularly.
Other drivers who aren't, you know, working with us bring in sports psychologists very regularly.
Do you collaborate with these psychologists?
Do you talk to them and compare notes?
Yeah, yeah. So we have...
What are common issues?
The...
I mean, again, it's just, it's so dependent on the individual.
But it...
But it's also very common across all athletes, right?
So it's like overcoming failure or fear of failure or...
Maybe it's dealing with difficult relationships,
which, you know, for various reasons that they can experience.
and then it's how their inherent thought process is when that happens.
So we know that the most resilient athletes are those that tends to be self-compassionate, right?
So like...
Interesting.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
I would have thought the opposite.
Yeah.
And so there's this idea, right, that, right, you want killers, you want people hard on themselves.
The guys who are hard on themselves.
But for sustained...
And so this is looking across.
like as broad as possible across sport,
those who are most,
most successful,
most often, of course there's going to be,
there's going to be the killer who's just like,
harden themselves and gets the job done.
Of course, right?
But these elements of self-compassion
that include things like mindfulness,
like thinking about the world
and understanding it and about their place in it
and common humanity,
which is like treating themselves
as they would treat other people.
and acknowledging the right we all make mistakes and stuff always happens but I can overcome this
I you know what this happened to me before like I've sucked I've crashed I've done something wrong
and hey I overcame it and you know now I'm succeeding again those um mental skills are
most common amongst the high level high level athletes so so I give an example this is not
so I don't know him but like um Roger Federer has a very famous quote right he gave it some
like graduation address or something
where he says that
across his career
he only won 54% of his points
on court, right?
So that means that 46% of points
he lost, right?
So that means that every time he makes a mistake,
every unforced error,
he has to come back and be like,
hey dude, like, you've got this.
I know I can do this.
And that's the point that he's making
in this address.
And it's those kinds of mental skills
that seem to be most
important. So when you've had a history of beating yourself up and being hard on yourself and that's
kind of gotten you to that point, there will often be a stage where there's so much accumulated
pressure or stress or failure that just working harder and being harder on yourself isn't going to
get you past it. But athletes who are successful for a long period of time tend to have those other
abilities to like think about the bigger picture understand what they've overcome previously
treat themselves more like they would treat others and they seem to the ones who overcome
failure and then continue to succeed um i'm really into professional pool i play pool and i follow
a lot of professional pool players and there's a trait amongst the elite pool players that's
pretty consistent uh for the ones that are successful in win tournaments is the ability to let a bad
shot go.
Exactly.
Because the guys who beat themselves up over bad shots, you see it.
They slump in their chair.
They start running their fingers through their hair.
They fucking, they throw their head back.
They take a beat deep breath.
And then they're carrying that with them when they go out to make a shot again.
And for a high-level pool player, so there's performance scores.
And a really high TPA performance score is like, I think the best in the world right now is
Joshua Filler, who's this guy from Germany, and he's arguably, if not the best, one of the top
two or three guys in the world. His performance score is about, I think it's like 850 out of a thousand.
So that means if he makes a thousand shots, he's going to make 850 of those shots, which is very
elite. Yeah. So you've got to think like even the best, because they're playing on four inch pockets,
but this guy never gets upset. Yeah. When he misses, he just sits.
He sits down and he's got a dead look on his face.
The Chinese Taipei players are the best at it.
I don't know how they coach them over there.
So there's some of the best in the world, the Chinese Taipei players.
So these guys from Taiwan, they have no expression.
When they miss a shot, they just go and sit down.
And maybe they'll smile, but they never get upset.
Whereas a lot of the American players, they get fucking pissed off.
And you see it.
Some of the European players do the same thing.
And those guys, they fall off a cliff.
Their performance is elite.
They'll make a couple of bad.
shots and then the match goes downhill and they wind up getting steamrolled.
Yeah. And and I think you can, there's other stuff going on, you can think about it in terms of that like a arousal curve we talked about earlier, right?
As you get stressed and like worked up about a missed shot, you're pushing yourself further and further away from the level of arousal that's required for performance.
Yes. And dwelling on failure. Right. And then you're thinking about what happened previously rather than the shot that comes next.
Well, that's one of the most important things about.
a shot because even if your mechanics are good, if you think you're going to miss, you're going to
miss.
Yeah.
It's weird.
Yeah.
It's a weird thing because you know what to do.
You know how to do it.
But if you think, fuck, I can't miss this shot, you're going to miss.
Yeah.
Like nine times out of ten, it's very weird.
So it's a very mentally, the game, a giant percentage of it once the skills are acquired,
because most of them, when they get to an elite level, have all the skills.
Yeah.
It's a mental thing.
It's ability to perform under pressure.
Yeah.
Because it's fine motor skills.
It's, you know.
There's, I mean, across every different aspect of cognitive performance, well-being,
there's, you know, again and again, you see that psychology drives physiology and drives performance.
Like, you can measure these things as you think them, as they then change physiology, which then alters how you perform.
So, so, I mean, that this is.
a very, very long answer to your question of, like, is, like, psychology and mental skills
important? Absolutely. Because I think that's going to be foundational to whether you can
even achieve those high levels of performance. And everybody needs help occasionally. And, right,
that's, that's perfectly normal. And they, right, different people are going to need different
tools and different skill sets. So, like, different psychologists are going to provide, you know,
different things for them to do. So, like, yes, that's always something that we have on hand as needed
as part of the team because that's going to be really important.
Yeah, the mind controls so much of what you do in life, even if you have skills.
And that's something that elite performers either figure out or don't, right?
They either never achieve their true potential because they keep tripping over themselves,
or they go, okay, this is not helping me.
It's only hurting me.
I keep allowing myself to spiral into this same sort of mental state.
and I have to find a method.
And so, like, when you talk with psychologists,
what do they, what tools and what sort of strategies do they give these athletes
to abandon negative thinking?
There are a few different ways to approach it.
And again, like, don't want to pretend I'm a psychologist, right?
These are the, we have other people with these skills for a reason.
But I think a lot of what becomes important, again, is thinking about the causes of, maybe initially the causes of mistakes and then the causes of stress and why that may or mean it be beneficial in the way that you can leverage it.
So there's a lot of research on understanding that stress.
that stress responses are there to divert resources to something that matters
and something that either requires your attention or adaptation to it, right?
So understanding that actually stress in the moment, in that kind of moment,
is a good thing, and you want to leverage it rather than be scared of it.
And we know that people who are trained in this mindset,
so this is work by Alia Kram at Stanford, the stress is enhancing mindset.
also like predicts how well Navy SEALs do during training like how much they sort of like appreciate that stress response is important.
This is me, you know, rising to the occasion.
Not only that you still get stressed where you still can measure stress hormones.
That's that still happens.
But you release other things that help to also like counteract that and drive adaptation.
And it results in better decision making when stressed.
So like reframing some of these responses can be important as well as then thinking about like after a mistake happened, you know, thinking about other examples of times when you did that and you overcame it or, you know, having having like these different parts of understanding what it is to be a human even when you're performing at an elite level.
Maybe some of it is building in routines so that you feel confident in a given situation, right?
These are the things that I do.
And when I do these things, I know I'm going to perform well.
That can be a double-edged sword for some people because, and I think this, we see a lot of this in the world of sort of like health optimization.
We assume that we need to do all these things in order to perform well.
And so then if those things don't happen, we think we won't perform well, right?
So that's another way for us to get in our way, our own way.
So you kind of have to balance that depending on the individual.
And then some of it can be, right, in the moment, right?
So you're one of those pool players and you're getting increasingly frustrated because you're not making your shots.
It's almost impossible to think your way out of that, right?
Your brain is too busy being dunked in adrenaline to like make good decisions.
So that's where you might have tools like leveraging your physiology, breath work, closing your eyes, visualization.
those things sort of work from the bottom up
to kind of help your mind get a grip
and get back in the game.
So it's a whole bunch of different things
depending on what you might need.
Is it, I need to regulate myself in the moment,
is it how do I set myself up for success
through a series of,
and it could be like what's my warm up,
what am I thinking through,
what am I visualizing before I perform?
Or is it tools to kind of deal with the processes
of failure afterwards.
And I would also think that even just the knowledge that these high stress situations
where you do encounter failure can produce a result inside the mind that can be beneficial
if harnessed.
Yes.
Yeah, exactly.
And so one of the ways that this is taught to other people, right, not just athletes,
is like, think about all the people who've performed under significant stress, right?
this is what the human mind and human body is capable of, if only we allow it to do that.
Right, right. That's what's important, right?
It's like, I think inspiration is one of the most powerful fuels that we can use.
And inspiration from other people's examples is one of the best versions of that.
Yeah.
Because I think there was a young kid who recently broke the world record of the mile.
Did you see that, Jamie?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
I watched that.
16, it was three.
Was 340 something?
348, maybe?
Yeah, 348, which is nuts.
Which is nuts.
We didn't think that people can get below four minutes before.
This 16-year-old kid hits 348.
And I immediately thought, wow, through the inspiration of this kid being able to do this, who's going to break 340 now?
You know?
I heard from somebody that in the run up to the race, he was like, he hadn't raced a bunch.
Recently, he, this was just.
stud.
This was just going to be like a, just like going to be a runout.
He was just like going to, you know, loosen his legs up, get back into the race.
And so like in that situation, he's put no pressure on himself, right?
All the, all the brakes are off.
Like, whatever.
He's got nothing to lose.
And so like in that situation, like, incredible performances are possible.
And it's crazy because that's only the 11th fastest indoor mile.
That's what it says here.
I thought it was the fastest ever, but it's the fastest ever for under 18.
Yeah.
Under 18 record, yeah.
So crazy.
That's so fast to run a mile.
I mean, I'm not sure I could go that fast full stop ever, like for any period of time.
Yeah, 20 feet.
Yeah, exactly.
I can't run that fast.
It's kind of amazing.
But, I mean, this is one of the things we talk about all the time with mixed martial arts athletes in particular, is that today is such an amazing time for them because there's so much access to video.
So you can watch all these performances by all these elite athletes.
and then it raises your personal standards because you're mirroring what these people are capable of doing.
And in your head, you have a very high standard because you've seen it.
And that inspires people to become better.
And so the athletes that we're seeing today, I say all the time that martial arts has evolved more in the last 30 years than it has in the last 30,000 years.
And it's true.
And it's true, just based on my own personal experience of seeing athletes from 1997 when I first started working with the UFC to 2026, it's a completely different standard.
There's so much better.
There's so much more elite.
They have so much more balanced.
They have so much more balance in terms of their game is balanced, striking, grappling, wrestling, all of it together.
It's amazing because they're walking on the foundation that was set.
by the athletes before them.
So it's the mind, recognizing what's possible.
Absolutely.
Or not thinking that something is impossible, right?
It's the opposite, too.
And maybe that's more of it, right?
It's the same with Roger Bannister in the four-minute mile, right?
As soon as he did it, everybody, not everybody, but lots of people started to do it.
Well, and also the ignorance of youth, which is why young athletes are so damn good sometimes.
Yeah, because they don't worry about their own limitations.
And they also don't have mortgages.
They don't have wives.
They don't have kids.
They don't have bills.
But this is also the thing is, right, if we think about these traits that we'd maybe like to carry over that help us perform or maintain performance for long periods of time later in life, like some of that curiosity, not worrying about like these burdens, continuing to engage in these things that challenge ourselves that kids just like readily do, right?
The brain is exploring and trying to learn.
I think we need more of that as adults.
but when you think about the standard being set
or thinking that things aren't impossible,
there's two parts of that.
One, yes, that's a huge aspect
of achieving higher and higher levels of athletic performance.
But for many of us regular people,
when you spend a lot of time seeing other people
performing so much better than you,
it can have the opposite effect, right?
I think this is something that we see on social media.
There's some really interesting studies on social rank.
So we are always trying to see where we rank in the world compared to others.
It's the part of us like being social beings.
And so if you spend all day looking at people who are richer, more beautiful, more jacked than you are, internally you demote yourself.
You give yourself a lower social rank.
And that creates a social stress that triggers.
genuine stress responses, right?
Increase sympathetic activation, activation of some,
like inflammatory process in the body,
very similar to if you're socially isolated.
So for some people who have the, you know,
are on a trajectory to improve their performance,
you know, because they're elite athletes
and they're seeing these other guys doing it.
Oh, yeah, yeah, I can do that.
Right. That's really beneficial.
But in like the general world, the rest of us,
when we spend so much time seeing other people do other things better than us,
it can almost have the opposite effect.
But not with everybody.
No.
That's the thing.
That's the thing between the difference between an athlete and someone who is intimidated by other people's performances.
Instead of being inspired.
Yeah.
But that's what I mean is that when you're one type of, when you're an athlete and you're seeing other guys like you do this thing, right?
That's like, oh yeah, that creates a bar.
You want to try and hit.
But that same thing is very different.
and out for the rest of us
based on like seeing how we compare
to others. Well, particularly in things
you can't control. Like your looks
or your wealth. Yeah. But
wealth in some ways can you achieve.
Your mind doesn't interpret it that way.
You don't, you don't immediately
rationally think, well, I can never
be that, right? I'm never going to look like Brad Pitt.
Right. Right.
You can't apply that sort of
like rational thinking to it. Or then even worse
for young girls because a lot of them are getting
surgery because they know that some girls have radically improved their looks through surgery.
And so they think like, this is the solution to everything. And I just need to get a nose job
and a chin job and a this and of that. Which of course never results. And also it's like the psychological
aspect of being controlled by paying attention to other people's lives is very weird. And it's,
you know, Jonathan Haight wrote a great book about it called The Coddling of the American Mind about
the impact of social media and particularly on young girls. It's really bad.
Colliding the, so he did write Codling of the American Mind.
That was more about changes in like academia, academia and helicopter parenting and safetyism.
The anxious generation was the one about social media.
That's right. Yeah, that aspect of it of comparing yourself to other girls is particularly devastating.
It's like you see when the impact of social media, when social media gets introduced into the world, immediately you see more self-harm, suicidal ideation, all these different things.
increase. Whereas like, so those same stressors, if you are in a position like an athlete and you're a
competitive athlete and you see someone who's elite, you would be inspired. But you feel helpless to
achieve these goals that, you know, like you can't get any taller. You can't get any better looking.
You can't look. It's just this is what you got. And then you see these with, and then you see people that
are using filters. So it's not even what they really look like.
Yeah, so I think that's why there's this, it's interesting that very similar exposures,
depending on who you are and what you're trying to achieve and what you have the ability to achieve
can have dramatically different effects on mental and other well-being.
Right. But you would imagine that for competitive athletes, you've already developed a certain
amount of resilience already. You already have a competitive spirit. And you are working towards,
a thing that's a high level of achievement and something you're already doing. So seeing a Michael
Jordan, seeing a LeBron James, if you're a basketball player, you would be inspired. And instead of
being like, I'll never be as good as that guy, you'd be like, fuck, I want to be as good as that guy.
What do I have to do? Well, Kobe Bryant worked out every day and he did this and he did that's
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is that something else,
we didn't talk about this in terms of like the approaches of the most successful athletes
is that they don't just say,
I want to be like LeBron or Kobe.
They say, what did he do?
What can I do?
So they focus on the process, right?
You have to love and focus on the process because you can't guarantee a certain outcome.
Right. So like in and I talk about this, I talk about this in the book and I give the example of the 2012 Olympics, right?
The guys who came second, third and fourth ran personal best times.
Like several other national records were set during the, during like the whole 100 meter sprint competition, all the different rounds.
But like, you saying Bolt ran, right?
And so like, you can, like, you can be the best you've ever been and be amazing.
Like you can run fast enough to a won a gold medal any other year.
But like sometimes you're out of luck because you say Bolt shows up.
So like you've got to focus on the process because you can't guarantee the outcome.
But by focusing on the process, right, you're going to get much closer.
Yeah, that's interesting because if you are a person trying to be the best in the world
and you happen to be in the same weight class as Mike Tyson, it's going to be tough.
Yeah, but I mean, that's always been the case.
That's the thing in championship level fighting, you find that once someone is a real outlier, that what happens is all the other people in that weight class tend to achieve a very high level, even if they never wind up being as good as Anderson Silva or whoever it is, they wind up, winds up being a very competitive contender class underneath it and much more competitive than divisions that are not being dominated by elite fighters.
Yeah. Yeah. It's a very large book, right? So I know it can't just be the stuff that we've already covered. What other things do you think are in here that are important when you're talking about future proofing your mind?
I will say you're looking at a dummy copy. So all the pages are going. Yeah, you just tricked me. Look at this, folks. I was saying this is a really large book. It's a fucking empty book.
That's crazy. I read this. I'm like, maybe it's a trick. Yeah, you're just not paying attention enough.
The book is as thick as the real one will be.
I believe you.
So, and that's on purpose.
I've never been given a dummy copy of a book before.
So does it even have writing?
No writing.
Good.
I'm going to use this as my new joke book.
New notes.
Well, once the full thing is printed, we'll send you a real one.
Okay.
You did trick me, though.
Thank God I didn't try to read from it.
So the first part of the book is about some of the history of neuroscience and why we
we think about the brain the way we do and some of the limitations that's created.
It's like why we think about Alzheimer's disease as just being like the accumulation of amyloid and tau proteins in the brain, which people might have heard of, right?
That's what it's been boiled down to when there's actually a much bigger picture of many other things that are important.
Wasn't that Alzheimer's were the amyloid plaque, where that idea was sort of proven to be a little bit bullshit?
it? So there have been a, so
not really, but kind of. So there
were several seminal papers
in, they were hoaxed, right? They were
manipulated in some way, right? They,
and this is, unfortunately,
is quite common where you change the figures,
you manipulate these blots to make them show
different things, and you kind of move them around and copy
and paste, it kind of shows what you want to show. And so
like for some of the like seminal papers
in Alzheimer's, that turned out to be the case.
But it doesn't
like discount the fact that it's
still a part of it. But people have increasingly looked away from just the accumulation of certain
proteins in the brain for two reasons. One is that we had as a field, they had to create new
ideas like resilience. And there's this thing called cognitive resilience, which is how much
cognitive function do you maintain in the face of these proteins building up in the brain? And that's
because the amount of amyloid you have in your brain doesn't really predict cognitive function
and cognitive decline that well. So some of that is related to other things. So we know that like
exercise is an important part of that. And then we know that there are these other things that are
important as well. So inflammation, other cells in the brain that become critical. So like the white
matter is a really critical structure in the brain. It's what allows us to have really fast processing
speed, decision making, executive function, the function of the prefrontal cortex, all of that
is kind of dependent on white matter structure. And that seems to be really related to like,
vascular function, vascular health, resistance training is really important to support that.
So like all these other things become important as well. So like that's kind of the,
it's just showing like the first part of the book is saying, hey, we kind of focused a lot here.
But actually, it's not that that's not important, but like this whole bunch of other stuff that's
important to. And a lot of it is related to things that we have control over. So then, then,
you know, I talk about all the different types of exercise, how different types of exercise
affects different parts of the brain in different ways. Nutrition. Talk a lot about cognitive
stimulus, social connection, sleep. Like I said, stress management and stress mitigation and how
you can kind of manage your performance in the moment. And then all of that comes together in terms
into like a model that I call the 3S model of how these different like things kind of interact
and affect you on a day to day basis.
So the first S being stimulus, right, we've talked about all the reasons why that's important.
The second S being supply, which is if you stimulate a part of the brain or a network in the brain
with a new skill, that area of the brain, the neurons and the astrocytes there, they
ask for more blood flow. So the blood vessels have to widen, they dilate, to bring in more oxygen,
bring in more glucose or whatever metabolic substrate you're using ketones, lactate, etc.
And so you need really good cardiovascular health. That's critical. So that's a big part of what we
talk about. You also need good metabolic health. So high blood pressure and high blood sugar
are two of the biggest risk factors for later dementia because they affect this supply component,
either the blood flow getting there or being able to regulate energy.
And then there's a bunch of nutrients that are important in that bucket as well.
So omega-3s, vitamin D, iron, magnesium, because they have very B vitamins,
they have very specific functions in the brain that we know that if you're deficient,
you have an increased risk of cognitive decline in dementia.
And then you've stimulated a part of the brain, you've kind of given it all the substrate
it needs to do its job.
Like we've talked about, adaptation occurs and function and gets,
enhanced when we sleep or when we recover. So like that's support is the third bucket. So sleep is a
part of that. Other support you might get like hormonal status is important. Trophic factors, right,
hormones that get released or proteins that get released that support neuroplasticity in the brain,
things like brain-derived neurotrophic factor. And then you want to avoid things that kind of inhibit
that process. So chronic stress can do that. It creates like an overtraining kind of picture in the
brain, smoking, excessive alcohol, air pollution, those kinds of things can have a negative
effect. So that's how they all interact. And the fact that they interact means that depending on
what feels most impactful to you, like what's the thing that you think you can move the needle on?
By focusing on one area, the whole network starts to shift. And we see that in multiple different
studies. So if you focus on sleep and you sleep a bit better, then the next, then we see that like
inflammation decreases and blood pressure improves and blood sugar improves. And the next day,
you feel more sociable. So you're more likely to interact with other people in a friendly way.
And you're more likely to engage in cognitively stimulating tasks because when we're tired,
we kind of shy away from those things. And it's the same. So there are studies in older adults where
you give them a brain training program and they sleep better.
Because when you stimulate a tissue, you then drive greater need for recovery after it.
It's the same.
If you exercise more, you sleep better.
So it's not like this long list of things that everybody has to do.
Because when you give somebody a list of 37 things, they'll do zero things, right?
We know that.
Yeah.
So if you just know that they all kind of communicate and interact, anywhere you come in, you
can start to kind of shift things in your favor.
Now, when you're compiling a book like this, I would imagine there's a lot of editing.
So how do you decide, like, what to leave them?
I mean, this looks like it's, I mean, obviously these are all blank pages so they're not numbered,
but it looks like this is at least a 300-page book.
The final book is about 450 pages.
Oh.
165,000 words.
Whoa.
And the reference list, like, so unlike most health books, every time I make like a statement
or I mention a study, there's a little number, and that gives you the paper or papers that I'm talking about that supports that, right?
It's 2,000 papers long.
And so, like, that all has to go online because they couldn't.
Of course.
They couldn't afford to print it in the book.
But that's probably better anyway.
Yeah, yeah.
Like, because, like, there's, like, seven people who will do that, right?
They'll read the book.
That's exactly what I was going to say.
And then they'll go and look.
Psychos.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's important to me.
Like, anyway, people who want to do that can do that.
But in, I'm not quite sure how it ended up
being this way. But I actually had to cut very little. But there were things where I kind of went
down a little bit of a rabbit hole that my editor was like, nah, I'm not sure we really need this.
But I basically wrote until I got to the word limit and then I stopped. And I focused on the things
that I knew that were important. And we're going to stay important even in the age of AI and as
technology improves and changes. So there wasn't a ton that ended up getting cut out.
But when you're putting it together, like, how do you decide what's prominent?
What's the most important thing to focus on?
Where to put things?
So when I started writing, as you saw, I'm going to disagree with my former self.
I wrote the first part of the book like three times.
And like the first time I wrote it, it was like 40,000.
thousand words all focused on psychology and like super like esoteric and academic and I
was like nobody's gonna read this so like had to be scratched a couple of times so
then the the core middle part of the book is all those different areas that we
know are important like the big rocks and practical frameworks for how to address
those and then then there's just like a then there's an introduction to like like
why should you care about this like for
like, individuals over 40, dementia is the most important health concern, right?
More than 10% say they've experienced changes in cognitive function.
We know that the rates of dementia are going to double or triple in the next two or three decades.
So why do people care about this?
And like some history there.
And then the middle part is, which I always knew I was going to write, these are the most important things.
And they're always going to remain the most important things.
And then the last chapter is sort of like just kind of bringing it together.
Does that answer your question?
It does.
It does.
Well, I'm glad you wrote it because I think it's a very important thing.
And I think there's a lot of people out there that don't understand the risks of being sedentary.
And that these are things that you can change.
Yeah.
And that you can improve the quality of your life by making those changes.
And it might make you uncomfortable to begin something like that.
But there's some real value.
you in that uncomfortable feeling of trying something new.
Absolutely.
And then it really does change the way your brain functions and it'll improve the quality
of your life.
And in this case, if possible, hold off dementia and just hold off cognitive decline without
calling it dementia.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So many people experience cognitive decline because of atrophy.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So that's kind of like the worst possible end state we want to avoid.
Right.
But you want to maintain your current level of cognitive function for as long as possible.
Possibly improve it.
And possibly improve it.
And there is evidence you can improve it even later in life.
And so a big part of this is that when you – you know, earlier we talked about, you know, this graph of cognitive function, right?
It increases to your sort of 20 or 13 and then it declines.
When we're doing studies that show that kind of thing, what we're doing is we're looking at a whole bunch of people, maybe tens or hundreds of thousands of people.
when we're saying like, you plot them all on a graph.
And yeah, as you get, as you sort of increase in age,
there are some people who are going to lose function,
you kind of like draw the average down.
But we've known essentially since, for the last 50 years,
that when you look at the same person over several decades,
it's actually very normal for us to maintain function.
So like the Seattle longitudinal study was run by a guy called Warner Shai in Seattle.
and it was one of the first studies where they measured cognitive function in the same people
every seven years for several decades.
And like every seven years they measured the same people and brought in new people.
And so they ended up with people who were like in their 20s up to over 100 years old.
And they found that the average effect, by that I mean that more than 50% of people
maintain the same level of cognitive function into their 50s, 60s, 70s and 80s.
And those data were used to actually raise the retirement age in the US in the 1980s.
because they showed that it actually wasn't normal for people to decline.
But the problem is now we've embodied this idea that as you get older, you will decline.
And as a result, you stop engaging in all the things that we've talked about.
Because you're like, oh, I'm too old to lift that.
I'm too old to learn a new skill.
I don't have time to do that.
And as a result, right, it's a self-fulfilling property.
You stop engaging in those processes and decline happens as a result.
But if we know that it's possible to maintain function and we can't.
continue to engage in those processes, the norm should be that function is maintained.
Last question. Did you do an audio version of this?
Yeah, I'm recording it at the moment.
All right. When will that be available?
Be out on the same day, March 24th.
March 24th, stimulated mine, Dr. Tommy Wood. Go get it, folks. I promise it won't be like this.
Thank you, Tommy. I really enjoyed this.
Thanks so much. Thank you very much. I think it's really important information too.
And I think it's something that everyone should apply.
you. All right. Thank you. Bye, everybody.
