The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish - Bryan Johnson: Five Habits for Longer Living
Episode Date: February 20, 2024What can you do (or avoid) tomorrow to guarantee you can live longer? In this episode, Bryan Johnson reveals the five simple disciplines you can start doing to live healthier and longer. Johnson shar...es what his daily routine looks like, the ins and outs of his experimentation process, and why he gave his father plasma. Johnson also opens up about the constant hate he receives from people online, how he deals with it all, and what he wishes he'd known when he sold his company. Bryan Johnson is the world's most measured human. Johnson sold his company to PayPal in 2013. Through Project Blueprint, Johnson has achieved metabolic health equal to the top 1.5% of 18 year olds, inflammation 66% lower than the average 10 year old, and reduced his speed of aging by the equivalent of 31 years. Johnson is also the founder of Kernel, creator of the world’s first mainstream non-invasive neuroimaging system; and OS Fund, where he invested in the predictable engineering of atoms, molecules, and organisms. Watch the episode on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/theknowledgeproject/videos Newsletter - Each week I share timeless insights and ideas that you can use at work and home. Add it to your inbox: https://fs.blog/newsletter/ My New Book! Clear Thinking: Turning Ordinary Moments into Extraordinary Results is out now - https://fs.blog/clear/ Follow me: https://beacons.ai/shaneparrish Join our membership: https://fs.blog/membership/ Sponsors: Eight Sleep: Sleep to power a whole new you. https://www.eightsleep.com/farnamstreet Timecodes: (00:00:00) Intro (00:03:45) On biographies (00:08:03) On depression and coping mechanisms (00:14:18) Self-destructive behavior and how to pitch Blueprint to someone (00:26:50) What a day looks like on Blueprint (exercise and what to eat) (00:42:06) How to turn Blueprint protocols into habits (00:45:17) Embracing the hate (00:49:07) The downsides and lessons of making money (00:59:22) The five habits (01:05:09) Why does posture matter? (01:07:48) Relationship between biological health and sexual health (01:09:50) Hair-loss prevention (01:15:46) Sunscreen, plastics, and other miscellaneous impacts on aging (01:18:30) How will AI help us? (01:22:10) On success Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Okay, phase one is like, do something that is unrecognizable in your time and place.
Okay, so we've seen this throughout history.
Phase two is people come with pitchforks.
Phase three is you've got to survive a whole bunch of attacks.
You know, like the power to be you're going to want to start taking you down.
If you get past phase two and phase three, you get to open up a little bit and you kind of have some open horizon.
And so that's where I'm at now is I've served.
survived the major dunk, where people tried to cancel me in society. I've survived several
attempts at takedowns, and now I'm still at it. And so I'm really happy I'm on stage four now,
and now it's just opening up into a bigger gameplay.
Welcome to the Knowledge Project, a podcast about mastering the best of what other people
have already figured out so you can apply their insights to your life.
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Today, my guest is Brian Johnson.
In 2007, Brian founded the payment processing company Brain Tree, which almost killed him through depression.
He sold the company in 2013 for, I think, about 800 million.
In 2021, he decided to dedicate his significant resources to Blueprint,
an algorithmic approach to optimal health and living.
Brian turned his decision rights over to an algorithm and now lives in accordance with
its guidelines.
In this conversation, we talk about Blueprint, the diet and sleep routine you need to reverse
aging, how to overcome depression, how he stopped binge eating, the automatic rules he
uses, lessons, he wish he knew earlier about money, his daily schedule for anti-aging, why posture
matters, overcoming hair loss, the relationship between sexual health and biological health,
hot and cold exposure, sunscreen, frying pans, and so much more. What I love about Brian is that
he's living life on his own terms and he's not harming anybody else. It's time to listen and learn.
I was thinking about where to start, and I think we'll start with your love of biographies.
Where did this start?
And what are a few of the lessons that you've learned from them?
I suppose I approach this question with the contemplation, how do you understand reality?
There's a few ways of doing it.
We're born into this world, and we're given a narrative about existence.
And that narrative depends upon when you're born and where you're born and to whom you're
born.
But you're told certain things about yourself and why you exist and what they care about and
how society works and what ethics are and norms.
And there's never been universals.
If you look at the thousands of different societies that have emerged on Earth, it's extremely
varied.
If you're poking at this situation and you're saying, okay, I know that I am born into a given
system and this system is not a universal truth system. It's just where I'm at time and place
and it's going to change in time. Then you can go about poking at a few ways. You can try to say
I'm going to take a quantitative approach and say, I'm going to learn the world through mathematics
or through physics or through some scientific discipline or I'm going to understand it through
behavioral psychology. So you kind of have to approach systems understanding. And biographies for me
was something that always intuitively helped me make sense
because I was able to transport myself in time
and be in different times and places instantaneously
and understand with a pretty decent level of detail
what was happening at that point,
you know, how people thought, what they cared about,
how it contrasted with my time and place.
And so I'd say biographies have been the most useful thing
I've ever invested my time in that has helped me understand reality with various dimensions
and perspectives at any given moment.
Are there a few that stand out to you that you reread time and time again?
Probably the biography of zero by Charles Seif, the number zero.
It was not common sense to me that the number zero has not always been around, but it took
humanity a long time, thousands of years to discover the number of zero, and even when you do
discover it, to really understand the potential. So from Cartesian geometry, from Euclid elements to
Cartesian geometry, or the function that zero plays in the vanishing point in art, or how zero enables
the modern world in computation. And it took a long time. And so I'd say zero is probably my favorite one,
because it's an entity, it's an idea, it's a concept, it's a number that has revolutionized
almost every part of society.
I was listening in previous interviews and you said, I think it was age 24, you got depressed.
What happened?
Yeah, I think it was, the onset was circumstantial.
I had my first baby and he was colloquy, so he just cried nonstop.
and I don't think his mother and I got a night of sleep of good rest for six months.
Meanwhile, I was building a startup and I was grinding at that with all the stresses of not having
income and trying to make something work that was new.
And then I was in a new marriage.
And then I was also dealing with some internal turmoil related to my religious situation where
I wanted to leave my religion, but I was pretty stuck in the system with my community
and the family and all the societal like all of all my community structure and it was just a chaotic
time and life and yeah one day it it i remember it as the day my brain snapped i just felt like
something broke and i couldn't put my finger on it but it just felt something felt different
and i was in that whole for 10 years did you know you were depressed yes unquestionably yeah it
strikes me with somebody who takes such a scientific approach to things that you would do the same
with depression. What was the process of after you recognize you were depressed? What was the
process to sort of get out of that depression? You know, I was raised in this small rural
community that was really the existence was religion. And so I was taught to understand reality
through story, not through mathematical methods, not through scientific methods.
In fact, I didn't meet an engineer until I was in my early 20s.
And so I just hadn't yet developed the cognitive abilities to think like a scientist or engineer.
It's always hard.
It's always complex looking at your past, but I do reflect like what would it have been like
if I would have had some awareness and some training early in life of how to think about the world
quantitatively. And it was one of the most significant moments of my life when I read this book
by Gary Becker, a Nobel Prize laureate from the University of Chicago. And in this, he was writing
essays, excuse me, for Newsweek. And he would take a given topic like poverty, for example. And he wouldn't
describe it in qualitative terms and story terms. He would talk about it.
in numerical terms.
And it was, I think, one of the most joyous moments of my life to understand that reality
could be understood in mathematical terms.
And I did go to the University of Chicago and I got a master's degree there.
But I do wonder in that decade of repression, if storytelling wasn't my primary skill set
for problem solving, what would have happened in my life?
What advice would you have today for somebody who might feel depressed, having been through that yourself?
First, I understand you.
The mind is relentless.
And so when people feel suicidal, I am deeply empathetic.
It is rational to want to kill oneself.
It's reasonable.
So when you're in that moment, it feels lonely when you try to explain to somebody.
how you feel and how life is not worth it. And a response is something like, get over it or just
feel better or like go outside. It's hard. It makes you feel very isolated and not able to reach
out and get the help you need. And so one is I would say I understand you deeply and I empathize
with you deeply. And then I would say there's some basic things you can do to increase your circumstances,
one would be sleep. I would make sleep your number one life priority. Like the most important
thing you do in any given day is high quality sleep. And I would build your life around it.
Because when you have good sleep, so many of the things in life are much better. And then if you
get good sleep, you can start doing some baby steps into exercise, even going out of a walk every
day, doing something small, and then starting to add a few good foods and a few fewer bad foods.
But just baby stepping your way because when you're depressed, you don't have the ambition and energy to do big stuff.
And so really, it's the winds are in the baby steps and it starts to sleep because once you can sleep well, your energy goes up and your motivation goes up and your discipline and willpower increases.
So try to get the flywheel moving in a positive direction where every day you have just a little bit more energy to make one more positive baby step.
it's almost auto-catalytic for the negative right like you because you're depressed you become
more depressed like it feeds into itself it does and it sometimes i suppose in a dark humor
sort of way we humans kind of got stuck in this really weird level of consciousness you know like
a dog seems to be optimal and its level of happiness and it's level of happiness
us about existence. And we humans are smart enough to do the remarkable things we've done,
but yet our mental existence can be extraordinarily challenging. And it seems to be we share
many of these challenging traits that it's not often that we're given a default mental state
that is just nice all the time. It's a pretty brutal place in our minds, most of our minds.
And I wonder if in how we're moving as a species, if we can evolve past this. And if we do look
back.
I'm like, yeah, we got stuck in that narrow band that was pretty uncomfortable.
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When did you start to overeat or binge eat, as you've mentioned before?
It was a soothing mechanism for my depression.
I wanted to fill some form of stimulation.
I was so dead inside something, some sort of arousal, some sort of pleasure.
And my life was just devoid of pleasure.
I mean, in the religion I was in, it's like you don't do caffeine.
you don't smoke, you don't drink, you don't go to clubs, you don't, you know, like you don't
look at porn, you're basically just devoid of those kinds of pleasures and you're, you're
supposed to derive pleasure from being in service of others and obeying God's commandments
and like those are your rewards that generate. Now, of course, those things do generate
rewards and you, we all understand that when we do help up someone else, we do feel that.
But, you know, when you're grinding 24-7 on a startup,
Startups are just pure pain.
Like you don't feel joy for years.
And when you're raising babies, you have these glimpses of joy,
but most of it's just really hard work with a little, with a newborn.
And so I think my life is just devoid of pleasure.
And I was trying to find a vector where I could feel something.
And that's what it would do for me.
Those patterns of self-destructive behavior get in the way of so many of us.
I guess the question is, how do we stop the patterns of self-destructive behavior?
Yeah.
You know, this is the essence of my entire life's mission, this single question.
What I did is, you know, after failing for a few years and a few hundred times of saying tomorrow
I'll start, tomorrow is the day, one last time, just this one last time, and failing a few
hundred times to stop that, one day I jokingly said, Evening Brian, you're fired, that you
make my life miserable. And Evening Brian was the version of me that occupied my consciousness
from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. He was tired from the day. He was fighting multiple fires. He was trying
to deal with the emotional upset of all the things that had happened during the day. Like,
you know, very common human experience. And then in those, in that window of time, when he's beat down,
that's when he goes. I don't think Evening Brian's a bad guy. I just think he was just trying to find
relief of the burden that he felt in that role, and I fired him. And so the past few years
has basically been trying to reimagine my reality of who's in charge of me, who makes decisions
at what point, what is a sacrifice and what's appropriate. And what I've come down to is with
blueprint, I wanted to demonstrate that an algorithm takes better care of me than I can myself. And to do
that, I became the most measured person in human history. I wanted to show that if you ask the
body's 70 plus organs to speak and you consult scientific evidence, and then you let the algorithm
run, so it tells me what time to go to bed, it tells me what to eat, it gives me all these
nudges on what to do. And if I just simply say, I can't deviate, my mind can't imprompt
do saying, you know what, we're going to add a brownie to the lunch session here. So removing
that. And I basically am arguing, this is the core of it. I'm arguing that as a species,
this is the most important question facing the human race hands down. As algorithms improve and
they increasingly become better at us at a variety of tasks, including taking care of ourselves
and planet Earth, what do we do? I think it's the defining question and contemplation
of our existence.
What percentage of people do you think, if, and you have this, right, you have a blueprint
and the algorithm can take care of you better than you.
We can use self-driving cars as an example, right, which we know statistically they're
better at driving than we are as individuals or collectively, maybe not individually.
What percentage of people are comfortable handing over the reins to an algorithm, which
is sort of like a purely scientific process, right, which assumes nothing, measures everything,
and adapts as it gets input.
Yeah, this topic is sufficiently rich and nuanced.
I wrote an entire book about it, titled Don't Die.
And in the book, I break myself out into multiple characters, like Evening Brian's Present,
depression, you know, this guy scribe, dark humor, Brian, like all these people are there.
and they have this discussion on what does it mean to have individual choice?
What does it mean to be run by an algorithm?
What does an ideal existence even mean?
What does it mean to have choice?
So it's a really nuanced conversation.
But I'd say I've been hosting dinners at my house for the past few years and having two
and a half hour long conversations about this topic.
And it does take about two and a half hours to get people warmed up.
I can abbreviate it for you, though, and I can tell you the five big emotional swings that happen.
So one is I say, I pose the question, if you could have access to an algorithm that can take better care of you than you can yourself, would you say yes?
Now, immediately people are like, but what about?
So it branches into a thousand, you know, questions.
And I just say, just assume what you want.
Let's just keep it high level and abstract, yes or no.
And then people go through this process where the majority of people are vomiting distaste.
Like, this is the worst idea.
I hate it for all these reasons.
A teeny number of people are like, please save me from myself.
And the others are like, yeah, but I want to make the following exceptions, which really is no.
So, like, there's a lot of resistance.
And the next turn is I say, now imagine the 25th century is viewing us right now.
And they're observing through our comments on this question.
what our norms and ethics are and how we understand ourselves in time and place.
In the same way, we would look at the 16th century with cold, detached perspective on what they thought.
And then you flip it.
So now people are looking at themselves in the mirror.
So no longer are they defending their knee-jerk reactions.
They're invited to be reflective.
Like, how did I behave in this moment?
And what am I really saying I care about?
And then the next turn is you say, what things about our current reality may change that would make our current reality unintelligible to us?
So now you're in this creative space where it's like, okay, we assume all these things to be unquestionable truths about our existence.
But we know from history none of these things ever really hang out for very long.
society moves into new truths and new norms.
So wherever we're at now, it's a temporary state.
And once you're there, like now you've swung from like no way to,
I'm kind of being reflective on myself to how might things change.
And then the next step is about the philosophy of this change,
which is zero's principle thinking and then full circle back to the thought experiment.
But you can see through those beats with about 12 people,
it takes each person the ability to cycle through these ideas,
ideas and emotions and hear how other people respond. But the very end, the majority of people
who attend my dinners are like, I got to say I get it. I understand the situation.
When you say it, and I want to go through some of the details of blueprint, to me, it sounds like
an algorithm for living, and the algorithm's in charge of you. And the algorithm is basically
just creating a bunch of automatic rules for success or a recipe to follow. You follow the
the rules, the algorithm, you create an output, which is sort of your biomarkers and your
indicators, that feeds back into the system and it adjusts. It strikes me that that's sort of
easy and sort of really hard too. Like, do you have, I'm imagining your house and walking
through it and like, do you have bags of chips? Do you have ice cream and you just don't do it
because the algorithm told you? Or how important is the role of environment? And how important
is the other stuff going on here to actually shape that behavior?
Yeah, you know, if you're here at the house and you're hanging out with me,
there's not a lot of trouble we're going to get into with what I have in stock.
If we want to get wild and down some extra virgin olive oil or, yeah, but no, it's, I basically
don't trust myself still.
That strikes me as really interesting, right?
Because it's sort of like, okay, we can have this thing of what we want to do,
but now we've got to create an environment or a reality.
And it can be an artificial environment,
which the algorithm kind of is an artificial environment for you.
And then you have to follow that.
So you have to have multiple things in line.
Like, I'll give you an example.
So a few years ago, I was trying to work out three days a week.
And I ended up going to the gym because I was like,
am I actually working out three days a week?
And I was like, can you give me a list of like all the times that I swiped in?
And they gave me this list.
And it's like once, he was going like one, one and a half times a week.
And so I was talking with Daniel Conman a little later that year.
And he had this phone call and he was talking to this gentleman on the phone.
And at the end of the call, he said, I have a rule.
I never say yes on the phone.
I'll have to get back to you tomorrow.
And he hung up and I was like, well, tell me about this.
What is this rule?
And he's like, well, I found I was saying yes to please other people.
I want other people to like me.
I'm a human.
and I'm a social.
So I end up doing these things that aren't really good for me.
And so I created this rule to do this.
And I was like, well, this is amazing, right?
This is the most powerful thing.
I think you've done.
And you've got a Nobel Prize.
So, like, this is really interesting because you rewire your brain in the moment to think
in a certain way, which your automatic response becomes that.
And so I was like, I'm going to try this.
I'm going to go to the gym every day.
I'm going to work out every day.
And the duration or scope can change, but I'm going to exercise every day.
And the conversation went from, should I work out today, which in my head is like,
oh, I have a really busy day.
I didn't sleep well.
I'm not going to work out today.
I'll do extra tomorrow.
You negotiate with yourself to I'm going to do exercise every day.
And it completely changed my approach to exercise and my health.
And it sounds like the blueprint is very much an automatic set of rules where you have multiple
things aligned, but you're trying to follow this pattern.
I'm wondering what your response to that is.
and specifically around how we can correct our self-destructive behaviors.
Your experience is exactly mine.
To say yes and to what you said,
if our conversation is about a practical topic of how do you achieve better health
or how to increase crop yield or how to run a more efficient driving route,
those are interesting questions.
The backdrop of this thought experiment is, as a species, are we facing an existential outcome?
I mean, what are the stakes?
Is it we'll make a little bit less money or we'll have maybe a four pack instead of a six pack on our abs?
Or are we really talking about life and death?
And my premise is that we are an existential moment as a species on a variety of fronts.
and then it invites a contemplation of if that is the case, what do you do?
And so that question itself primes the response.
Like, how do you stop self-destructive behaviors?
Because if I say, how do I stop self-destructive behaviors without identifying these
things, a person has a given willingness to change their behavior.
But then it will stop if it's like it's a nice to have.
But if it's life or death, the behavioral change profile may be very different.
And so really, I think it depends on where the person's coming from.
Someone mentioned to me recently, I haven't verified this, that the only way to get someone to change is to tell them they're pregnant or diagnose them with a certain condition.
Otherwise, no change will happen.
that's interesting a friend of mine had a it brings to mind this story a friend of mine had
a heart surgery a while back and I went to visit him in the hospital and I was talking to
the surgeon and you know the surgeon sort of had said all the typical things about changing your
diet and changing your lifestyle yeah and when I was talking to the surgeon he goes you know
odds are about 10% that he's going to do this.
And I said, well, that's interesting.
And he's like, he's like, I've been a surgeon for 30 years.
And he's like, people used to change all the time because I used to have to break ribs.
I used to have to, like there was a physical pain, a big scar, a visual reminder.
And he's like, now the incision's like, you know, half a centimeter.
And, you know, you're in and out of the hospital and there isn't a lot of pain.
And so he's like, people change a lot less than they used to.
And I thought that that sort of related to what you were talking about.
I'm wondering if you can walk me through at a high level, sort of the overarching day of blueprint.
And what does it mean to live like Brian Johnson?
The premise on this is I was posing the question in the early 21st century, is it the case that we have achieved longevity, escape velocity?
which means that for every one year of chronological time that passes,
can I stay the same age biologically?
And if not, where are we at?
And so that's the backdrop on what my daily routine is.
And so what we did to establish this routine is we looked at every single scientific publication
that's ever been done on health span and lifespan.
We then graded the evidence of these papers,
and we then stack rank them according to effect size.
And then we've systematically been implementing each one of these protocols.
So becoming the most measured person in history and then using all the scientific evidence,
I wake up.
So my day begins really the night before.
I go to bed currently at 9.30 p.m.
I just change my bedtime from 8.30.
But it's 9.30 on the dot.
So it's not, I don't have a two-hour window of time.
And I recently logged eight months of perfect sleep using my wearable,
which no human in history had ever done.
So I wanted to demonstrate that you can get reliable high quality sleep
for this extended period of time.
And then I wake up naturally.
I never wake up with an alarm, roughly 4.35, 30 in the morning.
And I will, I'll weigh myself, do body composition, like weight, hydration, fat, et cetera.
I'll take my inner ear temperature.
I'll take two pills.
I'll do a few minutes of UV light therapy to,
start my circadian rhythm. It's still darker in the morning. I'll go downstairs. I'll make
myself a morning concoction. I'll take 60 pills. I'll do light therapy on my hair. Once a week,
I'll do my blood pressure. I'll then work out for about an hour in a specific protocol. I'll come
in. I will make breakfast, which is a few pounds of vegetables. I'll shower and do a skincare routine
and get ready for work. I'll eat my second meal the day. And then I work for the day.
and then I have a evening, and then throughout the day, I'll do various doctor's appointments,
medical procedures, and measurement, and then I have a wind-down routine that I follow ritually.
And what we've done is we've tried to stack hundreds of protocols into my data routine.
Because we do so many things and we're trying to follow the evidence, I'm not able to just
randomly do things. It has to be highly structured in order for us to control this experiment
with the rigor we need for the results.
And so we've just done this for several years and fine-tuned it.
And we go through the process of measure myself, look at the evidence,
we do the protocol, measurement evidence protocol again and again and again.
And I have a few dozen biomarkers that are pretty phenomenal.
So, for example, my cardiovascular capacity is in the top 1.5% of 18-year-olds.
My bone mineral density is the top 0.02% of 30-year-olds,
which is age-man for that test.
And, you know, my strength tests, same thing, like top 1.5 and 10% of 18-year-old.
So the biomarkers across my entire body, whether it's my cardiovascular ability, my strength, my muscle, my muscle and body fat are the top 99.5 percentile.
So it's produced a pretty impressive list of biomarkers that indicate that I'm in pretty good health.
I thought your workouts were like 25 reps of exercise and stuff.
Are you, is that giving you the incredible strength?
Yes.
So it's about an hour a day, and you're right.
It's like, you know, 20 plus.
And it's mostly I try to flex and stretch every muscle of my body.
So I don't do heavy weights that are hard in the joints.
But yes, even doing these things, I do it every single day.
I don't take any rest days.
And yeah, I'm on my bench press.
It's top 10% of 18-year-olds.
And we use 18-year-olds.
A lot of people, I mean, with 99% certainty,
when I say this, people are like, but wait a second, why not a 30-year-old? It's because you max out
your weight to rep ratio at age 18. So even though you can lift more in your 20s and maybe
even your 30s, your ratio peaks at 18. The same is true with your V-O-2 max, your cardiovascular
fitness. And so we do a reference to an 18-year-old, not because it's an easy way to pick
off a number. We do it because according to these age, these biological age standards,
you're looking at when the human, when a male peaks peak performance.
And I think your last meal is at like 1130 a.m.? That's right. So I have roughly,
you know, 10 hours or so of fasting before I go to bed. Do you feel hungry when you go to
bed? I used to. I'm now normalized to it. And does that help your sleep? Like what happens if you
eat later? I assume this was all like sort of measured and I eat my last meal.
the day at 11 a.m. for the objectives of good sleep because, I mean, there's supposedly
good benefits on fasting. I think the evidence is still maybe developing. So I mostly do it for
sleep because when I eat my last meal the day, I have all my digestion finished. So when I go
to bed, my resting heart rate is around 46 beats per minute. And if it's 46, I'm going to have a
perfect night's sleep. If I eat at 5 p.m. or 6 p.m., then my resting heart rate is
going to be 56. And when I do that, I'm going to knock off about 50% of my REM and 50% of my
deep. But I'll increase my wake time by about 35 minutes. And so I've done these, I've done so
many experiments now. It is algorithmic on I know exactly what happens when I eat what at what time
and how it affects my sleep. It sounds like blueprint is optimized for the sole variable of sleep.
Is that correct? I mean, so sleep is an important one. It's the number,
priority because everything else, you know, hinges upon that. But it also, we are the first
endeavor in history to focus on trying to rejuvenate every organ of the body. So we have 70 plus
organs and we've tried to quantify and rejuvenate every organ of my body. So we just tried to
rejuvenate my thymus, which is a gland right behind your, your chest here, responsible for
your immune system. And so, you know, if I can say I'm chronologically 46 years old,
But the more important number is what is the biological age of my heart and of my lungs
and of my liver?
And that's really the more powerful predictor than a chronological number.
And where were you when you started a blueprint?
Were you basically your biological age for your, like was everything the same?
No.
I was coming from a pretty bad place.
After being depressed for a decade and being a startup entrepreneur mindset,
entire life and having just gone through a bunch of stuff, I was pretty beat up and I was in a
bad state. So I definitely subscribe to grind culture where you do things in society to try to earn
people of respect and have a position of a status in a social group to when you conform with
these social norms. And so like when you hear a story about a colleague who worked on a problem
for two days straight and didn't sleep.
It's like, wow, they're so awesome and amazing.
You know, like that it's very hard to not to be induced to think that that's an emulation
worthy behavior.
So I had to pill myself out of grind culture and find out that this is the thing is we are accustomed
death is the enabler of all things immortality.
You know, if you love country, die for your country.
If you want to, if you want to pay the ultimate price of being a hero, sacrifice your life.
You know, if you want to achieve immortality in your professional endeavor, have your works live beyond your death.
Everything we think about existence is around death.
And I was calling question to death that maybe we have reached this time and place in human history where death is no longer inevitable.
And if that is true, everything about our reality changes.
Do you think we'll see a quantum leap in average age in the next 15 years?
Like average life expectancy.
So, yes, there's people who will learn from what you're doing.
They'll change their habits and they'll extend their personal life expectancy.
But do you think we're going to see a collective big leap?
I mean, like you have sort of Jeff Bezos and Patrick and John Collison and people pouring money into billions of dollars into research on this topic.
To me, the most compelling contemplation is.
trying to predict how fast intelligence is improving.
So we humans have been the dominant force of intelligence on this planet for 200,000 years.
And we've been able to increase our abilities of intelligence by forming better cooperation in our society.
With language and all kinds of organizational methodologies,
we've increased our ability to utilize our intelligence with technological tools.
we've now created intelligence in AI that is creating better intelligence.
And if you say, what is the speed at which intelligence is improving, it's fast, faster than we can comprehend.
And so when we make these, when we model out the future and we say, what's going to happen on a 10-year time span,
we are unqualified to answer that question because that time.
That time frame exceeds our own intellectual capacity to imagine.
So it's the first time in human history where we, the superior form of intelligence,
are up against a wall of not knowing what to predict what comes next because it's going
to supersede us so fast.
And so this is the thing.
This is why I come down to.
The only thing I know to be true in the year 2024 is don't die.
That's it.
I don't know anything else other than I want to be around for what could be the most
spectacular existence in this part of the galaxy.
Yeah, there's a part of me that's really believes if we take care of ourselves really well
right now and we don't die.
We're going to get a lot of advantage from technology that thinks about things in a way that
we couldn't even comprehend.
I mean, you take that for inspiration, if you say, okay, well, point me to an example of
where intelligence has been used, that would give me any sort of bearings on what I might
imagine. Okay, so take alpha fold. It was many people thought solving the protein folding problem
was unsolvable or would take us some unknown duration of time. And Deep Mind allocated their
attention to that thing and solved it faster than anyone ever thought possible. The same thing
would go. And so when these groups of people that are very talented, focus
on a very narrow problem, they solve stunningly hard problems faster than anyone thought.
And as these systems get better and they're used more broadly. And as these systems create better
systems, this is why we are at this launch point. And is it going to happen in two years, one
years, five years, I don't know. But it's basically, if you zoom out far enough, it's in the blink
of an eye at this point. And so don't die is don't die individually. Don't kill each other.
don't kill planet earth, and when you're building AI, the objective function of AI is this
don't die ideology.
So what I'm trying to say is, like, so we've never been in the situation before where
we're baby steps away from creating superintelligence.
And when you're at this, in this moment, we have this incredibly practical question to ask,
what do we do?
Like, how do we think about reality?
What do we care about?
What are our ideals?
What are our objectives?
And then if you start surveying the world, like, hey, who can tell us how to practically think about reality and you probe religions and capitalism and communism and like any other group?
Who can pull up and say, here's a playbook.
Here's an instruction on how you actually think about reality.
And that's what I've been trying to fill is that void is there is no philosophical stack that informs humanity on what to do on a daily basis.
for example, what to eat for breakfast, all the way through the most complicated question
of how do you begin thinking about a philosophical alignment with AI?
I have some specific questions about Blueprint.
So, like, how much water are you consuming a day?
Between 60 and 80 ounces.
Is that the only beverage that you really consume?
It is.
I drink mineralized water, so it's always tea or has some electrolytes in it.
Is that tap water?
Is it filtered?
Is it out of a glass or plastic?
It's filtered and it's ceramic.
How do you think about things like Teflon and things that can sort of like get into your body
or things that are widely thought to get into your body like microplastics and Teflon?
Yeah, I mean, I try to avoid plastic bottles.
I use stainless steel cookware, filtered water.
I don't eat out.
I don't use takeout materials.
So I try to avoid the things that are more polluting.
Why vegan?
I think that's a personal choice, isn't it?
Yeah.
Yeah, it is.
Is there anybody doing this who's an omnivore?
Yeah, my son.
And are his results sort of similar to yours?
Yeah, pretty similar.
I think that diet is a special kind of provocative.
Like people break out into warring tribes instantaneously, and the intensity around
this topic is a lot.
lot. And so I've really just stayed out of it. I'm I'm impartial. I don't want to get into the war.
And so I just say you do you. I do think that there's every day there's more evidence coming
out suggesting plant-based diets are more conducive for longevity. So I think the evidence in time
will speak for itself. But right now, it's of all the battlefields I could choose, this is not the one I
want. That's a really interesting way to put it. I think it's really interesting, too. People
aren't convinced by data. I mean, you can show them all the data in the world and it's not
going to change their mind. How do we take Blueprint and build habits with it? So it's one thing to
know, okay, here's this manual, follow this manual, and this manual is going to be better at running
your life than you are. You can take your evening, Brian, you can put them away and just follow
the instructions. But how do we actually turn that into habits that we follow?
Every person is different in how they go about change and there's many ways that people go about habit, you know, behavioral change with very habit formation techniques.
For me, it's really helpful to understand my own behavioral change in a larger context where I say I'm endeavoring to maintain my health so that I don't die so that I can participate in what.
may be the most spectacular existence in the galaxy.
Now, for me, that's really motivating because I have a goal and I have a reason to live
and I have something to look forward to.
Now, a side effect of that is my body feels great and it looks great and I can do all sorts
of things.
But for me, it's the bigger goal that motivates me for other people.
They may have much, you know, different goals of like they want to fit into a certain pair
of clothing or they want to look good for a certain event.
or they want to achieve a certain physical outcome.
So, like, the end goal, I think the motivation is really important.
And then I go through the process, as you heard me say, is I like to break myself out into my various selves
because I am, you know, dozens of different kinds of people.
I'm morning, Brian, I'm evening Brian.
I'm after workout Brian.
I'm, you know, dad, Brian.
Like, in every one of those situations, I'm biochemically a different human.
I have a different way of understanding reality and I'll make decisions.
that are different in each one of those circumstances, like you said with Daniel, where
he doesn't say yes on the phone because in that moment, he's pleased others, Daniel, and he
wants to be a different version to let him earn his life. So I do the same approach. I break
myself out into different persons, and I decide which versions of me have authorization and when,
because, you know, like, who's in charge, 10 PMU who sets the alarm for 6 a.m. you, who wants
a few more minutes with the snooze button.
And so you need to make those decisions on who is in charge
because if you just let it roll out,
you know, the present you is always going to win
and always get what they want at the expense of other versions of you
that have your better interest at heart.
And then the third is once you get to the structural
where you have a goal and you've separated yourself out
and you know who's making decisions to win,
then you can do these hyper-focused things on behavioral change.
Like you can pair a habit.
So every time you see a given thing,
you do a certain action.
And so that's really in my estimation how I've tried to stack my life where basically
I've tried to build a life where I make zero decisions of doing things I don't really want
to do and I've almost got it.
It's actually I'm surprised I've gotten this close to achieving it.
I just don't behave in ways that I regret anymore.
And that's phenomenal because I was just like walking regret before.
for. What I love about you is that you're living life on your own terms and you're not
hurting anybody. And yet what you're doing is so outside of what we consider normal that you get
so much hate and vitriol. How do you handle that? I love it. I have such a positive
relationship with the hate. It energizes me. I am endlessly amused by it. I think
think it's just fun to engage with and you know i depression was a much better troll than anyone
online you know like my my depression could eat me up pretty efficiently get new the zingers and
the dunks everyone else uh you know like it's just play for me i guess like you know like you
you can think about these two phases like okay phase one is like do something that is unrecognitive
recognizable in your time and place.
Okay, so we've seen this throughout history.
Phase two is people come with pitchforks.
Like, we know this.
Phase three is you've got to survive a whole bunch of attacks.
You know, like the power to be you're going to want to start taking you down.
And then phase, if you get past phase two and phase three, you get to open up a little bit
and you kind of have some open horizon.
And so that's where I'm at now is I've survived the,
the major dunk, you know, where people try to cancel me in society, I've survived several
attempts at takedowns and now I'm still at it. And so I'm really happy I'm on stage four now
and now it's just opening up into a bigger gameplay. Yeah, I was amazed at some of the stuff that I read
online and some of the stuff that you've been through and I don't know if you want to share some
of that or not. What's been the hardest moments for you? I'm so happy to be alive. I appreciate
existence with an intensity that I've never felt before.
I know what it feels like to want to end your life.
You know, like I desperately wanted to kill myself for 10 years.
And I'm grateful I didn't.
And I'm grateful I'm alive.
So, you know, when when people come and dunk on me or when they're trying to attack
me or when they're saying things about me, it's okay.
like it's fine
everyone's just trying to do their thing and deal with themselves so
it's not really worth getting caught up in
I think it's possible that
you know
we'll look back at ourselves right now and we'll say
oh man like can you believe how hard it was to be human
like can you
do you remember how bad it was like the anxiety and the depression
and the jealousy and the angst and the fomo and all the things we felt like god that was just so hard
can you imagine going back to doing that in the same way we imagine you know previous areas not
having the technology we do today i think it's possible that we're just in this moment and time
of a conscious existence it's really brutal and so i guess they don't really expect anything different
if people's internal experiences are beating them up they're going to try to beat other people up too it's just
It's like kind of the situation.
It's okay.
Do you think you have that confidence to sort of face that
because you've been to a really dark place and come out of it?
Yes.
I think it's also because I get great sleep.
Honestly.
But you've also like it's one thing, like I get this.
You know, it's one thing when it's an anonymous person online saying, you know,
something about you.
It really mostly says something about them.
But you've also had people close.
you come after you and that's a whole different kind of vulnerability and feeling i i was poor my
entire life and my mom made my clothes for school i um i worked in third grade i worked the school
tables at lunch to pay for leftover food so my mom wouldn't have to pay my $25 a month of
cafeteria money like i knew we were poor and i was in on my families uh,
circumstances. And I didn't make money until I was 34 years old until I sold Braintree.
And I've had money for 10 years now, for 12 years. And I've learned a lot of lessons about
the complexity of money. I really wish that I would have spent more time having made money
and say, can I talk to somebody who's had wealth and can tell me how this game works. But I will
tell you, of the people close to me over the past 12 years, a very large number, like,
almost like 50% have ended up doing something to me that is unambiguous bad behavior,
in some cases, illegal behavior.
And this is not to say they're bad and I'm good.
It's meant to say that when you're around these circumstances, it's oftentimes very hard to keep your bearings.
And sometimes you lose your reality and you become so lost in it, you can no longer tell what's going on.
But money is extraordinarily complicated and it drives people to do crazy things.
And I've seen this pattern now repeat itself so many times in my personal life.
Like those who are the closest people to me and to see what they would do when money was at stake, they'll do anything.
And they lose touch with reality in the pursuit of that objective.
I have a friend who is incredibly wealthy.
And we've been friends for a number of years now.
And one thing that struck me a few years ago,
was his circle kept getting smaller and smaller.
Yeah.
And I remember asking him about this.
And I was like, you know, like we were hanging out last year.
And I'm just making this up.
But there's like 30 people here and now there's like 15.
And you see it shrink over time.
And he said, yeah, you know, because people do these things that they ask me for something or they do things.
And then I can't really trust them.
And then everybody who's trying to be my friend.
And I'm paraphrasing here and I'm not going to reveal who it is.
But everybody who's trying to be my friend wants something from me or that's how I think about it.
So it's really hard for me to like open up to new people because I all like I've become skeptical of motivations and intentions.
That's been what I have seen.
So when I've shared my problems, they are almost identical to the life experience as other people have had.
It's just algorithmic.
This is why I'm saying.
I wish I could go back in time and talk to somebody
because it is so predictable how people will behave in these circumstances
that you can do so many things to try to lessen the negative outcomes.
But I'm inherently a very trusting person.
And I'm hands off right to just kind of let people do their own thing.
And that's just not a good recipe.
Most people can't thrive in that environment.
Most people will really struggle to play by the rules that we as society have agreed that would constitute fairness and honesty and legality.
So again, it's fine.
This is not a critique of people.
It's just it's the human condition.
It is what it is.
And this is the same reason.
I don't trust myself.
This is why I don't have sweets in my house.
It's not like I think I'm the best person in the whole world.
I know that I will cheat.
I will do things I don't want to do if I put myself in those circumstances.
So this is coming from a place of distrust of myself and all things that we humans do.
If I inherited or suddenly came into $500 million tomorrow and I came to you and said,
Brian, I just got the big chunk of money.
Give me the lessons that you've learned over the last 12 years that I should put
in place today, what would they be?
One is, I would suggest you not change anything in your life for six to 12 months.
Keep on with your same habits and have the money so you can distinguish between your preferred
lifestyle and what money would otherwise alter your perception of what you want.
Because once you start acquiring things, you start losing your perspective on where you're
baseline is. And the shock of going from zero to 500 million is so sudden that it scrambles
your reality. And then number two is it is reasonable that a large majority of people are going to
want something from you at all times. And it will be small things like a niece or a nephew,
when you're invited to their wedding,
most people will give a gift,
you know, $100 or $200 or $20,
whatever the number is in that cultural norm,
that family,
they're going to expect you to give something for $500 or $1,000
because you have so much money.
And so people just assume that because you have so much money,
that you have more obligation to them.
So there's like this,
this reciprocal relationship.
And then three is, I'd say, identify what you want the money to achieve.
And that really needs to come from you on what your objectives are.
Because if you don't determine your objectives in life, money will run you.
And so it creates this really inverse relationship where you wanted the money so you could achieve your objectives, but now money is running you and just lost yourself.
And if you don't follow those three things, pretty soon you're in a situation where you don't know what is up and what's down.
You don't know who you can trust.
You've got people on the inside who are engaging in potentially compromising behavior without you knowing.
And so it just creates a real challenging environment.
And then your internal world becomes destabilized, where like your friend said, you just don't know who you can trust.
And it becomes a really isolating experience.
does that ever make you feel lonely it's a challenge you know like anything like i mean like in
in life it's like all of our problems are equal it's not like if you're rich you have fewer
problems it's not like if you're poor you've got i mean like so there's like there are some
clear differences like if if you're poor and you've got a very serious medical condition
you don't have the resources to address that that's a very big difference but
overall, every person I know who's wealthy has just as many problems and it fills to them
their problems are just as intense as everyone else at every other class of wealth, excluding
you know, like the extreme situations where like a person does not have the ability to pay
for basic nutrition or does not have the ability to pay for medical bills or is suffering
from some other like on the disparities.
But what I'm trying to say is human suffering is pretty universal.
and there's a lot of misperception that somehow money lessens problems.
It's not a panacea.
It has its own problems.
And many people with money wish they didn't have the money.
But of course, that's also hypocritical because if they did, just give it away.
Like talk to talk.
So it's complicated and nuance.
And it's just a very hard question to parse because it's hard to imagine those circumstances.
It's hard for society to talk about too.
I feel like it's exceptionally hard for my wealthier friends to talk about money than it is for other people.
Yeah, I mean, if they risk getting slapped on the hand for saying anything that is just insensitive, right?
It's like because their experiences is complex, right, that it causes very serious problems in life.
It creates loneliness.
It puts them in very challenging situations.
And then the natural response is like, boo-hoo.
Like, go complain to someone.
And I understand that.
It's also just like, I think it misses a little bit because we all live together in society
and we share classes of problems.
And so to me, it's like it's a bigger observation about how all of us struggle all the time
and how it's worthwhile to contemplate how we can all struggle less.
Yeah, we're more similar than we tend to think that we are, I think, across not only cultures,
but socioeconomic statuses too.
I want to come back to Blueprint for a second.
I want to go through specific things.
So I want to go through nine things.
I want to go through behavioral interventions.
I want to go through diet interventions and supplement interventions.
And I want you to give me your top three behavioral interventions, top three diet interventions,
top three diet interventions and top three supplements that people listening to this
if they're looking to sort of like play around with blueprint but maybe they don't want to go
all in that they can do and they'll get a noticeable sort of like bang for the buck out of.
Yeah, I can tell you I would structure that just a little bit differently.
I can tell you the top five power laws.
Okay.
Yeah, let's do that.
And so you, by doing these five things, you could achieve a life expectancy.
of 92. So one, don't smoke.
Two is exercise six hours a week. And that's a combination of strength and flexibility
and cardiovascular. Three is eat a blueprint-like diet or like Mediterranean diet.
Four is maintain a BMI between 18.5 and 22.5. And then five is limit alcohol consumption.
and those five things, the power laws.
Sleep is a contender for being a power law of health.
I think the evidence is emerging
now that we've got much better measurement around it.
Talk to me about the alcohol consumption
because that one is sort of a bit vague
in a sense of you didn't offer specifics.
Like BMI or like this range.
What is a limited alcohol consumption?
Is that like two ounces a week?
Is it six?
Is it like we're best with none,
but up until this point it doesn't hurt us.
If I remember correctly, it's something like between one and three glasses of wine a week
equivalent, so it's limited.
I do zero alcohol intake.
You used to drink alcohol there.
Yeah, I drink three ounces of red wine for breakfast daily, yeah.
Yeah, what was the thinking behind that?
You gave it up, I think, I remember, if I remember correctly, it's because you couldn't afford
the 80 calories in your diet.
Correct.
Yeah, but you liked red wine.
it was delicious it was such a wonderful experience yeah it increased the joy of food a lot
do you ever have wine now or it's just like a rule that you don't have it because once
you go down that path it's like a slippery slope i don't know because even small amounts
negatively affects my sleep even if i drink them drink it around noon or even if i do three
ounces at noon i still sometimes see effects in sleep and nothing
is worth trading high quality sleep to me that's fascinating are there certain foods
that like if you ate even at 1130 would disrupt your sleep that you know about
carbohydrates so breads pastas even rice is hard for my body to digest is that
your body or most bodies my body and maybe it's because I don't eat rice
very often so you know that the one-time occurrence but yeah when I eat anything
of that variety, my resting heart rate will be 55 plus, you know, probably in the 56, 57 range.
Then, of course, anything fried, but I never eat fried.
But if I did, it would definitely do it.
Flowers of all types.
Even like almond flour?
Yeah.
Oh, interesting.
I tried a bunch of different flowers.
I wanted to find, you know, like I wanted to find some variety of foods that would do it.
And that, that did.
And then also sugar.
So if I, you know, on occasion, I've tried like a fun drink.
Like someone took me and got like a Bobo or something, Boba or something like that.
He's made by tapioca.
But yeah, that will do it for me.
That will increase my.
So I know now the list of foods that increase my resting heart rate.
And this is the cool thing.
You know, before I would say I would be confronted with a situation of like, I really want to eat this cookie, but I know I don't, I really shouldn't.
Then I did it anyways, you know, and I probably did it.
that in my life thousands of times maybe. And for the first time in my life, I've gotten to a point
where I can look at the cookie and have it in my hand and say, you know what? The pain of eating this
thing so far exceeds the momentary pleasure from eating it, there's no way I'm going to do it.
And I can fill that with such confidence. I'm not even tempted to eat the cookie. Whereas before,
I was just desperate in its face to just be, you know, there's no way I was going to win in that
situation. I was going to eat the cookie. And then after that, I was going to eat the five more in the
pack. You know, like, I couldn't stop myself. And so now my, I finally, finally, finally,
finally got to a place where I can model out the pain and that's so unpleasant that I just don't want
to do it. And the pain in this case is you know it's going to impact your sleep and therefore you know
it. How much of that relates to the fact that you've had eight months of perfect sleep? Like if last
night was like, oh, the streak ended and now you've got the cookie in your hand, are you still thinking
with the same logic?
Well, that's what I actually measured my brain at my brain interface company kernel.
I looked at my brain based upon sleep patterns.
And we saw in my brain, I had less willpower when I had a poor night sleep, when I had
less REM and less deep.
And so, yes, when you have bad sleep, you have substantially less willpower.
Well, it's so interesting because I talked to my kids about this.
And I talked about it in the context of positioning and easy mode or hard mode.
Yeah.
And I'm like, when you go to sleep, it doesn't mean you're not going, like, when you sleep well,
it doesn't mean somebody's going to do something, you're not going to do something to you tomorrow
that makes you angry or upset.
It means your ability to regulate your emotions and have a healthy response is going to be
much easier than if you have a poor night's sleep.
So you can like, you're playing on easy mode or hard mode.
And I think sleep is one of the prime indicators of that.
Great job.
Why does posture matter?
You have like the best posture of, I'm like conscious of.
this and like i'm actually having better posture during this interview because of you you know like
i i realize that i present complexity in people's lives that you know if someone sees an article
about me or a video or something and if they're not in the same place as me uh it can have a net
negative reaction where the person's like damn it i'm never going to be able to do what he does
So that makes me feel bad about myself and so why even try?
And I'm deeply empathetic about that.
And I wish that wasn't the outcome.
And so I really try to be thoughtful and meet everyone where they're at.
Where I hope that when someone thinks about me and if they view my posture or they view my eating habits,
that they can think of me like an angel on their shoulder of like, I'm there.
I'm there with you, friend.
Like, I want you to be your best self and I understand you.
And there's no judgment coming from me.
And it's fine.
If you make mistakes, it's cool.
But it's complicated.
And I understand that it's difficult.
And so posture, I do work extraordinarily hard.
I'm also mindful that it potentially has this boomering effect where people get discouraged.
But, yeah, I mean, I maintain good posture because I discovered I've got genetically narrow internal juggered veins, these two pipes.
on the side of the neck.
And so I have restricted blood flow out of my brain when I have bad posture.
So it kinks my veins.
And so we did a whole bunch of measurement with MRI and ultrasound.
And I did a bunch of physical therapy to strengthen certain muscles that maintain
proper posture.
And so I've just built it as a habit now.
But it took me months and months.
For example, as a family, we have a habit where one day, my eldest son made fun of me.
He's like, dad's like an AI.
And he was like, he's like this.
Zoot, Zoot.
Like, you know, being this AI move.
And so his impersonation of me was reduced to zip.
So now every time anyone in the family has improper posture, that means if you're holding a phone directly down, you're looking at your head's hanging over or you're in some other catastrophic postural position, you'll hear it zip.
And everyone in the family just like, right?
Like it gets straight up.
And so we're now a family.
where we support each other in proper posture.
But it took us a while to get there.
That's awesome.
What's the relationship between our biological health and our sexual health?
Well, yeah, if you're male and you're not getting enough sleep,
your nighttime erections are eliminated.
And nighttime erections are an important biomarker for sexual health,
psychological health, and cardiovascular health.
And, you know, I've measured my nighttime erections extensively as we've basically.
Basically, we try to measure everything we can measure.
I know it's atypical.
And so this is not a common measurement people are familiar with, but that's true for the entirety
blueprint.
We're doing things that are new.
But I guess I say that because people oftentimes associate the cost of not getting good
sleep with feeling a little bit grumpy the next day, you know, or a little bit more
irritable, but they don't really understand the whole body consequences where basically
your sexual function goes to zero.
It's not that you can't still have intercourse.
You can, but I pointed out, it's a pretty devastating cost on not getting good sleep.
So, yeah, all these things are deeply connected.
And this is why coming back to grind culture, grind culture assumes death is inevitable.
So you're trying to achieve immortality through the means that you have.
And so once you go back down on the stack and you start questioning these things,
about our reality, it leads you down this path of like, do I really believe in this cultural
moment of this thing? Or is there something else really bigger going on?
One of my friends who was in the special forces for a long time used to be deployed
often. And he said one of the things that they looked for in the troops and they asked them
about regularly was their poop and whether they had a morning erection.
I love that. That's fantastic. I mean, that's the first time I've heard.
of anyone else measuring erections.
It's so important.
And I know it's taboo and funny and people I can dunk on it,
but it's really important.
I'm asking this as a bald dude,
but can you prevent your hairline from receding?
I mean, I imagine it's way too late for me now,
but do you do that?
Like, can you?
Yeah, hair loss is an enormous amount of work.
The technology is really not great.
So what I do currently is in the morning,
I put a topical application
on my hair that was based upon my genetics of what things I do and don't respond to and metabolize
and then I put a red light cap on my head and activate certain things.
I then work out, eat breakfast, and I'll shower and I'll use a certain shampoo
that basically creates the right environment on the scalp.
And then I'll do once a month, I just started this new therapy where I'll use this late
laser across the scalp and then I'll apply exosomes.
And that's a combo therapy to help hair grow stronger and faster.
And then I used to do PRP, which is you draw blood out, you pull the plasma, you reinject
the growth factors.
I stopped doing that because we're now doing this laser exosome treatment.
Yeah, that's it.
So basically it's a topical application, which you've probably heard monoxidil is the most common
thing.
So it's monoxide plus a few little goodies plus red light cap therapy, plus this laser and
Exosome treatment. Yeah, I mean, I should be bald at this point. I started losing my hair
in my late 20s and the men and my family are bald, basically. So I'm grateful I have some hair.
I started losing mine in my like mid-20s and then it sort of stopped. Like it receded and then
thinned out massively and then just all the sudden stopped. Yeah. I mean, the technology that
is very close is exciting. There's cloning therapies that are being developed.
So if you had a few follicles, you can incloin it and then do basically like implantation.
So I think it's a possibility that in like five years' time that you would be able to restore hair yourself.
Is there any biological longevity reason why hair matters?
I mean, there's probably a sexual attractiveness angle to it.
There's probably a confidence angle to it.
There's probably a lot of internal ones.
but is there any biological sort of like longevity reasons why it matters?
If there is, I'm not aware of it.
What do you think of hot and cold exposure?
Do you do that?
I don't.
It's not that they don't potentially have benefits for right applications.
The hot and cold therapy didn't make our cut because it doesn't increase lifespan,
health span.
Rather, the evidence was not strong enough for my team to recommend it to
be cut into the protocol. So if you go back to how we think about this, we've looked at all the
scientific evidence through the specific lens of increasing lifespan, health span, and then we've ranked
them according to power laws. And so this is not to say we may, we won't ever, you know,
we won't do it at some point in time. Like, we're very open-minded and we'll always change our
minds following the evidence. It's just right now we don't think the evidence supports it to incorporate
as a habit for longevity purposes, which is our aim. Now, if somebody is doing it for recovery,
objectives like that's an entirely different question so it has nothing to say about the
technologies for those just for my highly focused objective if you think of blueprint as like a
hundred pieces of lego and each one of those pieces of lego is an intervention based on scientific evidence
what's the last piece of lego you took out and put in a new piece of lego because you're like
oh this is better than that piece of lego i recently started taking oral monoxidil so there's there's the
liquid monocidil for hair growth, you know, for for rather hair loss prevention.
And I took an oral version, which initially that drug was approved for high blood pressure,
but was then repurposed for hair growth because it made hair grow all over the body.
But I started experiencing some side effects. I stopped that.
So we do stuff like that. Like every few days, we'll try something new like that.
So that was stopped. And then let me think before that, you know, I did those,
blood transfusions. So my son gave me his plasma and I gave my dad my plasma and I did six of those
one a month for six months and we saw no effect in me. But when I gave my father plasma, my father's
speed of aging slowed by the equivalent of 25 years. So from a 71 year old to a 46 year old
and those results remained the stable for six months, which is the last measurement we did. So in that
case, the plasma therapy was promising, and it didn't work in me, probably because my
biomarkers are already pretty competitive with an 18-year-old, whereas my father benefited
significantly because his biomarkers, as a 71-year-old, are pretty different than my biomarkers.
And so in that case, we discontinue the therapy from me, but he could continue if he wanted.
That's fascinating. That seems like a really easy-ish intervention that you can do to extend the
longevity of your parents.
From the outside looking in, it can sound wild and creepy and weird and everything on a personal level, you know, to be able to do something like that for a parent is a special experience.
It's not too dissimilar than donating an organ.
You know, that's very commonplace, and we don't think of organ transplants as weird or organ donation is weird.
So it's just, it's a new idea.
And so people think it's weird, but it's actually identical to what we already do.
in life and we actually applaud people who make those kinds of sacrifices.
And I should clarify, it's not a sacrifice.
Giving plasma is not a sacrifice.
If our goal is not to die, how do you think about the things like sunscreen
and sort of like the other things that are sort of proximate to us,
especially I'm thinking especially about things we put on or in our bodies, right?
So we talked earlier about plastic bottles and sort of trying to avoid that.
Do you have a particular sunscreen you use?
Like, I imagine you've thought about this more than any other human.
We do try to be thoughtful.
We're not perfect.
You know, there's so many things we're looking at at any given time.
But, yeah, we have, we use a sunscreen, Elta M-D, E-L-T-A-M-D.
And it's a good one that has less bad stuff in it.
I generally try to avoid the sun when the UV index is above four.
So I get sun exposure in the morning and in the night.
And this is also another contentious part in society where I get a lot of flack for the paleness of my skin.
And, you know, it's a cultural norm that tan skin is somehow a signifier of health and wellness and beauty.
But, you know, the sun ages and damages the skin and creates cancer risk.
So it's not this culture of tan skin is not going to survive much longer.
because it will just naturally push in the direction where we generally, over a long enough
time horizon, move towards more positive habits for society.
Sometimes it takes a very long time, but I think this is one of them that our current
ideas around sun exposure will change.
I'm not suggesting we will avoid the sun altogether.
I'm suggesting we will be more mindful.
It won't be a case where, because currently our.
general dispositions are pretty brazen towards the sun it's like um it's not a careful balance of
you know get sun exposure but only so much it's like you know unadulterated sun exposure is kind of like
this it's it kind of is like around like certain dietary preferences where uh it's really a much
bigger social thing that it is a data thing or science thing and uh that's fine that this is how
people kind of break out into camps.
But we measure my skin age using multispectral imaging and using a whole bunch of other
technologies.
So we see exactly what happens when.
And by looking at the data, it's just very hard to, it's very hard to go do something that's
going to actively accelerate my speed of aging when the objective of this project is to
try to slow it as much as possible.
And then I want to ask.
just before we sort of wrap up here, how do you envision?
And I know we don't have a long window in terms of what we can see.
But if you zoom out, how do you see AI helping us?
I actually, I tried to embody the problem of AI.
I tried to become the species as a problem.
And so I did that with a thought experiment where I said,
okay, I'm a collection of 35 trillion cells.
And that's a lot of intelligent agents all doing their own thing with different objectives.
The body doesn't have a singular objective.
The body has all kinds of conflicting objectives at all moments.
And I wanted to see, could I achieve goal alignment within me, Brian Johnson?
And that's what I've been trying to do.
And so first I had to say, okay, in order to understand these 35 trillion cells, I need to get a read of as many of them as possible.
Then I need to find the evidence to tell me how I align the cells, and then I need to implement it with exactitude.
Now, this is a problem that is identical to AI.
So we're building the superintelligence, and we then are going to give it objective functions.
I say, all right, AI, do this, you know, like solve this math problem, or help me write this thing, or have this conversation with me, whatever the thing we're asking it to do, it has goals.
And it has goals we've programmed into it.
It has goals that it emerges from the system itself.
So we're basically trying to say, what are our goals under what circumstances and for whom?
So it's a giant goal alignment problem.
So in my situation, I had to say, okay, is 10 p.m. Brian in charge who sets the alarm or 6 a.m.
Brian who wants to hit this news button?
Who's in charge and under what circumstance?
That's the same kind of goal alignment problem you have with AI.
And it's the same kind of problem we have with planet Earth.
So Earth needs to be a home where we can thrive.
If we kill Earth, we're in a bad situation.
And so when I say, don't die, it's don't die individually, don't kill each other, don't
let the planet die, don't kill it, and align AI with don't die.
Don't die is deceptively simple and endlessly expansive.
It is a heuristic.
It is a computational model.
It is a mathematical framework.
It is a biological system.
It is a close of algorithm.
them, all those things in two words.
And this is what I'm putting forward as a species, is if we care to be around for the future,
we need to be able to figure out how to cooperate at the most basic level.
And Don't Die is the most played game in every single minute of every single day on planet Earth.
There's not a game.
Even capitalism is not played more than don't die.
Every two seconds, you and I breathe to not die.
we look both ways before we cross the street we throw out moldy food it is the most played game
in existence now the moment you stand up above don't die you break out into a billion different
directions of what people want how they understand the world what they care about what they'll do
and why all their rules and justifications so you really have to say if we're trying to goal align a
super intelligence around something and not kill the earth and not kill each other and not die
ourselves, how do you do it? And that's what I've tried to put forward is this is an actual
plan, a practical plan that spans what to eat for breakfast and how to align a super
intelligence system with all of our interests. That's beautiful. We always ask the same
question to end, which is what is success for you, but I have a feeling it's going to be two
words. I would say it's the courage to believe that I don't know. That's a perfect way to wrap
of this conversation.
Thanks a lot for your time.
Thanks for having me.
All right.
It's time for a few of my reflections after that conversation.
That went pretty amazing, I thought.
I really, and so you know, I try to get into these things.
Like, I've been eating Brian's diet for the last week with a few exceptions here and there.
But generally speaking, the pudding and the bowls are pretty good.
They're awesome.
They're missing a little bit of salt for my taste, but they're, um,
The reason behind that, I talked to him after, and the reason behind that is that the lentils
and stuff have enough salt in them that if you consume the quantities that he's talking about
on his website, you actually get the daily amount of salt that you need.
I loved exploring a little bit of different angles to it.
I think the most surprising part of this conversation for me was the lessons on money that
he wish you knew earlier.
And I haven't heard him talk about that anywhere else.
I really enjoyed that.
The posture thing, I find myself sitting up straight right now, even noticing it.
And I think that that's a really good sort of angle to it.
I love the idea that, you know, we can improve our sleep as the one critical variable and everything else falls in line.
Sleep is a lead domino to so many other things.
And sleep positions you to play the next day on easy mode.
It doesn't change the day that's coming at you, but it doesn't change how you.
you handle it. And I think one of the things that I'm going to try is just experimenting,
eating dinner a little earlier, and seeing how that affects my resting heart rate while I
sleep.
Thanks for listening and learning with me. Until next time.
Thanks for listening and learning with us.
For a complete list of episodes, show notes, transcripts, and more go to F.S.
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and set yourself up for unparalleled success learn more at fs dot blog slash clear until next time
Thank you.