WHOOP Podcast - The Blueprint to Anti-Aging and Longevity with Bryan Johnson
Episode Date: February 16, 2023On this week’s episode WHOOP Founder and CEO Will Ahmed is joined by Bryan Johnson, entrepreneur, venture capitalist, writer, author, and the Founder and CEO of Kernel. Through his research, Bryan h...as become obsessed with slowing down the pace of aging. He has personally been following a daily regimen to increase his endurance, optimize his heart health, and even improve his skin – all in an effort to reverse aging. Bryan and Will discuss why Bryan is passionate about health and wellness (4:25), Bryan’s body on the Blueprint Method (7:25), his sleep and recovery WHOOP data (9:25), variables that impact Bryan’s sleep (12:25), how Bryan tests his body for optimal performance (14:25), his outlook on life since starting Blueprint (17:02), summarizing the Blueprint method (20:20), how he has filtered his relationships and a look into his family life (26:50), society and self-destructive behaviors impacting aging (32:35), the media backlash Bryan receiver when starting Blueprint (38:10), his diet on Blueprint (44:40), society and the government’s role in education around health and wellness (49:00), understanding how to remove your autonomy (52:00), and how we can build the next version of humans (56:50).Resources:KernelBryan Johnson BlueprintTheta WavesRejuvenation OlympicsBryan’s TwitterSupport the showFollow WHOOP: www.whoop.com Trial WHOOP for Free Instagram TikTok YouTube X Facebook LinkedIn Follow Will Ahmed: Instagram X LinkedIn Follow Kristen Holmes: Instagram LinkedIn Follow Emily Capodilupo: LinkedIn
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, folks. Welcome back to the WOOP podcast, where we're on a mission to unlock
human performance. I'm your host, Will Ahmed, founder and CEO of Woop. We've got a great guest
this week, Brian Johnson, who I'm going to get to in half a second. But first, I want to give
a big shout out to Patrick Mahomes, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs that just won the Super Bowl.
I was in the stadium for that game.
What a gutsy and amazing performance by Patrick.
A long time.
Woop member, we've been publishing some of his Woop data during the Super Bowl,
which to my knowledge is actually the first time in the history of the Super Bowl,
that that's been done.
And Patrick wears Woop 24-7, including during games.
So it's pretty fascinating heart rate data.
The spoiler is that his body experienced roughly what a marathon would feel like
for an amateur athlete, and there's some really interesting heart rate data to go with it.
Okay, congratulations, Patrick.
This week, I am joined by Brian Johnson, entrepreneur, venture capitalist, writer, author,
and the founder and CEO of Kernel.
I think most importantly, Brian has become obsessed with slowing down the pace of aging.
He's been personally following a daily regimen to increase his endurance, optimize his heart health,
and even improve his skin, all in an effort to reverse aging.
Brian has been able to reverse his age by five years in just two years, so his biological age
is meaningfully decreasing. He's slowed his pace of aging by 24%. He has 4.8% body fat as
measured by an MRI. He's got over 100 markers that are in the perfect range. And a lot of this
stems from his behaviors and habits, which we get into. I'll also say that he shared all of his
whoop data with us, and he's been able to increase his HRV by close to 20% in the last three months.
He's in the 99th percentile for recovery data, 97th percentile for sleep data. So this is someone
who is looking incredibly healthy on whoop, while also being a hard-charging entrepreneur.
Brian and I discuss on the podcast, his journey as an entrepreneur, his sleep and recovery data,
Brian's blueprint health program where he takes hundreds of measurements on his body every quarter
and really measures the effect on his organs.
It was quite fascinating.
The impact of self-destructive behavior, this was a big theme.
Brian actually talked about removing any notion of his own autonomy in making decisions as they relate to health.
He just fully follows a protocol that he set out for himself.
And you may find that the discipline required to do that is different than you'd perceive it.
I thought it was a pretty interesting topic.
We get into anti-aging.
We talk about society at large and the role that educators, politicians, and more have on wellness.
We also talk a ton about whoop.
If you're new to whoop, you can use the code will when you check out, get a $60 credit on whoop accessories.
We just announced new pricing so you can get an annual membership for $239, which is our lowest pricing ever.
That's all at whoop.com.
And without further ado, here is my conversation with Brian Johnson.
Brian, welcome back to the WOOP podcast.
Hey, great to be here again.
So since we last spoke, I feel like you've become, you know, the leading influencer around health and wellness.
I don't know if that was an intentional pursuit or not, but you've gotten a lot of traction in the space.
I was just playing around, so it's been surprising.
Well, it's been really cool to read all about it and to get to dive in on your Woop data,
which you've given us permission to look at.
I guess before we dive into that, why don't you just explain how you got so into health and
wellness lately and a little bit about your background.
Health and wellness has been of interest to me since I was young.
I was playing high school sports.
A few years ago, though, I got my pilot's license.
And one day I was flying an airplane and I turned on the autopilot.
And it was stunning how well the plane could fly itself.
It had all these different gauges that was monitoring things outside the plane and then making
these micro corrections to keep the plane.
basically motionless in terms of the tilt and yaw.
And that was very different from when I was trying to do it.
When I was using my hands, I couldn't maintain the same kind of precision.
And I wondered, what if we could build a autopilot system for our bodies and our health
that could take care of our health better than we could ourselves?
And that kind of started blueprint in that the measurement systems would be,
can we measure all organs of the body?
can the organs then speak independently and with that data can we reference scientific literature
and then develop protocols. And that's what we've done today is I've built, I guess,
what I call my autonomous self, a system that takes care of my health better than I was able
by myself. Well, we're proud that whoops a piece of that. If you take a second just to think
about being an entrepreneur and, you know, your amazing journey as an entrepreneur, at any point
in that process, did you feel like you were out of shape, you were stressed, you were, you know,
not prioritizing health, or have you always felt like you've had health first?
In building Braintree Venmo, that was in around 2010, the culture then was if you were
ragged and were sleeping under your desk and would go nights without sleeping, it was a badge
of honor, a source of mythology. And so in the entrepreneurial community, you would be
rewarded socially by those kinds of behaviors. And it always struck me as odd that as an entrepreneur,
you're an athlete of the mind. I mean, really, in anything you do in life, you're an athlete of the
mind. And so to impair yourself in such severe ways by doing the self-destructive behavior
just seemed foolish. And so I'm glad that the culture is starting to turn a little bit in greater
awareness, that it's not seen as a badge of honor. It's really seen as foolishness and that you make
inferior decisions when you do that. So now I'd say that my priority has been intensely so.
It was then back in Billy Bridgeview Venmo, it was certainly there, but not as nearly as intense
it is now. And it's also worth noting that you're running kernel, which is a really exciting
company. So it's not like you, you know, just have an enormous amount of free time on your
hands. That's right. I mean, every moment of the day is spoken for with something.
so you know living a great example as a hard charging entrepreneur now let's get into a blueprint and what
you've actually been able to accomplish so you're developing your own anti-aging protocol right that's
that's blueprint and if i look at some data from your website uh you've had a five year age reversal
so this notion of your biological age uh you've slowed your page uh you've slowed your page
of aging by 24%. You've got perfect muscle and fat. So that's MRI. Do you want to just describe
what is perfect from a muscle and fat standpoint? Yeah, we did a whole body MRI looking at muscle and
fat ratios. And so in looking at data sets for optimal clinical outcomes, I was in the 90th percentile
for both. What's your weight and your percent body fat?
163 is my weight and 4.7% this morning on my body fat.
Wow.
You've got 50 plus perfect biomarkers.
What would be included in that?
The typical ones that most people are familiar with, cholesterol, triglysteroides.
100 plus markers that are under your chronological age.
So if you think about common metrics there, what comes to mind?
One foot standing test
VL2 Max
Right
Yeah
One single rep bench press
Distance run in a 12 minute period of time
And your body runs
Three degrees cooler
I actually hadn't heard much about this
Intuitively makes sense
But explain why having your body run cooler
Is a sign a good sign
Part of the protocol is I'm on
25% caloric restriction. So RDA for me is around 2,500. I consume 2,000 calories a day. And as a
result, my body temperature just hangs out in the high 95 points or 95 or 96. Hmm. Fascinating.
Now, you gave us permission to look at your whoop data. So this is Brian versus other males born in
1977. You're in the 99.2 percentile for recovery, which you're also in the 0.8 percent of
recoveries, which is pretty awesome, frankly. Your sleep performance of 97 percent, 18 percent higher
than males in your age group. You rank in the 98.6 percentile, which is pretty amazing. You're in
the top 1.4% of sleep performance, you spend almost nine and a half hours in bed. That's a
pretty remarkable statistic. How did you ramp up your sleep so dramatically?
There's no single thing I do for my health is more important than sleep.
Amen. It's the number one. It's the number.
mean, if sleep is right, life is right. And when it's off, everything feels worse. And so I,
you know, I guess as a family cultural thing, for example, when our bedtime arrives, it doesn't
matter what we're doing as a family, what conversation we're having, what movie we're watching,
it does not matter what is happening. That moment strikes, everyone runs to their bedrooms.
And we do this in a dramatic fashion in a playful way, but it reminds us how seriously we take
sleep and that, you know, how conscious existence is depends upon that night's rest. And so I do the
things you would expect. I have a blacked out room. I have temperature controlled bed. I fast for,
I guess it would be around 10 hours before bed. My resting heart rate needs to be around 46 to 48.
I know when I get that right before I go to bed, my sleep will be great. I wear blue like blocking glasses
two hours before. But I basically, I'm trying to think of all the things I do. I've been fine
tuning this for years. And, you know, having a whoop as my feedback mechanism is extremely
helpful. I'm trying things every single day. And I now have these deep intuitions on what will
and what work. When I typically lay down to go to bed, I usually can predict how well I'm going
to sleep. Because I've done this, you know, hundreds of times sleeping and then seeing the data.
And so I now have these models that are pretty accurate.
And you've also created a lot.
It seems like you've isolated for a lot of variables.
Like even just your sleep consistency is remarkably high for an entrepreneur
and probably for someone who has to travel from time to time.
If you think about variables you've tried that haven't really made a difference
or things that you kind of sense, oh, if this is this, you know,
I'm not going to have quite as good of a sleep.
What comes to mind?
I'll tell you a few things that caused negative results in sleep.
If I eat certain foods like heavy carbohydrates, I never do, but when I have in the past,
like any breads or pastas, that will result in decreased performance.
If I eat too closely to bedtime, that will as well.
If I don't have a one hour or so wind down period to get my brain in some kind of stabilized
state where it's run out of the loops of the daily activities, that will also be negative
when I try new therapies, I'm always doing something new at Blueprint.
And sometimes the first or second time I do a therapy, it will have disruption in my
HRV and sleep.
And so, yeah, there are a few things I watch out for, and I try to control for as many as I can.
What would be an example of a therapy?
For example, I was, I tried a new product this week that was using electromagnetism to induce
better sleep that sat just below the pillow and I did it was a 60 minute go to sleep thing
and I did for 20 minutes and I woke up 30 minutes later and I had a headache and that night
I think my deep was something like an hour 20 versus you know they're on two where it should be
I've tried that pillow product actually I two two people who are crazy enough to try that I didn't
have good results either yeah so sometimes it's a initial result and then I can if I
level set over a few days.
But yeah, so something like that.
But it's nice.
I have this feedback device where I can fill it in the morning,
but then the data confirms what I'm feeling is right.
I imagine you've gotten quite good at feeling what's happened to your body.
But what are examples where you've been like a little surprised almost by the results?
I've been working on my HRV for quite some time now,
almost doubling it since I started Blueprint.
And recently in the past few weeks, I've been using theta waves.
So I just listened to the theta waves for a half hour before bed.
That's dramatically improved my HRV, surprisingly, just putting on the headphones and listening
to this before I go to bed.
And what exactly is that?
It's a video on YouTube.
It's theta frequency.
And I forget, I forget how exactly, I forget how we discovered this.
but it's had an initial spike of my HRV and it's sustained increase of HRV.
And we've been trying everything for HRV.
We do the vagal nerve stem, like five or six different devices and, you know,
caloric restriction also has improved it.
So we maybe have like 10 or 15 attempts now at improving HRV and cycling through.
This one is now a few weeks strong still going.
So these surprising interventions.
Well, we'll include that one in the show notes.
And when folks, when Brian says he's tried everything, you can trust that he's trying everything.
Well, I've got the data here, actually, to back this up.
So your HRV's risen from 43 to roughly 51 in the last three months, which is, you know, about a 20% increase.
So that's a big deal.
And it also looks like your REM sleep has improved about 20% over a similar time frame.
What do you think is driving that?
I'm uncertain on the rim.
I would say that the, you know what?
It could also be the theta.
Sleep has just been higher quality.
Yeah, it could be that.
Yeah, when I first started, I think my earliest swoop data,
I think my HRV was hovering in the mid to low 30s.
Yeah, which is, which is, you know, a lot of these things are somewhat genetic.
but going from 30 to you know 50 plus is a huge increase and I think people underestimate as you get older
just in general your HRV naturally declines so if you can actually make it go up that's a that's
another hugely reinforcing perspective on anti-aging yeah I'd say if you looked at my stats
initially when I started gathering this on a daily basis it looks like a profile of
of an entrepreneur, like a, you know, a hard, grinding, stressed out person.
So it's just taking some time to reconfigure that.
What would you say has been the sacrifice of some of this progress?
I would flip that question and say,
what expansions have I experienced in life because of it?
This is, I like to refer to myself as a professional rejuvenation athlete.
And when someone looks at, you know, how LeBron James is his daily regimen of exercise
and taking care of his body and his sleep, not many people are making the observations
that he's crazy or that, you know, he must be poorly sacrificing things in life.
I mean, he's devoted himself to becoming excellent at his profession.
It's just in the frame of when you say, okay, this person is an everyday person.
And therefore, the norms that we apply to them are this, and he does that, therefore, it's weird.
But if you apply that I'm a professional rejuvenation athlete, then you understand my lifestyle may be structured to achieve those objectives.
And so weirdly, I'd say most people will, like they look at me and they look at this thing and they immediately go in their mind of all the things that potentially lose in life and all the things that they would lose in life.
Like you can't have a bagel for breakfast and your wine with.
friends and blank, blank, blank, they think it's a, I must be miserable. I must have severe loss
of all things of joy. And my life, the reality has been the exact opposite. I've never experienced
more joy. I've never been happier. I've never been more fulfilled. I've never had better social
environments. I've never had better friends. So it's been entirely expansive to me. It's not been a
loss at all. Well, it's a really helpful framing. I mean,
The reason that I think it can be helpful to introduce the notion of sacrifice is that
for people to make a transition like the one you've made, they have to make changes.
And there's going to be things that they previously enjoyed.
Yes, there's a new path to enlightenment that you're describing, right?
But there was probably things in a person's life.
Maybe it's drinking beer while watching a football game.
maybe it's staying up late and watching a movie like there's things like that that someone
previously enjoyed that you're suggesting if you can meaningfully shift you'll come to a new
form of enlightenment that'll make you happier exactly it's like monkey bars so you've got your
hands on two different bars you let go of one bar and you need to reach out and grab the next
bar now monkey bars are easier because you can see what the target of the next bar is
But oftentimes in life with something like this, you don't know what's going to replace your current sources of stimulation and joy.
And so like you're saying, if it's a beer and watching football, it's very hard to let go of that rung and reach out to the next one.
You don't know what's going to replace it.
So it's really just this fear of loss and not knowing where your source of joy is going to be.
But I can tell you my source or, it's, it is better being on this side of the equation than the other.
if you think about the the blueprint program for a second blueprint method what are like what would be
you know sort of a general summary for people who haven't who haven't had a chance to research it
it's the idea that the fountain of youth is a story as old as humanity and typically it's people
in a boat in the jungle traveling to a temple to drink in a magic elixir and what i wanted to propose was
is the fountain of youth here right now,
it's just hiding in tens of thousands of scientific publications
and a lot of really hard work.
And so my team and I, there's 30 of us on this team.
We've scoured all the literature, not all,
like we've scoured the literature we think is relevant to this project,
and we've assessed where we think the highest potential interventions are.
And then I've agreed that I'm going to elevate all the organs of my body
as they're measured through every measurement modality.
Clinical grade protocols are created.
and then I follow it with perfection.
And so it's a system of measurement, science, and protocol that runs my body, not my brain.
So I'm not reading blog posts.
I'm not listening to the latest advice on Blink.
It is a system of scientific discovery.
And so this first phase has really been about how dramatically can we slow the rate of aging.
And that's, like you mentioned, it's been 28% that I've slowed how fast I age.
As a result, my epigenetic age was reversed 5.1 years.
All these other things happened as a result, but I achieve near-perfect health in these
optimal clinical outcomes.
Phase two of Blueprint is going to be reversing the aging damage that has happened.
And so we haven't even got to age reversal yet in our endeavor.
It's just been, the reductions we've seen have been a result of trying to slow down
the rate of aging.
And so I think really the summary of blueprint is the science of slowing aging and reverses,
seeing the AMA aging damage that has happened is here right now. It's just hiding in publications
and an extremely rigorous protocol. But as a society, it's extremely exciting that it's here. It's
not somewhere in the distant future and something that we have to wait for. It's here right now.
What are some of the protocols that go with it? So you mentioned measuring all of your organs,
for example. Like, what does that process look like? We take hundreds of measurements every
90 days. And that's the ones you would expect, blood, saliva, stool, urine, MRI, ultrasound,
fitness test, DNA methylation, microbiome. We test everything we can that we can map to
evidence-based medicine. So everything is looking at gold standard scientific evidence,
and then again, the clinical grade protocol. But yeah, I mean, I get poked and prodded and
imaged and tested all day every day. And so we're, and I publish all my data. So this is, we're not
saying that Blueprint is the only way this can be done. People can maybe do a better job than
what we've done. It's simply trying to demonstrate a process of the measurement evidence protocol
process. And how long have you been doing it for? Two years. So in those two years,
what would be a few areas where you've seen the most dramatic improvements? I mean,
generally speaking, I've never felt better in my entire life. I was accustomed as an entrepreneur
to the peaks and valleys of life, great days, terrible days. And now my life is extremely
consistent and stable. I rarely feel emotional arousal. I rarely get upset over anything. So I'd
just say the stability of my life is dramatically improved versus the whipsaw I was on before.
my body, I can compete with my boys, my 17 or 19 year old on the basketball court or
trail running or whatever, I'm right there with them in every physical form, which is amazing.
I have zero aches and pains, not a single thing in my body hurts.
My sleep is wonderfully restorative.
I wake up every day feeling energetic and great.
I never really, I never thought I could feel this good in life.
do you uh do you drink coffee i don't i have i have a few cups of tea a day
and they'll have caffeine in them yeah so it's about 60 milligrams of caffeine per day
from a uh a green tea concoction you measured uh you mentioned not feeling not getting upset
and i'm curious uh if you've introduced some type of meditation or breathing techniques as part of this
process. Yeah, I do. I do have breath work. And I've kind of incorporated into my daily
life. Like I'll stop throughout the day, maybe five to ten times and breathe for two or three
minutes. And again, this is what loopers really helped me. I just, I pull up my heart rate and I can
control very, I mean, with great accuracy where I'm going up and down. And so being able to pull
it open and just watch it go down has really helped me calm myself throughout the day. I mean,
Yesterday, for example, I was with some friends and we were driving and I did something that perturbed
the person behind me.
I don't know what I did, but they immediately accelerated and got inches away from hitting
the back of my car.
They had a nice car.
And then he's swerving around me, flips me off.
Like, he just went into this absolute fit.
And I guess it was such a sober moment for me because I thought, this is unbelievable that we
as humans, like we explode in this emotional anger over the slightest slight on the road. And
like we imperil two people to their death and these cars like, you know, they're so expensive.
And I don't know, it just made me reflect a lot on our emotional stability as species, you know,
of how it's wild. And I felt this. I know this. I mean, it's not really an issue in my life
now, but really caught me in the moment of sobriety of just realizing how wild our emotions are
and turbulent they are. I mean, I imagine that there's got to be some filtering as well of your
relationships over the past two years, just listening to you talk about how stable you feel
and also how sensitive in some ways you may be to other people who aren't. Like, have you found
that you've had to do a little bit of filtering with the way, you know, with your relationships
and maybe weed some people out.
I mean, even going back to Braintree, I guess the culture has been inspired by Ernest Shackleton.
The culture of the team has always been something that I've cared about the very most in building
teams.
And we've always had extraordinary people, low drama, low politics, low backbiting,
just a group of extraordinary people trying to do something.
something very hard where 99% of the attention is focused on the task and 1% on the other
peripheral stuff behind the scenes. But I'd say that's really how I've built the majority of my
life is I just don't have high drama, high poll, high politic people in my life. It's just not
where I'm at it. It doesn't suit me well. And what's your family life like? Married kids.
Yep, I have one son living with me. He's 17. He's finishing his senior.
year and we're best friends. We do everything together. We pile around and it's such a
rewarding experience to, for him to be growing up in this time and place. And so I just cherish that
relationship more than anything. I've got a 19 year old son who's at college and then a 13 year
daughter middle school she's with her mother got it and and do you find that they are as equally
excited about sleep and good habits as you are like i mean how have you been able in a way if you can
figure out how to teach your kids to to get bought into this maybe there's a lesson for the rest of
society i'll tell you the most effective thing i've done with the kids because for years for example
I tried to get them to wear sunscreen, and they would always just blow me off.
And so I have this device at the house in the clinic, it does multispectral imaging.
So it gives you, you know, 10 or so data points on your face, UV spots, brown, reds, you know, poor size, etc.
And when you get in there, your face, you look like a zombie because it shows you these things you can't see with the naked eye, and it reveals damage, sun damage.
And so I had my children do this, and they saw all the damage on their.
face from the sun that they couldn't otherwise see from their plump you know faces and they were
terrified and now they were sunscreen so the fastest way to get them to change their behavior has been
through measurement showing them what the effect is on their body when they do a certain thing
well it's funny the most common messages i get about whoop are from people where the product
has improved their life directly but the second most common messages i get are from parents
who have their kids on whoop.
And they're like, you wouldn't believe this.
My son now goes to bed early.
I don't have to talk to him about it.
So it's very funny.
Yeah.
And it's, I mean, our data, you know,
all of my children have whoop devices.
So, and some are better than others in wearing them.
My 17-year-old is like me.
But it is a common conversational topic in the house.
You know, what was your recovery?
What was your deep?
What was your resting heart rate?
What was your HIV?
And we pattern match it to our lifestyles.
and what we do together.
So it is absolutely a common language that it captures our life in ways that we both,
we both care about.
Do your kids have high HRVs?
I will say that we have a team and I'm, I regularly beat them on several things.
Very political answer.
It's interesting. I've found that teenagers, often teenagers who play sports, just genetically
have higher HRVs. I think it's something about being that young, but it sounds like you're
in the mix with them. Have you ever tried wearing blue light blocking glasses before bed?
I do it daily.
Yeah. How long do you wear them before bed?
Two hours.
Yeah, we're in the same camp on that one. That for me was the single biggest game changer for
sleep in recovery
and I became so obsessed with them
it's in part why WOOP now has our own blue light blockers
because I figured we could design them better
and I wanted to be able to control exactly
the amount of blue light that we blocked
especially with the red filter
I'm going to send you a pair
I'm bummed you're not using the Woop ones
I didn't know you had it by the way
yeah yeah we came out with them a few months ago
and they actually sold out
but I'll send you a batch.
And for those listening, part of the reason blue light blocking glasses are so valuable
is that if you're looking at screens before bed, that could be a television set,
that could be a cell phone, it's emitting blue light.
And the blue light to simplify the equation, stimulates your brain to be awake.
And so if you can wear blue light blocking glasses, it's like a get out of jail free card
for looking at screens
and it naturally makes you sleepier.
Is that fair, Brian?
That's fair.
Yeah, I never deviate from one of those.
The routine is locked in, yeah.
And I wouldn't, uh,
it's now so a part of the routine.
It's just six o'clock, it goes on.
Now, do you find that you're, uh,
you, like you, you don't travel anymore or, you know,
you, you, have to the,
a lot of, I don't know, dinner parties or certain social gatherings because they disrupt
the regimented routine that you're on?
I have a much higher bar for what will get me out of the house.
Yeah.
And so I'd say, so I've also started to shift things to other times.
So I've been hosting Blueprint Brunches.
I call it the First Supper.
And so we get together.
We talk about health and wellness and the future of being human.
I think there's this really interesting conversation.
If we really zoom out on planet Earth and say what is really happening and what is this
moment and time. Like every generation has their opportunities to do something that define the
future generations. And I think now is aging is one of them, slowing the rate of aging and
reversing aging. And in doing that, rethinking ourselves. And so I, I like the, you know,
companies like yours that are building these closed loop systems that enable humans to intuitively
and intuitively and with data build themselves into a better life and then take.
take baby steps and do it further and further. But I do think there's a special moment in time we're
at right now that we can map a different potential, a different horizon of human potential
than has ever been possible before. And so I think in doing that, social events take on a different
meeting to me, you know, going out and doing certain things or it really is about this larger
objective of what we can become as a species. I think you're absolutely right. And
And certainly my perspective on it through whoop is the fact that we now have sensing and computing at a level that you can continuously measure the body 24-7 and very quickly figure out the status of an individual or what's working for them or what they need to change about their lifestyle, their behaviors.
I do wonder, though, if you fast forward, like, are you almost looking at two very distinct populations amongst humanity where
you have one population that is pushing 100 and kind of accelerating past, right? And if you were to look
at, call it that percentage of humanity, maybe it's 5 or 10 percent of humanity, on a percentage
basis, their age is so much older than the prior top 5 or 10 percent, right? So you're like
pulling this top end of society up. Like if you keep doing what you're doing and barring no
accidents like i think there's a legitimate case to be made you could live to be 120 or something like
that but on the flip side you also have all these indicators that uh are incredibly negative right
like uh we can blame this in part on covid but for the first time in about 40 years life expectancy
declined in the united states over the past two years uh you do see obesity increasing
you see cardiovascular disease increasing.
You know, what do you make of this?
Do you agree with the way I'm thinking about it,
or do you think there's potential to pick all of society up
and bring everyone along for this age reversal?
I'd like to think about this in terms of self-destructive behaviors.
So every day when we navigate the world,
we need to, in driving to work, we need to pass McDonald's and Starbucks that has the sugar
drinks and, you know, 50 other possible temptations of engaging in some kind of self-destructive
behavior. Food that we know is not going to be good for us. It's going to lead to bad things.
And then we need to navigate social media algorithms, TikTok and others. Then we need to
navigate streaming late up to the night and then drinking with friends and then and then late
nights without friends the we have a culture of self-destructive behavior that is cheered on by our
social norms and it's people looking for arousal in the forms of food and how you know
digital algorithms and whatever else and I don't know how to measure this but if you say
on the timescales of human history, how much self-destructive behaviors being committed on a daily
basis by the human race? And is it potentially higher than it ever has been just because it's never
been easier to engage in these behaviors? And they've never been more powerfully addictive,
which goes back to the first of our conversation. When someone looks at me and they say,
oh, man, you must be miserable. That's a defense mechanism of saying, I'm not sure if I want to
move my hand from this this rung of the monkey bar to the next one because i don't know where
i what i can grab a hold to that's going to give me my form of pleasure and so to me it really is
a defining attribute of our time is how addicted we are as a society to the self-destructed behaviors
and it's invisible to us because we celebrate it and endorse it by and by ostracizing people who
don't participate in it like me and i actually saw that like you know as you came out with blueprint and
You know, my gut reaction, if you had told me, hey, Will, I've come up with Blueprint.
I'm really focused on longevity.
As someone who's been in the space for like over a decade, I would think that'll be generally received warmly or it'll generally be received by people who are interested in it or curious in it.
But I think you saw a lot of media backlash, am I right?
Like maybe talk a little bit about that.
Yeah.
Yeah, this was really a, I was just messing around with Blueprint when I started.
It was like this open question, where are we with the Fountain of Youth?
And I started blogging about it publicly and I started sharing all my data.
I'm like, hey, here's what I'm doing.
Here's what I'm trying out.
And then this article just blew up.
And it was like it had 100 kilotons of raw energy underneath it.
And it lit and it just blew up in every direction.
And so, yeah, the amount of vitriol and hate.
was unreal. And to be clear, I loved every second of it. Like, you know, the hate makes me so
happy. All the blowback made me happy. It was such a beautiful thing. And it's not, I mean,
it certainly, uh, I was a part of the conversation, but I think what's really happening,
there's a lot of internal dialogue going on with people. And they're just saying it out loud
and using me as the foil. But it's, this is very deeply interwoven in people.
psyche and society is a psyche. So the conversation is not so much about me. It's about society
and each person inside their own head. When you say you loved it, what did you love about it?
It just gave you a sense, like a sense of resolve and a sense of energy for what you're doing.
It makes me laugh. I mean, I find it so funny. I mean, it's like, for example, when I hear people say
they don't dare look at the comments section,
you know, on a video on YouTube
because the comment section is typically brutal.
I mean, don't we all have a comments,
an equal comment section in our brains about our own selves?
Like, don't we walk away from interactions and say,
I can't believe I said this or I shouldn't have said that
or I was so bad at this.
I mean, aren't we doing the same thing to ourselves all the time?
And it's just a macro phenomenon of what we already experienced.
And so to me, this is just how it's a beautiful mapping
of the craziness of being human.
What was the rudest thing someone said?
I actually made a list.
My team and I went around the internet
and we found the sharpest insults.
And like some of these,
you could tell people put a lot of effort
into constructing the most hurtful possible thing.
And I put a list together and I shared all of them.
I'm trying to think of some good ones.
There were some pretty good zingers.
I mean, a lot of people, they'll comment on my appearance, you know, saying that I look like a vampire or, recently an elf from the Lord of the Rings.
I need to think, I need to go through the list. There were some pretty good zingers in there.
Okay. Well, you know, the cultural piece that you talked about eloquently, I think rings true.
I mean, if someone's really going to attack you for this way of life,
they're also saying to themselves that they have to have certain things that you're now not doing.
And so it is an internal dialogue happening out loud or on Twitter or wherever a lot of these comments are surfacing.
And, you know, the way you're living is very disruptive, right, from a cultural standpoint.
You're saying, I don't need all of these things.
I don't need these little chocolates.
I don't need these types of meals.
I don't need a disruptive bedtime for social activities.
I don't need alcohol.
I don't need smoking.
I don't need, you know, all these different things.
And instead, actually, I'm going to use my free time to enhance a lot of aspects of my body.
I mean, people are reacting to the fact that they're not spending any time enhancing their body.
And in fact, when they get free time, they're going to lean into what you are now defining as a destructive experience.
So your way of life is they find very threatening, I imagine.
Yeah, and to be clear, the expectation of the blueprint is not that people are going to do what I do.
It's hard.
And they don't have the infrastructure I do.
So it's an unfair situation.
What I'm trying to point out is the.
insanity of our current society. And specifically, it is unfair for us to imagine an individual
being able to navigate the terrain of self-destructive addictions. They get thrown at them on a
daily basis and expect them to be able to somehow win in this gauntlet. It is crazy. We cannot
expect people to survive the addictive, the addictive things that hit, get hit on them every
single day. And so we need to approach this. Blueprint needs to be enabled by default in society.
It just needs to be the norm. And so this is the interesting thing. I pose this question at these
blueprint brunches is I pose the thought experiment. Imagine if a system, you could sign up for a
system that was personalized to you and it would take care of you entirely. Like you just have to
say yes. And saying yes means you have to follow the protocol, which means you go to bed when the
protocol says, you eat the foods. The protocol says you just abide by it generally. Now,
there's going to be some tradeoffs you're going to have to make in life. But in exchange,
you get, you know, as perfect health as you could potentially achieve. So a system takes better
care of you than you're able to. Would you say yes to that deal? And this is where we're going.
I mean, I've proven it with myself is my system does in fact do a better job taking care of me than I'm
able by myself. And so it is expensive right now and it's going to come down on the cost curve.
but eventually it's going to get to a society.
Like, we're all going to face this question.
Do we say yes to this?
Now, like, you can take that in a dystopic way.
You can take that in a utopic way.
There's so many follow-on conversations,
but the basic principle is true
is algorithmic abilities increasingly get better.
And it taking care of our health and wellness
is a very natural step.
It's an obvious step.
It's an inevitable step.
And I've just proven it out to show proof of concept.
Yeah, I love.
I love the way you're describing it and just the general openness you also have to the rejection
of it.
We haven't talked that much about diet, which I imagine is a big component.
And I've got some notes here on it.
But why don't you describe what your diet looks like today?
It's caloric restriction.
So that means 25% less than my RDA, so 2,000 calories a day.
It's 3 mils a day from 6 a.m. to about 11 a.m.
So I eat in a roughly a five to six hour window.
And it's for breakfast, I have a few pounds of vegetables, broccoli, cauliflower, ginger, garlic, lentils, black lentils.
And then I have a mid-morning, I have a pudding, which is macadamia, nuts, walnuts, flax seeds,
pomegranate seeds, berries, sunflower lachin, cinnamon.
And then a third meal the day, which is vegetables, berries, nuts, and seeds.
And so it's vegan by choice.
I mean, certainly it is not say anything about meat other than this can be done on a vegan diet.
Others potentially do their own version.
And then I take 104 supplements.
And so the objective with this is, again, the algorithm of how do you, if you measure every organ of the body and you inquire of every organ, what do you need to be ideal?
And then it outputs its needs list by sharing the data, you know, in terms of imagery or function.
And then we take all the inputs of food and supplements and we try to create that perfect diet.
And so it's entirely a closed-loop system that is fed on data.
So the supplements vary based on the results.
That's right.
And how dramatically do they vary?
like when you go from taking a lot of one to zero of it at this point it's fine-tuned and that's
why i share i mean i've spent millions of dollars building this and i share all of it for at
no cost with everybody anybody can implement blueprint and i share all the recipes all the supplements
in fact since this is uh you know exploded nobody can buy stuff anymore like everyone's sold out
for months of everything and so it's kind of frustrating but yeah it's pretty stable and fine-tuned at this
point. Is it possible for you to pinpoint some of the key supplements that you feel
like made? Like if you could only have five of the hundred, would it be easy for you to pick
those five? Yeah, people often, I mean, that's a great question. And people are
wisely looking for power laws. And when they start going into this conversation, my mind
immediately goes to, okay, if you are expressing an interest in doing something, number one,
stop self-destructive behavior.
There's no better thing you can do for your health
than stopping self-destructive behavior because we know this.
We go to the gym.
We do well.
And then afternoon comes or like, you know, I worked out this morning.
I'll have a second helping or I'll have this dessert because I've worked out this morning.
It leads to these kind of behavior.
So one, stop the self-destructive behavior, prioritize sleep,
you know, do something about exercise and eat more vegetables, berries, and nuts.
But oftentimes I find that people want to get into these highly,
technical debates, NR versus NMN or this supplement versus that supplement.
Meanwhile, they're sinking with the self-destructive behavior and not getting sleep.
And so it's better to focus the attention on getting the basics right than someone trying
to soothe their own suffering by feeling like they're doing something by taking the supplement.
It sometimes leads to worse outcomes.
Well, I appreciate the way you're framing this because the headline is 102 supplements,
but what you're essentially saying is that's kind of an afterthought if you don't nail
sleep, exercise, and diet.
That's right.
If we take a different direction for this conversation, what do you feel is society's role,
the government's role, like in better education around health and well-being?
I mean, even as you were just describing your diet,
I was thinking about how fucked up that food pyramid is.
And I'm sure you've looked at this.
Maybe you can even describe that for our audience.
But just the way that there's just been so much misinformation
around what's good for you and what's bad for you.
I mean, I think there's a sport of complaining about politicians
and their worthlessness.
us, but aren't politicians just a mirror to us?
Aren't they just showing us back in our own reflections?
And so aren't they enacting the policies that we are responsive to?
And if that's the case, then what does it say about us, you know,
and that we are creating the same problem we're complaining about?
And in doing this for myself and trying to solve my own problem of self-destructive behaviors,
it was very counterintuitive because the solution was to remove my mind as the problem solver.
So I know when my mind gets engaged of looking at a menu, trying to decide whether to eat or going into the pantry and perusing or going to the grocery store, my mind is so prone to selecting self-destructive behaviors, it's, its power is uncheckable, right?
It's like it's always doing bad things.
And so when I, when I agreed to, to the blueprint, it was, I agree my mind no longer has authority because I know when my mind does, it's going to make the wrong decision more than.
than half the time easily, if not, you know, higher bounds there. And so I remove my mind as a
problem solving thing. So your question, how do we think about this as a society and government
and the government's recommendations? I would say the human mind is potentially the biggest
stumbling block to the human race. The exact thing which we think is meant to solve all of our
problems may be the thing causing all of our problems and i've proven that with myself like i i
had this goal alignment problems within brian i had my i was balkanized and at war with myself
inside of me with all my organs and once i was able to allow them to speak and to then do goal
alignment with itself i achieved world peace inside of me and that's the first time of my entire life
i'd done that versus my mind being a tyrannical force of authority jamming itself around all over the place
and so to me it really is i don't think there's any like simple policy or changing the food
pyramid or this politician doing that thing it's i think it is uh genuinely a moment in time
where we can reconsider ourselves the species and imagine things we've never done before
well it was a really beautiful way you described that because in a sense like i'm listening
to you and i'm reading about you and i'm thinking to myself you know he has this enormous
discipline but the way you're framing it it's almost like you've just turned off uh you know an
aspect of your own autonomy and you're just following now the script and that's taking you to
the promised land exactly and it's there's a fascinating i mean there's a fascinating fascinating
fascinating psychology in that.
So, I mean, like, if you want to do the experiment yourself, like, I had this, my biggest
issue was nighttime Brian from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m. that version of Brian was an absolute rascal.
So the day would come to an end. I would feel the stresses of being a founder entrepreneur.
I would, you know, have a fight with the partner after putting the, bathing the kids and
putting them to bed. And then all the stresses of whatever's happening in life. And then I would be
feeling you know right we know this feeling like feeling awful and i would try to soothe my pain
with food and overeat eat the wrong kind of stuff until i was sick and i couldn't stop my behavior
it was just i was out of control no matter what i tried i couldn't stop it and so i playfully one day
said evening brian you're fired you are no longer authorized to eat food no matter the situation
doesn't matter if it's a birthday party your kids party a special occasion it doesn't matter you
cannot eat food anymore because you have shown to be totally unreliable and you ruin life for
everyone else morning brian sleep brian everyone else is miserable because of you and what i saw on a
daily basis is when 5 p.m rolled around evening brian would show up like hey everyone i'm here
how about just today what about just a little bit what about let's just test this one little
experiment and i got to see him in action and i would say no even brian you are destructive
you're manipulative, you're just, you're a monster, you know, and I'd watch, in my mind,
I'd watch him fall on the floor and throw a tantrum and punch a hole in the wall.
He would be so offended because his authority was revoked.
But having this internal dialogue of realizing all this chaos that was happening inside
of me was so illuminating.
And so I've then deconstructed the rest of myself.
And so if you want to see yourself, like, try to take that introspective approach and watch
watch yourself in action.
It's a really interesting movie.
well behavior change is something we think a lot about at whoop and i'm often asked oh how did you
begin ex-habit uh people ask me a lot about meditating because i've done it for a while and i i always
say like do it every day and in some ways my because people are like well could i start three times a week
and i say if you do it every day it's not a choice right and if you have to have choice in the matter
it actually makes it harder.
And in a lot of ways, what you're describing is in a very extreme version of that.
I'm curious, was there a step in between, you know, removing all autonomy?
Was there some form that, like, was there some maybe more of a discipline-oriented
muscle that you tried to flex into this and then realized, no, I've just have to remove all
autonomy. Yeah, the first step was identifying the worst version of myself, which was Even
Brian, and then mapping out a specific plan. So this, you name the person, you identify when
they show up, you identify all of their arguments, and then you identify the rebuttals you're going
to say. You just read through the script. And you need to build the intuition and power over time,
because you're going to lose the argument sometimes. Like, even though you know Evening Brian's
going to show up and they start you know he starts putting forward his arguments you're going to
lose initially a few times like okay let's do your experiment maybe it's going to work and so once
you tackle that portion then it's just taking these small building uh baby steps into building up
the scaffolding and so just a win or two a day and get you enough momentum where you can finally
to a point and be like you know what i'm good this whole thing is mapped out into a system
I fully realize that every time I give myself freedom of choice in these situations,
I'm more likely to lose than not.
And what's been interesting about this whole pattern is I now,
the idea of eating fast food, junk food, bad food is repulsive to me.
So people oftentimes ask you, are you, do you get a cheat day?
Do you want a cheat day?
How do you stop?
I don't want to do it.
It sounds awful to me.
yeah and that's being fully on the other side i get it i think there's a lot of really interesting
psychology behind what you're doing as well and in terms of thinking about destructive experiences
thinking about your own relationship with yourself and autonomy uh but i mean overall i love that
you're putting all this out there uh it's awesome that you're on whoop in the process so big fan of
that anything uh anything you want to leave us
with, like, where can people find more information about you and blueprint?
Yeah, I would say that the final thought I'd have is, you know, the community that you guys
have built at Woop is a unique opportunity and that I would imagine the characteristics
of people who wear your devices are those who are generally more disciplined, they're interested
in well-being. They're bringing their A game to life. That's not true.
I mean, life is very hard, and many people are in difficult circumstances.
I would imagine you have this interesting group of people.
And if we're posing this question, you know, in parallel to humans,
we're building this new form of intelligence in AI that is improving at a staggering rate.
And if we say, how could we put humans on a growth curve that is compounding?
because our growth curves are very different.
Like we make the same mistake thousands of times in our life,
which is weird as the most intelligent species of the planet.
That's crazy.
We do that.
And so what's interesting to me about WOOP is if we really start your community is
if we really begin imagining what is possible to human race,
you've got a group of people that if we built the closed loop system of improvement,
where they were no longer committing self-harm
and these protocols could be implemented
at the speed of scientific discovery in real time,
you're building the next version of human in real time
at a rate that is compounded.
And even if we can't expect everyone to do that,
that's just not realistic in society,
but if we can show it's possible
and show proof of concept and paint the excitement,
that thing gives the willpower to rebuild society
around these new norms.
Because humans are incredibly good at norm keeping.
If the norm is to go to bed at the same time, if you get social rewarded for going to bed at the same time or eating your vegetables, people are really good at that.
It's just when the non-norms, which are hard.
And so I guess I like what you're doing, Will, at Woop.
And I hope that we can provide proof of concept demonstrations that will begin to change what we want to aspire to.
Because really, you know, with our generation in the early 21st century, what do we aspire to as a species?
We just, we haven't answered that question, and it's high time we do.
It's right there in our front of our face, and we can pose it, and we can start making our answers.
Well, thank you for that.
And, you know, it's interesting to think about how WOOP has changed people's behaviors against destructive experiences.
The most profound, one of the most profound things is around alcohol, where we just see a massive reduction of alcohol consumption from people on Woop.
And that's not us, like, screaming if people don't drink alcohol, although, you know, there are some recommendations.
It's just the people see it in their WIP data.
And that is a meaningful enough nudge to say, okay, I'm going to drink a little less tonight or I'm going to drink a little less this week.
And there's other examples.
But as I was listening to you talk about the WIP community and this idea of just accelerating the curve towards longevity,
I think there's going to be so many, so many opportunities.
And even how we think about adding new features and new software and new insights has a huge eye towards that.
So, Brian, thank you so much for coming on the WOOP podcast.
Quickly, tell us where people can find information on Blueprint.
Yeah, at Blueprint.
com, all the information is there for you to follow.
make your own improvements, and then I hang out primarily on Twitter.
What's your Twitter handle?
Brian underscore Johnson.
Great.
Well, we'll put all of that in the show notes.
Brian, thank you so much for being on Woop and for coming on the podcast.
Yeah, and thank you guys for building a great product.
Thanks, brother.
Thank you to Brian Johnson for coming on the Woot Podcast, giving us that lens into the
Blueprint program and his insights on longevity and aging.
If you enjoyed this episode of the WOOP podcast, please leave a rating or review.
Check us out on social at Woop at Will Ahmed.
If you have a question, you want to see answered on the podcast, email us, podcast atwup.com.
Call us 508-443-4952.
And with that, stay healthy and stay in the green.