The School of Greatness - Ultimate Guide to Holistic Health: 3 KEYS to Controlling the Mind & RESETTING Your Nervous System
Episode Date: June 21, 2024Guests featured today: Andrew Huberman, Dr. Mark Hyman & Rich Roll. How much does the body control the mind, and the mind control the body? Today, we have 3 SOG favorites giving their own take on the ...mind-body connection and how they approach holistic health in their own lives. Andrew Huberman dives into the profound connection between the brain and body, revealing how our nervous system shapes our mental states. Dr. Mark Hyman shares his transformative journey of healing trauma to find true happiness and love. And Rich Roll inspires with his incredible story of overcoming addiction and embracing a life of continuous growth. This episode is packed with actionable insights to help you transform your life – now, let’s dive in!In this episode you will learnThe brain and body are deeply interconnected, influencing each other continuously.Emotions and states of mind involve both brain activity and bodily responses.Depression and anxiety can be mitigated by understanding and leveraging the brain-body connection.Breath control is a powerful tool for managing stress and altering mental states.Holistic health involves addressing emotional traumas and adopting practices that enhance both mental and physical well-being.For more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1631For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960Full length episodes featured today:Andrew Huberman – https://link.chtbl.com/1073-guestDr. Mark Hyman – https://link.chtbl.com/1560-podRich Roll – https://link.chtbl.com/1061-guest
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to this special masterclass. We've brought some of the top experts in the world to help you
unlock the power of your life through this specific theme today. It's going to be powerful,
so let's go ahead and dive in. How much does the body control the mind and the mind control the
body? Are they very connected or is the mind in complete control? That's a great question.
or is the mind in complete control? That's a great question.
The short answer is the body has a huge
and profound influence on our mind.
And the reason is that we often talk about the brain
and we think the brain, the brain, the brain.
The brain is important, but the brain and the spinal cord,
which makes up what we call the central nervous system,
are extensively connected with the body
and the body is extensively connected with the brain and spinal cord.
So the spinal cord is connected to the brain.
That's right.
The back. It comes up the neck.
That's right.
The actual nerves are connected inside of your brain.
That's right.
All the way down to lower back?
Yeah. So basically, we are a big tube, or our nervous system is a big tube. So your brain,
obviously, is the thing that's shaped
like more or less like this. And then the spinal cord extends off the back and all that is housed
in skull, except for two pieces of the brain, which are the eyes, which are actually two pieces
of the brain that are outside the skull. The eyes are a part of the brain.
They are absolutely a part of the brain. They are central nervous system. So it's eyes,
brain, and spinal cord. They're all connected. They're all connected. If you took that out of the brain. They are central nervous system. So it's eyes, brain, and spinal cord.
They're all connected. They're all connected. If you took that out of the body, let's say,
they would all be connected. That's right. They're contiguous, as we say. They're just one unit.
They're one piece. That's right. And sometimes they get challenged. People say the eyes aren't
part of the brain. Well, then that means that the spinal cord is part of the brain too. And
I want to be really clear. This is not sem semantics there is a genetic program that ensures that early in development during the first trimester
when we were all in our mother's bellies the retinas the neural retinas and eyes were deliberately
pushed out of the skull and the reason you have those eyes outside your skull is so that you can
evaluate things at a great distance from you,
right? Because otherwise everything would have to be in contact with you. Other animals do this
mainly using smell. We are very visually driven. So a lot of our genome is devoted to vision and
understanding what's going on at a distance from us. And that's afforded us a huge evolutionary
advantage. To survive. To survive. Because the more that I can anticipate events at a distance, the more that I could coordinate with my environment, like daytime
and nighttime, but also when objects are coming at me or things I want to chase and kill, or
you think about mating behavior and hunter-gatherer behavior, all of that,
evaluating faces and facial expressions without actually having to come into contact with people,
afford a huge evolutionary advantage.
But I want to make sure that I answer your question thoroughly.
The nervous system includes the brain, which we now know includes the eyes as well, the spinal cord, and then what's called the peripheral nervous system, all the connections with the body and every organ in our body, our heart, our diaphragm, our lungs, our spleen, our liver.
All of it is, as we say, innervated.
It receives nerve connections.
To the brain?
That's right.
From the brain and spinal cord.
So much so that if we were to just dissolve away everything except the nervous system,
if we had a human nervous system splayed out here on the table in front of us, it would
look like a human being.
There would be a connection at every level.
You'd be able to say that's the big toe and that's the pinky and that's where the heart would belong because it's almost like a silhouette
of our entire body and so when we think about the nervous system it's really important i think for
people to understand that the nervous system is all of that brain and body and all the connections
back and forth and you know there have been thousands of years of debates about what's the
mind what's the brain etc the mind the mind-body problem, all that.
I think it's fair to say in 2020 that states of mind include the brain, the activity of
the brain, and the body.
Those two things coordinate.
The brain and the body have a sort of what I call a contract.
There's a brain-body contract that gives rise to things like states of mind.
So a feeling of depression or a feeling of awe
or excitement or happiness.
Which is a state of mind is what I'm hearing you say.
Yeah, I mean, we could talk about why.
An emotional experience is a state of mind?
That's right.
I prefer to talk about states and states of mind
because they include the brain and body.
So just by saying mind, I don't mean just brain.
They include the brain and body. And also because saying mind, I don't mean just brain. They include the brain and body.
And also because-
So when you say, sorry to interrupt,
brain and body mean thought and feeling?
Yeah, so you're asking the key questions.
Emotions are very hard to describe in an objective way.
Whereas states have certain properties
that allow us to study them in different laboratories
and from one experiment to the next.
So some people may have heard this before,
but the brain does really five things.
We have sensation, which is, you know,
we're constantly being bombarded with sound waves
and light and smells and things.
And that stuff is ongoing and you can't negotiate that.
It's just, you have these receptors in your body
that allow you to evaluate those things. A sea turtle has magnetoreception. It can navigate by magnetic
fields. We cannot do that, but they can because they sense it, you know, infrared vision in a pit
viper or something. So unless you put on, you know, night vision goggles, you can't do that.
Then there's perception, which is which sensations you are paying attention to. So as you write with
your pen, if I say,
what does that pen feel like in your hand?
Now you're perceiving it, but the sensation was always there.
Those receptors were always sensing it.
So the sensation being the actual feeling
or the actual visual, the perception is,
your interpretation of the feeling?
So I would say that the perceptions
are where your attention is,
which sensations you're attending to.
And then you have thoughts and thoughts get a little complicated for us to parse because they are a little bit abstract.
But thoughts are a combination of our perception, whatever it is we're attending to.
And they have context memory.
You know, they're tapped into our, you know, they're tapped into our memory systems.
Right.
Because if I say a pen and you're like, I don't know what your relationship to pens is,
but mine is kind of a trivial one.
I write with one.
But let's say I come from a family that,
I don't know, had a pen factory in Germany in the 1930s.
Then there's a whole-
Or you got stabbed by a pen when you were a kid.
Or you got stabbed by a pen, right?
So it's very contextual.
So thoughts are like perceptions,
but they carry memory and context.
Thoughts are memory and context.
Yeah, they include that.
And then there are feelings slash emotions.
And this is where it really starts to get abstract
and kind of hazy and where there's still a lot of debate.
Because for instance, if I ask you how you're feeling
and you say, I feel, most people say, I feel good.
Well, what does that mean?
I mean, that's not a feeling.
So if you ever do personal development work,
they're always like, don't say good or bad. What do you feel and people say?
Well, I feel calm and excited or something that you know when it and it starts becoming very abstract and so
Emotions are a real thing and they certainly perhaps more than anything else
Recruit the brain and the body when we feel depressed, we occupy certain postures. We feel
it in our gut. We feel it in our limbs. We can feel fatigue. We can feel anxious. And so the
emotions are really where you capture that mind, the brain-body contract and relationship very,
very intensely. And then the fifth thing is actions. And what I love about actions and
behaviors is they are very concrete.
You're writing with your pen now.
I'm speaking.
I'm moving my hands.
You can measure those things.
You can analyze them.
We know exactly what the neural pathways are.
So we've got sensation, perception, emotions, and actions.
Thoughts, yep.
And then, of course, beneath all that, you've got memories.
And people always like to raise intuition.
You know, they always say, what about that sixth
thing, intuition? And we could talk about intuition, but the reason I like to talk about
states and the reason we study states in my lab is that states have two properties that are easy
to study somewhat compared to emotions. And that's how pervasive they are, meaning how long lasting
they are. States tend to have a a beginning a middle and an end whereas
emotions it's sort of like they're more in combination states are more like the
primary colors from which you mix all that you get all the emotions and the
other thing is that they have an intensity that we can measure you can
have a state of being very alert or very drowsy or asleep and you can say from a
one to ten how are you feeling in this state?
That's right.
And we can measure it.
How much is that experience?
That's right.
And we can correlate it with things like heart rate, heart rate variability, breathing speed,
sweating, levels of neural activity in brain areas that control wakefulness.
And so I will be the first to say that I would love to be able to say that in my laboratory
we are studying or someday we'll study all and flow and all
those things. But those are higher up on the ladder than we can get to right now. I think
with the current technology we can understand states and from there I do believe that we
can make a significant dent into certain mental health issues and optimize performance in
certain communities that are trying to optimize performance and in the general public. But the states that we're focused on are very concrete.
For instance, alert and focused.
That would be a wonderful state to understand
and be able to direct ourselves toward
when we're not feeling alert and focused.
How to get into that state.
How to get into that state.
And we could talk about tools for that if you like.
Sleep, sleep is so powerful and so important.
I think now people really understand the extent to which it's important in large part because of Matt Walker's book, Why We Sleep, sleep is so powerful and so important. I think now people really understand the extent
to which it's important in large part
because of Matt Walker's book, Why We Sleep
and the important work that he's done in his lab at Berkeley
and many other labs as well, of course.
So focus, sleep, creativity, stress.
These are the kind of core states
that we would like to tackle first
because we believe we can.
And then hopefully in my
career, but if not in my career, then maybe one of my scientific offspring or another laboratory,
you know, 10, 20, a hundred years from now, we'll be able to understand things like,
how does one get into a state of empathy? Like, I mean, we could spend the whole hour talking
about empathy, but it's hard and it's a fascinating topic and it's so important,
but it's just very hard to understand at a and it's so important, but it's just very
hard to understand at a neural level. So we're starting with the basics, with the confidence
that by understanding those basics, they will build up to richer representations and understanding of
things like empathy someday. Would you need to be studying the heart as well to understand
empathy or does it all come from the mind? That's a great question. So to understand any state,
we believe that you have to study the brain and the spinal cord and the body. So in my lab,
we talk about being neuroscientists. For me, that means we study the nervous system, the whole thing.
So people who come into my laboratory, we put them into VR environments that simulate some
experience. And I realize it's not as real as being
in the actual experience in the real world,
but you get enough presence,
especially because it's very visually
and auditorily rich in those environments.
People get what's called presence.
They forget that they're in a VR environment,
at least for moments.
And in that time, we're measuring heart rate variability,
we're measuring sweating, we're measuring, in many many cases we also have electrodes lowered into their brain because we do this with
neurosurgery patients and so we have access to the brain we have access to the body and it's
really by recording from all these areas of the brain and body that we can get a fuller
understanding of what a state of safe focus or stress or anxiety really is, if we were just looking in one little corner of the brain
or just at the heart, we wouldn't be able to do that.
And so that's kind of a centerpiece of our lab
is that brain and body, the whole nervous system is key.
You've got to look at all of it.
With feelings, I want to talk about feelings and emotions for a second.
Can a person make it so they never get depressed?
They never react to their perception, people's actions towards them where they never get
to a state of, ah, I don't feel good.
I'm feeling more depressed.
I'm in a dark place now.
I'm stuck in this place.
Is there a way that we could ever defend ourselves
against negative stressors negative emotions or are we just are they do we need them as well to
have contrast in life well there's sort of two views on this I'll reveal mine after I sort of
explain the two views one is that these states I guess I'm automatically calling things like
depression a state of mind state of body so depression, a state of mind and body.
So when I say state of mind, I mean brain and body.
Because your body is really feeling, it's like the brain is connected to the body.
Right.
And so if you're saying internally a thought of like, I'm depressed, I don't feel good,
or I'm sad or lonely, or I'm not good enough, the body's going to react. Is that what I'm
understanding?
Absolutely.
The body's going to manifest what the mind is telling you.
Absolutely.
The thought, the idea, you're going to be like, I'm sad. I'm not good enough. You're going to
shrink. Is that right?
That's right. I mean, there are really two forms of depression. Sometimes they're intermixed,
but one is anxiety-associated depression. And if you've ever experienced it, or for anyone that's
experienced it, they feel agitation in their body and their mind races, but in their body.
So the body is recruited.
There are also depressive states that people feel very fatigued and exhausted and overwhelmed.
And they also experience that in their body.
The idea of getting out of bed in the morning is hard.
Motivating to exercise, doing the sorts of things that we know are powerful for pushing back on depression. So the body is recruited.
I think most people would say that depressive states are bad when they bring down the baseline
on life. Just as a brief aside, anytime there's a question about mental health or addiction or trauma or anything, one could look at it and make up some argument of, well, evolutionarily, this makes sense.
We all get depressed.
But we have to be fair to the person experiencing it, of course, and have sensitivity that some behaviors will keep the baseline of our life steady, meaning job, relationships, et cetera, will continue as they are.
Other activities will tend to improve the baseline on our life steady, meaning job, relationships, et cetera, will continue as they are. Other activities will tend to improve the baseline on our life, job, activities, relationship,
et cetera, will improve. And then there's some things like heroin, which very quickly,
we can predict that very quickly the baseline on life is going to creep down regardless of
who that person is, right? So people say, can you get addicted to water? Well, maybe, but I have to drink a lot of water before the baseline of my life starts to go
down. So it just feels uncomfortable. That's right. It's like, man, I'm so bloated. Exactly.
So we tend to throw around things like addiction and depression a little loosely. So I think that
it's fair to say that depression is wired into us as a possible state that we could all fall into,
but that it's very important, in my opinion,
that humans have tools to remove themselves from that state, of course, to avoid tragedies like
suicide, but also because when the baseline on someone's life goes down far enough, they find it
increasingly hard to do the sorts of things that are going to get them out of depression. So you
or I could say... So they stay in that state of depression because it's too hard to go work. It's too hard to change
my habit of eating healthier. So I'm going to stay... I'm going to keep eating ice cream,
which is going to make my body depressed. That's right.
Right? If I keep eating bad foods, if I keep staying up till 4 a.m., if I keep
staying in a toxic relationship, I want to feel depressed. That's right. And eventually, because of this very inseparable relationship between the brain and
body, eventually what happens is that because the brain controls the body, but also the body
can control the brain, people lose the ability to intervene in this depressive process. So you or I
could say, look, if someone who's depressed, what they need
to do is get up early, get some light in their eyes, get some movement. I know you've put this
information out there, which I love because those tips are grounded in, they're not even tips,
they're really tools. And they're very powerful because they're grounded in excellent science.
You get that dopamine release early in the day that's anti-depressive you time
your sleep better when you get sun in your eyes and you get movement early in the day
for most people that's accessible and they should be they absolutely should be doing it everyone
should be doing that but for people who are far enough down that path of depression because the
body and the mind have this relationship that's so close, there is a crossover point where
they really can't do those activities.
Because they're so far deep in the depression.
The body won't do what they decide to do.
And so now I'm not trying to give anyone a pass because ultimately we are all responsible
for our own mental health.
Certainly adults more than kids, but we're all responsible for our own mental
health and only we can direct our own brain changes that's that's the stinger once we're
you know 25 years and older we are the only ones that can change our brain and we can talk about
neuroplasticity if you like but the depressed person has to take responsibility for their
behavior but this is why it's so important to catch this brain-body
relationship early and build routines that keep one out of depression so that was a long path
back to answer your question succinctly i hope which is we can stay out of depression but we
have to keep depression at bay by doing things regularly. The same way we can stay out of obesity by eating
the right foods in the right times and ratios and things of that sort. But once one is obese,
there are massive endocrine changes, type 2 diabetes that make it hard to eat correctly.
Right.
Right? So there's this feedback.
It's hard to get out of it. It's hard to go back to a healthy state.
That's right. Once your insulin is dysregulated, you're hungry all the time. So it's much harder
to control your hunger. Now- You have to have so much discipline and willpower to,
I guess, break through and try to get back to a healthier state. That's right. Is that right?
It's possible is what I'm hearing you say. Absolutely. But it's really, really hard.
That's right. So is depression a disease then? Are people who have certain brain chemistry
that are born differently with their brains that are just more depressed or
Is it possible to get out of that state if you have the functionality to think to act to you know
Move to create routines and habits for yourself. Is that possible? Yeah, there are some genetic
predispositions to depression and there's certainly familial circumstances where the trauma and challenge that can
Had people down that path.
I think one of the reasons I'm involved in public education about neuroscience is I want people to understand the nervous system.
And I want them to understand that there are tools that can allow them to intervene in their thoughts and feelings.
And most of the time, those involve bringing in behaviors and the actual actions which are
very concrete and the reason is the following it's very hard to control the mind just using
thinking just using the mind just thinking it's very hard you know if someone's stressed out and
you say calm down it doesn't work telling ourselves calm down doesn't work so it's like
what's a tool breathe right it's right so a specific time for a walk a specific tool right and when it comes to depression and emotions i mean that it's very
hard to talk oneself out of an emotional state it's just very challenging very hard that's right
it's like when i talk to my girlfriend and she's just like she's not happy about something
and she gets on a tangent i'm like there's nothing i can say to calm her down there's nothing i can
say to someone who's emotional about an idea in the moment until i'm like okay there's nothing I can say to calm her down. There's nothing I can say to someone who's emotional about an idea in the moment until I'm like, okay, let's talk later.
Otherwise, me trying to tell them to relax, that's not what you're thinking.
It's counterproductive.
You know, it's not the truth.
That's not what you're thinking or whatever.
It's counterproductive, right?
It makes them more emotional.
Well, that's because these states, like these emotional states of mind, they recruit the whole nervous system.
So we are actually a different...
So your whole body is out of control.
Your mind, your body.
Like, for instance, if you're angry, upset, or stressed, your pupils dilate.
This is subconscious.
As a consequence of that, you view the world in kind of like portrait mode, not panoramic, excuse me, portrait
mode on your phone, where the thing that's upsetting you is in sharper focus and everything
else is blurry. So you actually see the world differently. In addition to that, the timing,
that your perception of time, excuse me, is now faster so that things outside you seem to be
moving more slowly in comparison to how you feel inside you've experienced this if you were ever in line at the airport or something and it's taking a long
Time and you're about to miss your flight. It seems like the person in front of you is moving very slow
They're taking forever. Yeah, but time is time. It's you know, it's moving at the same rate regardless when you're very calm
Or let's say you're you're fatigued
Let's say you're exhausted
You didn't sleep well the night before things in front of of you are going to seem like they're moving really fast.
They're saying, take off your shoes, putting them on the conveyor.
It's kind of overwhelming.
We're slowed down here.
That's right, because your internal clock is moving more slowly.
And so these states of mind, when someone's upset, they recruit their entire being, their way of being.
And so one of the reasons why I mentioned that sensation, perception, feeling, feeling thought and action before is that the actions are very concrete and
Because of this reciprocal relationship between the brain and body brain connects to body body connects to brain
We know that when the mind isn't where we want it to be we need to use the body to intervene
What does that mean? So there are two ways that you can shift your brain state quickly.
You mentioned one already, which is respiration or breathing. And the reason is there's a direct
connection from the brain to an organ in our body called the diaphragm, which is skeletal muscle.
The diaphragm is designed to move the lungs up and down, bring in more oxygen, expel more oxygen.
And it's unlike other organs like the heart or the spleen or the liver, because it's actually
made up of what's called striated muscle
Just like a bicep tricep or quadricep. It can be voluntarily controlled
You can't voluntarily control your heart directly right now
Like you can't say speed up and speed it out or slow it down
You can slow down your breathing you can do and you can slow down the way you think about things
I'm assuming or change your thoughts or something else to help you be more relaxed. That's right. So one of the reasons why breathing is such a powerful tool for shifting
one's state is that, A, it's always available for voluntary control. It's just right there.
I can decide right now to do three inhales, or I can just go back to breathing reflexively.
I can just do that in any moment. So the neural real estate, which is in the
brainstem that controls breathing, is in a unique position because it's at the kind of boundary
between conscious control and unconscious control. I can't do that for my digestion. I can't do that
for most everything that happens internally. The other thing is that breathing controls
our level of alertness very dramatically.
So the faster you breathe, generally,
the more alert you are.
The slower you breathe, the more calm you're gonna be.
The faster you breathe, meaning shorter quick breaths,
or
Either way.
So we're just to take a brief adventure
through the neuroscience of breathing
and how it relates to brain states.
And there's some fun tools in here, so forgive me for this tangent, but you have two brain areas that are
responsible for breathing. One is called for the aficionados, the pre-buttsinger complex. It was
discovered by Jack Feldman at UCLA. It's named after a bottle of wine. So now people won't forget
it. And it controls rhythmic breathing. So inhale, exhale, inhale, exhale. It's just rhythmic breathing.
There's another brain area that controls breathing, which is near what's called the
parafacial nucleus, which involves breathing anytime there are double inhales or double
exhales or triple inhales.
You say, well, why would you have this second brain area for breathing?
Well, it turns out when you're speaking or crying or coughing, you need to coordinate
your breathing with your speaking.
And that means sometimes you need to take multiple inhales or multiple exhales.
And this is all happening very, very fast.
You don't notice.
But there's a very important discovery that was made a few years ago by Jack's lab and by a guy named Mark Krasnow at Stanford,
who discovered there's a set of neurons in your brainstem, my brainstem, everybody's brainstem, and every animal, every mammal's brainstem.
It's a very small number of neurons that controls a specific pattern of breathing, which are called physiological
sighs. So these are not just sighs where you go and exhale. These are sighs that involve doing
two inhales and then an extended exhale. We all do this. You do this during sleep,
anytime carbon dioxide levels in your bloodstream get too high in
order to get more oxygen into your system.
People also do this if they've been crying or sobbing, they'll do this and then they'll
exhale.
So what's happening with these physiological sides and why is this powerful?
So your lungs are two big bags of air, but they actually are made up of a ton of little
sacks of air called the alveoli of the lungs.
When we are exercising or when we are sleeping or anytime we're doing anything, these little
sacks of air eventually start to collapse.
And what happens is carbon dioxide builds up in our system and we experience that as
stress.
We actually feel the impulse to breathe because carbon dioxide levels get too high.
There are neurons that sense carbon dioxide.
And then without realizing it,
you do the double inhale and then exhale.
Typically the inhales are done through the nose
and the exhale is done through the mouth.
So it looks like.
And why the second inhale?
Well, if you've ever tried to blow up a balloon
for a kid at a kid's party or just blown up a balloon,
you sometimes blow into that empty balloon
and it doesn't go anywhere.
So what do you do?
You do two, you go blow into that empty balloon. It doesn't go anywhere. So what do you do? You do two.
You do two.
You go, and then it pops open.
So these double inhales pop open the alveoli of the lungs.
They don't explode them, but they pop them open, which pulls carbon dioxide out of the bloodstream, brings oxygen, and then you offload carbon dioxide.
So if you watch a dog right before it takes a nap or something, it often will do these.
Now, what's cool about these physiological sighs is from work in our lab and that's
still ongoing I just want to say it's still ongoing but work in other labs as
well double inhales followed by an extended exhale are the fastest way that
I'm aware of to bring the mind and the body into a more relaxed state really
yeah it's the fastest way the fastest way I stressed, I'm overwhelmed, just do a,
three or two?
Two inhales through the nose,
and then exhale slow through the mouth.
One to three of those repeated,
will bring your level of autonomic arousal down,
basically to baseline.
What's the automatic?
It's called the,
Automatic arousal, what was it?
Sorry, so the autonomic nervous system. Automatic. Yeah,
just means automatic. And it's a misnomer because as I'm describing, it's not all automatic. I'm
sorry. So autonomic arousal is kind of your level of alertness or your level of calm. People
sometimes call it sympathetic nervous system, parasympathetic. I avoid sympathetic, parasympathetic
because sympathetic sounds like sympathy. And then people think it means calm and nice when it
actually means stress and freaking out. Sympathetic is stress. Exactly. The naming. Parasympathetic sounds like sympathy, and then people think it means calm and nice, when it actually means stress and freaking out.
Sympathetic is stress.
Exactly.
The naming-
Parasympathetic is non-stress.
That's right.
And those names have to do with the anatomy
and the locations of the neurons involved in them.
But I think for anyone that experiences anxiety
from time to time, which is everybody,
knowing that you can consciously take control
over these neurons that control the ratio of carbon dioxide and oxygen and your lungs, etc
Even if you don't remember any of that, it's just two inhales through the nose
What you're trying to do is maximally inflate those little sacks in your lungs and then exhale long through the mouth because you're blowing off
Carbon dioxide. I heard you do a does it matter the cadence because you did a long deep breath and then a shorter
Not so much. That's just your style yeah you're just trying to fill those those as big as you can so the advice that we hear of
take a deep breath or just exhale is sort of right but it doesn't capture that the this neural circuit
so a lot of what my lab is focused on because there's so many great labs and people doing
great stuff in the breathwork community patrick mcwen, Brian McKenzie. They're all these incredible people doing this work, Wim Hof. But my labs have been
mainly focused on what is the neural machinery that controls these brain-body states. And the
reason these physiological sides work is partially because you offload carbon dioxide, you reinflate
the lungs. So when the body has oxygen, it's happy. When it doesn't have oxygen, it gets stressed.
But the other reason is the most direct
and fastest connection between the brain and body for controlling your state of mind is what's
called the phrenic nerve, P-H-R-E-N-I-C. The phrenic nerve connects these neurons that I'm referring to
in these two brain centers that control breathing with the diaphragm. A lot of people get excited
about the vagus nerve, and I'm not out to punish
the vagus nerve or the vaginistas, but the truth is the vagus nerve is a very slow system for
calming the brain and body. It's called the rest and digest pathway. People are engaging their
vagus all the time when they eat a big meal. When the stomach is distended, it sends a signal to the
brain that, oh, I have enough food. It's time to relax and digest but eating first of all if you're
only using food as a way to control your stress that's not a good habit it's not
a good habit you'll be depressed that's right people have learned long ago
thousands of years ago that the best way to suppress a cortisol response is with
carbohydrates because it blunts cortisol but this is why people eat
carbohydrate rich foods when they're stressed and when cortisol is spiked what happens so every
morning when you wake up there's a cortisol spike that's a good cortisol stress spike right it's
like a it's a good one it's the one that wakes you up out of sleep and you want that early in
the day you're not just like groggy, I'm aware. Cortisol has important positive health promoting functions.
There's a signature of depression and anxiety, however, that the psychiatrists know about,
which is a 9 p.m. cortisol spike.
For people who are depressed, there's a second spike of cortisol late in the day, and that's
problematic and is associated with a lot of mental health issues.
Cortisol is a stress hormone, is that right?
Cortisol is a stress hormone.
So you have your adrenal glands,
which are right above your kidneys and your lower back,
and they have two parts to it.
They release adrenaline, which is also called epinephrine.
And adrenaline is what makes you feel agitated.
If you're calm, you're walking along,
you look at your phone and there's a troubling text message,
you immediately have focus, energy, and alertness.
Is the brain connected to those then
and it sends a signal to each other?
That's right.
Really?
And then it affects the body.
That's right.
And the body feels it.
That's right.
So adrenaline is liberated into the body very fast
in less than a second.
Half a, 500 milliseconds.
You see something, you're reacting to it.
That's right.
And it's just boom.
That's right.
And it recruits a set of neurons
that live right in the core of your body.
They then send a signal core of your body they then
send a signal out to your body and all of a sudden you feel like you want to move and the stress is
just it's going to dilate your pupils cue your alertness and make you agitated want to move the
body's pretty fascinating it's really fascinating and you want this because you know um the other
night i was taking a hike um i was out here a couple days ago and taking a hike in topanga and I saw a shadow. I looked down and it didn't move. It was a snake. It wasn't a
rattlesnake, but still all that happened in less than a second. Right. And these are primitive
pathways designed to get you to your alertness here. My night vision is so, so, but all of a
sudden I felt like I could see clearly and you just, that's adrenaline. Cortisol is a bit more
slow acting. So when that adrenaline is up over and over and over again for days and days,
cortisol starts getting liberated from also from the adrenals.
It comes from other places too, but mainly from the adrenals.
And the cortisol system is an anti-inflammation system as well as an inflammation system.
It's both.
It's both.
They give cortisone shots to football players, you know, in the locker room for a reason. It blocks pain and all these things.
So the, but too much of it over an extended period of time does what? It can cause chronic
inflammation. It can cause chronic fatigue. I mean, there is a debate out there. Most serious
MDs don't believe in adrenal burnout. People think of adrenal burnout. There is a debate out there. Most serious MDs don't believe in adrenal burnout. People think
of adrenal burnout. There is something called- Adrenal fatigue or adrenal burnout.
So there is something called adrenal insufficiency syndrome, which is a real medical phenomenon where
the adrenals are incapable of making these cortisol and adrenal hormones. But the truth is
that you have enough adrenaline and cortisol in your body to last two lifetimes and 25 famines. I mean, we were built with a lot of robustness, right?
This explains the David Goggins of the world.
We all do have that greater capacity
that people talk about.
The stress is very misunderstood
because people think of stress as this ancient carryover
that's very unfortunate.
It kind of gets lumped with depression,
like, oh, this is just a flaw in our design or something.
But actually stress is wonderful.
It actually activates our immune system.
So anytime you liberate adrenaline into your bloodstream,
you also protect yourself against infection
of bacteria and viruses.
Because if you think about if we had to gather food
and we didn't have it,
and we had to then pack up and migrate long distances, distances you can't afford to get sick and this is why
people who work work work work work and then rest they usually get sick when
they finally stop and rest yeah it's like the post finals phenomenon in
university or after the season a game or the caretakers thing where you're taking
care of somebody who's ill and you're just work work work or taking care of
young children and then you finally stop to rest somebody who's ill and you're just work, work, work, or taking care of young children. And then you finally stop to rest,
you go on vacation and you get slammed with an illness.
Why is that?
Because you're being in your comfort zone now?
Or you're just-
It's because stress turned off.
And adrenaline, so that the stress response
recruits the immune organs of the body
to release killer T cells.
In fact, Wim Hof breathing,
I know you're familiar with Wim,
of doing 20 or 30 deep inhales and exhales, and also combined with some breath hold type work, exhale hold, inhale hold, is known to stimulate adrenaline release.
And one of the better papers that's out there, scientific peer-reviewed papers, is a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences where they brought in two groups.
One group did Wim Hof breathing.
The other group did just mindful meditation.
Both groups were injected with E. coli.
Right?
Right?
It's crazy.
The meditators got fever, diarrhea, and vomiting.
And the people who did Wim Hof either didn't get it
or got it to a much lesser extent.
Sluggish, but not...
Dr. That's right.
They didn't...
Dr. Isn't that crazy?
Dr. This is not an experiment to do at home.
Dr. Isn't this crazy?
Dr. But it makes perfect sense because that breathing simulates a stress response.
It stimulates cortisol and adrenaline, which signals to the...
Dr. Which protects the body.
Dr. Right, which signals to the thymus, the spleen, and the other, you know, the nodes
of the immune system to liberate killer
cells and so when that bacteria comes in the system is ready for it their yeah your body is
defending against viruses that's right disease that's essentially going back when you create a
routine of healthy stress that's right and and we could talk about we definitely want to you don't
want stress on all the time sleep Sleep is really important, et cetera.
But that stress response combats infection because it recruits immune cells.
Now, I want to be really clear because there's been a lot of discussion about that study out there, most of which is totally wrong.
The Ben Hoff breathing study?
The study was done correctly.
The Ben Hoff breathing study? The study was done correctly, but when people recap that study and summarize it, oftentimes
they'll say it suppressed the immune response, that people were able to suppress the immune
response.
And that's absolutely wrong.
What does that mean, suppress the immune response?
Well, exactly.
It doesn't make any sense.
What that did was, and if you look at the graphs in that paper which I've done what he did is it stimulated cortisol release it stimulated
adrenaline release or epinephrine release so that the system was primed to
battle infection and so I think it's a very impressive thing and and you know
hats off to whim for discovering and thinking about a way to recruit the
what's called the innate immune system
Before that study it was thought that you couldn't really recruit the immune system in that way now
You don't have to do that breathing
You could if you like but you don't have to do that breathing to recruit the immune response
What else could you do a cold shower and ice bath is another way to induce stress, which is what exactly exactly?
and so I think that
You know when you look at states
of stress i mean they're cold water is one way to do it um intense what's the breathing that they do
that sort of wim hof breathing is also classically called tumor breathing it's kind of the opposite
of the physiological side that i described the double inhale exhale because it's not designed to
to reduce stress it's actually designed to
increase your level of alertness and it's interesting because a lot of people find
great relief from stress by doing this tummo type wim hof intense breathing once a day now
the reason i suggest physiological size is they can be done in real time you can get into the
elevator and do a physiological side you could also also do tummo-type breathing. In any moment, you can do a...
Right, exactly. Whereas the more intense forms of breathing are more of a practice that you do.
Might take 10, 20 minutes. What they tend to do and what cold showers and ice baths and things
like that do is they raise the ceiling on your stress threshold. And what I mean by that is
throughout the day
and throughout the year,
we're confronted with different things.
The mind plays an important role in interpreting
whether or not it's overwhelming or tolerable.
So intense breathing like tumo breathing
or ice baths or cold showers or intense exercise
like high intensity interval training type stuff
teaches the mind to be comfortable in these higher
stress states where, in other words, it teaches people to be comfortable when they have a lot
of adrenaline in their body. This is basically stress inoculation. But stress inoculation is
not about not getting stressed. It's actually about divorcing the mind-body relationship a bit
so that you're calm in the mind when your body is very amplified.
On your stress.
Yeah. So if you've ever done tummomo type breathing or you've done a cold shower, the goal is
to get the adrenaline release.
And then calm your mind.
And then calm your mind.
And stay in the ice.
Not like, ah, I'm freezing, but more like, no, I can handle this.
That's right.
That's right.
And have power over your thoughts and your mind so that you can have more control of
your body.
Obviously, you're going to feel cold.
Right. mind so that you can have more control of your body obviously you're going to feel cold right but if you can but i mean does the mind have a hundred percent power over what the body feels
no but it doesn't mean that it doesn't have a significant control over it say i feel cold
and ice right i'm in ice it's 30 degrees can i control my mind to say, you know what, this is actually a hot tub and you feel
warm and you're feeling hot right now? Or is it too much physiological barriers to break through
that? To some extent you can. So I think the question that you're asking is a very important
one. It's actually the question, which is to what extent does our subjective narrative the story the story we tell ourselves actually means
something for the body and to what extent is the body actually means
something for the subjective narrative so this gets into some areas of work
that we're doing now and so I do want to highlight that it's ongoing work but I
think you know the old narrative
meaning a few 10 years ago was that if you're feeling depressed just smile well if that worked
right we would have a lot less depression than we see out right right now that does not mean
most people actually who are depressed just aren't smiling as well like when you change your
physiology doesn't it also start to change
the way you think about yourself a little bit? The reason I call it a brain body contract early
on is that the brain and the body are constantly in dialogue. So, you know, the idea that when
we're depressed, we tend to be in more defensive type postures. When we're feeling good, we tend
to be in more like relaxed and extended postures. All true. But it does not
mean that just by occupying the extended posture that I'm going to completely shift the mind.
That's a first step. Think about like two interlocking gears. It's one gear that turns
the other, but then they need to kind of dance together before you can get the whole system
going. So how do you get it to dance together? Exactly. So subjective, there is one way in which
subjective thought and deliberate thought is very powerful
over states of mind and body to answer your question can you think your way out of the ice
bath being cold so a couple things that are important first of all just to go a little
deeper on what thoughts are thoughts happen spontaneously all the time they're popping up
like a poorly filtered internet connection. But thoughts can also be deliberately introduced.
For instance, right now, I can say, okay, have a thought that just decide to write your name.
And you can do that.
I'm going to decide to write my name and you can do it.
So that's a deliberate thought, which says that you can introduce thoughts.
So I think it's very hard to control negative thoughts directly by trying to suppress them the
tent generally they tend to just want to continue to geyser up all the time but
we can introduce a positive thought anyone that's making that effort even in
a tiny way just to take this incredible machinery that we were given this
nervous system and to leverage it toward being better, feeling better, and showing
out better for other people.
I really believe that's why we're here.
What would you say is the biggest lessons from marriage and divorce that have taught
you about health and longevity?
That's a great question.
I think everybody's different. And for me,
the key to really finding happiness and the key to finding love that is a really good, healthy,
solid love, which I have now, was really dealing with my original traumas and wounds. Really?
Yeah. And I think, you know, you wrote a book about toxic masculinity. And I think, you know, we all, whether we're men or women, throughout our
childhood have big or small traumas. You know, Gheb Armati talks about micro trauma, macro trauma.
You know, micro trauma could just not being seen by your parents and not being loved well enough
or neglected or not actual abuse. Whereas, you know, there's actual real emotional or physical
abuse or sexual abuse. So all that registers in our nervous system.
And for me, I had corrupted love software.
And I had to heal that.
A corrupted love software.
Yeah.
What did that mean for you?
Well, I'll tell you the brief story.
My mother was a child of deaf parents.
Deaf?
Deaf, they couldn't hear.
So she was their ears and their eyes wow that's a
lot of responsibility she became a parent to them yeah she became somebody who thought that love was
taking care of people who needed help or were broken wow that's interesting right so she picked
my dad and my stepfather who were very broken and they were in very you know damaged emotionally and
that was because you know that's what she And that was because, you know, my...
That's what she knew.
That was her familiarity.
Familiarity.
And my dad was broken because his mother was a child of 13 and accidentally killed her
sister when she was too pushing her off the swing.
And it was the pariah of the family, had to sit at a different table, was completely neurotic
and anxious.
And that epigenome goes through, it's translated through generations. And so it all makes sense. And so
then my mom was super depressed and unhappy, and she used me to be her therapist as a little kid,
which is fabulous. So you repeated the pattern.
And I thought, oh, love is taking care of someone who's needy and broken.
Right. Who needs me.
Yeah. So I had the savior complex, and I would try to fill this hole that I had, this emptiness
that I had, because I thought that if I did that, I could kind of fill this emptiness
that I have.
Interesting.
Of picking these people in a way that filled me up because I was serving them or taking
care of them.
And it wasn't always exactly like that,
but I kept learning about this pattern.
And until I really healed that,
I wasn't able to just be ready for love.
So you kinda have to not find the right person,
you have to be the right person.
That's so true.
What allowed you to heal it?
What allowed you to recognize it
and then start the healing journey?
Which is a journey.
Yeah, no, I've been doing it,
I intellectually understood it, but you know...
It's a physical feeling.
Yeah, but I really went through a process
of using psychedelics to heal a lot of the trauma,
which is now emerging as a really valid way
to start to re-pattern your neurology,
that literally changes the structure
and function of your neurons in your brain,
these compounds.
And I began to sort of do some inquiry.
I decided to take like a break from relationships and really do a deep in-dive, looking at my
own mind, my own thoughts, my own beliefs, every day writing them down, kind of rewriting
it, the story from my higher self.
And then I kind of unpacked my whole life with a friend of mine who's a coach, a really
amazing woman, Lauren Zander.
And I was able to kind of see my whole childhood very differently
and talk about incest that happened to me and things that I just had buried for 50 years.
And then I saw this movie, Coda,
which was a Best Picture Academy Award winning film last year about children of deaf adults.
CODA means children of deaf adults.
And it was my mother's story.
Not actually her story,
but it was to say she was a child of deaf parents.
Because the child in the,
I still haven't seen it yet,
but the child has got a deaf family, right?
Yeah, and she's hearing,
and it's about her struggle to become,
you know, like disentangled
from the dependency her parents had on her.
Right?
Holy cow.
So what opened up for you when you saw that? That was like, that just like hit me like a lightning bolt.
And I just was sobbing and sobbing.
It took me hours and hours to watch the movie because I had to stop.
Because I was just being like on the floor just in this cathartic process.
And that never really happened to me like that before.
And after that happened, I kind of got
what happened to my mother, I got what happened to me,
I got what was going off in my own nervous system.
And then I just felt free, and I felt light,
and I healed a lot of that.
So it took me a while, I'm a slow learner.
I'm good with medicine, but it's not. it took me a while. I'm a slow learner. I'm good with medicine, but it's not.
It's okay, we all have our things to overcome.
It took me a minute.
But now I just feel like I have such a different wiring
and a different nervous system.
And I feel way calmer and way less anxious in relationship.
How, I mean, where would you be
had you not talked to that therapist friend
and kind of looked back at
your entire history of your life and assessed it?
If you didn't watch that movie, if you didn't do the psychedelics, kind of all those medicines
in one, where would you be had you skipped it after your last relationship?
I think I may still, you know, I always make a joke, I said I had a broken picker.
I still have a broken picker.
I still would try to find someone who isn't really the person that's
going to be able to meet me. That's an equal and, you know,
have a healthy attachment style. It can, you know, be independent,
but come together and just like it really, it really was powerful. So yeah.
That's incredible. Yeah. This all happened in the last couple of years. Yeah.
There's hope after 60, even if you're choosing poorly. Yeah, incredible. Yeah. This all happened in the last couple of years. Yeah.
So there's hope after 60, even if you keep choosing poorly.
Totally.
Totally.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
And it just got me free.
And I think a lot of these cultures don't have to deal with this stuff.
I mean, of course, there's always family drama and this and that.
But I think there's just such a level of connection and community and mutual support and happiness
and joy as part of living
that we've sort of lost.
And I think that was a big learning for me.
And how did you feel beforehand?
Like in the previous 40 years of different marriages
and relationships, you said you feel free and lighter.
Did you never feel free?
No, I didn't.
In marriage or in relationship?
No, I didn't.
I always felt.
What was the feeling?
I didn't know until afterwards.
You know how you don't know know a horse is standing on your foot
until it gets off?
It was kind of like that.
I was like, wow.
I was always so anxious
and kind of trying to hold on to love
and keep love
and be afraid of losing love
and want someone to love me.
And it just was like such a weird dynamic
that I was embedded in
that I didn't even fully see.
Really?
Yeah.
This is fun.
I'm so excited you're sharing this.
This is powerful.
Yeah, I think a lot of people need to see this
and hear this from you, Mark,
because they see you as this,
I don't know, what are you,
30-time New York Times bestselling author?
You know, this individual who's done so well
and been so successful in many areas of life.
And I'm not saying that, you know,
the marriages and the relationships you were in were all like failures. I I'm not saying that the marriages
and the relationships you were in were all failures.
I'm sure you had great love and connection
and moments and things like that,
but they weren't, it sounds like the right fit
and you didn't feel like you were free inside.
And maybe they didn't feel the same thing either,
so I'm not saying they were bad and wrong or something.
But to hear you talk about this,
this healing journey at this stage,
as someone who studies healing and as someone who studies medicine
and studies all these things, even you had to learn how to heal relationships.
Totally.
You knew about the body stuff and food and medicine,
but it was the healing, the relationship, and the childhood wound
that you carried with you all those years.
And what's interesting now, Lewis, is in our culture,
we're starting to have a language
for this and the acceptance of this and the sort of not seeing mental illness as a stigma,
but as a consequence of a lot of cultural and personal trauma, right?
I mean, just living in our culture today is traumatic.
You just open the newspaper or listen to the news or the amount of conflict and strife
and just economic inequities and all the things that we're dealing with, climate change, I mean, it's a very psychologically stressful moment
of history.
But we also can shift the relationship to that by understanding how our brains work
and our nervous systems work and start to actually not necessarily get caught up in
all that and kind of reset our systems.
So one of the key things I talk about in the book is mindset.
It's how our minds really play a role in our longevity.
And if we don't get that straight, we're screwed.
When people kill themselves by their thoughts, right?
Literally.
And give me some examples.
What do you mean?
How do they kill themselves?
I mean, if they have suicidal thoughts,
they'll lead themselves to killing themselves.
I mean, it's all about belief, right?
Yeah.
So when you look at voodoo, for example, I mean, you put a voodoo hex on somebody, boom,
somebody can drop dead, you know?
One of my mentors who very much inspired me before I went to medicine was Bernie Siegel,
who loved medicine and miracles, who's this kind of Yale oncologist, bald guy, so cute,
writes with a purple pen, letters they used to write me. Love Medicine and Miracles, who's this kind of Yale oncologist, bald guy, so cute, writes
with a purple pen, letters they used to write me back before email.
And he talked about these studies where they would tell this cancer patient that they found
this great new cure, and they gave them this pill that was a placebo, and their tumors
shrunk overnight.
And then they told them a month later, two months later, oh, they found it didn't work so well. And the tumors came flying back. So like, that's the power of the
pharmacy in our mind. This is fascinating. I'm still kind of amazed that this all happened in
the last couple of years. So after the movie, you had this catharsis experience, right? And you felt
lighter after that. Yeah. I felt free. Right after this on the floor sobbing moment.
Yeah, it's hard to explain it,
but I just felt like I was flying.
Like I just felt like I'd been carrying this weight
my whole life, it just was gone.
Do you feel like it was completely,
do you feel like your body has,
your nervous system was fully healed after that?
Or has there been moments of like triggers
and kind of the PTSD feelings in your nervous system?
Or like maybe?
I think it's echoes and shadows more that come back now.
Like that I can recognize and go, oh, all right, whatever.
It's not like it grabs me like it used to.
Wow.
Yeah.
This is fascinating.
This all happened in the last couple of years.
Yeah, pretty cool.
And then I began to think about just aging and longevity in general.
And how do we build a life that creates healing in our body,
whether it's healing or trauma.
And I have a whole section in the book about healing trauma
because that's a key part.
It's huge.
And some of the things that are now available,
like ketamine and ganglion blocks,
and increasingly, probably by 2024,
MDMA will be available legally for psychedelic-assisted therapy.
And maybe psilocybin, I think,
was legalized in Colorado now and in Oregon. So it's all coming. And I think there's so many different modalities for people to choose from that we never had before.
Sure. How important is expressing your emotions, crying, laughing, in living longer and healthier?
Well, I do a lot of laughing and I do some crying.
And I think in my current relationship, I'm the crier.
Like if we're watching a movie or, you know, like whatever, where we're listening to a
speech at a wedding, I'm the one crying.
It's so funny because yesterday I was on a flight and I watched Coco, the movie Coco.
There's an older guy next to me
and I'm literally, I kid you not,
I cried four times watching Coco.
The music and the storytelling,
I'm like, this is a cartoon and I'm crying.
But it was so beautiful and I was telling Martha about it
and she was like, yeah, it's such a beautiful,
because it's all about family, it's all about connection,
it's all about sharing your music's all about connection. It's all about like sharing your music with the world
and this beautiful story.
So you feel like you're the crier in the relationship.
That's right.
But how powerful is crying as an emotion and laughing?
I think it's being able to be free and expressed,
whatever it is.
Being able to not have to shut down and shut off
and to learn how to do it in a way that's not destructive, right?
To do it in a way that's loving and kind and thoughtful.
There's always a way of getting expressed without hurting somebody else.
Yes.
So I think we tend in our culture to lash out and to be reactive,
and that's not good.
That's not healthy.
So it's sort of like Viktor Frankl's idea of slowing things down.
Like in between stimulus and response, there's a gap or a pause, right?
And then that pause lies the choice.
So you can choose to slow down the whole process.
And I'm friends with Tom Brady and he's like, you know, when I snap the ball, everything's
in slow motion.
Like everything just slows down.
It's like…
It's amazing.
You think it all happens like in seconds, but like he's like all the time in the world, right?
It's amazing.
Because everything just goes in slow motion because he's so present.
So we can do that in every moment.
It just takes practice.
It's a skill.
If you want to lift 50 pounds, well, you have to work at it, right?
If you want to train your mind to work differently, you have to work at it.
You have to investigate your mind.
That's what, you know, all these practices that are ancient. You know, we in our culture are
really good with outer technology, but places like Tibet, they were really experimenting with
inner technology for thousands of years and learned all sorts of skills about mastering the
mind. So mastering your body is key, but mastering your mind is also a key to longevity.
And it sounds like mastering your emotions and your heart is a key as well.
Yeah, but your mind is what regulates your emotions.
Now, people are arguing about this,
but what happens first is your thought
and then the feeling, right?
And then the emotion.
Sure.
Right, because you have,
even if it's an instantaneous thing,
there's some thought that precedes it,
even if it's a subconscious thought
that precedes the feeling or emotion.
So you never have the feeling first.
Unless you don't have the ability to think,
but then you probably want to be here.
Right, well, some people don't have that, but yeah.
So it's always a thought.
Yeah.
So it can't be a feeling, huh?
Because you have to think it first before you feel it?
Yes, I think so.
I think always, whether it's like... Like if you smell something that brings back a memory, right?
Is that a thought first?
Yeah, or if you see you're about to get in a car crash,
you have the thought, I'm going to die,
and then your body goes into reaction.
And it can happen in a millisecond.
But you can have a millisecond thought,
but it's always going to precede whatever it is.
Sure, sure.
So I'm curious about relationship stuff
because I think you don't talk about this a lot.
I do a little bit.
We can do it.
And I think I'm starting to believe more and more
that the relationship you have with yourself is massive.
The way you view yourself, your beliefs,
you're talking about this now,
how you think about yourself,
how you feel about yourself is key towards living a healthy
life now, but also extending your life.
Totally.
And the way you view and think about your intimate relationship.
I used to feel like I was trapped all the time.
I was fearful, and I felt like I was trapped, and there was no way out.
I couldn't be myself.
Yeah.
And that would make me feel unhealthy inside.
It made me feel like I was a six out of a 10 every day.
Because I felt like trapped, right?
No, I'm doing that to myself.
No one is trapping me.
It's my fear and insecurity of leaving the relationship
or whatever it might be, or having the courage
to communicate all these things
that I needed to learn.
And so the relationship we have with ourselves
and with our intimate partner,
I'm starting to learn is the most powerful,
one of the most powerful things for longevity.
Why do you think it's so hard for us to change
and improve our life when things are good
or a little less than good?
Well, I think that we delude ourselves into thinking when things
are good, we delude ourselves into thinking they're always going to be good. And we also
delude ourselves into believing that our lives are static in that regard. And the truth is,
is that everything is always in flux. That flux may be imperceptible in the moment, but in truth,
and I say this all the time, every thought that
you entertain, every word that comes out of your mouth, every interaction that you have with another
human being, every reaction that you have to whatever stimulus is coming your way is either
moving you forward in your life towards your aspirations or some level of self-actualization or you're regressing back to some former
less evolved version of yourself. And the more you can kind of be present with that and appreciate
that truth, then you realize that as good as your life may be, there's always growth to be had. And
all of us, no matter who you are, have blind spots. You may think you're doing great in all these areas, but you need people in your life who are giving you feedback
saying, yeah, I know you think that you're rocking it out over here, but you're kind of off base on
this other thing. I think we all need a council of elders or a board of advisors who are willing
to be honest with us to say, look, you're not seeing this over here,
you need to redirect.
And then you're able to make those adjustments
without having to reap the consequences of some crisis
because you're kind of, you know,
jagging, jigging and jagging, you know, along the way
and course correcting as you go,
as opposed to hitting a wall and then
going, holy shit, like I thought I was good. And now, only now do I realize that, you know,
I've been doing all these things all along that led to this point. We're our own worst enemies
when it comes to objectively assessing where we're at. Ourselves. Yeah. Of course. We should
be asking our friends and family and peers all the time, hey, what do you think
I can improve?
What am I doing really well that I can do better at?
What are the things I'm not doing well that I should be doing better at?
But a lot of us don't want to ask those questions.
We don't want the truth.
Who is it?
Richard Feynman, I think it was.
It said something like, our job is to be...something like, I'm going to completely butcher this,
but it's something like our job is to be
honest with ourselves, but we're the ones that are most easily deluded by ourselves. You know
what I mean? That's why you need those outside sources to provide you with that feedback.
And that's why when you look at somebody we've both interviewed that were friends with
Jesse Itzler, that's why I have so much respect for somebody like that
whose life was going really well,
and he's like, it's too good.
I need to bring David Goggins into my life to mix things up,
or I need to go to this monastery
and sit with these monks for a while,
because he realized that his life was just cruising along
and that unless he created interruptions for himself,
that he would just live that way in ease and comfort for as long as the universe would allow
him to. Very few people do that. Right. I mean, it takes an extraordinary person to do that.
When you're making all the money in the world, when everything you touch turns to gold, when
you've got the family, the kids, the relationship, it's like, I got good friends. It's hard to say,
I'm going to push myself harder. I'm going to step up and try to transform myself even more.
Because some people might say, why work that hard to do that for yourself? Just enjoy your life,
relax. You don't need to do all these crazy things to transform.
But the truth is, and anybody who's done hard things in their life knows this,
that you feel most alive when you have the courage to step outside of your comfort zone
and test yourself and put yourself in an uncomfortable situation where you're going
to have to rise to the occasion. Those heightened moments are when you feel most fulfilled, most purposeful, and most, you know, kind of connected to yourself.
And I think Jesse understood that as somebody who had, you know, done ultra marathons before.
He knew how he felt when he was, you know, endeavoring live this, our culture is set up with this programming that we're all meant to aspire to that level of ease and comfort and luxury.
But what's missing is the fact that what actually provides the sense of satisfaction and fulfillment is getting outside of that
and testing yourself. And I think for a lot of people, they don't understand that until
they get a taste of what Jesse experienced, which is, look, I got all this stuff, but
I'm not content or as fulfilled as I would like to be. And I need to step outside of that in order to reconnect with that thing that fundamentally is part of being a human.
Yeah. And I think you could have all of the outer fulfillment in the world,
but you're still aligned to yourself until you create inner fulfillment. And that usually comes
through mastery of some type of practice or overcoming something challenging on a consistent
basis where you say,
okay, I'm building confidence because I did something that's hard. It was hard for me to
learn, hard for me to overcome. And I think the more things we learn how to overcome on a consistent
basis, the happier we become. Yeah, to be sure. I mean, and to kind of underscore your point,
it's not about external validation. It's about your relationship to yourself.
Yes.
You know, and you know when your head hits the pillow
at night and when you wake up in the morning,
what that relationship looks like.
And if that's missing something,
then perhaps that's a little nudge or a call to action
that you need to change things up a little bit.
So when did this moment, was this about 20 years ago
when you started to transform your food,
your nutrition, your training?
14 years ago. 14 years ago.
14 years ago.
How does someone, because a lot of people go through these, you know, especially this year, losing a job, a breakup, a relationship, a health scare, whatever it may be.
Losing a friend or a parent is happening a lot right now, unfortunately, for people.
And then people decide to take action and say, okay, I'm going to change my life.
And I'm going to take action. I'm going to commit to this and have these new okay, I'm going to change my life and I'm going to take action.
I'm going to commit to this and have these new goals.
I'm going to go after it.
I'm going to let go of sugar and be vegan, whatever it is.
How does someone sustain it for 14 years and beyond?
Because sometimes they'll do that for two years
and then fall back into the old patterns.
How do we stay consistent in growing the way you did?
Because you used to drink a lot of alcohol yeah
you used to eat horrible not train all these things and you've been consistent 14 years yeah
i think that i think the key is that as important as it is to set big goals that scare you and hold
this lofty aspiration for a better version of who you are.
Those are like North Stars to help guide your direction.
But once you kind of set those, at least what I've done,
is I just lodge them in the back of my mind.
And then it's really just about what's happening in the moment.
Again, it goes back to the present.
When I got sober, the idea that I was never going to drink alcohol again, are you kidding
me?
Like, I have to go to a bachelor party in six months, and then I've got this thing in
Vegas, and then I have to go to, you know, it's like, how am I going to get through those
things without drinking, right?
It's completely overwhelming.
And I think when people set a goal, they start future tripping on that kind of stuff.
And then it seems
overwhelming. And ultimately, that leads to abandoning it. So what you have to do is you
have to chunk it, you have to break it down into bite sized chunks and say, I know I'm going to
that bachelor party in six months, but I just today, I just have to not drink. That's all I
have to worry about. Or today, I just need to make sure
that I don't end up face planting in Haagen-Dazs before I go to bed. That's the only thing.
That's your job. Yeah, it's like, what are you doing right now? What's the next right
choice that you're making? And when you break it down into its smallest components,
then it becomes digestible.
So it's about putting distance between yourself and whatever that imagined future might be because it hasn't happened yet and shouldn't take up any mental energy.
And just focusing on what you're doing right now.
We were talking about back to the marathon before the podcast.
We were talking about how you want to do this marathon.
And it's how overwhelming because it's longer than you've ever run before.
And I'm like, just worry.
You can do it.
It's just about the preparation.
One day at a time.
One day at a time.
Today I'm running eight miles.
That's all I got to worry about.
You know what I mean?
And I think when you begin to master these small tasks and you're just eating away very, very gradually at these goals, over time, they become less intimidating
and much more doable.
And I think along the way, as you master these tasks,
they become rote, so then they don't expend
a lot of mental energy.
You're like, oh, this is just what I do.
So your actions start to align with a value system.
And I think when your actions start to align with a value system. And I think
when your actions align with your values, then it's less about achieving a goal and more about
just acclimating your lifestyle around these various actions and principles. They just become
who you are. And the goal is achieved not because you're working hard towards it, but because it just becomes the person that you are.
It's part of your identity.
Yeah.
Like this, I am this thing.
I am a sober individual.
I am a vegan.
I'm somebody who runs.
I'm somebody who doesn't eat animal products.
I'm somebody who doesn't drink.
Yeah.
There's no exceptions.
You just are that.
Right.
I think a lot of people don't decide to create new identities. Is it important
that we should be thinking of a new identity all the time or just getting clear on the values we
want to live by and then become that identity? Yeah, the latter. I mean, I don't think about
like, oh, these are my, you know, these, I don't think about, I'm trying to become this other
person. I just spend time thinking about what's important to me and how can I align my actions with that set of principles, right?
That's all that it requires.
And I think in furtherance of that point,
people tend to wildly overestimate what they can achieve in a year
and wildly underestimate what they can achieve in a
decade. I'm much older than you. I'm 54. I've been trying to iterate on myself for many, many years.
And if you Google me, there's a narrative that makes it look like I snapped my fingers and all
these things happened overnight. But in truth, my personal growth trajectory started when I was 31 and I found myself in a treatment center as a hopeless alcoholic.
And then it was another 10 years before I figured out I had all these blind spots around other habits that were leading me astray and how to address those.
And it's just been one step at a time of, you know, moving forward.
one step at a time of, you know, moving forward.
I mean, I remember as I was driving over here,
I have this vivid memory of coming to your apartment the first time I met you,
and I was going to be on your podcast,
and you were going to be on mine.
It's like, what, five years ago maybe?
You had like, no, it had to be like seven years ago.
I mean, it was like,
because we started right around the same time.
Yeah, you started a few months before me.
Yeah.
And you had like no furniture in your apartment before me. Yeah. Seven years ago, yeah.
And you had no furniture in your apartment.
Nothing.
And you had this mic.
And I was like, you need a better mic.
And we both were trying to figure out this podcast thing.
Yeah.
How do we get people to figure out what the download button is?
Right.
Yeah.
And if I was to tell you then, you were going to have these millions of people that care
deeply about what you do and that you were going to be in this beautiful studio doing this thing,
like you would have been like, there's no way.
And how did you achieve that?
Just like you just another episode, like one more guest,
like who am I interviewing today?
You know, you just stay in the process.
The more that you can divorce your emotional attachment to outcomes
and future, and just concentrate on
doing the best job with what you've got right in front of you and fall in love with the process.
And that process being an expression of that value system and what you care about,
that's where you're in a position to actually succeed. And then you wake up 10 years later and you're like, holy, I'm in this fancy studio.
How did that happen?
Right.
And the outcomes don't matter as much anymore.
You have the goal, but you're enjoying the process so much.
It's not about that.
The little wins are so exciting.
You just love your life.
And when you love your life and you're happier and you're more appreciative and grateful,
you're going to start attracting more of those good things in your life.
Right.
The opportunities come to you.
They start chasing you.
You don't chase them.
Exactly.
Because suddenly you're carrying a residence that's attractive and people want to be around that.
And so you're acting more like a tractor beam rather than running around, expending your energy, trying to get people interested in what you're doing because you're focused on doing something exceptional that's an authentic expression of who you are.
And ultimately, that becomes attractive of the biggest challenges you have is you have too many opportunities now and you're recovering people pleaser and you say yes to a lot of things that then pull you away from your current projects and mission that you have.
How have you been in the last year and a half since then? I mean, I still struggle with that.
You know, I'm still a hopeless people pleaser.
Do you like me, Lewis?
Yeah, yeah.
Was this okay? Yeah, yeah. Was this okay?
Yeah.
Right.
It's funny.
When the pandemic started, I thought, I'm also naturally introverted.
So I thought, this will be awesome.
This is my world.
I have an excuse to not follow through on all these commitments that I made to other people to get involved in their stuff.
Because I can't travel and I can't do it. So now I can just do my thing, you know, and I don't have to, you know,
say yes to it. I can say no to a bunch of stuff. Over time, I figured out that I was much more of
a social creature than I suspected because like everybody, I need that human connection as well.
I would say that I've gotten a lot better but out of necessity just because
You know when you're focused on your thing
There just isn't as much room as you would like to get involved in other people's stuff
Yeah, but it's still difficult for me
Like I you know somebody will call me and be like I'm doing this thing and I know my instinct is always like yeah
Let me help you. I want to do this. I want to do that. And it becomes hard. So
you have to be, it's back to your values. Like what is, what's your core? What is your core?
I hate the word mission, but like, you know, what is it that you're actually doing? What's a
distraction and what's a value add? And, you know, sometimes it's easy to distinguish those things.
But sometimes it's not.
Would you say you have a very addictive personality?
Yeah, I'm like recovering.
I spent 100 days in a treatment center for addiction.
So yes, I'm a highly, highly addictive personality. How does someone use their addictive personality in their favor for good?
Because you've changed it to be more in your favor for good because you've changed it to be more in your favor for good but still have
you know this i know it's not consuming you but it's like this people-pleasing mentality
same as me which is kind of addictive thing to want to break how do people break
that for all the bad things in their life and use it for all good things?
Well, first, let me say on the subject of addiction, like I'm a recovering alcoholic. I've been in recovery for a very long time.
12 Steps Saved My Life, like the most important thing to me is like staying sober, helping
another alcoholic achieve sobriety.
The most important thing to me is staying sober, helping another alcoholic achieve sobriety.
That being said, I think addiction lives on a spectrum.
I'm perhaps at one more extreme end of that.
But for every junkie that can't pull the needle out of their arm,
there's millions of people that can't put the phone down or find themselves repeatedly in
unhealthy relationships or unable to stay out of the casino or whatever it is. Like,
maybe they just can't stop eating chocolate. Like, I think we all have a variety of addictive
tendencies, no matter who you are, even if you're grounded and healthy. That being said,
even if you're grounded and healthy.
That being said, figuring out how to, first of all, like figuring out how to quell the negative impacts of that is important.
And, you know, I've learned many tools over the years from surrender to service.
And at the same time, being gentle with yourself and saying, okay, this is my disposition.
Like, I can't always be fighting it, but how can I channel it into something productive for myself?
So whether, you know, I'm working on a book or I'm building my podcast or whatever other creative pursuit it is,
or whatever other creative pursuit it is,
I've been successful because I know how to like focus on something
and blot out the world and like go all in on it.
Perhaps that is at times unhealthy,
but I think it's okay as long as you acknowledge that
and understand that that pendulum
has to swing back to center, right? Like if you look
at the buckets of your life, like what's most important? Like I have my recovery, I have my
family, I have my career, I have my friends, whatever those buckets may be in your life.
I think it's okay to be really focused on one at a time.
The idea that you're gonna give all those buckets
the equal amount of attention on a daily basis
is unrealistic.
It's really hard, yeah.
Which is why I have strong opinions
about this idea of balance.
But you have to make sure that you don't become
so immersed or obsessive or compulsive about this one thing that you can
pull yourself out of it and have the conscious awareness to say, okay, it's time for me to now
reinvest that energy in one of these other buckets? Or how can I apportion my energy and my time
so that I'm making sure that the things that are important in my life are being tended to
and attended to.
Yeah.
What's the biggest addiction that's holding you back still?
Biggest challenge.
People pleasing is a big one.
Perfectionism is a big one.
I end up being a bottleneck in a lot of stuff.
This is a conversation we've had a million
times going back to like day one i still fight this battle i'm better though that's good what
do you think it is why do you think people live in perfectionism why is that a thing for so many
people it's a control it's a control mechanism and i think it's also about external validation
like this has to be perfect or i won't be loved or If this isn't perfect and people are gonna think differently of me than I want them to think
So I think a lot of it is based on on
Trying to control
External perceptions of you and that's rooted in in self-esteem, right?
like if you're if you're if your self-esteem is fragile then
You're gonna want to make sure that every step that you make is absolutely perfect. So you're not giving anyone an excuse to not accept you.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness.
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And I wanna remind you, if no one has told you lately
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And now it's time to go out there and do something great.