Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 705 - Ben Greenfield: BioHacks To Reach Your Peak Human Potential
Episode Date: March 30, 2022en Greenfield is a biohacker, nutritionist, physiologist, fitness coach, competitive athlete and New York Times bestselling author of 13 books, including the wildly popular titles Beyond Training and ...Boundless. Buy Ben's newest book, Boundless: https://amzn.to/3IPVihP https://www.instagram.com/bengreenfieldfitness/ Join The Power Project Discord: https://discord.gg/yJsNEMBr Subscribe to the new Power Project Clips Channel: https://youtube.com/channel/UC5Df31rlDXm0EJAcKsq1SUw Special perks for our listeners below! ➢https://www.vivobarefoot.com/ Code POWERPROJET for 20% off Vivo Barefoot shoes! ➢https://markbellslingshot.com/ Code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off site wide including Within You supplements! ➢https://mindbullet.com/ Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢https://eatlegendary.com Use Code POWERPROJECT for 20% off! ➢https://bubsnaturals.com Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% of your next order! ➢https://verticaldiet.com/ Use code POWERPROJECT for 20% off your first order! ➢https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order at Vuori! ➢https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro at 8 Sleep! ➢https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT10 for 10% off ALL LABS at Marek Health! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code POWER at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢https://www.tiktok.com/@marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #Biohacking #BenGreenfield #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
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Pat Project family, how's it going?
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All right.
Well, today we have Ben Greenfield on the show.
Should be interesting.
He's kind of known as like a biohacker, I guess you'd say.
He's been doing hot and cold therapy and all kinds of different stuff for a long time.
Lots of drugs.
Yeah, lots of different drugs, lots of experimentation.
Yeah.
Injecting stuff into his wiener and stuff like that.
He did go that far.
Right, yeah.
Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
Kind of some people might label him as like a tin hat kind of guy.
Like he's a guy that's probably shutting off all his Wi-Fi at the end of the day type thing and just, you know, I don't know.
I don't know what to make of some of that stuff.
I shut off my Wi-Fi at night.
So maybe I just need the tin hat to go along with it.
I don't know.
A tin hat.
You know, the cool thing about all the biohacking stuff is, number one, he knows a lot about it.
But, like, remember when listening to this show, there are the simple things that you can do that are going to make 95% of the difference.
And then maybe a lot of the stuff we talk about here are going to be that extra 5%.
Yeah.
I think we could ask him about all kinds of weird stuff.
We could ask him about feet since we've had
a foot obsession. This man's in a fucking forest.
Hey, don't get fucking killed by a bear,
okay?
I'm walking up this
super steep hill
behind my house so I can get up
in the territory where
there's no bars meaning bears
that's just how we that's just how we say bears up here in Washington bars I got it I got it um
yeah yeah you sent me a picture yesterday because I was kind of teasing you I was like oh if you're
going to be on a walk you know watch out for bears and then you sent me a picture there's a big old
bear behind you you were at like a outdoor festival or something like that right oh yeah i brought my sons to an outdoors show last night like a hunting and fishing outdoors
expo which really uh we didn't really get anything out of it aside from uh we bought mom a taser
we actually bought her a really cool little pink taser so i had to explain to my sons uh what a dildo was
let's play a joke on mom and tell her we got her a dildo and so we brought it we put it on the
kitchen table and my my son goes hey mom dad bought you a dido something so
she takes it out in the hand obviously it's It's a taser. Those things hurt, though.
It was like 3,500 volts.
I had them try it on me and just about knocked me over.
It's crazy.
You're really big on doing a lot of things with your kids and not like in just a traditional sense.
You expose your kids to cold therapy, and I believe you are probably having them follow similar nutrition protocols and stuff.
How receptive have they been to some of those things and kind of how did you get them to do it?
Because I think a lot of people would like their kids to be healthier,
but their kids are kind of stuck on technology and junk food.
Well, my kids don't eat the same way I do, that's for sure.
So they've been cooking from scratch
since they were about two years old with mom i mean that's what they do they have a cooking
podcast they do cook books they do like uh you know restaurant reviews and they're they're little
foodies so so they'll get up in the morning and make themselves like these giant gooey cinnamon
rolls for breakfast from scratch or like you know yesterday they made like
like hot cross buns you know with with raisins and like a colostrum cream cheese frosting and
you know this morning made i don't know i don't even know what it was it was like this egg cake
thing how old are they then i i feel like every morning is like an opportunity for me to get diabetes.
Because like they, so for me, like I,
like my breakfast are like raw liver and colostrum and bone broth and,
you know, maybe a little whey protein isolate or whatever.
Cause I'm, I'm kind of like a cyclic keto guy, but my son's a bless their little hearts are, are more like bakers.
They're like little French bakers. So, um, that being
said though, and they're, they're, they're a 13 years old. Um, and that, that being said, uh,
besides our nutrition philosophy is differing. Cause I'm one of those guys who doesn't want to
make little like orthorexic anorexic boys. Like I just rather them be able to make what they want
to make and pursue their passions. And like, they're using all healthy stuff, right? They'll use like Bob's
red mill flour and, and, you know, and coconut creams for their frosting. And it's not like
they're using pure shit in the kitchen. It's just, they, they just cook and eat different than I cook
and eat. And I'm totally cool with that. Uh, cause I really, I don't know how to bake and I don't
know how to make pasta and you know, they don't know how to do all that stuff. So that's great. Um, and plus, you know, young
people have higher metabolisms and better insulin sensitivity anyways. So, uh, so they can get away
with that a little bit more, but anyways, um, yeah, besides that, uh, you know, I'm, I'm convinced
that I think four of the best ways to make like a,
kind of like a hard, resilient human being is breath, hot, cold, and kettlebells.
So my sons and I, we do breath, hot, cold, and kettlebells,
usually three to five days of the week.
You know, typically I'll drag them out to the gym.
You know, typical workouts for us are very simple.
You know, like our workout a couple couple days ago was just basically a ladder,
one swing, one hand-release push-up.
Two swings, two hand-release push-ups.
We'll work our way up to 20.
Work our way back down if we have a little bit more time.
Head over into the sauna that's been warming up.
Do a breathwork session.
Jump in about, you know, 32, 35 degrees of water for a couple of minutes while we do some
box breathing. And a lot of times the breath work that we do is in the sauna, so we're getting the
heat as well. But those are four things that I really try to prioritize from a physical standpoint
with my sons every week is heat, cold breath work, and some kind of unstable object like a kettlebell.
Sometimes we use sandbags and stuff like that too.
What does the breath work look like when you do the breath work in the sauna or the cold
plunge?
And what is the benefit of temperature?
What have you found the benefit to be for hot and cold?
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
Great question.
So what it looks like is our sweet spot is about 15 to 20 minutes for breath work.
And for us, like if we've done a workout, usually we'll finish a workout
because usually we'll do this right before dinner.
So we'll finish up around 6.30, 6.45,
throwing some kettlebells around or whatever,
and then we'll dip into the sauna inside, which has already been warming up.
We'll just flip it on before we hit the gym.
And I use an infrared sauna.
So, you know, it hits about 155, 160, been warming up we'll just flip it on before we hit the gym and i use an infrared sauna so it'll
you know it hits about 155 160 but because of the you know those light photons particularly from the
far infrared penetrate pretty deeply you know you'll you open up a pretty good sweat similar
to what you get from a from a dry sauna and i i think i you know the other setup that i really
like because i'm i'm probably gonna be moving to
idaho soon and i'll probably do this setup at my idaho place it's like a big old dry barrel sauna
but then take some heat resistant red lights in there so you kind of get the best of both worlds
like the super intense dry heat of the sauna you can still drag some red light in there right now
i use a uh uh clear light brand sauna so we get that thing jacked up. We go in there and we have a lot
of little, like every year, for the past three years, I brought my sons typically in one of the
first months of the year, like January, February, March, I bring them to a breathwork course just
to teach them how to breathe properly, you know, add a few new breathwork technique feathers to their cap you know so is there a specific coach breathwork or like the well no
so the ones we've done the past three years was we did uh mirage naik i really like him you guys
should interview him sometime he goes by the name the renegade pharmacist and he's like used to be
a dj and also a pharmacist actually so he knows a lot about the
physiology of breath work and he puts together some really good tracks that are anywhere from
you know from from 10 minutes to an hour and he has some good trainings online so i brought my
sons through that one about three years ago i brought him through one by another guy named uh
josh trent he has a podcast called the
the wellness force podcast i think it's called and and he had a good program that i brought my
sons through um this past year i brought him through basically this new app that just came
out i think it's the best breathwork app right now out there. That one's called Other Ship. And Other Ship has courses
and breathwork routines ranging from like very quick two minutes just for a quick charge me up
during the day all the way up to like these deep psychedelic like holotropic 75 minute breathwork
sessions. And that's the one that we use right now. We do about 15 to 20 minutes on that other ship app.
Typically, we'll choose kind of like one of the more invigorating upper sessions.
It's a lot of like Wim Hof style stuff, a lot of pranayama style techniques, a lot of holds, a lot of CO2 tolerance, a lot of oxygen deprivation, a little bit of box breathing.
They do have nighttime relaxation sessions,
but we kind of like the more invigorating stuff.
And then we're usually kind of sweating by the time that we finish that,
but about three, four times a week we're doing that.
And then about two times a month we drop into the sauna,
we lay flat on our backs, and we do like the full-on,
like 60 minute
long breath work sessions and i mean you know not only do those things get you you know high as a
kite if you're looking for more of kind of like that that self dmt release and really go to a
to a place that uh that just totally shifts you into a an elevated state of consciousness using
your own breath you know using your own physiology.
But they're also wonderful for developing heat tolerance and focus in kids.
And the other thing, they don't even know this, but they're going to be great at sex when they're older.
They're very happy wives because not only can they make cinnamon rolls,
but they're learning a lot of pelvic locks.
They're learning a lot of pelvic locks they're learning a lot of like tantric-esque techniques they're learning a lot of techniques
that uh that are very they're very uh correlative to like the multi-orgasmic male type of teachings
on you know where you do the lock right before you're about to to ejaculate keep it in the body
and still experience the the orgasm sensation and so you know a lot of these breathwork techniques
transfer to sex as well which is also what i like about the other ship app it has a couple experience the orgasm sensation. And so, you know, a lot of these breathwork techniques transfer
to sex as well, which is also what I like about the other ship app. It has a couple of partner
sessions and, um, you know, those are usually 20, 30 minutes. And oh my gosh, like if you have the
time for, for foreplay, you know, you just took those things up to a Bluetooth speaker in the
bedroom or whatever. And, uh, my wife and I like to do those here and there. You know,
sometimes we'll do like a little, like a ketamine or an oxytocin nasal spray and then drop in,
do 20 to 30 minutes of breath work. And it just makes, it makes lovemaking amazing because all
that breath work you do leading in during foreplay, you kind of keep doing while you're having sex.
And, you know, I convinced that that sex is about
one of the most sacred special things that two human beings can experience and you know from a
spiritual standpoint and because breath is also so spiritual you know the two go together like uh
turkey and cranberries i guess so anyways yeah back to my sons that's that's what our breath work looks like and then uh
you asked about the temperature for the cold and really with cold what it comes down to is
is the colder the water the less time you need in it to get the benefits so we go pretty cold we
keep we have one of those cold tubs that we keep between about 32 to 35 degrees and we'll either
go jump in that for about two minutes
or we also have like an above ground pool that i just don't heat and so most times of the year
that thing's anywhere from 40 to 55 degrees so we'll sometimes just go swim around in there for
a little bit longer time you know like four to six minutes uh and so yeah that's what it looks like
you mentioned uh the breathing having like a dmt effect. I would imagine that you've taken DMT before, right?
Yeah, well, taken.
I mean, not like orally, but yeah, I've smoked it, yeah.
Right, and then so in comparison, did that feel similar, the breathing?
Well, you get similar sensations.
I mean, let's face it.
It's not going to blast you off like a rocket ship to the moon,
like inhaling DMT will, but I mean, arguably, I think that,
that natural release that you get from the pineal gland via things like
breath work. Gosh, how do I explain this? I mean, I mean, you know,
it's kind of like, you know,
how do you build more character
and how do you appreciate what you're getting out of it more, uh, getting dropped by a helicopter
on the top of Mount Everest or hiking Mount Everest, or, or, you know, uh, having somebody
drive you in their Tesla to the finish line of an Ironman triathlon or actually doing the freaking
thing. And I think anytime you achieve an altered state of consciousness through hard work, there's a little bit more of a, more of a character building payoff.
And, you know, I'm not one of those guys who says that, uh, there's, there's, you know,
there's no shortcuts and, and, you know, you, you can't hack your way to, to get to anything.
But I think at the same time, like for me, it feels more rewarding but yeah compared to smoking DMT it's
it's very slight it's it's a little you know a lot less of an out of your body experience but
I mean to be honest with you like I'll shoot straight I freaking hate DMT like I don't even
like it like I I don't like the way I feel I don't like the way that it just basically just
strips me completely out of my body I don't't like some of like the darker sensations I get out of it.
But that same molecule, when released naturally in my body, in still relatively high amounts via breath work.
And when I'm sitting in that space, you know, on a long exhale, you know, especially during those longer sessions where I'm like 45 minutes in.
longer sessions where I'm like 45 minutes in and I'm able to hold that exhale sometimes for like, you know, three and a half, four minutes, um, you know, that silence and the space that you find in
that silence and the fact that you're a little bit more lucid and a little bit more, um, receptive
and open and aware of messages that you're getting in that silence, you know, either messages from God
or visions that you might experience or downloads that you might experience.
These are all things that you can leave a breathwork session and immediately go journal
and write down. Sometimes when you're using DMT or some other slightly more hallucinogenic or
psychoactive substances, sometimes you don't
even remember. Like you, you know, that, you know, that you had something important happen
that you were supposed to remember or some message that you got, but you're just so freaking out of
it. You can't even go write it down in a journal, you know? Wow. Um, so we've mentioned DMT, but,
you know, Mark, myself, and even Andrew's dabbled a little bit, I think,
but we've messed with psilocybin before. Um, and I'm curious, cause I mean, you were mentioning
that it's, it would be more ideal, like a lot of people find these substances and they want to use
them as an escape of something or, um, to get to another state without doing personal work before.
But I'd imagine that you do use psilocybin quite a bit.
What uses do you find that it's maybe useful for, for you? Or do you even, is it even useful for
you? I'm not sure. Um, yeah, psilocybin is certainly something that I've used before.
I wouldn't say I use it a lot. You know, I, um, I, I might microdose with psilocybin, uh, maybe,
maybe three or four times a month, you know, on like a day where I need a little bit more creativity.
I'll certainly use something like the Stamets stack and take a half gram or so of psilocybin with a little bit of like a blood cell or a blood flow precursor like niacinamide or niacin or even like silbenafil
or something like that. And then the lion's mane and the psilocybin. And that's really nice,
you know, for something for which you'd want increased sensory perception or increased
creativity, like either like in nature or, you know, or a really intense like worship, prayer,
song session, which I'll sometimes do, you know, especially in the morning.
Just, you know, going before God for an hour or so and going really deep.
You know, it can even be nice for like a hard workout or for a really good creative writing session where I'm juggling a lot of book chapters and just need to be able to step back and see the forest for the trees.
But then also be able to dive in and creatively tweak and edit each chapter.
So those would be some use cases for it.
And, you know, I would say that I very seldomly will use what many would refer to,
you know, as more like a trip dose, you know, where I'll take three, four, five, six grams. You know, I've done that before, you know, with a good journal and a,
you know, mask and a good track and have been able to have business or personal breakthroughs
that I wouldn't otherwise have been able to have, you know, and for those types of things,
just because sometimes you're kind of laid out a little bit, I'll just put on a digital recorder
and record what I vocalized during those sessions. And then later,
I'll transcribe that recording and, you know, get access to some of the things that I, that I voice
when my ego was set aside and I was in a little bit more of an elevated or altered state of
consciousness. Cause you do think, you know, differently on these types of substances,
especially when you've, when you've kind of minimized or slayed or set aside your ego to a certain extent.
And so, yeah, I think there's benefit. in many cases, you know, when you're talking to somebody who's done like their 38th ayahuasca
retreat or whatever, and then they're going back to Peru next week, you know, you kind of ask
yourself mentally, geez, like, what's this person looking for that they're not finding from this or
other substances? Because yeah, you know, you can go to a blissful La La Land state and convince
yourself that it's like this noble excursion to enlightenment.
And, you know, this time, this, this one time, even though it didn't work all the other times,
this one time is going to be the time when you finally come back with the magic elixir
with the answer to all of life's problems.
And the fact is, all you're doing is just checking out from the pain that you're experiencing
in your normal day to dayday life because you either haven't
integrated what you knew you were supposed to integrate from a previous plant medicine session
or there's just still so much pain and so much in your life that you need to address when you're in
a conscious rational full ego on board state that you haven't yet implemented. And sometimes the plant medicine experience
can be blissful and relaxing.
And you can escape a lot of the pain
that you experience in the logical,
rational, fully connected world.
But if you're in that logical,
rational, fully connected world
and not making the decisions
and doing the hard work
and implementing the things
that you may have
been told or may have realized that you should be implementing when you're in that more blissful,
you know, plant medicine experience.
It's really, it's not doing you any good.
I mean, look, I think with any of these things, you know, and I'm a Christian, so maybe I
have a different viewpoint than some people might.
But I think that God made everything that's in creation for a specific purpose.
And I think that anything in creation can be abused.
Like, for example, use of higher doses of plant medicine.
I think the use cases for that is very few and far between.
Maybe a rite of passage into adolescence for a young man or a young woman.
Maybe a wedding night that you're celebrating with the spouse you've just married. Maybe your
40th birthday party. Maybe if you have had trauma or you have epigenerational trauma,
and you need to specifically use that to start to dissolve some of that trauma you know but but you know the idea is very popular
like in our especially in the health and fitness community i don't know if you guys have noticed
you probably have you know people are just like dropping this stuff like candy and going off on
some journey every month i really don't think that's the that's the the intention for these
type of substances i think they're used for cognitive enhancement in a microdosing context,
great. I think that works fine. LSD, LSA, wachuma, psilocybin, you know, any of these things
used in small amounts to enhance productivity and creativity. I think that's the best use case for
them. And then higher doses would be very few and far between for uh what's the guy uh jamie wheel you know he
writes about this in his book uh stealing fire or recapture the rapture you know the rest of the
time it's just like extremely calendared hedonistic experiences that are not something that you're
doing like every month but instead use very very few and far between and for very
special occasions. You know what I'm saying? Yes. You know, I wanted to ask you this because
it's first off your book boundless is thick and it's filled with massive, like information on so
many different things. And it was funny because we were talking before the show of when somebody
thinks of the idea of a biohacker, they typically think of somebody who has their red light glasses on, their red light on their balls.
And they're fucking, you know, just doing wild shit and messing with the lights in their house and everything.
You know, but when we look at you and we pay attention to your stuff.
And they're also kind of scrawny and easy to kill.
Yes.
Yes.
But exactly.
You right now, you're on this podcast.
You're taking a walk, probably in the cold outside.
You put your body through stresses, and you focus on the big movers.
And then it's like so many things in your book that you talk about.
These are additions, not after, but these are additions to when you get the big things going.
So I was curious what your thoughts are on the whole idea of where biohacking is as a field or when people look at biohackers.
And then on the side, because you mentioned creativity earlier, I'm wondering kind of what your creative process is to be creative because you're putting out tons of stuff on unique different ideas all the time.
Yeah.
Well, the second part of your question is the easiest.
So I'll grab that low-hanging fruit first.
You know, I think that the one thing that,
especially in a wildly distracted era that we now live in,
that's so simple to do is to wake up and start checking boxes,
to wake up and start doing, doing, doing,
because let's face it,
it's very easy to just have work on our plate all day.
Like, it's not hard to make money these days.
It's not hard to have lots of things to do
and lots of emails to reply to
and lots of social media messages to check
and lots of stuff to post to your story
and, you know, into your feed. Like
you could go all day and pat yourself on the back for having done a good job, just like doing shit
all day. However, it's very seldom when it comes to impactful creations that are, that are deeper
works of creation that we actually take the time to think about what those creations are
going to be. I'll use a very trite and silly example, but I'll use it nonetheless because
my sons with their cooking podcast, they had a meeting last night with their, like one of their
social media people. Like I, I tell my sons, I told them, don't, don't dick around with social
media. Don't like, you guys don't even know how to log into your own website., hire other people to do that for you and just stick to the stuff you're good at.
Like, go make cinnamon rolls and let the team do the rest.
You know, because I honestly wish I'd done more of that when I was young.
Like, done a little bit less of the day-to-day and just stuck a little bit more to, you know,
the writing and the podcasting and the speaking and things like that.
But anyways, so they have a meeting with this guy,
and he starts to explain to them some of the YouTube tactics
that help to make videos successful.
You know, like could you do a podcast about how to make hot cross buns,
or could you instead have the whole video be titled
How Many Hot Cross Buns Can a 13-year-old fit into their mouth?
But then have as a part of that video, of course, is the recipe,
but it's different because it's a pattern interrupt, right?
And he was using a guy named Mr. Beast on YouTube as an example of this.
And I overheard some of the conversation that their social media guy was having
with my sons, and he explained, well, one of the things this guy does
is this Mr. Beast guy who makes a lot of really successful videos on youtube is he carves out
time each day to just sit and think about what videos he wants to do to like literally just sit
there doing nothing but thinking about what he's going to do now that's smart that's very smart
i'll tell you guys why. One of
the best business books ever written is called The Road Less Stupid. And the author of The Road
Less Stupid, the entire book is based around this idea of carving out thinking time as an entrepreneur
or as a creator or as an artist or as a storyteller for yourself on a regular basis, not necessarily every day.
You know, like the strategy that this guy presents in his book is two or three times a week, you know, as a business owner.
You're just giving yourself about 40 to 60 minutes to sit there with a pen and a journal and a couple of questions that you're trying to solve. Like, why didn't more customers come to this website
when I launched this new product? Or, you know, what are my competitors doing right now in my
space that I'm not doing? Or what is an emerging market, like say, you know, NFTs or the metaverse
or whatever that I'm not in right now? And what would it take for me to get there? And these
aren't meetings. These aren't talks. This isn't getting things done. This isn't
checking boxes. This is literally just like sitting there, stroking your chin and thinking.
And so for me, you know, getting onto your, to your question about creativity and, and,
and my approach is I have every single day where after I get up and I made a little coffee and typically like I'll
do some silly I do do some silly biohacking things in the morning like you know I get on some red
light and I jump up and down on a trampoline and I do some breath work and I do some foam rolling
like I just gotta freaking move my body before I have that thinking time or that meditating time
but after I do that for time or that meditating time. But
after I do that for about 15 minutes, you know, first thing of the day, you know, usually I get
up, I'm usually up sometime between like 345 and 430. And so usually by about 5am, I'm just sitting
there, you know, in my little man cave down in the basement with a with a journal and a pen.
And I'm sitting there and I play some nice music in the background and I'm praying and I'm meditating and I'm reading my Bible and I'm writing in a journal
and I'm stopping and I'm listening to myself and I'm listening to God. And I just carve that time
out each morning. And then in addition to that, twice a month, this sounds silly, but this is
the way I do it guys. Twice a month, I get a three hour massage. And I set up a vocal recorder underneath the table. And during the entire
massage, I just think about problems I've been having during the week. And I talk to myself
about ways that I might tackle them, right? So every morning, I got 20 minutes. And twice a month,
I got three hours. And those are the times when I have like my quiet time to just be super creative and step away from all the busyness and give myself permission to just think about problems and to think of ideas for articles and to think of ideas for books and to think of ideas for podcasts.
And so that's how I tackle the creativity piece.
Back to the biohacking thing. Um, yeah, I, I think
that it does get a little bit silly these days. We've got a whole bunch of people running around
like Muppets with their, you know, with their red light panels and their self quantification devices
and their ring and like their eight different brands of mouth tape and, you know, and then,
you know, the, the different, you know, oils and fats.
And now I don't have the short chain fatty acid and long chain fatty acid.
I got the medium long short chain fatty acid.
I'm putting my coffee and my tea now.
And, you know, it's just all these things.
It's almost like this competition to see who can do the weirdest shit to,
to hack their biology.
And look, the way I look at things is we as humans from an
ancestral standpoint you know i i don't think we've been around that long you know i i think
that that the earth is somewhere around uh around 7 000 to 8 000 years old so we haven't been around
that long but still long enough to where um we have developed this ancestral connection with nature that we are
fighting a constant daily evolutionary mismatch against with uh you know our our setting in a
modern post-industrial era you know sitting inside all day being largely connected having the hip
flexors shortened and the glutes turned off not lifting heavy things as part of our job and so having to fabricate that in a fake gym context you know um you know being in boxes a lot driving in a box
sitting in a box sleeping in a box uh working out in a box you know and in relatively predictable
versus unpredictable scenarios because the outdoors and nature is more predictable um or is more predictable or is more unpredictable. And so what I look at when it comes to a lot of
these biohacks is basically how can I simulate or even like hyper concentrate a lot of the things
that my ancestors would have been getting in nature. So yeah, I can't be out in the sunlight
all day, but I can literally just like blast myself with near and far infrared via like photo biomodulation block filtration that passes through like a structured water vortice.
So the water is more like the way that it would be if it were traveling underground in a spring.
Or I can't be like outside barefoot all day, but I can wear minimalist shoes or go barefoot in my house and have like grounding and earthing mats that I can stand on that are plugged into a
grounding outlet or like in the case of my office just in a wire that's planted a metal stake out
in the ground so I can be like grounded and earthed while I'm while I'm standing or working
in my office during the day you know I can't necessarily be subjected to the stressors of
of heat and cold and environment because I'm not working outside building fences
or herding sheep or hunting or anything like that,
at least not on a typical day.
But I can get in the sauna every day
and sweat my ass off for 20, 30 minutes.
And then I can go get into something super cold
at least once a day.
So I'm simulating those environmental stressors
and hormetic stressors.
So most of the stuff I look at as biohacking
is not like, what's this
easy, comfortable shortcut that I can take so I can skip doing the hard work. It's more like,
how can I simulate nature and then pair that with, with doing the hard work, right? With, with,
so, so like this morning, yeah, I worked out and yeah, it was an atypical workout. Cause I'm like
a biohacker. So I had like blood flow restriction bands on
with icy cold water circulating through the blood flow restriction bands with my feet attached to a
grounding pad. And I had like 30 minutes of high intensity intervals while connected to this
biohacking machine called a, it was called a VASPR while I'm breathing pure oxygen.
But during each of the intervals, I'm flipping a button and breathing basically hypoxic air.
So I'm essentially training my CO2 tolerance and then blasting my cells with oxygen in between each.
And then I stand up out of that, and I walk over to the barbell, and I'm doing deadlifts and kettlebell swings and just basically like Russian twist with a medicine ball.
And yeah, that, that like sucks and it, and it, and it hurts.
And it's not like, it's not like easy shit.
I think, I think that's the problem with a lot of biohackers is like, they're basically,
you know, oh gosh, like this, this sounds really bad.
I don't want to get negative guys, but they're just like weak ass people who basically like beat up a lot when
they were little kids, but they were kind of nerdy.
So they figured out some technical ways to stay fit,
but they've never actually done hard shit. Right.
And I think that's the problem with biohackers is yeah.
Like do the cool like biohacking stuff, but get out and do hard shit too.
You know what I'm saying? Like lift heavy stuff, get cold, sweat,
but sweat hard. Like it's not all about just basically putting on some fancy laser lights and then like some
electrodes on your stomach to get six pack abs.
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description as well as the podcast show notes. Let's get back to the podcast. What are some of
the harder things that you experienced because you've done ultras, you've done bodybuilding,
you've done triathlons, you've done all kinds of stuff uh what's the hardest and do you
still do some of these uh activities do you still run do you still bodybuild do you still mess
around with some of those things uh first of all um i i really don't do much of that hard shit
anymore i was like that was a chapter in my life and now like i play tennis with my family i do the
kettlebells and the heat and cold and breath work with my sons.
I mess, you know, for about a half hour a day, I'll, like, go deep and do something hard.
But compared to the days of, like, Ironman triathlon and, you know, obstacle course training,
where it was, like, just, like, training was lifestyle for me.
You know, like, the weekend rolled around, and I'd be out running 20 miles and then, you know,
hammering to some town 100 miles away on my bike and, you know, coming back from the bike ride and before dinner, you know,
swimming three miles while I started the black line at the bottom of the pool or, you know,
typical Saturday morning workout was I built like a half mile long obstacle course at my house.
And I'd literally just be like two and a half hours running, climbing ropes, monkey bars,
you know, hauling a hundred pound sandbags up the hill.
And, you know, not for like a 20 minute hit routine, but literally for like two and a half
hours of doing that shit. And I just, um, my identity isn't tied to that anymore. I think
it built a lot of character and perseverance and taught me a lot, but I just, I, I, I feel like
and taught me a lot, but I just, I feel like I'm called to do more meaningful things like,
you know, writing articles and producing books that help people find a little bit deeper fulfillment and meaning in life and, you know, and being with my sons during their formative
years and loving them and, you know, just slowing down and savoring creation a little bit and not
feeling like I got to beat myself up in order to prove myself to the world that I'm a man or in order to like, you know,
scratch some itch of, you know, let's face it, probably a little bit of like exercise addiction,
you know, stuff like that, or, or, you know, or just like training really hard so I could eat
whatever I want. Like there's all sorts of little things that go on mentally, you know, with,
with all these, these hardcore type of endurance activities.
It's literally not just, you know, doing something so you can inspire people and climb
your own personal Mount Everest.
A lot of times there's like some crazy, nasty, you know, selfish, addicted addiction type
of shit tied into some of that stuff.
You guys hopefully get what I'm saying.
But anyways, you know, as far as like the hardest stuff i would say like
the top three hardest things that i did was a the uh commander mark devines kikoro like his little
like navy seal hell week thing that he does for civilians that was hard shit i mean i i won't lie
it was like 26 mile night hikes wearing you know shitty backpacks
full of sand with a beat down every mile while you're eating nasty you know mres and you know
and then going and sit in the pacific ocean so you're hyperthermic or hypothermic for
you know like eight hours and you never know what you're going to be doing next and the whole thing
is just a mind fuck because they never tell you what you're going to be doing next and you know don't get me wrong like if you tell me i gotta go climb to the
top of that mountain way off in the distance and you know stop and do burpees and climb under barb
wire you know every hour during that climb be like all right well you told me what i gotta do i'm just
gonna do it but if you just tell me like put on your shoes put on this backpack and go walk this
way i'm not gonna tell you anything else like the whole time in the back of your mind like you just don't know
you can't prepare mentally like like so so that whole thing was kind of a mind fuck but you know
it's it's a like i told my sons i'm like hey when you guys are 18 you should go do this it'll make
everything else in life feel really easy so that that was a hard one that that kikoro camp i think
they had to like change it or
something or like alter the way that they put it on because apparently a couple years after i did
it some guy's heart exploded during the event and they had to like move it and change up some of
their protocols and i i don't want to put words in commander mark divine's mouth but i think it's a
little bit different now but that you know that was called kakoro that was pretty hard um the next one was the uh joe decena who runs the the spartan organization
he puts on this thing called a called a death race and um so i i was the idiot who signed up
for the death race during the cold snap that they had back in vermont where it was 32 degrees below
zero my buddy picked me up from the Boston airport.
He has dog in the car and he drove me like out of the backwoods of Vermont for
this, for this event.
And the dog wouldn't even get out of the car because the ground was like
burning the bottom of the dogs, like pause.
And within like the first 30 minutes of the thing,
two girls had to drop out.
One got two of her toes amputated because they were
frostbitten you know i couldn't even like pull my gatorade bottle you know out to take a drink
because it was frozen so i had to keep that up against like but you know it up against my up in
my armpits you know like an example of an aid station would you just like run by and there'd
be like a bunch of fish like frozen fish on sticks sticking up out of the snow and you had to figure out how to use your fire making kit and you know water
gatorade or whatever like boil the fish in this shitty little pot and like oh my gosh it's like
the whole thing they shouldn't have even done it have people died like there no nobody died you
know there was like emts and paramedics like there the whole time and i remember like my heart fell like when we were a day into it was like a three day event.
You know, we're just going all day and all night.
And I heard a couple of like the people putting it on, like talking and hushed voices like, what should we have them do next?
You think that's safe?
And I'm like, oh, shit.
And so so that but that was hard.
And yeah, but again, now anything I do that's cold
doesn't feel that cold compared to that.
So, you know, everything just kind of sets a standard.
And then probably the third hardest thing was just like,
you know, I competed in the Ironman World Championship
six times down in Hawaii on the island of Kona.
And like an Ironman is hard, but like anybody,
not anybody, but like doing an Ironman
isn't that hard. Like you can technically get up, you can take a couple hours to swim a few miles,
ride a bike kind of slow. Cause the cutoff is like 17 hours and then like walk a marathon
and you could do an Ironman. Like it's not that hard to do an Ironman, but when you race an Ironman
world championships, it's like, you know, all these like gilled out Germans and Speedos and super fast people.
And everybody's been to the championships and everybody's been training for like nine months to get there.
And everybody's going way faster than you're comfortable going, you know, for a 2.4 mile swim and 112 mile bike ride.
And, you know, you have a marathon for dessert.
You run 26.2 miles.
And so you're just like outside of your comfort zone
the whole time because you're trying to podium
and it's super hot and super windy.
And so I think the Ironman World Championships was hard,
not because of like the nature of the event,
like the distance isn't hard,
but just like the fact that everybody's going way faster
than you're comfortable going.
And so the whole time you're just basically breaking all the rules
about pacing yourself and hoping your body's just going to somehow survive the day.
So those are a few of the harder things.
But, yeah, I have no desire to do – I mean, yeah, if somebody offered me,
like, whatever, you know, $50,000 to go do an Ironman or something
just as a publicity stunt, I'd probably do it.
But, like i i've
that's about the only reason i'd be interested in doing that stuff anymore is if somebody
gave me a fat paycheck to go to go uh torture myself for the day do you run it all now or bike
just uh recreationally here and there i run to the mailbox uh and if some if if my kids are chasing
me or if i'm playing tennis but no like i i haven't
run in like a year and a half like actually gone on a run i i literally have not gone on a run in
like a year and a half okay you know when you were something that you mentioned i thought was really
cool is you know for example you've done those really really hard things but it makes it so that
like for example doing the death race and being out in that type of cold.
Now when you come and you go in your cold plunge device at 32 degrees, it doesn't feel that bad.
Just like we've done bodybuilding shows, and now maintaining a leaner type of physique is not that bad because a bodybuilding show is much worse.
Or doing a powerlifting meet and getting that strong, well, we don't necessarily do that anymore, but maintaining a decent level of
strength is not that hard because you've gone and you've done the harder thing. Now, the thing that
most people would think is hard to do is much easier. And I think that's something beneficial
that people can think about to try to do for themselves. Yeah. And I think it even extends
into like the mental realm,
like that quiet time that I was talking about for 20 minutes in the morning.
Most people, they, they have difficulty being present during the day and not just like flopping
around like a Muppet during the day from, from activity to activity, from checkbox to checkbox
and not really stopping to ask themselves, why am I doing this in
the first place? What's the ultimate goal for this task I'm doing aside from just getting it done?
Or am I truly connecting with this person versus, you know, doing what I said I was going to do,
which was whatever, meet them at the gym or have a coffee. Like, but am I actually connecting to
this sacred soul who's going to go on to live for eternity?
Am I making eye contact? Am I listening to the timber of their voice?
Am I feeling the electromagnetic signal coming off their body?
If I'm truly present, I mean, even smelling the pheromones and chemical signals that their skin's producing.
Like there's so much that we miss out on when we're not present.
miss out on when we're not present. And there's so much more capability to be present when you just stop and carve out time each day to sit with yourself. Because if you can't be present with
yourself, you're going to have a hell of a time being present in any other situation in your life.
And so like, for example, one tip I can give people just to begin to build presence is,
you know, like when you wake up in the
morning, even if you don't have time to meditate or journal or sit or, you know, carve out 20
minutes or whatever, just like listen to a song. And as you listen to the song, be fully immersed
in it. I mean, fully immersed, like what you're trying to do is identify the space between the
notes. Okay. It's difficult to explain, but if you listen to a song
and you truly listen to it intentionally, you'll know what I mean.
It should preferably be a song that's not too driven with lyrics,
preferably something instrumental.
One that I like, especially for my mornings,
is there's a Spotify playlist called Soaking Worship.
It's just like this really great worship channel, but it's got no words.
It's just like these really moving, epic, you know, songs, very orchestral and listen
to it and try to literally listen for the gaps between each note.
And if you can listen for the space between the notes on a song, you're going to find
yourself beginning to notice the eye color and the little lines and blood
vessels in the iris of someone who you're talking to that you're actually making eye contact with
and you're going to start to notice the subtle variations in their vocal inflections and their
vocal tone and you're going to be sitting and eating a bite of food and recognizing not just
one not just two but five seven ten 12 complexities of flavor in each bite.
And you're going to be chewing each bite 25 to 30 times, focusing on the actual presence of that food in your mouth.
And when you make love, you're going to have all your senses tuned on and be feeling even the slightest little puff of breath coming out of your lover's nostril.
even the slightest little puff of breath coming out of your lover's nostril. And you're going to be able to just experience and savor creation in a far different way
than nearly everybody walking the face of this planet, especially nearly every Westerner
walking the face of this planet who's got a fucking smartphone supercomputer in their
hand that they can't get disconnected from.
They're thinking about the eight different things that they can't get disconnected from. They're thinking
about the eight different things that they got to get done because we live in an information era
that's rife with FOMO and the opportunity to do so many things that we're rarely just doing one
thing at once for which we can be present. But the people who can actually listen to what I'm saying
and train themselves to be present, train themselves to be present with these little things each day,
starting with something as simple as listening to a song and finding the space
between the notes. All of a sudden life becomes a lot more magical.
And you know what?
It becomes a lot more magical without needing to like, you know,
pop some psilocybin or whatever to,
to find that beauty or to increase those sensory perceptions.
So, you know, I think that's something that's important.
What is something that you're into now, like at the moment, like what over the last maybe year or so,
what's something that you have gravitated towards?
Over here, we've been working on some like mobility stuff along with doing some stuff with like the feet
and working on hip flexors stuff along with doing some stuff with like the feet and working
on hip flexors and stuff like that like what's something that you feel has made a big difference
for you within the last year or so borrowing borrowing using like an 80 20 approach you know
20 of the the moves and the exercises in a lot of these programs are going to produce 80% of the results.
And so, you know, I, I obviously being in the health and fitness arena, I get exposed
to a lot of this stuff and I've borrowed bits here and there that are just woven into my
week.
So, so yeah, breath work is a big part of that.
A few other things that, that I've really just started to do probably cause I'm
getting old. So I'm just interested in feeling good and moving better and having better gait
patterning and, um, and, and, you know, building, uh, you know, it's like when, when you're young,
you're all, uh, tech major deltoid glute max, um hamstring gastroc biceps and when you get old you start to realize
oh like i've been neglecting um you know glute med rotator cuff uh the tibialis anterior
the flexor halicus and the big toe muscles, you know, and basically, you know,
and honestly, like a lot of the inspiratory and expiratory and diaphragmatic muscles,
as well as the deep pelvic muscles as well.
And so what I've really been figuring out is that I move better, I feel better,
and a lot of my other workouts actually go a lot better,
even the workouts that are using a lot of the primary muscles or the larger muscles
when I'm focusing on some of these other components that I've discovered
just by borrowing from some really good programs.
So what I mean by that is, for example, Ben Patrick, Knees Over Toes.
Like, love his ATG. That's got two different
workouts in it that are like these longevity based exercises. I took a few of the best of
the best from those two workouts, you know, like, uh, ass to grass, split squats and
tip raises and band pull aparts and some of the reverse hypers. And just basically put all those together into one 20-minute workout
that I do twice a week.
Another folks who I know you guys are familiar with, I forget his name, the go-to guy, Gary.
Gary Scheffler.
Yeah, yeah, Gary.
So the idea of while I'm in gait, focusing on the outside of my foot,
doing a few walks where when I'm pushing off, I'm rotating my back foot to about 22 and a half degrees and doing a little bit more of a push off in almost like a pigeon toed format.
And then working in some bear crawls where, you know, I'm also at about 22 and a half on the hands, 22 and a half on the feet, interior rotation.
And, you know, sometimes I'll even use you know i'll
use one of your bands mark you know around my hips for those crawls and um and so uh using some
more like the indigenous hunter gatherer and human baby type of angles and uh another thing that i do
in the sauna is i keep uh some some of the the wedges the feet, the sole steps that David Weck makes
so that I can kind of be in that biomechanical position
and just, you know, fuck around in the sauna
with some squats and some lunges in that position.
So I like, I like Goda.
I like Ben Patrick.
Another example would be someone who more works with women,
but who I think has a great program, Denise Conway.
And her, don't laugh guys,
called the Flower Empowered, right?
She teaches all these hypopressive exercises
and pelvic core strengthening exercises for women.
But I tell you what, like for me to be able to train
my deep diaphragmatic muscles,
to work on some of the organs
that tend to get pushed down with gravity
and to learn how to do things like hypopressive breathing,
things like working the perineum and some of the deep pelvic core muscles with like lacrosse balls
and just paying more attention to that one area that frankly massage therapists don't work on
much and breathing techniques that we really don't learn from some of these other breathwork
protocols that are specifically designed for supporting organs, digestive function,
prolapse, incontinence, some of those other things that occur with age.
I've found that program to be really good.
Another example would be back to David Weck.
I know he's kind of a funky guy, but some of his core coiling methods and going on walks
where I actually am focusing literally on storing energy and then releasing it as I swing my arms across the body.
I like his handheld things.
I forget what they're called, but basically going on walks with those where I'm swinging my arms across my body.
I still do some of his Bosu exercises.
I still do some of his club exercises for warmups, And I like that idea of, of coiling and releasing energy,
like his stuff and the go to stuff. They go together, uh, pretty well. Um,
and if I, if I could think of one other, uh, it would probably be, um,
let's see, I'm talking about the other ship app, go to Ben Patrick. Oh, um,
Eric Goodman,
Eric Goodman's core foundation exercises for decompressing the
spine. Again, like a lot of this stuff is based off what gravity does to the body with age or
faulty movement patterns that develop as we age due to us falling back on primary muscles rather
than some of these smaller stabilizers. But Dr. Eric Goodman has these exercises called core
foundation exercises that combine diaphragmatic breathing, spinal decompression, some honestly, some some like internal rotation and and loading of the hands and feet that are similar again to like like go to, for example.
I really like his programs and we'll weave a few of those in when I'm like in the sauna in the morning or like stretching when I wake up.
And so I would say the big thing for me is I just kind of like pick up little things as I go through my life.
And I won't like jump hardcore full on, like drinking all the Kool-Aid from anybody's program.
But I borrow little bits here and there and then I put them all together for what works for me and my body and my time limitations and my training environment and my training goals, which frankly right now are just basically longevity and healthy movement patterns.
What about training of the penis?
We recently dove into some penis pumping, and we've had some sex experts come on the show.
Has there been anything that you've learned more recently about that? You did mention like pelvic floor. And I think
men don't realize that we got a pelvic floor as well. Have you learned anything more recently in
that department? And real quick, I do want to add on to that because I've seen this comment from
women in the audience. Ladies, we know that you are all individuals and not one thing works for all of you. We're just trying to get better so we can do a bunch
of different shit. Okay. Anyway, Ben, please help us out. Yeah. You know, I think I was a
culprit for making a lot of stuff popular three years ago. I did that, that immersive journalism
article for men's health magazine where they sent me on like a six month foray for this article. It was called new year, new dick. They had me do everything
from, uh, PRP and stem cell injections into my penis to, uh, the, the penis pump to the gas
station, dick pills to no ejaculation for a month to the multi-orgasmic tantric breathing techniques.
Like it was like, gosh, everything.
And so, and yeah, I mean, like a lot of that stuff works.
You know, yeah.
Penis pumps work.
Yeah.
The PRP injections work.
Yeah.
The shockwave therapy, the Gaines wave for opening up new blood vessels works.
Yeah.
Stem cell injections.
Absolutely.
That was probably one of the most effective things that I did during that entire protocol.
That was probably one of the most effective things that I did during that entire protocol.
Long-term lasting results for firmness, for even like a quality of orgasm.
You know, kind of similar to the PRP injections, but a little bit more of an effect.
And I think probably in addition to just that whole lineup of stuff, really, I think the two main things come back to breath.
One would be during all of my breath work, and this really helps out too with just a lot of incontinence, organ prolapse, those type of things that can occur as you age, is nearly every time I do breath work, I am essentially doing Kegels. You know, I'm squeezing on the exhale. I'm relaxing on the inhale. And when I say squeezing and relaxing, I'm literally
talking about stopping the flow of urine, doing Kegels. And so every day, I mean, with those
breath work, that means every day I'm doing like 15 to 20 minutes of Kegels.
That, in terms of the effects on my orgasms, specifically like the length and the intensity of the orgasms, has been amazing.
Like, I think a lot of guys hear about Kegels, but they're kind of like, eh, they start doing them, and then they don't, and they think about here and there.
But, like, I literally do 15 to 20 minutes of Kegels almost every day.
And then i keep
a captain's of crush hand grip in my car when i'm driving in my car i'll just like go left hand
squeeze five times right hands but every time i squeeze i'm also squeezing all the deep pelvic
muscles and every time i release the hand grip strengthener i'm relaxing all those deep muscles
and so i'm getting a lot of that kegel exercises just while I'm driving around in my car as well.
So that's one thing.
Another couple of things that I messed around with for a little while, just because I'm constantly trying stuff, is there's one company called Inovio.
And they make like electrical muscle stimulation shorts that you actually pull on.
And they make like electrical muscle stimulation shorts that you actually pull on.
And they literally just like stem all your nether regions, all your pelvic floor muscles.
Now, I think, you know, one of those, the M-Sculpt device that Judson Brandes likes, they also make one called an M-Cella.
I haven't used it, but apparently you sit on it and it does something similar.
But essentially, this is like electrostimulation for a lot of those deep pelvic core muscles.
And literally, it's like training all these muscles to contract and relax and teaching you how to recruit them in some really cool ways.
And so two other things that, again, these are kind of fringe, but I know you guys just kind of like to hear about, you know, any and all this stuff. So, uh, PMF, if you have a PMF mat, um, there's a lot of good data on PMF for both testosterone, as well as, uh, your, your sperm quality. And you can, so what I have is one of these PMF mats. I
always have the one by Pult Centers and you can sit on it. And so you can just sit cross-legged
on it while you're reading a book or journaling
or doing breath work or whatever.
And it's literally doing like PMF up into your crotch.
What is PMF?
And so you're getting a pulse electromagnetic field therapy.
And so, you know, a lot of athletes will use this
for blood flow, for oxygenation, et cetera.
But there's no reason you can't just like sit on the mat.
And the smaller the mat,
the more concentrated the treatment is.
And you can do a treatment just through your crotch. And then the last one that's interesting, um,
you know, for, for a while I, I messed around with, uh, you know, just cause I, I want,
I was curious about, you know, prostate orgasms and what the prostate gland orgasm feels like.
And obviously you got to go, uh, into the, into the rectum to, to stem the
prostate. And, you know, my, my wife and I messed around with that a little bit. And I, you know,
I honestly didn't really get much out of it or like it that much. But what I have found is that,
and I actually did try this, like I will try anything. Um, they make like these, uh, um,
I will try anything.
They make like these, it's electrical muscle stimulation, but it's literally like an ass EMS device that you put up your butthole
and it stems all your deep pelvic floor muscles from the inside,
contract, relax, contract, relax.
And it's literally doing like electrical muscle stimulation
for all the muscles that you can't get to if you're like sitting on a device or wearing shorts or whatever and uh that thing had such an impact on like my
ability to be able to control ejaculation and uh and and do a better job with these multi-orgasmic
techniques but i still use it once a week it's like seven minutes i lay on my bathroom floors
grab a book and that thing is just like contract release it's literally like a workout for all like your inner butt and prostate
muscles and some of those tiny muscles that are just like right above the dick what exactly is
it called yeah that one's called a um uh oh gosh who's it made by it's it's uh it's called like a
like an electrical keegel wand exercise.
A lot of women use them in their vaginas also for vaginal strengthening.
I think it's called like a firm or something like that.
I forget the name of it.
Yeah, I forget the name of it.
I don't remember, but it's like an electrical muscle stimulation.
name of it i don't remember but it's like an electrical muscle stimulation like look up like electrical muscle stimulation kegel device and it'll look like kind of like a dildo type of
shaped wand that's literally just connected to this little computer and i realize it sounds
kind of weird but i mean the thing actually male kegel exerciser i found it yeah something like
that wow yeah all right by the way guys i, guys, I have another podcast in about 10 minutes.
I just wanted to warn you.
Yeah, no problem.
I'm curious, what do you have on your feet while you're on this hike here?
I have old school Brooks.
I don't know.
It's like the Brooks Beast or whatever.
You know, I get the whole, you whole you know barefoot spread the toes um vibram five finger
thing um my problem is like a lot of times i'll take phone calls and stuff and walk and do shows
like this and some days i'll walk like 25 000 steps right and i find if i get too minimalist
with the footwear a i always step on some big rock or something that seems to like sprain my toe and just like defeats the purpose.
And then I'm like wrapping my toes with Kinesio tape and trying to fix that stuff.
Or you get like some Achilles issues because there's almost like not enough padding, especially walking on hard surfaces.
So I wear more like these shoes are called Brooks.
They're kind of built like the like the Hoka's, you know, like those big built up running shoes.
So I wear like some some pretty cushiony shoes when I'm going on long walks.
But then rest of the time, including when I'm working out, I'm usually like barefoot or super zero drop minimalist.
Cool. Thank you so much for your time today.
Where can people find out more about today uh where can people find out
more about you and where can people uh find your books and stuff like that uh just uh you know on
the internet places like that there we go i'm on instagram or twitter or facebook i you know i'm i'm
on i'm on them all i'm even looking into some of these newer
decentralized ones like Getter
and Zion. You guys
know how it goes. You can barely keep up.
Honestly, my main portal,
pretty much everything I do,
is at bengreenfieldlife.com.
Awesome, man. Have a great rest of your day.
Thank you so much for your time.
Hey, I love you guys. Thanks for having me on.
Enjoy the weekend
guys let's listen for the uh listen for the silence between the notes all right yes catch
you later thank you sir all right catch you on the flip side later i feel like we won something
today like that was awesome we got a lot of penis information mark you're all about the dicks now
right one of the villain of the comments i see you're gonna about the dicks now, aren't you? What are the comments I see?
We're going to have a rogue attachment sex swing coming in soon.
Pretty easy to do.
I don't know why some of these guys in the comments are annoyed at us.
All we're trying to do is improve.
People are mad at us?
Some guys in the comments are like, I don't know why they're doing this so much.
It's like, so all they're talking about is dicks.
No, we don't only talk about dicks, but we have them and we want to improve them.
All right.
We're not just trying to walk around with average cacks.
So as we improve our dicks, you improve yours too.
And your lady or guy is happy with you.
I just know he had a lot of information about it too.
So I figured why not.
And I'm definitely going to grab myself that Kegel.
Man, I don't.
Nah.
Yes.
No. Yes. Can I borrow yours? Dog. Man, I don't. No, yes. No, yes.
Can I borrow yours?
Dog.
Can we wear them during the show?
Dog.
I'm excited for this Denise Conway lady, the one that did all that.
Because, okay, I honestly had an app.
Actually, I still have it.
I haven't used it in a minute, but it's a Kegel app on this phone.
And it literally counts down for you holding certain Kegels.
Because there's a while I did that.
And it makes a difference.
Like training those pelvic floor muscles and flexing and relaxing you become more aware and that plays
a huge role it oddly gets tiring very quickly it does but you could like what it's like when you
don't if you've never bench pressed yeah initially but you get strong quick right same thing with
kegels especially with these muscles because once you start doing that you're like you could hold
in anything but uh i'm
definitely gonna get that rectal thing which one was it because i see a couple on google i see a
few man i typed an electrical uh kegel wand and something came pmf yeah the pmf mat yeah a bunch
of stuff but special shorts that light your balls on fire yeah is it by attain probably this uh it's not loading yeah i don't know something
shocking inside my anus pretty cool that he's got you know such a diverse background bodybuilding
ultra marathons i don't know how many times he competed but i know that he competed a little
bit in bodybuilding i just think it's cool you know and now he just is, even though he's still working out intensely, it's more just like feel better.
Yeah.
And he's a biohacker I appreciate primarily because he understands the big movers.
The big mover is your physicality and your habits and all these things.
That's a biohack right there.
That's a biohack.
Just go fucking exercise.
Yes.
And then get some sunlight.
Try to make sure you have good quality sleep stay hydrated
walk when he was talking about the have some time to yourself have some time to yourself
and as he was talking about the creativity aspect of things we were talking about this yesterday
like i found that the the time when things start to really flow is when walking literally when
walking and i have my phone with me i'm'm trying to think of something, I think of it
much quicker and it comes much smoother if I'm
in motion and locomotion. And you mentioned there's
a lot behind that that I didn't even realize.
Yeah, there's studies. I mean, there's
from what I recall, there's
I think it's
what I've learned. I think it's that guy.
He talks a lot about
walking and then he talks about how there's been studies done
at specific speeds.
So if you're just kind of strolling, you might get some creativity.
But if you're walking a little faster is probably where you're going to get hit with more stuff.
So they recommend 3.7 in the study that they did, which is moving pretty good.
You've got to be kind of intent and purposeful to be walking at that speed if you're not used to walking at that speed.
Yeah, I wanted to ask him about grounding because he mentioned it a couple of times.
We got some grounding mats and I'll kind of stand on it barefoot and even sometimes work
standing on it. Is that an earthing the same thing? Yeah. Yeah. It's the same thing. Yeah.
And I ordered it because somebody on the comment section had recommended it. So I'm like, oh,
let me check this out. And they just have some crazy bold claims, you know, like what it can do.
It's just like, oh, it's impossible to get inflammation if you're grounded
and like, you know, some weird shit like that.
Like inflammation in your feet or inflammation in your chest?
Like your whole body.
Like it's, at least that's what it.
Well, I believe like, you know, I'm going to totally mess a lot of this up,
but I believe the earth has like an energy charge to it.
You know, it has like ions and shit like that.
And I think when you go to like you know it has like ions and shit like that and i think when you
go to like especially a place like the beach and you walk on the beach barefoot um the salt water
the sand like all that stuff is really beneficial but even just walking outside your house
and uh standing in the grass which would be cold and wet um you can just kind of logically know
that like that's probably what we used to do.
Probably used to do that a lot.
But now it's like,
you know,
God forbid I actually really go outside and bear the elements of the earth.
Let me put on a sock to cover up my feet and then let me stuff it into a shoe
and make sure that I don't make any actual contact with the earth.
And I was telling Nsema the other day,
I was like,
people drive from one box to
another and they get to that box by driving in a box that has wheels on it. And it's all climate
controlled. And so we don't really deal with the actual earth. And when we are dealing with the
earth, we try to figure out ways of blocking it by putting on clothes, putting on shoes.
And then somebody walks into somebody else's office and they go wow this is beautiful
look at that giant window and it's like oh that's cool we can see the outside but thank god we're
not actually outside because that could be dangerous yeah uh it is weird so like when i'm
when i'm standing on this earthing grounding mat or whatever and if i i touch the top of my laptop
it like it doesn't shock me but like I can feel something weird going on.
Wait, whoa.
So.
When you're standing.
So standing on the mat and then like I close my laptop case or like the, you know, flip the cover down.
And if I like rub my or like skim my hand across the top of my laptop, I can feel it like buzzing.
And then if I step off the mat and i do the same thing it's
smooth it almost feels like there's a texture to it when i'm on the grounding mat so i'm wondering
if a like the wiring is fucked up in my house or b like when i ground myself my laptop is like
generated like short circuit because it's not like legit grounded or something okay question
grounding mat is it so it's not it's not the
mat i was thinking about that has like the ridges and the rocks and shit no no it's not that just
imagine like a very small yoga mat with a plug that plugs into just the the uh neutral part of
the outlet of your house so you know like there's two then there's a one pin in the middle so it
just plugs into that grounding spot interesting yeah okay i didn't looks like i
was tripping i thought it was just one of those textured mats so your feet could get different
no okay no okay but yeah exactly it's just it's out there but it i mean we got them and
it just i don't know i don't know it's one of those things it's creatine i'm taking it just
because you know because there was a study done a long time ago.
Yeah.
One thing I really appreciated that he said is the idea of borrowing.
Because that's exactly what we do. We have all these different guests come on.
And I will take some stuff from what Ben does, some stuff from what Gota does, some stuff from what Schlesinger does.
Ben does, some stuff from what Gota does, some stuff from what Schlesinger does, and do it and add it into what I think is the most effective type of routine for myself and what I'm trying to do.
That's what we're trying to do. We don't buy in totally to one idea. We take the usefulness or
what we think is useful for us from all these different things and make it our ultimate program.
And that's the kind of thing that we're trying to help you guys do for yourselves.
Because I mean, you can totally buy in. There's no problem with doing somebody's full program. And that's the kind of thing that we're trying to help you guys do for yourselves. Because I mean, you can totally buy in. There's no problem with doing somebody's full program.
No problem there. But if you have some things that you're trying to progress on your own,
you don't necessarily need to abandon those things potentially and switch and do totally
something else. You can add. You can always just add things and take out things that aren't as
useful. And just try it. Just try some of the things that we mentioned
and see if they, or something that somebody else mentions and just see if it does anything
and don't just try it for a day.
Like give it, you know, give things an honest shot.
I think if you're really going to try something, I think, I think you would know by the end
of like two weeks on whether you're making any sort of progress or enjoying it or feeling slightly different from it.
So that would be a decent amount of time to – but also you've got to be –
I would say like a month, but like people aren't going to always stick with stuff for a month.
But I think if you're doing some of these things, like some of the things that we're suggesting, you can do them almost every single day or every single time you go to the gym.
thing, you can do them almost every single day or every single time you go to the gym.
There's no reason why you can't train your tibs or train your neck or like, you know,
some of these new things that we're starting to mess around with and explore like your hip flexors.
Obviously, you can overdo it, but a small dosage of it spread out over two weeks with
not heavy weights.
I think you'll get a good idea of whether it's going to fit into what you're doing.
Yeah.
And don't do what I used to do, which is like, I'm going to try this new thing and then get
in a couple of days and you start Googling why it doesn't work, you know, because then
you're not giving it an honest shot the way you just said.
Right.
Want to take us on out of here, Andrew?
Yeah, sure thing.
Thank you everybody for checking out today's episode.
Please make sure you guys like today's episode and make sure you drop a comment down below.
We heard some pretty incredible stuff from Ben Greenfield. I like how when he said
the breathing thing, I started doing the breathing thing and I looked at you and you're like,
we're kegeling together. I love how like I was doing it and then when I do the,
and like I crouched into it and then I look up and you're doing the same thing
and then we just point at the same thing so that was funny
yeah yeah if you guys are doing kegels right now let us know down in the
comments below and follow the podcast or make sure you guys subscribe if you guys
are not subscribed and follow the podcast at mark wells power project on
Instagram at MB power project on tick tock and Twitter my Instagram Twitter
and tick tock is at I am Andrew Z and Seema where you at guys make sure to
check out Ben his book book, his concept.
He has a lot of really cool stuff.
So check him out
and also let us know.
Comment below.
Let us know what you liked
in this episode.
But at Nseema Indian,
you can come to YouTube
at Nseema Indian
on TikTok and Twitter, Mark.
I'm at Mark Spelly Bell.
Strength is never weakness.
Weakness is never strength.
Catch you guys later.
Bye.