Lex Fridman Podcast - #435 – Andrew Huberman: Focus, Controversy, Politics, and Relationships
Episode Date: June 28, 2024Andrew Huberman is a neuroscientist at Stanford and host of the Huberman Lab Podcast. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/lex to get $350 of...f - LMNT: https://drinkLMNT.com/lex to get free sample pack - AG1: https://drinkag1.com/lex to get 1 month supply of fish oil - Shopify: https://shopify.com/lex to get $1 per month trial - NetSuite: http://netsuite.com/lex to get free product tour - BetterHelp: https://betterhelp.com/lex to get 10% off Transcript: https://lexfridman.com/andrew-huberman-5-transcript EPISODE LINKS: Andrew's YouTube: https://youtube.com/AndrewHubermanLab Andrew's Instagram: https://instagram.com/hubermanlab Andrew's Website: https://hubermanlab.com Andrew's X: https://x.com/hubermanlab Andrew's book on Amazon: https://amzn.to/3RNSIQN Andrew's book: https://hubermanlab.com/protocols-book PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (10:24) - Quitting and evolving (17:22) - How to focus and think deeply (19:56) - Cannabis drama (30:08) - Jungian shadow (40:35) - Supplements (43:38) - Nicotine (48:01) - Caffeine (49:48) - Math gaffe (1:06:50) - 2024 presidential elections (1:13:47) - Great white sharks (1:22:32) - Ayahuasca & psychedelics (1:37:33) - Relationships (1:45:08) - Productivity (1:53:58) - Friendship
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The following is a conversation with Andrew Huberman, his fifth time on the
podcast.
He is the host of the Huberman Lab podcast and is an amazing scientist,
teacher, human being, and someone I'm grateful to be able to call a close friend.
Also, he has a book coming out next year that you should pre-order now called
Protocols, an operating manual for the human body.
And now a quick few second mention of e-sponsor.
Check them out in the description.
It's the best way to support this podcast.
We got ASleep for naps, Element for electrolytes,
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and BetterHelp for mental
health.
Choose wisely, my friends.
Also if you want to work with our amazing team or just want to get in touch with me,
go to lexfreeman.com slash contact.
And now onto the full ad reads.
As always, no ads in the middle.
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This episode is brought to you by Asleep and it's Pod 4 Ultra. First of all, Pod 4 is an improvement
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to get 350 bucks off the Pod 4 Ultra. This episode is also brought to you by Element,
the drink that Andrew and I consume a lot of during the episode. I drink a lot of Element,
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I put element in the water.
I take, uh, I have one next to me right now, a power rated zero bottle
with 28 fluid ounces, fill it up with water, put one packet of element in there.
Usually watermelon salt, mix it all up, put in the fridge and, uh, but 30 minutes later, there's cold, refreshing deliciousness.
But yeah, in the Texas heat when I'm doing the long runs or hard training sessions,
like I just did 10 rounds the other day in grappling, no drinks.
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This episode is also brought to you by AG1, an all in one daily drink to support better
health and peak performance.
It's kind of hilarious how when Andrew and I hang out, how the supplementation and the
diet and just our way of being is on point.
There's a lot of AG1 consumed, there's a lot of element consumed, and there's a lot
of ground beef or steak consumed on a regular basis.
We've been planning to run together more,
but we haven't quite done that.
It's mostly my fault because
running has just been such a solo thing for me.
I really don't remember the last time
I ever run with anybody.
I get so much into my head
that I just feel like I'm even more introverted than I usually am.
Like I lose myself inside my mind.
It's become such a meditative process that to do running with another person.
It just feels a little bit weird.
I feel like I wouldn't be able to sort of contribute to the conversation.
If there's a conversation and also like pacing wise, there's a certain
pace where conversation is still possible, but it's a little uncomfortable
So and I can't really think at that pace that well and talk I already struggle talking
So I don't know what to figure it out
But he's just such a great person to work out with and a great person to talk to that
We'll have to figure it out anyway
Ag1 is always part of the picture and I drink
it twice a day. It's the foundation of my nutrition. It's the thing when I consume
it I feel like I've got all my bases covered no matter the crazy mental or
the physical stuff that I'm going to do. They'll give you a one month supply
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This episode is also brought to you by Shopify,
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This episode is brought to you by Better Help spelled H-E-L-P help. They figure out what you need and match you with a licensed therapist in under 48 hours. It's kind of
incredible the power of language, the power of spoken language to explore the
human mind. Because in order to generate speech, you have to take an idea that's in your
head, you have to compress that's in your head as you compress that idea
into something that could be represented in
Comprehensible sequence of words and you have to speak it within the full context of everything that's been spoken previously and everything
It's been going on around and then there's another human being on the other side that hears it first of all they have to hear it
Correctly, you know if it's noisy or whatever,
or maybe their whole mind is focused on some aspect of the scene that prevents them from
being able to really hear what's being said. But once they do, they have to then interpret it and
decode, decompress the thing that was represented in language into an idea and
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of rigorous deep conversation.
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it's super easy. Check them out at betterhelp.com slash Lex and save on your first month. That's
betterhelp.com slash Lex. This is the Lex Freeman podcast to support it. Please check out our
sponsors in the description. And now, dear friends, here's Andrew Huberman.
You think there's ever going to be a day when you walk away from podcasting?
Definitely.
I mean, I came up within and then on the periphery of skateboard culture.
And for the record, I was not a great skateboarder.
I always have to say that because skateboarders are relentless if you call something you didn't
do or whatever.
I mean, I could do a few things and I loved the community and I still have a lot of friends say that because skateboarders are relentless if you call something you didn't do or whatever.
I mean, I could do a few things and I loved the community and I still have a lot of friends
in that community.
Jim Thiebaud at Deluxe, you can look him up.
He's kind of the man behind the whole scene.
I know Tony Hawk, Danny Whale, all these guys.
I got to see them come up and get big and stay big in many cases, start huge companies
like Danny and Colin McKay's
or DC. Some people have a long life and some don't, but one thing I observed and learned a
lot from in skateboarding at the level of observing the skateboarders and then the ones that started
companies. And then what I also observed in science and still observe is you do it for a while, you do it at the highest possible
level for you, and then at some point you pivot and you start supporting the young talent coming in.
In fact, the greatest scientists, people like Richard Axel, Katherine Dulock, there are many
other labs in neuroscience, Karl Deisteroth. They're not just
known for doing great science, they're known for mentoring some of the best scientists that then
go on to start their own labs. I think in podcasting, I am very fortunate I got in in
a fairly early wave, not the earliest wave, but thanks to your suggestion of doing a podcast,
fairly early wave. I'll continue to go as long as it feels right. I feel like I'm doing good in the world and providing good, but I'm already starting to
scout talent. My company that I started with Rob Moore, SciCom Media, a couple other guys in there
too, Mike Blayback, our photographer, Ian Mackey, Chris Ray, Martin Phobes. We are a company that
produces podcasts.
Right now, that's Huberman Lab podcast,
but we're launching a new podcast,
Perform with Dr. Andy Galpin.
Nice.
We want to do more of that kind of thing,
finding a really great talent,
highly qualified people, credentialed people.
I've got a new obsession with scouring the internet,
looking for the young talent in science,
in health, and related
fields.
And so will there be a final episode of the HLP?
Yeah, I mean, bullet, bus or cancer aside, you know, someday they'll be the very last
and thank you for your interest in science and I'll clip out.
Yeah, I love the idea of walk and away and not be dramatic about it.
When it feels right, you can leave and you can come back whenever the fuck you want.
Jon Stewart did this well with The Daily Show.
I think that was during the 2016 election when everybody wanted him to stay on and he
just walked away.
Dave Chappelle, for different reasons, walked away.
Disappeared, came back.
Gave away so much money, didn't care.
And then came back and was doing like stand up
in the park in the middle of nowhere.
Genius.
You have Habib who undefeated,
walks away at the very top of a sport.
Is he coming back?
No.
It's done.
At least we don't know.
Yeah.
Right, you don't know.
I don't know if you know.
He bears everywhere our words.
Yeah, I think it know if you know.
He bears everywhere our words.
Yeah.
I think it's always a call.
The last few years have been tremendous growth.
We launched in January 2021, and even this last year, 2024, has been huge growth in all
sorts of ways.
It's been wild.
And we have some short form content planned,
30 minute shorter episodes that really distill down the critical elements.
We're also thinking about moving to other venues besides podcasting. So there's always the thought
and the discussion, but when it comes to like when to hang up your cleats, you know, it's like,
there just comes a natural time where you can do more to mentor the next generation coming in than focusing on self. And so there will come a time for that. And I think it's critical.
I mean, again, I saw this in skateboarding, like Danny and Colin and Danny's brother,
Damon started DC with Ken Block, the driver who unfortunately passed away a little while ago,
rally car driver. And they eventually sold it, I think, to Quicksilver or something
like that. But they're all phenomenal talents in their respective areas. But they brought in the
next line of amazing writers, the Plan B thing, Paul Rodriguez. For skateboarders, they know who
this is. Now in science, there are scientists like Feynman, for instance. I don't know if anyone can name one of his mentor
offspring. There are scientists who are phenomenal, like beyond world class,
right? Multi-generational world class who don't make good mentors. I'm not saying he wasn't good
mentor, but that's not what he's known for. Then there are scientists who are known for being
excellent scientists and great mentors. I think there's no higher celebration to be had at the end of one's career.
If you can look back and be like, hey, I've put some really important knowledge into the world.
People made use of that knowledge.
And guess what?
You spawned all these other scientific offspring or sport offspring or podcast offspring. In some ways, we look to
Rogan and to some of the other earlier podcasts. They paved the way. Rhonda Patrick, first science
podcast out there. Eventually, the baton passes. Fortunately, right now, everybody's active and it
feels really good. Yeah. Well, you're talking about the healthy way to do it, but fortunately right now everybody's active and it feels really good.
Yeah, well you're talking about the healthy way to do it, but there's also a different
kind of way where you have something like Grisha Grigori Perlman, the mathematician
who refused to accept the Fields Medal.
So he's one of the greatest living mathematicians and he just walked away from mathematics and
rejected the Fields Medal.
What did he do after he left mathematics? Life. Private. 100%.
I respect that. He's become essentially a recluse. These photos of him
looking very broke, like he could use the money. He turned away the money. He
turned away everything. You know, there's, there's, you just have to listen to the
inner voice. You have to listen to yourself and make the decisions that don't make any sense for the
rest of the world and make sense to you.
I mean, Bob Dylan didn't show up to pick up his Nobel Peace Prize.
That's punk.
Yeah.
Yeah.
He probably grew in notoriety for that.
Maybe he just doesn't like going in Sweden, but it seemed like it would be a fun trip.
I think they do it in a nice time of years, but hey, that's his right. He earned that right. I think the best artists
aren't doing it for the prize. They aren't doing it for the fame or the money. They're doing it
because they love the art. Yeah, that's the Rick Rubin thing. You got to verb it through, download
your inner thing. I don't think we've talked about this, this obsession that I have about how
I don't think we've talked about this obsession that I have about how Rick has this way of being very, very still in his body, but keeping his mind very active as a practice.
I went and spent some time with him in Italy last June, and we would tread water in his
pool in the morning and listen to History of rock and roll and 100 songs. Amazing
podcast, by the way. It is.
Yeah. And then he would spend a fair amount of time during the day in this kind of meditative
state where his mind is very active, body very still. And then Carl Deisteroth, when he came on
my podcast, talked about how he forces himself to sit still and think in complete sentences late
at night after his kids go to sleep.
And you know, there's a state of mind rapid eye movement sleep where your body is completely
paralyzed and the mind is extremely active and people credit rapid eye movement sleep
with some of the more elaborate emotion filled dreams and the source of many ideas.
And there are other examples. Einstein, people described him as taking walks around
the Princeton campus, then pausing and would ask him what was going on and the idea that his mind
was continuing to churn forward at a high rate. This is far from controlled studies,
but we're talking about some incredible minds and creatives who have a practice of stilling the body while keeping the mind deliberately
very active, very similar to rapid eye movement sleep. And then there are a lot of people who
also report great ideas coming to them in the shower while running. So it can be the opposite
as well where the body is very active and the mind is perhaps more on kind of like a default mode network, not really focusing on any one specific thing.
You know, interesting, there's a bunch of physicists and mathematicians I've talked
to, they talk about sleep deprivation and going crazy hours through the night, obsessively
pursuing a thing.
And then the solution to the problem comes when they finally get rest.
Right. And we know, we just did this six episode special series on sleep with Matt Walker,
we know that when you deprive yourself of sleep and then you get sleep, you get a rebound in
rapid eye movement sleep, you get a higher percentage of rapid eye movement sleep. And Matt talks about this in the podcast and he did an episode on sleep and creativity,
sleep and memory and rapid eye movement sleep comes up multiple times in that series. There's
also some very interesting stuff about cannabis withdrawal and rapid eye movement sleep. People
are coming off cannabis often will suffer from insomnia. But when they
finally do start sleeping, they like dream like crazy. Cannabis is a very controversial
topic right now. Oh yeah. I saw that. What happened? There's a bunch of drama around episode
you did on cannabis. Yeah. We did an episode about cannabis, talked about the health benefits and
the potential risks, right? It's neither here nor there.
It depends on the person, depends on the age,
depends on genetic background, a number of other things.
We published that episode well over a year ago
and it had no issues online, so to speak.
And then a clip of it was put to X where, you know,
the real action occurs,
as you know, your favorite box.
Yeah, the four ounce gloves as opposed
to the 16 ounce gloves that is X versus Instagram
or YouTube, there was kind of an immediate dog pile
from a few people in the cannabis research field.
The PhDs and MDs, yeah.
There were people on our side. There were people not on our side. I mean,
the statement that got things riled up the most was this notion that for certain individuals,
there's a high potential for inducing psychosis with high THC containing cannabis. For certain individuals,
not all. That sparked some issues. There was really a split. You see this in different fields.
There was one person in particular who came out swinging with language that in my opinion is not like of the sort that you
would use at a university venue, especially among colleagues, but that's fine.
We're all grownups.
Well, for me, from my perspective, it was strangely rude and it had an era of like elitism
that to me was at the source of the problem during COVID
that led to the distrust of science
and the popularization of disrespecting science
because so many scientists spoke with an arrogance
and a douchebaggery that I wish we would have
a little bit less of.
Yeah, it's tough because most academics don't understand
that people outside
the university system, they're not familiar with the inner workings of science and the culture.
And so you have to be very careful how you present when you're a university professor.
And when, yeah, so he came out swinging in some four-letter word type language and he was
obviously upset about it. So I simply said what I would say anywhere, which was, hey,
look, come on the podcast, let's chat. And one, you tell me where I'm wrong and let's discuss.
And fortunately, he agreed. Initially, he said, well, no, how can I be sure you're not going to misrepresent me? So I said, we got on a DM, then an email, then eventually phone call and just said,
hey, listen, you're welcome to record the whole conversation. We've never done a gotcha on my
podcast. Let's just get to the heart of the matter. I think this little controversy is perfect
kindling for a really great discussion. He had some other conditions that we worked out.
And I felt like, cool, like he's really interested. You get a very different person on the phone than
you do on Twitter. I will say he's been very collegial and that conversation is on the schedule.
I said, we'll fly you out, we'll put you up. He said, no, he wants to fly himself. He really
wants to make sure that there's like kind of a space between, I think some of the
perception of science and health podcasts in the academic community is that it's all designed to
sell something. No, we run ads so it can be free to everyone else. But I think, look, in the end,
he agreed and I'm excited for the conversation. It was interesting because in the wake of that little exchange, there's been a bunch of press from traditional
press about cannabis has now surpassed alcohol in many cultures as within the United States,
as when I say cultures, I mean demographics, the United States as the drug of choice. There
have been people highlighting the issues of potential psychosis
in high THC containing. And so it's kind of interesting to see how traditional media is
sort of on board certain elements that I put forward. And I think there's some controversy
as to whether or not the different strains, the Indica's and Sativa's are biologically different,
et cetera. So we'll get down into the weeds, pun intended, during that one. And I'm excited. It's the first time that we've responded to a direct criticism online about scientific
content in a way that really promoted like, oh, here, the idea of inviting a particular guest.
And so it's great. Let's get a guest to his expert in cannabis. I believe I could be wrong about this,
that he's a behavioral neuroscientist, that's slightly different training,
but look, he seems highly credentialed, it'd be fun.
And we welcome that kind of exchange.
And I'm not being diplomatic, I'm just saying like,
it's cool, like he's coming on.
And he was friendly on the phone, right?
Like he literally came out online and was like,
basically like, kind of like F you,
like F this and F you.
But you get someone on the phone and it's like's it going and they're like oh yeah well you know
I took there was an immediate apology of like hey listen I came out normally I'm like not
like that but online you know you get a different yeah okay listen so it's a little bit like
it's a little bit like jujitsu right people say all sorts of things I guess but if they
if you're like all right well let's go then it's probably a different story you know it's
not like you just,
because in Jujitsu people don't talk shit
because they know what the consequences are.
Let me just say on mic and off mic,
you have been very respectful towards this person.
And I look up to you and respect you
and admire the fact that you have been.
That said, to me, that guy was being a dick.
And when you graciously, politely invited him on the podcast, he was still talking down
to you the whole time.
So I really admire and look forward to listening to you talk to him, but I hope others don't
do that.
Like, you are a positive, humble voice, exploring all the interesting aspects of science.
Like you want to learn. If you've got anything. Like you want to learn.
If you've got anything wrong, you wanna learn about it.
The way he was being a dick, I was just hurt a little bit,
not because of him, but because like there's some people
I really, really admire, brilliant scientists
that are not their best selves on Twitter, on X.
Definitely. I don't understand what happens to their brain.
Well, they regress.
They regress and they also are protected.
You know, when you remove the,
I mean, no scientific argument should ever come
to physical blows, right?
But when you remove the real world thing
of being right in front of somebody,
people will throw all sorts of stones at a distance,
over a wall, and they've got their wife or their husband
or their boyfriend or their dog or their cat
to go cuddle with them afterwards.
But you get in a room and it's like,
confrontational people in real life are pretty rare,
but hopefully if they do it,
they're willing to back it up with knowledge
in this case, right?
We're not talking about physical altercation.
Yeah, he kept coming and he kept putting on conditions.
How do I know you want this?
And I was like, well, you can record the conversation.
How do I know you want that?
Listen, we'll pay for you to come out.
How do you know?
And eventually he just kind of relented
and to his credit, you know, he's agreed to come on.
I mean, he still has to show up, but once he does,
we'll treat him right like we would any other guest.
Yeah, you treat people really well,
and I just hope that people are a little bit nicer
on the internet.
Yeah, well, X is an interesting one,
because it thickens your skin just to go on there.
I mean, you have to be ready to deal with.
Sure, but I can still criticize people for being douchebags because that's still not
good inspiring behavior, especially for scientists that should be sort of symbols of scientific
thinking which requires intellectual humility. Humility is a big part of that. And Twitter
is a good place to illustrate that.
Yeah.
Years ago, I was a student in TA, then instructor,
and then directed a Cold Spring Harbor course
on visual neuroscience.
These are summer courses that explore different topics.
And at night, we would host what we hoped were battles
in front of the students, where you'd get two people on a, you know,
would it be neural prosthetics or molecular tools
that would first, you know, restore vision
to the blind kind of arguments.
You know, kind of like, it's kind of a silly argument
because it's gonna be a combination of both, right?
But you'd get these great arguments,
but the arguments were always couched in data.
And occasionally you'd get somebody would go like, or would curse
or something, but it was the rare, very well-placed insult. It wasn't coming out swinging.
I think ultimately, Twitter is a record of people's behavior. The internet is a record
of people's behavior. Here, I'm not talking about news reports about people's behavior.
I'm talking about how people show up online is really important. You've always carried yourself with a ton of composure and respect.
And you would hope that people would grow from that example. Well, I'll tell you that the
podcasters that I'm scouting, it's their energy, but it's also how they treat other people,
how they respond to comments. And we're blessed to have pretty significant reach when we
put out a podcast like someone else's podcast. It goes far and wide. Like a skateboard team,
like a laboratory where you're selecting people to be in your lab, you want to pick people that
you would enjoy working with and are collegial. Etiquette is lacking nowadays, but you're in the suit and tie, you're bringing it back.
Bringing it back.
You said that your conversation with James Hollis, a Jungian psychoanalyst, had a big
impact on you.
What do you mean?
James Hollis is an 84-year-old Jungian psychoanalyst who's written 17 books, including Under Saturn
Shadow, which is on the healing
and trauma of men, the Eden Project, excuse me, which is about relationships and creating
a life.
I discovered James Hollis in an online lecture that was recorded, I think, in San Diego.
It's on YouTube.
The audio is terrible called Creating a Life.
This was somewhere in the 2011 to 2015 span.
I can't remember.
I was on my way to Europe
and I called my girlfriend at the time.
I was like, I just found the most incredible lecture
I've ever heard.
And he talks about the shadow.
He talks about your developmental upbringing
and how you either align with
or go 180 degrees off your parents' tendencies and values in certain areas.
He talked about the specific questions to ask of oneself at different stages of life,
to live a full life. It's always been a dream of mine to meet him and to record a podcast.
And he wasn't able to travel, so our team went out to DC and sat down with him. We rarely do
that nowadays. People come to our studio.
He came in. He had some surgeries recently and he came in with some assistance from a cane and then
sat down and just blew my mind. From start to finish, he didn't miss a syllable. And every sentence that he spoke was like a quotable sentence with real potency and actionable items. I think one of the things that was most striking to me was how he said when we
take ourselves out of stimulus and response and we just force ourselves to spend some time in the
quiet of our thoughts while walking
or while seated or while lying down.
It doesn't have to be meditation, but it could be that we access our unconscious mind in
ways that reveals to us who we really are and what we really want.
That if we do that practice repeatedly, 10 minutes a day here, 15 minutes a day there, that we start to really touch into our unique
gifts and the things that make us each us and the directions we need to take. But that so often,
we just stay in stimulus response. We just do, do, do, do, do, which is great. We have to be
productive, but we miss those important messages. And interestingly, he also put forward this idea
of what is this? Like get up, shut up, suit up. Yeah, something like that. Like get out of bed,
suit up and shut up and get to work. He also has that in him, kind of a Goggins type mindset.
So be able to turn off all this self-reflection and self-analysis and just get shit done.
Get shit done, but then also take dedicated time and stop
and just let stuff geyser to the surface
from the unconscious mind.
And he quotes Shakespeare and he quotes Jung
and he quotes everybody through history
with incredible accuracy
and exactly the way needed to drive home a point.
But that conversation to me was one that I really felt like,
okay, you know, if I don't wake up tomorrow,
for whatever reason, that one's in the can
and I feel really great about it.
To me, it's the most important guest recording
we've ever done, in particular because he has wisdom.
And while I hope he lives to be 204,
chances are he's got another what,
20, 30 years with us, hopefully more.
But I really, really wanted to capture that information
and get it out there.
So I'm very, very proud of that one.
And he's the kind of guy that anyone listens to him,
young, old, male, female, whatever,
and you're gonna get something of value.
What do you think about this idea of the shadow?
That the good and the bad that we oppress
that hides from plain sight
when we analyze ourselves that's there.
You think there's like a ocean
that we don't have direct access to?
Yes.
Yeah, Jung said it, we have all things inside of us
and we do, and some people are more in touch
with those than others and some people it's repressed.
I mean, does that mean that we could all be, you know,
horrible people or marvelous people, benevolent people?
Perhaps, I think that, thankfully more often than not,
people lean away from the violent
and harmful parts of their shadow.
But I think spending time thinking about one's shadow,
shadows is super important.
How else are we going to grow? Otherwise, we have these
unconscious blind spots of denial or repression or whatever the psychiatrist tell us. But it
clearly exists within all of us. I mean, we have neural circuits for rage. We all do. We have
neural circuits for altruism. And no one's born without these things.
Some people are atrophied and some people are hypertrophied, but
looking inward and recognizing what's there is key.
Or positive things like creativity. Maybe that's what Rick Rubin is accessing
when he goes silent, silent body, active mind. That's interesting. What is it for you?
Silent body, active mind. That's interesting. What is it for you? What place do you go to that generates ideas, that helps you generate ideas? I have a lot of new practices around this. I mean,
I'm always exploring for protocols. I have to. It's like in my nature. When I went and spent time
with Rick, I tried to adopt his practice of staying very still and just letting stuff come to the surface or the Dice-Sarathian way of formulating complete
sentences while being still in the body.
What I found works better is what my good friend Tim Armstrong does to write music.
He writes music every day.
He's a music producer.
He's obviously a singer, guitar player for Rancid. And he's helped dozens and dozens and dozens of female pop artists and
punk rock artists write great songs. And many of the famous songs that you've heard from other
artists, Tim helped them write. Tim wakes up sometimes in the middle of the night
and what he does is he'll start drawing or painting.
So what he's done, and Joni Mitchell talks about this too,
you find some creative outlet that's like 15 degrees
off center from your main creative outlet
and you do that thing.
So for me, that's drawing.
I like doing anatomical drawings, neuroscience based drawing, drawing neurons, that kind of thing. And if I do that for a little while,
my mind starts churning on the nervous system and biology. And then I come up with
areas I'd like to explore for the podcast, ways I'd like to address certain topics.
Right now, I'm very interested in autonomic control. A beautiful paper came out that
shows that anyone can learn
to control their pupil sizes without changing luminance
through a biofeedback mechanism.
And that gives them control over their so-called
automatic autonomic nervous system.
And I've been looking at what the circuitry is
and it's beautiful.
So I'll draw the circuitry
that we know underlies autonomic function.
As I'm doing that, I'm thinking, oh, what about autonomic control and those people that
supposedly can control their pupil size?
Then you go in and there's a paper published in Nature Press, one of the nature journals,
and there's a recent paper on this.
I'm like, oh, cool.
Then we talk about this.
Then how could this be put into a post?
Doing things that are about 15 degrees off center from your main thing is a great way to access, I believe, the circuits for, in Tim's case,
painting goes to songwriting.
I think for Joni Mitchell, that was also the case, right?
I think it was drawing and painting to singing and songwriting.
For Rick, I don't know what it is.
Maybe it's listening to podcasts.
I don't know.
That's his business.
Do you have anything that you like to focus on
that allows you then an easier transition
into your main creative work?
No, I really like to focus on emptiness and silence.
So I pick the dragon I have to slay,
so whatever the problem I have to work on,
and then just sit there and stare at it.
I love how fucking linear you are.
And it just, and if there's no, if you're tired, I'll just sit.
I believe in the, in the power of just waiting and usually I'll stop being tired or their energy rises from somewhere or an idea pops from somewhere.
But there needs to be a silence and emptiness.
It's an empty room, just me and the dragon, and we wait, that's it.
Like if it's a, usually with programming,
you're thinking about a particular design,
like how do I design this thing to solve this problem?
Any cognitive enhancers?
I've got quite the gallery in front of me.
Oh, that's right, yeah.
Should we walk through this?
Yeah.
This is not a sales thing, it's just,
I tend to do this bounce back and forth.
Your refrigerator just happened to have
a lot of different choices.
So water.
This is all of my refrigerator.
I know, right?
There's no food in there.
There's water.
There's element, which they now have canned.
Yeah.
And yes, they're a podcast sponsor for both of us,
but that's not why I cracked one of these open.
I like them provided they're cold.
And that's by the way, my least favorite flavors, I was saying, that's the reason it's still left in the fridge. The cherry one is these open. I like them provided they're cold. And that's by the way, my least favorite flavors I was saying. That's the reason it's still left
in the fridge. The cherry one is really good.
The black cherry, there's an orange one. Yeah.
I pushed the sled this morning and pulled the sled for my workout at the gym and it was hot
today here in Austin. So some salt is good. And then Matina Yerba Mate, zero sugar, full
confession. I helped develop this.
I'm a partial owner, but I love yerba mate. Half Argentine, been drinking mate since I was a little
kid. There's actually a photo somewhere on the internet when I'm like three sitting on my
grandfather's lap sipping mate out the gourd. And then this, my fun, interesting, this is just a
little bit of coffee with a scoop of, Brian Johnson gave me cocoa,
just like pure unsweetened cocoa.
So I put that in chocolate and I like it.
Just for the taste.
Well, it actually nukes my appetite.
And since we're not going out to dinner tonight
until later, I figure that's good.
Yeah, Brian's an interesting one, right?
He's really pushing this thing.
The optimization of everything.
Although he just hurt his ankle.
He posted a photo of the hurt his ankle.
So now he's injecting BPC body protection compound 157, which many, many people are
taking by the way.
I did an episode on peptides.
I should just say, you know, BPC 157, one of the known effects in animal models is angiogenesis,
like development of new vasculature, which can be great in some context, but also if
you have a tumor, you don't really want to vascularize that tumor anymore. I worry about people taking BPC157 continually, and there's very little human data.
I think there's like one study and it's a lousy one. It's a lot of animal data. Some of the
peptides are interesting, however. There's one that I've experimented with a little bit called pinealin, which I find,
even if I've just taken it twice a week before sleep, then it seems to do something to the
circadian timekeeping mechanism. Because then on other days, when I don't take it,
I get unbelievably tired at that time that normally I would do the injection.
These are things that I'll experiment with for a couple of weeks and then typically stop,
maybe try something else. But I stay out of things that really stimulate any of
major hormone pathways when it comes to peptides. That's actually a really good question of how do
you experiment? How long do you try a thing to figure out if it works for you? Well, I'm very
sensitive to these things and I have been doing a lot of things for a long time. So if I add
something in, it's always one thing at a time and I notice right away if
it does not make me feel good.
Like there's a lot of excitement about some of the so-called growth hormone secretagogues,
hypermoral and testimeral and sermuralin.
I've experimented a little bit with those in the past and they've nuked my rapid eye
movement sleep, but given me a lot of deep sleep, which doesn't feel good to me, but
other people like them.
I also just generally try and avoid taking peptides that tap into these hormone pathways
because you can run into all sorts of issues, but some people take them safely.
But usually after about four or five days, I know if I like something or I don't, and
then I move on.
But I am not super adventurous with these things.
I know people that will take cocktails of pept adventurous with these things. I know people that will take
cocktails of peptides with multiple things. They'll try anything. That's not me. And I do
blood work. But also I'm mainly reading papers and podcasting and I'm teaching a course next
spring. Stanford, I'm going to do a big undergraduate course. I'm trying to develop
that course and things like that. I don't need to lift more weight or run further than I already
do, which is not that much weight or far as it is. All right. You're not going to the Olympics.
You're not trying to truly maximize some aspect of your performance.
No. I'm not trying to get down below whatever, 7% body fat or something. I don't have those kinds of goals. So hydration, electrolytes, caffeine in the form of mate, and then this
coffee thing. And then here's one that I think I brought out for discussion. This is a piece of
Nicorette. They're not a sponsor. Nicotine is an interesting compound. It will raise blood pressure
and it is probably not safe for everybody.
But nicotine is gaining in popularity like crazy, mainly these pouches that people put in the lip.
We're not talking about smoking, vaping, dipping or snuffing.
My interest in nicotine started, this was in 2010.
I was visiting Columbia Medical School and I was in the office of the great neurobiologist Richard Axel won the Nobel Prize
co-recipient with Linda Buck for the
discovery of the molecular basis of olfaction
Brilliant guy. He's probably in his late 70s now. Yeah, and he kept popping Nicorette in his mouth
And I was like, what's this about? And he said, oh well, this was just anecdote anecdote, right? But he said this. He said, oh, well, you know, it protects against
Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. I said, it does. And he goes, yeah, yeah, yeah. I don't know if he was
kidding or not. He's known for making jokes. And then he said that when he used to smoke,
it really helped his focus and creativity, but then he quit smoking because he didn't want lung
cancer. And he found that he couldn't focus as well, so he would choose Nicorette. So occasionally, like right now,
I do a half a piece, but I'm not Russian.
So I'm a little, you know,
did you just pop the whole thing in your mouth?
So I'll do a couple of milligrams every now and again.
And it definitely sharpens the mind
on an empty stomach in particular, but you fast all day.
You're still doing one meal a day.
One meal a day.
Yeah.
Yeah, I did a nicotine pouch with Rogan at dinner and I got high.
Yeah, that's a lot. That's usually six or eight milligrams. I know people that get a
canister of Zin, take one a day. Pretty soon they're taking a canister a day. You have
to be very careful. I will only allow myself two pieces of Nicorette total per week.
And you will notice that, you know,
in the day after you use it, you know,
sometimes your throat will feel a little bit like,
like a little spasming,
like you might want to cough once or twice.
And so, you know, if you're a singer or you're a podcaster
or something, you have to do long podcasts.
You want to just be mindful of it.
But yeah, you're supposed to kind of like keep it
in your cheek and here we go.
But it did make me intensely focused. In a way that was a little bit scary because the
nucleus basalis is in the, you know, in the basal forebrain nucleus has cholinergic neurons
that radiate out axons, little wires that release acetylcholine into the neocortex and elsewhere. When you focus
on one particular topic matter or one particular area of your visual field or listening to something
and focusing visually, we know that there's an elaboration of the amount of acetylcholine
released there and it binds to nicotinic acetylcholine receptor sites there.
It's kind of an intentional modulation by acetylcholine. So
you're getting it with nicotine, you're getting an exogenous or artificial heightening of that
circuitry. And the time I had Tucker Carlson on the podcast, he told me that apparently it helps
him, as he said publicly, keep his love life vibrant. Really?
It causes vasoconstrictions.
He literally said it makes his dick very hard.
He said that publicly also.
Okay, well, as little as I wanna think
about Tucker Carlson's sex life, no disrespect.
The major effect of nicotine on the vasculature,
my understanding is that it causes vasoconstriction,
not vasodilation. Drugs like Cialis, Tadalafel, Viagra, et cetera, vasodilators,
they allow more blood flow. Nicotine does the opposite, less blood flow to the periphery,
but provided dosages are kept low. I don't recommend people use it frequently or at all. I don't recommend young people use it,
25 and younger. Brain is very plastic at that time. Certainly smoking, dipping,
vaping, and snuffing aren't good because you're going to run into trouble for other reasons.
In any case, even there, vaping is a controversial topic.
Probably safer than smoking, but has its own issues.
And I said something like that,
and boy, did I catch a lot of heat for that.
Can't say anything as a health science educator,
not piss somebody off.
Just depends on where the center of mass is
and how far outside that you are.
For me, the caffeine is the main thing.
And actually, it's a really big part of my life. And one of the things you recommend that people wait a bit in the
morning to consume caffeine. If they experience a crash in the afternoon,
this is one of the misconceptions I regret. Maybe even it for people that crash in the afternoon.
Oftentimes if they delay their caffeine by 60 to 90 minutes in the morning, they will
offset some of that.
But if you eat a lunch that's too big or you didn't sleep well the night before, you're
not going to avoid that afternoon crash.
But I'll wake up sometimes and go straight to hydration and caffeine, especially if I'm
going to work out.
Here's a weird one. If I exercise before 830 AM, especially if I start exercising when I'm a
little bit tired, I get energy that lasts all day. If I wait until my peak of energy, which is mid
morning, 10 AM, 11 AM, and I start exercising then, I'm basically exhausted all afternoon.
I don't understand why. It depends on the intensity of the workout.
But so I like to be done, showered and heading into work by 9 a.m.
But I don't always meet that mark.
So you're saying it doesn't affect your energy if you start with exercising.
I think you can get energy and wake yourself up with exercise if you start early.
And then that fuels you all day long.
I think that if you wait until you're feeling
at your best to train, sometimes that's detrimental
because then in the afternoon when you're doing
like the work we get paid for,
like research podcasting, et cetera,
then oftentimes, you know, your brain isn't firing as well.
That's interesting.
I haven't really rigorously tried that wake up and just start running or listening.
This is the Jaco thing.
And then there's this phenomenon called entrainment,
where if you force yourself to exercise or eat or socialize
or view bright light at a certain time of day
for three to seven days in a row,
pretty soon there's an anticipatory circuit
that gets generated.
This is why anyone in
theory can become a morning person to some degree or another. This is also a beautiful example of
why you wake up before your alarm clock goes off. People wake up and all of a sudden it goes off.
It wasn't because it clicked. It was because you have this incredible timekeeping mechanism
that exists in sleep. There's some papers that have been published
in the last couple of years,
Nature Neuroscience and elsewhere showing that
people can answer math problems in their sleep,
simple math problems, but math problems nonetheless.
This does not mean that if you ask your partner
a question in sleep that they're gonna answer accurately.
Like they might screw up the whole
cumulative probability of 20% across multiple months.
All right. Listen.
What happened?
What happened? Here's the deal. A few years back, I did a four and a half hour,
after editing four and a half hour episode on male and female fertility. The entire recording
took 11 hours. And at one point during the, and by the way, I'm very proud
of that episode. There's many couples have written to me and said they now have children
as a consequence of that episode. And my first question is what were you doing during the
episode? But in all seriousness, um,
we should say that it's four and a half hours. And for people, then they should listen to
the episode. You're,'s an extremely technical episode.
You're not stopping dropping facts and referencing a huge number of papers. It must be exhausting.
I don't understand how you can possibly do that.
It talks about sperm health, sperm adgenesis. It talks about the ovulatory cycle. It talks about
things people can do that are considered absolutely supported by science. It talks about some of the
things kind of out on the edge a little bit that are a little bit more experimental. It talks
about IVF. It talks about ICSI. It talks about all of that. It talks about frequency of pregnancy
as a function of age, et cetera. But there's this one portion there in the podcast where
I'm talking about the probability of a successful pregnancy as a
function of age.
And so there was a clip that was cut in which I was describing cumulative probability.
And by the way, we've published cumulative probability histograms in many of my laboratory
papers, including one that was a Nature article in 2018.
So we run these all the time.
And yes, I know the difference between independent and cumulative probability. That's just like, I do. The way the clip was cut and
what I stated, unfortunately, combined to like a pretty great gaffe where I say,
I said you're just adding percentages, 20 to 120%. And then I made this kind of,
unfortunately my humor isn't always so good.
And I made a joke, I said, 120%,
but that's a different thing altogether.
What I should have said was, that's impossible, you know,
and here's how it actually works.
But then it continues where I then describe
the cumulative probability histogram
for successful pregnancy.
But somewhere in the early portion, I misstated something, right?
I made a math error, which implied I didn't understand the difference between independent
and cumulative probability, which I do.
And it got picked up and run and people had a really good laugh with that one at my expense. And so what I did in
response to it was rather than just say everything I just said now, I just came out online and said,
hey folks, in an episode dated this on fertility, I made a math error. Here's the formula for
accumulated probability, successful pregnancy at that age. Here's the graph.
And I offered it as a teaching moment in two ways. One, for people to understand cumulative probability. It was interesting too, a number of people that had come out critiquing the GAF.
Also, like Balaji and folks came out pointing out that they didn't understand cumulative
probability. So, there was a lot of posturing. The dog pile, oftentimes people are quick to
dog pile, they didn't understand. But a lot of people did understand. Some smart
people out there, obviously. I called my dad and he was just laughing. He goes,
oh, this is good. This is like the old school way of hammering academics.
The point being, there's a teaching moment. Gave me an opportunity to say, hey, I made a mistake.
I also made a mistake in another podcast
where I did a micron to millimeter conversion and were sending me your conversion. We always
correct these in the show note captions. We correct them in the audio now. Unfortunately,
on YouTube, it's harder to correct. You can't go and edit in segments. We put in the captions.
That was the one teaching moment. If you make a mistake, it's substantive and related to data.
You apologize and correct the mistake. Use the teaching moment. If you make a mistake, it's substantive and relate to data.
You apologize and correct the mistake.
Use the teaching moment.
The other one was to say, hey, you know, in all the thousands of hours of content we've
put out, I'm sure I've made some small errors.
I think I once said serotonin when I meant dopamine and you know, you're going, you're
riffing.
And it's a reminder to be careful to edit, double check.
But the internet usually edits for us,
and then we go make corrections.
But it didn't feel good at first,
but ultimately I can laugh at myself about it.
Long ago at Berkeley when I was TAing my first class,
it was a biopsychology class,
it was 1998 or 1999,
I was drawing the pituitary gland, which has an anterior and a posterior
lobe, actually has a medial lobe too.
I had five, six hundred students in that lecture hall.
And I drew, it was chalkboard, and I drew the two lobes of the pituitary.
And I said, my back was to the audience, I said, you know, and so they just sort of hang
there.
And everyone just erupted in laughter because it looked like a scrotum with two testicles. And I remember thinking like, oh my God, I don't think I can
turn around, I can face this. And I'm like, oh, I got to turn around sooner or later. So I turned
around and we just all had a big laugh together. It was embarrassing. I'll tell you one thing,
though, they never forgot about the two lobes of the pituitary.
Yeah. And you haven't forgotten about that either.
Right, there's a high salience for these kinds of things. And it also was kind of fun to see
how excited people get to see people trip. It's like an elite sprinter trips and does something
stupid, like, you know, runs the opposite out of the blocks or something like that. And, or, you know, I recall one World Cup match years ago,
a guy scored against his own team.
I think they killed the guy.
Do you remember that?
Some South American or Central American team.
And they killed the guy.
But yeah, let's look it up.
I just said World Cup.
Yeah, he was gunned down.
Andres Escobar scored against his own team in 1994 world cup in the United States,
just 27 years old playing for the Columbia national team.
Yeah.
Last name Escobar.
It's a good name.
I think it would protect you.
Listen, you know, so there are some gaffes that get people killed, right?
So, you know, how forgiving are we for online mistakes? You know, it's the nature of the
mistakes. People were quite gracious about the gaff and some weren't. And it's interesting that we, as public health science educators,
we'll do long podcasts sometimes and you need to be really careful. What's great is AI
allows you to check these things now more readily. So that's cool. And
there are ways that it's now going to be more self-correcting. I mean, you know, I think there's a lot of errors out there on the internet and people are finding them and it's cool.
Like things are getting cleaned up.
Yeah, but mistakes nevertheless will happen.
Are you, do you feel the pressure of not making mistakes?
Sure.
I mean, you know, I try and get things right to the best of my ability.
I check with experts.
It's interesting when people really don't like something that was said in a podcast.
A lot of times I chuckle because at Stanford,
we have some amazing scientists,
but I talk to them, people elsewhere.
I talk to them, people elsewhere. And it's always interesting to me how, you know, I'll get divergent information and then I'll find the overlap in the Venn diagram. And I have this like question,
do I just stay with the overlap in the Venn diagram? Like I did an episode on oral health. I didn't know this until I researched
that episode, but oral health is critically related to heart health and brain health.
There's a bacteria that causes cavities streptococcus, you know, that can make its way into
other parts of the body through the mouth that can cause serious issues. There's the idea that some
forms of dementia, some forms of heart disease are start in the mouth,
basically.
I talked to no fewer than four dentists, dental experts,
and there was a lot of convergence.
I also learned that teeth can demineralize,
that's the formation of cavities.
They can also remineralize.
As long as the cavity isn't too deep,
it can actually fill itself back in,
especially if you provide the right substrates for it.
That saliva is this incredible fluid
that has all this capacity to remineralize teeth,
provided the milieu is right.
Things like alcohol-based mouth washes,
killing off some of the critical things you need.
It's fascinating.
And I put out that episode thinking,
oh, I'm not a dentist, I'm not an oral health episode,
but I talked to a pediatric dentist.
There's a terrific one, Dr. Downscore Stacy, S-T-A-C-I on Instagram, does great content,
talked to some others. And then I just waited for the attack. I was like, here we go. And it
didn't come. And dentists were thanking me. I was like, whoa. You know, that's a rare thing.
More often than not, if I do an episode
about say psilocybin or MDMA, you get some people liking it or ADHD and the drugs for ADHD. We did a
whole episode on the Ritalin Vyvanse Adderall stuff. You get people saying, thank you. I
prescribed this to my kid and it really helps. But they're private about the fact that they do it because they get so much attack from other people.
So I like to find the center of mass, report that,
try and make it as clear as possible.
And then I know that there's some stuff
where I'm gonna catch shit.
What's frustrating for me is when like,
I see claims that I'm like against fluoridization of water,
which I'm not, right not. We talked about the benefits
of fluoride. It builds hyper-strong bonds within the teeth. I went and looked at some of the –
literally the crystal structure – excuse me, not the crystal structure, but essentially the micron
and submicron structure of teeth is incredible and where fluoride can get in there and form these
super-strong bonds. You can also form them with things like hydroxyapatite. And why is there fluoride in
water? Well, it's the best. Okay. You say some things that are interesting, but then somehow it
gets turned into like you're against fluoridization, which I'm not. Or I've been accused of being
against sunscreen. I wear mineral-based sunscreen on my face. I don't want to get skin cancer, or I use a physical barrier.
There is a cohort of people out there
that think that all sunscreens are bad.
I'm not one of them.
I'm not what's called a sunscreen truther.
But then you get attacked for like,
so we're talking about there are certain sunscreens
that are problematic.
So what, and Rhonda Patrick's now
starting to get vocal about this.
And so there are certain topics that's interesting
for which
you have to listen carefully to what somebody is saying, but there's a lump or
lumping as opposed to splitting of what health educators say. And so it just seems like, like with politics, there's this like urgency to just put people into a camp of expert versus like
renegade
or something and it's not like that.
It's just not like that.
So the short answer is I really strive,
really strive to get things right.
But I know that I'm gonna piss certain people off
and you've taught me and Joe's taught me
and other podcasters have taught me
that like if you worry too much about it,
then you aren't gonna get the newest information out there.
Like peptides, there's very little human data unless you're talking about Vilece or the
melana, you know, the stuff in the alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormone stuff which are prescribed
for female libido to enhance female libido or sermorelin which is for certain growth
hormone deficiencies.
With rare exception, there's very little human data.
But people are still super interested and a lot of people are taking and doing these
things so you want to get the information out.
Do you try to not just look at the science but research what the communities are talking
about, what the various communities are talking about?
Maybe research what the conspiracy theorists are talking about just so you know all the armies
that are going to be attacking your castle.
Yes, so like for instance, there's a community of people
online that believe that like, if you consume seed oils
or something that like you're setting up your skin
for sunburn and if you don't, you know,
like there's all these like theories,
but I liked it, so I like to know what the theories are.
I like to know what the extremes are,
but I also like to know what the theories are. I like to know what the extremes are, but I also like to know what the standard conversation
is.
But there's generally more agreement than disagreement.
I think where I've been bullish actually is like supplements.
People go, oh, supplements.
Well, there's food supplements like a protein powder, just different than a vitamin.
And then they are compounds.
There are compounds that have real benefit, but people get very nervous about the fact that they're not regulated. But some of
them are vetted for potency and for safety with more rigor than others. And it's interesting to see
how people who take care of themselves and put a lot of work into that are often attacked.
That's been interesting.
Also, one of the most controversial topics nowadays
is Ozempic, Monjaro.
I'm very middle of the road on this.
I don't understand why the quote unquote
health wellness community is so against these things.
I also don't understand why they have to be looked at
as the only route.
For some people, they've really helped them lose weight.
Yes, there can be some muscle loss and other lean body loss, but that can be offset with
resistance training.
They've helped a lot of people.
Other people are like, no, this stuff is terrible.
I think the most interesting thing about Ozempic monjaro is that they're in the GLP-1 pathway, glucagon-like peptide-1, and it was discovered in Gila monsters,
which is a lizard basically.
Now the entomologists will dive on me.
It's a big lizard looking thing that doesn't eat very often, and they figured out that
there's this peptide that allows it to curb its own appetite at the level of the brain and the gut.
And it has a lot of homology to sequence homology to what we now call GLP-1.
So I love anytime there's animal biology links to cool human biology links to a drug that's
powerful that can help people with obesity and type two diabetes.
And there's evidence that can even curb some addictions.
Those are newer data. But I don't see as either or.
In fact, I've been a little bit disappointed
at the way that the, whatever you wanna call it,
health wellness biohacking community
has like slammed on Ozempic monjaro.
It's like, they're like, just get out and run and do it.
Listen, there are people who are carrying
substantial amounts of weight
that running could injure them.
They get on these drugs and they can improve.
And then hopefully they're also doing resistance training
and eating better.
And then, you know, you're bringing
all the elements together.
Well, why do you think the criticism is happening?
Is it that Ozempic became super popular
so people are misusing it or that kind of thing?
No, I think what it is, is that people think
if it's a pharmaceutical, it's bad.
Yeah.
And then, or if it's a supplement, it's bad
depending on which camp they're in.
And wouldn't it be wonderful to kind of like fill
in the gap between this divide?
You know, what I would like to see in politics
and in health is neither right nor left,
but what we can just call a league of reasonable people
that looks at things on an issue by issue basis
and fills in the center.
Cause I think most people are in the, I don't want to say center in a political way, Cause I think most people are in the, are,
I don't want to say center in a political way,
but I think most people are reasonable.
They want to be reasonable,
but that's not what sells clicks.
That's not what, that's not what drives interest.
But I'm a very like, like I look at issue by issue,
person by person.
I don't like in group out group stuff.
I never have.
I've got friends from all walks of life.
I said this on other podcasts and it always sounds like it, like a political statement, but like in-group, out-group stuff. I never have. I've got friends from all walks of life. I said this on other podcasts and it always sounds like a political statement, but the
push towards polarization, it's so frustrating.
If there's one thing that's discouraging to me as I get older each year, I'm like, wow,
are we ever going to get out of this polarization?
Speaking of which, how are you gonna vote for the presidential election?
I'm still trying to figure out how to interview
the people involved and do it well.
What do you think the role of podcast is gonna be
in this year's election?
I would love long form conversations to happen
with the candidates.
I think it's gonna be huge.
I would love Trump to go on Rogan.
I'm embarrassed to say this,
but I would love to, honestly,
would love to see Joe Biden go on Joe Rogan also.
I would imagine that both would go on, but separately.
Separately, I think is, I think a debate,
Joe does debates, but I think Joe at his best,
this one-on-one conversation, really intimate.
I just wish that Joe Biden would actually do
long-form conversations.
I thought he had done a, it wasn't me,
I think it was on Jay Shetty's podcast.
He did Jay Shetty, he did a few,
but when I mean long-form, I mean really long-form,
like two, three hours and more relaxed.
It was much more orchestrated.
Because what happens when the interview's
a little bit too short, it becomes into this generic
political type of NBC, CNN type of interview.
You get a set of questions, and you don't get to really
feel the human, expose the human to the light.
We talked about the shadow, the good, the bad, and the ugly.
So I think there's something magical
about two, three, four hours.
But it doesn't have to be that long,
but it has to have that feeling to it,
where there's not people standing around
and everybody's nervous and you're going to be
strictly sticking to the question, answer type of
feel, but just shooting shit, which Rogan is the best by far in the world at that.
I don't think people really appreciate how skilled he is at what he does.
And the number, I mean, the three or four podcasts per week, plus the UFC announcing,
plus comedy tours and stadiums, plus doing comedy shows in the middle of the week, plus husband and
a father and a friend and jujitsu. The guys got these superhuman levels of output. I agree that
long form conversation is a whole other business.
And I think that people want and deserve to know the people that are running for office
in a different way and to really get to know them.
Well, listen, you know, I guess you, I mean, is it clear that he's going to do jail time
or maybe he gets away with fine?
No, I don't think I'm part of-
Because I was going to say, I don do – I'm not just saying this because you're my friend,
but you would do a marvelous job. I think you should sit down with all of them separately to
keep it civil and see what happens. Here's one thing that I found really interesting in
this whole political landscape. When I'm in Los Angeles, I often
get invited to these like, they're not dinners, but gatherings where, you know, a local, you
know, bunch of podcasters will come together, but a lot of people from the entertainment
industry, big agencies, big tech, like big, big tech, many of the people have been on
this podcast. And they'll host a discussion or a debate.
And what you find if you look around the room and you talk to people is that about half
the people in the room are very left leaning and very outspoken about that.
And they'll tell you exactly who they want to see in the win the presidential race.
And the other half will tell you that they're for the other side. A lot of people that people assume are on one side
of the aisle or the other are in the exact opposite side.
Now, some people are very open about who they're for,
but it's been very interesting to see how
when you get people one-on-one, they're like telling you
they want X candidate to win or Y candidate to win.
And sometimes I'm like, really?
I can't believe it. Like, you? I'm like, yep. And so it's what people think about people's political
leanings is often exactly wrong. And that's been eye opening for me. And I've seen that
in university campuses too. And so it's gonna be really, really interesting
to see what happens in November.
In addition to that, as you said,
most people are close to the center,
despite what Twitter makes it seem like.
Most people, whether they're sent a lot to center, right,
they're kind of close to the center.
Yeah, I mean, here's to me the most interesting question.
Who is gonna be the next big candidate in years to come? Who's that going to be? Right
now, I don't see or know of that person. Who's it going to be?
Yeah, the young promising candidates, we're not seeing them. Another way to ask that question,
who would want to be? Well, that's the issue, right? Who wants to live in this 12-hour news
cycle where you're just trying to dunk on the other team
so that nobody notices the shit that you fucked up?
That's not only not fun or interesting,
it also is just like,
it's gotta be psychosis-inducing at some point.
And I think that,
God willing, we're going to, you know, some young
guy or woman is like on this and refuses to back down and was just like determined to be president and we'll make it happen. But like, I don't even know who the viable candidates are. Maybe you, Lex. We should ask Sagar. Sagar would know.
Maybe Sagar himself. Sagar's show is awesome. He and Crystal do a great thing.
He's incredible. Especially since they have somewhat
divergent opinions on things. That's what makes it so cool.
He's great. He looks great in a suit. He looks real sexy.
He's taking real good care of himself. I think he's getting married soon.
Congratulations, Sagar. Forgive me for not remembering your future wife's great. He looks great in a suit, looks real sexy. He's taking real good care of himself. I think he's getting married soon. Congratulations, Sagar.
Forgive me for not remembering your future wife's name.
He won my heart by giving me a biography of Hitler as a present.
That's what he gave you?
Yeah.
I gave you a hatchet with a poem inscribed.
That just shows the fundamental difference between the two.
With a poem inscribed in it.
Which was pretty damn good. That just shows the fundamental difference between the two. With a poem inscribed in it.
Which was pretty damn good.
I realize everything we bring up on the screen
is like really depressing,
like the soccer player getting killed.
Can we bring up something happy?
Sure, let's go to Nature's Metal Instagram.
Those are pretty intense.
We actually did a collaborative post on a shark thing.
Really?
Yeah.
What kind of shark thing?
So to generate the fear VR stimulus for my lab in 2016, we went down to Guadalupe Island
off the coast of Mexico, me and a guy named Michael Muller, who's a very famous portrait
photographer but also takes photos of sharks.
And we used 360 video to build VR of great white sharks.
Brought it back to the lab.
We published that study in current biology.
In 2017, went back down there.
And that was the year that I exited the cage. You lower the cage with a crane and that year I
exited the cage. I had a whole mess with an air failure the day before. I was breathing from a
hookah line while in the cage. I had no scuba on. Divers were out. The thing got both constricted
up and I had an air failure and I had to actually share air and it was a whole mess. Story for
another time. But the next day, because I didn't want to get PTSD, and it was pretty scary, the next day I cage exited with some other divers. And it turns out
with these great white sharks in Guadalupe, the water is very clear and you can swim toward them
and then they'll veer off you if you swim toward them. Otherwise, they see you as prey.
Well, in the evening, you've brought all the cages up and you're hopefully all alive. We were hanging out
fishing for tuna. One of the crew on board had a line in the water and was fishing for tuna for
dinner. A shark took the tuna off the line. It's a very dramatic take. You can see the
absolute size of these great white sharks.
The waters there are filled with them.
That's the one.
But so this video, just the Neuralink link was shot
by Matt McDougall, who is the head neurosurgeon
at Neuralink, there it is, takes it.
Now, believe it or not, it looks like it missed,
like it didn't get the fish.
It actually just cut that thing like a band saw.
So I'm up on the deck with Matt. Yeah. And so when you look at it get the fish, it actually just cut that thing like a band saw. So I'm up on the deck with Matt.
Yeah.
And so when you look at it from the side,
you really get a sense of the girth of this fricking thing.
So as it comes up, if you pop the size of that thing,
and they move through the water with such speed,
just a couple, so when you're in the cage
and the cage is lowered down below the surface, they're going around, you're not allowed to chum the water there, some people do it.
But, and then when you cage ag sit, they're like, what are you doing out here? And then,
you know, they, you swim toward them, they veer off. But what's interesting is that if you look
at how they move through the water, all it takes for one of these great white sharks, when it sees a tuna
or something it wants to eat, is like two flicks of the tail and becomes like a missile. It's just
unbelievable economy of effort. And Ocean Ramsey, who is, in my opinion, the greatest of all cage
exit shark divers, this woman who dove with enormous great white sharks, she really understands
their behavior when they're aggressive, when they're not going to be aggressive. She and her husband, Juan, I believe his name is,
do they understand how the tiger sharks differ from the great white sharks? We were down there
basically not understanding any of this. We never should have been there. Actually,
the air failure the day before plus KJXing the next day, I told myself after coming up from the
KJX, that's it. I'm no longer taking risks with
my life. I want to live. Got back across the border. A couple of days later, I was like,
that's it. I don't take risks with my life any longer. But yeah, Matt McDougall shot that video
and then it went quote unquote viral through Nature is Metal. We passed them that video.
I actually saw a video where an instructor was explaining
how to behave with a shark in the water
and that you don't wanna be swimming away
because then you're acting like a prey.
That's right.
And then you wanna be acting like a predator
by looking at it and swimming towards it.
Right towards them and they'll bank off.
Now, if you don't see them, they're ambush predators.
You know, you're swimming in the surface.
And apparently if they get close,
you should just like guide them away
by like grabbing them and moving them away.
Some people will actually roll them,
but if they're coming in full speedy,
you're not gonna roll the shark.
But here we are back to dark stuff again.
I like the shark attack map.
And the shark attack map shows that,
you know, Northern California, there were a couple,
actually a guy's head got taken off.
He was swimming North of San Francisco.
There's been a couple of Northern California.
That was really tragic,
but most of them are in Florida and Australia.
Florida, the Surfrider Foundation shark attack map.
There it is.
They have a great map.
There you go.
So they look like they have all these scars on them.
So if you zoom in on, I mean, look at this.
If you go to North America.
Look at skulls.
There's a-
Yeah, where there are deadly attacks.
But in, yeah, Northern California, sadly,
this is really tragic.
If you zoom in on this one, I read about this.
This guy, if you can click the link, 50 year old male,
he was in chest high water.
This is just tragic.
I feel so sad for him and his
family. He's just three members of the party chose to go in. Nye was in his chest high water,
25 to 50 yards from shore. Great, he breached the water, seized his head, and that was it.
It does happen. It's very infrequent. If you don't go in the ocean, there's a very, very,
very low probability. But- But if it doesn't happen six times in a row,
no, 120% chance. Yeah. Who do you think wins? A saltwater crocodile or a shark?
Okay. I do not like saltwater crocodiles. They scare me to know. And Muller, Michael Muller, who dove all over the world,
he sent me a picture of him diving with salties,
saltwater crocs in Cuba.
It was a smaller one, but goodness gracious,
have you seen the size of some of those saltwater crocs?
Yeah.
I'm thinking the sharks are so agile.
They're amazing.
They've head cammed one or body cammed one
moving through the kelp bed.
And you look and it's just,
they're so agile moving through the water.
And it's looking up at the surface,
like the cameras looking at the surface.
And you just realize if you're out there,
you're not, and you're swimming and you get hit by a shark.
You're not.
I was gonna talk shit and say that a salty
has way more bite force, but according to the internet
Recently data indicates that the shark has a stronger bite
So I was assuming that a crocodile would have a stronger bite force and therefore agility doesn't matter but apparently a shark
Yeah, and turning one of those big salties this is probably not that you know turning around. It's like a battleship
I mean those sharks are unbelievable they hit from all sorts. Oh, and they do this thing. We saw
this. You're out of the cage or in the cage and you'll look at one and you'll see its
eye kind of like looking at you. They can't really fove it, but they'll look at you.
And you're tracking it and then you'll look down and you'll realize that one's coming
at you. They're ambush predators, they're working together.
That's fascinating.
I like how you know that they can't foveate.
You're already considering the vision system there.
It's a very primitive vision system.
Very primitive, eyes on the side of the head.
Vision is decent enough.
They're mostly obviously sensing things
with their electro sensing in the water,
but also olfaction.
Yeah, I spend far too much time thinking about and learning about the visual systems of different animals. If you get me going on this, we'll be here all night.
See, this is what I have the smuggler down to. I saw this in a store and I got it. Because this is from a shark.
Goodness. Yeah, I can't say I ever saw one with teeth this big, but it's beautiful.
Just imagine that. I can't say I ever saw one with teeth this big, but it's beautiful. Imagine it. It's beautiful.
Yeah, it's probably, you know, probably your blood pressure just goes and you don't feel
the thing.
Yeah, it's not gonna.
Before we went down for the cage exit, a guy in our crew, Pat Dossus, very experienced
diver, asked one of the South African divers, so what's the contingency plan
if somebody catches a bite?
And they were like, he was like every man for himself.
And they're like, basically saying,
if somebody catches a bite, that's it.
You know?
Anyway, I thought we were gonna bring up something happy.
Oh, that is happy.
Well, we live- Nature is beautiful.
Yeah, nature is beautiful.
We lived, but there are happy things. You brought, nature is beautiful. We lived, but you know, there are happy things.
You brought up nature as metal.
This is the difference between Russian Americans
and Americans is like maybe this is actually a good time
to bring up your Ayahuasca journey.
I've never done Ayahuasca, but I'm curious about it.
I'm also curious about Ibogaine, Iboga,
but you told me that you did Ayahuasca
and that for you it wasn't the dark, scary ride
that it is for everybody else.
Yeah, it was an incredible experience for me.
I did it twice actually.
And have you done high dose psilocybin?
Never, no.
I just did small dose psilocybin a couple of times.
So I was nervous about it.
I was very scared. Yeah, understandably so. I've done high dose psilocybin a couple times. So I was nervous about it. I was very scared.
Yeah, understandably so.
I've done high dose psilocybin.
It's terrifying, but I've always gotten something
very useful out of it.
So I mean, I was nervous about whatever demons
might hide in the shadow, in the union shadow.
Like I was nervous.
But I think it turns out,
I don't know what the lesson is to draw from that,
but my experience was-
Be born Russian.
It must be the Russian thing.
I mean, there's also something to the jungle.
It strips away all the bullshit of life
and you're just there.
I forgot the outside civilization exists.
I forgot time because like, when you don't have your phone,
you don't have meetings or calls or whatever,
you lose
a sense of time.
The sun comes up, the sun comes down.
That's the fundamental biological timer.
Every mammalian species has a short wavelength.
You think blue UV type, but like absorbing cone and a longer wavelength absorbing cone.
It does this interesting subtraction to designate when
it's morning and evening because when the sun is low in the sky, you've got short wavelength and
long wavelength light. Like when you look at a sunrise, it's got blues and yellows,
orange and yellows. You look in the evening, reds, orange and blues. In the middle of the
day, it's like full spectrum light. Now, it's always full spectrum light,
but because of some atmospheric elements and because of the low solar angle,
some atmospheric elements and because of the low solar angle, that difference between the different wavelengths of light is the fundamental signal that the neurons in your eye pay attention
to and signal to your circadian timekeeping mechanism. We are at the core of our brain
and the super-chiasmatic nucleus, we are wired to be entrained to the rising and setting of the sun. That's the biological timer, which
makes perfect sense because obviously as the planets spin and revolve.
I also wonder how that is affected by the… In the rainforest, the sun is not visible often,
so you're under the cover of the trees. Maybe that affects…
Well, there are social rhythms, there are feeding rhythms.
Sometimes in terms of some species will signal the timing of activity of other species,
but yet getting out from the canopy is critical. Of course, even under the canopy during the
daytime, there's far more photons than at night. This is always when I'm telling people to get
sunlight in their eyes in the morning and in the evening. People say, there's no sunlight this time here. Go outside on a really overcast
day. It's far brighter than it is at night. There's still lots of sunlight, even if you can't see the
sun as an object. I love time perception shifts. You mentioned that in the jungle, it's linked to
the rising and setting of the sun. You also mentioned on Ayahuasca, you zoomed out from the Earth. These are to me the most
interesting aspects of having a human brain as opposed to another brain. Of course,
we've only ever had a human brain, which is that you can consciously set your time domain window.
Like we can be focused here, we can be focused on all of Austin, or we can
be focused on the entire planet. You can make those choices consciously. But in the time
domain, it's hard. Different activities bring us into fine slicing or more broad binning
of time, depending on what we're doing, programming or exercising or researching or podcasting.
But just how unbelievably fluid the human brain is in terms of the aperture
of the time-space window of our cognition and of our experience.
I feel like this is perhaps one of the more valuable tools that we have access to that
we don't really leverage as much as we should, which is when things are really hard, you
need to zoom out and see it as one
element within your whole lifespan and that there's more to come. People commit suicide
because they can't see beyond the time domain they're in or they think it's going to go on
forever. When we're happy, we rarely think this is going to last forever, which is an interesting contrast in its own
right.
But I think that psychedelics, while I have very little experience with them, I have some,
and it sounds like they're just a very interesting window into the different apertures.
Well, how to surf that wave is probably a skill.
One of the things I was prepared for, and I think is important, is not to resist.
I think I understand what it means to resist a thing, a powerful way, that it's not going
to be good. So you have to be able to surf it. So I was ready for that, to relax through
it. And maybe because I'm quite good at that, from knowing how to relax in all kinds of
disciplines, playing piano and guitar when I was super
young and then through Jiu-Jitsu, knowing the value of relaxation and through all kinds
of sports, should be able to relax the body fully, just accept whatever happens to you.
That process is probably why it was a very positive experience for me.
Do you have any interest in Iboga?
I'm very interested in Ibogaine Iboga.
There's a colleague of mine and
researcher at Stanford, Nolan Williams, who's been doing some transcranial magnetic stimulation and
brain imaging on people who have taken ibogaine. Ibogaine, as I understand it, gives a 22-hour
psychedelic journey where no hallucinations with eyes open, but you close your eyes and you get a
very high resolution image of actual events
that happened in your life, but then you have agency within those movies. I think you have to
be of healthy heart to be able to do it. I think you have to be on a heart rate monitor. It's not
trivial. It's not like these other psychedelics. But there's a wonderful group called Veterans
Solutions that has used Ebola combined with some other psychedelics in the
veterans community to great success for things like PTSD. It's a group I've really tried to
support in any way that I can, mainly by being vocal about the great work they're doing.
But you hear incredible stories of people who are just near cratered in their life or
zombie by PTSD and other things post-war get back a lightness or achieve a lightness and a clarity
that they didn't feel they had. I'm very curious about these compounds. The state of Kentucky,
we should check this, but I believe it's taken money from the opioid crisis settlement for Ibogaine research.
I mean, so this is like no longer.
Yes, if you look here, let's see.
Did they do it?
Oh no.
Oh no, they backed away.
Kentucky backs away from the plan
to fund opioid treatment research.
They were going to use the money to treat opioid.
Now officials are backing off.
50 billion, what is on its way Now officials are backing off 50 billion,
what is on its way over the coming years?
50 billion dollars.
50 billion dollars is on its way to state
and local government over the coming years.
The pool of funding comes from multiple legal statements
with pharmaceutical companies that profited
from manufacturing or selling opioid painkillers.
Kentucky has some of the highest number of deaths
from the opioid.
So they were going to do psychedelic research
with Ibogaine, supporting research on illegal folks,
psychedelic drug called Ibogaine.
Well, I guess they backed away from it.
Well, sooner or later we'll get some happy news
up on the internet during this episode.
I don't know what to talk about,
the shark and the crocodile fighting.
Yeah, yeah, that's true.
And you survived the jungle.
Well, that's the thing.
I was writing to you on WhatsApp multiple times
because I was gonna put it on the internet,
are you okay?
And if you're like alive,
and then I was gonna just like put it to Twitter,
just like, he's alive.
But then of course you're far too classy for that.
So you just came back alive.
Well, jungle or not, one of the lessons is also,
when you hear the call for adventure,
just fucking do it.
I was gonna ask you, it's kind of a silly question,
but give me a small fraction of the things
on your bucket list.
Bucket list.
Yeah.
Go to Mars.
Yeah, what's the status of that?
I don't know, I'm being patient about the whole thing.
Red Planet ran that cartoon of you guys going to Mars.
That one was pretty funny.
That's true.
That was pretty funny.
The one with Goggins is already up there.
Yeah.
That's a funny one.
Probably also true.
I would love to die on Mars. I just love humanity reaching onto the stars and doing this bold adventure and taking big risks and exploring.
I love exploration. What about seeing different animal species? I'm a huge fan of this guy,
Joel Sartore, where he has this photo arc project
where he takes portraits of all these different animals.
If people aren't already following him on Instagram,
he's doing some really important work.
This guy's Instagram is amazing.
Like portraits of animals.
Well, look at these portraits.
The amount of, I don't want to say personality
because we don't want to project anything onto them,
but the eyes, and he'll occasionally put them up,
moving like that, there's a little owl.
I delight in things like this.
I've got some content coming on animals
and animal neuroscience and eyes.
Dogs or all kinds of animals?
All animals.
And I'm very interested in kids content
that incorporates animals.
So we have some things brewing there.
Like I could look at this kind of stuff all day long.
Look at that bat.
Like bats, people think about bats as kind of like
a little flickering, a little annoying disease
carrying things, but look how beautiful
that little sucker is.
How's your podcast with the Cookie Monster going?
Oh yeah, we've been in discussions with Cookie.
It's, can't say too much about that,
but Cookie Monster embodies dopamine, right?
Cookie Monster wants Cookie, right?
Wants Cookie right now, you know?
Like it was that one tweet,
Cookie Monster, I bounce
because cookies come from all directions.
You know, it's like, it's just embodying
the desire
for something and which is an incredible aspect
of ourselves.
The other one is, you remember a little while ago,
Elmo put out a tweet,
hey, how's everyone doing out there?
And it went viral.
And you know, the Surgeon General of the United States,
they've been talking about the loneliness crisis.
He came on the podcast and you know,
a lot of people have been talking about problems with loneliness, mental health issues with loneliness. Elmo
puts out a tweet, hey, how's everyone doing out there? Everyone gravitates toward it.
The different Sesame Street characters really embody the different aspects of self through
very narrow neural circuit perspective. Snufflefus is shy and Oscar the Grouch,
grouchy, right? And the Count, one, two. The archetypes of – yeah.
The archetypes of – This is very Jungian once again.
Right. Yeah. And I think that the creators of Sesame Street clearly either understand that or
it's an unconscious genius to that. So yeah, there are some things brewing on conversations
with Sesame Street characters.
It's not, I know you'd like to talk to Vladimir Putin,
I'd like to talk to Cookie Monster.
It illustrates the differences in our like,
sophistication or something.
Well, that's yeah.
It illustrates a lot.
Yeah, illustrates a lot.
But yeah, I also, I love animation.
So I'm not anime, that's not my thing, but animation.
So I'm very interested in the use
of animation to get science content across.
So there are a bunch of things brewing,
but anyway, I delight in StarTory's work
and there's a conservation aspect to it as well.
But I think that mostly wanna thank you
for finally putting up something that like
where something is not being killed
or like let some sad outcome.
These are all really positive.
They're really cool.
They're really cool.
And every once in a while, look at, look at that mountain lion.
Um, but I also like to look at these and some of them remind me of certain people.
Right.
So let's just scroll through.
Like for instance, I think when we don't try and process it too much, so like,
like, okay, look at this cat, this civic cat, amazing.
Like I feel like that somebody,
I feel like this is like someone I met once.
As a young kid.
Yeah, there's a curiosity.
Curiosity and a playfulness.
Carnivore.
Carnivore, frontalized eyes.
Found in forested areas.
Stereosis, depth perception, right.
So then you go down, you know,
it's like this beautiful fish.
Neon pink. Right. It reminds you of some of the, So then you go down, you know, it's like this beautiful fish.
Neon pink.
Right.
It reminds you of some of the,
like the influencers you see on Instagram, right?
Except this one's natural.
Just kidding.
Let's see, no filter.
Let's see, like, I feel like-
Bears, I'm a big fan of bears.
Yeah, bears are beautiful.
This one kind of reminds me of you a little bit.
There's like a stoic nature to it, a curiosity.
So you can kind of feel like the essence of animals.
You don't even have to do psychedelics to get there.
Oh, look at that.
He's like the behind the scenes of how it's actually.
Yeah.
And then there's.
Wow. Yeah.
Yeah, in the jungle, the diversity of life was also stark.
From a scientific perspective, just the fact
that most of those species are not identified
was fascinating.
Right.
It was like a little, every little insect
is a kind of discovery.
Right, I mean, one of the reasons I love New York City
so much, despite its problems at times,
is that everywhere you look, there's life.
It's like a tropical reef. If you've ever done scuba diving or snorkeling, you look, there's life. It's like a tropical reef. If
you've ever done scuba diving or snorkeling, you look on a tropical reef and it's like,
there's some little crab working on something and everywhere you look, there's life. In the Bay Area,
if you go scuba diving or snorkeling, it's like a kelp bed. The Bay Area is like a kelp bed. Every
once in a while, some big fish goes by. It's like a big IPO, but most of the time, not a whole lot
happens. Actually, the Bay Area, it's interesting, is I've been going back there more and more
recently.
There are really cool little subcultures starting to pop up again.
There's incredible skateboarding.
The GX 1000 guys are these guys that bomb down hills.
They're nuts.
They're just going-
So it's just speed, not tricks.
Yeah, I see GX 1000. These guys going down hills in San Francisco. They're nuts. They're just going- So it's just speed, not tricks.
You got to see GX 1000, these guys going down hills in San Francisco. They are wild. Unfortunately,
occasionally someone will get hit by a car, but GX 1000. Look, into intersections,
they have spotters. You can see someone there. Oh, I see. There's somebody looking out.
Into traffic. Yeah, into traffic. So- In San Francisco. Yeah, this is crazy. Like, this is unbelievable.
And they're just wild. But in any case-
What's on your bucket list that you haven't done?
Well, I'm working on a book. So I'm actually going to head to a cabin for a couple weeks and write,
which I've never done. People talk about doing this, but I'm going to do that.
I'm excited for that.
Just the mental space of really dropping into writing.
Like Jack Nicholson in the Shining Cabin.
Let's hope not.
Okay. Let's hope not.
You know, before, I mean, I only started doing
public facing anything, posting on Instagram in 2019,
but I used to head up to Wallala
on the Northern coast of California,
sometimes by myself, to a little cabin there
and spend a weekend by myself and just read and write papers and things like that. I used to do
that all the time. I miss that. So some of that, I'm trying to spend a bit more time with my
relatives in Argentina, relatives on the East Coast, see my parents more. They're in good
health, thankfully.
I want to get married and have a family.
That's an important priority.
I'm putting a lot of work in there.
Yeah, that's a big one.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, putting a lot of work into the runway on that.
What's your advice for people about that?
Or give advice to yourself about how to find love
in this world, how to find, how to build a family,
and get there. And then I'll listen to it someday and see if I hit the marks.
Yeah, well, obviously pick the right partner, but also like do the work on yourself. Know
yourself, that the Oracle, know thyself. And I think, listen, I have a friend, he's a new friend, but he's a friend who I met for a meal.
He's a very, very well-known actor overseas and his stuff has made it over here. We become friends.
We went to lunch and we were talking about work and being public facing and all this kind of thing.
Then I said, you have kids, right? He says,
he has four kids. I was like, oh yeah, I see your posts with the kids. You seem really happy.
He just looked at me, leaned in and he said, it's the best gift you'll ever give yourself.
He also said, and pick your partner, the mother of your kids, carefully. So that's good advice coming from, excellent advice coming
from somebody who's very successful in work and family. So that's the only thing I can pass along.
We hear this from friends of ours as well, but kids are amazing and families amazing.
And that's the different people, all these people who wanna like be immortal and like live to be 200 or something, you know,
there's also the old fashioned way of, you know,
having children that live on and evolve a new legacy,
but they have, you know, half your DNA.
So that's exciting.
Yeah, I think you would make an amazing dad.
Thank you.
It seems like a fun thing.
And you know, I've also gotten advice from friends
who are super high performing and have a lot of kids.
They'll say, just don't overthink it.
Start having kids.
Let's go.
Right. Well, the chaos of kids is kind of the, like, it can either bury you or it can give you energy.
But I grew up in a big pack of boys always doing like wild and crazy things.
And so that kind
of energy is great. And if it's not a big pack of wild boys, it's, you know, you have daughters and
they can be, you know, different form of chaos, sometimes same form of chaos. How many kids do
you think you want? You know, it's either two or five. Yeah. Very different dynamics. You're one of
two, right?
You're a brother.
Yeah.
I mean, I'm very close with my sister.
I couldn't imagine having another sibling
because there's so much richness there.
We talk almost every day.
Three, four times a week.
Sometimes just briefly, but we're tight.
We really look out for one another.
She's an amazing person person, truly an amazing person,
and has raised her daughter in an amazing way. My niece is going to head to college in a year or two
and my sister's done an amazing job. Her dad's done a great job too. They both really put a lot
into the family aspect. She has just spent time with a really amazing person
in Peru in the Amazon jungle, and he is one of 20 kids.
Wow.
So he's got, it's mostly guys,
so it's just a lot of brothers and I think two sisters.
I just had Jonathan Height on the podcast,
the guy who's talking about anxious generation,
coddling the American mind, he's great.
But he was saying that in order to keep kids healthy,
they need to not be on social media
or have smartphones until they're 16.
I've actually been thinking a lot
about getting a bunch of friends
onto neighboring properties.
Everyone talks about this.
Not creating a commune or anything like that.
But I think Jonathan's right,
we were more or less. Our brain wiring does best when we are raised in
small village type environments where kids can forage the whole free range kids idea.
And I grew up skateboarding and building forts and dirt clod wars and all that stuff.
It would be so strange to have a childhood without that.
Yeah. And I think more and more as we wake up
to the negative aspects of digital interaction,
we'll put more and more value to in-person interaction.
I mean, it's cool to see, for instance,
kids in New York City just kind of moving around the city
with so much sense of agency.
It's really, really cool.
The suburbs, like where I grew up,
like as soon as we could get out,
take the 7F bus up to San Francisco and
hang out with wild ones like that, while there were dangers, we couldn't wait to get out of the
suburbs. The moment that forts and dirt clod wars and stuff didn't cut it, we just wanted into the
city. Bucket list, I will probably move to a major city, not Los Angeles or San Francisco,
move to a major city, not Los Angeles or San Francisco, in the next few years, New York City, potentially. There's all such different flavors of experiences.
Yeah. I'd love to live in New York City for a while. I've always wanted to do that,
and I will do that. I've always wanted to also have a place in a very rural area. Colorado,
Montana are high on my list right now. And to be able
to pivot back and forth between the two would be great just for such different experiences.
And also I like a very physical life. So, the idea of getting up with the sun in the
Montana or Colorado type environment. And I've been putting some effort towards finding
a spot for that.
And New York City to me, I know it's got its issues and people say it wasn't what it was.
Okay, I get it. But listen, I've never lived there, so for me it would be entirely new.
And, you know, Shulz seems full of life.
There is an energy to that city and he represents that.
I mean, there's...
Yeah.
And the full diversity of weird
that is represented in New York City is great.
Yeah, you walk down the street,
there's like a person with like a cat on their head
and no one gives a shit.
Yeah, that's great.
All right. San Francisco used to be like that.
The joke was like, you have to be naked and on fire
in San Francisco before someone takes it.
But now it's changed.
But again, recently I've noticed that San Francisco,
it's not just about the skateboarders.
There's some community houses of people in tech
that are super interesting.
There's some community housing of people not in tech
that I've learned about and known people have lived there
and it's cool.
There's stuff happening in these cities
that's new and different.
I mean, that's what youth is for.
They're supposed to evolve, evolve things out.
Uh, so amidst all that, you still have to get shit done.
I've been really obsessed with tracking time recently, like making sure I have daily
activities of habits that I'm maintaining and very religious about making sure I get shit done.
Do you use an app or something like that? No, just Google sheets. and I'm very religious about making sure I get shit done.
Do you use an app or something like that? No, just Google Sheets.
So basically a spreadsheet and I'm tracking daily
and I write scripts that whenever I achieve a goal,
it glows green.
Yeah, do you track your workouts
and all that kind of stuff too?
No, just the fact that I got the workout done.
So it's a check mark thing.
So I'm really, really big on making sure I do a thing.
It doesn't matter how long it is.
So I have a rule for myself that I do a set of tasks
for at least five minutes every day.
And it turns out that many of them I do way longer,
but just even just doing it.
I have to do it every day.
And there's currently 11 of them.
And it's just a thing.
Like one of them is playing guitar, for example.
So do you do that kind of stuff?
Do you do like daily habits?
Yeah, I do.
I wake up if I don't feel I slept enough.
I do this non-sleep, depressed, yoga, nidra thing that I've talked about a bunch.
We actually released a few of those tracks as audio tracks on Spotify.
10-minute, 20-minute ones puts me back into a state that feels like sleep and I feel very
rested.
Actually, Matt Walker and I are going to run a study.
He just submitted the IRB to run a study on NSDR and what it's actually doing to the brain.
There's some evidence of increases in dopamine, et cetera, but those are older studies, still
cool studies.
But so I'll do that, get up, hydrate, and if I've got my act together, I punch some
caffeine down, like some Matina, some coffee, maybe another Matina, and resistance train
three days a week, run three days a week, and then take one day off.
Like to be done by 8.39, and then I want to get into some real work. I actually have a sticky note on my computer. It's just reminding me how good it feels to accomplish some real work.
Then I go into it right now. It's the book writing, researching a podcast,
and just fight tooth and nail to stay off social media,
text message, WhatsApp, YouTube, all that.
Get something done.
How long can you go?
Can you go like three hours, just deep focus?
If I hit a groove, yeah, 90 minutes to three hours
if I'm really in a groove.
That's tough.
For me, I start the day actually.
That's why I'm afraid I'd really prize that those morning hours.
I start with the work and the it's, it's, it's, uh, I'm trying to hit
the four hour mark of deep focus.
I love it.
Then the often can't.
Yeah.
I'm really, really big believe it's, it's often torture.
Actually.
It's really, really difficult.
Oh yeah, the agitation.
But I've sat across the table from you a couple of years ago
when I was out here in Austin doing some work
and I was working on stuff you were gonna,
and I noticed you were just like stare at your notebook
sometimes just like pen at the same position
and then you'll get back into it.
Like there are those moments you're building
that hydraulic pressure and then go,
yeah, I try and get something
done of value. Then the communications start. Talking to my podcast producer, my team is
everything. I mean, the magic potion in the podcast is Rob Moore, right? Who's been in the
room with me every single solo. Costello used to be in there with us because that's it.
People have asked, journalists have asked,
can they sit in, friends have asked, nope, just Rob.
And for guest interviews, he's there as well.
And I talk to Rob all the time.
All the time, we talk multiple times per day.
And you know, in life, I've made some errors
in certain relationship domains in my life in terms of
partner choice and things like that.
Certainly don't blame all of it on them, but I played my role.
In terms of picking business partners and friends to work with, Rob's just – it's
been bullseyes.
It's just Rob has been amazing.
Mike Blavak, our photographer, and the guys I mentioned earlier, we just
communicate as much as we need to and we pour over every decision near neuroticism before we
put anything out there. So you included even creative decisions of topics that cover all that. Yeah, like a photo for the book jacket the other day, Mike shoots photos, and then we look at them,
we pour over them together. Logo for the Perform
podcast with Andy Galpin that we're launching, like is that the right contour? Mike's the real,
he's got the aesthetic thing because he was at DC so long as a portrait photographer,
and his cue was close friends with Ken Block, Jim Cona, like all the car jumping in the city stuff.
I mean, Mike is a master, he's a true master of that stuff. And we just pour over every little decision.
But even with sponsors, you know,
there are dozens of ads now.
By the way, that whole Jawserciser thing of me saying,
oh, a guy went from a two to a seven.
I never said that, that's AI.
Like I would never call it number off somebody,
a two to a seven, are you kidding me?
It's crazy.
So it was AI, if you bought the thing, I'm sorry.
But like our sponsors, we list the sponsors that we have
and why on our website.
And like the decision, do we work with this person or not?
Do we still like the product?
I mean, we've got ways with sponsors
because of like changes in the product or change, you know,
most of the time it's amicable, all good.
But you know, like just every detail
and that just takes a ton of time and energy.
But I try and work mostly on content
and my team's constantly trying to keep me
out of the other discussions.
But I, because I obsess, but yeah, you have to,
you have to have a team of some sort,
someone that you can run things by.
For sure, but one of the challenges,
the larger the team is, and I'd like to be involved
in a lot of different kinds of stuff, including engineering larger the team is, and I'd like to be involved in a lot of different
kinds of stuff, including engineering stuff,
robotics work, research.
All of those interactions, at least for me,
take away from the deep work, the deep focus.
Unfortunately, I get drained by social interaction,
even with the people I love and really respect
and all that kind of stuff.
You're an introvert.
Yeah, like fundamentally an introvert.
So to me it's a trade off,
getting shit done versus collaborating.
And I have to choose wisely because without collaboration,
without a great team,
which I'm fortunate enough to be a part of,
like you wouldn't get anything really done.
But as an individual contributor to get stuff done,
like to do the hard work of researching or programming, all that kind of stuff. You need the hours of deep work. I used to
spend a lot more time alone. That's that's on my bucket list. Spend a bit
more time dropped into work alone. I think social media like causes our
brain to go the other direction. I try and answer some comments and then and
then get back to work. I'm really, after going to the jungle, I appreciate not using the device.
I play with the idea of spending maybe one week a month not using social media at all.
I used it as though after that morning block, I'll eat some lunch and I'll usually do something
while I'm doing lunch or something and then a bit more work and that real work, deep work. Then around 2.30, I do a non-sleep deep rest,
take a short nap, wake up, boom, maybe a little more caffeine and then lean into it again.
Then I find if you really put in the deep work, two or three bouts per day by about five or six
PM, it's over. I was down at Jaco's place not that long ago and in the evening work, two or three bouts per day by about five or six PM, it's over.
I was down at Jaco's place not that long ago and in the evening did a sauna session with
him and some family members of his and some of their friends.
It's really cool.
They all work all day and train all day and then in the evening they get together and
they sauna and cold plunge.
I'm really into this whole thing of gathering with other people at a specific time of day.
I have a gym at my house and Tim will come over and train.
We've kind of slowed that down in recent months.
But I think gathering in groups once a day, being alone for part of the day, it's like
very fundamental stuff.
We're not saying anything that hasn't been said millions of times before, but how often
do people actually do that?
And, and, and call the party, you know, like be the person to like bring people
together if it's not happening.
That's something I've really had to learn, even though I'm an introvert.
Like, Hey, I'm like gather people together.
You came through town the other day and there's a lot of people at the house.
It was rad.
Actually it was funny because I was getting a massage when you walked in.
I don't sit around getting massages very often,
but I was getting one that day.
And then everyone came in and the dog came in
and like everyone was piled in.
It was very sweet.
Again, no devices,
but choose wisely the people you gather with.
Right, right.
And I was clothed.
Thank you for clarifying.
I wasn't, which is very weird.
Yeah, yeah. The friends you surround yourself with.
That's another thing.
It's like, I understood that from Ayahuasca
and from just the experience in the jungle
is like, just select the people.
Just be careful how you allocate your time.
I just saw on somewhere,
Conor McGregor has this good line,
I wrote it down, about loyalty.
He said, don't eat with people you wouldn't starve with.
That guy's, I mean, he's big on loyalty.
All the shit talk, all of that, set that aside.
To me, loyalty is really big.
Because then if you invest in certain people in your life
and they stick by you and you stick by them, what else is life about? Yeah. Well, hardship will show you who your real
friends are. That's for sure. And we're fortunate to have a lot of them. It'll also show you who
really has put in the time to try and understand you and understand people. People are complicated.
to try and understand you and understand people, like people are complicated.
I love that, so can you read the quote once more?
Don't eat with people you wouldn't starve with.
Yeah, so in that way, a hardship is a gift.
It shows you, definitely.
And it makes you stronger.
It definitely makes you stronger.
Let's go get some food.
Yeah, you're one meal a day guy.
Yeah.
I actually ate something earlier,
but it was like a protein shake
and a couple pieces of biltong.
I hope we're eating a steak.
I hope so too.
I'm full of nicotine and caffeine.
Yeah.
What do you think?
How do you feel?
I feel good.
Yeah. I was thinking you'd probably do you feel? I feel good.
Yeah.
I was thinking you'd probably like, I only did a half a piece and I won't have more for
a little while, but.
A little too good.
Yeah.
Thank you for talking once again, brother.
Yeah.
Thanks so much, Lex.
It's been a great ride, this podcast thing, and you're the reason I started the podcast.
You inspired me to do it.
You told me to do it.
I did it.
And you've also been an amazing
friend. You showed up in some, some very challenging times and you've shown up for me publicly.
You've shown up for me in my home, in my life. And, you know, uh, it's an honor to have you as a
friend. Thank you. I love you, brother. Love you too.
Thanks for listening to this conversation with Andrew Huberman. To support this podcast,
please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you with some words from
Carl Jung. Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you
will call it fate. Thank you for listening and hope to see you next time.