Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Ben Greenfield on Upgrading Your Immunity, Sex, Longevity, and More
Episode Date: March 25, 2020Today’s episode is with the one and only Ben Greenfield, the bossman of biohacking and New York Times Bestselling author of several books, including his latest work, Boundless, which is a delicious ...buffet of techniques and tricks for optimizing your mind, body, and spirit. And with most of us huddled up in our homes with our families, only venturing out for necessities like groceries and toilet paper, what better subjects to talk about in this moment than immunity, longevity, and . . . sex! In this episode, Ben and I chat about . . . - How specific breathing techniques and nasal breathing can decrease stress and improve your sleep - Ways you can support your immune system - The benefits of cold exposure - How “sex salad” and oxytocin can enhance your drive and satisfaction - “Doomsday” prepping and using newly found pandemic time productively - And more . . . Enjoy! 9:40 - What forms of breath work do you discuss in your new book? 13:29 - How can you train yourself to breath through your nose when you sleep? 17:44 - How can you boost your immune system? 37:53 - How can you increase satisfaction while having sex? --- Mentioned on The Show: Legion’s Charity Sale: https://legionathletics.com/shop/ Ben Greenfield’s New Book ‘Boundless’: https://boundlessbook.com/ Ben Greenfield’s Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ben-greenfield-fitness/id283908977 Ben Greenfield’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bengreenfieldfitness/?hl=en --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to a new episode of Muscle for Life. It's a me, Mike Matthews, your pandemic pal,
your corona chum, your quarantine, uh, Quixote. And this time around, I have the one and only
big boss of biohacking, Benfield back on the podcast if you're not
familiar with ben he is a new york times best-selling author of several books including
his latest one boundless which is a delicious buffet a smorgasbord of techniques and tricks
for optimizing your body mind and spirit and Ben is the host of the wildly popular Ben
Greenfield Fitness Podcast, which is often sitting in the number one spot over at iTunes in the
health and fitness category. I think that's what it's called. Maybe it's just the fitness category.
Anyway, what with most of us huddled up right now, socially stranded, steadily sanitized, and maybe slightly stir-crazy thanks to the Rona,
which is not merely another flu as many not-doctors on Delete Your Instagram would have you believe,
we have a lot of time on our hands right now to talk about things.
have a lot of time on our hands right now to talk about things. And what better to talk about right now than immunity, longevity, and sex. And that's what Ben and I chat about on this episode. We talk
about how you can use breathing techniques and nasal breathing in particular to decrease stress
and even improve your sleep. Several ways you can support your immune system,
some of the benefits of cold exposure, Ben's secret sex salad recipe that can
enhance your performance and satisfaction, I guess you could say. We also talk about doomsday
prepping and using a lot of this newly found pandemic time productively and more. And quickly,
before we get into it,
I want to tell you about a charity sale that's going on right now over at legionathletics.com.
So here's what I'm doing. I have put my best-selling health and vitality supplements
on sale for 15% off. So that's my multivitamin, my green supplement, my fish oil, my joint
supplement, my sleep supplement, all on sale for 15% off. And I'm going to donate 20% of this week's profits to the Center for Disaster Philanthropy,
which is supporting healthcare workers, quarantined, and especially vulnerable individuals.
So again, that is legionathletics.com and our health and vitality supplements are on sale for
15% off. And the more stuff we sell, the more we are going to donate because I'm going to be giving
20% of this week's profits to a charity that is helping virus first responders and people
who are most negatively impacted by this situation.
Mr. Greenfield, it's been a while, man.
Thanks for making this work.
I know that we got our schedules mixed up a couple of times, but here we are.
It's been too long, man.
I'm just glad you're alive.
You're in DC, right?
Yeah, yeah, outside of DC in Northern Virginia.
The streets, the hard streets.
Are there riots and grocery stores
being depleted of toilet paper
and elderly people running for quarantine
and everything else that's going on out here?
Lots of scary, balding middle-aged men
and their meek wives peering out of their windows of their homes. Yes.
Yeah, lots of fear. I'm actually out walking right now. I heard that ultraviolet light potentially just kill off coronavirus, just nuke it. So I'm just getting toasted going out in the sunshine as much as I can. That's my remedy.
You're just going to get severe sunburns every day. Then you know you're going to be corona free. That plus toilet paper.
I mean, come on, dude.
And cancer, a few melanomas.
Well, yeah, that's the other thing is I have to get out in the sunshine because I need
to go out and hunt now for any plant-based alternatives to toilet paper I can find.
I hear lamb's wool might work.
There's another one.
I think it's called mullein, plantain leaf.
So I'm just going to start going out with like big plastic garbage bags and finding
anything I can find to wipe my ass.
That's an alternative to toilet paper. If you can find something nicer, you know,
that might have more value per strip than money soon, you know?
Yeah. Well, I mean, I've got a lot of stinging nettle because there's white-tailed deer all
over my property and they just go ape nuts over that shit. So I don't know how well it'd work
to wipe one's ass. Might create a little razor blade on the anus effect, but all joking aside,
that nettle that grows all over my property, I love to go out and learn about plants and forage plants and sprout seeds and make all sorts of recipes in the kitchen from what I find outside.
And man, this pesto I make out of the wild nettle is absolutely amazing.
I just go get big bags of that, bring it back and blend it up with some good extra virgin olive oil, some Parmesan cheese, some walnuts or some pine nuts, a little bit of salt, a little bit of black pepper. There's some
pretty cool recipes I can make regardless of whether or not I decide to use this toilet paper.
So I'm happy either way. I'm jealous that you're kind of off the grid. Check this out. A year ago
or so, I was talking to my dad and my wife and I was saying, I was like, you know, it would be cool to have a farm property that's
like full prepper mode, ready to go off the grid where you can grow your own food and hunt.
I wouldn't want to live there full time per se, but it'd be nice to have it. I live in Virginia,
Northern Virginia. You go into the state, you can get that for not as much money as you might
think. And they laughed at me. I was actually telling my dad, I was like, we could go in on it half half and we could just have it. I'm just that kind of person where I go,
it seems like everything is just going along fine and it's going to be like that forever.
But a lot of the systems that we rely on for our comfy life are pretty precarious. And we're
seeing that now. And for really an inconsequential amount of money or take on an inconsequential
financial burden.
I have two kids. My parents, both of them are still here. I have a brother. I have a brother-in-law.
It might not be a bad idea to have that. They laugh at me. Now, I'm rubbing it in their face.
I was actually talking about this with my boys last night. I have twin boys,
and I was telling them, look, this whole coronavirus thing is a sickness that'll
blast through, and hopefully we get herd immunity or develop a decent vaccine for it. And the people will realize what defenses need to be
shored up. People might realize that they actually do need to have more food in stock or speak of the
devil toilet paper. Companies might realize they need to do a better job setting up their employees
with the opportunity to be able to efficiently work remotely or virtually. I think if anything, some blessings will come out of this.
Or maybe pay more attention to your health, even if more people know, like,
you know what? I really want to get healthy.
Right. You might actually want to start washing your hands for 20 seconds. Or what I learned is
the equivalent of singing happy birthday twice. People hopefully are just going to become healthier
as a society on a whole in terms of their immune systems. And also just from a peer preparation standpoint, be a little bit more well-equipped
to deal with something that could actually be more serious than something like coronavirus,
like let's say a solar flare, for example, that knocks out all the electricity and bones and
communication services. I mean, that's the type of epidemic that I think would be a lot more serious
than a virus. Based on that, I think it's
not only worth stocking up on stuff, but also you mentioned land can be, and I realized for some
people, this might sound like a couple of rich eppers talking about buying land, but Idaho,
for example, right across the border from me, there's so much acres. It's dirt cheap over there.
I live on 10 acres in Washington state. I bought 10 acres for $90,000. You get that, you get a home loan,
which is of course dirt cheap right now
with what the feds have done with interest rates.
You can get set up for not a whole lot.
And then, you know, from there,
in terms of the information out there
that teaches you how to do everything
from hunt to plant forage,
this week alone, I'm learning a lot of new things,
just being stuck at home
with a little extra time on my hands.
But I figured out this whole idea of sprouting.
I had no clue how many nutrients you could unlock and how fast you can sprout seeds.
So I've got like alfalfa.
I've got red clover.
I've got broccoli sprouts.
My wife is doing micro greens.
I mean, she's a big green thumb gardener anyways.
I'm making a ton of different like yogurts and ferment.
And I mean, there's so much you can do even without a garden.
Like this stuff is not rocket science. Even if you don't have a bunch of land, I'm actually just
devouring a bunch of books on sprouting right now. You know, I'm sure the carnivore folks would go
nuts over this because of all the plant defense mechanisms, all sulforaphane I'm probably
consuming, but incredibly nutrient-
The anti-cancer molecule, that one?
Yeah, that one. Yeah. So I've got all these wonderful nutrient-dense sprouts going.
I've got huge batches of yogurts and ferments.
It's kind of fun just being stuck at home figuring out how to survive on cool shit.
Well, I mean, I like that you are occupying your time productively and you're staying positive.
I think that that's a lesson that everybody can take with them.
Don't just sit and watch the news all day or read headlines all day.
That's, I think, the worst way you can spend your time right now.
I mean, I'm sure there are a lot of people just working through their weed supply and
watching Netflix. I'm using it as an opportunity to not only prepare just in case this goes on
for a long time, learning a lot of new food preparation techniques that are relatively
inexpensive and affordable should grocery stores not really stay stocked up, but also learning new songs on the guitar or the ukulele.
I got a hand pan I'm messing around with,
a lot more quality time with my boys.
I decided to use all this time at home
that I'm with them to teach them
some really cool breathwork tactics.
So they're learning like Wim Hof and intermittent hypopnea
and holotropic breathwork.
And so every single day,
I'm taking them into our little infrared sauna
and just teaching them how to play with their prana,
how to play with their breath,
which is actually something I wish I'd have learned to do
when I was a kid,
like learn how to activate your sympathetic
or your parasympathetic nervous system
without drugs or medicines or supplements,
just using your breath.
It's pretty amazing what you can do with that alone.
That's what we talk about in your new book, right?
Boundless, which you said is doing really well.
It seems to be doing fantastically on Amazon.
I get into this in the book quite a bit, like all these different forms of breath work that
can be used for a variety of different kind of physiological functions.
Like, you know, there's this idea that I talk about in the longevity chapter of CO2
tolerance, right?
Like if you look at a lot of long-lived species, like the bowhead whale or the naked mole rat, for example, they actually appear to have much higher CO2 tolerance than average.
And what that means is they're retaining CO2, which we know in physiology based on something called the Bohr effect.
If you have simultaneously elevated levels of CO2 and oxygen, oxygen more readily dissociates into tissue from the bloodstream. And so if you,
for example, just learn something as simple as exhaling for twice as long as you inhale,
you're not only maintaining higher levels of CO2, but when you exhale for a long period of time,
that actually, based on the way the vagus nerve responds to that, elevates parasympathetic
nervous system function. So your heart rate drops, your heart rate variability goes up, your stress levels
decrease, your cortisol level decrease. It's a very simple method to learn. Like you can literally
just go for a walk like I am right now and say, okay, I'm going to breathe in for 10 steps.
And then for 20 steps, I'm going to breathe out, right? And by doing so you can train CO2
tolerance. Another way that you can kind of play with breath work is to induce the release of something called
HIF, hypoxia inducible factor. And that's the intermittent hypoxic training where you might
breathe like in, two, out, two, three, four, in, two, out, two, three, four. And you do that for
like two or three minutes. And then you finish with a full exhale. You hold that for as long as you can. And you go through a few rounds of that.
You know, you can do 12 minutes, you can do 20 minutes. You know, if you want to do something
more like a holotropic breath work, where you get the DMT release that feels like you're on LSD,
you can do that for a full hour. And there's actually some pretty cool physiological effects
that occur from that as well. You know, the other thing I talk about in the book is nasal breathing, right? Just this idea that when you breathe through your nose,
not only do you better oxygenate the air, you heat the air, it passes through all the turbines in the
nasal cavity, and that produces more nitric oxide. It forces you to breathe diaphragmatically rather
than the shallow chest breathing to activate some of the barrel receptors in the chest that can
cause a cortisol response. And teaching yourself how to, even during like a hard exercise session, engage in nasal breathing
versus mouth breathing, you actually get a lot better oxygenation and a higher level of nitric
oxide produced. And the other thing that's really interesting, I get into this a little bit in the
chapter on symmetry and beauty, is the concept of breathing through your mouth constantly,
which is one reason why what I think is kind of a silly idea
like mouth taping as you're going to sleep has become popular,
is that when you're breathing through your mouth constantly,
it can actually change the shape of the jaw
and cause some crowding in the teeth.
It can disrupt some sleep cycles.
And so learning how to breathe nasally when you sleep,
when you're at work, when you're stressed, et cetera,
it's actually a pretty cool concept.
There's kind of this idea that nasal congestion
brought on by food intolerances, food allergies,
you know, kids who might be consuming hefty amounts of,
let's say, commercial dairy or, you know,
high, high amounts of processed or packaged foods,
that it might cause some amount of congestion
that's forcing kids to breathe through their mouth.
And if you can reverse that and begin nasal breathing,
you can actually do and begin nasal breathing,
you can actually do everything from like, you know, eliminate the crowding of teeth to causing better formation of the structure of the jaw, better posture, things like nasal breathing,
things like CO2 tolerance training, intermittent hypoxic training. There are so many cool things
that you can do with breathwork. It's an amazing tool. And again, like being stuck at home with my
kids and able to just teach them every day, some of these more advanced breathwork. It's an amazing tool. And again, like being stuck at home with my kids and able to
just teach them every day, some of these more advanced breathwork techniques, I think is going
to give them a pretty good tool they can use for the rest of their lives. Yeah, that's interesting.
As far as you mentioned to learn how to breathe through your nose when you sleep, I'm assuming
that's just getting into the habit of breathing through your nose generally, and then it transfers
to your sleep? Or is there some other specific? See, that's my approach. Like I'm doing a lot of kettlebell training right now. One of the other
things I did three days ago, cause I was stuck at home. I was supposed to fly down to Austin to
pass my Russian kettlebell certification and had to like video it in. Instead, I was doing my
Russian kettlebell snatch test. A big part of my training for the kettlebell cert involved a lot of,
you know, get up swings, snatches, single arm swings,
goblet squats, cleans. And a lot of that was interspersed. I do a lot of kind of concurrent
strength and endurance training. It's just left over from my triathlon competition and obstacle
course racing days. That's just like a flavor of training. I really enjoy is training strength and
endurance simultaneously. And because of that, a lot of times during a workout,
you're a little bit gassed.
And if you can train yourself under that kind of stress
to continue to breathe through your nose,
and then when you're, say, at work,
stressed out from the emails flying out from your inbox
or whatever, you can also continue
to breathe through your nose
or even use some kind of a self-quantification device
that detects stress and then reminds you.
There are some really good tools out there. Like one new one is called the Leaf.
You just kind of put it over your rib cage. It's essentially very similar to an ECG. And so it's
monitoring your heart rate and your heart's electrical signal. And then it starts to gently
vibrate as soon as your HRV drops. One of the first things that you do is you start breathing
through your nose and after about
a minute or so, it'll stop vibrating because your HRV goes back up again. And so if you're using
tools like that or strategies like that to learn how to breathe through your nose, even when you're
in a state of sympathetic stress, then I think you just kind of do it naturally as you fall asleep
at night. But at the same time, you know, like on Shark Tank, for example, Mark Cuban invested in that company, Somnifex, which has like these mouth taping strips that you put on your mouth to force yourself to
breathe through your nose when you sleep. And maybe for people who just can't seem to crack
the code on nasal breathing, that kind of forced nasal breathing might be effective.
The company sent me a couple of boxes and I tried it out for a few nights, but you know,
as I'm falling asleep, my wife and I chat in bed and that's our time to just catch up and talk to each other. And I've got this mouth tape over my
mouth and I'm trying to figure out when to put it on. And a lot of times we literally just fall
asleep as we're talking. So for me, it didn't work. But I think that mouth taping could work
for some people who want to make sure that they're nasal breathing while they're asleep too.
As a last resort, maybe.
Yeah. And I mean, if you're concerned about sleep apnea, you can pretty easily get one of
those pulse oximeters off of Amazon that'll just track pulse oximetry the entire night while
you're asleep. And if you look at your data in the morning and you've got multiple forays into like,
you know, 70 to 80% or lower oxygenation levels, it's probably a pretty good sign you've got some
kind of a sleep apnea issue going on. And, you know, learning how to nasal breathe as you're
asleep can often be just as effective
as getting one of those custom mouthpieces or a CPAP machine that would normally be used to fix
an issue like that. Sometimes it can be as simple as just mouth taping and nasal breathing. So,
you know, you can do a little self-quantification and decide how high in the totem pole you'd want
to put something like a mouth tape for sleep. I think what you just talked about is fine. Like,
teach yourself how to nasal breathe during the day. And a lot of times, at least I found this for me from personal experience, you'll kind of naturally begin to
breathe through your nose while you're asleep too. I want to tell you about a charity sale that's
going on right now over at legionathletics.com. So here's what I'm doing. I have put my best
selling health and vitality supplements on sale for 15% off.
So that's my multivitamin, my green supplement, my fish oil, my joint supplement, my sleep supplement, all on sale for 15% off.
And I'm going to donate 20% of this week's profits to the Center for Disaster Philanthropy,
which is supporting healthcare workers, quarantined, and especially vulnerable individuals.
So again, that is legionathletics.com and our
health and vitality supplements are on sale for 15% off. And the more stuff we sell, the more we
are going to donate because I'm going to be giving 20% of this week's profits to a charity that is
helping virus first responders and people who are most negatively impacted by this situation.
Let's talk about immunity.
It's particularly relevant right now.
And it's something that I'm getting asked a fair amount about.
And I have an article I wrote some time ago on it.
I'm updating it though.
But I'll open this with saying,
it's interesting how the word boost is kind of stigmatized here.
So if you say that something boosts the immune system,
some people will say immediately that you're a quack. I actually didn't understand it at first. I was like, wait a minute. So riddle
me this. Okay. I'm going to restrict my sleep to four hours per night for the next week. And then
I'm going to sleep eight hours a night for the next week. Did I just boost my immune system?
Like, yeah, that's exactly what's going to happen. I mean, the dictionary definition to improve,
to enhance the activity of, If I do something that impairs
my immune system and then I do something that is good for it and it boosts it, okay, so we agree
on that. Do you agree that the weight of the available evidence suggests that if you eat a
clove or two of raw garlic every day, it can quite literally boost your immune system, enhance NK
cell activity, T cell activity, and then somebody will go, oh, well, no, but it could support or assist the immune system. And so I've had this discussion with a
couple of people. I'm like, oh, so now we're just playing semantic games. I don't get it.
But then what I realized is quote unquote immune boosting. I guess that well has been
poisoned by scammers just selling like vitamin C and lysine pills or something. So that's
interesting that there's good evidence that there are behavioral things you can do. There are some foods that you can eat. There are even some
supplements you can take that probably will enhance your immunity. And of course, it's not
a replacement for just basic good living habits. But especially in a time like this, if you could
add some extra little things to your regimen and bolster, strengthen, support, assist, boost,
whatever word you want to use,
your immune system, why not do it? What are your thoughts? Yeah, I agree. A big part of that's just
semantics. I mean, you could say the same thing about training, right? Like blood flow restriction
straps, right? Like you could say that that's a workout boost. If you wore them during any workout
that you normally do, you might get a little bit better satellite cell proliferation and a better
growth hormone response post-training when you
train with BFR straps versus without. And sure, those can be marketed like, I don't know, a
workout boosting device, or you could just also classify it as an alternative method, especially
if you want to use lighter weights. I think that's one of the big benefits. By the way, to jump in
there, I have a lot of physicians who I talk with, and many of them are actually being careful with very high-intensity overtraining, it may aggravate the issue. And we also know that
in somebody who's, let's say, run a marathon, they actually have a suppressed immune response
for like two or three weeks after running a marathon. That's why a lot of people get the
sniffles or get sick after they do an Ironman or a marathon or something like that. So this idea of
smartly programmed training in a situation in which you might be at risk of having a compromised immune system, I think it's smart. I've actually
been doing, speak of the devil, a little bit more BFR training because it appears, and I talked
about this on a recent podcast about some research that shows that you still get that satellite cell
response and mitochondrial proliferation, but at lower levels of inflammation. So, you know,
rather than me going out and doing like, you know, German volume training or something that might
cause a pretty pronounced inflammatory response, I can instead use BFR, lightweight, elastic bands,
et cetera, and still get a training response with less inflammation. So I've actually personally
been doing a lot more body weight training, BFR training, long walks in the sunshine, you know, some sauna, some cold water soaks, you know, stuff like that, just to make sure I'm not overtraining at the same time that there's a virus going around.
You know, I'm just trying to be smart about that.
But as far as the immune system, well, heck, let's just piss people off and call them boosters.
Yeah, there's some stuff that seems to be pretty prudent. There's other stuff that's honestly kind of marketed as an immune system booster that I think people should be careful with because it appears that, you know,
for this particular issue at the time that we're talking coronavirus, you know, one of the ways that
it can kind of do damage is by interacting with some of these angiotensin receptors in lung tissue.
And there are certain things that can actually increase sensitivity to that that are common
immune boosters like B. propolis, for example. A lot of people use that to protect themselves from airborne pathogens and
appears to have some kind of antiviral and antibacterial effect, but it also seems to
increase sensitivity on those ACE receptors. That would be an example of an immune booster
that for this particular issue, you might want to avoid. There's also some evidence that high-dose vitamin D and high-dose
vitamin A, another thing that a lot of people are doing or have heard are good for immune boosting,
may actually do the same thing, make the lungs more susceptible to damage from something like
the coronavirus. Not to mention, if we're talking about retinol, high-dose vitamin A is not a good
idea just generally. Yeah, right. Exactly. I mean, any of the fat soluble vitamins can induce toxicity pretty easily.
And some of that can depend on your excretion rates
and that's something you want to consider
on a case-by-case basis.
Elderberry as well, right?
I'm sure you saw the research.
Yeah, elderberry may trigger
a little bit of a cytokine response
that could contribute to that.
I'm not convinced that as much of an issue
as much as the sensitivity to ACE receptors and lung tissue, but elderberry, just because it's questionable and there are
good alternatives to it, that's another one I'm not really doing. So I'm not doing the high-dose
vitamin D, high-dose vitamin A, I'm not doing B-propolis, I'm not doing elderberry. Not that
I wouldn't use those in certain situations to help my immune system, but in this particular
situation, I'm not. A few things I am doing, I am using vitamin C and lysine.
Even if folks are on the line that's calling Dan Wagon, it's a water-soluble vitamin that's not that harmful. It's at least not going to present some of the same issues as some of those other
things I talked about. Just to clarify, if anybody was wondering my comment on vitamin C,
I mean, you're familiar with this research in athletes. It shows that a gram per day can
increase the incidence of cold and help recovery. So I've taken a gram of vitamin C a day for some time, and it does seem to have a mild
immune enhancing or immune boosting effect. What I don't like though, is the immune products that
are out there that are just vitamin C and lysine, maybe a little bit of zinc, maybe like a proprietary
blend of a few other things that either are hit and miss like elderberry or don't do much of
anything like probiotics, especially if they're just dead crap probiotics, and then over promise and oversell
the product as something that is going to supercharge your immune system. And if you're
around sick people, don't even worry about it, just swallow these pills. And so it seems like
a lot of people immediately when they hear immune boosting, they think, oh, one of those people.
Yeah, but I can tell you probably the top three things that I'm doing.
I'm a big fan of glutathione and acetylcysteine.
And in particular, considering the lung tissue doesn't actually have a lot of antioxidant activity in and of itself.
And this is something that functional medicine docs have used for things like mold and mycotoxins and biofilm that build up in nasal cavities and lung tissue for a long time. But this idea of actually
breathing or using like a nasal spray, glutathione and N-acetylcysteine, I think it's smart in this
time. And so what I did was I bought, I think it was like 40 bucks on Amazon, a nebulizer,
which is a little mask that you wear. And you can nebulize essential oils, you can nebulize
glutathione, you can nebulize N-acetylcysteine. So I've got liquid glutathione
and liquid N-acetylcysteine, and I actually use a little bit of colloidal silver as well.
And for about 20 minutes while I'm just standing in front of my computer replying to emails during
the day, I actually breathe in via nebulizer glutathione and N-acetylcysteine. I just alternate
between one deep breath in through the nose and one deep breath in through the mouth. And that
in particular targeted towards the respiratory passages that this virus seems to actually be most targeted
towards, I think is a good idea. And it's not that expensive to nebulize glutathione and
endothelial cysteine. So that's one that I've been doing on a daily basis. Another one, and this is a
little bit more involved and might be kind of eh for some people, but I'm not opposed to the use
of ozone. It seems
to have pretty good antiviral activity. So I actually have an ozone generator machine and
I'm doing just a quick rectal insufflation of ozone, which is the quickest way to get in the
bloodstream. I learned this tactic from a really good doctor down in California named Dr. Matthew
Cook, who does a lot of ozone dialysis on his patients for everything from Lyme to mold to
mycotoxins. And now he's using it for a lot of his patients for these viral issues. And so I have a home ozone machine and I'm doing a basically
rectal ozone. So how are you getting it in your ass? What are the mechanics here?
You fit the plastic ozone bag over the outlet port on the ozone machine. It fills it with ozone
and you literally just put it in your ass, squeeze it. Now you don't have to hold it or anything. It
gets in your bloodstream within about 20 seconds. And then that's it. Add that to the panic buying list. Run to Amazon.
Grab your ozone machine and your ozone insufflation bags. So I've been doing that.
And then the last thing is just because I think it has such a good immunomodulatory effect,
and it's just beneficial for strengthening the immune system anyways, is I've been doing
breathwork and cold, like about three rounds of that kind of Wim Hof breathwork technique. I've got a really nice cold tub right outside my office. It's one of those
done for you units that just stays super cold. Like I got to break through the ice. I have one
of those maces next to the bath. So I use the mace to break up the ice, do about three rounds
of Wim Hof breathwork and get pretty hypoxic, getting the ice, hang out in there for about
five to 10 minutes. And I think that's actually really good for the immune system. And granted, it's anecdotal, but there's
even, you know, guys like, you know, Wim Hof, who had a, I think it was E. coli that he actually had
himself injected with or that he consumed. And he was able to show that he was able to modulate his
immune response to that just using cold and breath work. So I've been doing that as well.
I remember reading some papers on winter swimming. So like my takeaway when I was doing some research on cold showers, which I actually
have been doing for a couple of years now, and I don't think that I'm getting much health
benefits out of it at all because it's not long enough.
You know, it's a couple of minutes.
I live in Virginia, so the water actually is pretty ice cold even still right now, even
though the temperatures are heating up.
But my takeaways from the research I did was the minimum of what you're doing, let's say
it's five or 10 minutes and it's frequent and it's exposure all the way
up to your neck. Or if you are into winter swimming where people are just out there for
hours sometimes swimming around in ice cold water, that you may be able to strengthen your immune
system through that alone. So I'd say there's probably some evidence. Yeah, there's a lot of
studies on cold thermogenesis or cold exposure and a strength and immune
system response in excess.
Some of the studies that show a really large drop in muscle core temp, it's kind of like
exercise.
And what I mentioned about a marathon or an Ironman triathlon actually suppressing the
immune system and excess cold can do that as well.
But brief, frequent bouts of cold exposure actually appear to be pretty good for the
immune system.
And in the recovery chapter of the book, I kind of tackle this a little bit because there's also
the anti-icing, anti-cold crowd who just think it blunts the hormetic response to exercise so
significantly that it should be avoided. But if you actually look at the blunting of things like
inflammation, satellite cell response, et cetera, most of that peaks within one to two hours after
you finish the workout. So if you're timing your cold exposure to not be acute, and they've
actually compared immediate post-workout, 30 minutes post-workout, an hour post-workout,
and what they found is that once you get an hour after the workout, you actually don't see that
same blunting of the hormetic response as you do if the cold takes place immediate post-workout. So you could argue the same thing
for like antioxidant consumption, right? Which would also blunt the hormetic response. You'd
want to time that at least an hour out from the workout. I wait a few hours before taking the
vitamin C. Exactly. I wait until the evening just because it appears that deep sleep is enhanced by
a drop in core temperature anyways. So I like to get cold in the evening, usually before dinner. So you get the enhanced insulin
sensitivity, the upregulation of glute four transporters, the decrease in core temp that
helps you to sleep later on. I'm a fan of actually, you know, if you're doing a morning workout,
just saving the cold until the evening. But then the other thing is that the drop in muscle
temperature is something like eight to 10 degrees to actually get yourself to
the point where you're really significantly blunting a hormetic response. And if you look
at, let's say like a cryotherapy chamber, and I think the gold standard time in one of those is
like three and a half minutes, the actual muscle core temp drop after like a cryotherapy session
is about one and a half degrees max. So you're not getting anywhere near the drop in core
temp that you'd get from like what they might be doing in a football locker room, you know,
a 10 to 15 minute ice cold soak post scrimmage or post-practice or post-workout.
And that's reflected in research too, that compares cryo to the ice baths, right? And if
I remember correctly, cryo wasn't nearly as effective for this reason.
And if I remember correctly, cryo wasn't nearly as effective for this reason.
Right, exactly.
But even an ice bath, you've got to be in there for 10 plus minutes to actually drop the temperature low enough to significantly block the hormetic response.
So even then, you've got to be in cold for quite a while to a pretty significant extent
at a really low temperature to cause some of these effects that everybody is concerned
about.
So I play it safe and just wait. And I don't do any cold or antioxidants for at least an hour after the
workout. And I try to wait a few hours and it really only turns into an issue if you're staying
in there a really long time and getting significantly cold. So I think people worry
about that whole blunting of the hormetic response to exercise with cold too much.
Are you trying to get more jacked? At this point,
do you care whether you gain a little bit less muscle from your workouts or not? I mean,
I can say I don't because in my case, I know you stay a bit leaner than I do generally and
a bit bigger than you are. I care on a little bit more muscle, but naturally this is about it,
that I'll ever get. The only way to really get much bigger or stronger than where I'm at now would be drugs. And I don't want to do that. So people should keep that in mind
too. If you like doing the ice bath and you already are basically tapped out in terms of
what you're going to get out of weightlifting, no matter how hard you train, no matter how
you periodize your training, no matter how much work on the programming, you're only going to
get so far. I think there's also something to be said for the context. That's also why I'm not too concerned.
Yeah, I take a gram of vitamin C per day because I don't like getting sick. And even though I do
time it, if that does impair my post-workout recovery to a small degree, I'm not concerned.
I don't live and die by my powerlifting total or my biceps peak or something.
Yep. That's a good point. Or even just from a societal standpoint, right?
If your hard morning workout
leaves you pitting out at the office
and stinky all day long
and kind of like annoyingly hot
to the extent that you're aggravated,
dude, just go take a long cold shower
after your morning workout
unless you're being paid to have that extra slab of muscle.
Exactly.
What are your thoughts on,
and this is something I've been getting asked quite a bit when I've been doing Instagram Lives, on calorie intake right now
and how that can affect the immune system? Oh, yeah. Dose response, right? We know that
excess fasting is something that can be stressful and that can suppress the immune system. Whereas,
you know, brief bouts of fasting or compressed feeding windows or longer periods of time between meals may actually suppress inflammation a little bit.
So I'm not doing any long fast, which I'm not a fan of anyways.
I just don't enjoy, you know, three to five day water fast.
I think that in active individuals, probably the majority of the people who listen to yours or my podcast, this whole idea of excess fasting, if you're already achieving
autophagy through things like cold, heat, exercise, and active lifestyle, sleeping enough,
or hormetic stressors from plants and herbs and spices, et cetera, arguably, you may not need to
fast as much as has become popular of late. For me personally, I do an overnight 12 to 16 hour intermittent fast
just about every day of the year anyways. And I enjoy that. I don't usually even get hungry
anyways until about at least 9 a.m. in the morning and usually close to like 10, 10.30. So
I'm just doing what I do anyways, which is a 12 to 16 hour intermittent fast. And aside from that,
I'm always careful with my consumption of, you know, a cellular carbohydrate or processed carbohydrate. I'm always extremely cognizant even more than
carbohydrates because I think those are over vilified as well. I'm much more careful with
my consumption of inflammatory seed oils, you know, like canola oil, sunflower oil,
safflower oil, et cetera. I'm just being more careful with that. And it's actually pretty
easy being stuck at home because really most of my exposure to those type of oils comes when I'm going out to restaurants or when
I'm traveling through airports and eating packaged food, et cetera. So just being really careful with
mitigation of vegetable oils and a lot of glycemic variability, I think is smart anyways, but I'm
cognizant of that. And as far as the fasting goes, I'm keeping up the 12 to 16 hour intermittent fast. I think that excess fasting in this scenario is, again, going to be one of
those things that could suppress the immune system response. Whereas for men, 12 to 16 hours for
women, especially lean and active women, not going much longer than about 10 to 12 hours.
It's a good anti-inflammatory strategy, this whole idea of a compressed feeding window.
And it's easy to do and is probably natural for many people. I mean, for me, I eat dinner
and that's pretty much it. Sometimes I'm eating home a little bit later, depending on work. I
might eat dinner anywhere between seven and eight, I guess. And then I'm done eating. I have my first
calories around, like you, probably around nine, 9.30, 10. And a lot of people just like to eat
that way.
Yeah, the only situation which I'm actually going to start to adopt
during this scenario,
those longer like two, three, five day fasts
are if we really truly run out of all toilet paper
or toilet paper alternatives,
I'm gonna have to figure out ways to not poop.
And I think not eating
might be one of the best strategies for that.
Well, you shared though,
some pretty unique options that you have.
You're gonna be able to forage for exotic toilet paper. Maybe that'll be like an Etsy business so you can start a side hustle
if you need to. My wife was joking. She's like, well, Ben, if you start killing the
white-tailed deer on the property, we can just figure out how to use their hide as toilet paper.
So we have that as an option. That's creative as well. One other point on diet and immune
function is energy status. So being in a calorie deficit versus just eating maintenance or even in
a surplus. What are your thoughts? Because a lot of people were cutting before all of this shit
started to get serious. And so they've been asking, should I continue cutting? What should I do here?
I've seen no data on whether a hypocaloric state is going to have a significant effect
on the immune system. I know that fasting, compressed feeding windows will actually
downregulate inflammation and may, quote, boost, unquote, the immune system. I know that fasting compressed feeding windows will actually downregulate inflammation and may quote boost unquote the immune system to a certain extent.
But as far as calorie cycling or whether or not you're fasting is in the context of a hyper
caloric state versus an iso caloric versus hypo caloric, I can't say that I've seen anything on
that related to the immune system. You know, Even in folks who are, let's say, consuming
a hypercaloric diet for mass gains, I still think that compressed feeding windows are a good idea
just so you can kind of have your cake and eat it too, right? So you have your phase of autophagy
and downregulation of mTOR where you're going for a certain period of time without eating,
but assuming you're choosing the right foods, seeds and nuts and avocados and coconut milk
and meat and organ meat and all these nutrient-dense slash calorie-dense foods,
you can easily squeeze, you know, 5,000 to 6,000 plus calories into an 8- to 12-hour compressed
feeding window on two to three square meals and kind of have your cake and eat it too,
still get the fast in, get some autophagy, and then go back into a hyperchloric
kind of intermittent fasting state type of scenario. So I don't know how much of an effect
that's going to have on the immune system though. I doubt that anything except long-term
hypocalorie intake is going to be that big of an issue. That's what I would be careful with is
just anyone who's dieting down without any refeeds at all, that's where I'd be careful.
Yeah, that's exactly what I was telling them is if you've been cutting for a while now and you're feeling a bit
run down, this would be probably a good opportunity for a diet break. That's the case regardless of
some new virus going around. It's just the right way to do it. But if you are feeling fine,
if you're just starting restricting your calories, I wouldn't be concerned about it. I would say
do what you want to do. If you want to take a diet break now, do it. If you don just starting restricting your calories, I wouldn't be concerned about it. I would say do what you want to do.
If you want to take a diet break now, do it.
If you don't, you feel fine.
That's probably fine too.
Yeah, I agree.
There are so many other things that you talk about in your book.
Just for people listening, again, the book is boundless.
There is stuff on sex.
Why don't we wrap up with that?
Let's talk about sex.
That'll be fun.
I'll turn it on high note.
Yeah, why not?
What do you want to talk about?
In this section, you're talking about tantra.
You're talking about increasing sex drive.
You're talking about getting more satisfaction out of sex.
Let's hone in on those.
Let's start with the free and easy stuff that's related to something we already talked about,
breath work.
So if you're doing that type of intermittent hypoxic training, where you might go in, two,
out, two, three, four, in, two, out, two, three, four.
What you can do is you can actually train yourself how to move sexual energy. This would be more from
like an Eastern medicine standpoint, up the chakra. So you're starting with the root chakra
and trying to move it up towards your head, especially for males, this is useful, but women
can use it too. You can train yourself how to get into a multi-orgasmic state. You can orgasm without an ejaculate. It's kind of like this trapping technique. It's very
well explained in a book called The Multi-Orgasmic Male. But essentially what you do is when you
breathe in on that in, two, out, two, three, four, you actually contract your perineum and
essentially do what would be the equivalent of like a Kegel-esque exercise when you breathe in.
So it's a contract on the in, and then you relax everything on the out. And then you're in to contract out,
two, three, four, relax, in to contract out, two, three, four, relax, with the contraction,
the relaxation being all around the pelvic muscles. And then what you do is at the very,
very end of that breathwork cycle, you take a very deep breath in and you just pull all the energy
from your perineum, from your groin and everything all the way up. You imagine going all the way up
to the top of your head and you suck in all your breath. You just hold that for as long as possible.
If you can train yourself how to do that during breathwork and you get right to the point where
you're orgasming during sex, you can actually keep the ejaculate in and come back and orgasm
over and over and over again.
Have you successfully done that?
Oh, yeah. Tantric sex technique. I learned it two years ago when I was doing an article for
Men's Health on sexual performance, and they wanted me to try it out. So I spent a month
figuring out how to do it and learning it. And it's a fantastic tool. Like I said,
I'm taking my boys through breathwork. They don't know why I'm teaching them that part of it right
now, but they're going to thank me when they're 18
and they understand how to move the sexual energy through their body.
So that's one thing, you know, that's free, cheap, and easy.
I have to ask because I'm ready to start trying it myself.
What does this routine look like?
Like how many breaths, how many reps, how many sets?
What are we talking about?
I like a sweet spot about 12 to 20 minutes.
If there's anything longer than that, you're just not going to do it.
You could do it every day if you're a big meditation fan,
or you can just do it two to three times a week.
You're sitting cross-legged, right?
You play a little music, or you just have your eyes closed or whatever.
And again, it's just in, two, out, two, three, four, in, two, out, two, three, four.
And technically, if you really want to get the benefits of the intermittent hypoxic component,
let's say you're doing a 12-minute cycle.
After you finish 12 minutes of breathing like that, and by the way, you're getting all the benefits of the intermittent hypoxic component, let's say you're doing a 12 minute cycle. After you finish 12 minutes of breathing like that, and by the way, you're
getting all the benefits of meditation because this takes some focus too. You're sitting there
cross-legged with your eyes closed, breathing like that. At that very last breath that you take in
to, then you breathe everything out, like completely empty the lungs, drop the chin,
push, push, push, push, push everything out. You hold that for as long as you can on the exhale.
After you've done that, you take that and you breathe, breathe, breathe, breathe, breathe
everything in and kind of at the very top of that breath, keep sucking it in.
It kind of sounds like this, like you're sucking through a straw.
You trap everything up in the head.
You're squeezing the perineum and you can do all that.
The Kegels, the Kegel squeezing is on the inhales, right? Yep. The Kegel squeezing is on the inhales. If you decide you want to experiment
with your breath, I would lay down if you do this, but you can do that for like an hour.
And that's technically what holotropic breath work is. And if you do it for an hour, usually
you're doing that full exhale followed by the inhale about every 10 minutes or so. So you're
doing like six different cycles and you're in a completely different universe by the end of that less breath hold at the end of an
hour. I only do this about once a month because it's very physically demanding. You feel as though
you've dropped about a hundred micrograms of LSD when you've finished that last breath cycle.
You're on cloud nine the rest of the day. If you say like, you know, get up in the morning when
the house is dark and quiet and go lay on your back and, you know, whatever place you go typically to do meditation,
it's amazing. So that's one thing for sex. Another couple of things that I really have found
interesting, at least that I talked about in the book, I don't know if you've messed around much
with oxytocin, like these intranasal oxytocin sprays that you can get. Nope, not at all.
Oxytocin, we released it anyways, you know, from the time we're babies or breastfeeding and all the way to after we orgasm
during sex, you know, a woman releases a bunch when she's giving birth, but it's this feel good,
trust, cuddly hormone. And you can actually buy intranasal oxytocin spray. And if you huff a
little bit of that before sex, you want your partner to do it too. But when you have sex on a whole bunch of oxytocin, it's amazing.
Like it increases your connectedness to your partner.
Everything feels better.
It increases tactile sensation on the skin.
There's a little bit better sensory awareness and, you know, everything feels better.
So I always have a little bottle of intranasal oxytocin in the drawer of the fridge for those date nights where we really want to
amplify the sexual experience. Remember though that oxytocin is a trust hormone, so don't huff
a bunch of that stuff and then go negotiate buying a used car or whatever. So be careful when you use
it because it turns you into a cuddly little softie. Finally, anything that is a really good,
potent nitric oxide precursor. I'm a huge fan of that. And in the book, I get into
this idea of making like sex salad. And you can use arugula, extra virgin olive oil, pumpkin seeds,
cubed watermelon, like a nice beet, throw some goat cheese in there for flavor. And this idea
of just like choosing a bunch of nitric oxide precursor, rich foods and consuming those prior
to a date night or prior to a night where you know you're
going to have sex versus kind of like the four-hour body old school Tim Ferriss approach was have a
fatty steak with a bunch of cholesterols from egg yolks because it's going to amplify your
testosterone and your hormones. And I'm not opposed to that strategy for endocrine support
as a practice, but all that's going to do is draw a bunch of blood away from the organs that you want
to have blood flow to before sex. So save those meals for other times when you're actually trying
to build up your hormones and get your cholesterol up and amplify some precursors for testosterone
and DHEA, et cetera. But for hot date nights or sex nights, go with some of those lighter meals
with nitric oxide. Use the old bodybuilding trick of a little red wine and dark chocolate to increase vascularity. Same thing, you can use that for a
little dessert or have that along with your sex salad. And it sounds simple and stupid, but I mean,
in the absence of sildenafil or something like that. And by the way, the other thing related
to nitric oxide that's right next to my oxytocin nasal spray in the fridge is nitroglycerin cream.
You don't have to.
If the idea of rectal insufflation of ozone for your immune system made you cringe, you
can just apply it to your scrotum.
But if you take a dab of nitroglycerin cream on the end of your finger, stick it up your
asshole so it gets absorbed super fast.
It basically gives you the effects of Viagra within about two minutes without having to
time the little blue pill or anything like that. So nitroglycerin cream is actually pretty damn
amazing in and of itself. Fascinating. I think this is something I've experienced myself and I
hear from people who use my pre-workout and not for a shameless product plug, but because of the
citrulline, because it has eight grams of citrulline per serving and a little bit over two grams of
betaine. And if you take that, even if it was my product or just buy them in bulk, whatever, I don't care.
But having those two ingredients in your daily regimen definitely makes a difference in terms of
erection hardness. It's noticeable. Oh, yeah. And some of those things that don't involve food,
but are more like pre-workouts or natural glycerin cream or anything like that,
you can use those
too before a sauna session. And if you want to sweat buckets in a sauna, if you're using a sauna
for something like, let's say you tested hyper heavy metals and you wanted to sweat a bunch out,
or you just want to get hotter in the sauna, any of that same stuff that you'd use for sex,
if you do it before a sauna session, it's amazing. Like you sweat buckets and buckets,
you know, some of the stuff you can use for other purposes too. Yeah. Yo, him mean is another one that's good for big dick energy as the internet
kids say. Yeah. That stuff's not bad either. Well, Hey man, this was a great discussion.
This was fun. We can do it again sometime, pick another several subjects out of your book. Cause
there are 21 chapters in boundless and yeah, the book split up into basically mind optimization, brain optimization,
everything from nootropics and smart drugs to biohacks for cognition, et cetera. And then I
get into a lot of fitness, a lot of body enhancing tools, recovery, immune system,
beauty, symmetry, et cetera. And then what's a large portion of my life and really where I think
ultimate fulfillment and happiness lies beyond just being able to memorize a deck of cards
or get a six-pack abs or whatever you're doing for the brain or for the body is the spirituality component.
You know, happiness, love, gratitude, family, sex, all those things that sometimes I think get neglected in the fitness sector.
I tackle those pretty heavily towards the latter part of the book.
Originally, the book was actually just going to be a book on anti-aging and longevity,
and then it just kind of blossomed from there into a whole different beast.
So there's about 170 pages just on this whole sector of anti-aging and longevity and everything
from peptides to hormones to lusones to all these things you can do to increase lifespan.
Yeah.
I remember when you were telling me about when you started working on the book.
Well, you're in the middle of it.
But at that point, it was just going to be a longevity book. I remember that.
I'm happy it turned out to be a little more comprehensive than that because obviously guys
like David Sinclair, for example, he just came out with a really good book on longevity. And
there are others. I think Peter Attia is publishing one soon. There are other great
books on longevity. So this one's got a lot of that stuff in it, but obviously based on the
age count of the book alone, which is like 650 plus pages, it wound up being a lot more than just that.
Yeah, it's cool.
It's a buffet of all kinds of interesting
health and fitness topics.
So again, it is boundless
and you can find it wherever you like to buy books, right?
Yeah, anywhere.
And there's an audible version,
a scandal version.
Hopefully people enjoy it.
Yeah.
Thanks again for taking the time to do this, Ben.
Really appreciate it.
And I look forward to doing it again.
All right, man.
Make sure you go buy an ozone machine for your rectal insufflation before
they all disappear after this podcast. You sold me. I already placed the order.
Good man. Cool, man. That was perfect.
All right. Well, that's it for today's episode. I hope you found it interesting and helpful.
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