Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Steven Kotler: Peak Performance Aging, How to Stay at the Top of Your Game in Your 30s, 40s, 50s, and Beyond | Mental Health | E211
Episode Date: February 27, 2023When Steven Kotler was a kid, he was skinny, klutzy, and often the last guy picked for any team or athletic contest. He spent a lot of his childhood losing fights to jocks. At 53 years old, he decided... to conquer his past shame and push his own aging body past preconceived limits by learning how to park ski. In this episode, Steven discusses how to navigate peak performance as we age and how to keep our use-it-or-lose-it skills. He will also dispel myths about the aging brain and give insight on how to always stay young and profiting! Steven Kotler is a New York Times bestselling author, an award-winning journalist, and the Executive Director of the Flow Research Collective. He is one of the world’s leading experts on human performance. His work has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes and has been translated into over 50 languages. Steven has appeared in over 100 publications, including the New York Times Magazine, Wired, Atlantic Monthly, Wall Street Journal, TIME, and the Harvard Business Review. In this episode, Hala and Steven will discuss: - The long slow rot theory - How we keep our “use it or lose it” skills - Why old dogs actually can learn new tricks - The importance of deliberate play - Negative stereotypes about aging - The 3 types of thinking as we age - Benefits of cross-generational friendships - Embracing authentic learning as we age - Illustrating flow through Steven’s dog sanctuary - And other topics… Steven Kotler is a New York Times bestselling author, an award-winning journalist, and the Executive Director of the Flow Research Collective. He is one of the world’s leading experts on human performance. Steven is the author of eleven bestsellers (out of fourteen books), including The Art of Impossible, The Future is Faster Than You Think, Stealing Fire, The Rise of Superman, Bold and Abundance. His work has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes, translated into over 50 languages, and has appeared in over 100 publications, including the New York Times Magazine, Wired, Atlantic Monthly, Wall Street Journal, TIME, and the Harvard Business Review. In his latest book Gnar Country: Growing Old, Staying Rad, Steven tests his knowledge and theories on his own aging body in a quest to become an expert skier at age fifty-three. Alongside his wife, author Joy Nicholson, he is also the co-founder of The Buddy Sue Hospice Home for Old Dogs, a canine elder care facility, and Rancho de Chihuahua, a dog rescue and sanctuary. Resources Mentioned: Steven’s Website: https://www.stevenkotler.com/ Steven’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/steven-kotler-4305b110/ Steven’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/steven_kotler Steven’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/stevenkotler/ Steven’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KotlerSteven/ Flow Research Collective Radio: https://www.stevenkotler.com/radio Flow Research Collective: https://www.flowresearchcollective.com/zero-to-dangerous/overview?utm_source=podcast&utm_medium=url&utm_campaign=getmoreflow Steven’s book Gnar Country: Growing Old, Staying Rad: https://www.amazon.com/Gnar-Country-Growing-Old-Staying/dp/0063272903 Steven Kotler: Master the Impossible | E138: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/young-and-profiting-with-hala-taha/id1368888880?i=1000539587689 Steven Kotler: Flow Into The Future | E32: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/young-and-profiting-with-hala-taha/id1368888880?i=1000445189295 LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 40% off at yapmedia.io/course. More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review - ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/
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This is one of the most well-established facts in peak performance aging when you have a positive mindset towards aging.
Second half of my life is filled with thrilling and exciting possibilities.
My best days are ahead of me.
It will translate into additional seven and a half years of health and longevity.
If you're morbidly obese and have a shitty mindset towards aging, change your mindset first.
It actually has a bigger effect on your life and your health and your longevity than losing weight.
What really changes is not our ability to do that.
learn, it's how we learn. When we're kids, we play. When we're adults, we have shame,
we have embarrassment, we have time crunches, we have a whole bunch of other stuff. If you can
shift back into that attitude of play, a lot of that motor learning window reopens.
What is up Young and Profiters? You're listening to Yap, Young and Profiting podcast where we
interview the brightest minds in the world and unpack their wisdom into actionable advice that you can
use in your daily life. I'm your host Halitaha. Thanks for tuning in and get ready to listen,
learn, and profit. Stephen, welcome back to Young and Profiting podcast. It is so good to be with you
again. I am super happy. Young and Profiters, Stephen Kotler has been on Yap three times,
and I still feel like I could have 10 more conversations with him, given his breath of work.
If you don't know, Stephen, he is the goat of human peak performance. He's the godfather of flow.
He's the executive director of the Flow Research Collective, and his work in this space has been nominated for two Pulitzer Prizes.
Stephen is an award-winning journalist.
He's the author of over a dozen best-selling books that have been translated in over 40 languages.
He's hands down one of the most reputable and well-known authors in the world.
And his latest book, NAR country, growing old, staying rad.
He tests his knowledge and theories on his own aging body in a quest to become an expert skier at the age of 53.
So in this episode, Stephen and I will discuss how to navigate peak performance as we age.
We'll understand how to keep our use it or lose it skills.
We'll dispel myths about our aging brains and we'll gain insight on how we can always stay young and profiting.
So, Stephen, I'm super looking forward to this conversation.
My podcast is called Young and Profiting, but I actually have avid listeners of all ages in their 40s and 50s and beyond.
And so I know though greatly appreciate this conversation.
And to kick it off, I figured we would start with how you got the inspiration to study
peak performance. So I learned that you were really shocked by the story of Antonio Stradivaris.
And he's a famous violin maker. And he had amazing feat of creating two of his most famous
violence when he was 92 years old. And this was in the 1700s way before medical advancements.
And so I'd love to understand why his story was so shocking to you. How did he dispel the typical,
you know, thoughts around traditional aging? And how did he inspire you to study peak performance aging?
So, you know, books have a lot of origin stories.
There's like 11 different things that come together.
I've been working, researching, looking at the field of people's performance agent for a while
in a totally unrelated project, right?
I was going to write a mystery novel.
And I wanted a cat burglar as a character who was going to steal musical instruments,
who made the rarest musical instruments in history.
I would stridevarious.
And then I found, figured out what you mentioned, which is he made two of the rarest and
most expensive musical instruments in his 90s.
And I went, well, wait a minute.
Everything I've been told about physical abilities is like the older myth about aging, which most of us believe, and I believe at the time of this, is what you could call the long, slow rot theory.
It's the idea that all of our mental skills and our physical skills that decline over time, there's nothing we can do to stop the slide.
So included in those skills, physical skills would be fast-twitch muscle response, fine motor performance, dexterity.
all this stuff you would need to make a violin or a viola in your 90s,
along with like expertise and wisdom and all the, like cognitive abilities.
And I, it sort of paused me and I was like, well, wait a minute.
If this is true, either Stradivarius is like the one in a billion,
or most of what we've been told about aging is wrong.
I had already been looking at other aspects of it,
but really sort of lit a fire under me to really investigate our physical abilities
and what happened to them over time.
I've been looking at the cognitive stuff for a while.
It's very related to flow.
How we age, flow plays a big role there, so this is not new territory.
The physical side was like, holy crap, could this possibly be true?
And it is true.
It's true across the board.
Every one of our physical skills, our user or lose it skills.
And the research is really clear.
We don't stop using these skills, both physical and mental.
We can hang on to them, even advance them far, far later into life than any of you thought possible.
I love this.
So you're saying the long, slow rot theory basically means that our physical mental skills
decline over time. There's nothing that we can really do to stop the slide. That's what inspired
you to kind of research this in more detail, understand performance peak aging. And like you just said,
you said that user or lose it skills, we actually have control over them. We used to think that
our physical abilities just decline, but there's a way we can actually keep those skills. So talk to us
more about use it or lose it skills, what they are, how we keep.
them, I guess, healthy?
Yeah, so there's a bunch of stuff on the cognitive side.
Let's get back there in a second.
On the physical side, there's five main categories that matter.
And since a lot of your listeners are younger, let me start here, which is peak performance
aging starts young.
Like the research is really clear.
Like interventions in your 80s, even beyond matter.
Like really matter.
You can really make changes right up to the end.
they matter and they're going to have actual big effects. But a lot of the stuff that you want to
start working on, you actually want to start working on in your 20s and your 30s. And, you know,
this is the biohacking crowd is very aware of this, right? A lot of that crowd is 20s and 30s and they're doing
a lot of these things. Now, I might argue that they're doing some of the wrong stuff because they
don't quite understand what peak performance aging is. But besides the point, a lot of this stuff
starts young. On the physical side, we want to train five skills that matter most,
strength, stamina, flexibility, agility, and balance.
Those are the five skills that you want to train over time.
And this is not new knowledge.
Like the World Health Organization knows exactly how many minutes a week we should be training
these things.
But peak performance aging, it's 150 to 300 minutes of heart aerobic training a week,
moderate to vigorous aerobic training a week, two strength training days a week,
and three flexibility balance and agility days a week.
Or you can find one skill.
I chose park skiing in the book that accompanises all that.
In park skiing, I'm using strength, stamina, balance, agility, flexibility.
There's other stuff you want to do.
There's ways we have things called prime mover muscles are big muscles.
And then we have stabilizer muscles like your rotator cuffs or your hip flexors.
Over time, the body gets more efficient and it will start using the prime movers and not use
the stabilizer muscles.
So if you've been on the couch for a while and you come back to athletics, you're not going to hurt your quad.
You're going to tear the stable out.
You're going to tear your hip flexor because it stopped doing the work.
Your quad if you're walking around, your ambulatory is working.
Your hip flexor has started atrophy.
So there's ways you want to sort of think about training that's a little bit different if you've been away for a while.
But those are the physical skills we need to train over time.
On the cognitive side, it's a really long list.
And let me pause there.
another question, then we'll get to the stuff on the cognitive side because we'll spend the next
20 minutes. I'll spend the next 20 minutes talking. Yeah, 100%. So on the physical side,
why are action sports and what you call dynamic activity is so important to help us with these
user to lose its skills? Because I think a lot of people who are older, we're used to going to the gym,
taking group classes, whatever, but nobody's really thinking about action sports. And you say that
they're a great way to leverage these skills. Okay, we got to get to the full sentence anyway.
So let's go for it. Just tell me.
Throw it out there and then we'll break it apart and why it matters so much.
Okay.
So if you want to rock,
T you drop, if you really are interested in peak performance aging,
you need to regularly engage in challenging, creative, and social activities.
That is, you just pointed out that demand dynamic, deliberate play and take place in novel outdoor environments.
Now, let's unpack what this big ass sentence and what it means and why it answers your question.
So challenging social and creative, lifelong learning matters for a bunch of different reasons,
but short version, if we want to preserve brain function, we need expertise and wisdom.
Expertise and wisdom are these very diverse neural nets in the brain, lots of real estate,
lots of redundancy, impervious to cognitive decline, the more expertise, the more wisdom.
And this is why one of the reasons people performance aging starts young.
Like literally the guy who did the core research on wisdom, Elkanon Goldberg, his core advice,
is the more wisdom, the more expertise, the more we have cognitive reserve, the meaning,
the more we can stave off Alzheimer's, dementia, cognitive decline, all the things that are
going to happen could happen to the brain over time. This is how we fight back. And his point was,
wisdom, among the many things encapsulated in wisdom, are all like the unconscious rules
that govern how does systems work, how does behavior work, all that stuff. It's onboarded slowly
over time. So you want to start training these things. You want to start learning. Challenging
creative and social activities, we learn a lot during. They're also tend to drive us into flow.
Social activities are really important as we age. Most important thing you can do for your
brain is maintain social activity because it keeps the brain active in really important ways
and really lowers stress levels. So a lot of stuff we're going to be talking about. There are nine
known causes of aging. They're all linked to inflammation. Inflammation is linked to stress.
So anything you do that fight stress, that lowers stress, that gives you more emotional
control is involved in peak performance aging. So social activities lower stress. They give us these
pros social. Oh, there's people around who love me, got my back. I can be a little less stress.
So there's a lot of that stuff. Dynamic, deliberate play is the next bit. Dynamic is literally what we're
talking about. It's just a fancy way of saying it's all five categories of functional fitness,
strength, stamina, flexibility, balance agility. Deliberate play, you've heard of deliberate practice.
Anders Erickson's favorite expertise, repetition with incremental advancement is the fastest
path for his expertise. And Anders wasn't wrong, but as he himself said, that's only true in certain,
very precise disciplines. And when faced with just general learning, deliberate play works better
than deliberate practice. Deliberate play is repetition with improvisation. You're going to do the same
thing he did last time, but a little bit of flourish, a little flower, a little, something fun.
It's playful, meaning there's no shame, there's no embarrassment. If you're bad,
who cares, you're having fun. But that feeling of play produces more neurochemistry, more
endorphins. This one really boosts the immune system, lowers stress levels, but amplifies learning.
So dynamic, deliberate play says I'm using all the physical skills that decline and I'm learning
better than any other way. Novel outdoor environments, the last bit. Why do we care? And this is back.
Action sports, demand dynamic deliberate play. They take place in novel outdoor environments and
they're challenging, creative, and social. So one stop shopping. The last bit is most important bit.
One, outdoor environments in general, lower stress. We know this. This is well established in positive
psychology. A 20-minute walk in the woods will outperform most SSRIs for treatment of depression.
I can talk about why if you care, but like we know that. Good for you, lower stress.
So in itself, being in nature is anti-inflammatory. So it's better for healthy aging.
But if you want to preserve brain function, how do you do that?
You want to birth new neurons and turn those new neurons into neural nets.
That's learning.
So the adult brain, contrary to what we used to believe for a long time, it actually does
continue to birth new neurons.
In fact, the adult brain will birth about 700 new neurons a day, even basically until you die.
But where do those neurons show up as the key question?
They show up in a part of the brain known is the hippocampus.
The hippocampus does two things.
It does long-term memory, and it is location, place.
It's packed with place cells and grays.
cell. Why we evolved as hunter-gatherers. When you were in the wild and something emotionally charged
happened, you got to remember where you were or when it happened. That's survival. So where did I
get attacked by that tiger? So I don't go back there. Where was that ripe fruit tree? So when it comes
into season, I'm hungry, I can go there. This is survival. This is what the brain is designed to do.
Peak performance and peak performance aging is always getting our biology to work for us rather than
against us. Our biology is designed to remember when we have novel experiences and outdoor environments.
So that's what you want to use it for. Action Sports gives you that. Now, I also say in the book,
like if action sports aren't your thing, you can duplicate a lot of this by simply hiking
with a weight vest. And weight vests are really key, better than a lot of other things, because
they amplify bone density. Little known fact, your bones, like where you store all your minerals,
all your nutrients are stored in your bones and they're released into so everything that drives the
brain calcium for example which is in everything the brain does it's stored in the bones so as our
bones become less dense over time which happens it impacts everything for women really important
after menopause where does most of your estrogen come from your bones so wildly fluctuating
hormone and levels which is the problem that most people have postmenopause exacerbated by bone
density. If you want to increase bone density, one of the best ways is hiking with a weight
vest. There's lots of literature. There's lots of science on that. There's also a bunch of other
benefits. But it hits all of those categories. If you're not interested in action sports, that said,
there's a lot to recommend in action sports, especially while a lot of in our country is about a new way
of approaching these difficult, challenging physical activities late in life that's much safer and
much more well-suited to progression. Yeah, because I have to say, like, I'm in my
30s and I used to ski and I don't even ski anymore because I'm like I've got too much
slip for it. I don't want to break a bone. I'm not into it. So I totally love that you're giving
another option in terms of the weighted vest and hiking. So in your book, you actually took on
park skiing and this is something that people used to believe that anybody over 35 like really
couldn't learn. So talk to us about learning that activity at 53 years old and what you learned
does an old dog learning new tricks.
So there's a couple things you need to know to flesh this out a little bit.
But you are right.
Everything you said is totally sure.
Why did I think I could learn to Park Ski?
There's a whole bunch of new stuff in like flow science, my field, and body cognition,
a couple other whizbang fields that I was like, you know, if these things are right,
should be totally possible for older adults to be able to learn really, really difficult skills.
I'll give you like one random example.
We have a motor learning window.
Like, Beverly says don't become a gymnast or a ballet dancer after 25, right?
Because that window's closed and you can't just.
That's sort of true.
There is like a lot of things in big performance aging, it's true, but.
And here's the but.
What really changes is not our ability to learn.
It's how we learn.
When we're kids, we play.
When we're adults, we have shame.
We have embarrassment.
We have time crunches.
We have a whole bunch of other stuff.
if you can shift back into that attitude of play, a lot of that motor learning window reopens.
So that's just one example.
A lot of the skills that we used to think declined over time.
We now know they're used to lose it skills, including the skills we need to learn how to park ski.
So that was sort of where it came from.
I was an expert skier.
I just had never parked.
I knew no tricks.
I was a big mountain skier.
I could go in a straight line very fast really well.
But park skiing is like, it's doing tricks off jumps and on rails and wall rides.
It's very acrobatic.
It's very dangerous.
So it was a totally not a new adventure for me.
There were a lot of reasons to take it up.
There were a lot of advantages about like knowing how to park ski later in life was actually what I was after.
But it was just a great way to test all this science.
And when we learned and here's what's cool.
So I made it to measure progress, I made a list of 20 tracks.
is zero to like intermediate. Intermediate matter because once you get there, you're sort of like,
you take the random shit out of the equation. Like you can control your progress and not have
these accidental falls or things that really can get you hurt early on. I figured if it took five
years, cool, whatever. Like I didn't care. I started when I was 53. If it took me into 60,
great, whatever. Who cares? I did it in under a season. In fact, I've never learned anything so
fast in my entire life. And the cool part was my ski partner who was your age and was a former
a professional athlete who got very injured, retired, had a family, had his job, came back,
the sport. He used the same methodology and got farther than he's ever gotten before.
We came back the following year. We took 17 older adults ages 29 to 68. They were intermediate at
best, park skiers, or skiers and snowboarders, and we trained them up in four days on the
mountain, and they got good. But then, because as you pointed out, action sports, not forever,
So the key thing here is mindset. What am I talking about? Let me tell you what we did and let me tell you what it was. We then stripped out the action sports. We used weight vest hiking instead and we put 300 adults all ages, ages like 30 to 85, I think, through the same kind of training to see if we could explode their mindset towards aging and get them on what I call the NAR-style quest, which is a challenging.
social and creative activity that demands dynamic, deliberate playing takes place in
a novel outdoor environments. I don't care what it is. I wanted them to just start on a quest
that would lead to something that way. What I really wanted to do was explode the mindset of
old. Oh, I'm too old for shit. I'm going to get hurt. I got things I want to hold on to.
It sets up. It's really weird. Our biology is designed when we're young. Kids, teenagers,
young adults, the seeking system sort of drives our behavior. This is exploratory behavior.
behavior, right? Like, I'm going to go out, I'm going to check out something new. I'm going to
figure out who I am and what I do and how I want to live and how do I want to make a little,
all that stuff. This is about dopamine and norapinephrine. Those are very potent feel good
in neurochemicals. They're very, very addictive, very addictive, right? Cocaine is the most
widely addictive drug on earth. All that happens is it causes the brain to release some dopamine
and it blocks its re-uptake, right? So dopamine is really addictive. When we get stuff that we want to
hold on to, oh, I got the right job, I've got the right partner, I've got kids, I've got dogs, I've
got dogs. I've got a great apartment. I like my bike. Whatever it is, we no longer want to be seeking.
We want the stuff that is about conserving what we have, protecting what we have, bonding.
So we get endorphins and anandamide and oxytocin. These are like the pro-social neural chemicals
that underpin strong family structures and things like that, strong company structures. And they're great.
But we're trading our addictions. And what happens is it makes us very, very conservative. It shuts down the seeking
system, we get the voice in our head that says, hey, don't do that. You're going to lose what you have.
The truth of the matter is, like, old people are literally addicted to the wrong drugs in their
bodies. You need all of these systems working together for peak performance aging. And there's a
penalty to having a mindset of old. And this is the point. There's a big health and longevity penalty.
In fact, when you flip it, when you have a positive mindset towards aging, the second half of my life
is filled with thrilling and exciting possibilities. My best days are ahead of me.
it translates, and this is one of the most well-established facts in peak performance aging,
it will translate into additional seven and a half years of health and longevity.
That's huge.
That's like quitting smoking, huge.
In fact, if you're morbidly obese and have a shitty mindset towards aging,
change your mindset first.
It actually has a bigger effect on your life and your health and your longevity than losing weight.
So it's really, really important.
It's where peak performance aging starts.
And one of the reasons that peak performance aging starts young is if you never develop this mindset, this isn't going to be a problem.
Like, you're not going to have to overcome it.
One of the reasons the NAR style adventure is so useful for older adults is, like, for me, it didn't matter what I wanted to believe about aging.
Once I got out on the mountain, I was learning how to do 360s and nose butter 360s and 180s and all the other stuff I learned.
Like, it just blew up all my limiting beliefs about what was possible in the future because I have just onboarded the most difficult physical.
thing I've ever done in my life and I did it at 53. And I've done a lot of difficult physical
things along the way. This was definitely the hardest and I did it. And I'm still at park skiing at 55 now
because I wrote books a couple years old in terms of when I wrote it. Let's hold that thought
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Hiring, Indeed, is all you need. That's amazing. I have to say, it's very inspiring and I can feel
your enthusiasm from the camera and sort of like your vigor for life. And so it's really positive
that you're spreading this message in terms of how people can basically stay young at heart forever.
And like you said, it's totally in your control. If you put yourselves in situations where you're
activating your brain in certain ways, you're playing, you're dispelling any sort of internal
beliefs that you have about your own abilities, but actually going out and doing these physical
things in turn, it's helping improve your cognitive performance. Just amazing, really cool stuff.
And nobody has talked about this on the podcast yet. So it's very exciting. So sticking on this
point of mindset, I'd love to talk about this concept of dirty old shame. I know that you had to get
over some internal traumas, from my understanding when you were growing up, you weren't always
this sporty. You were sort of the last kid picked on the team at school. And you mentioned in
your book that part of you kind of overcoming and taking on this challenge was you getting over these
past traumas. So talk to us about that and how we need to do that as well. So another reason peak
performance aging sort of starts young. First, we start with the good news. One of the reasons old
dogs can learn new tricks that we haven't talked about yet is as we enter our 50s.
It's really in our late 40s. There are a bunch of really profound changes on how the brain
process information. One, certain genes only turn on with experience. They'll only flip these
switches later in life. Two, in our 50s, the two hemispheres of the brain, which essentially
function in opposition to each other along the way, they start working together like never
before. And finally, the brain starts to recruit underutilized resources in our 50s.
So as a result, we gain access to whole new levels of intelligence, creativity, empathy,
wisdom. And it's, I go on and on and on about those benefits. There's a lot that comes with that,
but these are not guaranteed. So psychologists talk about moderators, the technical term,
it's an if-then condition. You get this only if you do this, right? And if you want to the access to
these cognitive superpowers in our 50s, and we'll come back to it, but from a profit perspective,
we really want to talk about those superpowers in a second. Let me finish this point.
There are a number of gateways of adult development that you have to pass through.
So by the age, age 30, you sort of, if you really just want to enjoy and kick ass beyond 30,
you have to have solved the crisis of identity, which sort of shows up around age 12.
And Erickson thought he used to disappear at 18.
It doesn't, but it does.
If you haven't solved it by 30, you have a problem.
The reason is by 40, you need match fit.
Match fit is an economics term.
means there's a tight link between who I am and what I do in the world, right?
If you just, if you don't know who you are, you can't get match fit because there's no,
if you don't know your strengths, your values, all that stuff.
So that has to be by 30, by 40, we need to be, we have match fit.
And then by 50, we need forgiveness.
We've got to forgive ourselves for like past embarrassments and past shames.
And we've got to figure for those who have done us harm.
And as you pointed out, I spent most of my childhood losing fights to jocks.
was a punk rocker. The jocks didn't like us. I didn't like them. And this was back in, you know,
in the 70s and 80s and like, you got to understand like cars of football players would pull up
on the side of the road and they'd see a guy with a Mohawk and they'd jump out to beat you up.
And it was like five against one always. And it was not a great situation. So I had a lot of
anger. And I knew peak performance aging, you got to put that shit down. You cannot thrive in
your 50s. You don't get these superpowers, which is why old dogs.
can learn new tricks better than young dogs.
It's why one of the reasons I learned parks skiing so fast is I have more intelligence.
I've got more creativity.
I've got the stuff I need.
And they've got even more wisdom, which means I could keep myself safer than when I was making
better decisions along the way.
That stuff is great, but I don't get it if I can't forgive those who have done me wrong.
So the standard best way to do that, and there's tons of research is love and kindness
meditation and passion meditation.
It's an incredibly potent tool.
It's amazing for a ton of different stuff.
It's been studied for probably longer than any other meditation style.
We understand all the neuroscience.
But when it came to people who I got in fistfights with and worse, for 10 years, it wasn't enough.
I could, like all the loving guidance meditation in the world, like, I could forgive a lot of stuff and clean out a lot.
I was left with like, it just like wasn't going away.
So I decided one of the reasons I took on an incredibly difficult physical jockey challenge is, okay, I'm going to go, like, this is my problem.
Let's go walk a mile in their moccasins, right? Let's take this on. And it turns out it worked. By the way, I didn't think it was going to work. I just knew I needed to do this to thrive. And I was like, well, I'm out of any other ideas. Loving kindness meditation, which is what everybody, right, is not getting it done. And there's still anger there. There's still resentment.
There's still stuff there.
So let me see if taking on this kind of putting myself on a physical mission could clear that out.
And it did.
And, you know, the story is sort of in the end of the book.
And I won't, I won't sort of ruin it.
A spoiler alert, right?
I'd be giving away sort of that one and I'm not going to.
But it was one of the neater things that happened along the way is I got to put down
like a bunch of sort of shame and embarrassment and like stuff that I have carried since I was probably 10 or 12.
Definitely 12.
That's amazing.
Do you feel like much lighter now and that you just can approach things differently?
Like how did it, how did that impact you getting over that trauma like that after so many years of having the same issue?
I always say that one of the myths that a lot of people have about their life is that people think it's going to get easier.
Like you think, oh, I'm going to get older.
I'm going to get better at this.
I'm going to be able to sort of like, oh, I know exactly what I like and I can manicure my life.
And it just doesn't get easier.
It just doesn't.
What it gets is more meaningful and more in like life satisfaction and overall well-being.
And that's what this really impacted.
Somehow like it made life more meaningful, like in those ways.
Like I don't know.
Do I feel lighter perhaps?
But what it just sort of, it closed that loop.
You know what I mean?
Like, okay, done.
Check.
I don't have to worry about that anymore.
And literally what it really does is when certain memories just like pop into my head,
now they just last a half second.
And I'm like, oh, yeah, there's that thing.
And it goes away.
Whereas before, no, I could start to think on it and dwell on it.
And then I'd have a problem.
Yeah.
Have you ever heard of Arthur Brooks?
I think so.
He's somebody that I think you should definitely look into.
So I had Arthur Brooks on the podcast in 2021, sorry, 2022.
and he was like one of my favorite interviews.
And he wrote this book called Cracking the Code to Happiness.
He's a Harvard professor, social scientist.
And basically he talks about how your brain biologically is different before 40 and after 40.
And he talks about fluid intelligence versus crystallized intelligence.
And so this was like a big conversation that we had on the podcast and something that made
us think a lot.
I had a lot of feedback from my listeners.
And I feel like what you say is pretty different from what he says.
There are some similarities.
But basically what he's saying is that you have a biological clock ticking, your ability
to reason, think flexibly, learn new things, problem solve, be innovative.
That starts to decline in your 40s and 50s.
And that doesn't mean that your brain starts to go bad.
You just start to have crystallized intelligence or you accumulate knowledge, fact,
skills, and you can use that throughout your career as a way to teach other people.
And essentially what he's saying is like, you've got to like be ready for the second half
of your career and not miss that and be like trying to chase your young.
self and your younger brain, essentially. So, for example, the professional athlete becomes the coach,
the star litigator becomes a partner, the singer becomes an A&R exec, and you're basically teaching
younger people your knowledge and taking on that second wave of your career. So he is right and he is
wrong, as far as I could tell. Where he's really right is passing along knowledge is absolutely
key to peak performance aging. It's key to, in fact, the societies where,
people age the best. Two things are very true. One, they don't have negative stereotypes towards aging.
So ageism is the most common and socially accepted stereotype in the world. I go out in a public
these days with any stereotype. Somebody's going to punch me in the mouth and cancel me, except for
ageism. Ageism, you can, people are like, oh, you're too old to do that shit. Like, we geeseer each other
and it's crazy. Becca Levy at Yale has done tons of work on ageism and the stereotype of aging
It's incredibly detrimental.
In fact, you could go so far as literally we are killing older adults with how we talk about them.
So that is really, really clear.
The societies where there's no ageism, there's also cross-generational friendships.
So the old are passing along knowledge.
This is a natural part of brain development.
Now, you have to put things into categories.
He is not wrong.
We do shift from fluid intelligence into crystallized intelligence.
that transition does happen.
But, but, but, but, but a bunch of the skills that we thought declined over time,
like the fluid intelligence skills that we thought went away,
no, it turns out that's not true at all.
We get actually new levels of intelligence and creativity in our 50s.
So that's not actually true.
There's certain things.
The article I like best, Martin Seligman from Penn and Scott Barry Kaufman
wrote a great article on creativity over time
where they talk about what goes away from creativity and what stays or comes on.
And the list of like what comes on and stays is much longer than what goes away.
Now, there's stuff that does go away.
So the question you've got to now ask, is it permanent?
Is this real or have we just not figured out how to train it?
So let me give you an example.
Adam Gazali is a friend of mine.
He's on my board.
We do a lot of research together.
He's at UCSF.
And he had these neuroscientists, you know, the cover of nature a bunch of years ago.
for a video game he designed.
It's the very first video game to be approved by the FDA.
It treats cognitive decline in older adults.
And what it specifically focuses on is task switching.
If you go back to fluid intelligence, one of the things that declines over time is
task switching, our ability to focus on this and then focus on this.
And that's a real problem.
He's got a video game that will take your brain if you're 60.
You play it literally, I think it's three hours a week or three 20 minutes sessions a week
for six weeks is the standard doctor prescription for this video game, and it will reset your
60-year-old brain back to 20. So there's a bunch of stuff like that, where it's used it or lose it.
We just have to figure out how do you train it up? The other side of it is, so let's talk about
the other weird, one of the things he said, one of the reasons our brain performance declines
over time is white matter density decreases over time, and we lose certain neurochemicals.
So what he's not telling you is, well, you can replace those neurocomicals.
In fact, SSRIs, which actually suck for depression, turn out to be great for older adults.
Low-level SSRIs because serotonin levels decline over time, and SSRIs can boost them.
If you don't want to take a drug, hike with a weight vest.
Most of your serotonin is manufactured in your bones, and one of the reasons the brain has less
is because you're making less in your bones.
And if you increase bone density, you get the serotonin back.
You get a bunch of those neurocomicals back.
The general thinking is sort of true, but a lot of those skills are used it or lose it,
and either we've already figured out how to fix them or this stuff is also progressing really,
really, really quickly.
The whole other side of this is regenerative medicine, longevity, science, all that stuff
is moving at exponential rates.
So, for example, five years ago, we could not deal with most tendon bone and ligament problems.
today, there's very little you can do to tendons, bones, or ligaments,
that exosomes, stem cells, certain other things.
Like, we are good at that stuff now.
It's advanced really far.
Now, if anybody is making you promises about stem cells that go, like, beyond bones,
ligaments, and tendons, no, no, they're lying and they're exaggerating what's real right now.
But up to that point, no, no, we've sort of got to dial.
So technology is advancing and it's going to solve a lot of those issues.
A lot of those issues are not what we thought they were.
And you can train a lot of that stuff in unusual ways.
We're just figuring out.
And some of the early ways, like all the brain games, they're worthless.
They're totally worthless.
They train nothing other than the ability to play that game.
That's not how this works.
But learning a foreign language, learning to play a musical instrument,
learning a challenging dynamic activity, like all that stuff.
No, no, that's the real medicine and that really actually does work.
Yeah.
I love what you're saying because I remember leaving that conversation with Arthur Brooks,
although it was really enlightening and he said a lot of smart things.
I felt depressed.
I was like, oh, man, I got like, you know, less than 10 years to figure, like, to do all
my innovative stuff.
And it's good to know what you're saying that we are actually in control.
Like, of course, you can be passive and the inevitable will happen with your cognitive
decline.
But if we're proactive and kind of fight that natural tendency,
that's going to happen. Plus with modern medicine, like you said, there's a lot that we can do
to slow it down, reverse it. So that's amazing. So let's dig deep on these three types of thinking.
You alluded to them at a high level that we get better at as we're 50 and beyond. So you say it's
relativistic thinking, non-dulyistic thinking and systematic thinking. Yeah, so short version,
our ego quiets down and our perspective widens. So essentially, we learn to see things. We're
from multiple perspectives. We learn that there are very few black and white truths, and most things
are gray. That's relativistic thinking and probabilistic thinking. Then the last category, we learn to
see the forest through the trees. We get good, better at systems thinking and seeing the big picture.
And because of these skills, this is where that extra intelligence, creativity, empathy, and
wisdom comes from and builds out of this intelligence. There's a huge business opportunity here.
and nobody's paying attention to it.
So that little backstory, when I wrote Bold,
which is a book about like entrepreneurship and people like Larry Page and Jeff Bezos
and Elon Musk and how to really use exponential technology
and some human capability, flow science stuff to really level up organizations,
I spent so much years talking to CEOs.
And a lot of the time and a lot of those discussions,
we would talk about hiring.
Who are the ideal employees?
How do you find them?
What do you need for the 21st century?
century, and over and over again, thousands of times I heard the same two things from CEOs.
I need employees who are really intelligent and really creative and really innovative because
the rate of change is really fast and I got to keep pace and stay ahead of it.
Otherwise, I don't have a company.
I don't have a business.
I can't do any of that.
The other thing I need is I need employees who are empathetic and why is because if I don't
have psychological safety, nobody can do their job.
If I don't have psychological safety, I don't have great.
team performance. That team performance, you can't be a company. You can't do those things without
empathy and wisdom. Most importantly, the mantra of 21st century business, and maybe we thank Jeff Bezos
for this, but it's always been, it's customer-centric thinking. And if you're not empathetic or you're
not wise, nobody's thinking like a customer at all. So it turns out a well-trained 50-year-old,
and well-trained is key, right? There's a whole bunch. We have, like, you want those gateways of
adult development, I've turned about these, it should be a hiring checklist. And in your 50s, you want
access to these superpowers. You need to engage in creative activities that sort of unlocks these new
thinking styles. That's another reason why challenging creative and social activities matter.
And you need to fight off risk aversion and train down physical fragility. Because if your body is
rotting, what good is all this new mental skills? You can't use it. And risk aversion, which
increases over time, this is why challenging activities,
matter so much. Risk conversion increases over time and has a lot to do with like literally
white banner volume in the brain. But we have to train back because the more risk-averse
you are, the more afraid you are, the more norapinephrine you're producing. That will block
creativity. It blocks empathy and it blocks wisdom. So like you have to train back rest
to version of really flower in your 50, 60s and 70s. But if you get it right and you've got all that
stuff, these are dream employees. This is a business revolution way to have.
And the very people that are getting forced out of companies?
No, no, no, no.
They're the very people we need in our companies most overall.
And in fact, this is not my line.
I think it's Daniel Levinton might have said it.
It's the first person I heard to say it this bluntly.
But Daniel Levitin is a neuroscientist who just wrote a book called Successful Aging,
where if you want in my book, my book sort of a fun adventure story, the sciences and the footnotes and sort of at the end,
if you really want every itch of the science, you can either take my peak performance aging
training or you can read successful aging and like he goes through all of it.
We came to all the same conclusions.
Though I think I took my conclusions farther because I ran a bunch of weird ass experiments
along the way.
But he said flat out it's like the best advice I can give you on retirement is don't retire.
Don't ever retire.
If you're interested in peak performance aging, retirement is a bad idea.
Reinvention, maybe.
Maybe I don't want to do the thing.
same thing I've been doing my whole life and I want to do something new. Great, fantastic,
retirement, death sentence. So I have a couple follow-ups to this. A lot of my listeners are young
entrepreneurs, business owners. So if we're going to take your advice, give older people a chance
when it comes to hiring. I mean, I know there's a big ageism issue, especially in the tech world.
They used to work at Disney streaming services. Like, you were old over 40, you know, and like people looked
at you sideways, you know, and didn't trust you to do your job, essentially, if you were older
than 40, 45. So I know there's ages. So if you were to interview somebody in their 50s,
what questions would you ask them to make sure that they've been training their brain and
and? So I would ask one, how physically active you are. If you're not dealing with somebody
who has been regularly exercising for for a while and hitting all five dynamic categories,
you don't want to go near them. The number one correlate with health and longevity over time is
leg strength, believe it or not. I know. I was going to ask, that's one of
my favorite facts. Yeah, it's wild. And we can talk about why and whatever. I don't think you can
employees, hey, what do you squat? Maybe you can. But it actually, like, if we're going to ask,
put politicians in office in their 80s, those questions become really freaking relevant. Like,
those are things you really want to know. Are you engaging in challenging creative social
activity? Like, are you, those things become a checklist for folks over 50. Identity. Match fit.
self-forgiveness, forgiveness of others.
You don't get access to the cognitive superpowers without those things.
So those are the kinds of questions you want to poke at to make sure are being checked off
those sorts of things.
Are you engaging in challenging creative social activities at demand, dynamic, deliberate play
and take place a novel outdoor.
Like that, those things, they become a checklist and they become, if you want to work here
and you're over this age, you've got to do this because we need you.
but we need this version of you.
And the most important thing is I look for older adults with much younger friends.
I want to see those cross-generational friendships because older adults over 40, 50,
one of the reasons they're not to be trusted is because they don't get the job
because they're just too out of touch and things have changed.
And there's a lot of stuff that changes and stays the same.
And you sort of want the older adults around for that reason.
But you also, being old is not an excuse for not keeping up either.
Like what I'm telling you is you've got access to more brain power.
So like it's really not an excuse as far as I'm concerned.
So I think it's got to be mutual.
And I think the benefits are going to be amazing if it can be mutual.
We'll be right back after a quick break from our sponsors.
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Yeah, I want to get into authentic learning and how older people can learn new skills,
but let's go on the tangent of why we should never skip leg day.
So it turns out that both preserving physical abilities and cognitive function,
leg strength is the single largest factor.
Now, the cognitive function is weird.
Some of it has to do with bone density.
Again, we're back to the bones and big bones in your legs.
And if they're dense, they're not losing their minerals, their nutrients, they can feed the brain.
The second part is that if you're not.
mobile, you don't have a social life. It's a lot harder to have a social life. If you don't have a
social life, you are not going to aid successfully. And in fact, if you don't have a social life,
peak performance, you're just sort of lock out of peak performance because you social support
for a lot of different psychological safety reasons and just performance reasons, it's really important
to have social support. And part of that, like you can get really great social support on the
telephone, on Zoom. We all learn that during COVID. But there is something to be said for in-person,
oxytocin, right?
I always tell people if for whatever reason you're like stuck with the phone and Zoom,
make sure you pet a dog for at least eight minutes a day, a dog or a cat.
Petting an animal for about five to eight minutes also releases oxytocin and some of those
other pro-social chemicals.
So like if you're stuck on, like if we need social support for performance,
we definitely need for big performance aging.
Animals are our friends here.
Yeah, I love that.
I feel like you're giving us so much great tips in terms of how we can age gracefully
and be impactful at an older age and still innovative and creative.
So this is such a meaningful episode to me because honestly,
we don't talk about this enough on the podcast.
So we do need to learn as we're older.
Obviously, it's possible.
You learned how to park ski at 53.
So let's talk about how we can learn and embrace authentic learning.
So let's back up one step into and talk about learning.
Like where you started.
I just want to start where you started, which is,
So if you want to stave off Alzheimer's, dementia, cognitive decline, right, fluid intelligence, what matters, lifelong learning. Why is that?
Expertise and wisdom are the two most important things we can do to develop what's known as cognitive reserve.
So if you have a high cognitive reserve, you could even have advanced Alzheimer's, meaning you die, the autopsy of your brain, and you've got tangles and plaques everywhere.
And it just looks like your brain's mush and you're still, nobody would notice if you were alive.
This was so some of the early research that happened, they started autopsying brains and being like, whoa, this person had advanced Alzheimer's.
How the hell did they function so well up until age 100? What is it?
Expertise in Learning and or to expertise in wisdom, which are two different things. But important thing here is they're big broad networks and they're in the prefrontal cortex.
The prefrontal cortex is where it's most vulnerable to cognitive decline. It's the newest brain structure from an evolutionary perspective.
and it's the most vulnerable.
You don't suffer cognitive decline like deep in your brain stem.
It's impervious.
But the prefrontal cortex is where it shows up.
Expertise and wisdom live in the prefrontal cortex.
And there's these diverse networks, lots of redundancy, lots of backup.
So this goes down.
You got seven other copies over here.
Don't worry about it.
So that's where you have to start with lifelong learning.
And you want to do everything you can to maximize learning for that very reason.
So what do we know about?
learning. One of the best ways to maximize learning is authentic learning. This is a big movement in
education right now, and it's based on a whole bunch of different stuff, but let me just talk
about one thing. So their attention, you can't learn anything obviously without focus or attention,
right? Like paying attention is the gateway for learning. Attention is a coupled system. It's linked
to autonomy. And autonomy means we like driving the bus. We like being in charge of our own lives,
right, we can't pay maximum attention to something if it's not sort of by choice.
Authentic learning means we learn based basically exactly on who we are.
So it got a bad name early on because people started talking about learning styles.
Are you visual learner or an auditory learner?
And that's absolute nonsense.
Like that's actually not true.
No, we're all those things.
It depends on what we're learning and how we're wired and it changes over time and that's not actually.
But what is true is everybody shows up somewhere on the introversion to extroversion.
scale. Introverts need to learn in private. Extroverts want to learn in public. We're somewhere on the
risk aversion scale. Like we all have, I'm this fearful. And you can only be pushed so far. And like,
so those authentic learning is about like those kinds of questions. The questions that really matter.
And so, you know, one of the most important things for me is I'm an introvert. I don't mind being
bad at stuff, but I don't like being bad in public. So we and most terrain parks are at
actually under chairlifts and very, very visible. So I would take these park tricks into the
side country, in the back country, in the woods, and I'd learn them out of sight with my friends.
And then I could go back, like, trying to do it the other way. It was impossible for me.
I don't work that way. And you can keep, there's a lot more to authentic learning,
but the big point here is also taking on these kind of NAR style challenges late in life,
like learning how to park ski or whatever.
Phenomenal for peak performance aging, but you need a lot of motivation.
And it turns out we have like we are driven towards authenticity.
Carl Rogers argued that it functions as a fundamental drive.
A fundamental drive meaning it's got as much power as a drive for sex or food or shelter.
You have a drive to be yourself, your authentic self.
And if you get it right, you get a huge boost in motivation, which is crucial for all this stuff.
So you learn better on the back end and you're more motivated to learn on the front end.
And being that there's a lot to do in peak performance aging and it can be challenging, you want all the help you can get.
Right.
In Ardenboss, I talk about one of the things peak performers are really good at is they never meet a challenge on a single field source.
We know this food-wise, right?
Like you want carbs, protein, and fats before you're going into workout.
Same thing with motivation.
You want authenticity.
You want autonomy.
You want passion, purpose.
all these big intrinsic motivators, curiosity, you want to stack them on top of each other
because it maximizes our motivation.
I love that.
So to wrap up this part of the interview, I'd love for you to just sort of summarize what
skills generally do you think older people are better at than younger people?
And older people, I guess, who have trained their brain properly, let's say.
Well, anything that requires seeing things from other people's perspectives and
multi-perspectable thinking, you're just better at.
it's harder to do when you're younger because of how the ego functions and how the brain functions.
You're just better at it when you're older.
You can meditate a lot to sort of lower cognitive bias and do those things,
but it's going to start to happen naturally when you're older.
So to me, the big one, the cool one is the systems thinking part because one of the commonalities
among all the biggest brains I've ever met, all the real, the people really can affect
change in the world. They're all systems thinkers. And it's really hard to train people how to be
systems thinkers. It's a tough skill to bring on. Certain careers force you to learn it in different ways,
writing, especially if you write books, because you have to hold 400 pages in your head and move it
around and be able to do stuff like that. You have to be able to hold the big picture. It's sort of built
into the job and it's trained up over time, but it's not trained up in a lot of jobs.
we specialize, especially in the modern world, we specialize, we specialize, we specialize.
And one of the things that I want to point out here is, and anybody who's ever worked in entrepreneurship,
innovation, like, you know, all the big innovations are in the cracks between disciplines.
It's very hard to innovate inside that same funnel that everybody's been in for 50 years,
but you move adjacent to where that funnel touches something, and suddenly there's a revolution
waiting to happen. And that's how you build companies and world change companies, everything else.
you can't see that shit if you're not a systems thinker.
It's completely invisible to you.
So the thing that I think is the most exciting over is that.
Yeah, that was really inspiring to me.
I'm actually writing a book with Penguin Random House coming out in 2025.
And that little bit of information was really inspiring.
I'm going to include it in my book and credit you.
Okay.
So, Stephen, I want to wrap up this interview talking about your research about the blue zones,
these long-lived communities around the world.
You alluded to some of it,
but I'd love for you to sort of dive deeper
on what you found in terms of why these people
live longer, happier.
Let me back this story up a little bit
to tell you a story that's not in the book.
Yeah.
That is where this actually starts.
So people may know this or not know this
for almost the past two decades.
My wife and I were on a hospice care dog sanctuary.
So for two decades,
we've done hospice work with dogs.
We have a healing methodology that's based on, it's very low tech.
It's like lifestyle interventions in a sense.
Some flow science, some evolutionary psychology, nothing really fancy.
Our dogs all get checked out by vets when they come to us.
Before they come to us, they come from shelters.
But we, I mean, are we specialize in the worst of the worst?
So if you are a geriatric chihuahua with an abusive pass, three legs, one eye,
cancer, heart disease, mange, and flatulence, you're our guy.
that's who we work with.
And the vets would be like, we did get these dogs.
Dogs would be like, don't get attached.
This dog is going to live a month, month and a half at most.
This is about to provide a very good death.
And we bring the dogs in.
And mind you, we've over 700 dogs have passed through our facility and over 5,000
are our own programs.
So big sample size.
And on average, our dogs wouldn't live another month or six weeks.
They would live another three, four, five years.
Oh, wow.
You translate it into that human numbers.
That's right.
You get seven years for every year.
So like the top end of that, you're getting an extra like 28 years, 30.
Like what the fuck is going on?
Pardon my language.
So I started to ask questions like, what's going on?
Why is this working?
What are we doing?
And will it work in humans?
Like would any of the stuff work in humans, right?
And it turns out almost everything I were doing with the dogs exists in the,
so-called blue zones, which is what led me to the blue zones in the first place.
So Dan Bueller was a National Geographic Reporter in the early 2000s noticed that there were
places on the planet where people lived, on average, a 12 years longer than everybody else.
And they're all over the place, and he wanted to know, what are the commonalities?
And he did a whole bunch of research.
The research is a little controversial.
The controversy is not on the lifestyle stuff.
It's on the, there's some stuff that has been turned into supplements and it's dietary.
Those are the open, and those questions are open.
There's no argument on sort of the lifestyle stuff with the blue zones.
And the commonalities are really, like, move around a lot, regular exercise, right?
De-stress regularly.
So have rituals, meditation, exercise, gratitude, practices, breathing work, whatever it is, walking in nature.
I don't like have rituals to de-stress regularly.
A ton of stuff on social belonging and connection.
This is why challenging social activities matter so much.
is this built into blue zones.
There's also this respect for the elders and these cross-generational friendships.
They're built into blue zones.
There's some evolution.
I mean, they eat healthy.
They eat less than most people and they eat very, very healthy diets.
But like, there's no one diet across the boards that, like, works for everybody.
But those are sort of the commonalities and they live with passion, purpose, and regular access to flow.
And these were all things that we were providing for our dogs and very, like, for example,
get social belonging and connection. They really emphasize it. You know, in the blue zones,
some of them people will spend six hours a day hanging out with friends or family. So a lot of it,
with our dogs, we had enforced petting time. So when you have a lot of dogs, like we had various
times, we've had 40, 50 dogs. It's hard to individual petting time. You have to like, oh, I got to hang out
with this dog, but we would do it because we wanted these neural chemicals underneath that.
Same thing with flow. We'd find ways to put our dogs into flow. Flow is.
really important to peak performance aging for a lot of different reasons. But the state,
just a really positive, powerful emotional state. And some of the emotions that show up and flow
stimulate the production of T cells and natural killer cells. So T cells fight diseases. And
natural killer cells fight tumors and sick cells and other the diseases of aging. So when we get into
flow, it lowers inflammation, which is tied to all the causes of aging. It peruses T cells,
natural killer cells, a lot of benefits, and it boosts the immune system. So this was the stuff
we were doing in our dogs. This is the stuff that's going on in the blue zone. This is the stuff we now
widely know correlates to healthy longevity. This isn't really peak performance aging. It's sort of
successful aging, healthy aging, right? At this point, it's like, it should be common sense for
everybody really is really what it should be. But one of the things that's interesting is you also
see a high. A lot of the places where there are blue zones, you see a lot of action sport and
outdoor athletes too. Colorado, Pitkin County, Colorado and Eagle County, Colorado, in Loma Linda,
California are the four places in America where people, these are the blue zones. Summit,
Pitkin, and Eagle, this is Colorado. That's Vail, Aspen, Beaver Creek, all the big ski areas,
a lot of outdoor stuff. And in Loma Linda, that's a seventh-day-advannis population. And they're very social,
very flowy, good dietary stuff, a lot of belonging.
So like it's the same stuff.
And a lot of outdoor activities surfing because it's California on the ocean, right?
They take advantage of that stuff too.
Yeah.
So I'd love to get a couple examples here.
First of all, what are examples of getting into flow aside from sports as an adult?
That's number one.
And the number two, like what are some examples of creative social activities as an adult?
Well, one, it is completely erroneous, though myself and Mihai Chixotemiah are totally at fault for this.
Like, we are to blame, but the idea that flow only shows up in athletes and artists is not true.
We focused a lot on athletes and we focused a lot on artists.
So people think it's only athletes and artists, but the most common flow state on earth is reading or interpersonal flow.
Interpersonal flow is like the group flow, you and your best friend, get into a great conversation, and a whole hour goes by,
notice it's gone. That's interpersonal flow happens all the time. So one of the reasons you want to engage
in challenging creative and social activities, they all trigger flow. So singing and a choir, very, very
flowy, group flow, lots of research on that gardening, very flowy long walks in nature. You know,
nature hikes very, very flowy, coding, architecture, drawing, drumming, dancing, on and on and on.
I mean, there's a ton of flow at work. In fact, flow is much more confidential.
common at work than it is during leisure for a bunch of different reasons. But, you know, the list
sort of goes on and on and on. If we want to enjoy the second half of our, if we want to enjoy our lives
in general, but if we really want to thrive during our second half of our lives, you can't do it
without flow. Flow is actually the engine of adult development. It's how we grow up. We grow up
by getting into flow states, coming out the other side is more complex, more skillful, more adaptive,
more empathetic, wiser. And we move forward. So it plays a big role in adult development.
and successful in peak performance aging.
Yeah.
So just for all my young improfitors,
I'm going to do a sort of Stephen Kotler Marathon
when this episode comes out.
And I'm going to replay all of our older episodes
about flow, about all the different things
that I've talked to with Stephen over the past.
So it will be a great educational value for all of you guys.
So, Stephen, I end the show with a couple of questions
that I ask all my guests and then we do some fun things
at the end of the year.
The first one is,
what is one actionable thing that our young improfitors can do today to become more profitable
tomorrow? You can double down on your primary flow activity, which is whatever the thing you've
done most to your life that just drops you into flow. For me, it's skiing, right? For my wife,
it's long walks with dogs. My best friend is playing guitar. Whatever that thing that most likely
drops you into flow, flow massively amplifies, among other things, motivation, productivity, and
creativity. And here's the cool thing. Even though a flow state lasts about 90 minutes, sometimes
I can stretch out for longer. The heightened productivity and creativity will outlasts the flow state
by a day, maybe two. Flow also resets the nervous system. It calms you down, flushed stress hormones
out of your system. So emotional regulation, emotional madden, fear blocks performance on every level.
Flow resets the nervous system. So, and the thing is, it's most people, and especially all the
people listening to this podcast are going to be like you. You got to your 30s and you stopped skiing.
You put down childish thing. Skies go away. The surfboard goes away. The skateboard goes away.
You stop samba dancing and salsa dancing and all that stuff. And the research shows that's a disaster.
It's a disaster. In fact, we work with tons of people all over the world and burnout is a real big issue.
The first thing we do to treat burnout is have them double down on the primary flow activity.
Research shows that if you want peak performance, you need.
to have like about three to four hours a week on your primary flow activity,
just to keep your nervous system where it needs to be.
Yeah, I'd love for you to tell everybody about the flow research collective
and all the trainings you guys have available.
Flow Research Collective is my organization.
We're a research and training organization.
On the research side, we studied the neurobiology of peak human performance.
What's going on in the brain and the body when we're performing at our best.
We did this work with scientists all over the world at Stanford and Imperial College, London,
and UCSC and UCLA and UC Davis.
in USCSF and a whole bunch of other academics.
And we take the science and we use it to train people.
We train people 130 countries.
And we train everybody from like professional athletes
and members of the special forces
to soccer moms and insurance brokers and teachers
and folks in the Air Force.
And we work with a lot of companies in between.
So now we're training Facebook or Meta,
censure, Bain Capital, Audi,
San Francisco Police Department, the Air Force,
wise watcher people and our trainings are for everybody.
And if you're interested, if you go to getmoreflow.com,
cheesiest URL in the world,
but nobody was remembering any of the others.
So I've given in.
And it's now getmoreflow.com,
despite the fact that I'm embarrassed to say it out loud.
But you can go there and sign up for a free hour-long coaching call with somebody
on my staff.
So you'll hear all about the trainings.
You'll learn everything.
Is it right for you?
Is it wrong for you?
Nobody on my staff gets every,
I'll fire somebody if they try to sell you.
anything. It's just an informational conversation. So it's really mellow and most people get a lot
out of it and it's free. Getmoreflow.com. Amazing. I'll stick that link in the show notes to make it super
easy for you guys. Okay. Last question of the episode. And this is where you can feel free to add
something that we didn't get to talk about or just something that's on the top of your mind.
Doesn't you have to have to do with the topic of the episode? It's up to you. What is your secret to
profiting in life? It's just hard work. I'll give you an example. I came up as a journalist.
And I figured out very early on that most journalists hated rewriting.
They'd write their story.
They'd edit it.
They'd turn it in.
The editor would make changes and they'd rewrite it once and turn it back yet.
I found that out.
I was like, okay, you guys are doing it three times.
Clearly my job is to make my editor's job easier.
Like, my job editor has to really come through my articles and takes months.
He hates me.
That's not, you know, I'm not a good employee.
So I started editing my stories 12 times.
I just figure out what everybody else would do, and I'd triple it or quadruple it for really,
I did that for years.
So, I mean, it wasn't much of a secret.
I just figured I wasn't as smart, as well connected, as handsome and all the other things
as everybody else, but I just figured out how to outwork them.
A lot of it is about smart hard work, not just hard work, smart hard work.
There's better ways to do.
I talk a lot about that in our country, about the advantages of smart, hard work and smart,
hard play and the difficulties was just have hard work is the only tool you reach for. But really,
like, there's no secret. I just put my butt in the chair and I did the work. I love that answer.
Thank you for sharing that. Where can everybody learn about you? Where can they get in our country?
And how can they find more about you, Stephen? NAR country. You can go to NARCountry.com or
Amazon or wherever books are sold. Stevencottler.com gets you to me. Flowresearch collective.com
gets you to the Flow Research Collective.
Get Moreflow.com gets you to our trainings.
I think that's it.
Amazing.
Always such a great conversation with you, Stephen.
Thank you so much for your time.
My pleasure.
It was great hanging out with you again.
Well, Yap, Bam, Stephen Kotler on Young and Profiting Podcasts for the fourth time.
It's crazy that I'm even able to say that and that I've been able to interview the
brightest minds in the world now for so many years.
We're coming up on Yap's fifth year anniversary in April, and I feel so blessed that people
like Stephen think of my podcast first when they want to spread the message on a new topic.
Today's conversation was especially eye-opening. You know, I always say this motto that I have.
You're never too old or too young to learn something new. And today's conversation was proof that that's
true. And especially for the older folks, a lot of people think that old dogs can't learn new tricks.
And Stephen flip that idea on its head today. The long, slow rot theory of aging is the idea that
our physical and mental skills decline over time, and there's nothing we can do to stop the
slide. But as Stephen explained in this episode, the good news is that it turns out that all the
physical and mental abilities we used to believe declined over time are actually use it or
lose it skills. If we never stop using these skills, it's amazing what's possible later on in our
years. In fact, in Stephen's new book in our country, he documents how he taught himself how to
park ski at age 53, which for a half dozen biological factors, was considered nearly impossible for anyone
over the age of 35.
Stephen defied all expectations.
And what a great way to learn
that action sports or dynamic activities
are great for longevity.
They're challenging activities
that produce feelings of mastery and control.
And these types of feelings
have a huge impact on health and longevity.
Action sports also demand
to find motor performance,
fast-twitch muscle response,
strength, stamina, balance,
agility, flexibility,
and a tolerance for risk.
That is the full complement
of use-it-or-lose-it skills
that we need later in life.
So young improfiters, here's your sign to take up that action sport you've always dreamed of learning.
Or at the very least, hike with the weighted vest to get the same effect.
Thanks so much for tuning in to today's episode of Young and Profiting Podcasts
with the godfather of Flo, Stephen Kotler.
If you like this episode, tell everyone your favorite way to listen, learn, and profit
by dropping us a five-star review on Apple Podcasts.
And share this podcast with your friends and family.
Spread the word about young and profiting podcast.
You guys can find me on Instagram at Yap with Hala or Lain.
LinkedIn by searching my name. It's Halitaha. We're also on YouTube. If you guys like to watch
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behind the scenes. This is your podcast princess and the LinkedIn, Halitaha, signing off.
