The School of Greatness - 104 Protect Your Brain, Reverse Injury, and Overcome Disorders with Dr. Daniel Amen
Episode Date: November 7, 2014"Our goal is to create brain warriors." - Dr. Daniel Amen If you enjoyed this episode, head to www.lewishowes.com/104 for show notes, extras, and more great content. ...
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This is episode number 104 with Dr. Daniel Amen.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
And this episode is with the one and only Dr. Daniel Amen.
I'm very excited about interviewing Dr. Amen.
And it's all about how to change your brain and how that will change your life.
The Breakthrough Program for Conquering Anxiety, Depression, Obsessiveness, Anger, and Impulsiveness.
He's a New York Times bestselling author of that book itself, and he is a clinical neuroscientist,
and also he is a nationally recognized expert on relationship between the brain and behavior and on attention deficit disorder or ADD.
He's the author of several books and again, a New York Times bestselling author, one of the leading guys on the brain in the world.
And fascinating information.
I heard him speak at a talk with Dave Asprey recently and said, I got to get this guy on the podcast.
So I'm very excited to dive into this, all about how to improve your brain and about
how to get your brain healthier and how it impacts a lot of your emotions, a lot of your
physical body and the results that you get in your life.
So this is crucial for people that want to have a better life, that want to be more successful,
want to be more fit, have better relationships. It all comes down to your health with your brain.
So you want to make sure that you dive into this, take notes, grab this book at the end. We're going
to have everything linked up with the show notes. But this is a fascinating topic and I had a lot
of fun connecting with Dr. Amen. So without further ado, let's go
ahead and dive in with the one and only Dr. Daniel Amen.
Welcome back everyone to the School of Greatness podcast. We've got Dr. Daniel Amen on. I'm
very excited about this and thanks so much for coming on, doctor.
Well, thanks Louis for having me.
Yeah. I'd heard about you a few times through Michael Fishman, a mutual friend.
I think you'd spoken at one of his conferences before and he told me about you. But I never
really learned about how inspiring you actually were until I heard you speak at Dave Asprey's event,
the Bulletproof Conference that happened here in Pasadena recently.
And I was blown away at your information about the brain and how it really affects every part of your life.
And I have a personal relationship with the brain because my father had a pretty severe car accident
and was in a coma for three months from this car accident.
And it's basically never been the same person.
He's still alive today, but it's basically a completely different human being.
Has a lot of challenges in remembering things.
He forgets a lot of memories from the past and specifically forgets a lot of memories from the past and
specifically forgets a lot of his kids' memories, things like that. And so it's been a challenge
for myself and my family to experience this over the last 10 years. It's definitely,
I've grown accustomed to it now and have adjusted to it. But for the first three years,
it was really hard to understand why the brain affected my father so much when it
had that extreme trauma. And so I'm curious to kind of dive in and ask you questions about this,
not only that, but really just everything in terms of everyone's behaviors and mental disorder in
general, because I guess it's actually more common than we think. It doesn't have to be an injury per se but that people have some type of mental disorder
frequently.
Isn't that correct?
Dr. Well, I think the story of your dad is just so instructive because your brain
is literally involved in everything you do, everything do how you think how you feel how
you act how you get along with other people and when it works right you work
right and when it's troubled for whatever reason toxic exposure head
trauma drug abuse a lack of oxygen the people people are sadder, sicker, poorer, less successful. And if you never look
at the brain, that's what we do at Amen Clinics, you in fact never know. And it's really easy to judge someone as bad when in fact they may have a brain issue
that can be rehabilitated. I mean, that's sort of the big exciting news in my world is that you're
not stuck with the brain you have. You can make it better if you do the right things.
So even if it has some type of illness or it's going down
the wrong track, there are one, medical things you can do, medicine that you can do, but also
holistic things that you talk about in your book, right? On ways to improve it so that it can
actually be cured 100% or just get better. Well, it depends on what you're starting with. I mean, so for example,
you know, if we take your dad, if the injury killed certain areas of his brain, well, we really
don't have the Lazarus treatment to bring the dead back to life, but we can certainly make
struggling tissue better. And I get so excited about the opportunity that we have at Amen Clinics to take troubled
brains, put them on brain smart programs that could include lifestyle interventions, diet,
nutritional supplements, or medication, or even more sort of wild, sophisticated treatments like
hyperbaric oxygen or transcranial magnetic
stimulation using powerful magnets to stimulate blood flow and work to improve it to whatever
degree is possible. Right. It may not be 100%, but it could get to 80%.
And, you know, often when people have had brain injuries or they've had strokes or they have Alzheimer's disease, that now their judgment centers aren't good. And so they make all the
wrong dietary decisions, which only accelerates the damage and the illness. Now, how important is,
I think I know your answer, but I want to hear from you. How important is diet when it comes to a brain disorder or illness?
Because I'm guessing it's really important because my father gained probably about 150 pounds since his accident.
He used to be really healthy and in shape, but now it's like he can't taste certain foods.
So he has a lot of fatty foods so he can taste it.
And I don't think he like has the hunk
like i don't think he gets full he just eats and eats and eats now and it's really disturbing to
me to see that happen because i feel like if he got healthier he would in fact be able to remember
a lot more he'd be able to move a lot better and i'm assuming it affects the brain a lot
oh no question there are 200 studies now that say as your weight goes up the size and function of your brain goes down really and where before he had impulse control
right if you hurt especially the front part of your brain well now you don't have impulse control
and in our day and age when there's so many delicious bad choices.
It's hard for me to not eat good things, right?
It's hard for all of us that we're surrounded by bad choices that keep us fat, depressed,
and feeble-minded.
Your brain uses 20% to 30% of the calories you consume, and food is medicine or food is poison.
So if you eat a high glycemic, low fiber diet,
so think bread, rice, potatoes, pasta, sugar,
if you're eating a lot of that stuff
along with a lot of sweets,
then it's gonna literally shrink your brain and not provide you
with the nutrients you need to have the most mental horsepower to make good decisions.
That's pretty much how I lived the first 28 years of my life. All those foods you just
mentioned, that's pretty much was my diet. It's crazy to think about and how much I struggled with memory, with, uh, staying focused with all
these different challenges I had growing up. It was hard for me to comprehend in school. I couldn't
read. Uh, I was really challenged me for the right and I couldn't take tests. I was horrible at tests
and all I had was sugar all day. Right. And, and, you know, it's easy to just go give you, um, Adderall or Ritalin, um, as a way
to help you focus. Uh, it's a lot smarter before we do those things to go change your diet.
Right. What, what got you into this before we move forward? What got you into this work in
the first place? What got you so fascinated about the brain and the health of the brain?
but also learned I hated the idea of being shot at or sleeping in the mud.
So I got myself retrained as an x-ray technician.
And that's where our professors used to always say,
how do you know unless you look?
And then when I was a second-year medical student, I got married.
And a couple of months later, my wife became suicidal,
took her off to the Department of Psychiatry. And that's really
when I fell in love with helping people's emotional lives. And then a number of years later,
I got the chance to do imaging. And so it really came full circle. My two professional loves,
imaging and psychiatry came together and I started looking at people's brains in 1991.
came together and I started looking at people's brains in 1991. And I mean, it really caused a revolution for me in the next 23 years, my colleagues and I have literally built the
world's largest database of brain scans related to behavior. So we've done nearly 100,000 scans
on people from 111 countries. So we have the most active imaging centers in the world. And when you look at
people's brains, I mean, the first thing you develop is brain envy. Start caring about it.
Right. You know, as a psychiatrist, I learned all about penis envy and Freud. And years later,
I realized Freud was wrong. It's not about your penis. It's about your brain that, you know,
I want to do, we have a nonprofit foundation called Change Your Brain, Change Your Life
Foundation. And I want to do these t-shirts that say brain envy and underneath Freud was wrong,
just to sort of start the conversation that, you know, as I saw my own brain in 1991, when I was 37, I just didn't like how it looked at all.
It looked toxic and older than I was. And I'm like, really unhappy about that. So brain envy
caused me to do things differently, eat right, exercise, take some simple supplements, care and think and fall in love with my brain.
And so 20 years later, my brain actually looks younger, fatter, happier, because I think about
it and I care about it. So as a psychiatrist, you know, I was making diagnoses based on symptom
clusters. I mean, if you really think of it, it's truly terrifying that literally in 1991, because it was what I was taught to do.
If you had six of these nine criteria, I would give you a diagnosis of depression or bipolar
disorder, ADD or whatever. And some people on medication got better, but other people got
dramatically worse. And so now I'm beginning to go, I think I need more information.
And so what the imaging did is it gave me more information and it taught me a lot of
really important lessons, such as all psychiatric illnesses are not single or simple disorders.
They all have multiple types.
So ADD is not one thing. It's seven different things. types. So ADD is not one thing. It's
seven different things. Anxiety and depression is not one thing. It's multiple different things.
Addictions are not one thing. Even being an overeater is not one thing. We have impulsive
overeaters, compulsive overeaters, sad or anxious overeaters. And it also taught me that mild traumatic brain injuries ruin people's lives
and no one knows about it. So I know that you've played football. And I played football in high
school and loved it, was passionate about it. And then I started scanning football players,
high school players, college players, and then NFL players. And uniformly, they have brain damage. And I'm
like, well, that's a bad idea. You know, your brain is soft, your skull is hard. Maybe we
shouldn't be bashing it around. Yeah. And I got to the point where I was only leading with my head
like as hard as I could when I hit people or block. I wouldn't use my hands or shoulders. I
would just smash people with my head. And
I can only imagine what that did for my brain. Well, it's not good. And if you own it,
that you were involved in a brain damaging sport and you ate lousy. So those are the two things I
know about you now. Well, then it's not really helping your brain express its full capacity.
And if it was hurt, well, one, you should look because how do you know unless you actually look at your brain how it's doing?
You should look at it, test it, and then always be on a rehabilitation program. And all of us should be on a rehabilitation program because
life is hard. Life is stressful. We, you know, have a lot of lousy quality food available to us
and we age. And the biggest risk factor for Alzheimer's disease is if you want to live a
long time, 50% of people, 85 and older will get a diagnosis of dementia of one form or another and alzheimer's
is the most common and so i'm like if i have a 50 chance of getting something and i love myself
care about myself i'm going to become and i am a brain warrior. Now, this is fascinating stuff.
And I'm really excited to dive more into this.
Now, should all of us get scanned to see our brain?
Because I heard you say, like, you know, you really don't know until you see what's inside.
So should we all do it?
Even though I think that's pretty expensive to get scanned, though, right?
Having a brain that doesn't work right is expensive.
Getting a scan.
So at Amen Clinics, we have two programs. One is our full evaluation if someone's suffering from anxiety, depression, ADD, memory problems. I mean, we really want to dig into their life.
And that's about $3,750. So if you think of what I spent on my kids' education, it's like less than half of elementary
school tuition. For people who are just curious and they want to just sort of get a checkup,
we have an executive brain optimization program, which is about $1,700. So it's not much compared to having a brain that
doesn't work right. And, you know, I live in Newport Beach, which is in Southern California.
And, you know, we've been part of the OC, the reality show. And, you know, people know about
Newport Beach. People here care more about their faces, their boobs, their bellies, and their butts than they do their brain.
And so to get any kind of plastic surgery is a heck of a lot more money.
And it's working on what you look like on the outside rather than how you operate on the inside.
how you operate on the inside.
And so I've always thought of the cost as an investment in my life.
The rest of your life.
Yeah, that's fascinating.
Because, I mean, if you think of it,
because people go, oh, the cost,
and they go, okay, so what does it cost
to have an ineffectively working brain?
What's the cost of
divorce job failure stress incarceration um chronic stress and and our goal quite frankly
is to create brain warriors who take this message of brain envy brain health to the worlds that they live in.
Now, is it only your place that does scans in Southern California or do people do this
all over the world or how can people get a scan and really learn more about their brain?
So we have six clinics around the US, three on the East Coast, three on the West Coast,
and people can learn about it at amenclinics.com.
So amen like the last word in a prayer.com. Imagine growing up with that last name.
There are other people that do it. There's a clinic in Dallas that does it. There's a clinic in
Melbourne, Florida that does it. There's another one in Chicago.
So there are other people that do it.
We do more of it than anybody in the world.
But I've always never thought it was mine.
I always thought I should teach other people how to do it.
There's just a brand new article out of Toronto that said if you get a spec scan, your outcomes are better a year later.
And that's why we do it.
Because you're aware of it and then you're willing to take the action to change it, right?
Right. So if you came and you got scanned, you would develop brain envy. You would go,
oh, I don't really like that. How can I make it better? And then maybe four months later, we scan you again,
and you can see the improvement. And now you're hooked to live a brain healthy life.
That makes sense. And you've had so many years of experience of this. Can you pretty much
pinpoint pretty accurately people if you were able to ask them questions for 30 minutes, let's say,
and then dive into what their challenges are? Would you be able to say them questions for 30 minutes, let's say, and then dive into what
their challenges are, would you be able to say, okay, this is really what the brain looks
like?
Could you kind of guess what it would look like with your experience?
Well, I do that.
We create questionnaires to help people.
For people who can't get scanned, either because of cost or they're not near a clinic
or they don't want to, we've developed questionnaires to help predict what the scans
would look like.
In my book, Healing ADD or Change Your Brain, Change Your Life, we have those questionnaires,
but they're clearly not as good as getting the scan. Sure, of course. Because, you know,
without looking. So there's a scan pattern that's typical for people who have ADD or people have obsessive compulsive disorder,
but not everybody has the typical pattern. Have you ever had someone come in and just
have a beautiful looking brain? Or does everyone have something that they can improve on?
Oh, no, I've had a lot of people come in and they just have great looking brains. It's not common. My favorite scan is Dr. Doris Rapp. So typically,
as we age, our brain just really begins to look awful. It begins to look atrophied, smaller,
more toxic, and that sucks. I mean, I don't know. How else do you say that?
But Doris was 82 and she'd really
taken care of her brain. She was not overweight. She ate right. She exercised. She was eternally
passionate about her mission and her message. And at 82, her brain looks stunning. In fact,
if I wouldn't have been married,d astro because ultimately you want your part
you want to be in love not with somebody's body but with their brain it's nice if they have a
nice body too right but um i i joke when and maybe i did that at dave's event yeah you did
that i talked you know when i met my wife tana i mean i just really liked her and i went hey
would you mind coming over to the clinic so that I could scan you and see that if I really like you long term, are you going to make me psychotic?
It's interesting you say that because I've dated a lot of gorgeous women, amazing women.
But it was some of the most stressful relationships I've ever experienced
because of the emotional imbalance and I wouldn't say it was all them you know I'm sure I had some
emotional imbalance as well and we fed off of each other's negativity or whatever but um it's such a
difference the relationship I'm in now it's like the calmness of her emotions uh there's still lots
of passion but it's like I just feel like she has
a healthy brain based on the way she acts and her habits and her hard work and commitment and her
mindset. And I'm just like, you can kind of see the difference, the physical results based on
someone's health of their brain, I guess. And it's kind of crazy. Go ahead.
If you put brain health in the center of your relationship,
so you eat right, you exercise, you're really avoiding things that hurt your brain, doing
things that help your brain, the relationship is just so much better. And I mean, isn't that what
we really want? And brain envy is not hard. And keeping your brain healthy isn't hard,
you just have to be committed to it. But then relationships are better, work is better,
your money is better, your sense of meaning and purpose is better. And that's what we get
so excited about. I think you quoted somewhere that there was a study, I think back in the 90s, it was like 50% of Americans
suffered from some type of psychiatric illness at some point in their lives. I don't know if
that's the correct stat or when it was done, but I know it was a while ago. What do you think the
percentage is today, if that was in fact the right percentage?
So it's a study from the US government that they've done a couple of times.
Kessler was the author. And when they do population studies, 51% of the population
at some point in their life will have a diagnosable psychiatric illness.
And what are these illnesses? What are the common ones that we're talking about? So people know, so like ADD, anxiety, depression, addictions, bipolar disorder,
obsessive compulsive disorder. So more than 50% of people will have some type of illness like that
in their life. Right? So what I say, it's almost more normal to have a problem than not to
have a problem and so really the concept of normal is a myth wow that i tell people normal is the
setting on a dryer or it's a city in illinois um that's, you know, just make a list of friends.
And half of them are taking medicine or they should be taking medicine.
Interesting.
So what is the cause for so many disorders?
That's a really good question.
And in children, for example, they have doubled in the last 20 years.
So the incidence of learning, behavior, emotional problems in kids has doubled.
And I think it's a number of things.
a low-fat, high-sugar diet that triggered inflammation in people's bodies and a higher incidence of ADD, depression, and dementia. We don't exercise as much because we're exercising
our thumbs with video games. And the other consequence of not exercising is we're not in
the sun. And oh, by the way, dermatologists have scared us of the sun.
So everybody's wearing sunscreen.
So that means two-thirds of Americans are low in vitamin D.
Well, vitamin D is essential for brain health.
So lousy diets, less exercise, low levels of vitamin D. And no one really helps us learn how to manage our thoughts or our own
internal emotions, which blows me away because, for example, there's a treatment called cognitive
therapy, which is teaching people not to believe every stupid thought they think. And I mean, it's just basically internal logic. It's as effective
as antidepressant medication. And yet we don't teach it routinely in school.
I've been having this conversation with a number of, you know, mindfulness practitioners recently.
It's that I don't understand that the things that are the most important to our health
and our success in life really, which is our emotions and our mind, our mindset, we don't
learn about how to be successful in them growing up at any place in school or in education. Only
if our, I guess our parents taught us that or our friends teach us that somehow, or if we pick it up on our own. But why is it that the things that are the most important
towards our success, we don't learn about until, you know, we discover it when we have an illness
and we try to figure it out then. Well, most schools have not been redesigned in 110 years. And so I actually did a, I created a high school course that is now run in 42 states
and seven countries. We just launched it in Huntsville, Alabama. And I created it after my
daughter, who was in ninth grade, asked me to help her do first quadratic equations.
And I knew this kid was never going to do another one in her life.
And I'm factoring.
And I'm thinking to myself,
I just remember Paul Simon's song, Kodachrome.
It starts with, when I think back on all the crap I learned in high school,
it's a wonder I can think at all.
And so shortly after the interaction with Caitlin in 2005, I was asked to speak by the Orange County
Department of Education. And I talked to them about brain health and how important it was to
teach kids some basic brain skills. And there was a principal there
who was in charge of high school redesign,
and she said, oh, I would love for you
to do a pilot with me and teach kids about brain health.
And we did that, and the kids loved the class.
I mean, that was really the exciting thing,
is nobody cut our class.
In fact, they got their friends to crash it. Because taught them and we would feed them brain healthy food. We'd play brain healthy music.
We would teach them about how it's your brain that gets you a date. It's your brain that gets
you into college. It's your brain that gets you a cool car and takes cool vacations. And if you hurt it before it's finished developing,
it may ruin the rest of your life.
And they just got excited and passionate.
And so we developed this course that is now taught,
uh,
all over North America.
And I think it's in Germany and wow,
that's crazy.
Is this elementary schools or high schools or we have a high school course.
And what we're trying to do is,
uh,
create an elementary school and a preschool version too.
Wow.
This is awesome.
You know,
fun fact about Huntsville,
Alabama.
I,
uh,
lived there for six months playing professional football, arena football down
there. So I know that city very well. That's cool. It's down there. Now, what I want to know is
how about alcohol and smoking and drugs? How much do those affect the brain? And if you are using
them for a long amount of time, can you still heal the brain to get it almost back to looking fuller and bigger and better?
You know, it's an interesting question.
I get that question all the time.
And it depends on how much you used, how long you used, what you used was laced with and so on.
I've been eternally impressed by the brain's ability to recover and heal.
And so here's the brain health purpose.
It's three things.
Brain envy, got to care.
Avoid anything that hurts it.
Do things that help it.
Now, you then have to fill out the list of care, stop, do.
So care, and then, so what are the things that hurt the brain?
Drugs.
You know, I'm not all that happy about the perception of marijuana is like, well, it's no big deal.
Except it is, because it drops brain function.
And you've got lots of proof of scans that shows this.
Thousands of scans.
And when we compare the POT scans with the healthy scans,
there's just no question it diminishes brain function and brain activity.
So people can talk about it all they want,
but I've published studies on it.
It's what we see clinically.
It's like you can't really argue with the science.
But alcohol is not a health food.
Medications like Xanax, anti-anxiety medications, Xanax, Klonopin, Ativan, Valium.
If you take those, you just increase your risk
for Alzheimer's disease. Yeah, it's frightening. Having a high blood sugar is bad for your brain
because high blood sugar erodes blood vessels and your brain uses 20% of the blood flow
in your body. So anything that damages blood vessels,
so hypertension, diabetes, heart disease,
is damaging your brain.
And I like to say whatever's good for your heart
is good for your brain,
and whatever's bad for your heart is bad for your brain.
But I wrote a book once called The Brain in Love,
and I realized I had to have genitals in there
because genitals are all about blood flow. And so whatever's bad for your heart is bad for your brain is bad for
your genitals. And did you know 40% of 40 year olds have erectile dysfunction, which is actually
more common in NFL players, which is sort of an interesting, why would that be? Because the chronic traumatic
brain injuries hurt this little gland in your brain called the pituitary gland that helps
produce testosterone. So isn't that interesting? You think, oh, these big football players are all
testosterone driven. It's like, well, no, a lot of them aren't because they've damaged the signaling mechanism
to produce testosterone.
So you want to produce, you want to protect your blood flow.
You want to protect your hormones.
So I just started talking about that low testosterone, low progesterone, estrogen, and women, low
thyroid are all associated with low brain function.
And so getting your important numbers checked
is really important.
Low vitamin D, as I alluded to,
is associated with trouble.
The standard American diet
associated with ADD, depression, and dementia,
not exercising is harmful to the brain,
yet exercising too much is also harmful for the brain.
So our extreme athletes, our marathoners, our triathletes,
it's just too much stress.
It's chronic, excessive stress that is bad for the health of the brain.
Believing every stupid thought you have is bad for the brain.
Having untreated depression doubles the risk of Alzheimer's disease in women, quadruples
that risk in men.
Untreated ADD triples the risk of Alzheimer's disease
because it's associated with all sorts of other bad things
like more medical problems, more head injuries,
more obesity, and then as we talked about earlier
in the conversation is as your weight goes up,
the size and function of your brain goes down.
I actually coined a term called the dinosaur syndrome.
Big body, little brain, you're going to become extinct
and i know some people think well that's just so rude of me to say that but in the new testament
it talks about know the truth and the truth will set you free there are 200 studies that say that
you want to take your physical health seriously wow also sleeping. If you don't sleep seven hours a night,
you have lower blood flow to your brain, more bad decisions. So protecting your sleep becomes a
critical piece of being well. If you're a teenager and on average you get an hour less sleep at night
than your peers, you have a significantly increased risk of killing yourself.
So sleep is really important.
And so, okay, so those are some of the things to avoid. The things to do, the right diet, reasonable exercise, new learning,
because whenever you learn something new, your brain makes a new connection.
The coordination exercises I particularly
like for the brain are their coordination. So like dance and table tennis, juggling are some of my
favorites. Simple supplements, omega-3 fatty acids. I love ginkgo. The prettiest brains I've
ever seen take ginkgo. Another one called vimpocatine. And so when you get excited about the brain,
when you learn about it, you can change it. I mean, if you go, you know, Daniel, what's the
single most important thing you're excited about is this concept that you're not stuck with the
brain you have, you can make it better and I can prove it.
I love that.
You just threw a lot at us right now and I'm excited to dive more into that.
But I want to talk briefly about, since this is close to my heart,
is extreme athletes or some of the greatest athletes in the world, let's say.
Let's say the top 1% of athletes in the world, their specific sport, they spend a lot of time, energy, practice, and I guess stress on their
body to be in that elite shape in their sport, basketball, tennis, baseball, all these things.
Now, do they have damaged brains when they're that great at a sport that has a lot of physical
exertion, I should say?
Or are they okay?
Well, I think it depends.
I think if they play in the NFL, they have damaged brains.
In my study of 140 players, 138 of them had damaged brains.
So if they're playing hockey, odds are they have a damaged brain.
If they are a rodeo athlete, they have a damaged brain if they are a rodeo athlete they
have a damaged brain um let's say non-contact let's say but still exercising to extreme levels
every single day to be in that top uh you know shape uh constantly i i think what we would have
to i mean it's really an individual thing.
Some extreme athletes have awesome brains because they really think about it.
They probably get enough sleep too.
If we talk about Novak Djokovic, his number one tennis player in the world, he talks about his meditation practices.
He talks about his dietary practices. He talks about his dietary practices.
But, you know, he's probably not running 26 miles. Right. You know how the marathon thing started,
right? The Greeks won a war against the Persians. There was a messenger from Marathon Greece who ran 26.2 miles to Athens and, you know, raised his hands and said, we won the war.
And then he died, right? It's crazy. So I'm like, you know, in what universe does this
really make sense to push your body to that level? I just and you know, maybe it's because I'm lazy. And I want
to believe that, you know, you don't have to beat yourself up. But my experience, the best exercise
for the brain, weightlifting, because the stronger you are as you age the less likely you are
to get Alzheimer's disease first training because bursting increases your
blood flow and metabolism and then coordination exercises and so I love to
play table tennis it's my favorite way to exercise. And I played actually in the U.S. Nationals a number of years ago.
And there were 600 of us in Las Vegas.
And there was not one brain injury the whole tournament.
Wow.
So I love table tennis.
We'll have to play some time and see if I can keep up with you.
Love that.
This is interesting.
So what's your daily habits and rituals?
Because you're one of the leading experts in the brain, if not the leading expert in the brain in the world.
So what do you do besides what you said with the coordination and the exercise and the table tennis and the juggling and things?
But what's like your daily rituals like to live a healthy lifestyle and have the healthy brain that you have?
So I sleep seven hours.
I'm pretty religious about that.
And I have, I mean, just naturally, I have a lot of energy.
But I really, since I read the research, focused on, you know, if I don't go to bed until 1130,
I'm going to stay in bed until 630 or 7.
So I sleep.
I pretty much have, I'm pretty routine with my food
in that I'll start the morning with kale, spinach, protein, blueberry shake.
So I'll do that.
I usually have a snack of an apple and some almonds or walnuts.
I have different lunches, but my favorite one is called pain in the ass.
It's a sushi where they core a cucumber and stuff it with crab and salmon abaco.
And then they slice it up.
It's why it's called pain in the ass because it's hard to make, but it's not wrapped in
rice.
We actually make something that I'm addicted to called Brain on Joy.
It's a sugar-free, dairy-free, gluten-free chocolate coconut bar that's just got nothing
bad in it, but coconut's awesome for
brain health because of the medium chain triglycerides that your cells use the most
efficiently and then chocolate's got all sorts of benefits it's usually the crap they put in
chocolate that makes it bad for you so um you know i have one of those that's calorie smart and that I'm always learning new things, eternally passionate and excited about the mission of Amen Clinics.
And I hang out with healthy people.
I think it's probably the most important thing that not only am I a warrior for my health, my wife is a warrior, too.
my health, my wife is a warrior too. And I remember the first time with my first wife, I went on the Atkins diet because I wanted to get rid of all the, you know, simple carbs in my diet.
And she brought home two double fudge chocolate cakes. I just like, this is not working for me.
I just like, this is not working for me.
You have to have a partner that does it with you.
And I don't know if we talked about, but I did this big program at Saddleback Church where we got this huge congregation healthy.
Yes, you know, the wife or the husband, because if they got hooked and started doing the program, their spouse wanted what they had, you know, whether
it was weight loss or energy or focus. And, you know, so one person then began to change their
couple, which then began to change their family. And then we had a lot of warriors who then brought it to their businesses
or their schools or their communities. And that's the ultimate goal in my wife is creating brain
health warriors, people who they get better, then they give it away, because it is in the act of
giving. And I never really understood this. I grew up very Catholic,
like my mother was not kidding Catholic.
And my favorite prayer growing up
was the prayer of St. Francis,
which starts, Lord, make me an instrument of your peace.
Where there is hatred, let me sow love.
Toward the end of the prayer, he writes,
for it is in the giving that we receive. And I never really got it.
But when we did the Daniel plan, that's the big project we did at Saddleback Church,
it just crystallized for me that when someone gives health away to their spouse, to their kids,
to their friends, to their business, what they're really doing is creating their own support group, making it more likely they'll stay
on the program forever. And so get it, give it away, keep it forever. That is how we're going
to change the world.
I love that.
I've got a couple questions left for you, and I want to be respectful of your time.
So a couple questions left.
We didn't talk about this, I don't think, yet.
How important is breathing and meditation for the brain in your life or in people's lives in general?
So meditation actually fooled us. A lot of us thought, who do imaging, thought that when we meditated, it would calm the brain down. It actually doesn't do that.
It fires it up, especially in the most human thoughtful part of the brain called the prefrontal
cortex. And so meditation is a wonderful tool to put in your life.
We actually teach it in our high school course to optimize brain function.
And you don't have to do it for a long time.
I studied and published work on a kundalini yoga form of meditation called Kirtan Kriya.
It's a chanting meditation, which means you have to use breath to do it.
And it was only 12 minutes long, and we found significant benefit from it.
Wow.
So do you use this in your daily practice, breathing or meditation?
You know what I do is I do diaphragmatic breathing.
And it's a technique I call five times two.
So you take five seconds to breathe in.
I mean, like you take a big breath,
and then you hold it for two seconds,
just because you're intentional about the breathing.
And then you blow it out really slowly.
So you take five seconds to breathe it out,
and then you hold it out for two seconds.
And I can just guarantee people,
if they're feeling anxious, tense, nervous, out of control,
five times two times
10 breaths will calm you down.
Wow.
I like that.
So simple, powerful.
Do you do that every day or is it more once if you feel stressed and you start doing that
practice?
You know, I do it pretty much when I feel stressed.
If I was maybe a little more disciplined, I'd do it every day.
Right.
But, you know, it's just such a cool tool to use.
I love it.
Well, I want to ask you one last question.
And before I do, I want to tell everyone to make sure to go get this book, Change Your Brain, Change Your Life.
The Breakthrough Program for Conquering Anxiety, Depression, Obsessiveness, Anger, and Impulsiveness.
It's a New York Times bestselling author.
obsessiveness, anger, and impulsiveness. It's a New York times bestselling author. The cool thing about this is there's like prescriptions at the end of each chapter that can support you. If
you're having any of these, uh, any of this anxiety on how to prescribe yourself to then start taking
necessary steps to improve your brain. So again, there's a lot of great information in this book.
If you can't go get a scan right now, definitely get the book and check out, I believe it's amenclinics.com. Is that correct? Correct.
Awesome. And we'll make sure to have it all linked up in the show notes here.
Before I ask you the final question, I just want to acknowledge you, Dr. Amen, for the incredible
service that you provide in the world for informing us on how to live really a better life and
how to have better brains, which is going to give us better health, better relationships,
better emotions, better feelings, and ultimately more success and fulfillment.
So I want to acknowledge you.
It's a true blessing to have you around.
So thank you for all that.
Thank you so much.
The final question, I ask all my guests this at the end, it's what is your definition of greatness?
You know, I don't know that I have one on greatness, but I do have one on happiness.
Perfect.
I've been thinking about this a lot.
And I had breakfast with Sanjay Gupta the other morning, and he's doing a whole show on happiness.
And he asked me about it and talked about the happiest people on earth
were in Denmark. And the reason they were happy is they had no expectations. And I'm totally not
there in my life. That I think happiness is not the absence of pain or the absence of expectations, that in reality, in my experience
and for my life, it is the presence of purpose. And I think when people live purpose-driven lives, that they live longer, they're healthier, and they can withstand the
stresses that come their way. My favorite book is Man's Search for Meaning by Viktor Frankl.
And it's, and The Purpose-Driven Life by my friend Rick Warren. I just know that when my brain is as healthy as
it can be, I am more loving and I am more purpose-driven and I'll live longer because
I'll be more effective. I love that. Well, thank you for that definition. Thank you for coming on
this interview and make sure to check out aminclinics.com and the book Change Your Brain,
Change Your Life. Thank you so much, Dr. Amin, for coming on.
Thank you so much.
What a pleasure, Lewis.
And there you have it, guys.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
Again, fascinating topic for me,
all about how to improve the health of your brain
and how really your brain affects the health of your brain and how really
your brain affects so much of your life.
So make sure to go check out this book.
Go head over to the show notes at lewishouse.com slash 104.
That's lewishouse.com slash 104.
We'll have the book linked up, some other videos, and all the other resources that we
talked about in here.
We'll have it linked up as well in the show notes. Very excited about this. I'm going to dive in deeper. I'm probably going
to get my brain scanned here soon. So I'm going to be heading down to do that because I just
am curious to see what it looks like. And I hope my brain is all there, really.
But yeah, guys, thank you guys so much for your support. From the last episode, episode 103, so many of you are talking about it like crazy online.
You're posting pictures on Instagram.
You're uploading it to the site at lewishouse.com slash 103.
It's all about how to get clarity in your business and your life and the steps to achieving
those goals.
So go ahead and check out the previous episode, 103.
Share this one as well with your friends
slash 104 and i'm so pumped to bring you more inspiring guests influencers and thought leaders
to the podcast thank you guys again so much for being here for subscribing for sharing this and
i can't wait to see you guys next time you know what it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. What's up? What's up? What's up?
What's up?