The School of Greatness - Neuroscientist: How To Hack Your Dopamine To Boost Your Mood, Energy, and Focus
Episode Date: March 5, 2025I'm going on tour! Come see The School of Greatness LIVE in person!Get my new book Make Money Easy here!Prepare to completely rethink your relationship with technology as neuroscientist TJ Power revea...ls the shocking truth about what's happening to our brains in the digital age. Drawing from his groundbreaking research and personal struggle with addiction, TJ explains how our modern environment is creating an epidemic of dopamine dysfunction that's sabotaging our ability to focus, feel joy, and connect meaningfully with others. The conversation explores the fascinating evolutionary mismatch between our hunter-gatherer brains and our modern digital environment, with TJ offering a compelling reframe of ADHD as a potential superpower when properly channeled. Whether you're fighting distractions, battling mood swings, or simply feeling numb despite constant stimulation, this episode delivers practical, science-backed strategies to reclaim your focus, energy, and capacity for genuine happiness through what TJ calls "The Dose Effect" – a revolutionary approach to balancing your brain's essential neurochemicals.Buy TJ’s Book The Dose EffectIn this episode you will learn:Why constantly checking your phone (140-170 times daily for most people) is more damaging to your brain than alcohol or other addictionsThe counterintuitive reason people with ADHD often become exceptional performers when they find their passionHow implementing strategic "phone fasts" and scheduled social media times can dramatically improve your mood and focusWhy "quick dopamine" activities like scrolling and porn create numbness while "slow dopamine" activities create fulfillmentThe essential morning routine practice that ancient hunter-gatherers naturally did that modern humans desperately needHow pursuing oxytocin (connection) rather than dopamine (pleasure) leads to deeper life satisfaction and meaningWhy disciplined boundaries around technology actually create greater freedom rather than restrictionFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1741For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Dr. Caroline Leaf – greatness.lnk.to/1079SCDr. Charan Ranganath – greatness.lnk.to/1632SCDr. Andrew Huberman – greatness.lnk.to/1072SC Get more from Lewis! Pre-order my new book Make Money EasyGet The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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If you've ever been worried about how certain activities in your life, how they might be affecting your brain and how it might be causing long term damage in the future, then this is the episode for you because we have a powerful conversation with neuroscientist and author T.J. Power, who is revealing some eye opening information around the brain, how our modern lifestyle is disrupting it, and the chemistry
in the brain and what we can do about it.
We're going to be talking about the shocking truth about how social media affects your
brain chemistry, similar to addictive substances, why quick dopamine activities make you feel
increasingly numb to life's real pleasures and what those pleasures are and also a practical three times daily
Method to break phone addiction that actually works when nothing else does there's so much scientifically backed
Information in this episode that I believe you are going to love this and please share this with one friend
If you know anyone who might be struggling
With kind of like brain
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and ask them to share their biggest takeaway with you in this episode. This show, the School of
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maybe I haven't faced this challenge yet.
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And again, I hope to see you on my book tour.
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well. Without further ado, let's dive into this episode right now. Welcome back everyone to the
School of Greatness. Very excited
about our guests. We have the inspiring TJ Power in the house.
Good to see you, sir. And thank you for being here, man.
Thanks for having me. Very excited about this. You've got
an a lot of incredible content online. You're a
neuroscientist, you've got a book called The Dose Effect, which
is about small habits to boost your brain chemistry. And the
first thing I asked you off camera was what is the biggest struggle that humanity is really faced
with right now in this season of life? And you said ADHD, the
lack of attention to really life and being able to be present
focused on their lives being distracted a lot. Yeah. What do
you think is the main cause of ADHD right now? And also, what is the superpower that people with ADHD have if they lean into it?
Yeah, I think ADHD is a fascinating topic for our world.
I think it's something that many humans may have had for thousands of years.
I think there would have always been a subset of society that potentially had this lowered baseline dopamine level. There's a
brilliant scientist called Volkow who's done a lot of research into ADHD and dopamine levels.
And you see with those that are genetically born with ADHD that they might have a lower
production of dopamine within their brain. So there's that element of the genetic component.
We in our modern world, with all the things we've been discussing of social media and
porn and sugar, are really disrupting this pathway.
So we have some people that are exhibiting it as a result of their genes from when they're
born and a lot of people that are also exhibiting it as a result of the altered modern lifestyle.
Regardless of the cause, it really does create a lot of difficulty for people's lives of
inattention and lack of action and procrastination.
And it's extremely important that we begin
to get it in check and help these people to thrive.
If someone feels like they can't focus, maybe they've been diagnosed with ADHD or maybe
they feel like maybe I have it, maybe I don't, but I just know something's off energetically
and I can't stay focused or I feel a little more depressive at times, is there a positive side to having ADHD? Is there a
benefit to having it if someone's able to learn how to harness their ADHD?
There is for sure. And this is where it gets really fascinating. I do a lot of events around
schools and we help them a lot with ADHD. And I also grew up as a young guy with ADHD without
necessarily knowing it. I wasn't diagnosed as frequently back then, but I grew up with real difficulty in school,
massive inattention, big highs, big lows, a very addictive personality to anything I
engaged with, whether it was healthy stuff or unhealthy stuff.
And I began really investigating this world of if someone has ADHD, how can they thrive?
Partly selfishly out of like, I really wanted to get going.
I wanted a business and I wanted to be able to serve.
And I began thinking a lot about our ancestors.
The whole of the dose effect is built upon our brain spent 300,000 years
running around out there hunting and building and making fire and connecting
as small groups 300,000 years.
And nowadays we've spent about 30 years as
modern, sedentary, digital humans. And you can imagine for our bright biochemistry,
that's pretty tricky, that change. If you were to look at a hunter-gatherer and
they grew up with ADHD, for example, so say they had genetically low dopamine,
they got to like seven, eight years old, and suddenly they're expected to
contribute. Maybe they had to start the fire one night, maybe they had to hunt,
build, make the food, whatever it may be. They would have had to begin
engaging with very challenging, effortful-based activities. If you were to compare the hunter
gatherer with ADHD to the one without it, the one with ADHD, because it's got low dopamine levels,
would experience a greater elevation in their dopamine and actually enjoy the activity more
and thrive more than
the other hunter gatherer without it.
So then they would get really into it and they might actually become the greatest hunter
or the greatest shelter builder.
As a result of the fact they would effectively experience more pleasure from the activity
itself.
And with the schools, we're really trying to reframe this for a lot of young people.
We've kind of changed it from ADHD, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, to ADHD, attention
deficit hyperactivity ability, to try and make it like a concept in their mind whereby
this is going to be challenging.
It definitely comes with a lot of difficulty.
If you find something to isolate on, you can really, really thrive.
That's interesting because I relate to that.
I mean, I just hated school.
I was just like, get me out of here, watching the clock all day long, like hoping for the bell to that. I mean, I just hated school. I was just like, get me out of here watching the clock all day long, like hoping for the bell to ring. It just felt like it took forever. And anything the teacher said, I just like I have no idea what they're saying. And I kind of comprehend and really have to reread the page over and over again. I still don't understand and just feeling defeated every day in class. Like, I'm never gonna get this stuff.
feeling defeated every day in class. Like, I'm never gonna get this stuff. And because it was so hard and I wasn't excited about it, I checked out. I had a
lack of attention. But once I found something that was, I was excited about,
it was hard, but it gave me more of a purpose. Like, I'm excited about this. I'm
willing to do the hard work because I'm seeing improvement, I'm learning something, I'm liking what I'm learning, like I'm seeing results,
like something's exciting and I have a goal or a dream that I can work towards that excites me.
Yeah.
So I was able to use that energy or that lack of energy I had from school and put it towards
sports most likely and eventually evolve into what I'm doing now. So it was figuring out a way to use that lack of attention
and feeling of ADHD into, well, find something
you're curious about.
It may be hard to learn how to do it,
but at least you're curious enough
and have the excitement enough to go work on it over and
over again until you get better at it. Definitely. And it made me kind of obsessive on mastering
things that I was curious about. Like you said, like becoming the best like hunter-gatherer or
whatever. It's like, okay, I suck at everything else and I have no attention for these things,
but this one thing is really exciting. Let me go all in. And it's like, now I have hyper focus
deciding, let me go all in. And it's like, now I have hyper focus.
Yeah.
And like super attention to detail for these things. So it's interesting how that, you know, kryptonite, you can turn it into
a superpower.
And if you think evolutionarily, it would actually be very useful
for us to all have a specific thing that we can hyper focus on.
You didn't just want a group that were all identical at every
single skill, because that group wouldn't thrive as much as a group that had an
unbelievable set of hunters and unbelievable set of builders, unbelievable
set of food providers, all that kind of stuff. So it makes sense that naturally
there would be different things we would be more in, have a greater inclination
towards and the big thing there is understanding you don't have to be good
at something for it to be your thing at the beginning. It's only that it has to interest you in some way. Like I've had the exact same
nightmare in school, really couldn't engage with any of it until I found this
psychology world and neuroscience and I thought, wow that actually for some
reason sparks my mind. But even when I started doing it like 15, 16, I still
wasn't very good at it. I just thought well this is at least something that's
interesting to me and finding the niche things of someone that has an ADHD brain, you think, I like it, that's
where you can thrive.
And I've even had it with slide design in terms of making presentations with work.
I always just thought for some reason that interested me and I was not good at it when
I started doing it, but I just niche so hard and I'm just going to design slides.
Really?
Slides are beautiful.
I saw it and I was like, man, who's your designer?
I like that.
I actually kept as that design role.
I have a great guy on my team that supports me now with it to make it extra cool.
But it was something that I wasn't necessarily good at, but it was something I liked and
I found it interesting.
And then you eventually, because if you have a brain that gets a big dopaminergic stimulation
of that activity, you will eventually be extremely good at it.
But you just have to realize that you don't have to be good at something straight away.
Wow, that's interesting, man.
Now what are the things that are causing us the most amount of lack of energy, low mood,
and a struggle to focus?
What are the things that's causing that the most for our society?
I would say if we're putting it down to a few specific ones, phones specifically social media would be the largest factor I would say is
number one and then I would say ultra processed food and sugar would be
secondary to that and I would say a lot of stuff then comes off of those two. If
you look at the phone it impacts the quality of sunlight we get, the amount of exercise
we do, it creates a really sedentary lifestyle and so on.
So there's downstream effects.
But I would say if you niched on someone creating an extremely healthy relationship with social
media, there would then be a big knock on effect on their mood and energy and so on.
What is a healthy relationship with social media?
One way you reduce significantly the frequency of engagement, not completely getting rid
of it.
You can do that.
That would definitely serve you to get rid of it but I think for a very significant
proportion of society they would like to continue to engage with the social media
world and when you look into it from a dopamine point of view, every single time
you enter social media you're experiencing this very fast elevation in
dopamine and that creates a really fast elevation and then a very quick crash as
the brain seeks for its homeostasis, seeks for its balance.
Just to put that into context, to go back to that hunter-gatherer example,
we only originally could experience that elevation in dopamine from successfully spending five hours building a hut or making a fire or hunting down an animal.
So it was a very slow increase. We experienced pleasure.
One high and then it was done.
A nice, slow, steady decline. You might get two dopamine hits in the whole day.
Wow.
If you look at social media,
you're effectively experiencing the same elevation
in dopamine as a hunter-gatherer would
after five hours of hunting,
but you're experiencing it within three or four seconds
from opening the app.
And therefore, because it rises so fast
and the brain is just thinking,
wow, I can't deal with this overstimulation,
after you come off social media,
you get this really significant crash. This is called phasic come off social media, you get this really significant crash.
This is called phasic and tonic dopamine.
You get this really significant crash and that creates this low mood, low energy, inattention
type experience.
When you're looking at social media, just going on it once or twice, it's going to create
stimulation and dopamine.
Your brain is going to experience a bit of a crash, but it's okay if it happens, let's
say four or five times a day.
But when we look into our data on the frequency of opening the phone, it's often between about
140 and 170 opens per day on the device.
So if you look at...
On social media or on your phone?
Opening the phone.
But then if you look at the first app is either WhatsApp or Instagram typically.
Typically those two.
Instagram being more dopamine-ergic than WhatsApp.
It's very hyper-connected
to the novelty of the information you're about to see. So Instagram's really novel, loads
of new stuff, especially how the feeds are designed now because we're not as in control
of what we see, like followers and stuff like that. And if someone really frequently engages,
hyper dopamine stimulation, hyper crash. For me, like I'm someone that is so addicted to
my phone, like I find phones extremely exciting and entertaining.
I got my first iPhone when I was like 11 years old or something.
So I've like my whole life has just been like an iPhone life.
And I got Instagram then I got Facebook then.
Facebook was really big back then.
It was like the app.
And throughout that next period of my life, maybe 11 to 25, I was just laser
hooked on my phone.
And eventually I was like,
this is really disrupting my happiness, my relationships,
my work, my attention, and so on.
And I thought, I'm not gonna completely quit social media
because it's creating my business life
and it's allowing me to help people.
And I like it, I find it fun.
Like I like learning things on there and so on.
And I was like, how can I actually learn to manage this?
And I tried so many different things. I tried app blockers and I tried like making the screen black
and gray and all that different stuff that's big online nothing worked except
a daily commitment to myself I could only open the app at 10 a.m. 3 p.m. and
8 p.m. Wow three times a day three times a day and if it's outside that window
even if I have some like really important message to reply to it's just
not allowed to be open.
10pm, 3pm, 8pm.
And I had to create this boundary.
My girlfriend also finds social media really addictive and she now lives the boundary with
me.
And we'll know at 10 o'clock.
You'll see the dopamine excitement.
It's like, yeah!
Now we can have it.
But that shift makes a big difference and we've got a lot of our people that go through
dose doing this and having really strong boundaries to reduce frequency seems to
be very important. Wow. As a neuroscience based on science and research what is
the benefit of delayed gratification of creating boundaries or barriers to
either check your phone or do something that's going to create gratification for
you versus having instant gratification whenever you want of that thing.
It's really nice to experience a high amount of reward for something.
Our brain wants really significant reward.
So for the hunters, the food and the shelter and so on, for us today that might be reward
in your relationship, something like a really special moment happens in your relationship,
something in your career, something with a friend, whatever it might be,
something like winning sports matches,
I'll bring what's those real elevations of yes,
life is going to plan, life is going well.
The problem with really frequently engaging
with the dopamine is it effectively works
similar to a car engine, where if you took like a manual car,
like a gear stick car, and every morning you got in that car
and you didn't put it into gear, you just started revving the engine which is like
making it room every day. After a few weeks that engine would begin to burn
out it literally wouldn't work anymore eventually it would stop working
completely but eventually over that period of time it just break down and
break down. Really frequent dopamine hits the quick easy ones like social media
and sugar and pornography and so on are like that and they're just revving the engine way too hard, way too hard,
without actually making the car go forward and achieve something.
And then if you actually think about that over time,
the engine gets weaker and weaker.
So then when you do have a great moment in your career or relationship or in a sports match,
it doesn't even feel that good because you've effectively broken the system.
And if you want a life that feels really rewarding and fulfilling,
we have to get the dopamine in check.
Otherwise our life feels all like numb and boring.
So you could have a lot of dopamine hits throughout the day
but still feel numb.
Yes, for sure.
It will make you numb and numb over time.
The more dopamine you hit.
The more dopamine, especially this quick dopamine.
If we were separating it into quick dopamine,
being I feel pleasure immediately and slow dopamine,
meaning I feel pleasure after and slow dopamine meaning I feel
pleasure after a period of time. You could even take a niche example of sex and pornography. Sex
is something that you have to start engaging with that person, you get intimate with them, you kiss
and so on. Eventually you find yourself in a nice experience of having sex. Pornography is you've
seen something on Instagram and then you're on pornography within 10 seconds and the stimulation
has risen extremely fast. So one would be slow dopamine.
Eventually you experience pleasure.
One will be quick and then a crash.
And if you're looking at your day,
overdoing the quick causes that numb,
deflated inattention, and then having the slow dopamine,
not meaning having sex all day,
but doing some other activities that are rewarding for you
is gonna lead to a much more fulfilling experience.
What are the things that cause the most pain and suffering in a human based on neuroscience?
Is it the addiction to pornography, the addiction to alcohol, drugs, vaping or social media?
What is out of that list?
What hurts a human being and their brain and their mood and their energy the most.
This is interesting.
Humans have had access to these quick dopaminergic behaviors for about one or 200 years, the
first being sort of alcohol and cigarettes.
And sugar.
And sugar.
Sugar was significant.
Sugar altered into the more ultra-processed food version of sugar now, like fructose, corn syrup, and these kind of things, is even more extreme for a dopamine
point of view. But I would say if we look at society and we look at mental health,
the most significant change that's brand new is short video content on social media.
I think that's the thing that has massively shifted the world from a mental health standpoint. And
if you look at your relationship with your phone before and after COVID,
COVID was the era of short video being created.
And also in these moments, I appreciate the irony of the fact I literally make
short video content. So it's like a tricky situation.
But if we look at the frequency of engagement with that behavior,
we're going to cause the greatest dopamine distraction because where alcohol
really has a big effect and pornography has a really big effect,
you're unlikely to engage with that behavior 50 times a day.
Whereas if you look at the phone, it is more destructive for society because of how often we're going on it.
So I would say the phone is the number one thing to get in check.
I also have had to come off of alcohol and things like that because for me, like I find everything way too addictive,
so I've had to move towards a pretty healthy lifestyle, to be honest,
in order to manage it and almost get addicted to the experience of a healthy lifestyle.
But I think for a lot of people, the domino that needs to fall is significant separation
from social media.
What is harder to break? Alcohol, pornography or phone addiction?
That's such a good question.
What's been the hardest for you?
To just always speak in the most truthful way. I think pornography is something that's really difficult to come away from
because it's a very private behavior and none of society knows that anyone else
is doing it because it's like an isolated behavior.
Whereas often, if you were really heavily drinking, it would be quite apparent to your partner or your friends, family and so on.
It's more of a shared experience.
It's more of a shared experience.
And even if you end up drinking on your own, it's going to become quite obvious to other people that you're now drinking on your own and so on.
You can't hide it. Yeah, you can't hide it.
You can't smell the grass and you'd be like, okay, what are they doing? Yeah.
Whereas pornography is very easy to hide.
And therefore, when I, a number of years ago, maybe four years ago or so, I started thinking,
okay, I've got to get dialed in on the dopamine. I need to like come off alcohol.
And for me, like that was the necessary step because I couldn't manage alcohol.
And then it was like really think about the food, think about all these different steps.
And then pornography was this one whereby I'd be able to come off it for a period of time, but there'd always be that temptation to
re-engage with that behavior. And it is like a challenging conversation to have pornography.
I feel like society isn't really considering it, but in terms of the elevation in dopamine,
it's absolutely insane. And in order to understand that, you only have to think about how much
pleasure you experience and how rapidly you experience that pleasure when you engage with
it. And then you know how big of a deal it is.
And when you compare, say, scrolling your Instagram reels to pornography, you'll notice
you feel much more pleasurable during the pornography because of the hyper dopamine
stimulation.
So where alcohol, social media, porn, they've all been challenging to come away from, I
would say porn is probably the most difficult.
Really?
Yeah.
Do you feel like it's got the greatest high in our brain chemistry over short form videos, vaping, and alcohol?
I think it's interesting this because I also
wasn't someone that was like a super porn addict in terms
of like it's not like someone that would be engaging with it
all day, every day, and stuff like that.
I was someone that just grew up as a teenager
and that was just like an option of like,
oh yeah, you can watch porn.
So that's like a thing you can do.
And then if I was ever engaging with the behavior of masturbation, it would be always accompanied
by porn because I just thought that's the given thing.
When you look at would it be more of a dopaminergic stimulation, the social media and alcohol,
I think you always have to go into like a deeper philosophical spiritual idea of what
is porn tapping into from a human innate desire point of view and where humans would have
really sought after social connection that was like fundamental to our survival with
social media and alcohol being kind of modern versions of social connection.
They're both driven by our pursuit of interacting with other humans.
Pornography is really tapping into the desire to procreate and there's nothing stronger in a
human than the desire to procreate. So I do think it's tapping even deeper into that instinctive
driver within us. Interesting. And what happens when you have a false sense of procreation
on a consistent basis through pornography? What I basically believe the brain evolved to do
throughout these like hundreds of thousands of years
was simply discover the process of survival
and how it can be optimized, which is a given.
Like obviously we've managed to survive to this point
and survival is important.
When you look specifically at dopamine,
like why is it really living within our brain?
It effectively lives within our brain to reward us
for behaviors that are advantageous to our survival.
To survive.
To survive, so in that moment that the fire struck
after rubbing rocks together for three hours,
a massive dopamine hit comes because that would have been
a very, yeah, it would have been so annoying doing that.
Yeah.
Like you think how easy our lives are now.
Imagine actually coming over from a day of work and then doing that for three hours until
you got some fire.
It was hard.
And we needed a chemical that every single day just drove us to keep making the fire
and keep looking for the food, even when it was freezing cold outside and so on.
And we got here as a specie.
And just like dopamine evolved, it's this very sophisticated mechanism to reward survival,
activities that promoted survival. I think it has
the same capacity to negatively create experiences that are disadvantageous to
survival of us and our prospering as a species. And then if you look, rather than
having to like look on Instagram at a list of what's good for my dopamine,
what's bad for my dopamine, if you simply ask yourself the question, is this
actually advantageous to my survival as a species? Then you will know immediately whether it's pro or not pro for your
dopamine and you look at pornography, if you go further with pornography, a
society that only watches porn as an engagement of sex is actually going to be
one that doesn't procreate at all and the brain is only going to send society
a stronger and stronger message saying please stop engaging with that path
because that's not going to lead to a prospering society in a thousand years.
And if you think of it with when you feel crap after cigarettes,
or you feel crap after spending a whole day socially isolated
from being on your phone all day,
or the ultra-processed food,
all of it is a very sophisticated message
from our biochemistry as a result of our brain's desire
to prosper for thousands of years.
Wow.
That's interesting.
How hard is it gonna be for society
to stop engaging in pornography?
Puff.
Because it seems like it's just everywhere,
especially with young men, right?
It's like, it's part of the culture.
It seems like it's accessible.
I'm assuming there's a lot of shame still,
but it's more acceptable, I guess, for younger men.
I don't know what it's like.
I definitely don't think that's right.
It's kind of late 20s, right?
Late 20s.
So what are men in their teens and 20s that you work with, what are they saying about it?
I definitely don't think people feel that much remorse or guilt or shame for engaging with it.
It's definitely a very normalized behavior, just like it's normal to get super drunk.
That's not necessarily that judged across the world.
Pornography, I don't feel is that judged.
I think it would vary from gender to gender or generation to generation,
how people thought about it.
Certainly in the world of being in your twenties, I don't think
it's a very judged action.
And I do think it's a very hard thing for society to come away from.
It's also evolving in terms of virtual reality
is gonna create a very difficult experience.
I can't even imagine what that would do to dopamine.
And all of that lane is becoming faster and faster.
I dread the day that pornography has a feed
like Instagram Reels, where you don't even have
to watch one video, but you could watch videos at pace
that that would be hell.
I shouldn't even give them that idea.
Don't give them that idea.
I'm like, didn't this match? And I believe the only path to coming away from it at pace that that would be hell. I shouldn't even give them that idea. That idea, yeah. Don't give them that idea. My goodness, man.
And I believe the only path to coming away from it is very, very deeply observing how it's actually
impacting your life. Because what happens with all this dopamine stuff is you just think, I feel okay.
Maybe you do struggle feeling depressed or anxious, and then you really need to start considering
how your lifestyle is creating that experience potentially. But a lot of people might feel quite neutral, they're like, I feel alright, it's not really
doing too much damage. And with all the different, particularly men they engage with this, but women
do too, the We Guide, they come away from it for a week, they say, okay, seven days, I'm just not
going to watch porn. And they're like, uneasy as to whether that's even going to do anything for them.
And they're like, I don't really want to lose that like pleasurable experience that I have in my life.
And you rapidly see a change in motivation and attention
when you come away from it.
You really quickly see the ability to just take action
on whatever you're wanting to do.
Like, I want to go to the gym,
I want to go for a walk in the morning,
because apparently they're good for you,
or I want to work hard.
You see a shift, and it's simply because,
just before you're going to sleep,
in that nice, regenerative dopamine experience of sleep,
just before that, you're just having this huge spike crash
off sleep and you're waking up with a lower dopamine level.
And if you can end the day with a healthier experience,
you're gonna wake up with a higher regeneration of dopamine
and then you're gonna think, okay,
I'm ready to attack the day.
And it's important.
As a neuroscientist, what is the best way,
what is the best evening routine to set you
up to have the most productive next day? Yeah, I think that definitely starts with you finish
your work. I think it's extremely important. So you finish your work, say 5, 6 p.m. The first
check-in I would do is make sure you have some short 60-second or so short reflection of your day
that helps you to celebrate the progress that has occurred.
It's very easy to go into the end of the day
looking at your calendar and tasks list
and thinking, shit, I have a lot more to do.
And then enter your evening in a state of dissatisfaction
which isn't good for our mind.
So the first thing, quick reflection,
very simple way to do that would just be
to look back at your tasks list
or look back at your calendar and think,
okay, cool, I've done this, I've done a podcast,
we've done some meetings or whatever it may have been.
Then I think you need a period of time
away from wherever you were working.
So if you're in the office,
you're naturally leaving the office, which is good.
A lot of people obviously work from home now,
you then need to leave your home.
Go outside, get some nature.
Go outside, that could be walking.
If it's still light in the summer sort of months,
go into nature, have a period of that,
could be to the gym.
The most important thing is after that work period,
you're then entering 60 to 90 minutes,
completely screen free.
So you need a moment where your brain is gonna de-stimulate
and it almost can be uncomfortable to experience
because our brain is in that dopamine loop all day.
We separate from the technology of our phone or our laptop
and suddenly we can almost feel a bit of a decline
and that's when we're like, well actually,
I think I'll just stay on the phone for the evening.
Or turn the TV on or something.
TV on. A different screen.
Different screen, and I think if you can have a period,
so it could be gym, it could be for a walk,
it might be that you just need to go like supermarket shopping,
you could at least get away from-
Make yourself dinner or whatever it might be,
like do an activity, right?
For sure, and then we basically try and get people to,
they come back from that activity, they've then got dinner and you've got potentially like TV watching and social. That's
kind of your potential evening activities typically in our world. And we'll try and continue that
concept of a phone fast effectively. So there's progress, prolonged periods of time away from the
phone so that this dopamine system can regenerate so that you can step away from all your work emails
and conversation and so on.
And phone fasting really requires,
and this is very clear in our work,
it requires physical separation from the device.
Not even just being close to you.
It can't be anywhere near.
Flipping it over, that's not a fact.
That does not work.
It has to be in like an office on a windowsill
away from you so that you're not near it
because we effectively have this experience of boredom
begins to arise in our brain.
Like we're cooking and we're like,
this is uncomfortable, I'm bored.
And the reason we feel that way
is because dopamine is declining.
Or it might be like we're eating dinner,
we're talking to someone and that even might be boring now
because we're so in stimulation all day.
And we call this the boredom barrier
where basically what you see is there's a period
of maybe 10 to 15 minutes where you feel uncomfortable and you're like, this is kind of shit and you want your phone and you
want stimulation. But you do quickly surpass what we call the boredom barrier if you stay
in the state of boredom and then it becomes okay again. Unsurprisingly, humans were able
to do life without phones prior to them being a thing. And we'll then guide them. They cook,
they eat and then maybe they watch TV. With the TV, I really don't think the TV is as significant as a problem as all the other
aspects of technology.
It's not a quick scrolling.
At least you're engaging in a storytelling or something slower, hopefully, right?
For sure.
And we have these simple questions when people are going through the experiences, these interactive
questions.
When we ask people whether they watched TV and scrolled at the same time the night before,
we have a 96% yes rate to that question.
Wow.
So the vast majority of society scrolls and watches TV and then you explore why that-
TV's boring now.
TV is so boring now.
It's too slow, so it's like, let me scroll and watch.
Yeah, like sitting there and just watching Netflix or like I watched Gladiator, the movie
the other day.
That's a great-
Is it good?
Yes, good movie.
My girlfriend had never seen Gladiator. Gladiator's a really good film.
Oh, you watched the first one or the second one?
First one.
We haven't seen the new one yet.
Oh, the first one.
But as you'll see, if you observe the difference
between the new one that comes out,
the new one will be dopamine carnage.
Sure.
In comparison.
To a slower storytelling of the old one, yeah.
And we're watching and you're kind of sitting there
and you actually are a bit bored
while you're watching a film.
And back in the day, if you went back to like the 70s,
that would have been like hyper dopamine stimulation,
but this is how the baselines are changing over time
because of the overstimulation.
You're like, this is too slow of a movie
where most people are at their top 10 movie of all time.
I know.
It's like.
And we just need to become comfortable with that experience
so that this chemical can restore itself effectively.
And again, physical separation is important.
If you're with other people, like if you've got a partner or kids anyone it's unbelievably important
that they also participate in the phone fast and there's this really interesting
area of neuroscience about anticipatory dopamine which is basically the concept
that your dopamine will rise simply at the thought of accessing dopamine not
just when you engage with it. 10 3 & and eight. Yeah, and that- 10, three and eight for you. I get the big answer, babe.
I know, when's my hit coming?
And like, if you're, like you know,
you're sitting at a restaurant with your wife
and you're eating some food
and then they take out their phones,
check it quickly.
And before you've even thought yours is boom,
straight in the hand,
and effectively your brain has seen their dopamine rise,
experienced anticipation,
and it's driven you into action
towards the same experience of dopamine. So it's very important. Like if you're going to sit on the
sofa and not be on it, they have to not be on it as well because the battle's too hard to fight.
What is the benefit of having strategic boredom time every single day?
We really want as a society high baseline dopamine. It's so important that we all every
day are waking up and we're generating a ton of this chemical. It leads to you just living your best experience of
life you possibly can in terms of everything. Your ability to cook and exercise and work
and connect and have sex and just be a thriving modern human. All of us are basically waking
up with low baseline dopamine and therefore it is not the greatest experience of life
humanity can have. And if we do begin to get this chemical back into balance, that's what's going to be the end product.
So when you have all these different actions coming into play, ultimately you're just looking at,
do I want to absolutely love my experience of life or do I want it to feel like pretty cool,
like pretty average medium? And it's like, if you can experience like your life feeling really good,
and I've had this, like all of this guidance doesn't come from a neuroscientist that thinks
dopamine is cool,
it comes from an addict that lived a pretty shit experience
alive for like 10 years.
And I just wasn't that happy, I wasn't thriving in my work,
my food wasn't good, my exercise wasn't good,
dating wasn't good, everything was off.
My ability to like feel connected to my family
and contribute to my family, everything felt misaligned.
And ultimately getting dopamine in check just changed
all of that, it completely changed the experience I'm having. And we getting dopamine in check just changed all of that.
It completely changed the experience I'm having.
And we all get this period of time where we get to be a human.
It would be nice if we can thrive throughout that time.
So you think if people learn how to change their dopamine,
they can change their life?
100%.
I actually believe it's the most important thing society does.
Really?
Definitely.
Focusing on dopamine.
Yeah.
And having a healthy balance of it.
Having a healthy balance of it. Having a healthy balance of it
and learning to step away as frequently as we can
from the quick stuff, move towards the slow stuff.
And then you obviously have these other neurochemicals,
oxytocin and serotonin endorphins.
These are absolutely pivotal to society thriving.
But the big issue we have right now
is we've become dopamine driven,
where we're all only in the pursuit of either pleasure
or also success is dopamine addiction as well.'re all only in the pursuit of either pleasure or also success is dopamine addiction as well.
We're in the pursuit of that. Society used to live its life very in the pursuit of oxytocin, serotonin and endorphins.
Now we've shifted it. So if dopamine gets in check, you then open this door and it's like, cool,
how else can I optimize my neurochemistry? So as a neuroscientist then, what is the greatest morning routine
to get our dopamine in check?
Okay, so the most important aspect is it starts with the night before with where you charge your phone. You can't charge your phone by your head. It's the most fundamental change society has to
make with the dopamine and if it has to be in the room for an alarm, it charges the other side of
the room and you get our beds turn it off. Ideally, the room for an alarm, it charges the other side of the room and you get out of bed to turn it off.
Ideally, you get yourself an alarm clock,
you get one for like two pounds on Amazon,
or you get yourself a nice one for Christmas,
whatever it might be.
But we need an alarm clock,
and we need to wake up and not go into quick dopamine.
I would say we need an absolute minimum of 15 minutes
before we see a phone screen.
Ideally, I would push that towards 30 minutes.
In the morning.
Yeah, I don't think you can see a phone within 15 minutes. Even this morning, like I woke up, I was pretty
jet lagged. I woke up at like 4am today and it was obviously very tempting. Oh, I wonder
what's going on in the world. Social media. We got the whole presidential election style.
I was curious to have a look at how that was going. And I was like, no, because this is
the day I want to be thriving. I've got an important podcast today. If I go into my phone,
I'm disrupting the capacity for that moment to happen. So the first thing is 15
minutes minimum, 30 minutes ideally. You want to wake up and you want to
immediately take action. You want to start doing something that's effortful.
So not only are you not spiking and crashing it and living in that world,
which is what most of us live in, but you're actually going in the opposite
direction and dopamine is on the rise. And that would involve you wake up, you
immediately walk to the bathroom and you go to the bathroom. After you've been to
the bathroom, if you're sitting there and you're going to the toilet you've
got to have a book in there to entertain you if you're going to potentially go on
your phone. Then you're engaging in effortful reading and that's much much
better. Books are way better for our dopamine because they're challenging, not
easy. Then use flash cold water on your face, you brush your teeth and you brush
your teeth properly and then you walk back to your bedroom and you make your
bed. So very simply, you wake, you don't go on your phone, you go to the bathroom, you
brush your teeth, you splash cold water on your face and you make your bed. You've experienced
a drastically different situation from a neurochemistry point of view. Your dopamine is climbing fast
and hard and then whatever else you want to do that morning, maybe it's that you want
to get out and go for a walk.
Maybe you've got to make your kids breakfast.
Maybe you've got to start your working day.
You're starting from a higher baseline dopamine state,
which is when you're going to perform at a really high level
with whatever action you're wanting to take.
Rather than climbing out of low dopamine
and finding everything annoying
and feeling irritated and feeling flat,
it's drastically different.
Wow. Okay.
So do something effortful will actually help
your dopamine levels in the morning.
Definitely.
As opposed to something that gives you
quick dopamine right away.
It's essential, imagine waking up as a hunter-gatherer,
how much effort they immediately engage with.
Instantly, how do we find them today?
They didn't just go and chill,
they would have just been up, get the fire going
so we've got warmth, who's going out for the food,
who's rebuilding the shelter, who's looking after the kids. It would have just been wake and go
every single day. Some people come through our dose experience and they say this is a bit like
military training, like waking up, making my bed. I honestly believe we are living in a world where
we've got to get more disciplined. I don't think a sort of balance, moderation, sometimes phone,
sometimes... I don't think that works in the world we have now. A hundred years ago, moderation might have been great
with food and all that sort of stuff.
I think we're living in a world where we do have to become
a more disciplined species if we want to feel our best.
Yeah, I think it's something that I've been doing for a long time
and I noticed you did in your book, which I really like,
is, you know, at the beginning of every chapter,
it's kind of like you have an assessment from one to ten.
And I always ask the scale from one to ten,
how much joy, fulfillment, happiness, peace
are you feeling right now?
If it's a five, you've got to evaluate every area
of your life that's causing you to feel under an eight.
Now, why am I at a lower level energies?
Why do I feel depression?
Why would feel sadness?
Why do I feel hurt, anxious, scared?
Why?
You have to look at that.
You have to take an assessment, a personal assessment,
and start saying, okay, well, let me look at every part of my day. Maybe I'm eating all day. Maybe
I'm just having sugar. Maybe I'm drinking alcohol. Maybe I'm watching porn. Maybe I'm disconnected on
my phone all day. You just have to assess it, not make it good or bad, right or wrong. You just have
to assess it and say, is this serving me feeling better? Is it helping me?
Is the quick service of making me feel high, helping me feel overall better every single day?
Definitely.
And you may not like the answer and it's going to be really hard to change and
make different choices every single day to support you in going from a three,
four or five on the scale of one to 10 to a six, seven, eight.
And it's going to be challenging. But like you said, and Jaco Willink says, you know,
discipline equals freedom. And if we want to feel free, we've got to create our own boundaries and
discipline in our life. And I went to a private boarding school for five years. So I lived in a
dorm. And we had to wake up at 6am. We had an hour of
Bible study. Then we had to make our bed, clean our room. Then we had someone come and check and
score us based on the cleanliness of a room. So it was like an accountability scoring. And there
was discipline if we did not clean our rooms at the end of the week. It was a dress code. It wasn't
a military school, but it was like a Christian like strict school. So we had a dress code. It wasn't a military school, but it was like a Christian like
strict school. So we had a dress code. You would get like suspended if you didn't wear a belt,
if your hair got too long, or if you had facial hair, like all these things. And it felt
restrictive, right? It felt like, you want to rebel against this. But it's so interesting,
like the more I got into it, the more I appreciated and respected it years into it.
Because I was like, wow, it's actually
helping me accomplish my goals.
I actually can focus my energy towards my sports goals.
And that discipline, those boundaries,
gave me focused attention to becoming better at my goals.
And I would see results.
And I was like, oh, okay.
Now I still was like, it'd be nice to nice to be as sloppy every now and then, right?
Which I rebelled after school.
It was like, I'm never cleaning my bed.
And I'm like, whatever.
I'm not picking up after myself.
I'll wear whatever I want.
Screw you guys.
In my early 20s.
Yeah.
But then something switched in my mid-20s to late 20s.
It's like, man, I'm feeling like I'm staying up really late, working hard nonstop.
Like I'm getting certain results, but I'm gaining a lot of weight. I'm not feeling good.
My mood is down. Let me try this discipline thing again. I started going to bed early.
I started waking up and making my bed every single day. It was a non-negotiable. Every
day make my bed in my late 20s and 30s. And I was like, oh man, dang it, there is something to this make your bed thing.
Like there is something to like just getting up
and doing something you don't wanna do.
Even if it takes two minutes, like I don't wanna do it.
But you're like, oh, I look at it,
oh, I just accomplished this thing
and I'm pretty proud of like how I made my bed look.
Let me go like brush my teeth and organize my bathroom
and make that look clean, right?
Okay, let me do the next.
Let me like put a nice shirt on on and do my hair and like,
okay, I'm feeling good about myself as opposed to quick dopamine hits or lazy, laziness.
And that discipline started to create more freedom in my life and started to create more self-love,
self-worth, appreciation of self and be oh, okay, I can do these things.
And look what I created.
When I come home at night,
I can appreciate the work I put in in the morning.
Oh, I have a nice bed to open up and go into, right?
It's like, thank you, you know, 10 hours ago self
for like putting in the work
to create an environment of peace at night,
as opposed to chaos and messiness.
And it created a viral loop of positivity and gratitude and peace and harmony.
And it didn't make everything perfect, but that discipline actually created a lot more freedom than people think.
It is so essential. And I think, just as you and I really believe in how important it is
to be in service to people in our world, like contribution is very, very important.
It also creates the stimulation of oxytocin, this love hormone within our brain when we
serve others.
We also have the capacity to contribute and serve ourselves.
And that is exactly what you're doing.
You're in service to yourself And it isn't actually serving yourself
by going straight in the phone when we wake up.
And just as I explained earlier
with how clever our dopamine is
at reinforcing the positive action,
it's gonna send us a message saying,
this isn't what I want, like I'm a body here
and I wanna be thriving, I want my hormones to be calm,
I want my whole body to be in a good state.
And when you live that lifestyle that you just described,
your brain is gonna send you a great message saying,
please continue this path, and then your happiness rises.
And we're, as a society right now,
very much in the pursuit of pleasure, not happiness.
And that is the pursuit of happiness.
The alternative option is the pursuit of pleasure,
and pleasure is not the best life.
Pleasure's not the best.
It's not.
It feels good at the time.
It feels good.
It's very addictive.
Very addictive.
It's very hard to break the addiction of pleasure. Extremely hard. I had to go, yeah, big periods of
absence. When I was at university, I got so into this pleasure loop of smoking cigarettes and drinking
and everything basically. And when I was about 22 years old, I was thinking there's no way I'm
going to live a life that I'm really happy experiencing with this.
And I knew that my grandpa lived in this natural setting,
they had a house with a garden and stuff like that.
And I didn't grow up, I grew up more like a bit more town
life and I took myself there and I spent like 90 days
at this house living like a monk basically,
because I was like, I have to somehow get off this stuff.
And very quickly I discovered there is a different thing
that you can be in the pursuit of.
You can be in the pursuit of a pleasurable experience of a really healthy life.
You can start really loving the nature walks and the hiking and the cooking and just the
getting really dialed into optimization.
And if you are someone that's super addicted to all the unhealthy dopamine, I really think
the only route is addiction towards the healthier pursuit of life.
Really? Yeah. It's like making that your addiction. Yeah. unhealthy dopamine, I really think the only route is addiction towards the healthier pursuit of life.
Really?
Yeah.
It's like making that your addiction.
Yeah.
And it doesn't mean it has to be unhealthy with that lane, but it needs, like, the big
thing with addiction, like my favorite definition of addiction is the progressive narrowing of
the things that bring you pleasure.
And if you look at when you're in a period of addiction, like if you look at alcoholism,
eventually your family don't make you happy and your work doesn't make you happy, exercise doesn't, but the alcohol brings you the pleasure
and it's this narrowing of what is the pursuit of pleasure for you in your life.
And then the other side of this good life being the progressive expansion of the things
that bring you pleasure.
And rather than like for me, I had alcohol and pornography and cigarettes being like
really driving things, what created pleasure for my brain, then it suddenly became this
fast array of nature
and exercise and food and social
and contribution and work and so on.
And suddenly when I had a variety of things
that were giving me the experience of happiness,
the kind of deep need I had for the quick stuff
began to fade and this thing was actually fulfilling me.
Wow, what's the biggest struggle you face today
as a neuroscientist, personally?
With all the research and information you have, what's the hardest thing for you still to manage?
I think the addiction to kind of success with work is quite tricky to manage. I have been
so thrilled over these last few years as to how things have gone with Dose. And I really am doing this from
a place of like, I just want people to be able to have a great experience of their life. But then
you build pressure around the system, as I'm sure you've experienced, where you suddenly have
a team to fund and all that kind of stuff. And I feel a kind of deeper weight to carry as to like,
social media needs to always be thriving, business needs to always be thriving. And then I can get quite hooked on the pursuit of that dopamine as well.
And things like followers, it taps into like your ego and things like that as well.
So I think managing kind of like the financial and social media side of this life I'm now
in is definitely difficult to manage.
How do you navigate in your brain chemistry if results are going down, if you're not getting the growth that you've seen in the past for a period of time or financially you're not making
as much or the following isn't working or something is changing, how do you navigate
that in your brain?
It's really interesting in these moments because as I started to do more and more of these
podcasts and these conversations, whenever I had a question that I think, what is the answer to that question? I've always thought I have to just ask the most truthful
thing in my being, not the thing that I think would be the right thing to say. Yes, you got to be
honest. If I am honest, a conversation and a connection with God is actually the thing that's
began to help me in those moments. And I didn't grow up with a Christian family. I didn't
grow up going to church. I basically had no religion in my life, my entire experience
of life. And when things weren't going to plan, I found that prayer was really good.
I have this morning routine where I have this really specific bench that I always like to
walk to in the morning, no phone involved, of course. And I walked there and for a lot
of the time, my practice there was to sit down
and do like a breathing process to calm my nervous system
and some gratitude and some like kind of
accomplishment celebration stuff for my self-talk.
And I had this experience, and I was doing this every day
for like three or four years.
And then with some various things that have happened,
life stuff and work stuff, I added praying into that moment.
And I found this conversation of like,
thank you for all I have
and promising my life to serving the world and things like that. I found it to be very powerful
in calming my moments of fear effectively in that experience and created this trust in things are
going to go okay. So when I'm in those deep states of fear, my mind race, I have a very
overthinking mind where I just rapidly go into worst-case scenario.
And I found really like a conversation with God in those moments is the best thing to
calm me down.
What does the research in neuroscience talk about when someone has a relationship with
God versus not having a relationship with God?
This is where things get so fascinating because with that new car, I would say I started
this prayer maybe a year ago. I then about four or five months ago began going to church for like
the first time in my life. I haven't even told anyone this. And on Sundays I'll go to church and
I spend like an hour in there. And my natural kind of inquisitive brain of like the neuroscience side
of things is like observing the whole experience of the prayer and the gratitude and the contribution to one another
and the connection and the singing.
And I'm thinking this is like those, this is a lot of actions that we're kind of promoting
in the modern world but just through a different lens.
And I've been sitting in there thinking this is the original mental health therapy, basically.
This is obviously the original model that really helped people's minds to thrive. And I think what's interesting in the church environment when you look at a
relationship with God, that is putting you more in the pursuit of oxytocin as an experience of
life. It's a very oxytocin dominant moment in the church. It's like this thanking to God,
it's this contribution to everyone. Like, everyone kind of shakes their hands, says,
peace be with you, and connects with one another. It's this singing, it's this contribution to everyone, like everyone kind of shakes their hands and says, peace be with you and connects with one another. It's this singing, it's this
like celebration of what has been and that is the pursuit of oxytocin and love. And I
basically believe that for much of the experience of humanity, oxytocin was the driving chemical.
It was how does this group prosper? How does this group survive? And dopamine was required
in our brain to make sure we were giving the resources to the group. But I think we are in the pursuit of others. And I think nowadays,
a lot of us are in the pursuit of serving ourselves, basically. How do I make myself
feel good all the time? My phone, alcohol, sugar, all this stuff. And I think when I'm
sitting in church, I'm thinking, wow, this is not about me anymore. This is about a group
and God. And that feels like a much better place for the human brain. It feels like it's
stepping you out of your own problems.
This is interesting because you have a whole program
called the Dose, is it the Dose Method?
The Dose Effect.
Dose Effect, which is kind of like a curriculum
to help people get their dopamine, oxytocin,
serotonin, and endorphins in a healthy balance,
I would say, right?
Is that what it is?
Like a healthier balance of those things?
Definitely.
Affirmatively, dopamine is about taking away the overstimulation and getting it back into
natural stimulation. And then with the other ones, we haven't necessarily learned how to hack them
like we have with dopamine, but they're very low as a result of our lifestyle. All of those three
oxytocin serotonin endorphins are under producing themselves. So we get them boosted.
What is each one? Dopamine equals what?
Dopamine equals motivation. So that's just completely driving your ability to take action
in your life. Oxytocin equals connection. Serotonin. Energy. Endorphins. Destress.
Effectively it has evolved to destress our brain. And if they're all off, if you have the ability
to focus on regulating dopamine, will all the others start to rebalance?
They wouldn't. It's an interesting idea. Would phone fasting serve the other chemicals?
So it's like, yes, it definitely is serving dopamine coming away from any dopamine hits from the phone.
So that's definitely serving dopamine. But then if you were just to sit in your bed and do nothing in your phone
fast and meditate, that would stay in quite a dopamine type world but if
you were to during your phone fast cook and serve your family when cooking and
socialize with them or if you go out and exercise or whatever it might be then
the other chemicals are going to rise. So effectively I think dopamine is largely
distracting us from pursuing the other chemicals if you step away from a lot of
quick dopamine,
naturally, just as a human being,
you're gonna think, oh, I need to entertain myself
because I'm bored.
And then the other actions are gonna cause a rise
in the other ones.
You talked about, what is endorphins again?
What is the-
It effectively evolved to de-stress our brain.
If ever we were in a situation
where we were in extreme physical and psychological danger,
like we were under threat of seeing an animal
when it began to chase us, we were forced into a moment of extreme physical exertion
to try and survive that situation. And it'd obviously be very annoying in that moment
if one, your brain was like, oh my God, I'm going to die, I'm going to die. And if it
was two, also experiencing like a stitch and stuff like that. And endorphins has this incredible
capacity to just eliminate the stress from our mind and take pain out of our physiology
as well in order to help us survive in that moment where we're no longer
running away from bears, which is great.
We are still stressed as hell.
And in moments where you feel extremely stressed out, endorphins can be an incredible response
and action that builds endorphins is a really good way to respond to it because it's going
to release in your brain and your brain is going to settle itself.
Yeah.
And if you said if you have low endorphin levels,
there's four causes of low endorphins.
The first cause is a lack of hard physical exercise.
The second key cause is a sedentary lifestyle,
which is kind of like a complication of that.
Third is a lack of laughter.
And the fourth is a final cause is chronic stress, constantly just being
in stress all day long.
It's interesting because this is just most of society, I feel like.
Most people don't have a hard sense of physical exercise every day.
They want to have a more relaxed lifestyle, more sedentary lifestyle, and those two things
are interconnected.
That's half of the causes of low endorphins, not having a physical exertion,
exercise routine, sitting all day or laying all day. And I think the third one is actually
really interesting because I was asking someone this morning, I was texting with someone this
morning, it's the, I was saying, what are the biggest lessons of the year for you? And they
were sharing their big lessons. One of them was actually stress is like learning how to minimize stress
because they had some physical problems occur from chronic stress.
And as I was telling them, they're like, what's one of your less?
They were asking me in return, what's one of your like lessons?
And I was like, bringing joy back into everything, you know, not.
And I think the antidote of stress is laughter
and joy. It's like, okay, this is a stressful moment or season or like things are struggling
right now. But how do I just find ways to bring play into my day? Even for like five,
10 minutes? How do I bring joy, play? And I'm not talking about bringing laughter in every
sad, sensitive moment, being, you know, having a lack of like
awareness of the moment, bringing it into your life,
having playful moments when you can, having fun,
just whatever you can to laugh.
It's important.
It is massive.
And the research is showing that as well,
based on what you have in your books.
So I think that's really interesting, these four causes.
Yeah, I think stress is a very interesting topic
and I do want to touch on the laughter
because stress is like very widely researched
and cortisol, this other hormone is also very impactful.
And a lot of the work we look at in stress
is about calming the body down.
And there is so much truth in that.
Our heart rates are racing in the modern world
and having breathing practices and nature and good sleep and everything is
very important for calming our stress. Endorphins is taking a slightly
different lane on that idea. If we look evolutionarily, we never really
experienced stress for 300,000 years that wasn't accompanied with a physical
action immediately after it. So if we
were super stressed because we were starving, food was the only thing that
was going to settle that stress. If we were in getting up and moving, getting up
and moving and if we were in some kind of physical danger from a human or an
animal or our environment was under threat, whatever it may be, physical
action always was accompanying the stress to calm us back down and I think
for me I do feel stressed.
Like by life, life can be stressful for sure.
And in stressful moments, I've done a lot of the breathing stuff,
which I think is great, breathing and sleep and so on.
But I actually think the most useful thing is utilizing physical action first.
And then after the physical action,
chilling out and slowing down is even easier
because you've kind of completely settled the system.
But I think a lot of us just feel stressed
and we're like, I feel very stressed
so I need an evening on the sofa
with my glass of wine and the TV shut.
That is not the optimal way to recover.
The optimal way would be getting
to a challenging physical experience effectively first.
Then chill out for sure and have an early night.
And so, and the laughter side of things,
we, as I said, as they're going through with the Dose
Lab, they are beginning to assess all these different metrics.
And we have been so unbelievably surprised at how much people rate, how much laughter
they have in their life.
And as they're going through it, they get asked this question, how much do you like
laughing?
One to 10.
And we have a 9.3 average on this question.
Unsurprisingly, humans like laughing.
Few people click 8, most people click 10. Then they get asked the question, how frequently do
you laugh from 1 to 10? And we have an average at 5.6. So there's this like massive disparity
between how much we like it and how much is actually occurring. And as these programs evolve
with people, people have this real realization of like, wow, I'm living a very isolated lack of
laughter lifestyle. Like I'm spending a very isolated lack of laughter lifestyle.
Like I'm spending a huge amount of time
whereby my social stimulation is being partially satisfied
by watching people socialize on my phone.
And I'm not actually there socializing
and being in that experience and maybe a little chuckle
at some like dog jumping off a wall or something.
There's that little laugh,
but there's not like proper physical laughter,
which is what the endorphins need to release.
And people then have this awareness of like, wow, I need to get myself into what we call
laughter environments.
And they literally plan out, okay, when are my three laughter environments this week?
Is it a FaceTime with my daughter?
And is it going for like a walk with this particular person?
A comedy show.
We really need laughter.
We're underestimating how much we're lacking it.
And it's very clear.
We all know that laughter is one of the greatest experiences as a human there is.
It's healing.
Yeah, and when we went into the research, as I was going through that, I over the last
few years selected these 20 actions based on what had the most research evidence behind
it in order to boost the chemicals because that was the most simple formula to take and
then I could pick the 20 behaviors.
When I was writing a chapter, for example, flow state, which is all about deep concentration, there is obviously crazy amounts of stuff
on your attention span, big widely researched area. If you look at laughter versus attention
spans, there is significantly less work going into laughter. I then had the task of I need
to get an entire chapter out of this experience of laughter, so I went really deep into that
world. It is so clear that human beings that laugh significantly more and significantly more frequently are having a better experience
of life and we need to become conscious of it. We need to be more social.
Wow. This is powerful, man. I'm excited about this book and all the things that you're creating.
Make sure you guys pick up a copy of The Dose Effect, Small Habits to Boost Your Brain Chemistry
by T.J. Power. Power for research,
content and information to support you improving the quality of your life. I've got a couple
final questions for you TJ, but before I ask them, where can people go to follow you and support you
beyond the book as well? Yeah, so at TJ Power on Instagram and Power is my name as we shared earlier,
that is actually my real name, It's not a stage name.
And the way in which you can engage with DOS
and learn it is at thedoselab.com.
Thedoselab.com.
Okay.
Check all that out.
I love it, man.
I wanna acknowledge you TJ
for your courage to talk open with me today. I think I felt something in your heart that you wanted to share more of this stuff, so
I'm glad you're able to talk about it openly.
And I'm glad that you, as a neuroscientist, have also tapped into the spiritual laws of
the universe to support you in your constant personal growth, healing, eliminating certain
distractions or addictive habits that might not serve you
and finding something to replace that can serve you and your mission on a greater level.
So I acknowledge you for, it's probably not easy being in your mid-20s, not being easy
at any age, but in your mid-20s when your peers of that age are pushing against the
thing that you're leaning into.
Yeah.
And are normalizing addictive behaviors that don't support you for quick dopamine.
And that's been how you were raised through culture, society, communities, things like that.
So for you to go against the grain and lean in the curiosity to find more peace and harmony
within yourself.
I acknowledge you for that and for opening up about it and started to talk about it.
And I hope to see it in some of your content as well in the future.
This question I ask everyone towards the end, it's called the three truths.
Imagine a hypothetical scenario.
You get to live as long as you want, but it's your last day on earth.
You get to create and accomplish everything that you dream of,
but for whatever reason on this last day you have to take all of your work with you.
It can't stay in this world. Your books are gone, your content is erased, this conversation is gone.
Everything is gone. But in the last day you get to leave three truths behind. Three things you know
to be true from all of your experiences and the
lessons you would leave behind to others. This is all we would have of your content.
What would be those three truths for you?
It would be to every single week, spend a prolonged period of time in nature completely
without a phone. Ideally, the phone is at home or if it has to
be with you for safety, it's in a bag and it's on airplane. So that'd be one thing. A prolonged
period of time in nature, no phone. The second one would be to ensure each day your day is centered
around how your actions will serve others rather than how are they serving yourself and your pleasure. And the third one would be to
put the people around you in your life at the center of your mind to make sure that every single
day you are conscious of how those people are. These are your direct closest connections, your
girlfriends and boyfriends and wives and husbands and kids and so on. And to have like a very
conscious thing in your life as to are these people's experience of life rising as a result of how I'm interacting with them and teaching them and learning from them and so on,
or are they creating greater difficulty as a result of me promoting unhealthy things within their lives?
So I'd say prolonged nature, constant service to humanity, and a real conscious aspect of are you educating and serving the people that you love.
It's beautiful man, I love those. And TJ, what's your definition of greatness?
I think living a disciplined life. A living a really disciplined life where you're feeling incredibly proud of each action you take.
I watched a great movie recently, The Last Samurai, which is that old movie.
Hopefully it wasn't too boring for you.
Well, it was slow-paced, and I'm in the pursuit of slow.
Good movie.
And I was watching, he goes to the samurai and he visits that Japanese village,
and they're all so deeply in the pursuit of hyper-discipline from the moment they wake.
And I so deeply believe that the path to us feeling our happiness
is very much rooted in
how much discipline we show to ourselves. And I believe greatness will come if you live a
disciplined life. TJ Power, my man. Thanks for being here, brother. Thanks for having me.
Powerful. I have a brand new book called Make Money Easy. And if you're looking to
create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in your life,
and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it easier, you want to make it flow,
you want to feel abundant, then make sure to go to MakeMoneyEasyBook.com right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is going to help you transform your relationship with money this moment moving forward.
We have some big guests and content coming up.
Make sure you're following and stay tuned
to the next episode on the School of Greatness.
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