The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 209. TJ Power: How Dopamine, Oxytocin, Serotonin & Endorphins Drive Happiness and Longevity
Episode Date: October 14, 2025Join my FREE 3-Day Water Fast Challenge - October 15th. It's the exact protocol I use with pro athletes and Fortune 500 CEOs to flush inflammation and kickstart autophagy. Sign up here! http://bit.ly/...4nTILPt Here’s what nobody tells you about happiness: it’s not philosophical, it’s biochemical, and there’s a formula for it. Neuroscientist TJ Power joins me to decode the DOSE effect (Dopamine, Oxytocin, Serotonin, and Endorphins), the four neurochemicals that determine whether you wake up energized or apathetic, connected or isolated, fulfilled or constantly chasing more. The game-changer here is understanding that you can’t scroll your way to serotonin or double-tap your way to oxytocin! Join the Ultimate Human VIP community for Gary Brecka's proven wellness protocols!: https://bit.ly/4ai0Xwg Get TJ Power’s book, “The DOSE Effect“ here: https://bit.ly/4ofGiP8 Connect with TJ Power Website: https://bit.ly/4n5KxvX YouTube: https://bit.ly/4ohqBXW Instagram:https://bit.ly/3W6MZaq TikTok: https://bit.ly/3KGbk4y Facebook: https://bit.ly/42Eiblb X.com: https://bit.ly/4nKKSoN LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/476JlSU Thank you to our partners H2TABS: “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4hMNdgg BODYHEALTH: “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF: http://bit.ly/4e5IjsV BAJA GOLD: "ULTIMATE10" FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3WSBqUa EIGHT SLEEP: SAVE $350 ON THE POD 4 ULTRA WITH CODE “GARY”: https://bit.ly/3WkLd6E COLD LIFE: THE ULTIMATE HUMAN PLUNGE: https://bit.ly/4eULUKp WHOOP: JOIN AND GET 1 FREE MONTH!: https://bit.ly/3VQ0nzW MASA CHIPS: 20% OFF FIRST ORDER: https://bit.ly/40LVY4y VANDY: “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF: https://bit.ly/49Qr7WE AION: “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4h6KHAD A-GAME: “ULTIMATE15” FOR 15% OFF: http://bit.ly/4kek1ij PEPTUAL: “TUH10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4mKxgcn CARAWAY: “ULTIMATE” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3Q1VmkC HEALF: 10% OFF YOUR ORDER: https://bit.ly/41HJg6S BIOPTIMIZERS: “ULTIMATE” FOR 15% OFF: https://bit.ly/4inFfd7 RHO NUTRITION: “ULTIMATE15” FOR 15% OFF: https://bit.ly/44fFza0 GOPUFF: GET YOUR FAVORITE SNACK!: https://bit.ly/4obIFDC GENETIC TEST: https://bit.ly/3Yg1Uk9 Watch the “Ultimate Human Podcast” every Tuesday & Thursday at 9AM EST: YouTube: https://bit.ly/3RPQYX8 Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3RQftU0 Connect with Gary Brecka Instagram: https://bit.ly/3RPpnFs TikTok: https://bit.ly/4coJ8fo X: https://bit.ly/3Opc8tf Facebook: https://bit.ly/464VA1H LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/4hH7Ri2 Website: https://bit.ly/4eLDbdU Merch: https://bit.ly/4aBpOM1 Newsletter: https://bit.ly/47ejrws Ask Gary: https://bit.ly/3PEAJuG Timestamps 00:00 Intro of Show 02:22 Role of Neurotransmitters on the Road to Happiness 03:27 Neurotransmitters on the Sense of Purpose and Community 12:24 Why Is Society Becoming Disconnected? 17:22 D. Dopamine Definition 20:29 O. Oxytocin’s Role in Humans 31:04 S. Serotonin’s Influence on Mood and Emotional State 40:16 E. Endorphins’ Impact on Stress 43:25 Objective behind the DOSE Lab 46:50 The DOSE Effect 1:01:18 Boredom and the Lack of Sense of Purpose 1:04:21 Connect with TJ 1:05:17 What does it mean to you to be an Ultimate Human? The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The Content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Dofine has been one of the most important desires throughout our whole human evolution.
As a man and woman in a tribe, you would have got your dopamine from making the fires,
chasing down the meat, and that was such a pivotal thing that we needed.
The absence of dopamine is the presence of addiction.
And when dopamine was absent, they were driven to dopamine seeking behavior.
You scroll videos for a while.
After you eventually finish, you don't kind of think in your head like, wow, that was such a good scroll.
If anything, you think like, shit, how do I get more of that feeling because it didn't feel like enough?
Social media is not necessarily the enemy itself.
It's that social media makes us feel connected and we're actually not connected.
We're living in a world now where we're almost thinking through the connection,
screw the connection to nature, let's just only focus on dopamine.
Once the dopamine goes, oxytocin can become a priority.
Oxytocin is designed to make sure we have a deep sense of belonging and purpose in our tribe.
We know from the big data that sense of community and purpose into later in life
are so important to longevity.
And no matter how successful you become, your money, your fame, whatever it might be,
you just think, more, more, more, and that's because we're too driven by dopamine.
And in the pursuit of oxytocin, your system starts to think, well, actually, my life's pretty good.
And that's a nice feeling for a human bit.
Why is society becoming so disconnected?
Are we seeking these neurotransmitters in other areas?
I would say deep connection is...
Ultimate Human
Hey guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human podcast.
I'm your host, human biologist Gary Brecker,
where we go down the road of everything,
anti-aging, biohacking, longevity, and everything in between.
And I happen to be over here in London right now
at the Health 2025 Summit, massive summit, 10,000 people.
The UK has really gotten woke to wellness.
It's been incredible.
And I got a chance to sit down with,
the neuroscientist, T.J. Power, and you guys are going to love this guy's mission.
So welcome to the podcast, T.J.
Thanks for having me, Gary.
Yeah, it's a pleasure to have you.
You know, first of all, I love the fact that you have an English accent and your wife has an
Australian accent.
So your kids are going to have the blend of, like, the best accent ever.
Yeah, I'm kind of wanting to get to lean towards Australian.
I almost think the Australians call it, but maybe England's called it.
Yeah, I think the Australians are there.
You know, the English are pretty like out.
spoken. But so are the Australians. I realized, man. That was an aggressive crowd in Melbourne
and Sydney, you know? I think the British sense of humor is like a little darker. And like
the Australians are a little like more straightforward with their humor. Like I always, I have a lot of
British friends. And a British compliment is like, hey, you look pretty good for a fat guy.
It's a little bit savvy about that. Can you just give me a straight compliment? You know? But I'm so excited
to run this with you today because, you know, I did a stage talk earlier.
Cool.
And we were actually talking about just the effect of neurotransmitters on the body,
forming our mood, forming our emotional state.
You and I actually almost ran a podcast before the podcast.
We started early.
And we were talking about your dose lab and, you know, your research and dose standing for
dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins.
Yeah.
That worked out beautifully for you.
I mean, God was at play at that point.
Making that acronym exists just felt crazy.
Instead of some weird acronym, you know, like doge.
I don't know if it would have landed as hard.
No, it doesn't land as hard.
This is amazing.
But you often talk about, you know, the road to happiness
and the role that these neurotransmitters play,
how we can get more of them, how we're artificially getting them,
how we've actually replaced our sense of connection very often.
with artificial ways of getting dings for these different neurotransmitters.
We used to have a saying in the mortality space,
the absence of dopamine is the presence of addiction.
And people got very addicted.
There was a lot of research centered around how, you know,
when dopamine was absent or people had difficulty methylating this neurotransmitter dopamine,
they were driven to dopamine seeking behavior.
Yeah.
Drugs and alcohol, addiction, permissible.
you know, thrill-seeking.
And, you know, it's fascinating.
I spoke to one of these guys that used to jump off a cliff in a squirrel suit.
Okay.
You know, like a wing suit.
Yeah, it's a wing suit.
You know, they call it a squirrel suit.
And you just open up the wings and you're going 200 miles an hour,
eight feet off the ground, like inches away from death.
And, you know, the fascinating would be soaring at that point.
But, you know, what he said was,
I you know when I do it I feel normal okay it almost gets him to the average level I'm like wow
dude life must really suck otherwise if that's like a day in the office for you you know interesting
but talk a little bit about the interplay with these neurotransmitters and tell me a little bit about
your journey into the authoring the dose effect and coming up with dose labs you know fascinating
what you showed me on your computer that you're doing with technology actually beginning to
gamify the way people look at these neurotransmitters and how they interplay with happiness.
So talk a little bit about that journey.
Yeah, I mean, for me, almost not too dissimilar to your wingsuiting friend there.
I grew up from as early as I can remember as like a dopamine addict, I would describe myself
as.
Like even if I think back to being a young kid, like five years old, I remember my mom used to
hide the sugar in our house on like a top shelf of the cabinet in the kitchen so we couldn't
get it as kids.
Wow.
So she knew.
She knew this kid like wanted.
like fast pleasure effectively.
And I mean, I don't even think dopamine
was understood as a word back then.
But she knew, okay, my kid seems to like want quick hits.
I was pretty like a daredevil type kid.
And when I became like a teenager
and discovered like cigarettes and alcohol
and partying and pornography,
I just got like lost in that way.
That world to me was just like really fun, really exciting.
It felt like cool to me to go down that dopamine path.
About 22, I'd been studying in psychology and neuroscience
and become lecturing in this world,
but I was still struggling a lot with my own habits and behavior.
I still felt lost in a lot of these different addictions.
And when it was about 19, 20, I heard the word dopamine for the first time.
And I was like, what's this word dopamine?
And when I went deep in studying it, reading the papers on it, I thought, wow, that is what I'm looking for in all of this partying.
Like, there's something in that chemical that I'm looking to chase that I'm artificially accessing through this lifestyle I'm living.
And at the time, I became really interested in the world of evolutionary neuroscience.
like how did humans evolve over hundreds of thousands of years
start thinking about like how men were spending their time
like hunting and making fires and eating naturally
and like physically working super hard.
Out in the sunlight.
How in the sunlight.
We were just like a real physical, determined natural being.
And I set myself on almost this experiment.
I kind of left where all my friends were where the parting was happening
and I went and lived with my grandpa
because I knew he lived out in nature
and I thought maybe I was just trying to live more of a hunter gal.
Dude, that's drastic, man.
You just pulled a plug.
I was just like maybe there's something in there
that I can feel like happy, happier in almost
and build a better career in
and like find better relationships in
and discovered over like 90 days
throughout this specific summer holiday from university
that there was like this alternative high
that I could chase.
During that journey I was like going deep into these brain chemicals
had this magical moment of noticing it spelt dose
and thought like, holy shit.
There's a formula here.
And I just spent my time like every day waking up
thinking like how do I live?
in alignments what my brain chemicals evolutionarily want me to do. And in that journey,
like I discovered a whole new world of happiness. And what does that look like? Because, you know,
in a world where we were exposed to nature, we were really exposed to sunlight, where we spent a lot
more time connected with other human beings. Yeah. I believe our senses were probably a lot more
cute back then. Yeah. And now connection, you know, I talk about this a lot with the blue zones.
when you look at the big data on blue zones,
no continuity between diets.
Okay.
But there were two non-negotiables.
One of them was mobility into later in life.
Yeah.
There's no replacement for mobility and exercise.
The Huntsy Gatherers had that for sure.
Yeah, they had that.
But the other one was sense of purpose and community.
Okay.
So where do these neurotransmitters come into play
in the sense of purpose and community?
Because I feel like modern society,
It's social media is not necessarily the enemy itself.
It's that social media makes us feel connected and we're actually not connected.
Yeah, we're moderately satisfying an incredibly important ancient desire on social media.
Because it's moderately satisfying us, it's reducing our desire to really go out and get it.
Like if, for example, tonight, like the internet just disappeared, our phones all disappeared,
we'd all sit at home and think like, oh, this is pretty boring, just like sitting on my sofa, doing nothing.
And eventually, if that continued for a number of weeks,
we would all be back out socializing.
We'd be back in the nature talking to each other
because we wouldn't have something to moderately satisfy that need.
And because it kind of ticks the box,
we're just not really chasing deep, deep human connection as much.
Like my partner and I consistently do different experiments
based on these brain chemicals to just see if we can improve our life.
Like we see if it can make us more connected to each other,
more intimate with each other, like happier together.
And we ran this experiment recently where we tried to get rid of our TV for four weeks.
And we just thought, what if we just don't have a TV?
I think, I think I've heard you talk about this.
This is really cool.
Yeah.
We just, we try.
And in terms of the dopamine scale, TV is actually almost better for you than like social
media videos.
So it's not to demonize television necessarily.
But we just thought like, what will happen if we don't have anything to watch in the
evenings?
No, like dopamine.
Like, I'm super into like.
Dude, I'm already mortified.
Yeah.
It's horrible.
I watched like a lot of YouTube.
Like, I like that.
The evening comes.
And it's like, okay, so you finish work for the day.
And it's like, what am I going to do for the next like four hours or so until I, like, go
to sleep.
And in that time, we started obviously walking for longer in the evenings trying to entertain us,
cooking much slower, healthier, more nutritious meals because that was like an activity to
entertain us.
Then you sit down on the sofa about 8 o'clock and you're like, what are we going to do then?
And you start talking and then you get into bed and you start talking.
And there's this like magical moment at the start of a relationship where you have like
that quote unquote honeymoon period where you lie in bed and you get to know each other and you
fall in love with each other and it's magic.
And that moment is deep oxytocin.
That's like a feeling of falling in love that humans crave.
And we've now been together a while.
So we're technically out of what would be described as a honeymoon period.
But without that like addiction,
so I have to check my phone the whole time.
I have to go on Twitter the whole time, YouTube the whole time.
You end up talking and you get deep into conversation as we are like in these conversations.
And in that like deeper discussion, like magical oxytocin activates.
And we're living in a world now where like communication is becoming more surface level
with our friends, our partners, our colleagues, our comms, like when we're direct messages.
people on social media and we need like slow long conversations like our ancestors sitting around
fires for like three hours four hours every night like dreaming about what's going on in space
humans are built for that like deep deep bonding and we're losing it in the face of our addiction
to dopamine yeah you know and and there's a correlation between this and longevity i won't say that
i have the exact answer what the exact correlation or cause and effect is but we know from the big
data that sense of community and purpose into later in life are so important to longevity.
We know also from a Harvard longevity study that was recently published. It was the longest
longevity study ever run. Yeah, cool. A little over 70 years, almost 80 years long. That life
expectancy was largely determined by the depth of your relationships. And when we say terms like
depth of your relationships, you know, what does that really mean to you? Is that,
how neurochemically we are connected, that we're actually getting a reward like oxytocin
reward or a serotonin uplift or dopamine hit from our relationships. And why is society becoming
so disconnected? Are we seeking these neurotransmitters in other areas? Yeah, I would say
deep connection is like open, vulnerable, loving conversation and where we meet different parts
for ourselves that we feel like afraid to talk about, where we like ask amazing questions to
the person we're with and we don't focus too much on ourselves, but we like really let them
speak. We listen carefully. And we have those phrases in the world where like you think of a
certain friend and you think, oh, they're such a good listener. We literally have that as like a phrase
and say, oh, they're such a good listener. And you know when you're with someone and they really
make you feel seen and you feel like, wow, this person's like really listening to me and it feels good.
And oxytocin is just like the biochemical affirmation that that is taking place between you.
And ask your question of why are we not in that pursuit as much anymore?
It's because the only chemical we figured out how to artificially hack is dopamine.
We're not hacking oxytocin and serotonin and dolphins.
There are little things you can do to hack them.
But primarily we're hacking dopamine.
And dopamine has been one of the most important desires
throughout our whole human evolution.
Like as a man and woman in a tribe,
you would have got your dopamine from making the fires,
building the shelters,
foraging for the fruit and nuts,
chasing down the meat.
And that was such a pivotal thing that we needed.
But it wasn't the only thing we needed.
We also needed to come back from that hunting and building and fires
so that we could deeply bond with each other
and make people make each other feel safe and loved and laugh and connect.
But we're living in a world now where we're almost thinking,
screw all the rest of it,
through the connection, screw the connection to nature.
Let's just only focus on dopamine.
And like when you lie in bed with your partner,
like my partner and I had this last year,
we were getting pretty into reading Twitter last year last summer.
For some reason, we got really hooked into Twitter.
we'd get into bed and we were reading it on the iPad.
And for a while, like, it was nice
that we were, like, finding different, like, stories
that were taking place last summer
and quite, like, fascinating to follow.
We were enjoying that journey.
But then it reached a point where I was, like, lying in bed
and I was thinking, we're just, like, staring at a screen,
consuming dopamine and we're completely missing out on the oxytocin.
Yeah, she's right next to you, right?
She's right next to you.
I'm not looking at her, not talking to her.
I'm not cuddling her.
And then we started thinking, okay,
let's, like, try and get these devices out of the bedroom.
And then you see this, like, big transformation of,
like, once the dopamine goes,
oxytocin can become a priority
but oxytocin is slow
and we don't like slow anymore
like we can barely even read books
we want it now we want it now we want to feel good
right now and unfortunately
with how brain chemistry works is for our
ancestors nothing really made you feel good
right now like when you scratch rocks
together for three hours it was a long journey till that fire lit
or it's a long journey till you found that dear
and we're evolutionarily programmed to
earn the feeling of love and hard work and reward
not have it instantaneously and the instantaneous
nature of the modern world is what's
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Now let's get back to the Ultimate Human podcast.
Wow.
You know, I'd love to go through the dose acronym and sort of define each of these.
I'm assuming that people are vaguely familiar with them as neurotransmitters.
But for the audience that's not, you know, dopamine, which I often refer to as
the main driver of behavior versus serotonin, which is a main driver of mood.
Imbalances in these different neurotransmitters are linked to all kinds of psychiatric
definitions, mood disorders, mental illnesses.
I hate these categorical terms because we don't ever talk about the fact that you have an imbalance
in these neurotransmitters or deficiency, let's say in serotonin or dopamine, or you're not
producing or seeking oxytocin and those are labeled as disorders mental illnesses
mood disorders and then of course we try to fix the absence or the imbalance in these neurotransmitters
with chemicals and synthetics and pharmaceuticals yeah and now we've become a very heavily
chemically dependent society yeah and you know where we think well if you have a broken
relationship with your mother, if you take this chemical, this pharmaceutical compound,
it will just fix that.
You've had a 30-year-torn relationship with mom and dad, but just take this and you're
going to somehow magically fix it.
That's never made sense to be.
Yeah, interesting.
So if we were to just go through that acronym and start with dopamine, first of all,
how do you define dopamine?
I mean, everybody's heard of it.
How do we define it as a neurotransmit?
I'd say it's the chemical that creates two very important things.
your motivation to do hard things.
Your desire to do hard things is driven by dopamine.
And then your capacity to have any kind of attention span
and focus on those hard things you're trying to win from
is driven by dopamine.
And it's designed to elevate very slowly in our brain.
Like when you look at a graph with dopamine,
if, for example, you were going for like one of your workouts,
like obviously exercise would be an important thing for dopamine,
you don't step in the gym and think like, fuck yeah.
Like I feel amazing now.
Some people might.
If you really love the gym,
maybe. But for a lot of people, it's a good 15 to 20 minute climb to experience like a nice
feeling of reward. And dopamine is designed to slowly elevate over time. We've got this beautiful
area of our brain called the ventral tegmental area, the VTA. And this is like the dopamine
factory where we're generating this dopamine. And then we have this area called the nucleus
accumbens, our reward center. And in that scenario where you're going to the gym, your brain
and your VTA, your dopamine factory, starts to manufacture dopamine vesicles, these little
dopamine bubbles effectively. And then occasionally, as you get some reward,
from that workout, you begin to ship some of these bubbles towards the nucleus accumbens
towards your reward center. You start thinking, it's kind of good that I'm doing this
workout actually in the same way our ancestors would have thought it's kind of good that I'm
hunting for this food actually. Like these are important drivers for us. In a scenario like in the
modern world where we open our TikTok feed or our YouTube shorts feed or Instagram, effectively
what happens is your brain just mass dumps the bubbles from the factory towards that reward
center. Feels good. Like when you're doing it, it's like this is pretty fun. Like now I'm not
thinking about any of my worries and I feel like present and enjoying this
experience. But then after a period of time, you put the phone down. Like, people have
that feeling. We're like, I feel kind of shit now. I'm not motivated and I've lost my attention
span. And it's driven by the factory now being empty and reduced in this capacity to have
these dopamine molecules in there. So if you have like dreams in your life and you're trying to
attain them, you have to be able to make sure there's an abundance of dopamine sitting in that
factory. Otherwise, you want them attached to dopamine, right? Yeah. You need to be generating a lot
a natural dopamine. And like the life you're in pursuit of, for example, like I'm sure you feel
like a motivated human. And so many of your actions you're taking, I'm meaning that factory is
thinking, holy shit, like, Gary, you're trying to do a lot. Because you're trying to do a lot,
I'm going to make sure we generate a shit ton of dopamine. But on the other side, when you get into
a pathway where you're smoking weed all the time and you're like scrolling your phone all the time,
and you're watching loads of porn, eating loads of sugar, the brain just starts to like break down
and the factory starts to not produce dopamine anymore. And you end up in like this apathetic state.
And I think many people, and myself included have like struggled with that experience and like, how do I
get this engine working again.
So that's dopamine.
And then we have oxytocin.
And this is, they say that's what's in Cupid's arrow.
You know, I've just heard that reference.
I don't know what's in his error, but they say it's called the love hormone.
And that's what Cupid, you know, shoots it with.
But, you know, I know it's involved in the psychosomatic response.
It's involved in, you know, arousal, libido, you know, all of the sort of hell yeah,
I won the lottery kind of emotions.
Oh, cool.
So talk a little bit about oxytocin's role in human beings
and human interplay as a neurotransmitter.
Yeah, I mean, again, if you think evolutionarily,
this chemical isn't designed so that we're, like,
really motivated to harm for food.
This chemical is designed to make sure we have a deep sense
of belonging and purpose in our tribe.
And that was imperative.
Like, we couldn't have selfish individuals
in these little tribes that were like,
I'm just going to find some food.
And then when I find I'm just going to eat it all
and not bring any back to you.
For myself.
Yeah, like it was very important
and that we had this like collectivistic understanding.
Because that sounds like me in the morning,
just that's why I wouldn't have done good in the tribe.
My wife is off camera going, yeah.
And this chemical programmed in that desire
to like have a bond with human beings
and to make sure you are in service to those human beings.
And when we go through the process, like of the modern world,
we're a little bit obsessed with dopamine
and like our capacity to make sure that that's our goal is reducing.
And any time in which you find yourself each day thinking,
right, my day is about others.
My day is about like, how do I make my partner feel great?
My colleagues feel great with your work, serving with your work.
When you're in that state of like, how do I create more love for the people that I care for?
That's when you're generating a shit ton of this chemical.
Yeah.
Wow.
So that's, you know, that must be what they talk about in blue zones when they talk about
sense of community and sense of purpose.
For sure.
You know, it's actually caring for the people that are around you and for your loved ones,
that sense of belonging.
I found it really interesting in a lot of these areas of the world.
There's no such thing as assisted care living facilities.
Yeah, that's interesting.
Yeah, cystic care is mom and dad move back in with the family until they pass.
And they really honor their elders.
Like the elderly are held in very high esteem.
They're looked at as having wisdom and something to be honored and gratified.
And I think, you know, very often now when, you know,
our loved ones age to the point where we find them no longer relevant or no longer useful
and it creates distance, you know, that has to, that must have to do with this oxytocin
connection.
Yeah.
And the important thing to understand there is oxytocin is like a deeply fulfilling
and rewarding chemical.
And it's very easy, for example, like when your parents get older, to almost choose
the dopamine path, which would be put them in a care home so I can continue living my life
that I want to live.
And I'm sure, like, one day I'm going to face this decision.
Let's see what kind of decision I make.
But the oxytocin-based decision would be I'm going to sacrifice.
Hopefully you wrote a book on this.
So hopefully you hang out with your parents for a while.
Yeah, I think I will be.
Like, it's a massive priority for me.
And the oxytocin-led decision might require sacrifice,
but will be more fulfilling.
And what I mean by that is when you, for example,
like take some form of cheap dopamine,
like you scroll your phone, for example,
you scroll videos for a while.
After you eventually finish scrolling the videos,
you don't kind of think in your head like,
wow, that was such a good stuff.
scroll. Like, I feel so satisfied. That was some good doom scrolling. I'm so happy with that
scroll. That never crosses your... Top five. Top five easy. If anything, you think, like,
how do I get more of that feeling? Because it didn't feel like enough. If you take like a real
oxytocin experience, which would be maybe like holding a newborn baby, for example. If you've
ever held like your own baby, like someone's baby, in that moment, you don't think like, oh, I wish there
were 10 babies in my arms. I need loads of this. You just think, like, wow, this is just pure
presence and deep connection and life.
Oxyotin is that feeling.
It's deeply calming for us.
It's deeply fulfilling.
And so many of us are feeling like unsatisfied with our experience of life.
So true.
And dopamine will never satisfy us.
That's how it's programmed within our biology because the hunter-gatherers had to
always keep hunting.
They had to make better fires, better spears, better buildings like shelters that
they could survive in.
And that was programmed into us by nature so that we would evolve.
And now we live in this crazy world because of that incessant need for progress driven by
dopamine.
But it would never feel like enough.
Only what would feel like enough to them was lying by the campfire
and like giving love to people.
And that's like why, like our bodies feel uneasy.
And no matter how successful you come,
become your money, your fame, whatever it might be,
you just think more, more, more.
And that's because we're two driven by dopamine.
And in the pursuit of oxytocin, your system starts to think,
well, actually, my life's pretty good.
And that's a nice feeling for a human being.
You know, it's really fascinating because my wife and I
have recently reached this point,
really in the last two years where we talk about all the time how just satisfied and gratified
we are with our life.
Like we've actually been present enough to notice and take account and say, we're so grateful
for where our life is right now.
And we always talk about how we truly, I think for the first time in our lives for both
of us don't want for anymore.
Cool.
I actually fear that it would change.
I wanted to stay right where it is because, you know, we've got a great team around us.
You know, we've got an incredible marriage, but we, most of all, you know, our family has
largely been on this journey with us.
Cool.
And you just for the first time made me realize that that's likely exactly what's happening
in our life, like this really deep sense of.
of ratification, you know.
We were just on a flight coming from Australia to,
we're on our way to London, we're going through Dubai.
We must have talked five times on the flight, right, babe?
She's off camera about like, I'm just so happy with where we are in our life right now.
Oh, man, that's good to hear.
See the message resonating where we are as a couple,
where we are as parents, where we are in our careers.
And I couldn't think of a thing that I wanted other than to be present
in that moment.
And that happened so rarely for me
in the first 45 years of my life.
Wow.
I always delayed my happiness.
I was like, as soon as this happens,
that's going to be amazing.
As soon as I get this, I'm going to be so happy.
As soon as I make this much money,
I'm going to be so happy.
As soon as I get this car, I'm going to be happy.
As soon as we move into this new apartment,
I'm going to be happy.
But now I don't think about our,
our dwellings and our surroundings,
I just think about, you know,
where we are in our life
and the connection that we have
and it makes so much sense
that maybe we're just finally coming in to balance
because, you know, it was always about building our careers
in the beginning and then there's the risk of trying to survive
and is the business going to make it? Is it not going to make it?
And now that it's stable,
our wish is not bigger, more, faster.
It's just if we could stay right where we are.
Cool. We wouldn't ask for another thing.
It's interesting there because you mentioned the physiological indication of oxytocin as well.
Like we see different things about how the nervous system will interact with oxytocin.
And many people these days are feeling like this real speed within their nervous system.
Like their HIVs might be really low because their bodies are running so fast.
And you'll see in research with HIV that like gratitude seems to have a really significant impact on elevating someone's HIV.
Of course, sleep or other factors are really important.
but in our nervous system it wants to be like happy and safe with what it has
and we are in this like dopaminergic state where our nervous system's like fuck how do I get
more how do I get more because that will one day make me feel calm but it actually
won't of course when you navigate difficult times like you're going to have to lock in
and you're going to have to figure out how to navigate that time but as you immerse yourself
in that deep grateful present state which everyone's aware of like I feel like people know
like yeah I should do that gratitude thing I still think people continue to not really
immerse themselves in it, not like frequently discuss it with their partners, not spend time
deep in these maybe like breathwork states in the silence. Like in those breath holds, you sometimes
can get like a real powerful emotion come through to you. And I think the interesting thing
you see with all this like anxiety we have in the modern world is if a individual in a tribe was
suddenly disconnected from the tribe and they were suddenly in a serious lack of oxytocin. Obviously
there'd be an immense fear response and like increase in their speed of their nervous system because
they've been like, how the hell am I going to survive? Like a human person.
being in the wild. I'm out of the hurt. You can't survive on your own in the world. It's like
tigers and stuff like that. You're screwed as a human being in the world. But as a group,
like we smashed it. We got to this point. And I think it's so important that people start
realizing like if they want to find like peace and peace is a nice feeling. Like it's almost even
nicer than success. It's almost better peace than success. Really. Totally agree with you.
And it's why I think we're almost in this like oxytocin epidemic in our world where
we think all of our dreams are in dopamine, but they're actually living in that oxytocin world.
Wow.
So, and then serotonin, obviously.
I think everybody's heard of serotonin.
There was for a very long period of time the serotonin hypothesis of depression.
It was an oversimplified view of depression that said, if you're low on serotonin, you are by definition depressed.
Yeah, interesting.
And I always kind of found that definition fascinating because if you took medication for low serotonin, the medication didn't raise serotonin.
So you define depression as too little serotonin, but the treatment isn't to raise serotonin.
It's just to freeze it where it is, you know, keep you from using it.
Reuptake inhibitors.
Yeah, yeah. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, which selectively slow the reuptake of serotonin,
ostensibly so you wouldn't want it out of it and then go off a cliff.
Yeah.
And then like most times that we mess with our physiognorochemistry, we realize, wow, there's
actually an increased rate of suicidal ideation and crushing depression.
But when we talk about serotonin, how, what bucket do you put serotonin in its influence on mood
and emotional state? Where does serotonin for you know I'm all about optimizing performance and
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podcast. Yeah, very, very significant. On that joy you can experience in your mind, that stability
of your mood. Like a lot of us have very significantly fluctuating moods or it's like, cool,
like I feel really happy now. Maybe that's like dopamine connection and then suddenly you're
like crashed out, irritable, pissed off, anxious. And then you're like up and down. It's a bit of a
roller coaster. And our serotonin levels are very low in the modern world because it's a chemical that
deeply wants a connection with nature
and to live in alignment with a natural
way of operating. Like we see obviously in the research
that 90% of it is being generated
within the gut and there's that beautiful Vegas
nerve that's connecting our brain and body together.
And it's communicating like what kind of
serotonin is going on here and it's distributing that information
to your mind. When you go into the research of what activates our
serotonin, you look particularly at like
Japan, for example. I think one of the blue zones
is in Japan. Yeah, yeah. They're one of the longest.
I think they just took over as the longest
average life expectancy in the world.
Cool. Yeah.
One of the scientists I love in Japan,
I wrote a lot about it in the book,
is Dr. Keeling, and he's done a lot of research into nature.
And Japan has had significant challenges
with mental health in the cities.
They actually term this specific word Karoshi,
which meant, like, kind of burnt out, overworked,
too much time on technology,
an individual that began to suffer
quite significantly with their mental health.
Japan also has the best forests on Earth.
And actually, they're like Avatar forests
in that cool movie about nature.
Wow.
It's an interesting thing that are based upon the forest you see within Japan.
And Dr. Kee-Ling started theorizing back in like early 2006,
how can we find a like scalable solution to this mental health challenge?
Because you can do lots of therapy and you can do medication,
but you also need to try and treat the root of like what's happening here.
What is this high-stim city technological environment doing to their brain chemistry
and their body?
And he started putting people into nature and called it Shin Rind Yoku,
this forest bathing idea, which I'm sure you've heard of.
Yeah, Dr. Aksonite just did a whole podcast on it.
He was talking about how they would prescribe forest bathing.
Yeah, like as like a medical treatment almost.
It's so fascinating.
Yeah, with this serotonin chemical that there's this significant increase in what we call serum serotonin
when an individual walks in nature and has alignment with nature.
And they didn't send them out there like with therapists or like with a specific goal of any kind.
You just have to walk in nature slowly, effectively.
And you think about how we spent 300,000 years running around out there.
Like when you walk there, your body is at home effectively.
Like your whole system thinks, oh, yeah, this is where we kind of like grew up.
And there can be this challenge like in the modern world where you might have been on
your computer all day, on your phone all day.
And you think, oh, I've probably go from one of those walks because that's something
people say is good for you.
Something people say is good for you.
Yeah.
And you kind of like wander around out there.
I read it on TikTok and Instagram when I was doom scrolling.
For sure.
And you kind of like walk out there for a few minutes.
You think this kind of shit.
And your brain's still in these beta brainwaves, like these fast brainwaves.
And it's like, is there anything out?
here for me. Then as you walk for longer and longer, and they were getting prescribed sort of
four or five hours a week to like really transform mental health. And I know New Zealand has
also adopted this now with these green prescriptions where they're having a similar
treatment protocol for mental health. For individuals that are struggling with many of the things
that you would utilize like serotonin-based medications to, that could also accompany it,
like they could work together potentially. But when someone's in that natural environment,
your serotonin levels go crazy. And obviously, as a species, we are just heading in the opposite
direction of nature in every single facet in our relationships, our food, in our sleep cycles,
in our relationship with the sun. And it's just so important to consider like this serotonin
chemical wants you to be bonded to where we came from. Wow, that is so fascinating because we
were actually just talking about this before the podcast started. And it's going to sound like
I'm trying to just agree with you and jump on the bandwagon, but you can actually look back on
my Instagram stories because I never had an explanation for it. But, you know, we have this beautiful
condo penthouse in Miami and has all the toys in a hyperbaric chamber, hydrogen nanobath,
you know, red light therapy, cryo, cold plunge, sauna, steam, like all the, all of my
biohacking toys. And it's very elegant. And when I'm there, I love using all this equipment.
But Sage and I, my wife and I, also have a one-bedroom log cabin. It's probably 40 years old.
Cool. At 10,500 feet, Colorado. Natural hyperbaric.
Yeah, yeah. It's a hypo-baric, actually.
Yeah, it's the opposite.
It's a hypo-baric, yeah.
And, you know, it has running water, but it has well-in-septic, no electricity.
It's got solar power.
Glacier-fed spring water, well-in-septic.
The oldest beat-down stove that you've ever seen in your life, this, you know, propane stove.
Okay.
And we go there, and I swear we never want to leave.
And I would do these stories about, I just don't know how to put it into words.
I would wake up in the morning.
I would have coffee.
I would put on a rucksack, like a little weighted, eye on vest.
And I would just go for this three, three and a half mile walk in the woods.
Okay.
And I would come back.
And sometimes I would post about it.
I would go, I feel amazing.
And like, I don't want to throw myself under the bus because I advocate all of these modality.
you know, like red light and hyperbarics
and all of this fancy stuff.
But I will tell you nothing
makes me feel as good
as a three and a half mile
ruck walk in the woods.
And then my wife and I talk about it all the time too.
So we have this little thing where, you know,
we're building another log cabin on the property.
And so we actually go out for these walks
and try to find like pieces of cool wood or fallen trees.
Mad there's his hunter-gatherer.
Yeah, so it's like it's our hunter-gathering.
thing.
And, you know, it's like, oh, that would be a really good coffee table.
And, you know, that would be cool, you know, wall sconces that we could put some lighting in
between.
And it's become one of our favorite things.
Wow.
And when we're not there, we deeply, deeply miss it.
And so much so that we're on this 14 city on 18-day tour right now.
And we are so looking forward to this two-day window that we get to spend at our place in Colorado.
Cool.
And that makes a lot of sense now.
It does.
It's this deeper sense of connection with each other
and then reconnecting with nature.
Yeah, and there's a real connection there.
Nature's a real thing.
It's alive.
Yeah, I kept doing it to be like,
is it really that good or did I just bake this shit up?
You know, and then I would get up the next day,
and I would go for a walk and I would come back and I go,
nope, I still, I feel amazing.
And I take it in the walks in the morning.
There's no kind of like headphones in at that point.
No headphones.
It's like a period of time in the quiet out there.
There's no cell phone reception.
Well, we have a Starlink at the house
so we can turn it on and turn it off.
But if we turn the Starlink off, we are off the grid.
Yeah, cool.
And there's this funny little place we call the phone booth,
which is where it's an intersection of four dirt roads.
Yeah, okay.
And it just happens to be where they cross.
If you stand right there where they cross,
you actually can get cell signal.
It must like be where the tower comes.
So you actually drive up there
and you can be on the phone in this one spot.
Amazing.
It's called the phone booth.
But, yeah, your phone doesn't work in the woods,
so we don't even bother taking it.
We're so lost in the internet world,
like this deep connection with it,
that I think we think we have to be on it all the time.
Like, the internet isn't that dissimilar to the advent of fire.
Like, it's one of those things.
It's like a huge, significant thing that evolved humanity.
Fire was one thing.
Then we had electricity and obviously got the internet.
We've got AI, obviously, coming in super hard now.
I imagine, obviously, I wasn't there as a hunter-gatherer,
But I imagine when we invented fire, we didn't just think, oh, my God, we've invented fire.
Let's all just look at it for 12 hours a day and do nothing else.
Fire, fire, fire, fire.
We're probably like, wow, this is pretty useful.
We can help us with our tools, our building, our food, our warmth.
But we also probably did other things.
And I think humanity needs to consider, like, is there a world where the internet exists?
And it's freaking amazing.
It enables so much of our work, connection, financial opportunity.
But also there's other things to do as well.
Like there's opportunity to go out into nature and just live a completely different life.
where you just tune out, and then you tune back in.
And in that world, like, humanity will thrive in the face of the technological
technological revolution.
Yeah.
But in the face of just, like, only living in it, our system can't take it.
Yeah, I totally believe that.
And so then there's enderfins.
Yeah.
And I think we all are somewhat familiar with enderfins, you know, the runner's high.
For sure.
Enderfins, you know, people get that from, I get that feeling from working out.
I get that feeling from cold plunging.
Yeah.
I always, my audience knows I call it cold plunging my drug.
of choice because nothing really makes me feel better for longer.
Cool.
If I get back from one of these walks and then I get in a cold plunge, I'm like, that's
it.
It's like, I won the lottery.
God take me now, I feel the best I've ever felt.
And I'm sure our answers has got back from their walks, jumped in the river.
Like, you're just living in a lot.
They probably did.
They probably been cold plunging for, you know, 600 years and just, I think I'm the one
that invented it.
But so talk a little bit about endorphins role in this whole dose effect.
where I think endorphins are fascinating
is actually in stress
and how humanity can cope with stress
because we see stress obviously deeply interconnected
with cortisol like the stress hormone
and obviously that is accurate
there's a significant cortisol hormone at play in our stress
and we think of a lot of stress
as kind of calming ourselves down
how do we calm ourselves down
which is also true like we do need to calm ourselves down
but if you think evolutionarily about stress
stress is very different to all the micro-stress
we experience today on our phones and politically
and different opinions and messages and financial trouble
and all these little things just like mingling at us
and stressing us out and causing cortisol activation.
Stress for our ancestors would have been,
holy shit, like I'm starving hungry,
there's no food, there's no fruit on the trees,
there's no meat out here,
and you're going to have to work physically incredibly hard
to work to find that food.
And your body is going to have to activate hard.
Another form of stress would have been like,
there's a bear over there.
That's going to be pretty intense.
And I'm going to have to like attempt to fight it,
run from it, hide from it.
but again, extreme physical activation under stress.
And in these intense moments of stress,
our body evolved to go into deep physical activation.
And because our body needed something to help it cope
with that intensity on the mind and intensity on the body,
endorphins evolved is this thing that would just flood our system
and take the stress out of the mind and the stress
and the physical pain out of the body
so that you could get super dialed in and survive that situation.
She's not running right from the bear thinking,
oh, I've got a stitch and like, oh, my God, there's a scary bear.
Your body just suddenly goes into like super drive
with no stress in it at all.
Wow.
And these days, like, you might get stressed out,
like little emails, things are stressing out.
And you're just dead sedentary.
You're just sitting in your chair, dead sedentary.
And you think, fuck, I've had like a stressful day today.
And you think, oh, I know it will kind of chill me out,
like a glass of wine and a scroll of my phone
and some chocolate on the sofa.
Like, that might be our, like, stress coping chair.
And I did that, like, for a decade.
I drank my glass of red wine and, like, tried to kind of get rid of my stress
using those tools.
But evolutionarily,
stress literally needs to be physically released from us
because that's how our brain evolves.
And if you can start having a framework where you think, shit, like, I've had a stressful day
today. Like I feel a bit like angry, tense, annoyed, like I've snapped at my partner or whatever
it might be. I've got annoyed at my colleagues. You think, okay, so if I was a hunter-gatherer,
like, I would have gone into intense physical activation. So I've got to get this out of me.
I can't just go chill on the sofa to get this at me. Chilling on the sofa will be great
later on. Like, it's also important to rest. Rest is key. But if you think, right, I've got to walk,
I've got to run up a hill. I've got to push some weights. I've got to freeze myself to death
in a nice bath. I've got to get in a sauna and try and stay in there a while to that.
point where your body's like, wow, this is tough, but I'm going to stay in here. That's how we
activate the endorphins. That's how we get this like tension, stress out of us.
Yeah. Knowing what you know about these neurotransmitters, their interplay in human emotion,
happiness, mood, you know, life connection, you wrote the dose effect. Yeah. And then you came up
with the dose lab. Yeah. And what is the purpose of the dose lab? I mean, is this to help people
understand how these neurotransmitters affect their mood and emotion, their relationships.
Is it a way for people to get a gateway of view into being more in touch with themselves?
What does the lab do?
I mean, something like the underlying philosophy is like the deeper purpose behind it is
I've experienced lots of loss in my life.
That's been one of my biggest driver is seeing people pass away in my family.
I've seen quite a lot of young people pass away, which is like quite a painful journey
to observe.
And it makes life seem really precious.
and you think, like, wow, like, we're getting this, like, experience of life as a human
being, and then we'll, like, have our time. We'll move into whatever, another land, or maybe
it ends. Who, like, who knows what's on the other side? And that precious nature of life has made me
have a deep purpose to think, I wish people could love that experience. Like, whilst you're here,
wouldn't it be great if it was a good time? Yeah. Seems pretty simple. Yeah. Seems pretty simple. It seems
like a great idea. Seems important. And I think for a lot of people, it's not a great time. I think
it's very stressful. I think they're very addicted to things. They're shackled to their phone and
sugar and booze. And I think they're struggling with their mood, their mental health, depression.
And I, that pains my heart. And it pained my heart when I spent 10 years in that state.
And I just think it would be magic if humanity knew that if you lived in alignment with what
your brain chemicals wanted, so much of that pain could leave you and this beautiful life could
follow. Wow. And I think as I look at our real focus in our research, it's very inside our
relationship with technology. We're looking a lot at screen time.
and attention and that addiction to technology.
We spend a huge amount of time in schools with teenagers with their phone relationships.
And I grew up as someone that, like, love technology.
I loved it when I got my iPhone.
I loved gaming.
I just loved that world.
And I think technology has its utility.
But I think we're in a very unique time as a species where we're in this almost
century where we've had 300,000 years of natural humans.
Then we're in this century where we are merging with a new being.
We're creating artificial intelligence and robots.
and there's this interesting interplay
where humans are literally becoming
a new form of species in this life that we're in today.
And I think after 300,000 years of evolutionist humans,
as we make this merge with machine,
it's very, very important.
We don't forget what made us human for 300,000 years.
And I think we will thrive in the face of this technological change
if we hold on to those human characteristics.
But I think if we just go in blindly and think,
oh, maybe that dopamine land in there
where we just nailed Chachibati and Porn and all these things.
It's like, if we think that's going to create happiness, it's not.
And I think if we can hold on to that human nature,
I think we're going to feel good in the face of it.
Wow.
And is the dose effect about helping people manage these neurotransmitters
or just be aware of what's triggering these different neurotransmitters
because as we walked through the interface of, you know,
the website that you showed me,
I thought it was really interesting.
You had scales for different neurotransmitters.
And then you actually had.
solutions for how to return these baselines to normal.
Yeah, and some of them were force bathing.
Yeah, that's one of them.
Actually very cool.
Cold water makes a spark on that deep breathing does.
So is the idea to first make people aware of what these neurotransmitters do in the body?
And then how do you measure them?
I mean, how do you know that I'm having a dopamine rush or an enderfin rush or that I actually lack?
oxytocin because, you know, I'm not having the deep meaningful relationships in my life.
How can I take that information and create something practical in my life where I could
make a change to deepen the meaning, the satisfaction of my life?
Yeah, cool.
So those ideas I shared before, those are kind of the deeper goal.
The goal then of the dose effect is to make it as easy and fast and simple as possible
for the change to occur.
And it is easy, fast and simple.
It actually can change incredibly quickly.
and we've effectively really pursued the gamification process
of how do we make it almost slightly dopaminergic
like I'm having to use some of these dopamine tools
that we've learned to understand
that like if you can get some kind of quick win
quite fast in change you start to think
maybe there's something in there for me
and we've gone through this process
of effectively selecting based on the literature
the 20 most scientifically backed habits
that will optimize the chemicals
and then five live within each chemicals
you've got 20 total five within each one
and we then take people on this journey
of like how can I complete challenges
within each of these different chemicals
in order to begin to create change.
Then once someone takes these different actions,
like one of my favorite, for example,
is flow state in dopamine.
Like our brain loves flow state.
It loves deep immersion in a task
for a prolonged period of time,
just as we did.
And we made those fires and built those shelters
and hunted for that food.
We love flow state.
People will begin experimenting with identifying their flow state.
We, for example,
actually help people identify their flow state
in their social media feed.
Because it's actually quite interesting
because as humans now,
we've actually got into this almost like sedentary, passive state.
But rather than doing the thing we're really good at,
we're watching someone else do it for us on our social media feed.
And if you think, like, what is my thing?
What would be my flow state?
If you look at your social media feed,
there'll be frequently reoccurring videos like cooking or art or sport or music
or fitness-based things.
The reason you're watching it is because your brain is desperate to do it,
not just to watch it.
Oh, wow.
So in that world, a flow state will get someone like testing
like each day, like, okay, how can I access this deepest state of focus, which is just so fun
because then someone starts to like gamify this process with themselves. And in terms of that
question of how do we actually physically feel change? We'll measure deeper stuff when we're doing
our actual intervention-based studies where it's like big questionnaires that people will have
to complete and observations in terms of how they are operating. But if you're just like naturally
thinking, okay, how do I get a good idea as to what's going on? We'll look at these eight different
metrics across your chemicals, two within each chemical. And they will give you a very good
understanding of where your baseline might currently be on each one. So if you just look at dopamine,
for example, if you were to think about your motivation level, like, how willing are you to do
hard things each day? Like, how willing are you to spend 20 minutes cooking a healthy lunch versus
like buying some crap from the supermarket? Or how willing are you to get out bed when you wake
up versus like lying bed and scroll your phone? If you're very willing, your baseline dopamine is
probably actually pretty high at the moment. If you're thinking, fuck, life is hard. I can't
always do anything. I feel apathetic. Your dopamine is probably quite low. The other
Another baseline metric for dopamine would be your attention span.
If you can open a book today and read it for longer than 15 minutes,
it's probably likely that your dopamine is actually doing all right.
If you think, wow, this is hard.
And you do that thing, which I've done so many times,
but you read a few pages and you think,
I was actually thinking about something else the whole time.
Yeah, yeah.
And you get through those pages and you don't remember anything.
Then you go back.
And if it's lower, then your dopamine up, besides it's lower.
And the good thing to understand is that we can all rebalance these things.
So you can create changes in that motivation and that attention fast.
if you live in alignment to what your dopamine desires.
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Now let's get back to the Ultimate Human Podcast.
Wow. So you can actually, so you see the shift. You measure them before, you measure them after,
mainly through what, activities, drawing their attention to this, you know, reducing screen time,
increasing family bonding time. What are like some of the activities that people go through?
I love that I saw force bathing on there. I also saw some things about limiting screen time.
I mean, I think this is just so valuable for kids because if, you know, I remember growing up, my father's
salty Navy captain.
Okay, cool.
Captain John Breka.
Nice.
And my mother was a flight attendant and we, I'm an only child, but my parents were
militant about dinner time.
Okay.
Seven days a week when I was young and, you know, a little less as I got older.
And I didn't realize how much I would miss it when I didn't have it.
But, you know, that was our time.
And we, we, you know, we, my mom always cooked and then we, we, we, we, my mom always cooked.
And then we would all sit down at the table
and that was like our hour or 90 minutes
and parents would ask me all kinds of questions.
I felt very connected to them during that time.
I desperately try to do that even with my adult children now.
We try to once a week get the whole family together.
And, you know, when they leave the house
and I'm going to bed that night,
I just feel this deep sense of satisfaction.
Like something really good just happened.
It's oxytocin.
And nothing.
magical happened other than I spent some really, you know, unique moments with my kids and
with my wife. So I think the younger generation really desperately needs this. I think they're
seeking connection in this electronic world in a way that we never did. Like my kids don't know
what it's like to be bored. They have a choice to just never be bored. Right? I remember being
really shockingly bored as a child.
You know, like if I got off the bus
and we lived in a farm town
and our driveway was like a quarter of a mile long,
by the time I made it around the barns
and made it up to the house,
we only had a telephone.
We didn't have a, you know, cell phones.
There was nothing on TV at that time.
Yeah.
And, you know, if you're in your 50s,
you're old enough to remember,
like cartoons were on Saturdays.
That was the big dopamine.
Programming during the day sucked
unless you were watching, you know,
you know, soap operas or something.
really, really boring stuff.
So I would never turn the TV on.
And sometimes I would just be bored.
It would go out and take a stick and go look for a frog in the stream.
You know, it's just...
For sure.
But I spent a lot of time bored.
I don't remember the last time I was bored.
I don't think my kids have any idea what it's like to be bored.
Cool.
Because they have the choice to not be bored because they can just pick up their phone.
And then here's somebody getting kicked in a head.
And here's a tragic event going on.
And, you know, and here's, you know, goofy meme.
and they're just so distracted.
So going through this exercise of the dose effect,
what is the end result that most of the folks, clients,
that are common to see you?
What drives them to see you?
What's the result that they're seeking?
Yeah, to share some of those points there,
one of the points when we're talking about these young people
and their mental health,
Scandinavian countries seem to be doing a lot better
than the rest of the world in terms of youth mental health.
One of the highest variables in terms of that benefit
and improvement is actually based on family-based meals,
which is interesting, you mention that.
Because eating meals together is not just like some insignificant thing.
It's very important for a kid to feel seen,
to engage with adults, to ask questions, to be asked questions.
So that's cool that you experience that.
And I think that'll be like a central theme that definitely with my new baby that's coming,
like I'll make sure that's a priority.
In terms of what the core is, the core is to break up with the phone.
That is the core thing people are coming towards.
And we'll cover these different things, the nature and all these different areas.
but the central theme is I'm freaking addicted to my phone
and I really want to know how to use it with intention
but not like having this life
which is totally in control of me.
And we created this framework
and we've had about 50,000 kids come through this intervention.
50,000.
50,000 kids have come through this intervention.
But about 35,000 adults come through this intervention.
So we've really got some good data
as to why they're coming and the outcome they're looking for.
That outcome, as I say, is phones.
And we created this framework called phone fasting,
which, as I'm sure you can understand the word fasting.
I've got a three-day water fast coming, so...
Yeah, I mean, you're a good proponent of fasting.
Yeah.
And as it's great with our food, with our intimate and fasting,
with our longer fast to really get the body clean and vitalized,
it has to be considered with the phones too.
We need phone fasting as a consistent protocol within our life.
And for periods of time, that could be longer phone fast.
Like, if it's ever possible to go to a cabin,
spend a couple days off the phone,
like that's a magical thing to take on.
I love the word intermittent phone fast.
And so it's awesome.
We need it. I argue we need it just as much as the food fasting.
I think it's really integral. And we can have these longer fasts from the phone.
And that's cool when it happens. But we also need like a consistent regime that's
happening day in, day out on our phone fasting as the intermittent fasting has offered for the
food fasting world. And we will effectively get them to embed this idea of how do I reach
a point where I can go for 30 minutes when I wake phone fasting before I first see the device.
And that's hard.
Like it's hard to go 30 minutes
before you see the device
and we'll start with five
and we go to 10 and 15, 20
and we gradually work it up.
The reason this is so integral
to the addiction to the phone
and the reason we see in the data
the screen times drop so significantly.
Like we'll see, for example,
in our school-based data in the summer holidays,
screen times are between 10 and 15 hours a day on the phone.
Oh my gosh.
We're looking about 10 to 15 hours
of binging social media content a day
and that you think about what I shared with you earlier
about this kind of like dopamine factory
in these vesicles we need
and how we don't want to dump them all into the reward center.
If that dopamine factory is really low,
no matter how magical your life is,
no matter how much love you receive,
how good your food is, how anything is,
you're going to feel pretty depressed
if there's no dopamine in that system.
You just are because it needs that molecule
to give you that, like, spark in your life.
So we'll see that for teenage sort of generation 10 to 15.
For adults, we'll see anywhere between three and eight.
It varies between about three and eight.
As they embed these phone fasting principles,
for everyone, you'll see about two to three.
three-hour drop in daily screen time, two to three hours a day. For the kids, sometimes we can
get a kid from 15 all the way down to three, but obviously it's a gradual journey. Like it's a,
it's a big process for the younger generation. For adults, it can drop super fast if you adopt
the strategy. The reason the morning phone fast is so integral is our brain as hunts gatherers woke
woke up and it was like, where's my dopamine? Am I starting the fire? Am I going straight out
hunting? Am I looking after the kids? Am I rebuilding the shelter that broke in the wind? Wherever it
finds that source, it's going to think, cool, that's my dopamine source. And I'm going to
attack the shit out of that for the rest of the day. And I'm going to find my dopamine in that
source. If you were to wake up and go straight into the device, and it's like, I'll just get
a little bit of WhatsApp, a little bit of Instagram, quick check, bit of email. Just a peak. I'm
just going to peek. It doesn't matter. It's only a few minutes. Your brain is then primed
as like, all right, this is my source. This is where I'll get my dopamine from the day. What's
the point in the pursuit of anything else? And then all day, you crave
And if, for example, like we help people with vaping, that's another dopamine
addiction, if you wake up and bang the vape, your brain's like, cool,
vape is my source of dopamine all day.
And then you're constantly pulled back towards it.
And your brain will either crave the easy path or crave the hard path,
depending on the decision you make when you open your eyes.
And if a young person, for example, we're not telling them to go and meditate in the woods
for two hours, they just have to wake up, immediately goes to the bathroom and brush their
teeth because there's a boring effortful action, the dopamine begins to generate.
They've got a splash cold water on their face, like it's a journey towards,
the cold showers. They don't have to do the cold shower yet. We'll work it towards
there. And then they've got to go back and they've got to make their bed. And this is the same
for adults. Very simple. Then they can go on their phone the first day. So they wake up,
they brush their teeth, they splash cold, we're on the face and they make their bed. Easy enough
to do. Then they've experienced this feeling of like, oh, I've got a little bit of motivation
in me today. And then they check their phone. And gradually, we start adding different
protocols to that morning in order to begin to progressively increase the length of the phone
fast. That transformation of the morning routine then begins to plummet the screen time.
Wow, that is amazing.
It makes so much sense if that's your first source of dopamine
that that will be your constant source of dopamine.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like if, for example, you've ever had one of those crazy days in your life
where you've drunk alcohol in the morning,
like some kind of crazy holiday or party or whatever it might be.
The hair of the dog, they call it.
It happens.
Like, for people at times, like I party pretty hard,
but I was younger than else.
You're like, I need a martini just to...
There were certain days.
And when alcohol comes in the morning and then it drops back out,
you start thinking like, oh, I might need that alcohol to return to baseline.
Like, you start thinking I'm going to require that source.
If you've ever, like, drunk, for example, like two in the afternoon,
you've had like a rosé or a beer in the afternoon,
whatever it might be.
And say you weren't getting drunk that night and you just had it in the afternoon.
You might notice it's like sudden plummet in how you feel.
A few hours later as the alcohol detoxifies to your body
and the dopamine baseline crashes.
Then your body starts going, well, the only way back up is the alcohol.
And we've got that exact scenario taking place with the phone all day,
every day for all of us, where we're plummeting it.
and then we just live in this wave of addiction.
Whereas if it's beaten, it's like, cool, I'm in control.
I love that.
And I think, you know, again, you know, when we talk about connection,
I think it's we should cautiously say, you know, human connection,
you know, connection to each other,
the people that we love, connection with our purpose,
our sense of community.
And I think so many people, since they don't have any alone time,
like they've never been bored.
They've never actually had that time to be introspective.
and say, you know, who am I?
What am I doing here?
What is my purpose?
Yeah.
You know, what really brings me joy?
I'm so out of touch with my feelings that time is just passing.
And I don't know that I'm really getting deep, satisfying meaning out of my life because I'm just trying not to be bored.
Yeah.
And inability or lack of willingness to just occasionally be bored doesn't allow us.
us to create a lot of the connections I feel in our lives.
It doesn't.
I'd love to add something on that boredom thing because boredom is so fascinating.
Because it's not like a desirable word, boredom.
It's like, oh, I'd love to be bored.
It's like, my wife says it all the time, by the way.
She likes being bored.
Yeah, like she's like, that's a unique character.
Because our life is pretty fast-faced and she's like.
Yeah, true.
Like you always need.
It's like to be bored, but I would like that.
And you could almost reframe it.
We like to call it with the young people low-stem.
We call it like low-stems.
It's like we have high-stim.
Okay, so not bored, low-stem.
One of the things we've got super fascinated by a dose lab, and now we're really pumping
our work towards this, is these two different brain networks, which you may have heard,
we've got the executive network and the default mode network.
Yes.
The executive network being the centre that's active when you're engaged in something,
when you're doing tasks, when you're working, when you're scrolling your phone.
For us right now, like our executive network will be active.
And it's a specific collection of areas within the brain that enable you to focus on something.
A very useful machine.
We then have the default mode network, which is very different.
It will activate when we're bored, when we're dating,
dreaming when we're in deep states of imagination. The interesting thing we're seeing in the
recent research is that an individual that is spending time in the default mode network will begin
to naturally, without any intention, strategize and dream of their future and how they're going
to access that future they desire. They'll begin to naturally ask themselves big questions
because you start wandering along and you're walking out there and you're in your default mode network
and naturally your brain, it's programmed to start thinking like, how do I make a better contribution to
the tribe. How do I improve my life? How do I hunt better, build better and so on? But in our
reality, you start asking yourself, like, how can I like sort out that specific health thing,
my relationship with alcohol, how I contribute to my partner's life, my specific work goal I'm
aiming at, a particular piece of content I need to create and work on. You start to ideate and dream
of how am I going to access that future. And if you spend your life always in distraction,
you're simply reducing your odds of accessing your dreams. And that's the biggest switch for me.
Wow, yeah.
Because I'm just like, because I don't like boredom.
Like, I was a dopamine out in my whole life.
I just want to stimulate.
I used to have my, like, Xbox on with my iPad, with my phone, like smashing them all at once.
Yeah.
And then I came to realize, like, I, of course, want to achieve my dreams.
I want my dreams with my family, my dreams in my work, my dreams with how I'll live.
Like, that's the number one goal is to, like, experience, like, a life that I really love.
And when I started to understand that boredom was how I was going to get it, then it all changed.
I was all right.
I'll open my eyes to the boredom.
I like, I like low stage.
better than bored of it sounds.
Yeah, so I just put myself like in your morning routine, like after work,
like how can I just go low stim as often as possible?
Even when you go to toilet, can you not take your phones?
You're just low stim for a moment.
Can you eat your food without YouTube on?
Low stem for a moment.
Yeah.
When your partner's cooking, could you sit on the sofa and just do nothing for 10 minutes?
Like low stem is where you're going to find the arts to get towards your dreams.
And we need that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I've heard you talk about that.
It makes so much sense.
TJ, you're amazing, amazing, man.
I mean, this is, this is, this is awesome.
I think this is a conversation the world really needs to hear.
Where can my audience find out more about you, find your book, find more about your work?
Yeah, definitely.
So the book is called The Dose Effect.
Yeah.
You can either read it, and it's very visually driven so that it's easy to journey through this book.
Like, I know how hard.
So I'm going to get some dopamine from it.
Okay, good.
Reading is not the easiest task now compared to scrolling the phone.
So the Dose Factor to Read it would be good.
It's, of course, on things like Spotify.
So you can listen.
to it, if that is your choice.
I then have the ironic moment of saying I'm on Instagram, of course.
And effectively, my Instagram is almost like standing in McDonald's handing out
salads, like I'm on Instagram, teaching people like how to maybe use it a bit less
and build a better relationship with technology.
That's at TJ Power on Instagram.
And then all these live experiences, we ran schools, companies all over the world.
That's TJPowder.com.
That's amazing.
So I wind down all of my podcasts by asking my guests, the same question.
There's no right or wrong answer to this question.
And it is, what does it mean to you to be an ultimate human?
I would say to be a dad that can provide and create a beautiful life for the family that
will come in my way.
And in the face of it, feel calm and present with them as I navigate that experience.
Like, that's my ultimate dreams that I feel like healthy.
I'm here for a long time.
Here to watch like grandkids and great grandkids come.
And that I could just like love that experience with them and teach them and learn from them
and like be a great partner to my, to my fiance soon to be my wife.
I think that would be like as I end my life, I would think I was an ultimate human if that
reality came true.
That's amazing.
You'd also leave a really powerful legacy if you did that.
That would be fun.
Yeah.
What a great conversation about connection, man.
I'm so thankful that you came on the podcast today.
I hope my audience looks you up.
We're going to continue to follow your work.
I hope I can have you back again in the future to check in and see how this is going.
As you get more and more data, I think this is going to be more and more fascinating.
So thank you, my friend.
Thank you.
I really enjoyed it.
Until next time, guys, that's just science.