The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Andrew Huberman Pt. 2 On Optimal Supplements, Fitness Routines, Cold/Hot Therapy, Biohacks, & Hormone Levels
Episode Date: May 5, 2022#458: Today is the second part of a two part episode this week with Andrew Huberman. Andrew Huberman, Ph.D., is a neuroscientist and tenured Professor in the Department of Neurobiology at the Stanford... University School of Medicine. On part 2 we discuss optimal supplementation, workout routines, hormone levels, hot/cold therapy protocols, and biohacking tools we can use. Dr. Andrew Huberman is hosting two live events this May. The first is in Seattle, WA on May 17, and the second is in Portland, OR on May 18. The events will include a discussion on "The Brain Body Contract" along with a live Q&A on all things human health & performance. It's almost sold out so be sure to visit https://hubermanlab.com/tour to get
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All right, let's get into the show. She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic. And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
Aha!
Unless people have amazing abilities of recovery,
training very hard with weights for more than 60 minutes
is gonna increase cortisol,
reduce other anabolic hormones like testosterone
and estrogen and DHEA and things of that sort.
So it's really warm up and hit it hard in the weight room
and then get out.
Just really, really get out.
Don't, two hour workouts may be fine
if people are anabolic assisted,
taking TRT at high levels or something,
not something I recommend. We could talk about hormone therapies, but get in, get the work done
and get out. 50 minutes, five zero is probably even better. And then zone two cardio on the
off days, or maybe even on the weight training days. Welcome back to the Skinny Confidential,
him and her show. For those of you that are tuning in for the first time this week,
or even the first time ever in general, I highly recommend right now that you actually pause this episode and go back to
the episode right before this one. That's episode 457. We don't typically do this,
but in this case, this is actually part two of a two-part conversation that takes place with Dr.
Andrew Huberman. We did part one this Monday where we covered a lot of ground, and it's definitely
relevant to go back to part one because there's a ton of references in this episode and what we talked about in the first.
And this was done in a single session of recording. So we just broke it up into two
parts because it was so long that we wanted to make sure that it was digestible for everybody.
So definitely go back and check out part one. That's episode 457. If you haven't done so,
if you have, here's part two, continuing the conversation with Dr. Andrew
Huberman. To remind everyone, Andrew Huberman, PhD, is a neuroscientist and tenured professor
in the Department of Neurobiology at the Stanford University School of Medicine. He has made
numerous significant contributions to the fields of brain development, brain function, and
neuroplasticity, which is the ability of our nervous system to rewire and learn new behaviors,
skills, and cognitive functioning. He has a phenomenal podcast called The Huberman Lab that Lauren and I are both regular listeners to. I highly recommend
you check it out. It's a wealth of knowledge on there. He does a great job presenting information
that's science-backed, digestible, applicable to literally everyone if you're a human being.
So be sure to check that out. So as I said, this is part two of a two-part conversation. In part
one, we covered sleep, we covered hormones, we covered stress, anxiety, and a lot more.
We covered all sorts of stuff, the visual system.
And on this episode, we're covering a lot more.
We're going to talk about workouts, the optimal types of workouts, when, how long, how much,
what cadence.
We're going to talk about supplementation, the proper supplements, what to use, what to avoid.
We're going to talk about diet.
We're going to talk about boosting the immune system.
We're going to talk about testosterone, estrogen levels.
We're also going to cover questions around biohacking that include different types of tools,
heat exposure, cold exposure, saunas, cold baths, ice plunges, all of that stuff. We're also going
to discuss sexual reproduction and overall sexual health. So again, if you're a human being, this is
applicable to you. There's so much information in these two episodes. Before we jump in, and I
mentioned this last time, but I want to mention it again for our friend, Andrew Huberman is hosting two live
events this May. The first is in Seattle, Washington on May 17th, and the second is in
Portland, Oregon on May 18th. The events will include a discussion on the brain-body contract,
along with a Q&A on all things human health and performance. It's almost sold out, so be sure to
check it out. Go visit hubermanlab.com slash tour to get your tickets today. If you're in the area or you want to travel, I'm sure it will be phenomenal. With that, Andrew Huberman,
welcome back to the show again. This is the Skinny Confidential, him and her.
So there are a couple of ways to do this. One is a uncomfortably cold shower every day
or a cold ice bath. I don't think ice baths are a good idea for pregnant women.
I'm doing my cold shower, not my ice bath.
Cold shower should be fine.
Okay. Yeah.
Cold shower should be fine.
I wouldn't do sauna, right?
There's a reason that warning is there.
I just stare at the sauna outside of it.
Yeah. I would avoid kind of extremes of temperature
and extremes of anything when pregnant.
What about Wim Hof breath?
I've been doing that and now you're telling me.
I wouldn't do it while pregnant.
I would recommend because it causes some pretty
dramatic shifts in the blood oxygenation,
carbon dioxide ratios.
I doubt you've done any damage.
Fetuses are pretty resilient, but I wouldn't do that.
Because one of the major effects of alcohol is hypoxia.
And we know that alcohol isn't great for fetuses. But I don't want to alarm you, but I would stop for now.
Good advice.
You can look forward to it after giving birth. So the way to get, to raise your level of grit,
resilience, and mental toughness is to deliberately induce adrenaline and then
learn to stay calm in that state, mentally calm while your body is very agitated.
The best way to do that is a cold shower, ice bath,
or you can do what's called
cyclic hyperventilation breathing.
My lab has worked on this.
It looks a lot like Wim Hof breathing.
It also looks a lot like Tummo breathing,
but cyclic hyperventilation involves
taking a big, deep inhale through the nose,
which will raise your heart rate.
So, and then a brief exhale through the mouth, just dump a little bit of air. Then again,
don't do too many of these. You're pregnant. So you do that for 25, 30 breaths. You will feel
very agitated. Your heart rate will go up. You'll feel warm. That's adrenaline. Then what you do is you exhale all your air
and you sit calmly for 15 to 30 seconds, and then you repeat. And you do that for two or three
rounds of 25 to 30 breaths of the sort I just described, exhale and hold. And then on the last
round, if you do two or three rounds, as long as you don't have glaucoma or a heart condition,
you can take a big big deep breath and hold.
And what you'll notice is you can hold your breath a long time because you've removed
a lot of carbon dioxide, which is the stimulus to breathe.
And when you do that, you can sit very calmly, but your system is still flooded with adrenaline.
If you do that one, three, or seven times per week as a practice, what you'll find is that when you look at that text message
or your partner says something really aggravating,
you will still experience the release of adrenaline,
stress associated with that.
But it will be a familiar place.
Kind of like if you've grown up in the Bay Area,
you get used to driving in fog in San Francisco.
Or if you are, you get used to earthquakes.
I mean, I've been through so many earthquakes.
Now when an earthquake hits, I go, oh, cool.
You know what to do.
You move to a spot where you're going to be safer.
You kind of know how to monitor how intense it is.
You look up the epicenter.
I've never been in a tornado,
but if I saw that twister coming at me,
I wouldn't know exactly what to do.
So this is a practice.
That's what happened here when that big freeze happened, right? People
didn't know what to do. People didn't know what to do. I mean, granted that we didn't have a lot
of infrastructure out here in Texas, but it was exactly what you're saying. If you saw this big
freeze happen in a place like Chicago or somewhere else that deals with this all the time, whatever.
I think that's why a lot of the country was like, yeah, no big deal. But here people hadn't seen it,
no infrastructure, host of problems, right? Like people, I think that was what contributed to a
lot of the panic.
I want you to practice this breath he's saying.
So when I piss you off, you're more calm.
So I'm better now.
Okay, so-
Well, you don't seem, well, I just think in general,
the human race, all of us would do much better
to be able to do what we're talking about
is autonomic self-regulation.
The ability to stay calm in your mind,
even if your body experiences a big shot of adrenaline,
is just an incredibly potent tool for everything.
I mean, I've been in a lot of complex driving situations.
The other day we were driving and I was on the headset,
but on the phone with my mother,
because I needed to call her before we traveled,
and a car pulled in front of us.
My girlfriend screamed and stuff, and I just kind of like, I've been in a lot of situations like that. I'm not And a car pulled in front of us. My girlfriend screamed and stuff.
And I just kind of like,
I've been in a lot of situations like that.
I'm not like a stunt driver or anything of that sort.
And I went around, honked and did the thing.
And then later she was surprised.
I said, yeah, I think a lot of that
is just because I'm doing a lot of ice bath.
I'm doing a lot of this breathing.
And so it didn't feel foreign
to suddenly have this heightened sense of alertness.
And so when you're in the cold shower, ice bath
or cold water immersion,
or when you're doing this breathing,
it's very important that you realize
that your body will feel agitated,
but that you can still anchor your thoughts.
It's the ability,
there's a reason why they use cold water exposure
to screen for special forces.
I want to talk about this kind of in detail,
and I was going to save it for the, towards the end,
but it's maybe more timely here now,
cold and hot exposure.
Sure.
And in addition to that,
maybe like I think within that workouts and stressors,
because I believe,
and I'm not going to have the scientific explanation,
that many people have more trouble now
regulating stress and anxiety
because we put ourselves in too many comfortable situations.
And it seems like that's what we're all seeking, right?
It's comfort, right?
I want to get the most comfortable home, the most comfortable bed, the most comfortable
job, the most comfortable relationship. And then when we were met with discomfort,
we can't handle it. So maybe we can start with cold and heat exposure and then talk about maybe
some workouts that you see to benefit both obviously body, mind, mood. But let's start
with cold. I'm going to tell you my protocol that I learned from you.
You tell me if I'm doing it wrong. 11 minutes per week is what I shoot for.
Total. I do it Tuesday, Thursday, and either Saturday or Sunday. I'm fortunate enough now
we have a cold plunge in our house. I think we have the same one that's literally called the
cold plunge. The plunge. Yeah. They make a good one and then the forge makes a good one. There
is a cost to those. Sure. They're not a podcast. And then the forge makes a good one. Yep. There is a cost to those.
Sure.
They're not a podcast sponsor for us, but they did donate one and a nice bath would work just fine
too.
Yep. For me, it's more cost effective because I was going to a place and I was like, by the time
I would have to take the time and pay-
To not have to go anywhere. And also to be able to get into your own shower or whatever.
Yeah, it's much easier.
Yeah, absolutely.
But before we had that, when we were living in LA, we were just doing cold showers. So
from a cold protocol, that's what I do. And I typically do three rounds and try to get to
around four minutes per time. And I know a lot of people go and they try to sit in extreme cold for
three minutes. I think after listening to you, I was like, okay, if I can do 11 minutes spread
over three days or in the week. That's good. That's very good impact.
Okay. And then what I do with the sauna now, and again, same situation, fortunate to just got one. I'm doing 57 minutes and I'm breaking that again,
Tuesdays, Thursdays, Saturdays. And I typically like call it 20 minutes per session.
Do you do it with the cold? So yeah. So this is what I was going to ask you,
because I think I just highlighted your protocols and your times per week.
But what I had a question of, and I think a lot of the questions that came through was, my protocol is this. I typically start with the cold and I do a round and then I get out and walk
around, just let the air dry. And then I go back into the cold for like call number two. And then
I go into the sauna for like, call it 15 minutes, 10, 15 minutes, come out, take a little break,
walk. And then I go back into the sauna to finish. And then I end with a cold and then just walk around
and let the air drive me.
Is that-
That's a great protocol.
So it's not bad going back and forth, cold, hot.
It's terrific.
That contrast therapy is really terrific.
A couple of things.
If people want to maximally stimulate metabolism, fat loss,
the accumulation of what we call brown fat,
which people might think is a bad thing,
but brown fat is brown because it's rich with mitochondria.
It's not the blubbery fat.
It's actually little pockets of fat around our clavicles
and spinal cord that keeps us warm when it's cold out.
And it acts as kind of a fuel in it,
like the oil in a candle.
Very beneficial.
Kids have tons of it.
Why? Kids can't shiver.
Babies can't shiver.
So they have a lot of brown fat to keep them warm,
to keep them alive in case they get cold.
Pretty cool.
And no pun intended.
Your protocol's terrific.
Ending on cold is the best way to stimulate your metabolism
because it forces you to warm back up naturally.
This is what I call the Soberg principle
named after Susanna Soberg in Scandinavia
who essentially discovered these
and is a big proponent of these mechanisms. She's a serious academic, publishes research studies.
The way you configured it works, you could also, if you wanted, end on heat, but you wouldn't get
the same increase in metabolism. You look like you're in great shape and lean. That's how I used
to do it. When I was first learning, I would end on the heat, which is much easier, right? Because you're automatically warmed up. But now, after I listened to that episode you did,
and now I end on the cold, which in the beginning is interesting. It's challenging. But now I feel
a lot better doing it that way. Yeah. The cold stimulates metabolism,
especially if you end on cold. The critique sometime is that the amount of caloric burn
isn't that great, but that's total garbage. When people say that, it's clear that they don't really
understand the way adrenaline works because it's well known that when you do a cold ice bath or
shower or immersion of some kind, even 20 seconds at very cold temperatures, or 20 minutes at moderately cool temperature,
causes a massive increase in epinephrine,
adrenaline, and dopamine that lasts several hours.
So improvements in alertness and mood,
these are healthy increases in dopamine and epinephrine
and in metabolism.
The sauna is an interesting one.
First of all, I recommend,
I'm not a huge fan of infrared sauna.
I'm not against it.
I had a note there.
I wanted you to explain why.
We have an episode out right now,
actually all about cold and cold therapies.
And we have another one about heat coming out
and one about light.
But to just cut to the chase,
light and red light can be very powerful.
We talked about UVV light,
getting on the skin, getting in the eyes,
hormone health, alertness, sleep, et cetera.
Red light has its value.
And I didn't mention this before,
so I'll use this as an opportunity to say
that there's beautiful studies
out of the University of College London
showing that three minutes of red light exposure
to your eyes early in the day
can offset some of the age-related vision loss.
So like a juve?
Something like that.
The other one, Cozy, makes a really good one.
You don't want to get too close. Again, never so bright that it's painful to look at. You don't
want to damage your eyes. But work from Glenn Jeffrey's lab at University College London,
very reputable lab, has shown that just a couple of minutes, three times per week,
can offset a lot of some of the mitochondrial changes and vision loss that can occur. So that's
a great practice. I do that. I have a cozy light.
I'm not sponsored by them.
They don't sponsor the podcast,
but they sent me a little panel and I love that thing.
And I'll just kind of stare there.
Incidentally, there are also people
who are putting red light on their abdomen.
It has been shown to be useful for acne and skin lesions
and scar healing.
This is a real thing because of the way red light
can go deep into the skin.
It won't make the scar worse like sunlight would?
No, if anything, it can be used to heal scars more quickly.
So a lot of the photo, the Nobel Prize in 1908
was given for phototherapy for the treatment of lupus.
So this is not some crazy new biohacking thing.
What happens is a long wavelength light, red light,
can get down through the skin and impact mitochondria.
Now, if somebody is offering you a red light therapy to get to a deep organ, like your brain, unless
it's via the eyes or to some deep organ, have them talk to me because that red light is not
going to go past the deeper layers of your skin. So if people are putting red light to get to the
ovary or something on the outside, I'm sorry, that doesn't square with the physics.
I just have to ask you, can you do red light pregnant?
Because it's a huge controversy.
I take my routine, my morning routine pretty serious.
So serious that Michael Bostic is not even allowed
to speak to me.
That's true, not even allowed to even get near you.
You know what else I take seriously? My lemon water with chlorophyll, my probiotic and my light movement
and hydration. So I like to wake up. I like to open the shades. I like to get my lemon water.
I do a couple chlorophyll drops in there. Then I take my Just Thrive probiotic every single morning.
And I like this probiotic because it's one of the only probiotics that survives the trip
to the gut.
So many people are out there listening, are taking probiotics that are not surviving the
trip to the gut.
So basically, it seems like it's pointless, right?
I am very much about doing my own research.
And everyone should do their own research when it comes to the supplements
they're taking. So Just Thrive checks all the boxes for me. We have had a microbiologist on
the podcast. He agrees with this. We've had the founder on. The way that they've created this
probiotic is absolutely game changing. They recently launched a new product called Just
Calm. And this is a product that they recommend using before you go to bed. So now I
wake up with Just Thrive and I can wind down with Just Calm. And what this does is it reduces stress,
it improves sleep quality, and it even encourages a better focus and flow. So if you want to book
end your day and you want to have your probiotic in the morning and just calm at night, you'll be
making some wellness moves. And right now you can get 15% off both products when you go to
justthrive.com and use code skinny
at checkout.
That is justthrivehealth.com, use code skinny.
I'm of the mind that, you know,
listen, I started off as a,
worked in a lot of areas of science,
but one is developmental biology.
And I teach embryology
and I teach development of the nervous biology. And I teach embryology.
And I teach development of the nervous system.
And it's such an exquisite system.
I would not put some potent external stimulus in there.
I would just say, just avoid it.
So Lauren, this topic of cold plunge, sauna, red lights,
is not the most exciting.
No, I just can't.
Let me just sit in the corner.
But once you are done,
you're going to know all these protocols.
No, I think, yeah, I think-
I'll just go watch porn.
The cold shower, please don't.
I mean, well, listen, I mean, of the sort that we were talking about before.
I'm really of the mind that real life experiences are what we should cultivate.
Anyway, I realize we're just joking around here.
But I think the physiological side, perfectly safe.
You know, extremes of any kind of heat or light or anything are something to avoid while pregnant.
Development is just such a beautifully orchestrated process.
Why would you tamper with it?
And your wellbeing is not going to,
you're doing so many other things perfect and well
that there's no reason to do that.
The red light therapy can be useful.
Some people are also using red light on testicles
in order to stimulate sperm production.
There are some interesting data on UVB and red light on testicles in order to stimulate sperm production. There are some interesting data on UVB and red light
for stimulating testosterone increases.
There are probably better ways
to stimulate testosterone increases using light,
like light to the skin generally.
I'm going to do an episode all about the use of light
and other ways to modulate hormones.
And as much as I'm going to probably regret doing it,
the data on red light,
because of the skin is so thin on the scrotum and their light can permeate to the testicle
and blood flow is a big part of keeping any organ healthy.
So there's something there.
Now, in terms of cold and heat,
if you had an ideal world,
you would do the cold exposure early in the day.
Why?
Because it gives you a shot of adrenaline.
And when you're in the cold,
yes, your body temperature goes down,
but when you get out,
the metabolism increases
due to an increase in body temperature.
And if you remember,
increase in body temperature wakes you up.
Sauna is the opposite.
When you get into the sauna
or any kind of hot environment, hot bath or hot tub
would also work just as well, by the way,
except for men that are looking to reproduce,
it will definitely kill your sperm
at higher rates than if you stay out of hot water.
That old thing of wearing boxer shorts,
not like really tight briefs
and staying out of hot tubs
if you're trying to get pregnant,
well then, or make someone pregnant,
then that's true because sperm,
the reason the scrotum has the architecture
and the ability to move the testicles further away
or closer to the body is to optimize temperature.
So once she pops this baby out
and if we want to take a break,
I should be in that sauna all the time.
Depends on-
They'll lock you in the fucking sauna
with the jacuzzi in there.
No comment.
The other thing some people will do is they'll take,
I guess we're getting right down
to the nuts and bolts of it, no pun intended.
But some people will just take a jar of cool water or something
and they'll put it in their groin while they're in the sauna
and keep their testicles cool enough
to maintain sperm production.
Heat and sperm.
A little ice bath for your testes.
We're taking a little break.
Okay, we need to slow down.
It turns out that there's a market now
for like boxers that are cold pack boxers
because a lot of guys think it will increase testosterone.
Here's the interesting thing.
It actually doesn't increase testosterone.
It basically makes the testicles very cold
so that when they remove the ice packs,
there's a hyperperfusion of blood there,
which encourages the leydig cells of the testes
to produce testosterone.
So in any case,
if you were going to use sauna in the ideal time,
you would do it in the evening
because while you're in the sauna, you're going to heat up. But then when you get out, there's
going to be a natural cooling of the body that lends itself to getting to sleep. Actually,
when I'm in Austin and last night, what I did is after work yesterday, I went to Kuya and I sat in
the saunas and I really wanted to get into the cold bath, but it was late in the day. So I sat
in the sauna. I did, I think, three rounds of 20 minutes, but it was the only one I'll do all week.
And so here's the thing.
If you want to get maximal growth hormone release
from the sauna,
do it very seldom, one to three times per week.
Huge increases in growth hormone,
but you do it for like four or five rounds of 20 minutes.
That's a lot.
That's a full day.
You got to find Jesus at that third one.
Yeah, you're just, you're basically the guy
hanging out at the sauna.
Question before we, as we go, and especially because I know we're getting tight. So the temperatures, and I know
like I've heard you talk, you kind of, you say it depends. Yeah, I can. So with cold,
uncomfortably cold, you really want to get out, but you can stay in safely. So these people that
like, like, you know, the guy that's go, it's like 36 degrees and they need to stay for three,
four minutes. You don't, it's not. You can get into four degrees Celsius water for 20 seconds and get some of the effects
I'm talking about. Or you can get into 65 degree water for 45 minutes. Studies have been done that
way and see the results I'm talking about. I'm at like 45 right now. I don't like to go much
colder. Here's the thing. It's a lot like weightlifting. You actually don't want to
cold adapt too much because then you won't get the benefits. You'll still get some benefits, but not too many. So the pain is a good thing provided it doesn't harm you.
Now that's the beauty of cold because with heat, eventually you're going to get tissue damage.
Now with sauna, it's very clear that 80 degrees to a hundred degrees Celsius. So that's 176 degrees
Fahrenheit to 212 degrees Fahrenheit is a great range to work in. At least that's where most of the studies have been done.
And I would say, if you get into the sauna
and it's uncomfortably hot,
remember breathing through your nose in the sauna
is gonna be a little bit more painful
than breathing through your mouth,
but try and do that slow,
really slow nasal breathing if you can.
And anywhere from 10 to 20 minutes, it's great,
but don't go hyperthermic, right?
I mean, the last thing we wanna do is have someone crank up the sauna to 220, get in great. But don't go hyperthermic, right? I mean, the last thing we want to do
is have someone crank up the sauna to 220,
get in there for 20 minutes and get hyperthermic and die,
or kill some neurons.
You know, ease into it, ease into it.
And then when you get out of the sauna,
you can take a nice cool shower at Kuya.
And I have no relationships,
and I just think it's a great little place,
and their prices are pretty reasonable,
especially their memberships.
And if I lived in Austin, I would definitely be a member. So it's also a beautiful place. They have plants hanging
and all this stuff. If Korea wasn't already packed enough, here we fucking go. Yeah, sorry. Yeah.
Well, and then the Bay Area, there's like a place called Archimedes Banya that I've gone to when I'm
in New York. I always go to Spy 88. Again, I have no relationship to the place. These are just places
you go when you're on the go. When I travel, sauna and cold is harder to get to, but I make the
effort. You know, we had to go back to California
for two weeks for work and I've been doing this regularly. I didn't have the sauna or the cold
there and I noticed the difference. How do you think I feel for 10 months?
It'll be that much better. It's like people who, I'm not a drinker, but it's like people who really
love a good glass of wine and then they're pregnant and they just cannot wait. I hear this
and the dopamine release from it will be that much greater. Well, when in California,
if you're near the Pacific, the Pacific ocean, as long as you can swim, makes a great cold dunk.
And for heat, you can use hot showers, cold showers. There just aren't as many studies of
those because you can imagine it's harder to control the conditions. Whereas putting people
into water up to the neck is key. If you really want to push it hard, you can get into an ice
bath or cold water immersion.
And I always appreciate how on social media,
it's all these guys, it's usually guys
looking really tough and stoic,
like I'm just sitting here and I'm being hard.
Actually, when you stay still,
you develop a thermal layer of heat around you.
If you really are a tough guy or gal,
move your arms and limbs around in there.
That is really cool.
I was very depressed when I heard you say that
because I started doing it.
And then when you get out,
instead of huddling like this,
stretch your limbs out
so you evaporate over more of your body.
Now I can find the real men.
And if you get in the sauna
and you're having a hard time staying in there,
believe it or not,
put on a wool beanie cap.
It will insulate your brain to the heat.
Because that's what signals you to like,
get out, get out.
That's right.
And so your brain will remain a little bit cooler and you'll feel fine. Now don't override the signals to the point where
you die, please. I don't say that to protect me as much as I say that to protect the listener.
So ease into these protocols. Don't do them if you're pregnant. There's also really interesting
data now, peer-reviewed data on the use of sauna anywhere from three to seven times per week for offsetting mental health
issues. One thing is very clear, death due to cardiovascular event or what's called all-cause
mortality, so strokes and other, that's a cardiovascular, but ways to die, all ways to die,
is reduced by 27% in people that do sauna two to three times per week. And in people that do sauna for about
10 to 20, maybe 30 minutes at the temperature range, as I described, for four to seven times
per week, you reduce death to all cause mortality by 50%. So I'm a huge fan of David Sinclair's work
and all the work on NMN and all this anti-aging stuff. I guess that's the word that I use,
anti-aging longevity. But if you look the word that I use, anti-aging longevity.
But if you look at the data on living longer and being healthier,
there are two things that are undeniably
the biggest accelerators and extenders
of lifespan and healthspan.
And that's 150 to 200 minutes of zone two cardio per week.
So pure nasal breathing,
just at the threshold where a conversation would be hard,
and sauna.
You just cannot deny it.
It's like, if you look at all plant-based diet
versus carnivore diet, it's still debated.
They'll be debating till the end of time.
These things are like you would stake your-
This is, it's like the difference between a cannon
and a cap gun, okay?
I do take a little bit of pure NMN each morning.
I've been playing around with that.
And sure, I feel more energized.
Will it extend my life?
I don't know.
But if you look at the data,
it's absolutely clear the zone two cardio thing
and the use of sauna, dramatic increases.
And then of course, I love resistance training
and doing other things too.
I love eating well, all that stuff.
But it's like sunlight in your eyes in the morning,
sauna or hot shower or hot bath four times per week for 20 minutes. It's the simplest things. eyes in the morning, sauna or hot shower or hot bath
four times per week for 20 minutes.
It's the simplest things.
Which is pretty pleasant, right?
And then the zone two cardio,
the problem is that a lot of people don't do it.
It's boring.
Zone two cardio is not as much fun as a HIIT session.
I'm trying to,
zone two cardio is like a faster paced walk.
What's the number on the treadmill?
Well, it depends on your level of cardiovascular fitness. So some people will be really taxed by a
fast walk, but sure, fast walking, I like to think of it as an easy jog, easy jog where you could
talk about the day's events to your partner or to somebody, but if you pushed any harder, it would
be hard to have that conversation. The best way to do is just head out by yourself
and just nasal breathe, force yourself to nasal breathe
and push to the point where nasal breathing becomes hard.
And then just throttle back a little bit
and go for 30 to 45 minutes.
I don't even consider exercise.
It's just kind of fundamental
to getting your cardiovascular system to work.
And it won't compete out any strength gains,
hypertrophy gains, if that's your thing,
you're trying to get stronger or bigger in the gym.
It's not going to be a big taxation on your system.
You can do it morning, afternoon, or night
without disrupting your system.
Because you do a HIIT training in the evening.
Some people feel really tired after that.
Some people feel too ramped up.
You don't need caffeine to do it.
It's without question, one of the best things you can do.
And we should all do it.
And I'll be honest, I struggle to do it
because it's not very interesting.
Right.
You could listen to your podcast.
You could listen to your podcast or our podcast or a podcast.
You could think your thoughts.
You could look off in the distance while you do it.
You could get your eyesight thing going there.
You could push the stroller.
You could do whatever it is.
You guys have one kid already.
And then the other is on the way.
Yes.
I say more.
I say five.
Five kids.
Five kids.
Oh, okay. No, we have ambitions to keep. Like say five. Five kids. Five kids. Oh, okay.
No, we have ambitions to keep like we're-
Oh, yeah.
I like a big family.
Look, sample size, it's just statistics.
The best way to reduce variability is increase sample size.
So you just increase sample size.
Oh, okay.
So last thing on the sauna,
then I want to talk about workouts
and we've started touching on zone two.
Is 57 minutes the minimum or is that like,
that you're like, once you get your 57 you're
good because that's where i've been a little unclear like i know the 11 seems like that's
you know like these guys that say hey you need to be in a nice bath for 13 minutes in one session
three days a week that seems a little excessive but for the sauna it's 57 minutes your minimum
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There are a couple of positive effects on metabolism
that kick in when you're getting 11 minutes total per week
of this uncomfortable cold exposure.
You could get it all in one session
or you could spread it out.
There are benefits that kick in
at that 57 minutes per week
of uncomfortable heat exposure.
And I should mention the uncomfortable part
because the heat and the cold
has one thing in common,
which is they both stimulate adrenaline release.
That desire to get out of the sauna. I guess I was in the sauna,
Kuya, and I was feeling like, God, I really want to get out. And the timer looked like it was going
so slowly. I'm thinking, you know, probably from travel or I'd done a long bout of work,
who knows why. But that discomfort is really valuable, provided it's safe. Now, if you did
an hour of sauna, that's fine. If you do
an hour and 20 minutes, that's fine. More than an hour and a half of sauna per week, and you're in
this, that's a lot of sauna. That's a lot of sauna. It's like 57 threshold, hour and a half,
like maybe you've reached the top marks. Unless you're trying to drop weight for a fight or
something, or you are getting paid to sauna, it seems a bit excessive. There are other
parts of life, I think, that are calling those people. Now, in terms of the cold, one of the
goals is to not become cold adapted. Unlike weight training, where there's always more weight to add
to the bar, you can only make it so cold or so hot before you eventually damage yourself. So you want
to get the maximum results from the minimum change in temperature
duration. So I would play little games. I would get into the cold and some days maybe go an extra
10 seconds. Other days, move your body around so that you're getting a little bit colder. Some
days get out and dry off limbs extended. Other days, take a hot shower afterwards. I would mix
it up. You just don't want to get used to it. You don't want to get used to it. In the same way that
if you get really good
at Wim Hof breathing or cyclic hyperventilation
or the type I described before,
you'll notice that you kind of crave
a more intense stimulus.
And so it's a lot like the way I would encourage someone
to weight train, which is add as little weight to the bar
as necessary in order to get the improvement.
In fact, for a lot of people staying at the same weight,
but moving the bar more slowly or contracting the muscle more vigorously is
going to be better because at some point you're setting yourself up for injury,
or you're going to need a training partner, or you're spending all your time loading weights
on and off. This isn't going to be a problem for a lot of people because there's always more
weights in the stack to approach. But the idea that more weight is always better or colder is
always better or longer is always better in one sense is true, but you have to compete that out
against the variables of life. And you also don't want to be all day in the cold. So if you, I would
say three minutes, I would say three to four minutes, three sessions or so per week of cold.
Great. And then do that for a while. And actually your travel where you don't
get in it for a week or so is probably a good thing. Well, because I came back and I couldn't
do as long as I... Meaning I did it this weekend and I had to... Normally I'll do like 20 minutes
on a session. That was like 15 was tough. And then normally I'll do like four minutes in cold
and like three minutes was tough. And so I feel like I lost a little bit of the adaptation that
I had. Yeah. It's like being out of the gym for a little bit.
Okay, two more topics.
We've started talking about fitness and workouts a little bit.
And we talked about zone two.
When it comes to training and your training protocol or something that you would prescribe to anyone trying to get fit,
is there a certain type of workout routine
that you think blanketly across everybody should kind of think about
or try and partake in? Yeah. I think health-wise and indirectly aesthetics-wise, 150 to 200 minutes per
week of zone two cardio, as we've talked about, that could be in the form of swimming, walking
on the treadmill, but ideally you do it outside if it's fast walking or incline walking, jogging,
cycling, whatever works for people. People are going to pick their thing.
It's going to be required for health.
There's no question about it.
Six to 10 sets per body part of resistance training
with weights or with some or with machines
or even body weight,
although it's a little harder to get the complete body workout.
One can do it with a little bit of research
and skill training per week,
six to 10 sets of resistance training.
What do I mean six to 10 sets?
I mean, six to 10 work sets
where the last repetitions are very hard
and maybe even to failure.
What's very clear from our,
we did an episode with Dr. Andy Gallup
and he's a professor at Cal State Fullerton.
It's just an encyclopedia of all things endurance,
strength and hypertrophy training.
Works with athletes, works with everyday people,
understands the science
and also understands the practical elements.
It's very clear that if your main goal is strength,
that you want to do relatively low repetition ranges
of three to five repetitions of three to five sets
with three to five minutes between sets,
three to five exercises, three to five times a week.
He calls it the three by five concept. So taking that long of a minutes between sets, three to five exercises, three to five times a week. He calls it the three by five concept.
So taking that long of a break between sets.
If your main goal is strength.
If your main goal is-
What is it called?
Super set?
Could you do different body parts?
Sure, push pull, bench press pull up.
Sure.
And then only 90 seconds between the push and the pull.
That can work.
It's very clear that for strength gains,
and this is true for men and women, I should say.
A lot of women think, oh, I don't want to get too big. One way to get, by the way, ladies, one way to get really
strong without getting big is actually to train very heavy in the low repetition range of three
to five repetitions, which will make muscles and connective tissue strong without making it grow
very much. Higher repetition work of six to 25 repetitions is optimal for hypertrophy,
for muscle growth. So for the women out there who are thinking, oh, I'm going to do, or men who are
thinking, oh, I don't want to get too big. I'm going to do 15 rep sets, lighter weights. Well,
if those final repetitions are bringing you close to failure or to failure,
you're stimulating hypertrophy. So to be clear,
because actually maybe I didn't realize this,
you will get stronger by doing heavier low rep sets,
but you may not get as big.
Correct.
But you will get bigger by doing lighter,
but high rep sets.
As provided you go to failure.
Okay, provided you go to failure.
Or close to, yeah.
So now most people want a mix of both.
Most guys that seem to want a mix of both.
Women, you know, the goals vary
depending on the person and their natural build.
So the typical repetition range
is for people that want to get stronger and grow muscle
is going to be somewhere between five and 12 repetitions.
And the final repetitions of those sets
are going to be hard.
And some of them, maybe, you know,
50% of them you're actually taking to failure where you can't move
the weight anymore in good form. The lowering phase of the so-called eccentric portion of any
resistance exercise is going to induce more damage and soreness than the concentric. So a barbell
curl, bringing your wrist towards the shoulders, the concentric lowering is when lowering the
weight back down. Emphasizing the eccentric portion of any lift
will induce more muscle damage,
which is one of the stimuli for muscle hypertrophy.
However, getting a lot of blood into a muscle
is another way to stimulate hypertrophy.
So for someone who wants to
kind of cut across all three of these parameters,
so for somebody that wants to cut across
all three of these parameters,
wants to get stronger or maintain strength,
wants to put on some size, probably in particular muscles.
These days I hear a lot about,
people want to grow their glutes or people want to do that.
Glutes seem to be very popular now.
The best person out there,
in terms of training programs for glutes, by the way,
for women and men, but he has a lot of protocols.
It's a guy I've never met him,
but we've communicated a little bit on social media,
no business relationship,
a guy named Brett Glutguy Contreras,
who's a PhD in exercise physiology.
He's really niched in there.
And has really figured out the optimal protocols,
for instance, for growing glutes
without making thighs bigger.
He's the absolute ninja of all this stuff.
And he's a PhD and very smart and clear and articulate
and has some great programs for people doing that.
But in general,
if someone wanted an all around fitness program,
it would be the following.
Weight train or resistance train of some kind
every other day involving a warmup of five to 10 minutes
and then hard work on various body parts.
We could talk about body parts split.
Then on the off days, you do your zone two cardio,
or you do it in the morning after your weight training
or in the afternoon after your weight training.
But so it would be weight train next day,
zone two cardio, weight train and so on.
One day per week, it's a good idea
to get your heart rate way, way up into near max
range for 90 seconds. So this is something that Andy Galpin taught me. One day a week,
go out to a track or a field and sprint for- Go all out.
Warm up, then sprint for 90 seconds, then jog or walk for 90 seconds, sprint for 90 seconds,
jog or walk for 90 seconds, sprint for 90 seconds, and then jog and you're done.
That doesn't have to be a long thing. No. And so it could just be like a burst of really pushing
you to the limit. So if you think about that program that I just described and you're working
the weight training in that anywhere from five to 12 repetition range, depending on the exercise,
et cetera, and you're not doing more than one hour of hard work with the weights. This is something
that's really key. Unless people have amazing abilities of recovery,
training very hard with weights for more than 60 minutes
is going to increase cortisol,
reduce other anabolic hormones like testosterone
and estrogen and DHEA and things of that sort.
So it's really warm up and hit it hard in the weight room
and then get out.
Just really, really get out.
Don't two hour workouts,
maybe fine if people are anabolic assisted,
taking TRT at high levels
or something, not something I recommend.
We could talk about hormone therapies,
but get in, get the work done and get out.
50 minutes, five zero is probably even better.
And then zone two cardio on the off days
or maybe even on the weight training days.
And then one day a week doing those interval runs
or you could even do it with sprinting upstairs
or things of that sort.
If you really look at that program, that's a program that's going to give you some strength.
It's going to give you some hypertrophy. So not every set to failure, only about half.
Lower rep sets, not to failure for the strength stuff. Some sets in the eight to 12 rep range to
failure for hypertrophy. On the off days, you're doing zone two cardio. And then one day a week,
you're getting some sprints in
so that your body is accustomed to doing these max,
keeping your VO2 max up.
And then if you really have the time and energy
and you're a little bit masochistic,
you could do mile repeats once a week
or once every two weeks.
You go out and run for a mile at your fastest pace.
Don't kill yourself, but run fastest pace.
Let's say that took eight minutes.
Well then rest for eight minutes or walk for eight minutes,
then do it again.
And then again, if you do that once every two weeks,
now you've got a program where you're getting strong,
you've got hypertrophy,
you're maintaining muscle strength and size,
we're building it, you are in your zone two cardio.
And it sounds like a lot,
but everything I just described is a total of about-
Yeah, it's not too long.
Six hours per week,
because the zone two cardio is like 30 minutes on your off days. So it's not that much. And everything I just described is a total of about six hours per week because the
zone two cardio is like 30 minutes on your off days. So it's not that much. And what I just
described- So that's basically average of like an hour of training or less a day.
So for, yeah. So I've been doing essentially that program minus a few things that I plan to
incorporate now for 30 years. I'm 46. I started training when I was 16. You look good. Thanks.
I feel good. I've always felt good. Well, it's part of the reason I honestly,
outside of all the credentials in here,
I mean, I feel like I could throw anything at your answer,
but I look, sometimes I look at people touting advice,
especially nowadays,
and they don't actually walk the walk
or look the way you think they would
as they are touting that advice.
So I think like for your age,
for the things you do,
like you look pretty,
you look like you do what you're talking about.
You know what's not sexy, Michael?
I hope you don't say me.
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Yeah, I do these practices. I mean, I'm definitely not the fittest or the strongest guy in the gym.
I'm definitely not the fastest guy or most endurance,
but I can go out.
If I had to run a marathon today, I know I could complete it.
I can pick up and put down heavy objects.
I can open the pickle jar in our house.
I'm the guy who opens the jars, so that feels good, right?
Don't want to set the bar too low, guys.
And as you get older,
it's not just about keeping your heart healthy.
And when I say older, I mean into the 40s know, forties and fifties and on, it's also about maintaining tissue health and not being
injured, you know, knock on wood. But ever since I stopped skateboarding and boxing when I was
younger, you know, I haven't had a major injury in the gym in a long time, mostly because I use
parameters like moving the weight more slowly, or really trying to focus hard and contract the
muscle more strongly. It's one of the most important things. If you're interested in
powerlifting and moving a lot of weight, focus on moving the bar or the dumbbell.
But for most people, this mind-muscle connection that you often hear about,
that's the parameter that's really going to lead to improvements in aesthetics and hypertrophy
because it has to do with you have multiple systems
within the brain and body for contracting muscles.
And your body works very hard to not use those systems,
to not think about walking,
not think about moving the bar.
So if you're going to train in the gym,
don't look in the mirror,
focus on challenging muscles.
This is Ben Pakulski,
who's a phenomenally accomplished bodybuilder at one point,
but now is in more just in the fitness realm,
really taught me, don't think about moving weights,
think about challenging muscles.
And if people out there, men and women,
both are thinking, well, there's certain muscles
that grow really easily
and other muscles that are really challenging.
Like some people struggle with symmetry
and guys, especially, like it's so ridiculous.
You see these guys that are starting to look like,
you know, they're curling over on themselves
and it's like they skipping leg day and the whole thing. The key is if you can contract a muscle
really strongly with no weight, almost where it cramps, that's a good indication that you can grow
that muscle easily. Whereas if it's a muscle that you have a hard time engaging, like a lot of
people have a hard time engaging the glutes. That's why there are ways in which people can
learn how to do that. That's neural. That's
the nervous system. So a lot of weight training is about the nervous system. But anyway, weight
training every other day for about 50, five, zero minutes to an hour of real work once you're warmed
up, then getting out. And then zone two cardio, 150 to 200 minutes per week. I'm saying it again
on purpose. And then maybe once a week, getting up to that maximum heart rate during the cardio
at the end of a zone two cardio.
And then once every couple of weeks going out
and seeing how fast you can run a mile,
you're going to be a very fit individual.
It's very low cost.
The resistance training stuff can be done with body weight.
It could be chins and dips
and things you might have to go to a park,
but none of this stuff requires any fancy equipment.
And then the only other thing I would point out
is that there are a lot of interesting things
coming out of the idea of walking backward.
You know, this knees over toes guy, Ben Parker, he's great.
Recently, we took a vacation with him and his wife
and kid down to Costa Rica,
and we did a lot of backward walking.
And walking backwards does some things
to support the lower limbs and the hips and the back
in ways that can really support knee structure.
So now when we wake up in the morning,
my partner and I actually go to this hill
and we walk backwards while talking,
getting our long distance viewing in our sunlight.
We're going to do some backwards walking, Lauren.
So what you realize is you can start to fold
these different protocols in together.
You don't have to spend your whole day
optimizing your biology.
So we're walking backward up a hill,
getting our long distance viewing,
even if it's cloudy out.
We are getting optic flow.
A lot of this stuff is very simple. I mean,
the mechanisms are complicated and you obviously explain in detail, but if you really think about
it, you're talking about maybe six to eight hours of fitness a week max. You're talking about two
hours max of cold, hot. If you decide to do cold, hot,
I would say the exercise part is going to be the most,
the sleep part is the most important thing.
The exercise part would be second.
Of course, nutrition is its own thing.
And that's very simple to talk about
without having to say more than two sentences.
It's as we said before, mostly unprocessed whole foods.
And whether or not you eat meat or you don't, I do.
I'm an omnivore, right? I realize it's kind of an active defiance nowadays to say that you eat meat
and rice, but I happen to like vegetables, rice and meat. There are a lot of foods I don't like.
There are a lot of foods I like. I'm an omnivore eating mostly healthy, unprocessed foods
and not eating them in excess. And you're going to do better than 90% of people out there.
What does Andrew break his fast with if you're fasting?
So I do a sort of pseudo intermittent fasting
where I don't really want to eat much
until about 11 or noon each day.
I feel the same way.
But I also tend to eat pretty big dinners.
And so when I wake up in the morning,
I'm not really thinking about food.
I mean, my guilty pleasures,
which I don't feel guilty about are I love thinking about food. I mean, my guilty pleasures, which I
don't feel guilty about are, I love croissants. I have no sweet tooth. For the last two years,
I completely, I don't know what happened, but I have no desire. Magnesium probably.
Could be magnesium. That's the last topic I want to talk to you about.
Supplementation. Yeah. And thank you so much for spending so much time here.
Wait, I need to know what he eats in the morning. No, it's in there. I want to talk about
supplementation, eating, fasting.
You eat a croissant or what?
You were going to say something else.
If I'm going to break protocol and just enjoy a treat,
it would be croissants.
Croissant.
Yeah, I love croissants.
The issue is I'll eat all of the croissants with butter.
I would never adulterate my croissants
with anything besides butter,
but I'll put butter on the croissant.
I like pancakes. I like croissants. And if you do a hard resistance
training workout, you actually want to replenish glycogen. It's a great time to have pancakes with
fruit and syrup after your weight training, because you're mostly going to siphon that
into glycogen storage. That's a hard workout. I'm not talking about a hundred pushups across
four sets and a couple of sit-ups. I'm talking about sets to failure of the sort before.
Don't go to eight pushups and have a stack of pancakes.
Yeah, I mean, I will sometimes,
I like to train fasted in the morning.
Same.
But keep in mind that's with water and caffeine.
A lot of people are going to say,
what breaks your fast?
Anything with substantial calories
or that raises your blood sugar.
You taught me athletic greens may not break the fast
or does not.
It does not break my fast
because it doesn't raise my blood glucose very much.
And we have to remember that things that break the fast,
the question is also how long does it break the fast?
So fasting is not an event, it's a process.
So I generally don't want to eat anything
until about 11 or noon, as I mentioned.
I always have some Brazil nuts or walnuts around.
If I'm hungry, if I have those,
then I can push out to one or two.
I don't do the one meal per day thing
because I end up eating so much food
that I have a lot of, you know, I almost explode,
but I have a huge appetite.
I'm very fortunate that my partner's a really good cook.
And so basically all I do is work, sleep,
work out, hang out with her, you know,
I'm going to have another dog soon, you know? So, I mean, I don't really do much else,
but work is a big part of my day.
I work very, very long days,
but I push this stuff in throughout the day,
these health practices.
But so I don't tend to have cheat meals very often,
but if I go to someone's home
and they're serving a big bowl of pasta with bolognese,
of course I'm going to eat it.
I'm not- I always find those people weird that can't, it's like, okay, like one day,
break it up a little, get out of the routine, you know? It's probably good too. And some days,
if you end up, I, for instance, am a big fan of eating relatively low carbohydrate during the day.
So meat and vegetables throughout the day, because carbohydrates tend to make us sleepy.
So unless you do a really hard weight workout first, you don't need much glycogen packing during the day. But so on a day where I wake up,
once I eat, I'll have some meat or fish or chicken or something. And I like vegetables.
I do like some fruits, especially berries are just so delicious. And then as the evening comes
around, I'll eat more before my dinner generally is more rice or pastas, less protein.
And I sleep much better as a consequence
because the carbohydrates lend themselves
to the serotonin tryptophan system.
You sleep great.
And then it also repacks glycogen.
And then the next morning I get up,
all I want is water and coffee.
And then I want to get into the gym
or go sprint or do something like that.
Okay, last question about supplementation.
And I think we could probably at this point of the show,
skip things like D and omegas
because I think Blanket Lee would say-
They're foundational.
Yeah, the foundational stuff.
But are there things in your supplementation routine
that you also think people should look at?
I'll tell you two things that I learned from you.
One, the glycine in the GABA, three nights a week.
I want-
How's your sleep?
Great.
Great.
And then also that sleep cocktail.
I think one thing you touched on earlier is a lot of people think they need melatonin
when they go to sleep.
And I listened to an early episode of yours and you basically mentioned, I told you I'm
a big fan, mentioned that melatonin is maybe good at getting you to sleep, but not keeping
you asleep.
And that you had this other sleep cocktail with apigenin and all that.
So maybe just supplements that you think people haven't heard
as commonly as D and omegas and A and all those things.
Yeah.
So as you mentioned, make sure you're getting enough D3.
Get above one gram of EPA omega-3 essential fatty acids.
Above a gram EPA does not mean taking a omega
that's 1.5 grams.
Look at the package.
Look how much EPA is in there.
Why? Well,
the improvements on mood are phenomenal. You're just going to feel so much better of getting one to three grams. The most cost-efficient way to do that is going to be
liquid. Carlson's are another brand. Again, no affiliation. You're taking one to three
tablespoons per day of fish oil. Okay. For sleep, supplements that can really improve sleep. And today I have
some new ones to share with you. Again, I don't care what brand people use, just look for a
reputable one. Okay. So, cause I don't want people to think this is gearing back to us for any reason,
but in any case, many people who have trouble falling and staying asleep will take melatonin.
Bad idea. Melatonin has another role, which is to suppress puberty. It has impacts on other hormones. Don't take it except for jet lag or there's some interesting
data on migraine. If you take it, take a very low dose because most of the one to three to six to
12 milligrams, that is a absolutely outrageous amount of melatonin. So not a fan of melatonin. Magnesium threonate, T-H-R-E-O-N-A-T-E,
140 milligrams. And then it'll say elemental 2000 milligrams, just look on about 144 milligrams or
140 milligrams of magnesium threonate taken 30 to 60 minutes before sleep helps a lot of people
transition into sleep and get deeper sleep. It's also brain protective. There's some evidence that can offset some of age-related cognitive decline.
Still early data. And I crave chocolate less.
Interesting. There are other forms of magnesium like magnesium bisglycinate,
which are interchangeable with magnesium threonate. The other supplement that a lot
of people do well on is apigenin, A-P-I-G-E-N-I-N. 50 milligrams of apigenin. The only supplement that a lot of people do well on is apigenin a p i g e n i n
50 milligrams of apigenin the only source that i'm aware of is swanson very inexpensive. It is the stuff of chamomile
That will make you drowsy and help you fall asleep. And then the third thing is theanine t h e a
A n i n e theanine 100 to 300 milligrams of theanine
But if you're a sleepwalker or you have very intense dreams don't take theanine, 100 to 300 milligrams of theanine. But if you're a sleepwalker or you
have very intense dreams, don't take theanine because it can exacerbate that. Those taken
one or several or in combination 30 to 60 minutes before sleep, a lot of people feel better
and sleep better. A lot of people. About 5% of people don't tolerate magnesium well. It gives them some gastric distress.
Other forms of magnesium, like magnesium citrate,
are strong laxatives.
So we're not talking about using those,
but still some people take threonate or bisglycinate and they don't feel well.
So you just have to find out,
but it's only about 5% of people.
Now, there is a really wonderful supplement
that I haven't talked about previously
that is shown in a lot of peer
reviewed studies to really reduce anxiety, but can also help with sleep. And that's inositol,
I-N-O-S-I-T-O-L, inositol. The form to get is myoinositol and 900 milligrams of myoinositol
taken 30 to 60 minutes before sleep with or without the other stuff I just mentioned,
you'll be amazed at how well it works. It also is a very potent anti-anxiety compound.
It also has been shown to improve various aspects of female fertility. So that's interesting.
Examine.com is a great source for evaluating the research and peer-reviewed studies on these. Again, always talk to your doctor. Ideally, a doctor who is open to things like supplementation before taking or removing
anything. I don't just say that again for liability. I say that to offset liability.
I say that to really like people should be smart about what they're taking.
All right. Eyelashes. Such a hot topic. I used to have eyelash extensions and I feel like they
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skinny. When you wake up in the morning and you want energy for the day, what are the things that
you're always grabbing? I know you mentioned omega-3 and you also mentioned D, but what else?
Right.
So that, okay.
So the sleep kit, I think we got.
And if you have trouble waking up in the middle of the night or with sleeping,
if you're a bad sleeper, despite doing everything,
I'll give you two free resources.
One is if you go to our website, hubermanlab.com,
look in the menu, the neural network newsletter,
we have a toolkit for sleep that lists all these dosages and a bunch of behavioral tools,
including self-hypnosis for sleep, which is powerful. Bunch of things, zero cost.
You can find it there. And so you don't have to sign up for our newsletter. If you want to,
great. We'd appreciate it. And hopefully you'd appreciate it too. But the PDF is just right
there. You get it. Zero cost, no record you were ever there.
We're good.
For wakefulness, well, I wake up in the morning
and I hydrate.
I will put some salt in some water.
They are a podcast sponsored by,
I really like the Element stuff,
which is a electrolyte solution.
I think they're based here in Austin or somewhere in Texas.
Great, get your electrolytes.
If you're eating a pretty clean diet,
there's a good chance you need more salt.
A lot of women, and my sister's a good example,
always thought they had low blood sugar,
would feel shaky, anxiety, fluttering of the heart.
I had my sister literally taking real salt packets
and knocking them back.
Her blood pressure was still in range.
So if you have prehypertension or hypertension,
obviously avoid high salt intake.
There was a period of time
where people thought salt was bad, right?
You want, and if you look at all cause mortality
and the amount of salt, getting too little salt is bad.
Getting too much is bad.
Processed food diets are going to give you a lot of salt.
For people eating clean,
drinking caffeine will cause you to excrete sodium.
You're going to do well to have some salt.
My sister started taking a little packet of salt with her
and she's like, oh my God, I can actually think straight.
Why? Well, your blood carries oxygen to your brain. And when you don't have enough sodium,
especially if you're drinking caffeine, you're excreting sodium. If you're doing any kind of
fasting or you're eating really clean, you're going to have low blood volume. You literally,
you should get dizzy. She thought she had an anxiety disorder. She didn't have an anxiety
disorder. She had low blood volume, low blood pressure, something called POTS where people
stand up and they feel dizzy. You might be low on sodium.
That happens to me all the time.
A lot of athletes do well by replacing sodium. So you don't need element. You can also use some
salt and magnesium potassium. Does it need to be like sea salt that's high grade level or does it?
Healthier salt, probably better. They taste better, but it doesn't have to be.
I like the sea salt.
I like the way it looks.
It's relatively inexpensive.
I actually travel with a little thing of sea salt.
Salt water in the morning with a little bit of lemon juice
also is going to act as a way to flush out your system.
I do drink athletic greens in the morning.
For me, it doesn't break my fast or if it does very briefly.
And then eventually I do the caffeine.
For me, it's yerba mate.
I'm a big fan of mate.
Now, if you're going to drink mate,
I do the pour over mate, not the canned mate.
This goes back to my Argentine roots.
It has something in it called,
it stimulates the release of something called GLP-1,
glucogon-like peptide one,
which promotes metabolism and fat loss
and insulin management.
GLP-1 is now a prescription drug
or analogs of GLP-1 are now prescription drugs
for the treatment of obesity and diabetes.
So mate is great. The. So mate is great.
The loose leaf mate is great.
Avoid the smoked flavors of mate.
This is really serious.
The smoked flavoring in mates is highly carcinogenic.
Is that what, didn't I just read a,
was there a controversy that just came about about mate?
Is that what it's from?
It's the smoke.
It's not the mate.
It's the smoked flavors.
It's worse than cigarettes.
Wow.
Oh, wow. Serious carcinogenic mouth cancers and things.
So there's a great brand.
I have no affiliation to them,
but Anna Park is an organic mate.
You can buy it online.
It's relatively inexpensive.
You do the pour over one,
you can put it in the fridge and ice it.
You can put lemon in it if you want it,
you can put stevia in it if you want it, all that.
So that one doesn't have the carcinogenic?
No, not that I'm aware of.
And so I drink that every day.
I travel with it and I love black coffee
and I love espresso and things of that sort.
So that's, but supplements for energy,
you could do green tea capsules.
Some people will do that.
That's a pretty mild form.
For cognition and focus,
a lot of people nowadays rely on, sadly,
Ritalin, Adderall, Modafinil.
Bad idea, just bad idea.
And the best way to scare people out of doing this
is unless you're prescribed this for adhd
Tickling that dopamine system to that degree. It's a serious problem. There's also keep in mind. It's very amphetamine like
And there are other effects of amphetamine guys
Including shrinkage of the penile tissue and reduce blood flow
I mean people that take ritalin and adderall end up with some pretty serious issues
My friend had to stop taking it because he couldn't get hard.
Right. Because it stimulates dopamine release in the brain, which makes people motivated to
have sex. But then when people take stimulants like amphetamine or cocaine or Ritalin or Adderall
or modafinil, what ends up happening is there's vasoconstriction and blood flow shuts down.
All the major treatments for erectile dysfunction are things like Cialis and Viagra,
which are PDE5 inhibitors, which promote blood flow.
I should mention that nowadays it's kind of interesting.
There's a lot of prescription,
on-label prescription of very low dose Cialis
of 2.5 to five milligrams,
not for sexual function, but for prostate health.
Because also, you know, when you tell younger guys about this, they're like, oh, prostate, whatever, but for prostate health. Because also, you know,
when you tell younger guys about this,
they're like, oh, prostate, whatever, I don't care.
Yeah, well, when those guys are in their 30s
and they've been vasoconstricting by taking energy drinks,
you can get Red Bull, Monster, and Rockstar,
and they've been taking Adderall and Ritalin,
and their prostate actually doesn't function,
that's often a cause of a lot of sexual health issues.
So do you think that may be one of the reasons
that people are having so many sexual health issues?
Is that the rise of these things
or it's just that in combination with other things?
I think it's a lot of things.
I'm going to do a whole series on sexual health.
There's a huge reason.
Some of it is the high intensity,
high availability of pornography.
Some of it is the overuse of stimulants,
modafinil, Ritalin, et cetera, energy drinks.
Not one energy drink every once in a while, not a problem,
but chronic use of stimulants that vasoconstrict.
Part of it also is what we call psychosexual development.
Part of it is relationship dynamics, cultural dynamics,
where important discussions, obviously,
about consent and things like that
have a lot of younger guys now are just kind of,
they're like, they just don't want to deal.
They just don't know how to,
basically as humans, discussions about sex and sexuality
are make people uncomfortable for two reasons.
Either they make people uncomfortable
because it's kind of a, there's some taboo elements to it,
or unfortunately in my, this is my opinion,
a lot of the people who are out there
really talking about sexual health
are kind of on the opposite extreme. They're so comfortable with these extreme topics that it's a little bit aversive the people who are out there really talking about sexual health are kind of on the opposite extreme.
They're so comfortable with these extreme topics
that it's a little bit aversive to people.
With any topic, biology, psychology, sexual health,
climate science, of which I'm still very confused,
by the way, there's so much data on every side
and everyone seems so combative
and I'm just trying to sort it out.
I do recycle in the meantime.
The conversation needs to be more grounded, right?
It can't be all, you know,
it can't be so extreme on one end or the other.
So I'm looking to bring some experts in.
Also just talking about it from a biological perspective,
urology, like keeping that,
all the plumbing healthy is really great.
Here's an interesting thing.
A lot of people that do heavy squatting
and dead lifting in the gym,
or a lot of cycling,
end up with a lot
of nerve damage and vascular flow damage to the genitals. This is true in men and women, right?
There's a discussion, but women are always more comfortable talking about reproductive health
because they have cycles and they're used to talking about this stuff much more so than men.
So I think that's part of the reason. A lot of women who heavy weight train with deadlifts and
squats, if they don't do it properly, they have pelvic floor issues
and they start, they get leaky, literally.
They start leaking urine.
And so there just needs to be a conversation about it.
To me, it's all biology.
You remove the moral part of it, it's all biology.
I think you talk about it, you normalize it.
It's not a taboo anymore.
Right.
Yeah, you know, it's funny as I've gotten older now,
like when I was a young guy,
I wanted to see how much weight you can stack.
And at some point now,
I was working with my trainer the other day, Brent, who's been on this show, big fan of yours as well.
And he, we got to a point with the weights where I'm like, okay, we're getting up there and it's
heavy and I could probably do it, but it's a strain. And I'm like, at this age, why do I need
to go so far beyond what I think is, you know, like I'm not trying to enter a competition. I'm
not trying to get like huge. And if you get hurt, you're out of commission. Exactly. One thing you could check out would be the blood flow restriction training.
You have to use the proper cuffs. You don't just want to tourniquet off. You buy these cuffs and
it is so unbelievably painful, but no soreness and you get really dramatic results. Andrew,
you're going to have him walking around like an alien with his sauna wool hat and his cuffs and his,
his, uh, pop and magnesium in his arm. I mean, it's okay. Well, rarely do I get involved in
a couple of disputes, but in this case, what I will say is that the flip side of that is how old
are you? 35, 35. But when you're 55, you're going to be lean, strong, everything working better than it does now.
That's my goal because I had a kid and the kid, I think, helped frame out.
It gives you another reason about why you want to be not only around longer, but in good shape.
I want to keep up.
If you look at, for instance, age-related decreases in testosterone in men.
Everyone hears, oh, testosterone is decreasing, sperm counts are decreasing.
You know what? If you look at the data, that's true. It's also true that there are men in their 70s and 80s who maintain the testosterone levels of men in their 20s. Why?
Consistently, zone two cardio, sun exposure, weight training exposure, health happiness is
a huge one. The relationship between the dopamine system and the hormone system.
In women too, you see this now, that basically health span is extending for some people. If you
look at follicle number in women, there are women in their 20s and 30s. I do think every woman should
get scoped for the follicle count. There are women who think, oh, I'm in my 20s and 30s, I'm sure I've
got plenty of follicles. And then they go in at 35 and they realize they've got two follicles left.
There are women in their 40s who have many follicles. Everyone should get scoped.
Everyone, in my opinion, should get blood work done
while they're in their 20s, 30s,
to know where you were at.
And so there are a lot of discussions to be had here,
but doing the basic behavioral practices consistently
is what's going to make you healthy in the long term.
And of course, there are instances
where people need hormone replacement therapy.
Just very briefly,
we could do a whole episode on this if you want sometime,
but it's very clear that for women,
hormone estrogen replacement therapy
is best done as women enter menopause
or in the middle of menopause,
but then outcomes are very good.
I'm going to call you when I enter menopause.
But after women exit menopause,
if they wait too long and then do hormone therapy,
health outcomes and the situation is worse.
Men are now starting to approach hormone therapy.
I get a ton of questions about TRT,
but the problem,
testosterone replacement therapy,
the problem is guys are starting it
in their 20s and 30s.
They're doing it long before they ever need to.
I think there's like 800 guys
that get his specific TRT protocol.
I'm like, I'm sure he's going to do something
in depth on this, but.
Well, for years, I mean, so I'm 46.
I mean, there are two supplements
that I've talked about pretty openly,
Tonga Ali for men and women and Fidogeo Agrestis.
You need to get the right sources and dosages.
We've done episodes on this,
so we can go into it some other time
or we could hold another conversation.
They can be beneficial for improving testosterone,
but not going on testosterone replacement therapy. Because if people do that, guys,
there's no way around it. You're going to shut down sperm production. There are ways,
it turns out, I'm going to contradict myself now, to offset that.
People jump to the extremes.
It's ridiculous. It's ridiculous. Any guy in their 20s and 30s who's not hypogonadal,
who's taking testosterone, you are setting yourself up for serious issues. Also mentally, it changes your brain. Now, women nowadays are starting to take
low doses of DHEA, very low doses of testosterone. Guys are starting to realize that if they take
estrogen blockers, it crushes their libido and their joints get sore. So there are a lot of
things that you want to be nuanced about. I always recommend, here's the kind of my general philosophy,
behavior, excuse me,
first, do the right things,
avoid the wrong things.
We talked about a lot of those today.
Second, get your nutrition right.
That's a highly individual thing,
but we talked about some of the general parameters,
non-processed foods most of the time, et cetera.
Get supplementation right.
For some people, that means no supplementation.
If you're sleeping great,
don't take the sleep stack. If you're sleeping great, don't take the sleep stack.
If you're sleeping lousy, try one of the things,
but do the behavioral stuff first.
If that doesn't work, add the second and the third.
That still doesn't work in the sleep kit that I referred people to earlier.
Then you might want to try a sleep-related hypnosis protocol,
the kind of more heavy-hitting tools.
And then, of course, there's prescription drugs.
But what really saddens me is when I see people saying,
Oh, I can't focus.
I mean, my kidneys riddle it or my-
They jump right to the thing.
They go to modafinil because you will be focused,
but you're also causing these other potential
negative effects.
And you actually, with supplementation and drugs,
you don't engage neuroplasticity.
You don't change your nervous system.
When you do behaviors,
you actually change your nervous system and make it more functional.
A drug or a supplement just gives you access to that state,
but you are dependent on that thing.
So if you're doing cold exposure and breathing
and sunlight and all of this throughout the week,
yes, it seems like a lot,
but again, you can weave these protocols in with one another
to avoid them being too time consuming.
And you're actually getting better
so that when you don't have access to those tools,
you can still function really well.
And sure, there's a place for prescription drugs,
clinical conditions, depression, et cetera,
but that should always be the last resort.
Yeah, and I know we're up on time here,
but my personal experience
in my personal health journey was like, and I've talked about it on time here, but my personal experience in my personal health journey
was like, and I've talked about it on the show. First, I kind of cut alcohol and started figuring
out, like I cut alcohol completely and started figuring out, okay, what's the clean way to eat?
That was like step one. Then I started focusing on like, what's a natural way to get better sleep?
And this is not, I didn't do all this at once to your point. I did it like a month on figuring out
how to bed sleep. Then like two months on figuring out the workouts. Then after I figured out all that,
then I was like, what supplements could enhance,
but I didn't just have to jump into
to make those things happen.
I kind of figured them out first.
And now I just use them as additions.
And to your point,
there's been no need to jump to the more extreme things.
But I feel like a lot of people
just want the quick fix now.
And it works, but it ends up handicapping people somewhat.
I think the behavioral tools, people should ease into them.
You don't have to do them all at once,
but if they want to do them all at once,
they'll certainly feel better.
And the zero cost tools are always fun to talk about
because the only barrier is effort.
And yeah, if you're relying on sleeping pills
to fall asleep and modafinil or Ritalin to be awake,
sure, I know a lot of day traders and tech people and
people that are doing that. You're going to pay the price. There's no question. There is a better,
safer alternative. This podcast was one of my favorites. I learned so much. I have so many
notes. I wish that we had another two hours. You're welcome back anytime. I think our next
episode, we theme on hormones. We covered a lot of ground. Yeah. It
seems like, you know, a lot about that as well. Where can everyone find you pimp yourself out?
Well, first of all, thanks so much for having me. It's been a long time coming and it's,
it's been a real pleasure sincerely to meet you both in person and love what you're doing. And
I appreciate, oh, and I get, I get a book. Nice. Don't worry. It's get the fuck out of the sun,
but I'm still getting my morning sunlight
in the morning
subtitle after you've gotten your morning sunlight
I already wrote it in the book
people get confused about the title but her point was like a lot of people are baking in the sun
I'm saying don't bake with oil in the sun
don't lay in a tanning bed
love it by the way great title of the podcast
thank you
love it and love what you guys are doing generally
where can people find out more
so we are Huberman Lab on Instagram.
There I teach neuroscience and neuroscience related tools.
And on Twitter, also Huberman Lab.
That's Twitter, but Instagram mainly.
And the podcast is the Huberman Lab Podcast.
And so every Monday we have a long episode,
sometimes just me talking,
sometimes talking to a truly expert guest.
They are long episodes,
sometimes two and a half or three hours long,
sometimes less, but we timestamp everything.
So for instance, if you go to the episode
on master your sleep
and you want to just see about the supplements,
there they are.
If you want to learn more
about optimizing testosterone and estrogen,
you go there and it'll say,
how to use weight training to optimize, there it is.
So you don't have to listen to the whole thing, I realize.
And then in general,
if we have formats on our website, hubermanlab.com, where people can ask us questions, I do some live events now and again, but really it's the podcast, Instagram, and
Twitter. And listen, guys, if this episode didn't sell you, I mean, it's an incredible podcast. I
told you I'm a huge fan, really respect everything you're doing, love the content. And if there is
a right way to do a podcast, it's the way you're doing it. Maria Shriver shouted you out too. She's a huge fan of you.
Oh, wow. Well, I'm certainly a fan of hers as well.
People ask me how to do a podcast. They come to me and say, how do you start a podcast? I'm like,
what the fuck do I know? Just go to Huberman. I don't know anymore.
You clearly know what you're doing.
Thank you.
Thank you. I have a great team and as you do as well. And again,
it's a real pleasure to be here. Thanks so much.
Please come back.
Wait, don't go. Do you want to win a copy of Get the Fuck Out of the Sun?
My book that's available on Amazon and Barnes and Noble and at Target.
All you have to do is tell us your favorite part of this episode with Andrew Huberman
on my latest post.
So easy.
And someone from the team will drop into your inbox.
I hope you guys love this episode.
I literally took so many notes.
And I think this is one of my favorites.
Cheers.