The School of Greatness - Everything You Need To Know To Fix Your Diet & Nutrition To Live Longer w/ Michael Pollan EP 1424
Episode Date: April 17, 2023https://lewishowes.com/mindset - Order a copy of my new book The Greatness Mindset today!Michael Pollan has been writing books and articles about the places where the human and natural worlds intersec...t for more than 30 years. He is the author of nine books, seven of which have been New York Times bestsellers. In 2003, Pollan was appointed the Knight Professor of Journalism and director of the Knight Program in Science and Environmental Journalism at the University of California, Berkeley. In 2017, he was appointed professor of the practice of nonfiction at Harvard and the university's first Lewis K. Chan Lecturer in the Arts.  In 2020, along with Dacher Keltner and others, he cofounded the UC Berkeley Center for the Science of Psychedelics. In 2022, Pollan released his four-part docuseries, How to Change Your Mind, on Netflix, which explores the history and uses of psychedelics, including LSD, psilocybin, MDMA and mescaline. Most recently, Pollan released his class on MasterClass where he teaches intentional eating. In the class, he breaks down decades of research to help members rethink their relationship with food and make choices that benefit their health and the planet.In this episode you will learn,Everything you need to know about eating intentionallyHow important the communal meal is for our overall healthThe science  of psychedelics and what it teaches us about consciousness, addiction and mental healthThe effect caffeine has on the mind and bodyHow to align your eating habits with your valuesCheck out Michael's new MasterClass - Intentional EatingFor more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1424How Food Heals or Harms Your Body, Aging & Mental Health: https://link.chtbl.com/1075-podBuild Your Health to Build Your Wealth: https://link.chtbl.com/916-podUse Food to Heal Your Body: https://link.chtbl.com/714-pod
Transcript
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My friend, I am such a big believer that your mindset is everything.
It can really dictate if your life has meaning, has value, and you feel fulfilled, or if you
feel exhausted, drained, and like you're never going to be enough.
Our brand new book, The Greatness Mindset, just hit the New York Times bestseller back
to back weeks.
And I'm so excited to hear from so many of you who've bought the book, who've read it
and finished it already, and are getting incredible results from the lessons in the book.
If you haven't got a copy yet, you'll learn how to build a plan for greatness through powerful
exercises and toolkits designed to propel your life forward. This is the book I wish I had when
I was 20, struggling, trying to figure out life. 10 years ago, at 30, trying to figure out
transitions in my life
and the book I'm glad I have today for myself. Make sure to get a copy at lewishouse.com slash
2023 mindset to get your copy today. Again lewishouse.com slash 2023 mindset to get a copy
today. Also, the book is on Audible now so you can get it on audiobook as well. And don't
forget to follow the show so you never miss an episode. I don't think we fully recognize the
mental health impacts of the way we're eating. When you're eating a diet that is, for example,
has lots of sugar in it, you're going to be on an emotional roller coaster.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a 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.
Now let the class begin.
I think nutrition and this idea of wanting to extend our life, our lifespan, living a healthier life, living longer is something that people are taking note of specifically
in recent times after just all the different physical ailments, stresses, diseases that people
are accumulating in life. And I want to start with a question that I think anyone could resonate with,
which is the worst foods that you think so many people are consuming that they think are healthy,
which are actually really, really unhealthy for us physically, mentally, emotionally, spiritually. If you had
a list of three to five foods that you think people think are healthy, but actually the research,
the studies are showing it's actually hurting you. Well, yeah. I mean, I think the least healthy
category of foods are what are called ultra-processed foods, sometimes UPFs. These are foods that are heavily processed.
The reason they use the word ultra is because lots of healthy foods are processed.
Cheese is processed.
Yogurt is processed.
White flour has been processed.
So there's a degree of processing that's just kind of fine.
But when you get into ultra-process processed foods, which often carry health claims, I mean,
I'll give you an example, the Impossible Burger or the Beyond Burger, right?
But super processed, though, right?
Yeah, like 21 ingredients, some of them never before in the human diet.
Really?
And they're, you know, they're sold as plant based. And I would always watch out for that phrase because it sounds really good.
It has an aura of health around it.
But how about just plant?
Right.
Why plant-based?
One ingredient.
One ingredient.
Carrot.
Exactly.
One ingredient food.
Yeah, that's a plant-based root.
And so, but in fact, it's got these 21 ingredients and lots of novel things and emulsifiers.
And bonding.
Yeah.
Methylcellulose is the glue that holds it together.
It's, I mean, I like them.
I have to say they're tasty.
They're a pretty good synthesis of meat-like experience.
But it's an ultra-processed food. And we do know that
ultra-processed foods as a category, which now represent more than 60% of the American diet,
which is astonishing, are bad for us in many ways. And we have really good research suggesting that.
And I'm not speaking any specific one. There's no research that the Beyond Burger Impossible Burger is bad for you but the class that it is a part of is and so you've got people
eating great amounts of this and not even knowing the difference you know a
frozen pizza versus a real pizza it looks the same it's but to make it last
as long as it lasts in the in's freezer. You have to add all sorts of chemicals to it.
Interesting.
And products.
Now, the best definition of ultra-processed food is it's made with ingredients.
It's something you couldn't make at home.
You don't own methylcellulose.
It's not in your pantry.
You don't have emulsifiers.
You don't have – and you need a factory to make these foods.
So if you look at the label and you see stuff
you don't have in your pantry,
or a normal person wouldn't have in their pantry,
that's an ultra-processed food, stay away.
So I would say that's the big category,
the plant-based ultra-processed food,
because plant-based has this aura about it.
Is there, you know, meat-based processed foods that are worse than plant-based processed, or does
it really not matter?
I don't know that it matters.
I don't think it's an important distinction.
Got you.
You know, a lot of the ingredients in processed food, if you look at the label on
a Twinkie, you know, they're like, I don't know, there are a lot of ingredients.
A very high number of them are derived from a plant, specifically from corn.
A lot of the American food
system consists of growing huge amounts of corn. And this is commodity corn. This is not corn on
the cob. And then using those kernels, breaking them down into its chemical constituents and then
putting them back together as processed food. So all that crap is plant-based technically. That's where it starts. But it's so far removed
from a plant as to not be healthy. So ultra-processed foods is the number one category.
What would be the next category of unhealthy foods that seem to be healthy?
Sugar. I mean, I think one of the things people should pay attention to is how sugar has infiltrated foods that never used to have sugar in them.
Like which types of foods?
Oh, ketchup, tomato sauce, bread.
Bread, you know, historically, no, it's flour, water, and yeast or a sourdough starter.
That's all you need to make bread.
What is sugar doing there?
The industry has discovered
that if you add sugar to anything, you will sell more of it. It's magic in the marketplace. And we
are, you know, hardwired by evolution to like sweetness. Sweetness in nature is a sign of
nutritious food, of energy. You know, it's ripe fruit. And so the problem with a lot of the modern food industry is that it takes these,
you know, inborn qualities we have, like we like, we like sweetness, we like fat,
the sensation of fat, because these are, you know, flavor is, is the brain system for making, you know, evaluating nutrition in nature. And it works
really well until you learn how to fool it. And that's essentially what food science does.
We can make you think you're eating a strawberry when you're eating cardboard.
Candy bar or something. Yeah. And we can think you're eating sugar, drinking sugar when you're drinking a diet soda.
One of the really interesting facts about diet sodas, zero-calorie soda, is that people don't lose weight.
Why is that?
Well, one of the theories is that your body, experiencing sweetness, prepares for sugar, releases insulin, and gets all ready, and then doesn't get the sugar.
So you crave it, and you will get it somewhere else.
You'll get it in a piece of white bread, or you'll reach for a pastry or something like that.
So you end up consuming just as much sugar, just not in that diet soda.
So what's worse, the diet soda or the regular soda?
I would, if you're going to drink soda, and soda, you probably shouldn't drink or make a very special occasion food. I really don't like
saying don't eat anything. I think the key distinction is, is this a daily routine food
that you should eat whenever, or is this a special occasion food? I would put soda in the special
occasion. Sure. And if you're going to do it then, would you do the diet soda or the regular soda? I would do the regular soda. Why screw around?
I mean, no. I mean, there's a recent study out about erythritol, which is an alcohol that's
very sweet. And that's going into a lot of processed foods. And they've just recently
found that there are various health problems associated with it. I mean, you know, our body understands sugar. Our species understands
sugar. Let's stick with what we have a long history with and not go with these novelties.
So why does our body think we're having something nutritious when we have something sweet,
even though it's high fructose corn syrup as opposed to a fruit or
a strawberry or a blueberry? Why does it think this is nutritious just because it tastes good?
Well, because we have this, I mean, we inherited this, it's not one gene, but a liking for
sweetness just because if, let's say you're in nature and there's a lot of berries out there
and you taste some and one is like really sour or bitter that's a sign of an alkaloid which can be
a poison whereas sweet is usually a sign that it's something safe to eat and will give you some
energy so in the state of nature our senses are very well tuned to the environment and our bodies and can negotiate between the two.
But once you start creating synthetic flavor, we're lost.
Our bodies don't know.
Now, it's interesting.
We're fooling our bodies into thinking they're eating meat with some of these plant-based
burgers.
And what are the implications of that?
What are those?
I don't know.
We haven't studied that yet.
So we've studied it with diets that are, you know, artificial sweeteners, I guess, right?
Well, there's a very interesting study that was done at Yale where a scientist looked at the relationship of expected sweetness and actual sweetness in when the amount of sugar in a drink matched the expectation that we had,
you were better off.
And when it was off, either the soda, they did it with a drink.
I don't know if it was a soda.
If the sweetness was greater than it would be if it were sugar or less than it would
be with sugar, things went wrong.
In the body.
In the body, yeah.
So it's almost like match the amount of sugar to the sensation that you have.
Make sure it's pretty close.
Yeah.
If you want your metabolism to work correctly.
Wow.
Because we have this very highly attuned insulin metabolism.
And that's what goes awry when people get overweight. It's just not working
right. So, you know, we shouldn't lie to our bodies. We shouldn't let our food lie to our
bodies. Don't trick it and say, this is really healthy, even though it tastes really sweet.
Yeah. Yeah. Maybe it's not the right thing. Yeah. So how do we, I mean, we're so addicted to pleasure
sensations, it seems like, physically as human beings.
How do we learn to intentionally eat for pleasure and also for nutritional value,
but not get caught up in eating so much sugar or processed foods that give us this
heightened sense of pleasure quickly and easily?
Well, you know, I came up with my seven word mantra when I was trying to figure out how I should eat, eat food, by which I mean real food, food that isn't synthetic,
that isn't lying to your body, that people have, you know, that people have been eating for a long
time, that your grandmother would recognize as food, that, you know, contains ingredients that
a third grader can pronounce. I mean, I have all these food rules.
And then the second part of the mantra is not too much.
And that's the hard part for people.
And mostly plants.
And not all plants.
I don't think meat is bad for you.
I think it's perfectly nutritious food.
But the more plants in your diet, the healthier
you will be. Why? Well, plants have, first of all, we've been eating plants for, you know,
300,000 years. As long as we've been around as a species, it's the main thing we eat. We get,
we would get lucky when we hunted and, you know, or caught animals to eat meat. But the mainstay for most diets has been plants.
Plants are full of nutrients that we need, phytochemicals of various kinds.
Antioxidants, the most famous, and they're really important.
And you get those.
All plants produce antioxidants.
They have to to survive.
It's how they deal with all the solar radiation they're getting. And that is cancer preventative, does all sorts of things. But the other thing that
we're now understanding is so important about plants is that there are cell walls we know as
fiber. And fiber is essential. We're learning the biggest, the two biggest discoveries I think in food
is this
research around
ultra-processed foods
and the other is
this research around
the microbiome
yes
and that there are
10 trillion organisms
you share your body with
they have the majority
actually
more of them
than there are
cells of you
and that microbiome
turns out
to be critical
to our health
10 trillion 10 trillion microbes in your gut microbes in the gut And that microbiome turns out to be critical to our health.
10 trillion.
10 trillion microbes in your gut.
Microbes in the gut.
Yeah.
And they have such a powerful effect on our health.
And they, to be healthy and diverse, because you want a diverse number of species of these microbiomes, what they eat is fiber.
They eat plants. They're not interested in other things. They don't deal with sugar. They don't deal... All the kind of
immediate gratification processed foods are absorbed in the small intestine very quickly.
They're designed for that purpose. Ultra-processed food has little or no fiber. But fiber is what
these microbes need to be healthy.
And when they're healthy, they're producing lots of chemicals, byproducts, some of which are important to mental health too.
I don't think the link between the microbiome and your mind has only recently been established, but it has been established.
And for example, most of the serotonin in your body is produced in your gut.
And we need that for a whole lot of different reasons.
So that's the best argument for eating lots of plants and a variety of plants because there are many different types of fiber and many different types of antioxidants.
So the recommendation is you eat 30 different plants a week. 30 different? It's not as hard as it sounds. Really? Coffee is one of them. So the recommendation is you eat 30 different plants a week.
30 different?
It's not as hard as it sounds.
Really?
Coffee is one of them.
Okay.
Yeah.
That's one, you got one plant there.
But I mean, there are lots of plants that you're eating without thinking about it.
Sure.
And, but if you think about varying your diet, you know, you had some strawberries or blueberries
this morning, you're going to have, there's lettuce on your sandwich at lunch.
There's plants in the bread of your sandwich.
I mean, it's not that hard to hit 30, I think.
Unless you're eating a lot of processed food.
Right.
Now, in terms of the story of longevity,
living a healthy, longer life,
how important is it to have meat in your diet
in order to maintain muscle mass and strength as we continue to age?
How important is meat for building muscle?
Well, I think protein is important for building muscle, and protein is important for healing.
You know, the reason that athletes consume a lot of protein after they've had a big performance is that they're rebuilding muscles that have been torn down.
Torn down, yeah.
But you can get protein from plants.
And people overlook the importance of that.
You can get it from legumes or beans and tofu and things like that.
And it's just harder.
You have to put more thought into it.
I don't know that meat is necessary for longevity.
I don't know that.
I haven't seen research to that effect.
It's a very convenient way of getting a lot of protein.
But other things come with it.
I guess not for longevity, but building muscle for longevity
so that you have the strength to get back off the ground
if you fall over when you're older or you get stronger.
But we've been reading about and hearing from vegan athletes.
I mean, there are some very high-performing vegan athletes,
which kind of gives the lie that you need meat to do this.
I just think you have to be...
I mean, I've had periods where I've only eaten plants and I did crave protein sometimes.
And so I, you know, added back in fish.
Sure, sure.
And so I think it depends on you and your metabolism.
Some people thrive on an all plant diet and some people simply don't.
They don't feel they have enough energy.
Sure.
I felt I had enough energy.
I just, something in me needed more protein.
Right.
And I was eating lots of tofu and tempeh and things like that.
But it wasn't enough, huh?
Apparently not.
Or my mind didn't think it was enough.
Right.
So, you know, you have to listen to those signals when you get them.
But, you know, I think if you're interested in, if longevity is your focus, and that's never been my focus, my focus has always been be as healthy as you can for as long as possible.
And then have a, what is the term, compressed morbidity or something.
The shortest possible period of illness before death.
That's the key.
That's what Dr. Sinclair talks about.
Oh, yeah?
Yeah.
I don't know if you're familiar with his work, David Sinclair.
about that. Oh, yeah?
Yeah, I don't know
if you're familiar
with his work,
David Sinclair,
but he talked about
how his mom suffered
like a,
I can't remember,
something like a 10-year
unhealthy death.
Yeah, and that's typical
in America.
And he was like,
I wanted to be,
you know,
I'm sick and I die
within a couple of days
type of thing
and I live a healthy life
until it's over
as opposed to
how do I keep myself alive
in an unhealthy way
for as long as possible? That's not a good life. And we have a medical system that's pretty good
at that too. But so, you know, my focus is chronic disease. I mean, just the kinds of things where
people have 40 years of diabetes or something, which is not a great way to live the second half
of your life. No. Is there a way to reverse diabetes?
Type 2 diabetes can be reversed with diet and exercise. People really can put themselves on
a regime and their numbers will go down and their blood glucose will improve. So in the case of type
2, type 1 is genetic. and I don't know that.
I think diet's very important to maintaining yourself, but I don't know that you can reverse it.
How do you navigate the pleasure signals in, I guess, your gut or your brain telling you,
or that might tell you, that tells a lot of people, here's a candy bar, here's a cookie, here's a milkshake, I want to eat this now.
How have you trained your mind and your gut microbiome to not be tempted and want it and crave it consistently?
Or is the craving there, but you've just created standards and food rules to support yourself in minimizing those temptations?
Yeah, well, I don't know that I've worked it out completely. I mean, I have my cravings.
If you ask my wife, who, you know, if there's a bag of potato chips, she'll finish it if it's open.
I am fairly disciplined. And some of it is just being mindful. You know, I've thought a lot about
food and nutrition, and I have researched it in great, you know, I've thought a lot about food and nutrition and I have researched it in
great, you know, so asking yourself a set of questions, you know, am I still hungry or am I
just enjoying eating? That's a big one. You know, Americans are socialized. I mean, think about what
your mom said to you. She said, are you full when she fed you, right? She didn't say, are you satisfied? That's the right
question. Or are you no longer hungry? Because the moment you're no longer hungry is many bites
before you're full. Right. Just stop eating. Exactly. And so I often will ask myself, so am
I still hungry or am I just eating because there's more on the plate. And then I enjoy the process. And, you know, in other
countries, I talk about this in my masterclass, there are sayings. In Japan, they say hara hachi
bu, which means eat until you're 80% full. That's interesting. And in the Arab world, they say you
should eat till you're three quarters full. In France, parents don't say to kids, are you full?
They say, do you still have hunger?
And so it's a different way of socializing appetite.
In America, it's like, eat until you cannot eat anymore.
Way past hunger.
Way past hunger.
And there's two more courses to come, so we got
to finish them. So the goal is satisfaction. It's not making yourself full. How do we get to
satisfaction when people have been training and conditioning themselves for decades to eat past
satisfaction? We are up against, yes. We are up a powerful industry. I mean, I can't overestimate how important food marketing is.
I mean, the industry spends like $40 billion getting us to eat more.
It's in every commercial, it seems like.
Absolutely.
It's either drugs or food.
Yeah.
In every candy commercial.
Yeah.
I bet you can't eat just one.
You know, the old Lay's potato chip commercial. And in fact, food scientists talk about craveability as something they're designing into the food.
And they can do that.
They know how to do that.
And, you know, we're being manipulated by the food science and the marketing.
So it's a struggle.
So it's a struggle because in other countries, America's somewhat unique in food because we don't have a single old traditional food culture.
You know, in most cultures, you would eat the way your parents ate growing up, the way their parents ate growing up.
And people knew what food was, what wasn't food.
This is what we traditionally eat. In America, since we're, you know, a mongrel nation, you know, drawn from so many different cultures, immigrant nation, we don't have a single dominant food culture.
And I think that has left us vulnerable to marketing and to fads.
And so America will change the way it eats overnight. You know, I remember the low-fat craze, you know, that was like when I was growing up, you know, fat was the evil nutrient.
You shouldn't eat fat.
And then suddenly in 2002, I know exactly when it happened.
It was like it's not fat that makes you fat.
It's sugar that makes you fat.
Carbs.
So then we had the campaign against carbs.
And overnight in 2002, and it was one article published in the New York Times.
Was it with Atkins or was that a?
Well, Atkins was behind it, but it was a writer named Gary Taubes.
And it was like, what if it's all a big fat lie?
That was a cover story in the Times.
Good headline.
Good headline.
And suddenly, like, donut companies were going out of business,
and bread companies were going out of business
because everybody was demonizing carbohydrates.
Wow.
And we're still kind of in that world and celebrating protein.
Protein now is the good nutrient.
Carbs are the evil nutrient.
Fat is, depending on what world you're in. If you're in the keto world, fat's fine. If you're in the good nutrient. Carbs are the evil nutrient. Fat is, depending on what world you're in,
if you're in the keto world, fat's fine. If you're in the...
Right.
So, you know, we're crazy about food. We really are confused, fashion conscious, fashion driven.
And it's no wonder because we're getting these messages. You know, the grocery store is full
of foods being sold on the basis of health that aren't healthy. So no wonder we're confused. You know, the food in the supermarket that screams
loudest about its virtues is all in the middle aisles. It's all processed food with packages.
The healthiest food is the produce section where the food is like sitting there quietly because it
doesn't have packages. By the corner, yeah, there's no packaging.
It's intimidating.
You're starting to see some like, I don't know,
Apple companies putting a plastic, you know, wrapping in bags.
And here's some marketing behind this.
Yeah.
But I mean, the real health claims should go on that stuff.
Yes.
But of course, you know, they don't, farmers don't have money to.
They don't do that.
Research the health claims.
I'm curious.
It's, you know, I don't know the statistics, the health claims. I'm curious.
I don't know the statistics, but you mentioned about marketing.
Would you say $40 billion a year, as we said, in the food industry in terms of marketing and ad spend? And compare that to how much the government spends informing us about health and food, the food pyramid or whatever, MyPlate.
And it's the equivalent of a single SKU, a single product from Frito-Lay.
Oh my gosh.
And so the message, any kind of health message about food is drowned out by the marketing.
It's crazy. So $40 billion a year on the food industry to market you products that
probably 99% aren't actually healthy and that are formulated to scientifically get you hooked.
Get you to eat more.
And play on your dopamine system and give you those kind of satisfactions.
I want this now.
And people might say, well, your parents cooking for you, they're also trying to get you to eat.
But they're not trying to get you to overeat.
Yes.
Your parents are trying to satisfy you with food. And. Your parents are trying to satisfy you with food.
And the food industry is trying to addict you with food.
That's very different approaches.
What do you think?
Do you know how much the medical world, the drug industry, spends a year on advertising?
I don't know that number.
I'm curious what that is.
But I'm curious your thoughts if there was a law that banned all food marketing and all drug marketing.
Because I believe these food marketing and the drug marketing is making us sicker.
It's not helping us get to the root of healing intuitively and organically.
It's masking.
It's putting over layers.
And confusing.
Confusing.
It's telling you you're going to get healthier, but it's not the case.
If there was a ban against all food marketing and all drug marketing on everywhere, TV, podcast, everywhere,
do you think the country would get healthier?
Or what do you think would happen if there was no marketing for food or drugs?
It's a great question.
I think we'd be a lot healthier.
I think we would. I think culture
would step into that gap. And culture has a lot of wisdom about food. And we don't listen to it
nearly enough. Or science would step into the gap, too. And we'd get our scientific information not
from pharmaceutical companies as we do now the
other interesting phenomenon though is how much of those pharmaceutical products you see advertised
on tv are expressly designed to undo the effects of a diet right yeah and uh it's a lot of them
everything for diabetes is about dealing with type 2 diabetes is a product of the food system, right?
I mean, rates have gone up with obesity
and that we are spending,
so we spend about three quarters of all spending
in healthcare goes to treat chronic diseases.
Of that, some of it is smoking.
Some of it's smoking and alcohol.
If you take out alcohol and smoking, how much is related to food?
It's something like $500 billion out of $750 billion.
Oh, my gosh.
It's a huge number.
But how much of chronic disease is related to food and nutrition?
Most of it.
Most of it.
Versus smoking or drugs or alcohol?
Yeah, most of it.
80%, 90%?
No, the American diet, the standard American diet is what is killing most of us.
That is what most people die of.
And I'm talking about several types of cancer that are linked to it, heart disease obviously linked to diet, and diabetes, which has become a really big killer.
It is the way we're eating that is doing this to us and that we could save a fortune by changing the way
we eat in, in healthcare spending. Um, and no doubt we could improve longevity as well. It's,
it, it's the elephant in the room is the American food system. And we all take it to be as like
normal and, and the food still looks the same. Pizza looks like pizza and, you know, these,
you know, convenient frozen dishes in the, in the grocer's freezer, but it's not the same. Pizza looks like pizza and, you know, these, you know, convenient frozen dishes in the, in the grocer's freezer, but it's not the same. That, that, you know, that packaged
ravioli or tomato sauce is not what those things were or should be. Right. So, um, in a way it's
an easy fix and it's a hard fix. I remember I was speaking, I was giving a speech to a group of health insurance executives, and I was trying to enlist their support for reform of
the food system, which is one of my causes. I don't want that, though.
Well, the reason it was very interesting, and I was saying, you know, you guys should be allies
of the food reform movement, because every case of type 2 diabetes you prevent is $400,000
to your bottom line.
That's how much it costs to treat each case over the life of that person.
$400,000?
$400,000 for something that can be completely prevented.
And one of the presidents of these organizations came up to me after and says, you don't understand.
We don't have a long-term
interest in your health because the churn, because the churn, because medical contracts for medical
insurance are only one year and people are constantly switching plans and companies are
constantly switching plans. So we don't, you know, you're talking about something that is going to benefit
you over years and we don't care about that. And I realized there, there is a simple fix.
How about five-year contracts for health insurance? That would completely change the, the,
the incentives for the insurance company. And they would start talking to us about prevention.
Interesting. Cause they don't, they benefit when we are sick.
Well, I don't know that they benefit, but they don't benefit when we prevent...
When we're super healthy.
Yeah. So they're not invested in preventive medicine.
Wow. And the drug companies aren't...
Oh, they benefit enormously from chronic disease. Sure.
That's the only way they make money.
Yeah. Ozempac.
I mean, right?
Everybody's taking Ozempac for diabetes and weight loss now.
How much money are these drug companies making?
I don't have any figures.
It's a huge industry.
Huge.
And, you know, their business model, too, is some drug you have to take every day of the rest of your life.
But that doesn't cure the illness.
No. They're not cures for the
illness. They're just dealing with the symptoms. And that's true for mental health drugs too.
SSRIs don't cure depression. I mean, they tamp down symptoms when they work.
What is the greatest cure for depression without any drugs?
I would say exercise. It's huge. And eating real food.
I think you do those two things. Now, it's not going to work for everybody. Some people have
depression caused by trauma and all sorts of different factors. But those two things can
make a huge difference. I don't think we fully recognize the mental health impacts of the way
we're eating. When you're eating a diet
that is, for example, has lots of sugar in it, you're going to be on an emotional roller coaster.
I mean, watch kids with sugar, you know, and they think that chocolate or this kind of sweetened
cereal makes them happy. And it does for a little while, but they crash. And that's true for us too.
We have these ups and downs during the day that have a lot to do with our sugar intake.
And then when we get this spike, and it has to do with glucose release and things like that, and then we crash.
And the solution to that is more, more sugar.
So snacking is another thing, too.
Meals are like a really good human institution.
Snacking, we're eating all day long.
How bad is snacking for our gut microbiome, for our brain, and for our overall just metabolism?
If we're eating meals and then snacking a little bit here and there in between.
I mean, I don't think snacking is like evil or anything.
And I think a lot depends on what you have.
I snack.
I'm a writer.
So, you know, I'm at my desk.
I'm supposed to get up.
That's the other, that's the competing value, right?
You should stand every half hour.
And move a little bit.
And where do you go?
You go to the kitchen.
And you heat up your coffee or pour a cup of tea and then you have, you know,
some nuts or some nuts or dried fruit. Yeah, definitely. And I'm not like Obama. I don't
count my almonds as he allegedly did. So I think snacking, you kind of lose, you lose sight of how
much you're eating. It just becomes kind of invisible. So, I mean, I think snacking, you kind of lose sight of how much you're eating. It just becomes kind of invisible.
So, I mean, I think it's something that people have to be careful about.
But I don't believe in being punitive about it.
But I think eating meals with other people, you know, we're talking about food as if it's this transaction between us and this stuff.
But meals, eating with other people affects how you eat. You know, when you're
eating with other people, you put down the fork and talk and then you pick it up and there's more
time. And the more time you spend eating, the more likely you are to know when you're full.
It takes 20 minutes for the body to send you the news like, enough, we're full. 20 minutes. So if
you're eating really fast,
you're defeating that signal.
And so you're eating too much.
But if you have a leisurely meal,
you're much more likely to realize,
you know, I think I've had enough.
It's interesting because I was just having
a breakfast meeting this morning
and it probably went for about an hour and a half, right?
It was a great meeting and meal
because I noticed that I did not finish my plate.
You were engaged.
I was engaged.
I was talking and then I'd eat a little bit
when they were talking, you know,
and have a few bites.
And then I would, you know,
have my fork here with food
and be like talking to them
and just like, okay, let me listen, engage.
And it got to the point,
and I didn't have a lot.
I had two eggs, scrambled eggs. I had a a couple pieces of bacon and i had some you know potatoes
kind of the standard breakfast yeah exactly right um and i and i was eating the potatoes and i was
like huh okay i'm getting pretty full and i just left the last potato and i was like let me just
experiment i left it on the table and I could have eaten it easily,
but I left it because I was like,
I actually feel pretty satisfied.
Well, that clean plate ethic is really bad.
I mean, why?
I mean, when you're done eating,
it's okay if you leave something on the plate.
And in fact, it's a good practice.
Just make a point.
I'm not gonna eat the last thing on my plate.
Just as an exercise.
Now what do you feel like?
Well, I don't want to waste food.
Well, yeah, I know.
And that's what we were brought up.
People are starving in Korea or whatever.
Yeah, yeah.
The thing you heard from your parents.
So you can box it up.
It's not going to help them if you leave a potato.
Maybe you should take less at the beginning or maybe the portion size is a huge problem.
Huge.
Don't get the appetizers.
Don't get the desserts.
You know, have, we tend to think
that the amount of food put in front of us is the proper amount to eat. It's usually probably
double what we're supposed to eat. And for food, for restaurants, they've learned that we appreciate
ampleness and the cost of the food is one of their lowest costs. And so they give us portions that
are too big. And we we compliment a restaurant for having
big portions. You feel like you're getting more for your value. Yeah, you feel you're getting
good value. And the economics definitely work for the restaurants, but it doesn't work for us.
So we end up, big portions are definitely part of our problem. So you mentioned before, you know, two great ways to minimize or decrease depression for a human being is healthy nutrition and exercise.
Those two things.
Yeah.
Getting some sunlight is really good, too.
Sunlight, probably quality sleep as well.
Oh, yeah.
I mean, people are depressed often have trouble sleeping.
But one of the ways to fix your circadian rhythms is make sure every morning you look at the sun, you go outside, even
if it's cloudy, just look at where it should be.
And that information comes through your eyes to your brain and kind of sets your clock
and it will improve your sleep.
Yeah.
Dr. Andrew Huberman has done a lot of research on that and preaches it almost every day about
the research.
That and breathing, yeah.
He says that's his number one health tip,
is get outside and look at the sun.
First thing in the morning, right?
Not when it's already up and you can't look at it.
And it's okay if you didn't get up at dawn,
but before midday.
Yeah, get up for 10, 15 minutes
and look towards the sun, right?
Just allow your eyes to gaze towards it.
And you'll be getting outside and you'll be getting some vitamin D because you spend way
too much time inside. Being outside is, you know, I mean, exercising outside I think is better for
us than inside. What do you think is the root cause of depression? Why someone could get
depressed or chronic depression? Because we all go through sadness and grief and loss and
heartache and relationships and deaths and career ending, things like that, where there might be a
season of sadness. But the chronic depression, what is the root cause of that?
I don't think we know. There are people looking for the genes implicated in depression. They have
not had success finding them. There is depression caused by events. People with a
cancer diagnosis get depressed. We understand exactly why. And if they're healed or cured,
their depression might lift. But then you have other people, and I've interviewed them in my
research on psychedelics, who've been depressed for 30 years without a break. And I don't think
we really understand that. It's exhausting on the nervous system. Yeah, it takes a toll.
On the brain, on the heart.
Every system, every system.
But I don't think we have a real understanding of what's going on.
I mean, one of the things I've learned about mental health is that there's a lot we don't understand.
We don't even know if depression, anxiety, addiction, and, say, OCD are separate diseases, or are they four different symptoms of the same underlying disease, which is to say a mind that is too rigidly bound up and stuck in patterns of rumination.
They're all characterized by rigidity and strong habits.
A controlling nature almost, right?
Yeah, an attempt to control nature.
And they're also characterized
by these destructive narratives
that people tell about themselves.
So, you know, they're in the DSM,
you know, the Bible of diagnoses.
They're listed as separate things.
But I've talked to psychiatrists
who say, no, they may all be the same thing.
Susan David talks about emotional agility, having the ability to, you know, be flexible with our emotions and not be so rigid.
Habits, yeah, habits get us into trouble with food, certainly, and with our mental health.
And habits are really valuable.
I mean, they can organize your life.
They can save you from having to run, you know, run the algorithm every time a new situation comes up.
It's like, okay, this is a conversation with my boss.
This is the kind of thing that works.
You know, you have a habit.
But they also are straitjackets.
Yes.
And the older we get, the harder it is to break habits.
And that's one of the really interesting things about psychedelic medicine.
I'm not talking about psychedelics used recreationally, but when they're used in a therapeutic context, people seem to be able to break habits of thought and behavior.
And that's really powerful.
And that allows you to start taking different consistent actions, which gets you different emotional results. Exactly. And you can basically
lay down the pathways of new habits, which becomes more and more important as we age.
Have you ever felt extreme depression in your life?
I have had periods. I don't know that they were extreme, but I've definitely had periods that I can remember
where I was depressed or anxious.
I had periods when, as a teenager, I was a very anxious teenager, and then experienced
some depression in my, I would say in my 20s, and not so much since then.
And I do-
Why do you think you have a pretty, you know, harmonious emotional environment internally?
Well, you know, you're assuming that's the case, but thank you.
Well, if you're not in depressed states, then you have to be at least neutral.
I'm definitely not in depressed states, and I'm definitely not in an anxious state.
And I think a lot of it owes to the fact that I'm mindful about my health, which means exercise. And I mean, I do a couple of things. I have a
whole regime. So I eat real food, not too much, mostly plants. I struggle with the not too much
because I love to eat. But if you're eating real food, it's less of an issue. You know, overeating,
you know, a vegetable stir fry is not going to get you in trouble the way overeating a pizza is.
Yeah, or a whole cake or something.
Yeah.
And I don't have a big sweet tooth, luckily.
That's not helpful.
I wish I had that disease.
Yeah.
So I don't crave dessert.
And I rarely do have dessert.
That's a gift.
Okay.
So you eat real food.
So food.
Eating real food.
Exercising at least 30 minutes a day.
And I do aerobic exercise and I do, you know, floor and weight work.
I mean, it's amazing the benefits of moving 30 minutes a day on how much more joy, excited you can be, how much more peaceful, how much more gratifying.
It's the best drug there is.
It just makes you feel better.
So if you don't feel good, move.
Yeah, it's so important.
There was a study that came out
just a couple of weeks ago
that said 11 minutes of walking
will improve your longevity
and improve your health in general in 11 minutes.
So it doesn't have to be a lot.
It doesn't have to be, you don't have to be running.
You can be walking.
So exercise.
Eat real food.
And the last thing is I meditate.
And I meditate about 25 minutes a day, preceded by some breathing exercises.
And, you know, that's stress reduction.
You know, the other thing people don't talk about and it's very hard to quantify is social connection.
Huge.
And loneliness.
The Surgeon General, Vivek Murthy, has really made this his cause.
He wrote a really good book on loneliness.
his cause. He wrote a really good book on loneliness. And that people without social connection or who are mediating their social connection through social media, which isn't
the same thing. You're not connected. You're not really connected. You have faux friends.
You have faux connection. But that's really important. And having some sort of social group that supports you in some ways.
And so those four things, I think, are so important.
So cultivating your friendships is huge.
How many people have you studied or worked with who have been in emotionally depressed states that started doing these four things, essentially,
the three things plus deepening their intimate relationships,
saw improvement?
Oh, many, many people.
I mean, I've seen this over and over again.
You know, I'm not a scientist, so I haven't researched it
and obviously haven't done a control.
But I've seen it in my friends.
I've seen it in relatives.. I've seen it in relatives.
It can do a lot for people.
And by the way, we have evidence that the regime I'm just describing has very positive effects on people's cardiovascular health.
Dean Ornish has done a lot of research, pretty much that regime, those four things,
although he insists on a totally plant-based diet.
And I think it should be substantially plant-based.
And he has also done that with men with prostate cancer and has found prostate cancer is a very interesting case
because many people are not treated for it since, you know, it often doesn't advance.
So it's one of the rare cancers that people live with for years and can be studied while they're being surveilled for it.
So we can look at lifestyle interventions and see if they make a difference.
So UCSF put several thousand men on this regime with a control to see if it would have
an effect.
And indeed, it slowed the progression of their disease and lowered their PSA scores, which
is a marker of prostate cancer.
Wow.
So, and Dean Ornish is now trialing this with a group of people just diagnosed with Alzheimer's
to see if it has an effect on the progression of their disease. So with eating real food, exercise and meditation?
Yeah, some kind of, it doesn't have to be meditation, some kind of stress reduction.
It could be yoga. Yeah. Breath work. Breath work. It's all those techniques we have to
essentially lower stress. Wow. I think I love this prescription, you know, this organic, intuitive prescription.
It's too bad doctors don't talk about it more. Yeah. And I think the other elephant in the room
that we, you know, kind of hit on a little bit is the trauma, you know, because I think you can
eat well, you can exercise, you can meditate, you can have social connections, but if there's still trauma stored in our memories
or in our body, it can take us farther,
but it can still be pulled back into the trauma.
And I think because I did all these things for many years,
but I still hadn't faced certain traumatic memories.
I hadn't created new meaning from those memories.
I hadn't processed them.
I hadn't fully addressed them.
I didn't fully unpack and talk about them and have catharsis and emote in those feelings
and grieve and go through the wide range of emotions of traumatic moments in my life.
How did you end up doing that?
I did that in the last couple of years.
It's been a 10-year journey of healing traumatic experiences.
Ten years ago, I opened up about being sexually abused as a kid when I was five.
It's one of my first memories, actually.
And for most of my life, that emotional and psychological wound was a memory playing in my mind almost daily.
It would just kind of come up, and i would just push it away and work really
hard so i used so it was present it wasn't a suppress constantly present but i would try to
run away from it i try to out work it i would try to you know be a workaholic in sports and achieve
and succeed to validate i'm worthy lovable and enough yeah But it wasn't until I hit 30 when I had lots of breakdowns in my life
that I realized I had never addressed it
or told anyone.
And so I went down a process,
and I've talked about this many times on my show
and publicly,
but I went down a process of facing the trauma,
you know.
With the help of therapists?
I did it in an emotional intelligence workshop initially, so kind of a safer environment in a group setting, and then worked with therapists to unpack it more and process that healing.
And then I ended up writing about it in a previous book on the mask of masculinity I talked about, where I feel like a lot of men suffer from trauma that they never express.
They never talk about it in a healthy way.
And so I was able to unpack that. trauma that they never expressed. They never talked about it in a healthy way.
And so I was able to unpack that.
But then there were more things over the last 10 years that I needed to face that I was unwilling to, or I thought maybe I'd done all the work.
And the last couple of years, it was really kind of healing the pain in my heart in other
ways through emotional coaching sessions, but very intense, you know, three to five hour sessions on every
Saturday for months because I wanted peace and freedom in my heart. Again, I ate well,
I exercise well, I'm healthy, but emotionally, psychologically, spiritually, there was
wounds that I hadn't yet mended. I hadn't yet healed and created new meaning as Viktor Frankl
talks about. It's creating that meaning behind these traumatic events.
And I think the healing of the trauma, for me, has brought me so much peace psychologically, emotionally, and spiritually.
And physically.
There was physical pain in my chest, in my throat, that would come and go.
That now I haven't felt in almost two years.
How great.
And for most of my life, you know, 38 years,
I felt pain, palpitations off and on,
depending on life's circumstances.
And now with some of the most chaotic events in life,
a book launch, moving into a new home,
buying a home, you know, I just turned 40,
like all these kind of like events, life events,
I feel peaceful.
And the only way that I could attribute,
now it doesn't mean I don't have moments of stress
and overwhelm, but the way I feel peaceful
is because I've been doing so much
of the healing trauma work,
but been willing to say, I'll do anything.
I'll try, I'll say anything, I'll try things,
whatever type of emotional
experiences you want me to go through, healing the inner child wound, having spiritual experiences
with my five-year-old self, my 12-year-old self, whatever it is, having those conversations,
I've been doing that. And that has given me a sense of peace and freedom that I've never felt
in my life. And that's why I was interested about psychedelics
and the topic of psychedelics
because I have lots of friends who I swear by it.
I've been in ceremonies.
I've sat in ceremonies and watched people.
I've seen everything being passed around.
I've seen people hallucinate.
I've seen people throwing up.
I've seen people crying.
I've seen people releasing.
I've seen these things.
And I've been curious about them, but I've always been
weary of recommending or suggesting these things because I've one, never done it.
And I don't want to recommend something, but I'm also curious about the long-term potential
side effects of an out and external drug putting into the body and how that affects the brain, the heart, the emotions,
and all these different things. And I love your example of having these breakthrough moments for
people to change their habits, which I think is necessary for healing and shifting our behavior.
And my thought is, is there a way to do that emotionally, spiritually, and psychologically and try everything else first before doing psychedelics?
Or should people go right into a therapeutic psychedelics without trying all the other types of therapeutic experiences first?
Well, I don't think it's a one-size-fits-all.
I mean, it takes a lot of courage to do what you did.
It was painful and scary.
And you feel like you're going to die emotionally.
And so some people are not going to be able to do that.
They're not going to have the commitment or fear is going to get in the way of doing it.
I've been researching psychedelic therapy since 2014.
I, too, had never used psychedelics
and was really afraid of them.
I had a series of experiences for my books on psychedelics,
How to Change Your Mind and then This is Your Mind on Plants.
The night before every one of those experiences, I was...
Terrifying.
I was up all night.
Because the inner self is a really scary place to go.
Yes.
Terrifying.
Yeah.
There's a darkness in there.
And you're opening a door, and you don't know what's going to be on the other side of that door.
That's terrifying.
I found in the event that they were powerful and really interesting experiences.
And I have not yet on psychedelics had the experience of, I've had some dark experiences and kind of wrestling matches with certain things.
But I haven't had the experience some people do, which is a trauma that they were not aware of comes up.
Come up, yeah. experience some people do, which is a trauma that they were not aware of comes up. And that can be
really destabilizing if you're not being held in a therapeutic relationship. In other words,
if you're not with a facilitator or guide who can help you, it can be incredibly productive
when it comes up because now you know, oh, there's the problem. Yeah, you're aware.
But if you don't have an ongoing integrative therapeutic process afterwards, you could downward spiral.
You could.
And it's really important, I think, to if people are going to explore psychedelics to deal with their mental difficulties, that they do it with somebody who is well-trained.
And in the specific case of trauma, which I think is much more widespread in our society than we realize.
Because there's big T's and little t trauma.
There's traumatic events, and then there's just the feeling of abandonment by your parents.
Yeah, or you had an alcoholic parent, and you can't point to one event.
They weren't abusing you, but it was an abusive experience.
Yeah, yeah.
So what has proven most effective is MDMA in the treatment
of trauma. What does that stand for again? I don't know. I'm sorry. It's a short. I should
know that. But it's also known as ecstasy or molly. That's the street name. But it's MDMA.
It's a drug that's been around since the 30s. People don't realize it was used in psychotherapy in the 70s and early 80s until it was banned in 1985.
And that's when it became a very popular rave drug.
And the DEA just cracked down on it and said, we're not going to.
But it was being used effectively in therapy.
There are now two phase three studies, that's the last phase before
approval, showing that about two-thirds of the people who have been diagnosed with PTSD,
post-traumatic stress disorder, who have guided MDMA trips, usually two,
lose that diagnosis. In other words, they don't qualify for a diagnosis of PTSD anymore.
That's an astonishing result, two-thirds. So that, I think, is going to be a powerful tool.
And it is going to be approved by the FDA in the next couple of years. Some people say next year,
because the data is in and the data is very strong. So that's an encouraging thing,
data is in and the data is very strong. So that's an encouraging thing because the kind of, you know,
we have soldiers who've been traumatized. We have women who've been traumatized by sexual abuse.
We have racial trauma in this country and we may have a powerful new tool to treat it.
On the risk of taking in these foreign substances. Right, and how that affects the brain chemistry and long-term effects.
I don't think people realize this, but most drugs have what's called an LD50, the amount of the drug you take where 50% of the rats or whatever it is die.
The lethal dose, okay?
LD stands for lethal dose.
Wow.
There is no lethal dose of psilocybin or LSD or DMT.
That's astonishing.
You can't overdose.
You can't overdose.
You can get screwed up.
You can get crazy.
You can't die.
You can't die.
Well, maybe you could.
I mean, who knows?
Maybe there's a certain amount you just take and your brain just.
There is one reported case of, and this is a horrible story, of shooting up an elephant with LSD, with huge
amounts of LSD, and it died. But it also had received huge amounts of a tranquilizer. So it's
not really useful information. But there's a lot of safety data on these drugs. And I don't think
people know or realize that there are over-the-counter drugs that can be lethal.
It's only about 17 or 20 pills of Tylenol and you can kill yourself.
Wow.
Okay?
The equivalent amount of LSD is not going to do that.
So brain toxicity, you know, unless we're missing something and it's gonna take you know but people have been using
lsd for a long time they've been using um ayahuasca which has dmt in it and they've been
using psilocybin for thousands of years um but just because they've been doing for thousands
of years does that mean it's good for the brain and your emotional state long term yeah well no
um but i think that if it were it were having consistent patterns of damage of some
kind, we would have picked it up. MDMA is a little more toxic. But the thing to understand about
psychedelic therapy is like, I mean, we should be asking the same questions of SSRIs and all the antipsychotic drugs.
100%. Which people take every day.
Now, I have friends who have been doing shrooms and ayahuasca and all these different things for years.
And some of them swear by it.
They say, like, this is the answer.
This is helpful.
This is giving me clarity.
It's showing me visions.
It's helping me face traumas, things like that, which I'm all for those things.
But my curiosity comes in when someone needs to do these things over and over and over again,
as opposed to, okay, I've got the awareness, which is what I need.
It's pulling out the stuff from the past that I wasn't even aware of or the things that I needed to face.
Now I've had these moments of clarity, darkness, visioning, all these different things that allowed me to open my heart,
express these things, release. I'm all for that. It's when people need to do it over and over again,
every month or every six months and go back to like some, you know, psychedelic retreat,
which gets me wondering why. Why do you need to continue to do it every six months,
every year, consistently, when you've started to face it? Is there other emotional or psychological
therapies they can do to process and integrate healing without external chemicals entering the
body and the brain? That's my thoughts. Yeah. It's interesting. I mean, there are people who,
I mean, it depends on why people are using it.
You talk about healing, and that should have an arc, right?
Yes.
And you get the message and then you hang up the phone, as Nandas or somebody like that said, when you stopped using psychedelics.
And then there are other people who get into, I mean, you could call it a habit.
They don't use them every day.
They don't use them every week.
The experience is you don't feel like using it again.
I mean, when you have a big psychedelic experience, your first thought, this isn't like using a drug like cocaine or something.
Your first thought is not where can I get some more.
Your first thought is do I ever have to do this again because it's really hard work.
It's intense.
But there are people who have a regular journey. And sometimes there
are people who are using psychedelics not for healing, but for, say, spiritual development.
Sure. And spiritual exploration. And I think that's legit, too. I really do. You know,
I would be nervous about somebody who is using psychedelics every month and wondering why.
Is there something missing from their lives that they should be attending to?
Is that becoming its own problem?
But they're very strange substances.
They can have many different identities depending on the context in which they're used.
So, you know, there is a powerful religious context for most of history.
That's how they were used.
There were sacraments.
They were used to be in touch with the divine.
And that's very different than the healing context.
And then there are people who take them just for thrills.
And, you know, that seems to me, you know, the least interesting.
But we use this word recreational use of a drug. What's wrong
with recreation? Why did that get such a negative connotation? I'm trying not to judge,
because I'm trying to see what is most beneficial to our health. And so if there's massive benefits
to our immediate and long-term health, then I'm all open to exploring that. And so if there's massive benefits to our immediate and long-term health,
then I'm all open to exploring that.
And I think it's too soon to say.
And that's the thing.
I grew up rarely taking any drugs.
You know?
And the belief was the mind,
we have the power to heal ourselves
with our thoughts, our mind, we have the power to heal ourselves with our thoughts, our mind, and the body's pharmacy
has so many healing components.
And I'm sure as a meditator, you've gone through
some beautiful visioning and some beautiful
spiritual experiences by closing your eyes,
meditating and breathing intently as well.
And so my thought is, are there ways to do this without
recreational drugs, therapeutic drugs, you know, drugs in general to heal versus doing it from
inside out? Yeah. So there are, I mean, you know, I mean, there's an interesting question whether a
drug produced by the body, like endorphins after you exercise is, you know, superior to a drug produced by the body, like endorphins after you exercise, is superior to a
drug that comes from outside. Aldous Huxley wrote about this in Doors of Perception. They're all
chemical events, right? Whatever's happening. So endogenous versus exogenous chemicals,
how significant is that? But there are other ways to get there. I mean, meditators,
really experienced meditators
get into a psychedelic state. There are breathing exercises. There's something called holotropic
breath work, which is a form of breathing based on yoga techniques that I've done it and will
give you a psychedelic experience. Not everybody, but a high percentage of people. It's kind of
uncanny how this works.
You are doing something to your blood chemistry, though, when you hyperventilate.
That's what's happening.
I think either the acidity or alkalinity is increasing as you reduce the carbon dioxide.
I don't know the physiology of it.
Fasting can get you there.
Isolation tanks, for some people, can get you there isolation tanks
for some people
can get you there
dark spaces
like caves
if you remove all sensory input
people who go on vision quests
and you know
they're alone in nature
for a long time
and they're not eating
they will have psychedelic experiences
so
you know
we're wired for these experiences
and there are other ways
to get there. And psychedelics is one way. But I would, you know, I would press against this idea
of, you know, toxicity, though, because there's not a lot of evidence or addictive potential.
They've been shown not to be addictive. There are absolute risks. People at any risk for schizophrenia or personality
disorders are not allowed in the current drug trials. And people can have terrifying experiences.
And what happens if you have a, you know, maybe you're not,
maybe you haven't been clinically diagnosed as bipolar, but you might have some bipolar tendencies.
Or maybe you're not diagnosed as narcissistic, but you have narcissistic tendencies or extreme mood swings or depressive states.
People like that, could it get them off the track, so to say?
It could.
People have had psychotic breaks on LSD trips.
I mean, we saw that in the 60s.
There were admissions to psychiatric hospitals and things.
And it's really hard to come back from that, right?
Yeah, although there's some debate over whether these are people who would have eventually had a break.
And that it's not like incidents of schizophrenia went up when people started using LSD.
Any kind of mental shock can put people over.
And LSD is a big shock to the system.
So that can definitely happen.
And look, people should approach this with great care.
It's very consequential.
It's momentous to decide, I'm going to have a high-dose psychedelic experience.
You should be with someone who knows the territory, who can prepare you properly.
Scary things can happen,
but if you know how to deal with it, you can navigate those things. And often the results
at the end make it worth it. So I'm loathe to recommend anybody do anything, but I also think
that people should know how many people are being healed by this. And that the thing we have to keep
in mind is that mental health treatment is just not very good in this country. I mean, even with
the access issues and insurance and all that, there's that problem. But the problem is, and I've
heard this from psychiatrists who I've interviewed, it's like they'll tell you we don't have very good tools.
If you compare mental health treatment to any other branch of medicine, oncology, cardiology, infectious disease,
they have all prolonged human life and relieved lots of suffering in the last 50 years.
You can't say that about mental health treatment.
We're kind of where we were.
We have SSRIs, which we throw at everything.
What are those?
What are those?
There's selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors.
Antidepressants.
Paxil.
But those antidepressants, do they have any benefit?
Because I feel like people who are on antidepressants don't have, like, it doesn't actually work.
Or maybe it's like they feel for
a few weeks or a month, like some benefit, but then it's like, you're still depressed.
Well, it gets people out of crises very often if someone's, you know, having a suicidal crisis.
But the evidence on there, they don't work very well. I mean, there's some people they help
there. When they were approved in the early eighties, late 70s, they did two percentage points better than placebo.
I mean, trivial benefit.
But we didn't have anything else.
So it's something.
And they got hyped by the industry.
But it's not healing.
It's not healing.
The root cause.
It doesn't affect the root cause.
So it's minimizing some of the effect.
It's lowering symptoms for some people, not for everybody.
But over time, the effect goes down.
And then you need more and more.
You need some other drug.
Or you switch to another one.
The other problems with it is that it decreases your libido.
You put on weight, and they're very hard to get off.
They're addictive, in effect.
Man.
So if you want to talk about toxicity to the body, I mean, that's a bigger issue than LSD or psilocybin.
Sure.
So that's a bigger issue than LSD or psilocybin.
Sure.
What would you recommend or suggest before people get on some type of antidepressant that they try on, that they experiment with, that they apply for a 30-day window before, say, okay, I'm just going to jump into today's exercise? Well, that regime we talked about.
Well, that regime we talked about, you know, eat real food, get a half hour of exercise a day, some sort of stress reduction technique, sunlight, and social connection.
And the problem with people who are depressed is they tend to lose their social connections.
They don't have the connections.
Yeah.
They're often lonely.
Yeah.
But I think that's the first line of defense.
And right now, it's important to understand, too, that even though psilocybin is being trialed, doing drug trials for depression, it hasn't been approved yet.
So it's still illegal.
Right.
And that's something you have to take into account.
Gotcha.
You have to work with someone underground.
And that has its own set of risks.
Sure.
Speaking of people feeling lonely, it seems like there's more social anxiety and loneliness than ever,
even though they're more connected or seemingly false connected with social media.
What would you suggest for people to overcome the feeling of loneliness?
Well, it takes us back to food, meals, the institution of meals.
Eat with other people.
Don't eat alone.
Find somebody.
Invite someone out to have a meal with or cook and invite people into your home.
So much happens at the table that isn't about fueling your body.
And that there is a kind of connection that happens when we eat together that's really wonderful.
It's deeper than a lot of other connections we have.
And when we share something,
when we share food out of the same common dish,
we're connecting, that's a connection.
Sharing food is a very powerful bond between people.
It has been for like thousands of years.
And we learn things about other people we you know why do world leaders always
have banquets right it's because going back a thousand years it's a time where you know you
don't shoot someone over a banquet table you know you put down your arms and you pick up your fork
and knife you connect you connect and um there i i just think the meal is one of the great
institutions and it and it helps us deal not only with healthier eating, because you're not going to eat junk food. You're not going to eat a microwavable food in front of someone else. You're going to cook something or order in and eat the same thing. And that sharing puts us on the same mental wavelength. It's almost like entraining ourselves to someone else, that we're eating the same thing together. And so I think putting yourself, you know,
way too many of us eat alone now. And I think it's really destructive to eat alone. When you
eat alone, you eat mindlessly. You're in front of the TV or you're reading something and you're,
you just don't know what you're doing. I mean, think about, you know about you're in front of the TV with a bag of potato chips.
Like, you don't even realize you've eaten a bag.
It's just so mindless.
Also, manners automatically helps people control their appetites.
People don't want to act like pigs at a table.
Yeah.
Whereas when you eat alone, you do act like a pig.
So getting away from solitary eating. You have crumbs all over your belly. You're just like, ah, just eating it. Yeah. Whereas when you eat alone, you do act like a pig. Oh, yeah. So getting away from solitary eating.
You got crumbs all over your belly.
You're just like, ah, just eating it.
Yeah.
Exactly.
You know, in this class I did for Masterclass, we're looking at not just the health effects of food, although those are very important, but there are all these other effects.
And that there are ways to align your
eating with your values. And we all have different values. And some people, food is just going to be
about health. But for other people, it's about their relationship to nature, for example.
You know, are they eating organically or sustainably? Is that what matters to them?
And for others, it's about ethics.
Is this a way, do I feel comfortable eating animals or these animals?
So there's a, there are moral and ethical questions that come, so much happens at the table.
And, and my, and so where I came out thinking about this in preparing the class is there's
no one right way to eat.
There's probably a right way to eat if health is your only concern.
But if you're thinking about these other things, and eating for pleasure is a perfectly legitimate reason, it argues for slightly different kinds of food.
Sure.
How does someone come up with their eating values? Well, that's a process of kind of self-inquiry. I mean, and we go through that in the class about like, so what really matters to
you when you think about food? You know, are you someone who thinks a lot about nature and climate
change? There's a way to eat if you really want to, you know, make your contribution to reduce
climate change. There are foods that have a big climate footprint and foods that don't. Beef is, of course, the worst offender. And milk,
that's a huge part of your climate footprint if you're a beef eater. But maybe you're concerned
about the health of the soil. And what about social justice, the health of the workers
in the food system? That argues for slightly different choices too. What's great about food
though is that we're not stuck with one choice. We now, we're very lucky because there are now,
you know, there's organic food, there's conventional food, there's what's called
regenerative food grown on very healthy soils, that we have an opportunity to express
our values by our food choices.
That's a great vote to have.
We're really lucky to have that vote.
Because in many parts of life, we don't have that vote to make.
Right.
What are your food values?
Well, I think a lot about the environment.
I started out as a writer writing about nature and gardening.
And I'm very concerned about the environment. I started out as a writer writing about nature and gardening. And so I'm very concerned about climate change.
And I don't know how you cannot be, but a lot of us are not.
And so that I think a lot about the environmental impact of what I eat.
So I don't eat beef.
I eat very little meat.
I mostly eat fish.
Um, I, I eat very little meat. I eat mostly eat fish. Um, and I'm careful about that too,
because some fish is, you know, really unsustainably produced. Um, you know,
some farm salmon is just horrible the way it's produced. Um, not, not just for the fish,
but for the environment with lots of antibiotics. And I, I, I will choose organic when I'm buying plant foods. Organic is not a perfect label, but it's one of the only labels that's monitored by the government.
And so you know that if you buy organic food, it has not been grown with synthetic pesticides.
I'm particularly insistent on buying organic wheat products, whether that's pasta or bread.
wheat products, whether that's pasta or bread. The reason being that it's become common practice in America to spray wheat fields with glyphosate, which is an herbicide that has been linked to
lymphoma. It's not allowed in Europe. Farmers do it for the express purpose. They spray it on the
wheat fields right before harvest to kill the wheat Because the wheat has to be dry before you can harvest it so it speeds up that process
It's a really irresponsible use of a pesticide
Why are there so many things in the American food system that don't happen in Europe that are legal in other countries?
Yeah, but hormones and beef for example, I mean, every non-organic beef animal gets a hormone
implant in its neck. And then we wonder why girls are going through puberty early. I mean,
we are exposing ourselves to lots of hormones through our meat. And that's not allowed in
Europe either. Europe has tougher environmental rules, especially around food and cosmetics, believe it or not.
There are chemicals in our cosmetics that you can't put in European cosmetics.
Wow.
It's the power of the American food industry.
It is dominant.
They control Congress.
They control the agricultural committees.
So there have been efforts to ban glyphosate. There have
been efforts to get hormones out of beef. And the industry has stopped it. And the reason for that
is we've allowed these industries to get so powerful and monopolistic that we had a great
example during the pandemic when there were outbreaks of COVID in the meat
plants in the high plains, Tyson's meat plants. The local public health authorities, so many people
were dying on those lines and they were bringing COVID into their communities. The local health
authorities wanted to close down the lines for two weeks and just quiet. This is right at the
beginning of the pandemic. John Tyson, the president of Tyson, takes out a full-page ad
in the New York Times. Dear Mr. President, you need to invoke the Defense Production Act,
which is designed to get companies to do things they don't want to do to help the war effort.
We want you to invoke the Defense Production Act to force our workers back on the line.
Come on.
And within days, President Trump signed an executive order opening up the Tyson production lines.
So when a company can force a president to do its bidding, you know an industry's gotten too powerful.
Wow. Yeah. This is crazy. What is the
things that you've seen 10 years ago in the nutritional food world that people thought was
the way? Science, society thought this was the way, that we now have new evidence and new science showing that that's not the way and there's something different that is the way.
Is there anything that's changed in the last 10 or 20 years that you've seen?
Well, the biggest thing is something we talked about right at the beginning is ultra-processed food.
And we didn't, you know, we'd heard for years that junk food was bad for us and we thought the reason was there was too much sugar,
too much fat, too much salt. It turns out it's not about the nutrients. It's about the processing
itself and all the chemicals that are used. And this is what's making us fat.
The processing itself, not the actual sugar.
There was a really cool experiment done at the National Institute of Health
by a scientist who was very skeptical
of this theory that processed food was uniquely bad. And he was a great believer that, no,
if you get the nutrients right, you'll be healthy. He got a group together. They lived in a facility.
So he fed them for 30 days and divided them into two groups, control and not, and created two meals for every meal.
One was substantially whole foods.
The other was substantially ultra-processed food, like 80% ultra-processed food.
Matched for calories.
Right.
Matched for protein, salt, sugar, everything.
And people in each group said, eat as much as you want or as little as you want.
Up to you.
No control on caloric intake.
Consumption, yeah.
The people in the group with the ultra-processed food ate 500 more calories a day.
So the way you prepare the food dictates how much you're going to eat.
And that blew his mind.
And he came around to the thesis that there is, we don't know exactly what it is, but there's something uniquely bad about that kind of food.
Does it not make you feel full?
Or does it make you still hungry or craving that?
It could be that because it has so little fiber.
It doesn't fill you up in the same way.
little fiber. It doesn't fill you up in the same way. It could be the fact that it's absorbed really quickly in the body and not going through this long, you know, microbiome processing
in your body. I mean, when you process food, you're essentially externalizing digestion.
In other words, instead of eating things like plants or even, you know, real meat that hasn't
been overly processed or turned into hamburger,
your body has to work hard to break it down.
You burn calories.
Digesting is burning calories.
Yeah.
But as soon as you start doing this high-level processing and removing the fiber,
you're creating food that your body can be very lazy about digesting.
And so it's absorbed through the small intestine
rather than the large intestine. And that may explain it. It could also just be the science,
this idea of lying to the body about what you're getting, fooling the body.
And it could be other effects in the microbiome. There's some evidence that emulsifiers, which we
use to keep food, basically keep the oils and the waters from separating in
processed food. Processed food would look even uglier than it does if not for these chemicals.
Emulsifiers have damaged the lining of the gut and allow for large particles to get into the
bloodstream, which leads to an immune reaction. So it may be that processed food inflames our bodies
in ways that are destructive.
So the science is still out on the cause,
but we know the effect.
The effect is you will eat a lot more food
if you're eating ultra-processed food,
and you will increase your risk
of all sorts of chronic diseases.
That's really clear.
Where do you feel like in 10, 15 years
will be the new science that comes out?
Because it seems like there's always something new being discovered or revealed.
Where do you see the nutritional health world moving into in the next 10, 15 years of these other discoveries?
I think we will continue to accumulate evidence that it's really simple.
Eat food, not too much, mostly plants.
I think that's going to hold up.
I'll put money down on that.
Mostly means, doesn't mean no meat, means some meat.
That word, that adverb pissed off everybody because the vegetarians are like,
why don't you go all the way and just say eat plants? And the meat eaters were like, why don't you talk about meat? No, mostly,
let's be reasonable about that. I think we are going to learn that a traditional diet of real
food is the best way to eat. And it's going to be really simple. And I think we have overcomplicated food.
And there's so many reasons to do it, right?
I mean, you know, scientists want funding.
Companies want to have a health claim.
They need to churn.
You know, there are 14,000 new food products every year.
And a lot of them carry health claims.
Isn't it amazing?
14,000 new food products.
14,000 new food products every year.
Oh, my gosh.
And most of them are like ridiculous extensions of something we have.
You know, it's like an Oreo in the shape of a straw.
You know, that's innovation.
And there's always an investor who wants to make money in return on creating this product or this business or this company.
this product or this business or this company. And the other economic incentive is that it's not profitable selling simple food that comes off the farm. You make more money processing the food.
The more value added, it's the package, it's the health claim, but it's also the tricking it up
and giving it new flavors and new colors. I mean, think about how many different,
check out next time you're in the supermarket,
how many Pop-Tarts there are,
and Pop-Tart-like products.
It's just brand extension.
So this is capitalism.
Capitalism depends on novelty.
The idea that you're going to eat simple foods
that you prepare yourself,
who makes money on that?
I don't know.
The egg business has got to be making money, right?
I don't know, like eggs and apples
are making business, but it's not as much though. To give you an example, I think it's 14 cents of
your food dollar goes back to the farmer. It's all the people in the middle who make the money.
And farmers will tell you this, or people in the food industry, I'm sorry, not farmers will tell
you that if you want to make money in food, it's not from growing it.
It's from processing it.
Wow.
So we have a strong incentive to process food as much as possible.
Plus you get something you can put a brand name on, right?
What?
You have IP.
You have all this value added.
And the farmers get screwed.
Crazy.
value added and the farmers get screwed. Crazy. Now, what is the main, uh, the masterclass that you have, what is the main benefit within the masterclass that people will, will get out of
that when they go through it? Well, my hope is, I mean, I, the reason I did it, I had a couple
of reasons I wanted to do it. One was the, the, one of the great things about masterclass is you
get a lot of time.
It's like a, I forget how long it is, but it's a two and a half or three hour class.
So you can really go deep.
Yes.
And you don't always get to do that writing articles.
So I really appreciated that.
And the production values are amazing.
I've seen some of the clips.
It looks amazing.
Well, they send a crew of like 60 people.
I know.
It's crazy, right?
It's like a full movie production.
Yeah, it is.
And it looks like it.
They make you look great.
But I'm hyper aware, because I get asked questions, I do a lot of public speaking, of how confused people are about food.
And they'll say to me, so should I buy the organic or the conventional or the regenerative or the humane?
And there are all these labels in the store. And we're tying ourselves up in knots about what
should be a very simple transaction. And for most of human history, people have known what to eat.
They learned from their parents. They learned from what was available. They didn't have to run all these complex algorithms to figure out what a product to buy.
So I saw this as an effort to cut through a lot of nonsense about food, whether it's coming from
the nutritionists or the marketers. And just like, let's look at this. Let's take a fresh look.
Let's figure out what you care about because I'm
not going to tell you how to eat. It's not, it doesn't have that kind of message. My message
really is, tell me what you care about and I'll tell you what to eat. And so we go through the
various, you know, different motives. Getting clear on your food values, getting them, you know.
Yeah. Figure out what your food values are and then here's how you might align them with what you're actually eating.
Right.
And so I'm hoping it'll relax people about food.
I want people to come out of it, like, with their stress level around when they go to the supermarket, down.
I don't want them to have to read labels and, you know, do this all the time.
So, yeah, you talk a lot about intentional eating.
It's not just about mindless eating,
but being very intentional about these food rules,
these values that we create together.
And I really love the idea of getting back
to the dinner table or getting back to the commune table
with at least one person so that we can connect,
we can slow it down,
we can have more fulfilling conversations,
feel more fulfilled spiritually and emotionally,
but also nutritionally fulfilled in that process.
Yeah, and I think that, you know,
we've reduced food to this transaction
between us and this stuff.
But in fact, food is not a thing.
It's a set of relationships.
Food connects you to other people, as it has for all of human history.
It's a communal act.
But it also connects you to nature, right?
It's your most important connection to the natural world.
You affect nature more through your eating than anything else you do.
If you think about what agriculture does to nature, right?
It's the way we change the landscape more than anything else.
It's the way we change the composition of species on the planet. The reason there are, you know,
50 million head of cattle in the U.S. and only 5,000 wolves, it's because we like one and we
don't like the other or the other is a threat to the one we like. And we affect the atmosphere.
You know, greenhouse gas production from the food system is about 33%.
Really?
Yeah.
So there's a lot at stake
when you sit down to eat.
But I want that to feel empowering,
that you can actually vote.
It's not a burden.
Right.
It's an opportunity.
Right.
So that's what I want to inspire people with,
to take their food choices
as an opportunity to express their values.
Wow.
They can go to masterclass.com and check that out.
If they search your name, they can get that at masterclass.com.
You've also got a number of, what do you have, seven, eight New York Times bestsellers now?
What do you have, 12?
Something like that.
Something like that, something crazy.
How to Change Your Mind has been a phenomenon that's gone all over the world, talking about the psychedelics and the studies that you've done there.
But the recent book is more about your mind on plants.
This is Your Mind on Plants, where I look at three different psychoactives, one of which we're all involved with, caffeine.
Almost all of us.
And people don't think about that as a drug, but it is a drug.
And I think it's a very good drug in many ways.
It's had a lot of positive effects for people, although people, like all drugs, people can get in trouble on that.
You talk about bringing chemicals into our body.
We're doing it all the time.
All the time.
And so I look at caffeine.
I look at opium.
We have such a big problem around opiates now.
And I look at mescaline, which is a psychedelic that you don't hear as much about, but it's a really interesting substance that Native Americans have been using
to heal themselves for a very long time. Wow. What is the pros and cons of coffee
that you talk about, that you've researched, that can truly benefit current health, lifespan,
cognitive health, and also what are the cons of caffeine or coffee?
Yeah. So caffeine is a powerful drug. I don't think people realize it, but most of us have
an addiction to it. And I got off caffeine for three months. It was one of the hardest things
I've ever done. No caffeine, no chocolate, no tea, no coffee. And I didn't feel myself for that whole
time. You know, I got through the withdrawal, which only took a couple of days. You didn't feel,
what do you mean, grounded or you didn't feel connected to yourself? I felt like I was someone
else. Really? And it made me realize that being caffeinated was my default state. It's like that
was my normal. And I'd been drinking coffee since I was 10. I started early.
So about 10 years, right?
10, 20 years.
No, I'm just kidding.
A lot more than that, like 50 years.
50 years drinking coffee.
Since you were 10, how did you start at 10?
You know, I started like 35, you know?
Yeah, I know.
I started early.
Everybody said it would stunt my growth.
It apparently didn't.
At all.
Maybe I would have been seven foot without it.
So I felt, you know, it was hard to do.
I felt like I had acquired attention deficit disorder.
I normally have very good focus.
I can concentrate and, like, block things out.
You need to to write.
I couldn't write.
Without the coffee.
Without the coffee.
I just was, I found things came in from the periphery.
You know, I got easily distracted.
And, you know, that's why we take amphetamines, you know, to deal with that.
They give us, like caffeine, stimulants give us a focus.
And I needed it.
So it was really hard.
And the first cup after three months.
I was amazed. It was months. I was amazed.
It was incredible.
It was delicious.
It was the best.
It may have been the best drug experience I've ever had.
Wow.
Yeah.
I was euphoric.
So now you're caffeine.
You want to know benefits?
Yeah, yeah.
So I looked into this.
There are a lot of health benefits to caffeine.
Caffeine or coffee?
Yes.
It's coffee and tea have the health benefits. It may not be the caffeine. Wait, I should correct that. Yes, it's coffee and tea have the health benefits.
It may not be the caffeine. And the reason is that coffee and tea, believe it or not,
are the biggest source of antioxidants in the American diet. That's pathetic, actually,
but it's true. And so we don't know. Caffeine, we do know, improves performance. Athletes will tell you that. On test taking, it improves performance. If you study for a test and drink caffeine after that, after you've studied, you will remember the material and do better on the test.
Wow. mental function. It has some physical benefits too. It reduces risk of certain kinds of cancers.
It reduces risk of cardiovascular disease, Parkinson's disease, and reduces risk of
dementia. So it has a lot of benefits. The negatives are if it makes you really jumpy.
You know, some people react badly to it or drink too much.
It reduces risk of suicide and depression
up to seven or eight cups.
If you're drinking seven or eight cups a day,
your risk of suicide and depression go way up.
Seven cups a day is a lot.
It's a lot, yeah.
But people do.
I know people who like are sipping it all day long. That's too much though, right? Seven cups a day is a lot. It's a lot, yeah. But people do. I know people who are sipping it all day long.
That's too much though, right?
Seven cups a day, come on.
The big negative on caffeine
is it does interfere with good sleep.
Even if you stop drinking it at noon,
which is my practice,
a quarter of the caffeine in your body
is still circulating at midnight.
It lasts in your body a long time.
So when should you stop coffee by?
Well, at least by noon, but hopefully earlier.
10 a.m. maybe, yeah.
Yeah, if you can.
I mean, I go to noon because I sip it while I'm writing in the morning.
What happens with even people who can fall asleep,
and there are people who can have an espresso at night and fall asleep,
it's changing the quality of their sleep.
They're losing what's called slow-wave sleep.
There's REM sleep, which is when you dream,
but there's a kind of very deep sleep called slow-wave sleep,
which is very important for your health,
and caffeine reduces the amount of it you have.
So I interviewed a bunch of sleep experts for the chapter on caffeine and none of them
use caffeine.
Was it Michael Walker?
Matthew Walker.
Matthew Walker, yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
I don't know if he does now, but he, yeah.
And he did a master class actually about sleep that's definitely worth checking out.
And he said no caffeine.
Yeah.
And he's like against caffeine, but he's softened a little bit.
Yeah.
Huberman talks about, he has a cup of coffee, I think, early in the morning, but he's like, try to finish it as soon as you can, earlier in the day.
Yeah.
Every day when you wake up, you are undergoing withdrawal.
That's why you crave coffee.
You know, the people who say, I can't talk to you until I have a cup of coffee.
The reason is that for most of us, we're drinking coffee to head off those withdrawal effects.
The caffeine just lasts long enough during the night that you don't wake up to a long coffee.
But as soon as you get up in the morning, you want it.
So, you know, we are addicted.
But addiction, you know, if you have a steady legal supply is not a terrible thing.
Sure, sure.
Yeah.
Not too much of it.
This is amazing.
You've got a,
you know, your website
has so much research
and articles and information.
Well, I've posted every article
I've ever written there.
Yeah.
And it's available for free
to anybody who wants.
And that's michaelpollin.com.
michaelpollin.com.
So make sure,
and I'm, you know,
make sure you go sign up
for your newsletter
and be subscribed
to everything you have there.
What's the social media place
that you spend time on the most?
Is there a platform of choice?
I use Twitter.
Okay.
I use Instagram, but just in a kind of personal way.
I just post pictures I like that I've taken.
Twitter's more the research and the information that you have there.
Twitter's very useful for journalists.
And so if I read something interesting, and it could be about health,
it could be about food, it could be about psychedelics, I'll post it. Sometimes without
comment, just, hey, you should read this. Check it out, yeah.
Yeah. So I use it that way. I don't hold forth. I don't offer a lot of opinions,
but I just find it's a great way to share information.
Wow. What are you most excited about in your life right now?
What am I most excited?
Well, it's spring, and we're about to start gardening.
I'm a passionate gardener, and we've had so much rain in California.
So much.
Today it's raining.
It's insane.
And the earth has been saturated, and you don't want to mess with the earth when it's that wet.
It's bad for it.
So I'm really looking forward to starting a plant and get my garden
going. I grow vegetables and flowers and various psychoactives. That's cool. That's exciting.
Michaelpaulin.com, themasterclass.com, check you out there. The books, they can get it all
at your website as well for the books. And again, you've got a number of New York Times bestsellers,
so get multiple books if you want to dive in more.
This is a couple questions that I have left.
This is a question I ask everyone at the end called the three truths.
So imagine a hypothetical scenario.
You've written a lot.
You've researched a lot.
You've had a ton of experiences.
And imagine you get to live as long as you want,
but eventually it's your last day.
It's not that long, drawn-out death.
It's a quick, healthy, you know, quick, painless death.
And imagine you continue to live your life the way you want,
achieving your dreams and connected to people you care about and healthy.
But it's the last day.
For whatever reason, you've got to take all of your work with you.
Every article, every book, every message, you know, the master class is gone, you know,
everything has to go to some other place when you pass on.
So for whatever reason, we don't have access to your content, your information, your wisdom.
But you get to leave behind three final truths three lessons from all of your experiences that you've learned that you would leave behind as kind of like here are these wisdom
this wisdom um what would be those three truths for you to leave behind yikes uh i told you i
didn't like to hear questions in advance. I put you on the spot.
Well, the first one would be to honor the plants.
My whole career, I have been learning from plants about how to eat, about the mind.
It's amazing what they have to teach us.
And, you know, they don't speak loudly.
But if you listen and you're curious so
honor the plants that could mean growing them certainly mean eating them this is
a cliche people often say that no one goes to their deathbeds thinking god I
wish I'd spent more time at work so honor your family, your loved ones, your sisters.
I don't have brothers.
Although I have brothers-in-law, your partner, your child.
I think that we get caught up in things.
And those are the relationships that matter at the end.
And the other stuff doesn't.
And those are the relationships that matter at the end.
And the other stuff doesn't.
Third truth.
I think one of the biggest problems we have is fear.
I think we are closed off because we're afraid.
We're afraid of trying new things.
We're afraid of saying things.
We're afraid of trying new things. We're afraid of saying things. We're afraid of exposing our weakness.
And overcoming fear.
Yeah.
I would say that's so important.
My father, who was a very wise person, or he got wise.
He wasn't always.
He was a lawyer, but he hated the law. But he liked helping people, and he had a clientele of people your age who he would help with their money issues.
But their money issues were always really family issues or self-worth issues
and all these kind of questions.
And he would always say, you know, your biggest problem is between your ears,
he would say, and it's your fear.
And he was very good at getting people to have faith in themselves, make the big move, change your career, quit that job, buy that house, marry that person.
And he was a kind of just do it person.
And it usually worked out.
And people spend a long time procrastinating because they're afraid of change.
And so embracing change and overcoming fear,
I would put number three.
I love those.
I don't know about the order.
I haven't thought about the order,
but those are the three that came to me.
Honor plants, honor your family, overcome your fears.
I love it.
I'm a big believer that self-doubt is the killer of all dreams.
We can have all the talent,
but if we doubt ourselves,
we're not going to act courageously.
We're not going to take the risks.
We're not going to say what we need to say,
like you said.
So we've got to learn what are those fears that cause us to doubt ourselves.
Yeah, self-doubt is very much the root of fear.
Before I ask the final question, I want to acknowledge you, Michael, for your continuous
journey to seeking wisdom, truth, knowledge, lessons to help people. You've been on this
journey for a long time, and you keep showing up. You keep showing up in service to the process, to the journey of discovery and to sharing the process with us so that we can try to understand this world in a more harmonious, integrous way.
So I really acknowledge you for your humility, your service, your commitment to being of service with your mission. It's really inspiring.
My final question for you is what's your definition of greatness?
Oh, I should have seen that coming. I think you've just given it. I think it is your
willingness to give it away, to help other people, to help people transform their lives. I think transformation is like so key and we get so stuck.
So for me, you know, my work, I didn't set out with mission,
a mission to like heal people or to change their minds.
I set out with a mission to follow my curiosity.
And then I found stuff that, oh, people need to know about
this. This is not what they thought. And that's exciting to me when I find that out. When I,
you know, spent a year studying nutrition and realized, oh, I can, all you need are these
seven words. And I just wanted to give them to everybody. So I think that idea of putting your work in the service of other people
is very powerful to me. It makes me feel like I'm not being self-indulgent when I'm sitting
there alone writing all day long. Then maybe it will have an effect on the world. I feel very
lucky that I've had two phases in my writing life where I produced books that changed the conversation.
If you do that once in a lifetime, you feel pretty good.
But this happened with food and it's happening now with psychedelics.
And I don't know what the next one will be.
And I don't know why that is because I'm saying things that other people know.
Um, and, and that in some ways are pretty obvious when it comes, when it comes to food,
but, um, sometimes the obvious is very powerful.
I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
Make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show
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