Young and Profiting with Hala Taha - Ben Greenfield: Hustle Culture is Ruining Your Health and Happiness!! | E259
Episode Date: December 4, 2023Ben Greenfield grew up in northern Idaho, a self-described homeschooled geek who played the violin and chess and spent most of his time reading or writing fantasy fiction. But, as a teenager, he disco...vered tennis and working out, which led him to buy a pair of cheap 10-pound dumbbells at the local sporting goods store and transform himself into an athlete. Eventually, he grew up to be a bodybuilder, Ironman triathlete, nutritionist, and trainer who is now one of the foremost biohacking experts in the world. In today’s episode, Ben will share some of his best biohacking techniques for achieving total human optimization—mind, body, and spirit.  Ben Greenfield is a trainer, coach, speaker, podcast host, best-selling author, and a very involved parent. His latest book is called Boundless Parenting. Ben has an unquenchable enthusiasm for optimizing and improving human performance, and he has helped millions through his biohacking strategies and techniques.  In this episode, Hala and Ben will discuss: - Growing up in the sticks in Northern Idaho - How he defines biohacking - Why the original biohackers were human cyborgs - How modern science can simulate our ancestral environment - How your body is like a battery - Why you should go barefoot after air travel - Striking the right balance between time, health, and money - Why business should be your fifth priority - How cold water can boost brain function - When carbon dioxide can be beneficial - The benefits of a deep, hypnotic trance - His tips on boundless parenting - Why you should teach your kids how to negotiate - And other topics…  Ben Greenfield is a trainer, coach, speaker, podcast host, best-selling author, and a very involved parent. Ben has an unquenchable enthusiasm for optimizing and improving human performance, and he has helped millions through his biohacking strategies and techniques. He has a science-based approach to discovering the balance between health and performance and works with athletes, CEOs, and others from all over the world. His books include Beyond Training (2014), Boundless (2020), and most recently Boundless Parenting (2023).  Resources Mentioned: Ben’s Website: bengreenfieldfitness.com Ben’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/bengreenfieldfitness Ben’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bengreenfield Ben’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/bengreenfield Ben’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/bengreenfieldfitness/ Ben’s Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BGFitness Ben’s Podcast, Ben Greenfield Life: https://open.spotify.com/show/4nN0MRFIdTsx3iMrsh9TYd Ben’s latest book Boundless Parenting (2023): https://www.amazon.com/dp/0999722778  LinkedIn Secrets Masterclass, Have Job Security For Life: Use code ‘podcast’ for 30% off at yapmedia.io/course.  Sponsored By: MasterClass - Right now you can get Two Memberships for the Price of One at youngandprofiting.co/masterclass Relay - Sign up for FREE! Go to relayfi.com/profiting **Relay is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services and FDIC insurance provided through Evolve Bank & Trust and Thread Bank; Members FDIC. The Relay Visa® Debit Card is issued by Thread Bank pursuant to a license from Visa U.S.A. Inc. and may be used everywhere Visa® debit cards are accepted.  More About Young and Profiting Download Transcripts - youngandprofiting.com Get Sponsorship Deals - youngandprofiting.com/sponsorships Leave a Review -  ratethispodcast.com/yap Watch Videos - youtube.com/c/YoungandProfiting  Follow Hala Taha LinkedIn - linkedin.com/in/htaha/ Instagram - instagram.com/yapwithhala/ TikTok - tiktok.com/@yapwithhala Twitter - twitter.com/yapwithhala  Learn more about YAP Media Agency Services - yapmedia.io/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Today's episode of Yap is sponsored in part by Relay and Masterclass. Relay is an online
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As always you can find all of our deals in the show notes.
You can make money but you can't make time and you can't make health.
His latest book is one of the most studied books on the subject of biohacking right now,
a nutritionist, physiologist, and a competitive athlete.
Ben Greenfield.
You're basically one giant battery because your cells are best equipped to operate with a slightly
negative charge on the inside of the cell and a slightly positive charge on the outside of the cell. So
earthing, grounding, sunlight, water, minerals, and then avoidance of a lot of modern electricity is all really important.
I've intentionally built my business much more slowly because my business is my fifth order of priority in life.
I've seen a lot of my friends build their businesses
and then they'll do the Facebook posts
where they're like, yeah, I'm 30 pounds overweight
and I'm sick and I don't feel good about my body
and it's time to start working on my body, but man,
it's so much easier when you don't let yourself slide
in the first place.
Business is like the icing on the cake, but if you're not fulfilled in those other areas of life,
the business is always going to be unfulfilling and you'll be overworked. But there's one other thing
that I think is really interesting, and it's also relevant to biohack, to heal, to enhance the body,
and that is...
Yeah fam! Boy do we have a treat and store for you today,
because I'm chatting with world-renowned fitness expert Biohacking Guru and New York Times bestselling author
Ben Greenfield.
Ben is so many things.
He's an ex-body builder, an Iron Man triathlete,
a trainer, a coach, a speaker, a podcast host,
a bestselling author, and he's also a very involved parent.
In fact, his latest book is called Boundless Parenting,
and his breakout book, Boundless,
is pretty much the Bible of Biohacking right now.
Ben has an unquenchable
enthusiasm for optimizing and improving human performance, and he's helped millions through
his biohacking strategies and techniques, and I'm so excited that you get to learn directly
from him today because he's brilliant. Ben, thank you so much for joining me on Young
and Profiting Podcast.
Well, thank you so much for having me. I'm out in my backyard right now, catching a little bit of fall vitamin D in the sunshine.
So I was telling you before we started recording that, come by with the fact my son's having
a piano lesson inside has showed me out into the great outdoors, but you know what?
Walking in the sunshine and talking to you and your wonderful folks could be a worst day, right? Yeah. And this is totally in line with Ben's brand, as you'll
soon find out. He's a big proponent of sun, getting exercise, all those good things.
I wanted to tell our listeners about your interesting background story and so much
of who we are, as you know, starts with our childhood, and you had an unusual childhood compared to most,
you grew up in Idaho,
and that definitely impacted who you are today
the way that you were raised.
So can you take us back to your childhood
and shed some color on that?
A trip down memory lane, huh?
Well, you're right.
I did have a little bit of unique childhood,
specifically, not only did I grow up
in the sticks in North Idaho,
which already makes you kind of weird,
but I was homeschooled, so K through 12,
I was homeschooled, and that's interesting
because traditional homeschooling,
which of course has become more popular lately,
involves sitting around the kitchen table,
learning from books and curriculum
overseen by your parents and going to prom by
yourself and kind of doing the traditional form of schooling but at home.
Whereas, like I, with my own sons now who are 15, we do unschooling and unschooling is
different.
Like you don't even use books or curriculum much.
You essentially tune into your child's passions and interests and desires and then just
surround them with as many
experiential
Emergence as possible whether it's like building a tree fort in the backyard to learn math
You know going on filled trips in the local community or like you know learning a language like Spanish for six months leading up to a trip to Spain to
Also engage in like Spanish cooking or Spanish social studies, etc.
But in my case, I was just homeschooled using books in the sticks in North Idaho with my two brothers and
two sisters and I was a total nerd.
The interesting thing is that I was not interested in like sports or exercise or fitness at all, you know
the world that I'm immersed in now for career,
I played the violin, I was president of the chess club,
I was like a total fantasy fiction nerd,
I loved to read and write and hang out alone in my bedroom
and you know, hike the hills back behind my house.
When I was 14, I discovered the sport of tennis,
and I began to play tennis quite a bit.
I got so interested in physical culture and nutrition
and exercise related to the sport of tennis
that I wound up going to college
and studying exercise physiology and biomechanics.
I got a master's degree, I got accepted
to a handful of medical schools,
opted not to go to medical school
and went into the exercise industry instead
and have been
in that industry ever since.
Starting off with brick and mortar, personal training gyms and studios, and then when
my sons were born 15 years ago, I decided to change my model.
I moved into the house, much of the chagrin and annoyance of my wife.
I'm at home all day long now.
Now I do podcasting, I write articles, I do freelancing, I write books, I invest
in different companies in the health and fitness sector, I run membership-based websites
and content-based websites, and I own a supplements company, and I just basically kind of
shifted and did a little bit more of a lifestyle design approach to work from home and to, like
I said, unschooled my sons and be kind of a fully present father
and husband.
So that's what I do now, starting off from
Backwood's Vita Ho, and interestingly enough,
now I'm building a farm in Idaho,
that'll be done next summer,
so I'll be moving back over with all the red necks
and the hicks.
Amazing, thank you so much for giving us
your background story.
It's really interesting how you piece everything all together.
And so you've got this book boundless
that you wrote a few years ago.
And we'll talk about your new book,
boundless parenting.
But boundless is one of the most studied books
on the subject of biohacking right now.
And biohacking is this really popular term
that gets flung around a lot.
So firstly, how would you define biohacking yourself? Well, it's funny because you're right, it gets thrown around a lot.
And now I think you're a biohacker if you put some butter in your morning tea or coffee or like, you know,
hold your breath while you're exercising.
You know, the original biohackers were like human cyborgs.
Like these are people that would implant like metal into their fingers to be able to interact
with screens very similar to like Tom Cruise and minority reports, compasses and installment
chests that would vibrate when you face true north implants in the ears to enhance hearing
and all manner of different forms of hardware that would be attached to the human body, which
many of the early day biohackers would call wet wear, and essentially biohacking used to be the use
of technology to enhance human biology or shortcut certain aspects of human biology to allow the
body to work better or the brain to work faster.
Another common definition of biohacking comes from the exercise industry and that's like
all of the early day bodybuilders who would use steroids and hormones and off label pharmaceuticals
and chemicals to kind of like morph the body into a giant muscular machine.
We see a lot of that type of flavor of biohacking
now in the exercise industry, you know,
different peptides and stem cells and protocols
and gene therapies to kind of like get the body
to live longer or work better or be bigger
wherever the case may be.
But if you combine all those different flavors
of what you'd define biohacking as, I think that ultimately
the definition I'd roughly describe would be the use of science, technology, and a variety
of different modern tools to enhance human biology in some manner.
In the same way that someone might use a computer in a different way or upgrade that computer
in some way could be called a computer hacker or even someone who might go into the back
end of the computer software and alter the code, you could say that biohacking would kind
of like be what a computer hacker would do to computers except a biohacker would do that to biology.
Yeah, that makes sense. And you just mentioned modern technology, but something that I want to call
out that I've heard you say before is that you say you're living with one foot in ancestral
science and one foot in science. So when I think about biohacking, I tend to think of all the new
things, right? Like stem cell research and EMS and stuff like that.
But talk to us about how we can look at prehistoric times and how humans lived and take a page
from their book.
Yeah, you've done your homework.
Good job.
I have said that phrase of one foot in the realm of ancestor wisdom and the other foot in
the realm of modern science.
Like I'm walking through the forest behind my house, right?
I've got like this half mile long obstacle course that I've carved through the forest
in a moment.
I'll come up on the goat and the chicken pens and a big garden of six raised beds for
gardening.
And, you know, a lot of kind of like outdoor farm style living, you know, we often go
outside again in this same forest
and we'll plant forage and find wild mint and nettle and mushrooms and harvest things
that we can use in cooking.
And the other thing I'm getting exposed to right now is sunlight.
And you can find fresh water, and there's even this concept of earth and grounding,
like touching the surface of the planet
to absorb a lot of the natural negative ions that the earth produces to allow for the body's
battery to be charged in a way that would fight inflammation or would increase energy.
And so when you look at a lot of these natural elements of lifestyle,
look at a lot of these natural elements of lifestyle, you can actually simulate many of those
using modern day technologies or biohacks.
So what I mean by that is like red light therapy
is very popular.
People use infrared sonas or red light lamps
or even like head worn red light helmets, for example,
to enhance brain function, to decrease inflammation,
to increase the production of heat-chuck proteins.
And you can get those same beneficial wavelengths of light
from sunlight, but you can also bring it indoors,
concentrate it, hack it, focus on the red light frequencies,
and get the same benefits, even if you're say, whatever, indoors in Seattle during a dark and gray winter, or working in a job that
would limit you from being able to get out into the sunlight.
I talked about walking on the ground or touching the surface of the earth.
Well, you know, from an ancestral standpoint, we know that a physical, intimate connection
to the surface of the planet seems to produce a variety of really beneficial biological
effects.
But again, let's say you can't get outdoors or your job doesn't allow you to be heading
outside like a dirty barefoot hippie all the time.
Well, you can use grounding or earthing mats under your desk that you stand on.
You can, if you're like me, like sleep all night on a grounding or an earthing mat, underneath
the top sheet of the bed, you can even use biohacking technologies like pulse, electromagnetic
field therapy, also known as P-M-F to concentrate those frequencies and deliver them in even stronger
forms to the body.
And so that would be an example of biohacking the process of earthing or grounding in the same way
that you could biohack the practice of red light.
You know, we also know that, for example, fluctuations of temperature
induce cellular resilience and almost seem to enhance longevity and cause an
anti-aging effect for the body. And of course, anyone who's gone camping or
hunting or spent a lot of time outdoors, again, and kind of like that ancestral
format or someone who say has the the modern day privilege of working as a farm
or a construction worker or a painter or a roof or something like that, they're more
subjected to temperature extremes,
right?
Like you're really hot sometimes and you're really cold sometimes and you're not inside
this comfortable air condition, temperature control box that a lot of us drive in, work
in, fly in, live in, sleep in, etc.
But now we can use biohacking technologies like cryotherapy chambers and infrared sonnas and different tools like that to actually
subject the body to the same type of
beneficial temperature stressors that our ancestors would have naturally experienced. So in many cases
I think that some of the more
beneficial
tools that we can find in modern science for enhancing human body are simply mimicking
and concentrating what primal humans would have experienced
for thousands of years leading up to the advent
of these technologies.
And furthermore, they almost allow someone who's living
like a modern day post-industrial lifestyle
to better simulate the beneficial aspects
of a different human connection
that was more connected to the planet.
All the way down to like, you know, again,
like the foraging for leaves and roots and berries
and things like that,
well now we have encapsulation technologies
and powdering technologies that allow us
to grab a handful of capsules or make a morning
smoothie in a fraction of the time that it would have taken our ancestors walking through the woods,
finding all these antioxidants and supplements and you know roots and oils and berries. So yeah,
those are a few examples of how you can either have modern science to biohack, to heal, to enhance
the body, use ancestral wisdom like earthing, grounding, sunlight, fresh air, to heal, to enhance the body, use ancestral wisdom, like earthing, grounding,
sunlight, fresh air, temperature extremes, et cetera,
to enhance the human body, or, back to the root
of your question, like me, do a little bit of both, right?
Like, I was in the infrared sauna this morning,
and now I'm walking in the sunlight.
I was standing on an earthy and grounding mat
in my office like an hour ago,
and now I'm walking around outside
You know, I will have lunch later on today and my salad will have some wild mint and nettle on it from the forest
But with my smoothie this morning I had a handful of antioxidant capsules that are the same thing in a modern day format
So that's kind of example what I mean by the marriage of
ancestor wisdom in modern science or having a little bit of both in your life.
That was so good. Thank you so much for bringing that down. So much great information.
So Ben, one of the other things that you also say is that our body is like a battery. And I think
that analogies are great ways to make complex topics easier to understand. So talk to us about how our body is like a battery.
I'm so glad you brought this up because it really ties into some of the examples I was
giving you about sunlight and earthing and grounding and fresh water and supplements and
things like that when we were talking about ancestor wisdom versus modern science. So here's the concept.
Your cells are best equipped to operate
with a slightly negative charge on the inside of the cell
and a slightly positive charge on the outside of the cell.
And because of that, you're basically one giant battery.
And there are great books about this
like The Body Electric
by Robert Becker, or Healing is Voltage by Jerry Tenant.
And those are books, and I get into this in my book, Boundless, as well, that describe
how nearly every element of human metabolism relies upon the proper charging of that battery,
the proper negative charge on the inside of the cell cell and positive charge on the outside of the cell.
Well, if that battery becomes drained, then you start to suffer from for sleep, impairment,
metabolism, and fat loss, poor recovery, brain fog, and impaired mental function, and
even an increased risk of developing chronic diseases, such as heart disease, for example,
anybody who's studied the heart in high school biology
knows we have these things called pacemaker cells, right?
That's another good example of biology being a battery.
So what is it that would cause the negative interior
of the cell to become more positive?
Well, a few examples would be
poor hydration even down to consuming foods that don't have a lot of water in them like ultra-process packaged foods out of
crinkly containers
heavy exposure to electricity
particularly you know Wi-Fi radiation radio frequencies from cell phone towers radio towers
radio frequencies from cell phone towers, radio towers, poorly wired housing, you know, working in an office where you're just bombarded with electricity and
appliances all day long. Well, that causes an influx of calcium into the cell, which
would also, as a positively charged ion, decrease the potential of the body's battery. Another example would be poor surface contact
with the planet, meaning never going outside barefoot. Flying in airplanes a
lot of time, always wearing big built up rubber-sold shoes rather than like
walking barefoot on the beach or swimming in the ocean. So those would be other
examples of ways to drain the body's battery.
So you can see that a lot of the examples I gave are basically like
modern-day assailants that cause our bodies' electricity to not work properly. Now how would you charge the body's battery? Well, you know, I could tell you,
for example, four different ways to do it it and these are very similar to the things
I was telling you about earlier when it came to ancestral wisdom for example the earth the surface of the planet
Emits negative ions that when you touch the surface of the planet with your hands or with your feet or land your back in the backyard
You're recharging the body's battery. You're reintroducing a
You're recharging the body's battery. You're reintroducing a negative charge to the interior of the cell.
And do you know what is the best way to actually ground or earth the body?
And it's not sending barefoot on the ground.
But I'll let you guess.
What do you think is the best way to ground or earth the body or restore a negative charge
to the cells?
Lay down on the ground, maybe.
Close. I mean, the amount of surface area of your body that's in contact with the ground
is important, but it's actually swimming in a natural body of water because water is
extremely conductive and salty water such as the ocean or the sea is incredibly conductive.
Like 20X over what you get from here. So if you happen to be lucky enough to like live near the ocean and if you could like walk outside barefoot on the sand and get into
The ocean on a regular basis. It's one of the best ways to charge up the body's battery
I have like a cold tub that I keep outside
For that temperature stress that I was talking to you about earlier. Well the cold tub
It's metal like Like, the outside
is wood, but if I open it up and I show you the inside of the cold tub, it's metal. And I also have
epsom salts in the tub. You can see I keep it really cold. Look at this. This is like ice. That's
all ice in the tub of the tub. So it's cold, but it's also salty and it's in metal. And so if I get
in the cold tub, and I'm kind of a wimp
I'll go for like one or two minutes sometimes a couple of times a day
but I'm getting a massive grounding effect because I'm in metal in a salty solution and so
that's one example of a really good way to charge up the body's battery. Another way would be by
drinking really good clean pure filtered water and eating produce that's very
rich in in hydrating water. Cucumbers are a really good example. Like I love cucumbers
they grow like weeds around here. So when I go out and harvest cucumbers for lunch
I can chop those up and the water that you find in produce like tomatoes, cucumbers,
etc. is actually way more absorbable than the water that you find in produce like tomatoes, cucumbers, et cetera, is actually way more
absorbable than the water that you drink because it's not in liquid or vapor or solid form.
It's in a gel-like form.
And so, by shopping around the perimeter of the grocery store, where you don't have a lot
of the dehydrated process and packaged foods, and by instead consuming the natural fruits
and vegetables and produce that are very rich in both minerals and water,
you're putting into your body the minerals that it needs to actually keep the body's battery charge,
and because of the importance of minerals, I'm a huge fan of supplementing with a lot of these supplements that are mineral-based,
like LMNT or Protect or Keen Ton or even like really really good salts.
As a matter of fact, salting your food regularly, contrary to popular belief, is not bad for
blood pressure for the body.
Now, isolated sodium chloride like you'd find in cheap table salt is not great for the
body, but really good, fancy like full spectrum mineral salt is fantastic for keeping the
body's battery charged.
I'm just a geek about salt.
I always go around with a fanny pack and I'll have like a little bit of olive oil, a little
bit of salt, like different things in there that allow me to upgrade a meal that I might
eat.
Do you know what is one of the most clean mineral rich sources of really good salt that you
can find at most grocery stores in the US.
Celtic salts, you can find it in like a little blue bag. You know, I've seen it in Safeway,
Rosars, Albertsons. I don't think Costco has it, you know, a few of the grocery stores, but Celtic
salt is a perfect example of something you can get and sprinkle on your food or even put
pinches of into your water that does a fantastic job keeping the bodies battery charged. So you know I talk about earthy and grounding, about
avoiding heavy exposure to electricity, about swimming and natural bodies of water,
but there's one other thing that I think is really interesting and it's also
relevant to you know the environment I'm in right now. And that is, it turns out that photons of light,
particularly in what would be called
about the 650 to 810 nanometer wavelength of light.
And that would define like infrared and red light
is fantastic for charging up the body's battery.
Your cell's absorbed that photonic wavelength of light.
So that means like watching the sunrise or the sunset,
going outside like I am with a little bit of skin exposed
during the day, using infrared lights,
like near-for-red and red and infrared lights
such as you get an infrared sauna
or some of these red light panels
that are popular that people put in their offices.
It turns out that that's really good
for keeping the bodies battery charged. So, earthing, grounding, sunlight, water, minerals, and then avoidance of a lot of modern
electricity is all really important. You don't have to do this measurement to know, but there's a
measurement called a phase angle, you can get what's called a phase angle tool. I've been measured,
I've seen some other people's measurements, and the lowest charge you can get on the body's battery is when somebody stepped off a plane
Because you're completely disconnected from the planet and you're in this giant metal tube full of like Wi-Fi signals and cell phone signals
You know hurtling above the earth's atmosphere and so if you fly on an airplane
Now that you're empowered with that knowledge if you're watching listening, the best thing you can do when you've gotten off an airplane flight is to get outside barefoot
or like, if you have to, I mean, you know, a pitch, you can just like go swimming in the
hotel pool or sometimes all check into my hotel and then go into the back yard area behind
the hotel and do some yoga or take a few phone calls while I'm walking barefoot, you know,
just like in some laps around the hotel. So that's really important too. If you've been flying to
especially focus on recharging the body's battery.
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This content is just so good. Ben, I love learning about this.
And as you're talking, I'm realizing, oh my God, I have so much to improve.
Like right now, I'm in grind mode building my companies.
I'm in an apartment building on the 18th floor.
It's hard for me to get outside.
I don't get to see sunlight.
And I'm just thinking there's probably so many people like me
who are in this stage of their life
where they're in cities working really hard,
either working from home or in an office.
And they just don't have access to what you have access to.
You built your life around this, right?
So what can we do?
You mentioned some things already,
but what are some key things that we can do if we're kind of in this mode of our life where we've got to be working,
a lot of the time sitting behind a computer in an office and so on.
Yeah, so first of all, mindset shift. And of course, as you've probably heard from the ancient
Chinese proverb, the best time to planetary is 20 years ago or today. So, beat yourself up thinking,
I haven't been doing this stuff. I'm screwed.
You can start right away.
So, don't lose heart or feel regret about the fact that maybe
you haven't set up your lifestyle in a way that's natural
or ancestral or weave some of these concepts in.
So, that's the first thing.
The second thing is, I've built my own business a lot more slowly than many of my peers,
several of whom make a lot more money and have even developed financial freedom and independence
more quickly than I have. Many of those same individuals are not happy because they don't have their
health. Many of them are divorced or estranged from family and they don't even have the knowledge
to be able to take care of themselves
because they've put business on such a pedestal
and they've put achieving financial freedom
so that you can have the time
to do all these other things you wanna do
like focus on health, on a pedestal and,
paradoxically, you get to the point where you've made the
money and had the career, but you're sick, unheltly, and don't have access to the knowledge, or
the practices or the routines that you need.
You know, there's another saying that a human being reaches a certain stage in life, where
they would pay anything for good health, or their health becomes a top priority because
You can make money, but you can't make time and you can't make help and so I think what's important here and what I'm getting at is
I've intentionally
Built my business much more slowly because my business is my fifth order of priority in life
I have five key priorities in life and business is fifth and
My priorities in life. I have five key priorities in life and business is fifth. And my priorities in life are number one, God. So I care for my spirit, I care for my soul, and I take care
of my union to God by the very first thing when I get up in the morning, being gratitude,
journaling, prayer, reading the Bible, talking to God, and feeding and caring for and working out, the one part of the human
existence that I believe will go on for eternity for better or worse, and then many people
have shriveled and trunked up and uncared for and neglected.
And so God is the first priority of the day, and the next priority is my connection to my
wife, because let's say you do have children, well if you
pray as your children over your lover or your spouse then you're really not
going to be able to show up for your children as a couple and you're not going to
be able to build like the legacy and the generational wealth that I think a lot
of people have lost sight of. We have an entire Greenfield family constitution,
hundreds of pages of documentation
about traditions and legacy and routines and rituals
and family insurance policies and family banking
and the family crest and mission statement and values.
It's almost like an entire business branding book
for the family.
And if I didn't have a good relationship with my wife,
or we considered ourselves to be just staying together for the kids, or, you know, we were kind of like settling on the
idea that I think a lot of couples settle on, that if that person really doesn't fit the
bill for you, eventually you can just divorce them and move on and find somebody more compatible
with you and your beliefs and your values, whatever. But instead, my wife and I are very
committed to each other.
One on one date, praying at night every night
before we go to bed, working on the Greenfield family
constitution, and staying connected so that we can
either for our children, wish you're number three.
So number three is the kids, right?
Because your children are your legacy, your children
are how you're going to go on and live on
and impact the world in an exponential way. If your children and your family are how you're going to go on and live on and impact the world in an exponential way.
If your children and your family are unhappy, it's very difficult to be happy and successful and
fulfilled with your job. And so children number three, if you don't have
spouse or if you don't have children, then I would say that you could substitute community
neighbors, friends for that same commitment
and that same focus again over and above business.
Human beings were built for relationships.
We see a host of issues pop up when we're lonely
and when we're over focused on work.
And that human touch is something
that's far more important than business.
And as I mean, as any like 110 year old gin,
chugging, cigarette, smoking, I mean, as any like 110-year-old gin,
chugging, cigarette, smoking, you know,
sardinian grandma, what it tests to relationships
and the fact that that grandma is surrounded
by people she loves and it's a community,
it's very focused on community and relationships,
the relationship part and your family's
even more important and helped.
So again, like I have my personal spiritual time,
and then I gather my family for a family huddle every morning,
and we meditate together and we do breath work,
and we read the Bible and we pray,
and we all come together as a family for a family touch point
each morning.
When my kids are gone, it can't be whatever my wife
and I do that together.
So God is first, then family, first spouse,
then children, fourth priority is health, right?
So the health comes after taking care of your spirit and taking care of your relationships.
So after I've done all that after the family huddle, then I go hit the gym and I'm an entrepreneur.
Okay, I love my business. I love making money. I love impacting the world. I love fulfilling my life's purpose and
making money. I love impact in the world. I love fulfilling my life's purpose. And even though I'm in the freaking fitness industry, every bone in my body wants to go take care of the emails and start the
podcast and create the content and build the business and get the income streams going. The whole
time I'm in the gym. I'm like, I'm like, forget I should be at the office right now. But I do it because I've seen a lot of my friends,
especially as I grow old now, I'm 42 years old.
I've seen a lot of them build their businesses
and then they'll do the Facebook posts
where they're like, yeah, I'm 30 pounds overweight
and I'm sick and I don't feel good about my body
and it's time to start working on my body.
But man, it's so much easier when you don't let
yourself slide in the first place and you prioritize taking care of your health before you get into
the office for the day. Because for most entrepreneurs and business builders, eating the frog is not opening
up your email inbox. Most of us love that dopamine knee jerk surge of like starting in the emails and
starting the checklist for the day. For most of us eating the frog, doing the hard thing first is journaling, meditation,
prayer, gratitude, family time, family devotion, family huddles, working out, and the business
will always be there.
And frankly, you know, and there's a guy who has featured in my book, Balanced Parenting,
who told me this when we were seeing a dinner one night.
He's actually one of the parents featured in Balanced Parenting, who told me this when we were seeing it dinner one night. He's actually one of the parents featured in Balanced Parenting. Chad Johnson, he's a father of 11, Ironman
triathlete, big mountain skier, amazing guy. He said, Ben, your business will eat you alive.
Like, the emails will never stop coming. Zero inbox will, will never be a reality. He'll
leave occasionally at different points throughout the day or the week. There will always be work to do. There will always be lists to check. There will always be opportunities.
There will always be more money to make. And if you let your business eat you live it will.
But if you focus on God, your spouse, your family and children, and your health first, then the
business will not only come about and happen, and you're still going to have plenty of hours in the day,
but at the end of the day, the money that you make and the business that you build will
be more fulfilling for you because you will have a happy family at home to enjoy dinner
with each night and hang out with and you won't have that angst of having forsaken relationships
to build your business. Your body will thank you because it feels good and you can actually
go out and go in adventures golfing and tennis and pickle ball and you know wake surfing and
all the things that you should be able to do with the money that you're making.
And then business is like the icing on the cake, but if you're not
fulfilled in those other areas of life, the business is always going to be
unfulfilling and you'll be overworked. So it's just a change in perspective,
right? I know it's a long answer to your question, but to change the priorities that you make,
and if you make a change in those priorities, then, you know, the business will take care of itself.
But yeah, it does really what it comes down to is habits, rituals, and routines,
set up, starting in the morning, that'll allow you to care for your spirit and care for your body
and care for your relationships before you care for your business.
And that's the mindset that you got to start with.
That was so good, Ben.
And you know, this is one of my favorite conversations that I've had all year because I feel like
it's such a fresh perspective that nobody's talking enough about.
And I know that a lot of my listeners like me are just hustling, hustling, hustling.
And we don't often have somebody come on here and tell us that business should be our fifth priority.
That's really rare for us to hear.
I do want to talk about boundless parenting, ties it in a lot with what you were just talking about.
But before we do that, there's a couple more biohacking things I want to get clarity on.
And one of them is cold showers and cold thermogenesis.
And the impact that that has on our sleep and
our cognition and something that you call leaky brain syndrome. Or a lot of people call it that I think
leaky brain syndrome is about like the blood brain barrier. Can you explain that to us a little bit
and break that down? First of all, you know, I showed you that that one cold tub that's the one that
keep it like 33 degrees. That one's called the morasco. That's the one that I keep at like 33 degrees.
That one's called the morasco.
This is the one that I was in this morning, just swimming underwater laps.
This is like an endless pool that I have in my pool house on the backyard.
I don't put ice in it, but I just don't keep it warm.
This one's at about like 45 degrees.
It fluctuates based on the season.
That over there's the hot tub.
So I can go back and forth from the cold pool to the hot tub.
But on a huge fan of cold, I raced Iron Man triathlon
for 12 years.
I did races over the planet.
And I was doing cold thermogenesis
before I even knew the benefits of it.
You know, I get out of the water freezing
and I feel great.
And I meant the willpower be higher the rest of the day.
And it was pain killing.
And it was mood boosting.
But I didn't realize until I actually started to study if the science of it for my book
boundless, how big of an impact it has on the release of feel-good chemicals, on decreased
inflammation, on the conversion of metabolically inactive white adipose tissue, in a metabolically
brown, active brown fat that you have to make to generate
heat to warm yourself back up, decreasing in risk of certain brain diseases based on what
you described, the fact that it can allow for almost like a ceiling of the blood brain
barrier, allowing less toxins and metals and inflammatory compounds to cross over into neuronal tissue,
very similar to how a good night of sleep could help with that, or very similar to how proper
mineral intake, particularly magnesium can help with that, fishwook and help with that.
Well, it turns out that cold, specifically the process of getting the head and neck and
face cold, is fantastic for brain function.
So huge right, it benefits a lot of people who will bend.
I don't have like a cold tub like that or a cold pool.
Well cold showers work.
Here's a little hack for you.
When I travel on a minute hotel room and the water isn't cold enough because what's
I'm in like Florida or you know, in the warm area, you can just get your ice bucket
from the hotel room
and or the the plastic bag for the laundry that's in the shower, you can fill it with ice from the ice bucket down the hallway and just like hang that when you're taking your shower and you can get
like the ice he has coldest shower imaginable. So you can even do this when you travel, but there are
so many benefits of cold, you know, a lot of people don't talk about what you were mentioning,
the fact that it helps with
your brain function as well.
But yeah, I mean, it's, even me,
I've been doing it for years and years.
I don't relish the cold.
Like, I don't get in there.
And I'm like, yeah, I'm in the cold now.
This feels fantastic.
Like, I kinda hate it.
It hurts.
And it's really uncomfortable.
And you never wanna do it.
And especially like the moment when you're standing
there half naked next to the cold, waiting to get in, it sucks. Okay. And that feeling never goes away.
But if it was easy, I don't think the payoff would be as high. And even if you're in there
for just 30 seconds, as soon as you get out, you're on top of the world. You feel great.
And it pairs like turkey and cranberries with things like breath work and a sauna practice and a workout. And so nearly 365 days a year, I'm
in a cold pool or a cold tub or a river or a lake or an ocean or taking a cold shower.
And not that I think this is like the best goal for everybody, but I maintained about
6 to 8% body fat year round. And it's not because I diet. I eat like a horse. I eat like 4,000 calories a day.
But a big part of that is due to the fact
that my metabolism is screaming high
because nearly every day of the year in a fasted state,
I get myself cold.
Even if it's just for like one or two minutes.
Sometimes it's a little longer,
but cold is amazing for metabolism
and for body composition as well.
And would you say that we should get cold in the morning or the night or both?
Does it matter?
Well, if you wake up fasted and you do some type of a cold therapy session, your body will
burn fat to generate heat.
And so doing some type of like a fasted morning cold shower as a matter of fact in boundless I talk about my
Strikes-stroll shiver strategy where if you want to lose fat really fast
You get up in the morning in a fasted state you do 20 to 40 minutes of aerobic
Conversational cardio just like a walk in the sunshine or walk in the dog or
Write your bike to the coffee shop or whatever and then you finish with one to five minutes of cold.
And that mobilizes fat like crazy.
But morning cold is good also,
because it gives you that endorphin release.
It has a little bit of a stress resilience
promoting a fact where,
I mean, but it's like hard things feel easier
after you've been in the cold.
Very similar to how a morning workout
can help with stress later on in the day.
Now, I talk a lot about sleep hygiene in the cold, very similar to how a morning workout can help with stress later on in the day. Now, I talk a lot about sleep hygiene in the book, and there are different components
of sleep hygiene, like you want a dark room, and you don't want your body to associate
the bed with stress or work, so you don't work on your laptop and bed, you don't keep business
books by the bedside, you want a silent room, meaning wax wax ear plugs or slip in ear plugs or some type of ambient sound like white noise
And then you want a cold room because the body heals better at night when you sleep
You sleep more deeply when you're not hot. This is why you should avoid a hard workout or a heavier spicy meal
About three hours prior to bedtime
This is why a lot of people use like the eight sleep or the chili pad to keep their bodies cool,
whether it's sleep.
Whenever I check into a hotel room or in my house,
I'm selecting anywhere from 64 to 66 degrees Fahrenheit
for the ambient sleeping temperature.
There's even hacks like you can wear wool socks
when you go to bed and that paradoxically cools the rest of the body.
I talk about a lot of these cooling strategies in the book,
but interestingly, it turns out that in the evening,
like a slightly cold or lukewarm shower is best,
because if you do a really cold soak
or a crowd therapy chamber,
even though it'll make you cold,
the endorphin release that you get from that,
the excitatory neurotransmitter release
will paradoxically promote wakefulness. And so it's like really cold in the morning is
better and then kind of sort of cold in the evening is better. And there's no
reason you couldn't do both. Like a lot of times since I'm playing tennis or
pickleball or we're doing something fun with my kids in the evening before dinner.
A lot of times like right before dinner, I'm just getting into a lukewarm shower
or even jumping into the hot tub
and letting the ambient air cool me off,
which kind of cools you a little bit.
But in the evening, I'll do like kind of cold
and in the morning really cold.
And the general rule for sleeping temperature is that,
like when you get into bed or you take off your clothes
to get in the bed, you wanna feel like a mild cognitive resistance because it's just a little bit cold, but it's not freezing
shivering cold.
It's just like, okay, this is going to take me a few minutes to warm up or snuggle up
with my husband or wife or lay in bed and get warmed up a little bit.
But if you're like shivering, hyper cold, that's too much physiological excitement before
bed.
So it just kind of depends on how cold we're talking.
Yeah, and it probably also depends
like if you run really,
like I know women run really cold.
So I feel like my cold's going to bed
is more warmer than your cold's going to bed, you know?
Not my wife, my wife's a freaking furnace.
She's so hot, like a lot of times,
like sometimes I'm cold, I'll snuggle up to her
and I'll just be like warm within a couple of minutes.
But yeah, you're right, in general women
tend to sometimes have a little bit lower thyroid activity.
I actually interviewed this doctor,
she's called the thyroid fixer doctor on my podcast.
This is fresh in my mind because that podcast came out
like three days ago.
Her name's Dr. Amy Horniman,
and she talked about this little known molecule called T2.
It's like a, it's not what you find in thyroid medications.
It's different.
She has a supplement I think it's called thyroid fixer that has it in there.
But if you're a woman and you run cold, you should get your thyroid values checked.
And if it's low, it appears out of all the different ways to fix it, that T2, which kind
of flies under the radar.
And not a lot of people know about, is a really good way
to naturally restore thyroid activity without having to take like a medication.
Hmm, I have to look into that. Okay, one more question on biohacking stuff and then we're going to
get into boundless parenting. So you mentioned breathing before and oxygen is really important to
humans, but one of the counterintuitive things that I learned from you is that carbon dioxide can actually be good thing when it comes to healthy breathing. So,
talk to us about CO2 levels, mouth taping, different breathing techniques. Yeah.
Yeah, it's so true what you say down to the point where there's a certain
carbon dioxide inhalation apparatus called a carbogen that they'll use in people who have
high amounts of stress or depression because it appears that breathing in carbon dioxide
or having naturally elevated levels of carbon dioxide is helpful for a wide range of mental
functions and psychological states and also induces a little bit of stress resilience.
Now, there's a lot of diminishing returns, like a lot of people who eat a various acidic diet,
way too many inflammatory foods, et cetera,
or even just exercise and produce too much lactic acid
from excessive hard exercise.
They produce a lot of CO2, like too much CO2,
and that can tend to cause a little bit
of an acidic state in the body.
But at the same time, if you look at breath work,
most forms of breath work,
one of the reasons they work so well
is you're getting high levels of CO2
and high levels of oxygen simultaneously
and kind of dropping back and forth between them.
But if you look at a Wim Hof protocol
or Prana Yama breath work
or any of these popular forms of excitatory breathwork.
In many cases, you're retaining CO2 and oxygen simultaneously and the high amounts of CO2
can actually help with the oxygen delivery to your tissue.
So you almost reach this hyper oxygenated state.
There's a lot of breathwork apps out there that can assist with this. Two of my
favorites, there's one called other ship. It's fantastic. It's got like two minute sessions, five minute
sessions, all the way to like super deep like call it tropic, get high on your own supply type of like
90 minute breathwork sessions. There's some couple sessions in there. You know, my wife and I will
sometimes do a breathwork session. It's almost like four play.
You can do 20 or 30 minute breath work session as a couple where,
you know, I'm breathing into her.
She's breathing into me and you can like sit cross leg and embed
in this entire choreographed breath routine and music.
I have done breath work for freediving and spearfishing
and, you know, Wim Hofstyle cold exposure with my sons
who are 15 now who I've had in
breath work since they were six years old, just because it's such a good way to know how
to control your body's stress response and create nervous system resilience.
And then, another form of breath work that's really good is there's another app called
the breath source.
And the breath source lets you choose from like different instructors whose courses
you're going to take or whose breath work sessions that you want to follow.
I am actually a featured instructor in that app.
And I've got 10 different breath work sessions.
And minor very religious or spiritual in nature, meaning it's like the Jesus prayer or focusing
on certain passages of like the Bible as you breathe through a really hardcore routine.
And so for people who want, you know, like that morning spiritual routine, that's another
example of breath work that you can use for that.
And then back to the biohacking thing, if you want to get super crazy, there's this machine
that I love.
It's called the brain tap.
It's a light and sound stimulation machine.
And I'm one of those guys who's like not hypnotizable, have never had been. But this is the one thing that will get me into a deep hypnotic trance.
And there's like 300 different tracks on there for relaxation, for focus, for pain relief. But
some of them are breath work. And when you pair the breath work sessions in that machine to the
light and the sound stimulation, I mean, I know a lot of people
are into plant medicine these days,
psilocybin, LSD, Iowaska, whatever.
The thing is, you gotta recover from that type of stuff.
Like it kinda drains the body
and you gotta replenish with Sami and Blue Dethione
and dedicate days to it.
This is like, oh, at lunch, in the middle of the day,
you can literally flip it on and get into that same state.
And then out of that state, with just like the flip of a switch, listening to sounds,
and then for some of the sessions doing the breath work, that's associated with the
track that you're doing.
So the brain tap is super cool for kind of like biohacking breath work.
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So cool.
I feel like I need to listen to this again and again and just get all the little nuggets
that you're sharing.
You're giving us so much insight.
So let's move on to your latest book.
It's called Boundless Parenting.
First off, what does this boundless parenting mean?
Why the title?
Well, it's kind of like my stick. It's my, my brand. So I have the
boundless biohacking book. I have the boundless cookbook.
Boundless kitchen is coming out soon. And then there's boundless parenting. And
boundless parenting was my desire. I've been asked for a long time to write a
parenting book. And I was kind of soconscious about it because I'm not a proven model. I've got 15-year-old sons.
And you know, who's to say they're not going to wind up in prison for three years or I'm
going to try to be parental failure or whatever. Like there are certain things I know about
like how to form a legacy and a constitution and how to set up the insurance policies
for the family and create the family mission statement and the family values and key educational concepts
and the comings and goings and traditions
that you create are on Christmas and Thanksgiving
and when a child is eight and 12 and 15
and how to set up rights of passages.
And all these things that I talk about
in my chapter of the book
and that my wife talks about in her chapter of the book
but at the same time, I know
a lot of really fantastic entrepreneurs and people have amazing children who have already
grown up and started super impactful businesses and trusts and foundations of their own.
So I kind of use the Tim Ferris tools of Titans or tribe of mentors type of approach where
I found the most amazing parents on the planet who I actually know and who I've conversed with and whose children I've hung out with.
And I sent them each the same list of 32 questions like what keeps you awake at night when
it comes to parenting or what were the foundational educational principles via which you educated
your children or did you ever worry that your children were going to be weird based on
your unique role as a parent entrepreneur and how did you deal worry that your children were going to be weird based on your unique role as
a parent entrepreneur and how did you deal with that?
So, I got about 30 or so parents to apply and create this anthology of about 700 pages
of deep parenting wisdom and also had them record their audio of the chapters of the audiobook,
super interactive and fun.
But there were repeated
themes that came up throughout that book that were really interesting based on each parent's
response to the same set of 32 questions. Like, for example, nearly every parent interview is
freaky. Nearly every parent interview had some semblance of the phrase, more is caught than taught,
meaning you can talk to your kids till they're blue in the face about screen time or about drugs or about alcohol or about relationships
or about working out or anything, but if they don't see you mirroring and living out,
what it is that you're telling to them, it will fall on deaf ears.
So more is caught than taught. For example, if I tell my kids that digital screen time is not conducive
to the same type of deep relationship building as analog face-to-face interactions, but then I've got
like my phone hidden by my chair at the dinner table and like five times during dinner, I'm checking
it or there's like a ding or I'm like, wait, there's this one thing,
like this one email I'm expecting,
you guys just saying, I gotta check this real quick,
this is important for work.
A, not only are your kids gonna see that and simulate it,
but B, you're not just teaching your children,
you're teaching your children's children.
This is another concept that came up repeatedly
in the book from parents, and so just imagine,
by that little action that you're taking each night
of making your phone a priority over family or at least giving the perception that there's
something really important on your phone that cannot wait till after dinner, you're basically
creating about 100 great grandchildren who are all going to be hanging out on their phone during
dinner, not talking with people, not engaging in eye to eye interaction,
getting the type of leaky gut syndrome and port nutrient absorption that occurs when you're
interacting with technology at the same time that you're feeding yourself.
And it's not just like you checking the phone at dinner and justifying that to yourself
because it's important.
It's literally you equipping generations after you to be addicted to their phone during the
time that they could be most connected to family, like during family dinners, which is also important because that's another common theme nearly every parent who had a really deep connected
thriving family prioritize family dinners.
In some cases, to the point where like their cousin play certain sports or do certain activities because it was more important for the family to be together and thriving and connected at the end of the day compared
to having the traditional American family or Westernized family where everybody spread
to the four corners of the planet all day, they're like ships passing in the night and there
is nothing like what, for example, we have in our home, which is a morning family huddle and then in the evening at 7 p.m
We all gather and we make dinner together and play board games and card games and play music and have bedtime rituals and
We have this complete
Amazingly connected family unit who's happy who's laughing who's thriving and it's literally just me and my wife and our sons and every night at our
House is like a freaking party we're playing backyard games and card games
and board games and cooking and singing.
And so you see elements that are common
threads within the book, like Morris Caught and Todd.
You're not just teaching your children,
you're teaching your children's children and beyond.
Family dinners and family traditions
and having family touch points that are systematized
and calendared and scheduled
in both the morning and the evening are really important.
And then probably if I could name one other common thread,
most of the parents had some sort of unique take on education.
And it doesn't mean that they all homeschooled or unschooled
or private schooled their kids, but even the ones
who had their kids at a public school,
at a public institution, there's like three different parents who said they would just
go and pull their kids from school to go travel the world, at random intervals throughout
the year. The teachers and the school system were not in charge. The parents knew that they
were in charge, they called the shots, and yeah, even though they outsourced much of the
education to a public institution,
they were still very active as parents
and considered their role as parents
to still be educators.
Who's the guy who runs the Domino Project?
Seth Goden, I really like his take on this.
I think I heard him say during a TED talk
or something like that.
Even if your kids are going to a private or public school,
your job as a parent to de-educate slash educate,
school slash unschooled them,
starts the minute they walk in the door.
So that means that what they learn about the world,
their worldview, their habits, their rituals,
their routine business entrepreneurship,
those lessons are gonna be far more valuable
attained from you than they are
from the standard education model,
which is basically fabricated from a German industrial model of making factory workers
who all learn at the same pace, put round pegs and round holes, square pegs and square holes,
learn to memorize wrote facts and pass tests and do homework. Whereas the worker of the future, the impactful human
being of the future, needs to be able to creatively adapt on the fly to their position being
constantly replaced by autonomous work and AI and robots. They need to be someone who's able to
right effectively express thoughts effectively, create engineering prompts for AI effectively and engage in a lot of creative
left and right hemispheric thinking patterns that are far different than the left brain shipped
memorization and almost like walk in a straight line follow the rules paint inside the boundaries
type of rules that kids tend to be I don't want to use a strong word as indoctrinated,
but they tend to be very, very saturated in those principles in traditional school setting,
whereas you want a free thinking, free-spirited, young, creative, resilient individual who is able
to look at a problem and tackle it without being able to Google it or look at the workbook or
look at the manual and instead
you should think on their own two feet and think creatively and most of the parents in the book
were creating children like that based on educational principles that put their children
in situations where they needed to think resolutely and creatively on the fly and a perfect example
is that's like travel like traveling the world or traveling the country or traveling the state or the city with a child
is a perfect way to create that kind of resiliency.
And so as you're talking about children and education,
I learned that you actually didn't homeschool
your kids from the start
and you talked about this term unschooling
a bunch of times during this interview.
So what is unschooling and why did you decide
to eventually homeschool your kids?
Yeah, I homeschooled my kids traditionally,
using like traditional curriculum up until second grade.
And then I started to slip into this mindset of thinking,
well, this is not systematized as well as it should be.
My wife's kind of dyslexic.
She doesn't have the heart of a teacher.
I've got a lot of stuff I need to be doing during the day
that dictates that I can't be sitting around,
immersed in books with them all day,
which was my initial impression
of what homeschooling was supposed to be.
So in second grade, I put them into a really good
private school, you know, like the school that,
all the rich kids go to and the super smart geeky kids and the sons and
daughters of the local Microsoft employees and whatever.
So it must be a good school, right?
And during the three years, they run that school up until fifth grade, not only did I through
my podcast and through a lot of reading, learn a lot about the way the educational system
is currently built to create the type of scenario I just described, kids who really can't think on their own two feet or solve problems on
their own and who primarily just like are able to memorize facts, take tests and do homework.
But I also discovered that the amount of peer pressure, bullying,
inability to be their authentic true self, and loads of homework that
isn't necessarily related to their passions, interests, and desires, dictates that
at about the age of 13, the social enjoyment that kids derive from school
begins to be outweighed and outpaced by the dissatisfaction from homework,
bullying, forced inauthenticity, and lack of time to be
able to delve into things that the kids are really passionate about.
And so when my sons were in fifth grade, at 11 years old, I took them out to dinner
and I said, look, you guys don't have to go back to sixth grade.
Here's what I'll do.
You tell me, and we'll figure this out over the next month,
the things that you're really, truly passionate
that you care about, which for them is like writing fiction,
reading, painting, making art, designing card games
and board games.
And we have a father-son gaming company now
called Fried Pickle Games, where we do this.
Plant foraging, wilderness survival,
animal tracking, bird language, tennis, jiu-jitsu,
right, there's all these things that they love,
that they just weren't able to do,
because they were freaking sitting there like
learning math tables and memorizing facts
and doing homework.
And so I said, look, I don't want to force this on you guys,
it's your choice.
I want you to be self-actualized individuals, but I will, if you tell me your passions and interests and
desires, surround you with as many activities and experiences and travel and tools and games
and tutors and online classes and everything you need to pursue the things that you're really passionate about and interested in and have a deep desire to learn and then you don't have to go to school.
Like your schooling will be life. And you know what their number one, number one question,
number one concern was, even right there at dinner that night. Maybe they wouldn't have friends.
Yeah, but dad, what about my friends?
What about my friends?
And look, if you think about it, it's pretty silly
that we've decided as a society that the only way for a child
to be with friends or make friends is for you to dress them up
and send them off to an institution each day
where yeah, they're going to be with friends,
but they're also going to be in a learning environment
that is potentially completely
opposite to what it is that they're truly passionate about, or even your own values as
a family or as a parent, not to mention the bullying, the peer pressure, etc. So they took
me up on the idea and their days are freaking magical now. They're off playing, I think they just left with mom
to go play tennis.
They're outside most of the day.
They're cooking.
They ran their own podcast and cooking channel.
As soon as they got out of school,
they started up a podcast and a cooking channel.
And we're doing restaurant reviews and interviews with chefs.
They've both written since I took them out of school.
Both of them have written two fantasy fiction novels.
They are now co-CEOs of a father-son card game
and board game company.
They're in their sixth year of wilderness survival.
They're like advanced wilderness survival experts now.
One is studying bird language, animal tracking.
I mean, they can literally get dropped in a helicopter
in the middle of nowhere and survive, you know, they bow hunt, they fill dress, they cook amazing
luxury meals, and all of that is because we decided, you know what, they should be immersed
in things that they're passionate about. And yes, there are certain things that a young
human being may not be passionate about, that they may not know is going to serve them
later on in life, that I think you still want to go out of your way to immerse them in. Like, this would come down to
basically the idea of a classical education or even the ball, Robocon and the Almanac of
the ball talks about this. Like, every human being is poised to thrive in just about any working
your life environment. If they have a good working knowledge of an understanding of
any working or life environment, if they have a good working knowledge of an understanding of math and how to work with figures, reading and being able to digest information at a
pretty rapid pace, writing, being able to clearly express one's thoughts preferably in
long form, not necessarily just tweet, centimodicons and TikTok, logic or computer programming,
which for us is game design and gameplay. Fantastic way to teach
logic flow and programming sequences through game design and gameplay and then rhetoric or speaking.
And so both of my sons are in speech and debate. We have a lot of rhetoric, games are on the table.
We do a lot of arguing in our family, which is fantastic. I take them through a chapter of a book
every day and many of our books are based on rhetoric,
apologetics, speaking, et cetera.
So math, reading, writing, programming, or logic,
and rhetoric or persuasion.
We're also going through Chris Voss's book
on negotiation right now, for example.
If you can equip your child with those five skills
and then unleash them to, at that point, pursue
all the other things they're passionate
about.
That's basically the definition of unschooling.
And based on what's called the cone of learning, the best way for a child to learn their passions
and interests and desires is not necessarily books.
It's documentaries, it's life experiences, it's conversations, it's field trips, it's
travel, it's conversations, it's field trips, it's travel, it's museums.
So, we don't avoid books, but books are just one small part of their curriculum and their education.
And so, that's unschooling. Yeah, they're not in prison yet.
It seems to be working out okay, they're happy, they're self-actualized, and they're loving life, but they're also learning and they're fantastic boys
unbiased, but I think they're fantastic.
Yeah, I mean, it seems like you've done a great job.
They've already accomplished a lot of things and they're only 15 years old.
My last question for a boundless parenting is really about these routines and traditions
that you were talking about.
You brought up a family constitution a bunch of times that I'd love for you just walk us through what that is, what we should put in it.
And then of course, I highly recommend that everybody go grab boundless parenting if you have kids.
Yeah, I detail this heavily in boundless parenting, but we worked with a company called Logato
Family Foundation to learn legacy building for the family. And then we also work with a company called Logato Family Foundation to learn legacy building for the family.
And then we also work with a foundation
called Way to Welp as our family office and family bankers.
And so the family constitution is a living document
that starts off with our family values
and our family mission statement.
Think of this the same way as you would build
a business branding document. You want the business values, our family mission statement. Think of this the same way as you would build a business branding document.
You want the business values, the business mission statement,
and then from there, as a matter of fact,
the guy who runs the Logato Family Foundation,
Rich Christensen, who's in my book.
He started off as a business branding expert
and realized that families needed to be branded
with documentation and playbooks,
very similar to businesses.
Not in a cold, heartless way, but in a way that allows for traditions and
legacies to be passed on and for elements of what the family holds dear to be
visualized and systematized.
So from the values in the mission statement, which we spent several days talking about
informing as a family, as a unit, we then went on to create the family crest. Each family member has our own logo.
We have our family spirit animals. We have our traditions. Here's everything down to like,
here's what we do for Thanksgiving. Here's the meal we have together on Christmas Eve. Here's
the movies we watch on Christmas Eve, well, we have that meal. Here's when the boys have their
right of passage into the wilderness. Here's when they have their right of passage into adulthood.
Here's the age at which we have the birds and the bees sex talk.
Here's when the kids go on their first service trip to go help someone in another country.
Like everything is laid out all the way down to, you know,
here's how we start up each whole life insurance policy with paid up additions for his child.
Here's the numbers for all the family bankers. Here is each. I mean our kids have their obituary is written their end of life planning their memorial service plan like that's all in the book.
So everything is in there. I mean I'm standing outside my house right now. There's our family flag on the front door. My wife is the seed my son rivers rivers the water, my son turns the leaf. I'm the tree.
I feel cute.
If I go inside, you know, hanging above the fireplace right here is the green-filled
family crest.
So you can see the family crest.
It's even got the family logo in the middle of it with the tree and the water and the leaf
and the seed.
Same as the family flag.
I was so full.
This guy everything we hold dear as a family.
And I mean, look, the family logo is on my computer.
It's kind of cool,
because once you have a family logo,
you can put it on all sorts of different stuff.
Like if I go out on the back patio,
see the throw pillows,
those have the family logo on them.
We have the family pepper grinder with the family logo on the
pepper grinder all the way down to here's my I'll show you my favorite. Check
this out. The family pickleball paddles with the family logo on the pickleball
paddles. So it's kind of cool because it creates a real good sense of
identity and belonging for the kids in the family.
It allows you to teach your children and keep top of mind what it is that your family
holds dear.
Where like my wife made this, this is the family mission statement, the same that's in
the family constitution, but it's just like handwritten on the wall.
And so it essentially, just like a business, kind of systematizes and organizes the concept
of having a family goal, family values,
a family mission statement, like a playbook
for how a greenfield family goes.
And so when my sons are married, they'll get that playbook.
They'll be able to use this stuff for their family.
They'll be able to pass it on to their family.
I mean, that crest I showed you
even has little hidden logos in the stone. So every time a new grandchild, or great-grandchild is on to their family. I mean, that crest I showed you even has little hidden logos in the stone.
So every time a new grandchild or great-grandchild is added
to the family, their logo gets embedded in that stone
to be able to just continue to build this deep sense
of legacy so that, and I think this is probably
the most important part.
You don't, as a family, create a rigs to riches
to rig scenario where generational wealth is created
and then it's wasted by the next line down because that second generation didn't have
a deep sense of belonging and legacy and connection to what it is that the family is building
that the family holds dear, nor a sense of connection to the family wealth, the family
bank and the family legacy as a whole.
Well, Ben, this conversation was so eye-opening.
I feel like you gave me so many ideas that I've just never heard before,
and I'm sure it's the same for all of my listeners.
So I in my show with two last questions that I ask all my guests
that we do something fun with at the end of the year.
So the first one is, what is one actionable thing
that our younger profitors can do today to become more profitable tomorrow.
And this can do with anything. It doesn't have to do with the topic of today's episode.
One thing that you can do. I mean, I know I named a lot of stuff on this episode, but if I could
throw one thing in there, I guess it would be this. And I realize this might isolate some people
who might be listening, who aren't married, but my wife and I realize this might isolate some people who might be listening who aren't married
But my wife and I've been married for 22 years and one of our keys to success is the very last thing
We do at the very end of the day as we hold each other in bed and we're falling asleep is we pray together
And I think that's important because it's very difficult to do something sacred and spiritual like prayer at the end of the day
If there's anything between you, any ith and authenticity, any lies, any lack of transparency,
anything like that. So I think one key to relationship success with the person
who you love is every single day, even if it's short, do something spiritual
with that person, whether it's a prayer or gratitude journaling or something
that brings you together in a spiritual sacred way.
And so that's what I recommend. And I'm sorry, I'll use single people out there.
I didn't give you a lick of advice just now.
It's okay. And what is your secret to profiting in life? And this goes beyond just financial success.
Yeah, I mean, obviously the order of priority, God, family, health and business is important. But I think that the energy that you give and the extent to what you serve the world comes
back to you, I have this journal I created called the Spiritual Discipline Journal and there's
a question at the beginning of the day and the question is this, who is one person who
I can pray for or help or serve this day?
Who is one person I can pray for or help or serve this day. Who is one person I can pray for or help or serve this day. And
that act of your beginning of the day affirmation, not being about you, not being I'm good, I'm
great, I'm wonderful. And gosh darn it, people like me. It's instead speaking into what you
can do for the rest of the world. And if you serve other people and you systematize the
process of serving other people, and that might be a phone call. It might be going out of your way to help that person.
It might be text messaging them.
It might be sending them a nice note.
Whatever the case may be,
that one active service every single day
will be something that you give
that comes back to you 10 fold the rest of your life.
So I would say the beginning every single day
by planning an active service for that day
is one of the best ways that you can create a profitable and fulfilling life.
I totally agree.
That's a great piece of advice.
Where can everybody learn from you and everything that you do?
BenGreepforLife.com is my website.
I got a podcast there.
I got my articles there.
You can find my books.
So that's usually the best place.
And on social media, I'm not hard to find. But I don't even remember what my handles are so I'm sure you can
hunt me down though. I'll put it down in the show notes for everybody and make it
super easy Ben thank you so much for your time today it was awesome I really
appreciate you. Cool thanks Hall I appreciate you too.
Man this interview with Ben Greenfield was epic.
First of all, I've never done an interview where somebody was walking outside the whole
time, so that was a totally new type of energy, and I loved it.
And I enjoyed his definition of biohacking and how it involves using science, technology,
and other tools to enhance human biology.
And also his approach to doing this, it involves state-of-the-art technology
like infrared saunas, but then it's also just as simple as taking off your shoes and socks and
walking around barefoot outdoors while soaking up some sun. I really need to get out of the city more.
And apparently I really need to put my feet on the earth more often and I never even knew that
was a thing. I love thinking about my mind and body as batteries that can be charged up by doing these types
of simple activities.
And I found it so encouraging how Ben said that it's never too late to get started, and
we shouldn't beat ourselves up about it or feel guilty if we haven't started.
But we do have to have a mindset shift so that we can prioritize our own health as much
as our work and other aspects of our lives. As Ben put it, when it comes down to it, you can make money, but you can't make time,
and you can't make health. Finally, here are a few of my favorite biohacks that Ben mentioned
in our conversation. First, if you want to recover from a tiring airline experience, go outside
and walk around barefoot once you've reached your destination. Another cool travel tip, give yourself an extra cold shower at your hotel by filling that ice bucket
up and taking it into the shower with you. And if you can stand that, try working in cold showers
into all of your morning routines. There's few better ways to bring fat than exposing your body
to the cold in the morning when it hasn't yet eaten. And after that, get out and do a 20-minute walk,
go to the coffee shop, take your dog around the block,
it's a great way to start today and get some sun.
And lastly, for you parents out there,
remember what Ben said that more is caught and then taught.
If you want your kids to do things
like look at their screens less,
start so by doing that yourself.
But before you do any of that,
be sure to drop us a five star review on Apple podcasts
if you haven't already.
This is vital to our own health as a podcast.
There's no charge for this podcast, no subscription fee, and we'd love to hear what you like most
about the show and what you want to hear more of.
And if you do listen, learn and profit from great conversations on app like this one with
Ben Greenfield, then please don't just stop at a five star review.
Please share this podcast by word of mouth
with your friends, your family, your colleagues,
and even your competitors if you're feeling generous.
Thanks again for listening to Young and Profiting podcasts.
You guys can find me on Instagram at Yapathala
or LinkedIn by searching my name, Halek Tah-Hah.
Finally, I did wanna shout out my amazing production team
at Young and Profiting.
I couldn't do this without you guys.
My executive producer Jason Amilia, our assistant producer for Khan and Hashan for supporting
our guest outreach, Redd and Sean for supporting research, Critty, Oshatosh, Ambika and
Garema for helping us with Adop.
You guys are awesome.
I have such an amazing big team and that's just the team that works on my podcast.
I love everybody at Yat Media on the social side, on the network side.
Thank you so much for your hard work.
This is your host, Halataha, signing off.
you