How to Grow From Doing Hard Things | Michael Easter
Date: 2025-06-16 | Duration: 03:05:40
Transcript
0:00 Welcome to the Hubberman Lab podcast, where we discuss science and science-based tools for everyday life. I’m Andrew Huberman and I’m a professor of neurobiology and opthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Michael Easter. Michael Easter is a professor at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and a world-renowned writer. His recent work has focused on how modern conveniences undermine our mental and our physical health. And as importantly, the daily, weekly, monthly,
0:30 and yearly steps we can all take to not just offset the damages of those conveniences, but to continue to grow and improve our ability to focus, to do meaningful and creative work, and to derive deeper connection with others. One of the reasons Michael Easter is on this podcast is that his book, The Comfort Crisis, changed my daily life. The comfort crisis made me realize that every activity available to us, easy or challenging, destructive or constructive, can and should be viewed through the lens of whether it spends our dopamine reserves or invests them in
1:00 a worthwhile way. This is a key distinction that we don’t often hear about, but it’s one that can help you access much greater levels of focus and motivation to be able to avoid and get over addictive or compulsive behaviors. And it also brings about greater meaning and depth of connection to your relationships and leisure time. During today’s discussion, Michael and I explore these ideas and their practical implementation, including how you can tailor them to your own life. He explains how our choices in the physical world and in the online world shape us over time and how to make better choices
1:30 about both on a daily basis. He also provides the practical steps of how to get mentally stronger. You know, we hear about getting mentally stronger a lot, but he explains exactly how to do that, as well as how to live with a pervasive sense of gratitude. I’m certain that everyone, young, old, male, female, maybe you’re driven or maybe you’re more laid-back type of person, will benefit from and be changed by the conversation with Michael Easter. The information and tools he offers and shares are that good. Before we begin, I’d like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at
2:00 Stanford. It is however part of my desire and effort to bring zerocost to consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, today’s episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Michael Easter. Michael Easter, welcome. Thanks for having me, man. You’ve changed my life. Really? You have. Tell me more. You’ve changed my behavior on a daily basis. So, a ex-girlfriend of mine who lives in Colorado and I were in a discussion about the best place to live
2:30 and raise kids. And she grew up in the mountains of Colorado. And she had just listened to your book, uh, The Comfort Crisis. and she was saying I think this is the reason why people in her hometown are so mentally robust into their 70s, 80s, even 90s. Her grandparents were really robust. I think they lived into their 90s or late 80s at least. Uh and we talked about her childhood a bit
3:00 around this and she said that her mom actually used to take her and put her in a basket and put her into the river and just send her down river to a friend’s house. And I mean this is the kind of stuff that nowadays you like, you know, parents like lose their mind. Yeah. Like Moses like Exactly. um and that she, you know, grew up in cold water in the morning and um and of course skiing and doing all the things they do in Colorado, but she was absolutely convinced that the uh the sort of bodily expectation of daily activity, meaning
3:30 just a sort of level of energy and almost stress if she didn’t um get a ton of outdoor movement every day, um was determined by that early upbringing of just being outdoors almost all the time and doing hard things and experiencing cold and things of that sort. So, uh, I read the book um, and started doing hard things on a regular basis, mostly rocking, but it has been a few years since I’ve had a really big adventure,
4:00 and we’ll talk about big adventures that include some actual danger. And I make it a point each week to write down one thing that I’m going to do that is truly uncomfortable. So, thank you for changing my life for the better. It’s uh transformed my mental health and I was already feeling really good. Amazing. I love that. It’s great. So, let’s talk about modern life versus um ancient nervous systems. Yeah. Right. I think this is um a big theme in in your writing and your life. Um what do you
4:30 think the human brain and nervous system were quote unquote designed to do? I’m not implying uh the the origins of the design. That’s a different podcast. But what do you think the human species is really organized to do and how do you think that fits into modern life or doesn’t fit into modern life? Well, I think that we evolved in a context where we had to do hard things all the time. Life was uncomfortable, right? You were out, you spent 100% of your time outdoors. Uh it was often too hot, too
5:00 cold. You were physically active all day. People walked something like 20,000 steps a day on average. And by the way, as you were taking those steps, you’re usually carrying something heavy, right? This could be your child. It could be tools. It could be an animal that you took down. You had to carry the meat back to camp. You also had long periods of downtime that were unstimulated where you would talk to other people face to face. I mean, life was just it was effortful. It was challenging and you had to do
5:30 those challenges and go through those discomforts in order to survive. And I think that the sort of uh promise and peril of modern life is that we no longer have to do these hard challenging things to survive. Right? If you want food, you can go to the gas station on the corner and get it. There’s just ample food. I think we throw out about a third of the food that we produce. Um physically, we obviously have to do a lot less physical activity to survive.
6:00 If you want to go somewhere, you just hop in your car, you walk across the parking lot. Um, you could actually just exist in your house and not really move, right? You could like do Uber Eats for all your food. You could work behind the screen. So, we’ve really removed that physical discomfort out of our life. Um, and I also think, you know, even something like boredom, like boredom is an uncomfortable thing. And now when we feel boredom, we have this like very easy, effortless escape from it in the form of a phone. temperature swings, right? We can live at 72 degrees. I
6:30 mean, this list goes on and on and on. I could answer this question for for like hours, but I think that listeners get the point that we evolved in these environments of discomfort, and now we have shifted over to environments that are much more comfortable. Now, let me be clear. This is a good shift in the grand scheme of time and space, but it does come with problems because you find that because we’re involved in environments of discomfort, I think humans um are sort of wired to do the next easiest, most
7:00 comfortable thing because that would have served us in the past, right? In the past, you didn’t want to move too much just for the sake of it because you wanted to conserve calories. If you had the opportunity to eat a little more food, you would probably do that because that would give you a survival advantage, right? you put on some fat. You didn’t want to spend too much time if it was too much too cold or something. Um, and so we’re wired to do the easy thing, but now we end up in this sort of easier world. And those sort of instincts we have, I think,
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10:00 you can go to helixleep.com/huberman, take that two-minute sleep quiz, and Helix will match you to a mattress that’s customized to you. Right now, Helix is giving up to 27% off all mattress orders. Again, that’s helixleep.com/huberman to get up to 27% off. As a neurobiologist and in some sense a comparative neurobiologist, I like to step back and say, you know, what what is a species uh, you know, trying to optimize for? It sounds like a lot of what we were trying to optimize for throughout human history is to limit
10:30 discomfort. Um, and of course ensure the species persists, so reproduction is key. And then making sure that our offspring, which need a lot of care over a long period of time compared to other species, are taken care of. Like when you step back as like pure evolutionary lens, um, it to me seems pretty much that simple. Uh, and all the rest is noise as they say. So if our goal in human evolution is to rid ourselves of discomfort and make things easier and
11:00 safer and propagate the species, then why at some point is more comfort bad for us? There are side effects that happen, right? Um and when you look at most of the diseases that kill us today, they are a result of usually overconumption of food, right? We eat too much uh far more than we often need. Um we don’t move enough. there’s a lot tied to sort of metabolic health. And so I think that I put this in the I like to say these are good problems to have in
11:30 the grand scheme of time and space, right? I would prefer to have my problem be that oh I have to go exercise or something to take care of my physical activity than the fact that like oh I have to I have to go hunt and gather every single day like to get my food. But I do think that they are problems that we need to solve. the fact that you know a lot of our modern problems are driven by the fact that our environments have become so comfortable. Does that answer your question? Yeah, that that answers the question. I I heard someone
12:00 say recently that a lot of what exists now in health and wellness is just trying to bring the outdoors indoors. So I I’ve tried to persuade as everyone knows people to get outside in the morning get sunlight in their eyes for all sorts of reasons. Um but you know the whole business with red light you know long wavelength light infrared light you can use one of those panels it can be quite useful. There’s also a lot of long wavelength light coming from the sun. Um, fresh air, we could debate grounding. Um, but many people believe it’s helpful. Uh, green spaces. I mean,
12:30 kind of agree with this idea that, you know, so much of what we’re encouraging people to do is just, um, mimic doing what we used to do all the time. It’s what life used to be, right? We, like I said, we spend 100% of our time in the outdoors. We evolved in the outdoors. That is kind of like our natural environment. And I think um to continue with this example, when you put us in four walls where we don’t get that outdoor exposure, some interesting psychological things start to happen that probably aren’t that good for us.
13:00 Um and this you can apply this idea to everything like I said like even physical activity. It’s like exercise is a great example to me. No one exercised in the past, right? Exercise is something that we made up basically after the industrial revolution because what happened is we get these jobs where now we’re much more sedentary and we start to realize, oh, these people who have the jobs where they sit all day, they’re getting these strange new health problems that we’ve never seen. And yet
13:30 the people who are kind of moving around all day still in their jobs, they don’t seem to get those problems. So maybe activity is the difference maker. Hey, you guys that are sitting all day, I want you to just go move around for the sake of it. No, there’s no actual point to it. Just like move around for the sake of it. That’ll improve your health. And this becomes this idea of of exercise, movement for the sake of it, which is this kind of strange idea in the grand scheme of time and space. But it does make sense in the context of a world where the average American is
14:00 walking, you know, 4,000 to 6,000 steps a day. That’s how we get our activities. We have to manufacture it effectively. And I will say though to continue with your example about how we sort of uh mimic what we used to do in the past. Um I do think that when we we try to solve for these problems sometimes uh the way we do it is sort of interesting. We go okay if we need to move more well what if we got um what if we got a belt and we put a motor on it and a person could
14:30 just run on this belt in this air conditioned building. Oh, and and then we’ll put a television there, and that way you can just watch CNN blare insane information into your face the entire time and be totally distracted. Yeah, that sounds like a good idea. But when we do that, what are we missing? So, when a person runs outdoors on the other hand, let’s say it’s on a trail, well, now you have all these other forms of discomfort and stimulation that are coming your way. So, one, you’ve got the
15:00 physical activity, obviously. But two is that the trail isn’t this perfectly predictable thing, right? If I’m on the treadmill, I can go, okay, 1% incline, I’m going to run six miles an hour, and I just do that. I don’t have to think about it. Well, the trail, it’s going to go up and down. You’re going to have rocks and ruts you have to navigate under. That’s a mental challenge. You’re also going to have to think about the weather, right now. Oh, I have to deal with the temperature changes. Oh, that looks like a storm might be coming in. There’s also so much more that you take in from the environment. You run through
15:30 trees. You run into open spaces. And that has, I think, a real emotional and I would say even spiritual benefit from that nature. You’re going to see totally random things, right? Like my favorite thing is when I go run on trails in Las Vegas and like you see that random coyote or the big horn sheep and it’s just like this is it. Mountain lion. Mountain lion. Right. Have you Have you seen mountain lions? I’ve seen them other places, but not in Vegas, unfortunately. Most people would say fortunately, I’m on the other side. Like, mountain lion’s not going to hurt you. But if you get to see one, that’s an opportunity. I don’t know that video
16:00 of that kid in Colorado, you know, where it’s chasing him. Oh, yeah. Or or stalking him. And we could talk about that. I totally agree. I think that um optic flow that uh of the sort that you get out when you’re hiking or walking or cycling or um more dangerous activity like motorcycling out ofdoors um we know that it has a powerful effect in suppressing some of the areas of the brain involved in fear. I don’t know if you’re familiar with this literature, but Francine Shapiro, who was um actually ran her clinic behind Stanford
16:30 uh for a while, who came up with EMDR, this eye movement uh desensization uh reprocessing for trauma, um came up with that on a walk and developed the lateral eye movements that are the cornerstone of EMDR as a way to bring the walk into her clinic. Interesting. Because and then for years I would hear about this and I thought it was complete garbage. I was like this there’s as a neuroscientist I was like no. And people would say oh you know the eye movements mimic rapid eye movements in sleep
17:00 that’s why it works. And no they don’t look anything like the rapid eye movements in sleep by the way. They’d say oh you know it’s um creating cross hemispheric uh activation of the two sides of the brain. No I mean you get that if you have binocular vision you know vision scientists. I was like no that’s ridiculous. But and somewhere around 2016 to 2020 there were four papers and then an additional paper in animal uh an animal study. So some there’s a mix of animal and human data showing that when um animals or humans
17:30 engage in this uh lateralized repetitive eye movement back and forth that it suppresses among other areas the amydala. So amydala activation, you know, troughs. And so there’s something about forward ambulation, nerds speak for walking and running, right, that um suppresses the the fear areas of the brain. And I’m convinced that this is a a a central reason why movement out ofdoors is so fundamentally different on our psyche um and our level of calm uh
18:00 as compared to running on a treadmill or um god forbid just sitting at a desk all day. Yeah. And that makes sense. And I would wonder evolutionarily if that would be um for hunting. So something like persistence hunting, right? That’s a dangerous act. Yes, you have to hunt every single day. That’s how you’re going to survive to get that food. At the same time, it’s still very perilous, right? You’re not walking down to Walmart and getting stuff. And so if you had that fear suppression in the context of an act that is somewhat dangerous, that would probably give you an advantage to actually end up taking down
18:30 that animal. Huge. There’s a a video of a um some hunters. It appears to be in Africa. Forgive me uh for not knowing exactly where it was. Um prepared to essentially walk towards a group of lions that have have are on a kill and the lions look up from the kill and there are these hunters walking like with spears vertical, right? And the the lions are like, “Wait, what’s going on here?” You know, typically this is the other the scenario is the other way around. Are you familiar with this
19:00 video? No. and that the hunters, they’re translating into the captions and assuming it’s accurate. They’re saying, you know, it’s key that we just keep moving forward. And that confuses the lions and they think that, you know, that because we’re continuing to look at them and move forward, they’ll move off the kill. But if we avert our our gaze, then they won’t and we can get attacked and it’s happened before. And they literally walk these lions off the kill. And the lions are, you can see that they’re they’re perplexed, but like they’re like, “These guys aren’t afraid at all.” And they just start backing away. And a couple of them are
19:30 negotiating in their minds, you can see, and they basically walk these lines off the kill and take the kill. And there’s so much going on there that but it relates to what we’re talking about. But forward ambulation in the context of hunting, I I I agree with you. I think it could have um huge implications. Also a great metaphor for life right there, right? It’s like just keep moving forward. If you just kind of focus on the kill as it were and just keep moving forward, don’t hesitate. Like that can
20:00 get you pretty far. So you’re a writer. Yeah. But you get into the outdoors a lot. I do. And you do hard scary things on purpose on Yeah. So I’m curious about the um the younger Michael Easter. When you were a kid, were you the kid that would would like hold on to the firecracker to the very last second? Were you the kid that was like, “Let’s jump that roof into the pool.” I’m not giving suggestions here, but I I knew kids like that. They usually were named Johnny for whatever reason. There’s a correlation there. Were you that kid or
20:30 were you the the writer kid? So, I was not the kid that would hold the firecracker to the last second. Um, jump from the second story into the pool. And I’m still not that person. I’m a person where if I had a good reason, what what sort of bigger thing is holding that firecracker till the last end going to give me then I’m perfectly willing to accept that risk. Okay. So, the things that I do that um might be considered dangerous or
21:00 challenging, I always assume there’s going to be a greater reward at the end. You know, I’m not just doing something hard for the sake of doing something hard. Think about it like you’re skateboarding. Okay. As you were learning how to skateboard, I’m sure you fell a lot. Yeah. All the time. You banged yourself up, got all these scuffs on your arm, but the point wasn’t to fall. No. Falling, however, was something that came as you got better as a
21:30 skateboarder, right? So, the point is not to fall. The point is to go, okay, what is the overall goal? be better as a skateboarder and in the process I’m probably going to have to do some things that maybe bang me up a little bit that have some element of danger but to focus on that overall goal. So, I’d say I’ve always been um like that. And I personally find um as a journalist, I mean, I read a lot of studies. I speak to experts. I call people like you who have a PhD, pick their brain. Um but I also find that um sometime I get the
22:00 best information and can better process it and put it into a narrative that um someone can identify with and maybe learn from it more if I have if I actually go to the source and I have a story around that. And sometimes for me going to the source leads me into places that are a little bit I would say off the beaten path maybe. Yeah. Sometimes I go to labs you know and it’s there’s no danger there. Um plenty of coffee nice and air conditioned. Um nothing’s going to go wrong. But you know my work has taken me to some war zones to the middle of the jungle in the Amazon. Um I went
22:30 up to the Arctic for 30 days. I just completed this long hike in the middle of nowhere Utah. Um, and I do find that on those trips, that’s where you start to peel back the deeper layers of whatever idea I’m trying to communicate. So, I think that there’s a big difference between um intellectual understanding and experiential understanding. And it’s that experiential understanding like I want to get to the heart of that. I want to get to the heart of that because if I
23:00 can communicate that, I have a higher probability of getting a person who reads my work to perhaps take an action that could improve their life. And it doesn’t have to be big. I’m not suggesting people have to go to the jungle or go up to the Arctic, but I am saying start where you’re at and do something that’s maybe a little bit out of your comfort zone, maybe a little bit of a challenge, and see how it goes. Oh, you didn’t die. Great. Maybe try it the next day and the next day. And so by sort of continuously pushing that edge,
23:30 I think that people find that you don’t fall off the edge, the edge tends to expand. And as the edge expands, you end up a better person. Yeah, I definitely want to talk about your 2% rule and and some of the other um actionable items that uh you’ve delineated in your books and elsewhere in your in your Substack. I want to sort of um it’s not a challenge. It’s a it’s a question about okay if humans have introduced so many comforts to their lives that uh small
24:00 things feel uncomfortable like for me um I like flying places but I don’t like airports. Um I I travel I travel with a lot of supplements. I’m always secondary screened. I don’t check luggage. And it’s funny because um uh it’s such a small thing, right, to wait for your bag to be secondary screened. But you know these things can become annoyances. you know, we’re human and I I love to laugh at myself uh when I get annoyed about these little things. You go, “Oh, like this thing bothered me or something.” You know, it’s um so if we lower our
24:30 threshold for what we consider challenging, and I’m making myself the the the butt of the joke here, but it’s pretty serious if you look out and think, okay, you know, some people that they’re hearing us talk about doing hard things, but for many people, even though there’s so many comforts, um life feels hard. It’s like work is hard. Uh, you know, things are expensive. Um, it’s hard to get enough sleep. Uh, everyone’s always blaring at us at at all the things we’re supposed to be doing. The
25:00 the world seems unstable. So, I think many people already feel like they’re inundated with challenge even though we’re talking about the the creature comforts that we all enjoy. So, if somebody wants to start exploring leaning into discomfort in the way that grows them and actually makes those other discomforts that we’re talking about kind of dissolve away, h how should they start to go about that? So, a couple things um come to mind and I’m trying to think how to get into it and what I think that I will um use is an
25:30 example of myself and then I’ll kind of unpack that and I’ll unpack it at a level um where we talk about something more it’s kind of a big challenge and then also something like people can use every day. So, I’ll give you the example of um for the comfort crisis I go and I spend 30 days in the Arctic, a little more than 30 days. Now, when I fly up there, I fly from uh Las Vegas to Anchorage, Anchorage to Katsub, which is this little town just 20 miles above the Arctic Circle. And then from Katsub, you get in a plane that is about the size of
26:00 a pack of gum. And you take that plane out, you know, more than 100 miles into the Arctic and it drops you off. Now, when I get on that plane from Vegas, it’s like a 747. And I’m like you. I hate flying, right? Because seats are too small and cramped. Plane’s too hot. The movies in the seat back, they suck, right? The coffee not very good. There’s usually a baby crying. If I need to go to the bathroom, bathroom’s totally cramped. Like, flying is just terrible. I’m like, flying is
26:30 the worst. And then I go spend this 30 days in the middle of the Arctic, right? So, if I want to drink anything, I got to hike down to a stream and I got to carry the heavy water bags back up to camp. I am freezing cold the entire freaking time. If I want to go to the bathroom, I have to hike out on the tundra and I have to bring the rifle because there’s grizzly bears. Uh, I’m starving the entire time. Uh, if I want to get warm, it requires picking up firewood, of which there’s
27:00 not many, hauling it back. Like, everything is hard. Everything is uncomfortable. That whole experience for the whole month. So then when I get onto the plane that goes from the Arctic back to Las Vegas, it’s like, what do you think my experience of that flight was like? Pure luxury. Holy Greatest thing that ever happened to me, right? It’s like that chair. I had sat in a real chair for more than a month. I was like, “This is so comfortable.” Coffee was hot. I’m like, “This is the best thing I’ve ever drank.” I had like
27:30 12 bags of pretzels, right? The crying baby. I’m like, “Oh yeah, just hand me that baby. I got it.” Movies in the seat back. Like it was so boring up there that we were reading the labels on our energy bars. And so when you show me Fast and the Furious like 79, it’s like this is the greatest thing I’ve ever seen. And then when I go to the bathroom, right, not only do I not have to take the rifle, right, that would have been problematic on the plane. Um,
28:00 but I hit this button in this bathroom, this metal thing, little red button, and hot running water comes out of a faucet and hits my hands. I had hot running water on my hands for more than a month. And it was just like, oh my god. Now, let me let me remind you, too, that this is happening in a tube of steel that’s hurtling through the air at like 600 miles an hour, 35,000 ft above sea level. And it was one of those moments
28:30 where I’m like, “Holy it is so amazing to be alive today.” Like, we have the most amazing access to just luxuries and comforts ever. And yet, we often forget that, right? So, what did it take for me to realize that that flight is a freaking miracle instead of this huge in personal injustice to Michael Easter? I had to go out and I had to sort of
29:00 reset that goalpost and go out into a world that was totally different, that was totally challenging, that taught me that the world I came from was actually quite great. So, there’s this uh psychologist, I believe he’s now at Brown. When I spoke to him, he was just finishing up his PhD at Harvard and he did the study that was published in science. I can’t remember its title, but he basically came up with the theory that’s called prevalence induced concept change. So what they did in this study is um they took a group of people. There
29:30 was like three different phases of the study, but I’m going to talk about two of them because I think they’re most relatable. What they did is they took a group of 800 different people in the first study or I can’t remember how many people, but they had them look at 800 different faces in a row. Okay? So they’d look at face after face after face. And these people had to deem whether these faces were threatening or non-threatening. So you’re going non-threatening, non-threatening, oh
30:00 threatening, threatening face after face. Now at the 200th face, what they did is they started showing these people fewer threatening faces. Okay? So successively fewer. The second study they did, it was a similar setup, but they use research proposals. And these people had to deem whether these research proposals were ethical or unethical. Same deal. About midway through they start feeding these people fewer and fewer unethical proposals. Now, these two scenarios, they should be
30:30 pretty black or white, right? Either you look at a face and it either threatens you or it does not threaten you. You read a research proposal and it either crosses this like moral line you have in the sand or it doesn’t cross it. What they found though is that people basically see gray. So as people started encountering fewer truly threatening faces, they started judging faces that were on the borderline as threatening. So they said threatening just as many times, even though the faces weren’t truly threatening, faces that they would have let slide before. Same with the
31:00 research proposals. As they get fewer and fewer unethical ones, they start to get nitpicky, right? They’re like, “Oh, well, there’s that one line in there. Yeah, that’s unethical. Throw it in the pile. So the guy calls this prevalence induced, his name is David Lavar, he calls it prevalence induced concept change. And it basically finds that as people experience fewer and fewer problems, we don’t actually become more satisfied. We simply sort of lower our threshold for what we consider a problem. So when you apply that to life
31:30 today to make this practical it’s like as the world has become a lot more comfortable as we encounter fewer sort of traumas and real problems in our life we don’t necessarily stop and go this is amazing. We simply broaden our definition of what a problem is of what a discomfort is and so we end up with the exact same number of problems of discomforts but they’ve just become progressively more hollow over time. I
32:00 like to think about that as the science of first world problems. I think you can think about it as a moving goalpost. So it’s like you go into one environment and that sort of sets your expectations, right? and were sort of designed to search for problems. More or less designed um designed to search for problems. So you’re going to find them in your environment no matter how unproatic your environment is sort of objectively unproatic. So when I talked to uh Lavari he basically said like yeah I think it makes theoretical sense that if you’re
32:30 going into a place where your problems are more acute and say objectively more realistically problems when you go into this less problematic environment um you’ll sort of be like wow this is fantastic now of course over time you’re going to adapt back and I found that under myself so when I got back from the Arctic I’m like a I’m like a zen punk, man. I’m just like, nothing’s rattling me. That was my wife’s comment. Like, nothing rattles you since you’re back. For how long? Probably a month. Probably
33:00 a month. Then my question becomes, well, I can’t go to the Arctic every month. One, I can’t. Two, nor do I want to. So, what can I do in my life that sort of constantly pushes that go goalpost back into a place where I’m less neurotic, more or less, it’s almost like we live on a neurotic treadmill in a way. As problems fade, we just keep searching for problems and finding them. So, I think there’s a lot of things that a person can do like in their daily life and people can get creative around this. For example, volunteering,
33:30 like if you live a a decent life, well, why don’t you go help people whose lives are a little harder than yours and you’ll see what it could be like and what it’s like out there and that’ll give you some sort of perspective. And that’s something you can do. It takes an hour a week or something, right? I’ve talked to people who go to uh recovery meetings, including myself. uh you go into a meeting and you hear these stories from people who are at the most rock bottom moment of their life like
34:00 that’ll reset what you consider a problem pretty damn fast. You just walk out going, “Wow, I was complaining that uh my tax guy was asking for a lot of papers and this guy just told me a story that just blew my mind.” Like that’s a real problem. And so I think we need to have moments like that that sort of press back against us and put things in a little bit more context. And I do think you need the sort of moment where you think about that and you tell yourself the story around that.
34:30 Like that’s a really important part. Um and I’m going to this is kind of going off on a weird path. I don’t know what it’ll take where it’ll take us, but we’ll find out. Um when you think about something like a right of passage, what people would do in these like these are you know tribes around the world had these different rights of passages all throughout time and this was not like they’re all communicating and figuring the same thing. No, these things arose spontaneous and the point of a right of passage is that we have a person who’s at point A in their life and we need
35:00 them to get and we need to get them to point B where they’re going to be more capable, more confident, more competent. We don’t just say, “Hey, you’re ready to go to point B.” We would often send them out to do something challenging. Could be like extended time in nature. There was all these different things. And in that process, the person would struggle. They would face all these different problems. They would have to figure their out and then they would come back and they would be at point B. But there was a point where people would sort of gather around and say, “What did
35:30 you learn about that? What story are you telling yourself about that?” And so shaping the narrative around a life event becomes critically important I think for mental health and how you frame issues. And so if you think of the concept of like event centrality, it’s like how central is an event going to be to my life and what story am I going to tell around it? Right? So people who tend to take like something bad that happened in their life and they take that in as the central component of
36:00 their personality tend to have worse mental health. Whereas people who take it and say hey this thing happened but what can I learn from it? How can I grow from it? What might happen in the future? Yes, this sucks hard right now but where might it take me in the past or in the future? And those two people are going to have completely different trajectories. So the narrative you tell yourself becomes really important. A few years ago, I started keeping a folder where I would look back um to different
36:30 uh phases of life and just list out sort of the bullet point events of like 0 to 5 and uh you know 5 to 10 with with no particular endpoint in mind. Um it’s an exercise that I find very useful because um it offers the opportunity for this kind of like h how do I frame this thing? oftentimes that the things that felt the worst at that time turned out to be some of the best things ever. And then you can start to create a um a timeline and you realize that most of the things that were felt really bad at
37:00 the time turned out to be the best thing ever. And and that the big wins were almost always the um outgrowth of those prior negative experiences. It’s just kind of wild. But it gets back to this theme that I think is um thread throughout so much of what we’re talking about today and and your work, which is that it seems like discomfort is uh a prerequisite for really feeling truly good about oneself in the world. Like I I’m not sure that they can exist um separately from one
37:30 another, but I think we come into the world as these like bubbling babies and like nervous systems prepared to learn. And so hopefully the early phase of life is nothing but joy and peace and comfort. I mean our parents devote themselves to that we hope right. Um and then at some point they ought to pull us aside and say hey listen you know the next like 70 years are going to be these you know this uh saw of of uh of really tough really great really tough really
38:00 great experiences. But they don’t tell us that. And I think that most of us go through life trying to get back to this place where we’re like where everything’s taken care of. But what you’re what you’re saying is that uh that’s the exact wrong approach. And in fact it’s it’s it’s not um it’s not it’s not we don’t want to be infants but at some level um we we from a comfort perspective we we sort of infantilize ourselves. My thought is that the vast
38:30 majority of things that are good for us today and that help us grow and that help us become better humans, they’re going to be hard, right? Apply this to exercise. Exercise sucks, right? When you’re doing exercise, it is hard, but you’re going to get this long-term benefit. If you’re trying to get your eating in order, I can tell you a salad is less delicious than a Dorito. And anyone who argues with me, you just been eating way too many salads. you’ve diluted yourself, right? Or in my case,
39:00 you know, I I’ll push back a little bit here because I I love exercise and I love eating clean and what’s just happened. I got into it early and but and people like this is ridiculous, but I just don’t eat bad food. I quit eating bad food and I stopped thinking about whether or not exercise is a negotiable a long time ago. I could see that. Um I think for probably most people exercise is going to be an uncomfortable event. Uh it’s why what are the federal exercise guidelines? 150 minutes of uh
39:30 moderate to vigorous activity a week, strength training tries a week. Something like 18% of Americans actually do that. Only 18%. 18%. Yeah. Could be 20, you know, fact check me. I’ll I’ll believe you. Um yeah, because it is uncomfortable. You know, we have all these I think for most people it’s uncomfortable. uh we have all these sort of internal levers that dissuade extra movement for the sake of it. You know when you run your legs are going to burn, your leg your lungs are going to hurt. Um but on the other side of that
40:00 discomfort is improved health, improved mental well-being, all these different things. Um in short, I think that sort of to sort of back up from the evolutionary perspective that I often take is that um the reason we have the reason why things are often uncomfortable is because you know we wanted to dissuade extra movement in the past. Um you didn’t want to feel hungry because you needed that food like on and on and on. And today the environments
40:30 have really just flipped where often times doing the uncomfortable thing is the buy into a better life really. Yeah. And you can and it applies to so many different places. acknowledge our sponsor AG1. AG1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that also includes prebiotics and adaptogens. As somebody who’s been involved in research science for almost three decades and in health and fitness for equally as long, I’m constantly looking
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43:30 There’s a kid that I’ve known since he was really little um who has some learning challenges uh but managed to get himself into a really fine university um and then after a year took on too many comforts of the social dynamics, let’s say, and decide to leave leave of absence. um he read your book um about halfway through the summer where he was working construction and he called me and he
44:00 said uh I’m going back to to college. Hell yeah. And I I said if he’s listening now, I applaud him. Yeah. Uh he also um quit a heavy cannabis habit in the in the same uh swipe. and um and his one of his parents, I don’t want to give too much information about him because people are are clever these days. We’ll figure it out uh who he is and I’d like to maintain his anonymity, but one of his parents is a first generation immigrant. Um and when his kid was leaving college was just like,
44:30 “Oh my god.” You know, he had really toiled in in hopes of his his son not having to have as challenging a physical labor life as he did. And so I talked to this kid um just the other night and he’s like moving thousands of pounds of concrete every week is really hard on the body and he’s in his 20s. Yeah. He’s he’s saying he goes to bed every night sore like sore from the gym like sore down to the bone. Yeah. And um so I want
45:00 to extend a thank you from him. Awesome. Most people will not hopefully have to go through that process to figure out that the path that they have an opportunity to take um is probably much easier than um the alternative in many cases. I want to distinguish between daily self-induced discomforts and these larger discomforts of like going to the Arctic. I want to get to the the the massogi theme and and this idea of taking on things that are truly hard
45:30 that you might not finish. But if we were to shrink this down to the the morning, you wake up, you can scroll on your phone or you can hop in the cold plunge, take a cold shower. These days there’s a lot of um discussion around doing the cold shower has numerous benefits. Wakes you up, dopamine, norepinephrine, but also it kind of sucks. Nobody likes cold water. If you do, send me a note because some, you know, I’ll send you a neurologist’s phone number. Um, but we all like the feeling of getting out of it. Mhm. But what are
46:00 some things besides cold showers and exercise, which I do believe everyone should do and get sunlight, etc. that we can do on a daily basis, morning or in the afternoon if we’re feeling just kind of low. besides cold showers and exercise and sunlight that are hard. Like is it if I um like I love eating strawberries and I hate putting like I I leave the hulls in weird places without even realizing it and I’ll walk by a hole of a strawberry and I’m thinking and I this morning I thought my Easter is going to laugh at me like I’m like I got to pick this thing up. I’m not just
46:30 scattering them around my home by the way but I’m like like what is it? Like we create these barriers to doing the simplest of things. Mhm. So what are some difficult things that we can introduce to our daily routine that have been shown to make us feel better besides exercise, sunlight, and cold and cold water? Yeah. So sort of my big picture answer here is my Substack is called the 2% newsletter. And I’ll tell you why it’s called 2%. So there’s this uh study that found that only 2% of people take the stairs when there’s an
47:00 escalator available. 2%. Now 100% of people know that if they were to take the stairs that would be better for them, right? They get a better long-term return on their health, on their well-being. And yet 90% of pe 98% of people do the easier thing that could actually hurt them in the long run in the context of this environment where we don’t move enough. So this tells me that we’re sort of wired to do the next easiest thing. But living better in
47:30 modern life often requires doing these slightly uncomfortable things that are just so obvious and in front of us. And it’s like you have to get to the second floor. So which route are you going to take? You going to take the one that’s a little bit uncomfortable now but improves your life in the long run or are you going to do the easy thing that might actually hurt you in the long run? So that to me is just a metaphor for like how do you improve in daily life? Right? in the trenches of daily life, how do you improve? So, I apply this I try and apply this to as many different
48:00 areas in my life and I as I can. It’s like if I can make something just a little bit more uncomfortable. I’m not talking about extreme do the slightly harder thing that I know will give me a long-term return, I got to take that. So for me it’s like okay if I’m in my office, go through some examples and I have a phone call. I could sit here and take the phone call or I could pop in my headphones and I could go for a walk and I could take that call while walking. I would say for the vast majority of phone calls unless you’re like talking to the CEO, your big boss, right? Maybe sit
48:30 behind the computer for that one. But like you’re getting in all these steps that are going to be beneficials and steps are one of like the metric that is most correlated to better health. Like people just need to generally walk more. And that’s an easy way to do it. It’s like you got to take the call. Might as well get some steps in as you do it, right? Things like that. Things like could you even just carry your groceries at the grocery store? You get the basket, you’re carrying stuff. If you’re getting in this like low load of
49:00 carrying that’s going to really help with back health, strength, all these different things. Even the things as simple as like I’m going to park in the farthest spot away. Like people go roll their eyes and go that’s so obs. It’s like okay, but no one actually does it. And if you look at just um nonex exercise activity thermogenesis neat, this is basically a a dorky way of saying all the movement in a person’s life that isn’t dedicated exercise that often outweighs the benefits of exercise
49:30 in many studies certainly by calories burned. Certainly by calories burned also uh some data suggests even health outcomes in the long run. Um there’s some Mayo Clinic data that says that, you know, people who just move around a lot more in their daily life, they’re burning like 800 calories just from moving around. This incidental movement, it’s like running eight miles or something if you do some really rough back of hand math, right? And so I think looking for those opportunities even beyond exercise, something like um so in
50:00 the comfort crisis, I write about the value of silence for example. Um we have increased the world’s loudness four-fold as human beings. And yet silence is actually pretty good for us in this context of noise. So you put someone in silence and like, yeah, it’s a little uncomfortable at first. People will generally report being like, it’s so quiet. This is weird, a little weirded out. But as time goes on, people tend to calm down. It’s sort of like a nice reset. And so, can you even go, hey, like I go into my office and I just start blasting music immediately. Like
50:30 most people keep the TV on, who keep the TV on all day. It’s not that they’re watching it. It’s that they just need noise in the background or else they feel weird. But if you can sort of cut that out, even though it’s a little bit hard at first, it’s probably going to improve you over the long run. Like how can we apply this to different areas? I did a post, it’s called the 2% manifesto on my Substack, so I’ll link to it um in that link I mentioned. Um and it lists a bunch of different ways. But I think it really is it’s just like this mindset shift, like how can I take this thing I have to do and maybe make it a little
51:00 bit harder and get a benefit? And once you start to stack those things up, like things start moving, things start changing. Yeah, I agree. I um you know my trivial example about the strawberry hulls which I always put like next to the bowl of strawberries and they’ll just sit there. Um this is actually really beneficial for me cuz I do that too and my wife and my wife goes, “What kind of psychopath does this?” I be like, “Well, there’s two of us now.” Uh at least two of us. Um if you are a Strawberry Hull um a non uh throwawayer,
51:30 um definitely put put a comment and we’ll we’ll start a support group. Um it taught me an important lesson though because um it’s less about the strawberry holes um than noticing the feeling of resistance. Like what is that? And and then recognizing how trivial that resistance is, but how um pervasive it is. So like the things that we resist doing like I’ve got the making the bed first thing in the morning down. I’ve got the morning sunlight thing
52:00 down. I’ve got got all that stuff down. But it’s the little things that we can get away with not doing for a while that I think are the the ones that really erode this whatever this um circuit in our brain is that that you’re talking about. And and I I do want to talk about brain circuitry a little bit. Um but I don’t think we have a name for it. And um yeah, because it’s it’s it’s a little bit of willpower. It’s a little bit of tenacity. It’s a bit of reflection. But what I what I’m getting to here, forgive
52:30 me because I’m stumbling through this a little bit because it’s it’s something I’m just arriving to in this conversation, is that there’s something about the contrast between prior experience and current experience where we could say level of discomfort from, you know, 1 to 10. Um, the more uncomfortable something is in our prior experience, the better the next phase of life is going to feel. Whether or not it’s hours or days later, as you said, a month you go to the Arctic for how long were you there? 33 days. So more than a month and you got a month of
53:00 zened out bliss, uh, you know, super Michael to you and to everybody else, right? And then the crazies start to slowly work their way back in, starts to work its way back in. And I think that it’s a um this is a microcosm for a lot of things about nervous systems. They adapt and and so forth. So when I think about the examples you gave and I love the one of taking the stairs. I always think when I travel I’m going to sit a lot. I I don’t like to sit too much. I always feel better when I’ve moved a lot. So I’m farmer carrying my luggage
53:30 of big supplement bag you know hence the secondary screening and uh the you know security and then the stairs are a great opportunity. So we can reframe right as humans we can reframe tell oursel that things are good for us. Um, but it’s these areas where we where we experience a lot of resistance to ourselves, I think, that are the most challenging as opposed to resistance to the world. As you point out, the the world isn’t um lacking opportunities to to walk on a call or take the stairs. It’s all around us, but it’s that internal kind of like,
54:00 you know, shift towards what’s more comfortable. What do you think about the the more psychological things like um like god forbid reading a book in paper form as opposed to listening to it? And I love audiobooks, but you know, forcing oneself to read um having the phone out of the room. Um read something difficult like a hard book. Like if I want a really good hard book, I ask Mark Andre for a book recommendation. Usually I have to go find the book from a like a
54:30 special book seller because some of these books are hard to find. And then I open up the first page and I go, “Well, I knew he was really smart. He’s one of the smartest people I’ve ever met. I’ve met a lot of smart people, but this is really challenging.” And then I have to just start lathing through it and lathing through it. And it reminds me of being a PhD student and learning about the nervous system for the first time. That stuff feels so good when we like find a nugget of of understanding. Yeah. But and get through it. And get through it. Yeah. But um so in the in the cognitive domain, in
55:00 the emotional domain, like do you intentionally sit down with your wife and go, let’s have like a really hard conversation so that we can have a really great weekend? Do you do that? Do you do this in all areas of your life? Um, well, I’m definitely not perfect. My wife and I actually, we go on very long walks and that’s where all the magic happens. There’s something about walking as a couple. We’ll do like 12 miles on a Saturday. 8 to 12 miles on a Saturday. Those are long walks. Yeah. And you got like four hours together. And you know, the first hour you’re just kind of this and that. And you know, how was your work week? It was good. How was yours?
55:30 And then like by hour two, you’re getting into like the deep and the gritty stuff. And I think there’s something about Forward Ambulation. uh with other people that is really um lifegiving and there’s something even sort of spiritual about it and the amount of connection that you can get from people. So that’s something that we definitely do and I don’t think those conversations would come if we were like let’s sit on the couch. Okay, we’ll turn on this Netflix show. Hey, how are you? Like just wouldn’t happen, right? Yeah, the walk’s a little bit harder of
56:00 course. Um but magic happens there. I would also say there’s a there’s a section in the comfort crisis and I’ve written about this a little bit in my other book scarcy brain as well where I talk about the value of boredom. So boredom is effectively this evolutionary discomfort that tells us go do something else. It’s neither good, it’s neither bad. Simply tells us whatever you’re doing right now the return on your time invested is running thin. Go do something else. So, in the
56:30 past, if you think of us, say, um, we’re out foraging for food and we’re in this one area and we can’t find anything, there’s nothing, boredom would kick in because we’re not getting a return. And it would say, “Well, go do something else.” And we’d probably go say, “Okay, well, what if we try fishing this river or something, right?” And I think what happens in modern life is that when that evolutionary discomfort that tells us to go do something else kicks in, that something else is just like really easy, effortless escape. And it’s in the form
57:00 of a cell phone, it’s Instagram, it’s whatever, right? It’s like this hyper stimulating content. But I think that sort of sitting with boredom and leveraging it to see where else it might take you beyond a screen can be really valuable. Yes, it’s uncomfortable. Um but I’ve found I’ve get my best ideas and I think that there’s de centuries of thinkers who would say the same like my best ideas come when
57:30 I’ve sort of removed myself from outside stimulation and yes like my mind wanders I’m bored but then bam some magic happens. One point of messaging around screens today that I wanted to touch on too is that like there’s so much media around cell phones and like you got to use your cell phone less. Here’s a million different ways to use your cell phone yet less. Yes, that’s important. Yes, we should all do it. But I think it misses a big point and that is if we take, let’s say, two hours off
58:00 our phone screen time, what happens is that people often get bored and they go what am I going to do? and then they turn on Netflix. Not much different, right? It’s not an algorithm. No, but you’re still just like taking this information that is being beamed into you rather than seeing what else the world can offer you and sort of coming up with your own ideas and creativity. So, I like to say rather than focusing on um less phone, I like to think more boredom. Get yourself in a space where like boredom is going to
58:30 kick on. It’s going to be uncomfortable. Your mind’s going to wander and you might find some good ideas. Yeah, you’ll have some weird stuff in your brain. Of course, that’s what happens when your mind wanders, but I think you can find some interesting things out there. Does boredom include reflection or it’s true boredom like uh I think we need to be removed from the hyper stimulating stuff that we often when we get that moment of I’ve got nothing to do like stand in a grocery line, right? What do people do? Everyone’s on their cell phone. Like we can’t just like sit with our thoughts
59:00 for more than three seconds. So, I think even just having the moment where you go, okay, going to do nothing. Might get a little weird, might get a little uncomfortable, might be a tiny bit bored, but like your mind’s going to go some interesting places I think can be productive in the context of today. What I’m chuckling because what were your thoughts on the the brief um appearance of the the raw dog flight experience that showed up last year? Did you see that where guys were posting online? it did seem to be guys um saying that they quote unquote
59:30 raw dogged a terrible use of language. Um I didn’t pick it. Uh they would do a 10-hour flight or a six-hour flight with no media, just sit there as a as a kind of sign of their toughness. I thought it was kind of interesting. Uh here’s what here’s what came out of that is my wife said, “The hell? These guys are weak.” She’s been doing that ever since I knew her. She literally sits in that seat and she turns on the flight screen map and
60:00 she just zones into that. I’m like, “You’re a crazy person.” Now, it turns out she’s just like the original raw dogger. I love it. That was not the answer I expected. Um, yeah, that that trend kind of came and went. Yeah, came and went. I think that, you know, and there’s the there’s a performative element to that, right? And so it was kind of became a performance for the for the algorithms and whatever where it’s I think maybe we need to get a little more nuance behind that and put some thought into it. It’s like how it’s like okay if I’m not on my
60:30 screen like how am I going to use this time? Can I use it to go sort of deeper into my thoughts? And you know, I do think people need time, especially when you’re deal trying to chew off big ideas. Like I’ve found that a long walk where I don’t take my cell phone. It’s like I need that. And I think a lot of people I think there’s a lot of anecdotes historically that um good ideas come from these moments where you’re just that’s all you’re focused on. Maybe you’re on a walk. You’re just kind of sitting and just peeling away
61:00 the layers. Not easy but worthwhile. You know throughout history and still now many people get ideas um from dreams during nighttime sleep or during the kind of liinal states between waking and and sleep. These times of of inactivity that no sensory input coming in are are when the brain processes things. And it makes perfect sense to me that in daydreaming or in boredom as you describe it that new ideas would would
61:30 surface just as they would from the liinal state between sleep and awake. Yeah. And I think people sometimes experience this like there’s a reason we have that sort of cliche that’s like you come up with your best ideas in the shower because there’s not this simulation, right? Just kind of Yeah. You’re not on your phone. You’re removed from you’re removed from the noise and you’re just kind of oh bam. But you got to write them down too. I found that as well if you have a good idea. Yeah. What’s your idea capture mechanism? You write. Yeah, I usually have a notebook on me. Just write things down.
62:00 And much like a nighttime dream where we wake up and like, “Oh, I’m going to remember this tomorrow.” And then you you won’t remember. You won’t remember. I agree. It’s important to write things down during the day that come to mind. Actually, it was the great Joe Strummer of the Clash of Mascalo’s fame who there’s some clip of him someplace saying in that like heavy like breath voice where he’s like, “You if you have an idea, you have to write it down.” Yeah, because not only will you forget, but even if you happen to remember it, you can’t capture the essence of the the the inspiration unless you write it down
62:30 at that moment. He really believed that in that moment it carried a certain um uh a certain value that you couldn’t replace just by writing it down later. Yeah, I agree. So, I just did for a third book I’m working on, I did this um it was about 40 days. This is a hike through southern Utah and it goes into through the Grand Canyon so into northern Arizona and then ends in Zion. Took about 40 days. And so normally when I’m reporting a book like when I did the comfort crisis when I did scarcity brain like I’m traveling I’m doing all this stuff but I’m usually writing using
63:00 these notebooks. Use a very particular notebook to write in the rain because I’m in outdoor environments whatever. But on this hike, like I can’t cover the mileage we need to cover all day if I’m constantly stopping and writing. And like I can’t hike and try and write. It was Yeah. Thorough had an advantage by just staying in the one spot. Yeah. Exactly. Exactly. So I took voice notes actually on my phone and um I found that to be really useful too that some a tool that people can use. So I had when I got
63:30 back from the hike I had like 500 different voice notes. Some of them were 10 seconds, some of them were six minutes of me just babbling, but there’s some good stuff in there. And um so I think you do need to capture it in the moment because I did find too that I didn’t really catch on to the voice note idea until maybe the second or third, fourth day of the hike. And I would like I can’t stop and write this down. And then I’d be in camp at night. we’d set up and I’d go and I’d start writing down the day’s notes and I’d go, “What was
64:00 that thought you had in that canyon? It was so good.” And I’d just never find it. Right. So, I just was like, “Okay, we got to use the voice notes tool and just take those.” It was great. Uh there’s a very very uh accomplished neurobiologist out at Caltech by the name of David Anderson and he’s done some really interesting work on these more ancient brain areas like the hypothalamus, primitive states like aggression, mating behavior, but uh it carries out to a number of things that we’re talking about now um about cognitive states and creativity and
64:30 capturing ideas and it’s this notion of attractor states that basically that the brain uh much to most people’s dismay doesn’t work such that you go oh I’m going to from 9 to 11 or I’ll do some hard coding or I’m going to and you sit down and you start. No, you you you warm up. You kind of ratchet into it and then um but over time it’s it’s almost like a ball bearing on a flat surface and then and then the surface starts becoming more and more concave and eventually it’s a deep trench and then that’s usually when the buzzer goes off. It’s time to move to something else. But
65:00 those so these attractor states are basically the the shutting down of of a lot of other circuitry as one circuit kind of ramps up its activity. But that over time um we can entrain these things. We can link them to specific uh events in time like the making of your coffee at 9:00 a.m. So your nervous system unconsciously starts to predict the attractor state of being in a state of deep focus and writing. Uh that all starts to make sense. It starts to just it’s a different kind of lens on habit. Um but if you look at most people
65:30 including my own activity through the lens of attractor states and you say well what am I training my brain for? What am I in training? End training. End training. E N. And then also just drop the EN. What am I what am I teaching my brain to do on a daily basis? You go. Well, the attractor state is scrolling lots and lots and lots and lots of media. It’s reading people’s comments. This is funny. It’s talking to friends. It’s texting a few people. And what we what we’ve done, I think, is that we’ve created these attractor states of it’s
66:00 not that we’re we all have ADHD or something. Some people do. But we’ve we’re right where we belong given our pri our prior behavior. We’re just we’re just training up this this trench of a bunch of noise and then the the end of the day comes and you’re like I didn’t get anything done. This kind of thing. So when you describe getting out into nature and removing all of that and and kind of forcing yourself to uh to go in a particular not just physical direction but um to go in a particular
66:30 mental direction. Um, I feel like it’s getting back to something very fundamental. It’s like, uh, it’s like the overload principle of resistance training or cardiovascular exercise and increasing stroke volume. It’s like the it’s like the fundamentals of how the mind work, which is one of the reasons I I love these practices so much, which brings me back to this question of, okay, so there’s the 2% rule. Yep. Taking the identity that I’m going to be this 2% of people that’s going to do this harder thing. It’s going to be harder in the short term, but it’s going
67:00 to give me this long-term benefit. And if I can find areas to apply that in my life, I’m going to get this big long like the benefits just pile up massively. And then at the other end of the spectrum is the misogi concept. Could you explain misogi? Yeah. Um, so if I were to sort of give the cliff notes, I’ll give the cliff notes and then the longer explanation. in cliffnotes is that msogi is sort of almost a modern right of passage in order to teach people what they’re capable of and to give them experience that really changes them thereafter.
67:30 Now I heard about this idea um from a guy whose name is Marcus Elliot and he came up with this idea back in the 90s. It was like this personal thing he did and I stumbled upon it. Um Marcus I believe got his MD from Harvard and he decides like I don’t want to be a doctor. I want to get into sports science. So, he runs this facility that’s called P3. They’re actually not far from here. They’re up in Santa Barbara. And he works with all these different sort of athletes. He’s got contracts with the NBA, with the NFL,
68:00 blah blah blah, whatever. But he also sort of realizes that um what really changes a person, it can’t always be measured because he’s taking a lot of um movement measuring. He does a lot of like big data AI stuff around movement measurement, can predict injury and things like that. Um he realizes that like these big changes that force a player to be better that get them in a better state when a sort of game is on the line that can’t be measured. And he does this practice he
68:30 calls msogi. And the idea is that once a year you’re going to go out and you’re going to do something really really hard. Now he defines really hard as saying you should have a 50-50 shot at completing whatever your masogi task is. So 50-50 shot because today I think he’s right here. He argues like even when we take on a challenge, we have to know we’re going to complete it, right? It’s like people don’t run marathons and go, I don’t know if I’m going to finish the marathon. They say, I don’t know if I’m going to finish the marathon and sort of insert some arbitrary time. Um, so
69:00 that’s the challenge element. And then the second rule of Msokei is that you can’t die, right? So the implication is, yeah, do something pretty hard. And what tends to happen when you go out and you do something really sort of kooky, challenging that you know is really going to be hard for you, that you are truly unsure if you’re going to be able to finish this, is you get into this moment and in this moment you think you’ve hit your edge. You know, I’ve hit my edge. Like I’m not going to be able
69:30 to finish this thing. Like all is lost. But if you can kind of just keep going, one foot in front of the other, you get this other moment. And that’s where you look back and you go, “Well, wait a minute. I thought my edge was back there, but I am clearly past it right now. So, I’ve sold myself short here.” And then the question is, okay, if I’ve sold myself short here in this moment, where else in my life might I be selling myself short? And that’s where the big changes happen, right? That’s the
70:00 question that you want to leave with from the maseogi. Now, in the past, I would argue. So, after I meet Marcus, he tells me about this like quirky masogi idea he does. He does all kinds of weird stuff. Um, I started sort of really doing some digging and going, “All right, this is like a interesting idea. It’s also sort of wacky, you know, but if you look back in history, I think we had things like this in the form of rights of passage.” And like I mentioned before, like rights of passage just popped up naturally in all these different cultures. But there
70:30 was a realization that doing something that truly thrust you beyond the bounds of what you thought you were capable of where you had to figure things out where you had to really doubt yourself and where you had to overcome becomes this sort of great teacher for the human spirit. So that’s the idea of masogi. Go out do something that you think is going to be really really hard. See what you learn. And even if you fail, that’s fine. You’re still going to learn something along the path. I’m a huge fan
71:00 of this misogi concept. Um, so once a year picking site, could be physical, could be physical, could be intellectual, create creative, could be anything. And how important is it, you think, to um advertise that you’re doing this versus uh important to keep it quiet and to yourself? I think it’s better to keep it to yourself. So, I think we live in a world where nowadays people do a lot of
71:30 things um for external reasons to get likes on social media so your neighbor will be like, “Oh, that guy’s the badass in the neighborhood. That lady did this.” Whatever. And I think if you can just do something only for you, um, that makes it sort of more valuable. It puts a sort of different spin on it. Um, once you decide, oh, I’m going to do this thing because, oh, this guy did it in an hour. Well, I’m going to do it in 59 minutes. That also get puts a ceiling on
72:00 you, right? Because now you’re going to shoot for 59 minutes rather than, well, what if you just went out and did this for yourself and you just went all in? potentially you could do it in 55, you know. Um, and I think today we do live in a world where there’s a lot of um sharing in order to get social approval. Um, you know, you can go back and forth about what are the goods and the bads of that. Um, but I would just argue that sometimes it’s good to do things only for yourself and use that as the sort of lever that you know you have that maybe
72:30 no one else knows you have it, but you can pull that damn thing when you need to. And that’s going to really affect some change. I mean, one of my big like my one of my biggest messages is like people just need to go out and find some damn adventure. And it’s very easy to get locked in a cycle of doing the same thing over and over. You exist at home and everything is nice and comfortable and like stresses come in, but they’re like in the form of emails and deadlines
73:00 and things just get predictable. Go out into a place that is totally unfamiliar. Do something that’s going to be challenging to you. Go with the wind. You will find things that will really enhance your life. That will make you feel, as Joseph Campbell put it, the rapture of being alive. Like I can tell you I feel most alive when it’s like, “Okay, I got to go out to wherever it is, the Bolivian jungle, and I got to figure this thing out because I’m going down there to meet with this Chimane
73:30 tribe or whatever it is, or I got to go to Iraq and investigate the drug trade.” Doesn’t have to be that extreme, of course, but that is where I absolutely feel that I am most alive. It’s like we’re going into this unknown world. We don’t know what’s going to happen. We’re going to encounter all these wacky characters along the way. There’s going to be trials. There’s going to be hardships, but I’m going to like get through it and I’m going to have to figure things out. And it is just like so life-giving. It’s like the most amazing thing. And I come back from that and it’s taught me something that allows
74:00 me to function better when I get back to my normal life because I’ve learned all these skills and tools that I wouldn’t have gotten had I not exited normal life and gone out and just had an adventure. What if you and I were to um run an online experiment? This is actually serious here. where we said, “Okay, uh, we are going to have you and I and a bunch of people that are going to join us are going to, uh, refrain from any any smartphone use for a certain number of hours per day. And instead of posting
74:30 your sleep score, uh, which a lot of people are now doing, you’re going to post the number of hours that you manage to be offline completely at the end of the day. So, we’re going to compete for time away from social media and maybe we even get on Instagram live once a week and we we share our experiences and there’s this club of wackos that want to do this right for and and and see where we get with it. Do you think that the sharing of that experience at the end and the community around it would actually detract from the experience uh when people are away from their phones?
75:00 It’s a good question. I think it’s one of those complicated things where there would probably be some upsides to the sharing. Some people need the like sort of community element like yeah that would probably enhance in some ways. Um the community element and the competition might also bend people’s behavior in a way that maybe they wouldn’t have behaved had they not known that they were part of this group. Right? So I think these questions get really complicated and I think it’s also there’s probably some individual variation. Um, like I know that I
75:30 personally do a lot better um, if I don’t have like a huge social element to things. Like I don’t run marathons just because I’m like for me psychologically I know marathons give people a lot of value because there’s community and all these things. But like in my mind for some reason I got this weird quirk where I go yeah but I could just go run like 26 miles like at any time on my own time and not have to wear this bib and like pay this entry fee like you could just
76:00 run 26 miles you know. So like something they don’t do it for me um but they do it for some people. So, I think you would have I think you’d have individual differences. What do you think? I think we should do the experiment. I think we should um I think it’d be a lot of fun to get a group of people, large group of people together um from online to go into their lives and then create a community of people that use social media for learning and for actual social connection. Yeah. but are not leaning on it for um this kind of uh
76:30 people call fast food or kind of what my dad would call the kind of chewing gum version of of of nutrition um all day long. Yeah. And I say this as somebody that enjoys social media. So um but I think this is an idea I wanted to pitch to you today. So decided to do it on mic. I have a good platform for it unless you do how we could track it. So one of my favorite apps it’s called Clearpace. What Clear Space does is it uh when you go to you select the apps that you want
77:00 to sort of quote unquote block um when you go to select one of those apps, let’s say it’s Instagram, it gives you a nice quote like a inspiring quote about life, but you have to wait, right? There’s like a 10-second pause. You wait and then it takes you to the next screen and it says, “How much time do you actually want to spend on this app?” And you can select, you know, 5 minutes, 10 minutes, 15, 20 minutes, and then you select whatever amount of time. And only once you’ve gone through that process can you use the app for the
77:30 pre-selected amount of time. And I found it to be really useful because it gets me intentional. Right? A lot of times people just pull out their phone, they immediately hit, oh, Instagram, and then you find yourself in it, and then you you went in to answer a DM, but like actually you watched dog videos. Nothing wrong with dog videos, but you watched dog videos for 30 minutes and you go, oh I’ve just lost my day. Right? So, this thing sort of interrupts that. And they do have um some challenge features. They could probably create us a group. That would be really fun. It sounds really cool. Yeah, I I I love social
78:00 media. I think that in its essence um it’s an opportunity to really connect with people and I’ve always wanted to have like a weekly meeting with my followers where we I could learn from them and hear what they’re doing and what they’re up to and you know and um and so I feel like there’s real value to that like going and living one’s life and then meeting online and talking to people you otherwise wouldn’t be able to share information and and learn from them and and hopefully them from you and and to to really do that. I don’t know
78:30 are there any aside from perhaps 12step or maybe there’s some religious groups um but are there any within social media platform groups that meet regularly and have for years like we meet once a week we get on there we have a live I mean I’ll pop on for a live every once in a while um to connect with my audience um and mostly to hear their questions but I wonder if there are any online groups that have met consistently for for many years. That’s a great question. It reminds me of that
79:00 um you probably saw the story about the the guys and this wasn’t social media but it’s amazing. That group of guys that’s been playing a game of tag for like 40 years or something really. Did you see that story? Yeah. It’s like these guys I think they were like kids and they kept up this like lifelong game of tag and it just never it’s never ended at weddings and everything. Yeah. Oh wow. Most people probably think that’s got to be incredibly obnoxious. So they never pause the game. Never pause the game. Yeah. And it’ll, you
79:30 know, someone might be it for like years and then that person will take a secret flight to Cleveland or wherever the other guy is and then gotcha, you’re it. You know, this is still going. I think it’s still going. Yeah. Amazing. Yeah. Amazing. Great. Yeah. You know, I’ I’ve said this before many times on social media, but uh any dopamine reward that is not preceded by substantial effort, you know, can potentially destroy us in the form of addiction, but also leads to a drop in that baseline of dopamine at other times. This is, you know, this is
80:00 the abundance of food, the ease of life that you’re referring to. um in this experiment that I’m hoping we we can run in some form or another the the idea is that there will be some resistance um to stepping away from smartphone uh there will be great hopefully pleasure and the attractor states will take over to doing other things in one’s life relationships and creative pursuits etc when we’re away from the phone but that there’s a certain amount of effort to to resist so that when we come
80:30 together socially it it’s a real dopamine not hit but it’s a real dopamine rise that doesn’t drop the baseline of dopamine. So it meets all the the kind of criteria of of uh dopamine dynamics that I believe are healthy because we really can distinguish healthy from unhealthy dopamine dynamics but it still incorporates the smartphone which doesn’t look like it’s going anywhere. Um so it’d be fun to do this experiment. I don’t know. I think it’s like that yeah to your point smartphones are here to stay. clearly benefits to social
81:00 media else, no one would use it. Um, problem is some of the benefits come with long-term harms, right? Um, but I think if you can sort of train yourself to use it in a way that helps you rather than hurt you, well, that’s a good thing. Sort of reminded me of this story um of my mom. So, my mom had cancer about 10 years ago. She’s fine now. Um, but she was in for one of her annual checkups, right? And this is obviously nerve-wracking because you’re finding
81:30 out, hey, did it come back? Whatever, blah, blah, blah. So, she goes to this meeting and I was um I was out of town. She goes to this appointment and she’s in the doctor’s office. She’s in the sort of waiting room in the gown and they’re like, “Yeah, we’ll be back in a minute.” And so she sitting there and right as the nurse left she immediately went to put out pull grab her phone and she left her phone in her car and she’s like I realized in that moment I was grabbing that phone because I was anxious and emotionally vulnerable and
82:00 that was effectively a sedative in that moment and I had to sit with that. I had just had to sit and feel that. She’s like, but by being sort of forced into that moment, it made me realize, well, why don’t I want to feel this? And that leads to these questions like, oh, because I value being alive. Well, why do I value being alive? We’ll hear all these reasons. Oh, I appreciate this thing. I appreciate this other thing. And that insight, I think, taught her a
82:30 lot about how she wants to spend her time, too. And so having these moments where we don’t immediately go for the sort of easy uncomfortable or easy comfortable thing I think can lead to these insights and that’s just like this very micro moment but that it it stands for so much and her behavior did change afterwards. You know she’s she’s awesome. She’s always been amazing. She’s a um she’s a single mom and I’m an only child. And um
83:00 she’s been sober for 40 years. Yes, 40 years. And I’m 38, so she got sober, had a kid. Um cards were definitely stacked against us, but she worked her ass off and built us a pretty good life. That’s awesome. Definitely weren’t rich, but just amazing woman. And um yeah, I’ve learned a lot from her. She sounds like an amazing woman. I’m really happy to hear she’s healthy. Yeah. And that moment of um having left the phone in
83:30 the car. Uh yet it’s amazing how those small portals in time like can open up so much. I I I think um social media offers a lot. I do also think that as your example points out, it offers the opportunity to numb out or to experience drama. And I feel like when people talk about the dopamine hits of social media, the data on this just don’t square with the idea that that
84:00 scrolling our phone gives us dopamine hits. It gives us low-level expenditure. Um, you know, I want to you on the basis of your books, I I wrote something down a couple days ago. I was thinking about our conversation. I was thinking I I’ve long believed that, you know, dopamine is a currency. We it’s the universal currency of motivation, right? It’s what literally allows us to ambulate forward. It controls movement in the body. That’s why people with Parkinson’s who lose
84:30 dopamine neurons can’t move. But in terms of mental movement is motivation, like movement towards something, redirecting our efforts and so forth. Um and I was thinking about um this idea that we we can either spend our dopamine, right? Or we can invest our dopamine on this is purely on the basis of your work. Awesome. Um and it seems like all day long we we can potentially spend dopamine. Scrolling is spending and and it’s the kind of spending we don’t even notice that we’re
85:00 doing. We’re sort of leaking. It’s almost like leaking dopamine. We we we’re not getting these big quoteunquote dopamine hits. This is why I don’t like the dopamine hit model. I don’t log on Instagram and go like wow. Like it’s it’s no like it’s not like coming back from a massochi and going I lived. It’s not transformative for the next month. It keeps you in the in the rut of looking for more because it’s like mental chewing gum. As my my dad long time ago he said be careful of of the internet. Uh I said why? And he said it’s just mental chewing gum. You just
85:30 wise wise guy. Yeah. And um he’s he’s very reg regimented guy. Um, and so we’re always spending, but then there are these things that require effort that are in we’re still spending dopamine while we’re doing it. Like if you go do a workout, you’re spending effort to do it, but you get something back on that investment. So you’re investing it, you’re not just spending it. Yeah. And that’s great. And the other one based on what you told me today is reflection
86:00 in states of boredom or meditation or you know for for people that orient this way prayer what whatever it happens to be or maybe it’s even just leaving a social gathering and keeping your phone in your pocket and walking back to the car and just really thinking about the richness of that interaction. Right? these little things that are disappearing in in in our lives these days, but that are so easy to recapture that reflection is another way of investing our dopamine. I think what when we look at the the neurobiological literature on dopamine, we’re going to realize that yeah, of course, addictions
86:30 spend out your dopamine, drop your baseline, your your bank account is in the red, deep in the red. Yeah. um it’s a whole other discussion, but that most of us are spending and then we reset each night with sleep and then we spend the next day and then we reset and it’s a life of it becomes kind of a meaningless life. And um this isn’t to demonize the social media platforms that they’re pretty good at letting us numb out when we don’t want to feel something or feel drama when we need to feel that
87:00 like lift. Um like, oh my god, she did that, he did that. Oh my god, the lawsuit got dismissed about these two people who are arguing about who said what and who did. I’m like, how boring is it really? Yeah. And how unimportant is it? But it’s not boring because they they’ve taught us how to make it not boring. And you look at the comments, it’s like it’s just like gross. It’s like high school forever. Yeah. But the worst part of high school, it effectively trains us to use it. So when I think about comfort crisis or scarcity brain, see it’s really about how to
87:30 invest your dopamine in effort and reflection as a way to capture more of capability to lean into things. That that’s that’s really um to me what I like is the the genius of of doing hard things that you brought forward in the comfort crisis. I as as I started today’s discussion saying I mean it really changed my everyday because I think so so intensely now about like the like how can I introduce more pain to in to bring about more meaning as opposed
88:00 to comfort like meaning and in any in any case. So um yeah I I think you’re you’re really on to the two things that matter most which are effort and and reflection. I love that language of spending versus investing. That’s just Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head there. And the the investing is usually things that are going to be a little more challenging, not as hyper stimulating, things you maybe wouldn’t necessarily want to do at first and then once you’ve done them
88:30 enough, you realize, oh, this has really changed me in a fundamental and positive way. And hopefully you start to sort of crave them. Like you said, no, I love exercise, right? That’s where we want people to get with all sorts of things that can enhance their life. And I think too I’ll add here is so if you think about people who pile up money and pile up money and invest and invest and invest and they never spend it, maybe you also need to learn, okay, now that I’m doing all this investing, it’s also okay to spend it sometimes,
89:00 right? And then I can really enjoy that because I’ve done all these things. And so like I find with my with my own use, I used to sort of um beat myself up if I was on say Instagram or whatever just looking at nonsense. I I like nonsense on Instagram and I would beat myself up and then I realized you’ve done all these things like you wrote for five hours, you got a workout in, you took your dog for a walk, you know, you helped out around the house, you did all these things. Dude, watch a freaking dog
89:30 video for 20 minutes. it’s fine. And then I could actually appreciate that more and like I didn’t have the guilt around that, you know, and it was like sort of the all right, you’ve invested a bunch. You got all this money. Yeah. And buy that buy that thing you don’t necessarily need, but it’s going to it’s nice little boost, you know. I’d like to take a quick break and acknowledge one of our sponsors, Function. Last year, I became a Function member after searching for the most comprehensive approach to lab testing. Function provides over 100 advanced lab tests that give you a key
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91:30 functionhealth.com/huberman to get early access to function. the idea that we all have to become these sickos that love um that love self-punishment in service to just building up more dopamine reserves, that’s that’s definitely not the goal. I mean, I think one of the reasons that David Gogggins is so popular uh is well, there are many reasons. Um a he he is how he appears online. I mean, I’ve known David since before he had a book, since his before his first book. He was exactly that way. He was exactly that
92:00 way. He’s not playing a role, right? There’s no acting. This is how he functions. That’s great. It’s a life that most people are not going to embrace. Um, and if they do embrace it partially, I think it will benefit them tremendously. But he he sort of embodies that. He excuse me, he doesn’t sort of embody that. He embodies that. I think that being able to relax and enjoy things and really savor them uh is another source of of of I won’t say everything’s investing, but there are certain things that might look
92:30 like spending your dopamine that are actually investing them. And you described a beautiful one as walking with your wife these long these long hikes and walks like real relating in-person relating I think uh makes us feel so many things. I mean there’s so much science and psychology about this that I mean we definitely evolve to to connect to other humans. Absolutely. you know, so I I don’t think of it as um meaningless relaxation to to just connect with people and have a barbecue and just relax or just what what do they
93:00 call it? Like Netflix and chill can be a great thing if it’s not the only thing. The internet has allowed us a lot of interesting new ways to connect with other people. Um so we were talking before we uh hit the red button on record how I’m into the Grateful Dead, right? And I think that you can find a lot of different sort of strange tribes to belong to and they can be enhanced by the internet. You know, it’s like when I got into the dead, it was like, okay, now I’m listening to the the live shows. I’m going down this rabbit hole. Well,
93:30 I’d find these Reddit threads where people are discussing the live shows and like, hey, if you listen to how Jerry plays this song in 78 versus 79. And I’m like, oh, okay, listen. Oh, wow. Yeah, that’s really interesting. So then you start weighing in and then you’re friends with, you know, Deadhead 778 who you don’t even know who the hell he is or where the hell he lives, but like this is a great guy online that I can talk to and then you eventually sort of find yourself at the shows and you’re connecting with these people that you would probably otherwise never connect with in normal life and there’s like, you know, the hippie who’s got like two
94:00 bucks in a dream to get to the next show in tie-dye. And then there’s the hippie who’s got the Rolex and he’s taking his private jet to the next show on your right. But you’re all in it together, you know, and you’re sort of like connecting for this sort of big sort of group thing. And I think you could apply that to music, you could apply it to sports teams, this sort of shared cause. And the internet, I do think, can allow you to find those sort of many tribes, you know? Yeah, I love it. I just now um allowing myself to get familiar with the Grateful Dead. I did go to a bunch of
94:30 shows because they were from my hometown, right? Awesome. They California Avenue was where Drapers Music and some of those Grateful Dead band members worked and uh there was a great bookstore there, Printers, Inc. and uh so they were kind of an institution in the South Bay where I grew up. But uh I fell into a different genre of music, but um there’s some great music um that out there, but I think the culture around the dead, the fact that people would devote their entire lives to quote unquote following the dead. Um and still now like people
95:00 go Oh, totally. like with Fish and Dead In Company. This is like an outgrowth of the of uh of something that I don’t know of any other band that that had people change their entire lives in terms of the whole structure of their lives. Yeah. I mean, I went a bunch of times when they’re in Vegas at the Sphere. I have another fun thing and there’s like that shared sense of connection whether it’s a sports team, whether it’s a hobby, whether it’s a type of music. Um when we were when I was on this long hike, um you get within shooting
95:30 distances of towns and that’s where you have to go resupply. But you might be 40 miles from a town. So you’re like, “All right, we got to hitchhike, right?” So we got to ride into this town called Escalan, Utah. It’s this tiny town. So we go restock food, you know, we each eat like a 16inch pizza ourselves and like wings because you got to refuel. And then we’re at this gear store and we need a ride back to the trail head. It’s like 40 miles away. So, it’s like, how the hell are we going to find a ride? Like, this is going to take forever to hitchhike. I’m in this gear store and um
96:00 they happen to have this uh I can’t remember what it was. It might have been like a beanie or something that had a dead head on it. I picked it up. I’m like, “Oh, this is awesome.” And this lady comes up to me and she goes, “Oh, you like the dead?” Like, “Yeah, I like the dead.” And she works in the shop and she’s like, “Yeah, me too.” We start talking. Well, turns out this lady’s seen him like 500 to a thousand times was her estimate. Like, well, it’s a big estimate, but that’s a lot of shows, right? Um, and we just immediately connect and she’s like, “Oh, you need a ride back to the trail head.” I’m like, “That would be great.” Yeah. And it’s just like just that thing, that little
96:30 emblem of the dead immediately allowed us to have this conversation and have this fi this shared sense of connection. So, kind of finding something to identify with with people, I think, can be just like a a great adventure. And like you meet new people, like go out and find interesting communities to belong to, try stuff. I mean, this is the power. So, you had um Ryan in for the recovery and addiction podcast. Like that’s Yeah, that’s the power of recovery groups. It’s the power is in the group because you’ve got this shared
97:00 identity with people. You have people keeping tabs on you. You’re keeping tabs on other people. They help you. You help them. You share your stories. They know things about you that probably no one else does. And there’s an identity in that. And it’s powerful. It’s why that works. If you you know if uh I’m gonna forget the names of the founders, Bill Wilson if he found if he founded that online and was like, “Hey, we’re all just going to chat on AOL Messenger probably would have helped a lot of people, but it would not have the power that it would have of getting people
97:30 together to converse.” I think it’s harder for people to go out and do that today because there is a it’s it’s much easier to only do things sort of online and sort of, you know, be a little bit of a a hermit, if you will. And I think forcing yourself to go into new places, meet new people, try new things, get into new stuff, and go out and meet people in in person can be really powerful. Today, I wrote a post on 2% about the value of gathering and sort of
98:00 identifying identifying with something like whether it be a band or a team or whatever. Um, and I talked to this researcher. Um, she’s up in Oregon. I forget what university. Uh, and I’m sorry for that, but she talked about how, um, the internet when used appropriately can be a really great community builder. And she also said the best thing that can happen is when those type of communities then figure out ways to meet up in person. Like that’s that’s the perfect next step. And it all starts
98:30 with like, okay, we have this community online. Oh, I’m going to be in San Francisco. who in the group is San Francisco based? Let’s meet up and get coffee. And I do think you’re starting to see more of that happen. Like it’s happening on Substack with a lot of writers. Um for example, I do events that I call the Don’t Die event. And um it’s me. It’s this is different than the Brian Johnson Don’t Die event. Yeah, this is different. Yeah, this is different. This is the original Don’t Die. This is a different type of Don’t Die. Yeah, the original Don’t Die. Um what we do is it’s uh me and my friend
99:00 Mike Moreno. Amazing guy. Mike was a was a CIA case officer in uh Iraq and Afghanistan I believe and um we basically teach people like travel wilderness survival skills over two days and so it’s most of the people that come are from people who read my Substack and so it’s people who are often active in the comments. they they all know each other. Like people show up and they know each other from the internet and then we all hang out and we do awesome stuff together and it’s just like it’s the best. But it’s like that step to get
99:30 people in person I think needs to happen. And so one thing I’ve even thought about too is you hear a lot about how um people spend less time together and there’s a variety of reasons for that. you know, people will point to the sort of less activity in organized religion, which used to be the sort of hub of sociality in in towns. But I also think um things like, and I talked to a uh woman I love, she’s she
100:00 was with the Wall Street Journal. She’s back at the Wall Street Journal, a reporter. Um her name is Gwendalyn Bounds, Wendy Bounds and she wrote a book called Little Chapel on the River and it’s about she was at the Wall Street Journal uh when 911 happened and she was living in the city like she was taking a shower and the plants hit the towers and so to get out of the city she ended up moving to this town called Garrison, New York and the heart of this town is this old Irish pub that is right by the train station. And she’s like, “And people from this town would come to
100:30 this Irish pub and they might have one drink, two drinks, but it was like the hangout and you’d get, you know, people who were super right leaning, people who were super leftle leaning in the bar, and they would, you know, they’d give each other but it was all in fun.” And it was like the heart of community and gathering and human connection. And I think you’re starting to see a little bit of a death of places like that. You know, like the the community pillar
101:00 institution is sort of been replaced by, you know, chains or something. And like, yeah, people can gather at chains, but there’s not like that unique identity. It’s all like predetermined by someone in a corporate office 3,000 miles away. And I think there’s a case for like trying to find those places that still exist and hang out, whether it be, you know, the pub. You don’t even have to drink at pubs. I can tell you that. I don’t drink. Still go hang out at the bar. Um, and I love bars. I sometimes work in bars and I don’t drink. Yeah,
101:30 it’s great. Restaurants, whatever it might be. I think there’s a case to get out in the world. And again, you know, I’ll go back to the the comfort crisis that I think sometimes that is hard to just go somewhere. You’re like the new guy. Hey guys, you know, um, and to strike up a conversation with someone random. But I do think it is, um, really good for us in the long term. I think, too, the internet dehumanizes people, right? It’s, um, it’s easy to yell and scream at an icon that’s, you know, the
102:00 size of a thumbtack on the screen who said one thing, but if that same person was in person across from you, across from the bar from you, you may not even talk about politics with that person, right? And here you’ve, you know, people make these crazy death threats or something. Whereas like if that person was just across the bar from you, you may not even talk about that and you might actually think they’re a great person. I’ll give you another example. More hitchhiking. Um, so we had to get uh we got into this town when we’re on this hike, resupply. We need to get up to the
102:30 trail head. This trail head’s um 20 minute drive away or something. Um these people pull over and they say because we got our thumbs out, you know, we’re like old school hobos and um say, “Oh, do you need a ride?” And it was this couple from China. They had come over uh a week ago just for some vacation. They’re both from China. This was at the heart of the trade war. The trade war was at its apex when this happens, right? China had just
103:00 like decided they’re not even going to ship us the some rare minerals we needed. I wasn’t paying too much attention to the news out there, but I was aware of that. We get in the car with this couple from China and like that’s all happening in the world. And guess what? No one gave a about in that moment. All this media on CNN and Fox and social feeds and everything about the damn trade war. these two Americans, one of who worked in government for 20 years,
103:30 these two people from China, and we’re just connecting, talking about the United States versus what it’s like to live in China. Oh, you guys are academics. Oh, it’s fantastic. We’re just really, really connecting, and they’re doing us this huge favor of giving us a ride up to the trail head. And these are two people that like these, this is awesome. These people are great. and like no one gave a about all this noise happening that should seemingly put us in this like maybe tense moment, right? So I think that when you actually get in front of people
104:00 and face to face, people have about 75 million more things in common than they do things that are not in common that they could argue about. And it takes that interaction and going out into the world. I found that when I travel, people everywhere are far more kind, happy, willing to help than I would have ever expected. And I had high expectations going in. But it
104:30 takes those experiences to realize that. And I do think that if you’re kind of just existing behind a screen where it’s easy for people to shout, you get this distorted view of the world. It’s like go out, talk to people, have different experiences. You’re going to walk away realizing that, hey, most people are actually totally fantastic if you just give them the time today, talk to them, ask them questions, and be nice. Like, being nice is the number one tool in my tool book to survive and get along at my
105:00 job and do all these different like just be nice to people and you’ll find that most people are nice back. It’s this uh starting in the real world and perhaps bringing something online, you know, posting about it or writing about the great experience later as opposed to the online experience brought it into the world. The I have a friend that’s uh uh he’s a very accomplished musician and um he doesn’t do his own social media and um we get together for dinner once every couple of weeks and once I got out there and I said, “Oh yeah, I saw this thing
105:30 online.” He said, “I don’t want to hear about social media.” And I I realized in that moment I was like, “Okay, got it.” Like we we’re not going to talk about something that was on social media. Why would we do that in his mind like why would we do that? We’re here. Like why? Let’s have an experience now. And I think this can be easy too. And I’m I’m going to because I didn’t say this and it came to my mind when we were talking about Mogi. When I talk about this and I say, you know, something I did that might seem hard for people. Um I’ll put a cav caveat on that is that there’s way
106:00 more people out there doing even more extreme things. At the same time, there’s people whose entry point like you got to meet, you got to do the thing where you’re at. So, I gave this talk, right? And I talked about masogi in the talk and afterwards this lady comes up to me and she goes, “Hey, I had read your book and I learned about this masogi idea and she goes, “My masogi was trying sushi.” I go, “Trying sushi?” And she goes, “It’s trying sushi.” I go,
106:30 “Okay, tell me about that.” She goes,“I just always had this fear around sushi, but people told me it was good, but I just couldn’t. I couldn’t do it. I forced myself to do it.” She’s like, “I didn’t love it, but I didn’t hate it.” But more importantly, it taught me what other fears do I have about things that are probably totally fine. And that opened this big door for me to go try all sorts of new things. Like, oh well, I’m kind of afraid of flying alone. What if I went and took a trip and visited a
107:00 friend? Now I got to go hang out with my friend. Like it just opens doors, right? And so really, it can be anything. Can be something totally ex objectively extreme and crazy. It can be trying sushi. Just try something. So it’s really about pushing up against those edges in real life, wherever the edge is. Do you think it’s possible to structure one’s day around making the morning and day really tough? And when I say tough, I mean um in the sense that
107:30 you go against your um impulse to do things the easy way and then making your evenings and nights really relaxing. Yeah, I try and do that. Um I’ll get into the heinous details about my evenings in a moment, but I’ll tell you about my mornings. And I’d actually like to hear about how you approach this, too. Um so in the morning, I wake up uh usually very early. Now I’ll I’ll put a asterisk there that I also go to bed early. So, I wake up at like in between 3:30 and 4:30. What time do you go to sleep? Probably 8:30. Okay. So, wake up
108:00 at 3:30, get a cup of coffee, immediately I go to my desk and I just I write and I sit there and to your point, it takes a little bit of that warm up, right? Um, but I know as a writer, the more time I’m in my chair behind that keyboard, the more likely I am to produce words that um work for the goal I’m trying to accomplish. So, I need that say four or
108:30 five hours every single day. And it is hard. It’s usually like the first two hours of just like, “Oh, you suck at this. This is terrible. Why did you choose this career?” How does your body feel physically is writing hard for you? Like is the chair comfortable? Are you feeling strained? Are you relaxed? Is it all just mentally hard or is it physically demanding as well? I would say it’s more mentally. You kind of just get in it. For me, it’s like you get in this zone and you’re like, I got this
109:00 idea like how am I going to put this down? And you write something out. You’re like, that’s not it. But there’s like this one nugget. Okay, take that one nugget. Now, what can we do with that? And it’s kind of like putting together this really like kind of difficult puzzle. Um, but I’ve also found that eventually you kind of start to hit a stride and things start to work. And I I know that some days I’m going to sit there for five hours and I’m going to get out like 300 words and they’re going to be okay. But some days like just boom, magic happens and I might bang out like 3,000 words and I’m like those are those are decent those
109:30 are decent words. But if I’m not there doing that every single morning despite knowing that most days it’s probably going to be hard, like book’s not going to write itself, right? So, I do think like with a lot of things that um a person might want to improve in, you really do have to be willing to put in the time and realize that this is going to be there’s going to be really challenging moments. Um but those challenging moments, they also make the days when you get the metaphorical 3,000
110:00 decent words, they make it just awesome. So, to lean into that, so that’s kind of like how I approach my mornings and evenings. Um, like I kind of alluded to with social media, how now I’ve just kind of let off and just let myself be okay with just letting my brain turn off. My wife and I watch some pretty heinous reality television. That is our thing. Turn on big fan of Real Housewives of Salt Lake City. Okay, I will admit it. Okay. I I confess I’ve never seen that one. Is it don’t start
110:30 just watch stuff like that and it’s just like you know can connect over this totally just mindless show and it’s almost like it’s kind of a reset. It’s like you know those ladies throwing drinks in each other’s faces screaming at each other. It’s just a nice little beep. Your brain’s reset for the day. So you’re writing from about 3:30 in the morning, 4 in the morning until you said about four hours. Yeah, four or five hours. Yeah. All you’re getting up to use the the bathroom. Yeah. Yeah, you’re drinking some more coffee, some more water. Yeah, I might get another coffee.
111:00 You have breakfast before usually after after. And then what happens um between 8 am and uh and really house and Salt Lake City housewife she called after I’ve got like the key core writing in. I would say that then I um focus on what I not eloquently at all say would be the sort of you know, like we got all these emails to respond to, got to do sort of this task and that task. um whatever project isn’t sort of like my main writing probably
111:30 is not the right word for it because it’s important stuff but I just sort of value that writing time and then I will usually uh I’ll usually exercise before I eat dinner usually around 4 um I tried exercising in the morning for a while but I realized that that is like my peak hours for writing and that was kind of getting interrupted and so I’m like okay I’m good with it being before dinner. Do you do caffeine before your afternoon workout? I’m just curious. No, not usually. I usually shut off uh
112:00 caffeine probably around noon. Probably heard that on this podcast actually. But I found I actually years ago um I did a sort of caffeine audit and my caffeine was out of control. And so I just did cold turkey quit. I felt like I was literally had the like felt like I had the flu for about 28 hours and then I slept for 18 hours straight and then I had a headache for a week. Um but I felt a little better and
112:30 so I’ve tried to be a little more cognizant of how’s the intake going. Some days I’m better than others. You know, sometimes sometimes I go, “So you had two 32 ounce cold brews today. Um, seems like a lot of caffeine for one man, you know, but you can do I mean, you’re talking to a lifelong caffeine addict here. So, I I unless I’ve had a cold or a flu, I I don’t take breaks. And I consume an outrageous amount of caffeine. How much do you think you consume? Um, I’m going to shock some
113:00 people, but I’m very caffeine tolerant. I should say that first. And um uh and I’m actually a pretty mellow person. Yeah. Um, and I probably consume distributed from the morning until about 2 or 3 p.m. Usually 2 p.m. is my cut off. Um, somewhere between 600 and 800 milligrams of caffeine a day. But before people bulk at that, keep in mind that when you look up online, you know, you go, “Oh, Chad GPT, how much caffeine is in a typical
113:30 cup of coffee?” It’s going to say like 150 milligrams of caffeine. If you go to like a Starbucks or a Pete’s coffee or they’re brewing it much stronger than that. So a small probably has somewhere between 200 and 250. Medium is going to be 350 to 500. I once said that you know a venty coffee what I call a large um but just to orient people um can have 800 to 1,000 milligrams of caffeine. People like no way. And then I got some brush back on that. Look people have
114:00 tested this out. Different places are brewing them differently. So, what most people are consuming a lot more caffeine than than they realize, which is why they have a headache when they don’t drink it. Um, I like caffeine, but mostly in the form of of yerba mate, either this or or um uh just brewed leaves and it’s a very different um high. It it rises more slowly. It kind of arcs down. You if I drink a coffee um as opposed to espresso or yerba mate,
114:30 it’s a real punch. So, I’m not drinking 800 milligrams of co caffeine from coffee. So, very different. I mean, my day looks quite different than yours, but um I definitely agree that once we figure out our optimal circadian schedule, which for you sounds like you’re a true probably genetically from what we understand, early bird, you like to go to bed somewhere between 8 and 9:00 p.m., wake up somewhere between 3 and 4:00 a.m. Most people who try and get on that schedule really struggle um
115:00 and they start to revert to toward the more typical schedule or the night owl schedule. But most people, like me, go to bed somewhere between 10 and 11:30 at night. I can get to bed by 9:30, but it’s tough. Um, typically go 10:30 in bed. 11 I’m out. And then if I do that, I need maybe six and a half hours of sleep and I’m fine. Yeah. And then the night owls definitely exist. There are people for whom their genetic polymorphisms in in their genome make them want to go to bed at 1, two, 3 a.m. and sleep until, you know, 8, nine, 10,
115:30 even 11 am. And they do best. Uh but I agree that once you figure out your optimal circadian schedule um early bird typical or night owl that there are couple of three to fourhour pockets during the day when our attention and wakefulness is just at its greatest and you have to decide what you’re going to devote that to. And from what we understand that morning bout which for you falls very early is when the catakolamines dopamine norepinephrine
116:00 and epinephrine are really being released at their greatest amount. It’s almost like the bank account to invest. You okay you can you can invest now. You’re going to spend you’re going to invest. And I think many people spend it out. Um and exercise is great. I notic that card cardio, so to speak, um, gives me a lot of energy and focus in the hours that follow, whereas resistance training, which arguably I like to train hard and I like training heavy. Yeah. Afterwards, if I shower up and eat
116:30 something, I’m my brain is fatigued in a way that I’m like, damn, I I invested it in exercise. I I can’t invest in everything. So, I think finding those times when we are optimal is great. and not just spending it out on meaningless stuff. Yeah. And that’s what’s happened to so many of these I hear from a lot of young guys on this in particular. Um guys who are like hitting their early mid late 20s and they’re like my life is like not heading in a particular direction. the so-called failure to
117:00 launch kids and it’s scary and then you say well what are you spending your time on like well I get some exercise but then a lot of YouTube a lot of video games a lot of spending out and I realize that there are some people who can make a career out of video games but most can’t right so I I think um there are a lot of casualties of of that kind of spending out of that those key hours yeah I think so too and I do agree with you that it’s all about finding whatever’s going to work for you got to find that sort magic, those magic hours,
117:30 you know, as I would call them in a non-scientific way. Um, the example I always like to give is Hunter S. Thompson, where he would sleep until noon and then he would start writing at like 11 p.m. maybe, and he would go till 4 in the morning. And of course, he’s fueled by all this nonsense on, you know, going into that. But that was like his that was sort of his magic hours where he got the best work done. And it’s like you got to find you got to find what yours are. Yeah. It’s interesting. uh the reliance these days on energy drinks and caffeine and
118:00 supplements some of which we’ve talked about on this podcast like alpha GPC like they’ll have a meaningful um effect on your levels of alertness and focus. I think it’s a mistake to use those to just kind of exist like sipping an energy drink just to get through your day. I do think there’s a place for the occasional use of things like alpha GPC or caffeine. Certainly some people nowadays are using non-smoke non-vaped nicotine. Uh the great Joe Strummer said that one of the worst things that ever happened to creativity is people stop smoking. I’m not encouraging people to
118:30 start smoking. He died young sadly uh 50. Um but uh you know I think the idea there was that nicotine is cognitively enhancing. You don’t want to take it in in a way that kills you. But I think if you’re going to explore chemistry for um changing your your brain state, which is what it’s all about, um that you want to be really careful about what you do with that enhanced brain state. Yeah. Like just drinking a bunch of energy drinks to scroll the internet
119:00 is truly a waste of a life. Yeah. Getting all ramped up to do nothing basically, right? Yeah. Get all ramped up to do something. That’s a good rule to follow when you’re out on these adventures. Um, do you have all your comforts from home of like to bed at a certain at your early hour, up at an early hour? Um, are you still writing before you head out? I guess some days you can’t. Do you do you bring coffee? I mean, are there certain things that you bring with you so that you’re not just
119:30 in a complete stoic mode of you’re not like naked in the woods? I think that’s a different reality TV show, right? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. We don’t watch that one. Um, I will bring So, I’ll give you It kind of depends on the trip. Um, a lot of them if it’s uh international, things get a little skewed with time changes and things like that. Um, but if it’s sort of a outdoor adventure, I’m usually up pretty early with the sun. I also
120:00 notice that I sleep a lot better and longer when I’m out in the wilderness. Just way better. Um, so I usually get up and um I usually bring coffee if it’s an outdoor thing. Just like instant crap coffee, but it tastes great out there because that’s what you got. Um, I often don’t bring a stove when I do outdoor uh adventure stuff simply because one, it’s more weight to carry. Uh, two, I’ve heard horror stories of people who are boiling water on these awkward stoves
120:30 and then, oh, they knocked it into their lap and now we have like a serious emergency in the middle of freaking nowhere. Um, so I don’t bring a stove and so I’ll just mix the instant coffee with whatever temperature. The water temperature is like the outdoor temperature, right? So, if it’s 33 degrees outside, the water’s 33 degrees, I’ll drink that. And then usually just You don’t bring a stove on these long adventures? No. Um, wow. Yeah. Then I’ll get moving on this last hike. A lot of
121:00 lot of bars for calories. You’re basically just looking for foods that um so sort of the rules to kind of give people some uh advice here. And I can put that in the link we talked about. Um, one, it’s got to be good on my stomach. That’s rule number one because if you eat something that’s going to upset your stomach and you got to hike 25 miles, you’re going to have a really, really bad day, right? So figuring that out. um that tends to be foods that aren’t super super fibery and um are are a little more processed rather than
121:30 less. So your stomach’s not doing the processing. Um two, it obviously has to be calorie dense because if you take let’s say to give a kind of extreme example, 2 lbs in peanut butter, that has way more calories than two pounds in apples and it also takes up uh less room in your pack, right? So stuff tends to be calorie dense. like nuts, bars, things like that. Um, at night I’ll have like tortillas and salami and some dried fruit, things like that. Um, number three is that it has to taste good
122:00 because if you don’t like how it tastes, you’re probably not going to eat it. And if you don’t eat it, it’s not going to help you, right? You’re just carrying it. And then four, I kind of look at like nutritional composition. I’ll go, okay, am I getting enough protein? Now, granted, when I’m out in a scenario like that, you’re eating so much food that you basically get enough protein on accident. Like, it’s hard to not get enough protein when you’re eating 4,000 calories a day. But those are sort of the rules I follow nutritionally when I’m out on these journeys. Interesting. Yeah. One big win
122:30 that I found um are these bars from, and I have no affiliation with these guys. Um it’s I think it’s called it’s made by Met RX and it’s called the Big 100 Bar. So, this is like a bar designed for straight up meat heads, okay? Um, but it’s got like 400 something calories in. It’s got 30 grams of protein. And I stumbled upon these in these little in this little gas station in this the town is one gas station in a hotel. And they have all these different flavors. They taste like candy bars. And I’m like,
123:00 this is a thing that I am probably never going to eat in normal life, but this is magic out on the trail cuz it’s just a hunk of calories with protein and they like inject it with all sorts of vitamin and minerals. Just like way over fortified like this is trail food right here. As you pointed out, very different than what you recommend people eat back home. Totally. People should probably eat exact opposite way back home. Exact fruits, vegetables, clean meats, eggs, fish, you know, this kind of thing. Yeah. Generally, like my people will ask
123:30 me about nutrition advice and mine is basically just like try and eat more foods that uh are ingredients rather than have ingredients. If you can just follow that, you’re probably going to be all right in real life. In real life. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I definitely follow it. Not on the trail. On the trail, just just realize you’re going to be uh eating a lot of crap for 30 days and then when you get home or 40 days, whatever it might be, when you get home, maybe lean into salads. Well, it’s survival out there. You said you’re
124:00 losing weight even though you’re consuming a ton of calories when you’re out on these adventures. Yeah. So, for the last one, for example, that was 40 days. Um, we probably averaged 20 to 25 miles a day. Um, some days are a little more slowgoing because you might have to navigate a canyon. There’s a lot of ups, a lot of downs. Um, but we also had sections on the Arizona Trail, which is like this really well-maintained trail. Um, so we had like a 40 mile day that day. Um, and you have everything in your pack, so you’re carrying the pack. And I
124:30 was trying to eat between 4,000 and 5,000 calories a day. And I still lost about 13 pounds. Wow. Yeah. I talked to Herman Poner at Duke and he did some back of the hand math. He was like, “Okay, I’m going to figure this out.” He’s like, “Caveat. I’m just doing this in my head right now.” He’s like, “Okay, you How much did you weigh? How much did you Okay. He thought I was probably burning about 6,300 calories a day. Wow. Yeah, it’s a lot of work. The I think some people will hear 40 days and go
125:00 like, “Okay, I don’t have time for this. I can’t get away from this.” But you mentioned something that I think is worth pointing out and it it offers an opportunity for um people to access some of the incredible things that um these outdoor adventures provide. And that’s the reset to sleep and sleeping outside. There’s a uh a guy uh researcher at uh University of Colorado Boulder by the name of Kenneth Wright who’s done these really beautiful experiments where he takes students camping. Mhm. Where they go to sleep shortly after sunset. I think they have a nice campfire and
125:30 enjoy, you know, samores and socializing. And then they get into their tents and maybe read a bit and they go to sleep and then they wake up somewhere circa sunrise. Not exactly there, but but no one’s using an alarm. No one’s being told when to wake up and they get up and they do their breakfast. So, they’re just camping in the Colorado mountains for a couple of days. What he found was that just two nights and and the days around those nights of camping in the Colorado mountains um allowed them to reset their circadian rhythms for melatonin which elevates at night
126:00 kickstart the sleep process as many people know and for cortisol which is why we wake up in the morning the so-called cortisol awakening response you know precedes uh the time we wake up which for you comes at a god awful hour from but um and was able to reset that those cortisol melatonin rhythms which really bookend end uh our days and are and and really establish regularity of circadian rhythm. So while there are a lot of things one can do like cold showers and exercise and forced early hours and dimming the lights etc. when getting out into nature and camping for
126:30 a couple of nights really getting away from cell phone contact and getting more oriented to the sunrise and sunset as the cues for circadian rhythm um has a longlasting effect on uh circadian rhythms of these hormones and wakefulness. So, it’s, you know, it’s getting back to the fundamentals. I just offer that because some people might hear like 40 days and like I don’t want to like just eat peanut butter and when I hear that you don’t bring a stove, like now I’m looking at you different like this guy’s psychotic and in the in the in the good sense of the
127:00 word, right? Um, it’s awesome. No, no, it’s it’s when I say psychotic in the form of a good kind. Yeah. It’s the good kind. Um, but I think most people think, okay, I could probably get away for two, three nights. Yeah. and and camp or talk to someone who knows how to backpack and get a proper kit together and go backpacking. Yeah. And and the level of adventure and and life reset and meaningful experiences that one brings back from that and reset of circadian rhythm is is super significant. Totally. There’s and it’s amazing. I mean, when
127:30 you look at how much of the US is actually like developed, it’s some crazy number like only three 4% is occupied by people and the rest is just like farmland and open land. Like we have so much amazing, unbelievable public lands in the United States. And by the way, as I experienced, the best stuff isn’t necessarily in national parks. The best stuff is often in these sort of middle of nowhere places where
128:00 it would just be a giant logistical nightmare to try and put a national park there and get all these people into it. Like you can find some just incredible places in the US. And even I think three nights outdoors, two, one night, two nights, whatever, any amount of time outdoors, especially if it’s a little more rugged, a little more off the grid. And hell, you can even car camp. Like you don’t have to like walk 20 miles out into the middle of nowhere. You can car camp. I think that has just so many benefits. There’s um this guy at University of Utah named uh David Straer
128:30 and he did uh he’s done this work on what he calls a three-day effect and he’s basically found that after uh three days in nature like some really beneficial things happen to people and people come back reporting that they just feel so much calmer, more collected, they’re just like more reset, more aligned in their life. And I think that’s absolutely a thing. The reason he started studying it is because a guy who owns this sort of famous rare book shop in Salt Lake City, the guy’s name is Ken
129:00 Sanders, he was calling this thing that would happen to him the three-day effect. He goes, “Yeah, we just call it the three-day effect among my friends.” And he was like a friend of Edward Abby, the environmental writer. He’s like, “Yeah, we call it the three-day effect. Like after three days in the wild, you like just totally reset. You’re a better human. You think better. You’re nicer. You’re more empathetic. You’re just a great person.” And Strayer was kind of like, wait, I feel like that’s happened to me, but I’ve just never heard anyone sort of put a term on it. And so he started kind of doing some research into it. And it’s actually pretty interesting
129:30 stuff. Super interesting. I think uh my mind as the neurobiologist goes to these attractor states. I think that it takes some time for us to drop into these different ways of being and ways of being sounds kind of mystical, psychological, but it’s it’s also neural, right? is that our our nervous system shapes itself around the interactions and vice versa. And I think I find uh your work so interesting because you’re a sit in a chair for four hours cognitive thinker toil with words
130:00 and ideas guy, but you like these long extended adventures which are really um adventures of the body and mind. Uh I I’ve been wrestling with this idea as you can tell today. I wanted to just present your some ideas to you to get your your thoughts on them. Um, and one of the ideas and I’ve talked to a couple of MDs that work specifically on dementia uh about this and and the idea hasn’t been killed yet which is a sign that they might have legs and the idea is that um comes from this originates
130:30 with this sea squirt. Do you know the story about the sea squirt? No. So the sea squirt are uh I I’ve been learning about them. They’re in this um the film of a tunicata. They’re tunicquates, which means nothing. You when anytime somebody throws something like that or a Latin name, uh, they’re really just trying to impress you. But what’s interesting about tunicquets is that they live two lives. They have a nervous system. They live two lives. They they are mobile. They swim for part of their life, and then they at some point descend onto a a rock, typically, fix
131:00 themselves to the rock, and live the rest of their life fixed to that rock. And when they land there, they eventually learn how to harvest nutrients from from the ocean around them, but they eat their own nervous system. They eat their own brain, and they specifically eat they don’t really have a brain, but they eat the components of their nervous system that aren’t required for moving around anymore. Interesting. So, one idea, sorry to like noodle with this, and I was thinking, you know, we we hear so much now about the relationship between
131:30 exercise and longevity. And, you know, I try and get my zone 2 cardio. I definitely ruck. We’re going to talk about rucking. I do my resistance training. I’m very interested in some of these functional patterns folks online. They’re very um combative people, but they they’ve got some really interesting points about the need to do more um real world throwing, sprinting type activities. But here’s an idea. If we step back from the human species and we go, okay, what what do humans need? We need to reproduce, take care of our young, propagate, all the stuff we talked about before. But throughout
132:00 human evolution, humans have gotten to a point where in everyone’s life where at some point the young are old enough and and educated enough about what’s required to be a human that they don’t have to throw, run, or do any of these things. And perhaps, and someone should look at this, I think perhaps the areas of the brain that atrophy first, the neural pathways that atrophy first in everybody, we’re not talking about Alzheimer’s necessarily, are the areas involved with jumping, landing, throwing, navigating, uh, uneven
132:30 surfaces, um, lack of familiarity, you know, as and it could be that the deterioration of those pathways sets in motion a cascade of of things that cause the loss of neurons in other areas and then like so many things you know it tends to then we get like everyone gets demented with age. Yeah. No one is sharper at 90 than they were at 70. No one unless you know maybe they lost a lot of weight and took a bunch of you know acetyloline promoting drugs or
133:00 something but that’s very rare. So the idea here is that um maybe we’re a lot like the sea squirt. um we’re just starting earlier nowadays and that’s interesting and that perhaps some of the things that you’re doing um in these uh msogi adventures are um forcing you to do things that are maintaining brain circuitry that allow you to sit in that office and and and attack it with more vigor with each year. I I I I like this idea. Um first
133:30 of all, it’s not testable. That that sucks. We it would it’s going to be hard to do. You could do jumping and plyometrics and landing and look at brain scans. You could do that, but it’s going to be hard to do in the real world. But I like this idea because everything that you’ve told us is that we need to do the thing that we could easily offload onto devices or other people. But if we don’t do that, we actually have more uh pleasure in these moments of watching television with a spouse or
134:00 perhaps even more intellectual vigor because how old are you? I’m 38. 38. Um so if you were to now I’ I’m kind of leading the I’m seeding the question. Um, but if you were to kind of plot in your mind like your your cognitive vigor across these years before, during, and and now you’re continuing to do these massogis, would you say your cognitive vigor is is declining or is increasing or is staying flat? Definitely increasing. I’ll put the the the
134:30 confounding the confounder here is uh I stopped drinking when I was 28. So basically up to 28 I was a damn idiot. Um, but I think that where I’ve sort of taken things, I mean, I’ve definitely become a sharper writer, a sharper thinker over time. Um, and I think there’s something to that. I’ll say just from the perspective of a writer, you will write better and have more
135:00 material to work with and more interesting writing if you go out and do things. Shocker, right? There’s so many people who it’s just like entirely behind the keyboard looking at a screen, not even talking to another human being. Like even just the reporting part, they’re not even talking to another human being, much less like going out and going there and seeing what they find. So, just from a writing perspective, like of course I still sit behind the screen
135:30 and read the studies, but like I’m also going to go out and talk to this person and I’m going to go do these things that give me so much more to work with. And for the average person, like, okay, you’re not a writer. I get it. But that’s a story. Like, you want to die with a lot of badass stories. Like, that’s a life well-lived, right? You got to like shape your own narrative and go out and be able to find these moments and things that you’ve done that you can look back on and be like that was awesome. And if you can fill your life up with that because in the moment they’re awesome too. Like happiness is
136:00 sort of it’s not this end point, right? It’s like this rolling average of your behaviors. So what do your behaviors look like? Do you have more awesome behaviors or more crappy behaviors? Okay, let’s try and get more awesome behaviors. Okay, well what are awesome behaviors? It’s like probably involve other people. probably involve doing things that push you a little bit and and teach you something about yourself. It probably involves getting out of your damn office every now and then and away from the screen. And so just trying to get enough of that. That’s like, you know, that’s it’s a thing. And I think
136:30 you’re probably right. There’s a lot happening in the brain, too. But I’ll leave that up to you. Well, yeah. I I I I love the notion of creating a life of adventures and happiness as a a rolling average. I think that the word happiness is very very uh slippery slope. Oh, totally. you’re chasing feeling states and Buddhists have talked about this and people talk about this endlessly online. No one’s talking about being miserable is talking about uh feeling to make it neurobiological that feeling of dopamine being trickled
137:00 out in response to effort and getting the rewards of the that effort repeat. Yeah. And then the the rewards of course include the non-effort states of being able to lean into uh social things with more ease and more relaxation because you know you put in a really great day or just the richness of what you’ve built in your life. Like there’s that’s happiness. That’s like deep pleasure, right? That can only be built through through this kind of uh connection between the these different gears we’ve been talking about. And it just has to be it just has to be pursued and lived
137:30 out and no one does it perfectly. I think that’s an important component is like like you can’t you can’t do the perfect mogi just like because that sort of defeats the purpose, right? You’re supposed to catch splinters and feel miserable and that’s part of the the perfect mogi, right? Totally. You’re not supposed to feel great. That’s but it’s not you feel so miserable that you regret the entire experience. Yeah. You want you want some calluses. I’d be interested to hear your thoughts here because this isn’t a fully formulated thought. Um, but I
138:00 think a lot of it is channeling that same sort of framework into something that helps you over the long run. Right? So, if you think about like the the structure of a lot of the behaviors that hurt people in the long run can also have a similar structure to behaviors that help them that help them in the long run. So, I’ll give you an example. Something like gambling, right? It’s like this random reward schedule, right? But when people get hooked on that random reward schedule in the context of gambling, it’s like the house
138:30 always wins, right? And that leads to misery. When I think of my own job though, it’s a very similar random reward structure in terms of searching for information in an open environment with different charact and I don’t know what I’m going to get. You know, it’s like, okay, I’m going to this city. It’s like when I got to Baghdad, I’m like, I got to report on the drug trade. Uh, I’m going to have to link up with all these characters. I have no idea what’s going to happen. It’s so exciting. the reels of the slot machine are spinning, the dice are falling, same exact thing, but
139:00 it’s channeled into a thing that like becomes more rewarding to me over the long run. And so I would just like to hear like how do you think about taking that sort of structure and making it helpful for a person? Yeah. Well, the first thing is that the structure and the circuitry is exactly the same for gambling and going out and finding a great story and building a great story and having those experiences, including the pitfalls, the losses. um that by the way set a lower threshold for what you consider a win and then you ratchet up through there
139:30 and you know it’s like I’ll never forget my dad being a scientist who’s been on this podcast before. I’ll never forget the first time I published a paper in science which is like you know it’s like Super Bowl ring that he didn’t say congratulations. You know what he said? He said expect yourself to feel kind of low in a few weeks and expect yourself to wonder if it will ever happen again. And I said will it ever happen again? And he said, “Well, if I told you that then the experience wouldn’t be worth much, would it?” I was like, “Damn it.” The other thing I’ll just, this is answering your question uh indirectly.
140:00 Uh but it’s meaningful perhaps is that my graduate adviser when we published that paper, I was like, “Are we going to throw a party? Like, are we going to celebrate?” She’s like, “I guess we could get a pizza or something.” But um the celebration was the work. I was like, “What do you mean?” She’s like, “The work was why was the fun, right? You had fun doing the experiments.” I’m like, “Yeah, but are we going to celebrate?” We didn’t celebrate it. And as a consequence, you know, humbly, we went on to publish many, many more papers in excellent journals, not all in
140:30 science, uh, most of them in other journals. But that the point being that um, she was teaching me to attach the reward to the effort. And I was like, ah, the fun is doing the experiments, getting the paper like you have to take the reward and and and relegate it. Yeah. To a place below the effort. You can celebrate wins, but you you can’t let yourself internalize the the wins more than the effort to get there. So, there’s that. So, um yeah, so same circuit, it’s this dopamine circuitry.
141:00 Um and of course, when I say dopamine, it’s that’s a proxy for adrenaline and norepinephrine. Adrenaline is operating in the body to make you feel alert. Norepinephrine is operating in the brain to make you feel alert. So, those three work together. They’re cousins to like get out, get up and go, pursue things. And it doesn’t matter if it’s a 4:30 wake up or 4:00 a.m. wake up, sit down and mental movement or it’s physical movement. I mean, evolution designed it this way and it and it’s incredibly efficient and it has these pitfalls of gambling. Um, if you have a proclivity
141:30 for alcohol, alcoholism or uh methamphetamine or cocaine or if you like stimulants or um for the process like you know fill in the process addiction, shopping, sex, whatever it happens to be. Um and that base you’re you’re draining the bank account on these catacolamines and then the reset is always abstinence. Yeah. It’s just abstinence, right? Yeah. And then people like people in their second or third year of sobriety are like, “Oh my god, like the world just feels so incredible.” Like there are these these magnificent moments from things that I
142:00 just completely missed before. And it and it’s because what brings about pleasure now is a at a you could say it’s at a lower threshold, but the level of meaning is skyhigh relative to before. So So there’s that. So there’s real value to understanding dopamine catakolamine dynamics because you can identify where you are on the map at a given moment that can tell you the direction to go. I agree. And I wish I could tell you, you know, you have dopamine catakolamine circuits for writing versus gambling versus uh wandering through Antarctica. Not
142:30 wandering, but trying to survive Antarctica. It’s the exact same circuit. Yeah. Uh which is, you know, one of the reasons I I want to shift us to rucking. Okay. I really dislike rucking, but now you got me rocking. So tell tell us why rucking and things like it are so valuable and are distinctly different than like quoteunquote hitting the gym. So I’ll tell you how I sort of came to this realization, started writing about this in the first place is that um when
143:00 we were in the Arctic were hunting, right? Right. So, when you look at um why humans are good at running, and by the way, we’re good at two things. We’re good at running and we’re getting at good at caring. And I’ll tell you why we’re good at caring. So, the reason we’re good at running is because we evolved to run long distances to chase down animals in the heat and spear them. So, humans are really good at cooling ourselves in the heat, right? And we can run these long distances. Other animals can’t manage their heat. So, we’d slowly
143:30 but surely run down animals. Eventually they would get too hot, they’d topple over from heat exhaustion and then bam, we’d kill them. Okay. So this is a theory called it’s called called persistence hunting. So we won the thermmorreulation game. We run the won the thermorreulation game. Yeah. So we can we sweat. We don’t have much fur. And then our bodies are also designed for this type of persistence hunting. Um there’s a guy at Harvard Dan Lieberman who had this I think it was in 2004 uh paper about this how the reason we’re
144:00 built the way we are. One of the key reasons is uh so we could run long distances for persistence hunting. So I’m familiar with that research, right? I’m like, “Oh, that’s really interesting. Cool.” Like, “Yeah, this explains why I have like, you know, these big butt muscles, these arched feet, these whatever.” Um, so we go up to the Arctic, we’re hunting, eventually successfully hunted caribou, and we, you know, we’re taking every usable part of it we can. So we load our packs with all this weight. It’s like 100 something pounds in this damn pack
144:30 and start walking back to camp. And I’m just thinking about this research about, okay, humans evolved to run long distances so we could hunt. Great. What happens after you actually kill an animal? You got to carry that damn thing back to camp, right? And so it occurs to me, well, wait a minute. We’re also pretty unique among animals in that we can carry weight. like no other mammal can just pick up weight on its own and carry it a long distance. I was like,
145:00 “Huh, that’s interesting.” So, I just start looking into this and yeah, humans are the only mammal that can pick up a weight and carry it a long distance. And it absolutely shaped us into who we are. It allowed us to really conquer the globe because we could take tools into the unknown, right? We can walk. We can cover these long distances on our two legs and our feet, our hands are freed up to carry our tools, to carry whatever it might be. And it really turned us into who we are. Now the thing is is when you look at running, plenty of people run, right?
145:30 Like running and marathons, that is a popular activity. But how many people are just like carrying weight as a regular form of exercise? The answer was really not that many. So I’m thinking like, okay, who actually still maybe does this? And it turns out it’s the military. So rucking is sort of the main activity of physical training in the military. Just throwing weight in a backpack and going for a long walk. And I’ve actually started to sort of even
146:00 shift my language from using the term rucking to simply saying walking with weight or weighted walking. And the reason for that is is if I tell my mom, “Hey, you should rock.” She goes, “Oh, okay.” And she types in rock and she goes, “What the hell is this military stuff, Michael? I’m 75 years old. So, I’ve started to call it more walking with weight. So, it’s a little more approachable for the masses. Um, but I think the benefit of it is that you’re getting cardio stimulus because you’re covering ground. Um, but you’re also getting strength work because you’ve
146:30 loaded your skeletal system, your muscular system. Um, and that comes with a lot of benefits. You kind of got this twoin one. So, it generally will burn more calories per mile than walking or running. And that is simply because you’ve added extra weight. Of course, if you’re running, you might cover more distance in the same amount of time, but if you just compare it by distance, it’s burning more calories. And um I think it’s one of these activities that can really fill in gaps in people’s training. And to what you sort of
147:00 alluded to in your question is um there’s a variety of reason it fills in gaps, but one of them is simply that it gets people outside. Like there’s a lot of gym people who are like, “Yeah, I lift all the weights, but like I’m not doing that running thing.” A lot of people can’t run and like, oh, by the way, walking feels a little too easy. I’m not going to do that. So, if you can throw some load on someone and have them go for a walk, it gets them outside. Helps them preferentially burn fat, it seems, compared to um something like running. So, there’s this interesting
147:30 study, and I’ll caveat this by saying it was a very small study. I think it was only 12 people cuz they could only find 12 crazy enough people to do it. It was on uh backcountry hunters in Alaska. And so these guys carry these heavy packs out into the mountains for, you know, a week or whatever and they test them and they ended up losing um a significant amount of weight, but it was all from fat. They actually gained like a very minute amount of muscle. And that really shouldn’t happen in the context of going out and losing weight, right? You’re probably going to lose fat along with muscle, but with this, they ended up
148:00 losing mostly fat. So I just think it’s this amazing activity that we really wo out of our lives due to technology. Humans evolved to carry. People were carrying babies all the like every day in the past. We’d go hunt and we’d have to carry all the meat back to camp. We would carry food that we gathered. Like gathering. We’re hunter hunters and gatherers. Gathering is literally walking around finding some food, carrying it, finding more, carrying it back to camp. And then we got, you know, cars, we got grocery
148:30 carts, we got XYZ, we got furniture dollies that we don’t carry as much. And I think we’ve um lost a really important form of human movement and physical activity that we’re literally born to do. And so my uh suggestion to all the listeners is get some weight and carry it. easy to throw some weight in a backpack and go for a walk and um it’ll be good for you. How much weight and how
149:00 far? So, if someone is just starting, I tell them to start light, I think. So, after I published the comfort crisis with the um there’s a chap there’s an entire chapter on um walking with weight or rocking. I got all these people in the military rocking destroyed me. Okay. Well, how much did the military start you with? 100 pounds. It’s like, well, yeah. It’s like if you did anything at that intensity immediately, just immediately went into like the red,
149:30 you’re going to get injured. You know, it could be squatting. It’s like, yeah, I tried to max out on my deadlift every time I deadlifted. The first time I deadlifted, therefore, no one should deadlift, right? You need to ease into this. So, I tell people, um, women can start with anywhere from five to say 20 pounds suggest. Um, men anywhere from 10 to 30 depending on your fitness level. I would rather have someone really ease in and sort of get used to it because a lot of people will say, “Yeah, I went a little too heavy and it really sucked.”
150:00 Like, I want you to sort of on ramp slowly. And then from there, you can build up over time. And so, I have plenty of, you know, women who might weigh 130 pounds who now use 30 pounds, which is a significant amount of weight. Yeah. Um, I’ll have men who, you know, maybe they started with 20 and they’re like, “That’s way too light.” Like, “I I just have too much of a base of fitness.” It’s like, “Okay, good. Well, I’m glad we started there, though, so we know for sure.” And then they’ve ramped up to say 40, sometimes 60. I mean, for me, I generally my sort of go-to weight
150:30 is probably 35 to 40 pounds. And I find that that’s a weight where it’s uncomfortable. It’s challenging, but it’s also not so soul crushing that I’m like, I got to end this walk. Like, this this absolutely sucks. I can still enjoy it. And of course, I’ll go heavier sometimes if I’m going really far. Sometimes I might be like 20 pounds or something. You know, I think it’s really just like start light, take a walk, see how that feels. You know, doesn’t have to be too complicated. Yeah. I said I I hate
151:00 rocking, but um I love the way I feel afterwards. Maybe that’s the form of exercise I don’t like there. I just outed myself as not liking a certain I I find that um it forces me to pay attention to some of the smaller stabilizing muscles like you can’t be as loose with your gate. You have to be pretty thoughtful especially if you’re hiking. Um you can’t stride too long here or there. You just naturally keeps you moving more like a a packed mule. Uh which I think can be helpful. Um, and I
151:30 do notice that when I take off the rucks sack or the vest um, on a different day and I and I run, I definitely feel faster and lighter just by way of comparison. Probably a real real change too due to the st small stabilizing muscles. This thing about losing more body fat will get will get people motivated. People love people love that. Works. I think it’s also a good tool for runners because the injury rate is much lower. So if you’re within a reasonable amount of weight like of course if you go up to these crazy weights. So, I generally tell people if you just want like a firm number, don’t go over 50
152:00 pounds. Um, if you want a more sort of dialedin number to your body weight, don’t go over a third of your body weight. There’s a lot of military research that suggests that, but even for me, like I don’t go up to a third of my body weight all that often, unless I have a really good reason. I’m training for something like backpacking or hunt or something. Um, so if you’re in a within a reasonable amount of weight and not too heavy, um, the injury rate is exceedingly low. It’s not that much higher than the injury rate of walking
152:30 and walking is pretty safe. Do you ever experience the kind of uh crossover of understanding between uh your physical pursuits and your um creative intellectual pursuits? Like do you find that for instance if you you rock that there’s a certain you start to recognize where the resistance is? Is it putting on the pack? Is it uh you know a third of the way through you tend to feel pretty good? Do you notice those contours and do they map to the contour of sitting down and and writing? Um that
153:00 it’s hard at first, then it gets easier and then at some point there’s a breakthrough or else it just plain sucks the whole time. I think so. I’d like to hear your experience with running, but my experience with running is that the first say three miles, they suck. I go, this is hard. Like things just start, you just feel like resistance. And then eventually, usually after say mile three, all of a sudden I feel like, oh, I could do this forever. I could do this
153:30 the rest of the day if I wanted to. But if I don’t go through that first three miles, I’m never going to get to four plus or whatever it is. And I do feel like that’s the same um with writing where it’s it’s challenging at first. the things aren’t moving, but then things just things start to move, you know, and you but you need to you need that buy in. Like you need the you’re not going to have those amazing four plus miles after mile four or sentence after the 20 paragraphs you deleted if you don’t run the first three miles or write the first 20 paragraphs. And then
154:00 a related question is um specifically about writing, but it could carry over to school, music, or any sort of um kind of pursuit. Um you said that some days getting 300 quality words feels like an accomplishment. Other days you get 3,000 words. Do you think prior to the days that you got the 3,000 words that your brain is processing it unconsciously? Do you think it all happens in the session or is there something like if you look
154:30 back into your days and and um hours before those incredible days where you just feel amazing? Can you map it to anything or is it just mysterious? I think it’s somewhat mysterious. Uh but I I guess here’s how I would answer that. is there’s some writing I’ve done where you sit down and it’s just it comes out and it comes out not needing many edits and it’s just like like I’ll give you an example um a
155:00 lot there might be some bias um but a lot of my friends and people who’ve read my work say one of the best things I’ve written is this essay I did about my mom it originally appeared in Men’s Health in 2017 maybe um it’s called my badass mom I I have it on my Substack. I’ll link to it in that um post. I wrote that in about seven minutes. Sat down and just and it’s like a thousand something words and it was like printed it and was like I don’t know if
155:30 I need to change this. And so why is that? Because I’ve been thinking on that piece for 30 something years and it was just that was the moment and just the energy got captured and then that was it. A good example of this, and this is a person at a much higher level, is um I was watching a Tom Petty documentary. Apparently, he sat down, flipped on a recorder, and just came up with Wild Flowers. Literally started just playing those chords and making up the lyrics as he
156:00 went and recorded Wild Flowers. Just went, “Holy shit.” Right? That is like there are times when like magic happens and just lightning strikes and you got to be you just got to be there for it though. It’s like I think things like that can happen. But I think to your point, why could that happen? It’s because he had like all this experience that just sort of like was swelling and bubbling under and finally it just like converged. Brings it me to a earlier point in our
156:30 discussion. I I genuinely believe that the raw materials of great writing and music and science and uh you know whatever podcasting uh visual art, painting, those raw materials are collected away from the the actual craft and so you have to get out into the real world and experience those. Where have you gotten your best material, scientific work, ideas you’re flowing into podcasts? like how does all that unfold for you? For me, you know, PubMed
157:00 is um it’s like the it’s the intellectual wilderness of published material as our books and lectures, but mostly PubMed. So, the more time I can spend foraging papers and looking at graphs and seeing things and and connecting it to something else and um that’s where you know the ideas, those are the raw materials. Yeah. like like this year I haven’t been doing quite as many solos as I work on the book, but
157:30 I’m getting back to solos soon and I’ve got these like folders upon folders of papers that no one’s ever discussed out there that I think have real gems in them. So those are that’s those are the minds in which I’m mining for information that I then have to work with. So for me it’s PubMed and occasionally it’s getting on the phone like I did yesterday with a neurosurgeon friend of mine and having a discussion about the Vegas nerve and realizing that everything that’s out there about the Vegas nerve everything is exactly backwards. Interesting. And going and I
158:00 was like is this possible? And he’s like yeah and I’m like why hasn’t the narrative been corrected? And he’s like well because there’s never been a a a real neuroscientist talking about it. I was like, “Oh, wow. We have it exactly backwards.” Just for not to be cryptic here, the vagus nerve, even though it’s classified as parasympathetic, is not a calming pathway. It’s a pathway by which physical movement wakes up the brain. Period. Or mechanical changes in the gut wake up the bra. It’s all excitatory. Everyone thinks the vagus calm down. No, the only quieting signals come from the brain to the body. Interesting. And there are a few of them in there, but
158:30 the vast majority of the Vegas is this way that the way to wake up your brain is to move your body. So that’s um anyway I don’t want to go too far down this rabbit hole. This though this sounds like what I was just talking about when I’m in a place and having to find information for a story and I experience it’s that you use the word foraging, right? It’s that that like the chase of the the thing. What’s the thing I’m going to find here? I got this question. I got to go find these and I don’t know what I’m going to encounter out there in the wilderness as you put
159:00 it. That is the best. It’s why people get hooked on social media. It’s why people get hooked on gambling. It’s why people get hooked on dating apps or whatever the hell it is. I think the problem today is that you see it getting put into um technology and leveraged in a way that maybe hurts people over the long run. Whereas if you can find a way to leverage that as you have and are telling me now that helps you in the long run, that’s like the unlock, right? Yeah. Yeah. That’s what a lot of these failure to launch um kids
159:30 are are not um accessing totally. And Anna Lemi of you know the author of Dopamine Nation has said this you know when she said like what what do you what are people who haven’t found their passion supposed to do and she’ll say mow the lawn and people go this just sounds like a mom telling me what to do but she she understands it’s the same circuitry. You’re trying to get that that you do something you don’t want to do you complete it it’s job well done. You’re learning a process and then you start to, you know, um, superimpose the understanding of that
160:00 process onto things that are hopefully meaningful and and generative, you know, as opposed to destructive. That the problem is it’s like a trail where on either side you can slip every day you can slip down the slope of numbing out or drama. You’re trying to stay on a trail to keep it in the language of Michael Easter like you’re trying to stay on a trail this narrow and you don’t know where it’s going and it’s splitting off and you don’t know which is the right one and and there just so many opportunities to slide down the the edges totally every day all day and
160:30 those edges continuously get tweaked to be slipperier, easier to fall down, steeper. So in scarcity brain I um so I live in Las Vegas, right? And so you see people playing slot machines all day long and there’s slot machines everywhere. And I just look I go, why do people do that? Because everyone knows the house always wins, right? You want evidence? Why would there be those bajillion dollar casinos down there if people were
161:00 actually winning at gambling? And I’ll keep this story short, but I ended up in this um casino that’s new, but it’s used entirely for research on gambling behavior. Um levers, I’ll say, that can be pulled in casinos to get people to effectively gamble more. And it’s funded by um Caesars is one of the companies in it. There’s also a bunch of tech companies in there. And I think that that is like a metaphor for the world we live in
161:30 where now because things can be tracked and digitized that like people who are using this in a way where it’s maybe arguably not helping people in the long run. There’s just so much information that that saw can continuously be sharpened and sharpened and sharpened. I think slot machines are also just the ultimate metaphor because they um in the 80 up until about 1980 no one played them and um then you had a guy come in in the 1980s his name was Cy
162:00 Red and he had noticed that his kids his grandkids would play Atari all day long. He’s like they just get hooked on Atari and he’s like that’s interesting. what can I take from that and apply to these machines that I make? So, what he does is he makes the first screenbased slot machines. And when slot machines go screenbased, all of a sudden you can program the odds rather than be constrained by actual spinning reels
162:30 because there’s only so many symbols you can fit, right? So, now you can offer this total crazy world of different combinations and jackpots. and he realizes, oh, what we can do because we have all these options now is we can have people bet a bunch of different lines. So on like a on a digital slot machine, you can bet like 40 different ways the line is going to go and the things are going to fill up. And what we can do from there is that if you get a win, you might quote unquote
163:00 win, but let’s say you bet a dollar, you’ll win say 50 cents or 40 cents. That is what casino companies call a loss disguised as a win. The thing is is when that happens to people doesn’t necessarily register as a loss. Something exciting happened, right? And so all of a sudden the machine can start have something exciting happen far more times, but you’re just slowly losing your money instead of quickly losing your money. So the reason that people
163:30 weren’t playing slot machines up to 1980 is because simply by the constraints of space and the way that reels were like physical reels, you just couldn’t win all that often. So you might play 20 games and you nothing ever happens. So that behavior is going to extinguish like really quick. But if you can get someone on a machine where like maybe every third pull, maybe every second pull, something happens, the machine lights up. Ding, ding, ding, ding, ding. Congratulations. You won. You won 40
164:00 cents on your dollar bat. Isn’t this exciting? Congratulations and welcome to Las Vegas. Now, all of a sudden, you start to see slot machines go from like being thrown in the corners of casinos to taking over casino floors. So, they now bring in 85% of uh casino revenues. And people spend more money on slot machines than they do uh books, movies, and music combined. And it was really just this tweaking of this perfect reward schedule where you’re getting just the right amount of rewards at a random schedule and it’s just been
164:30 sharpened. And then you see companies go, “What the hell’s happening in Vegas?” And then that gets placed into social media, into dating apps, into online shopping. Like you go on shopping places now there’s a damn spinning wheel, right, to get a discount. It’s like that’s what happens when you walk into a Las Vegas casino, too. First thing you see is a spinning wheel because it’s a suckers game and then just spread everywhere. Wow. Yeah. And the speed. Speed is a big
165:00 thing. So, the other thing with the spinning reels when it’s physical, you pull this handle, it’s a slow process. Pull, clunk, clunk, clunk. Okay. Pull, clunk, clunk, clunk. So the CI red guy, he realizes, hey, this pulling the handle thing, that’s just slowing people down. What if we made the spin a button? And what happened is the average slot gamer went from playing 400 games an hour to 900 games an hour. Yeah. Swipe right, swipe left, swipe
165:30 right, swipe left. Whoa. Infinite scroll, right? Infinite pages that just load as you shop. You want no friction. Everything needs to be frictionless. The faster you can do a behavior, the more likely you are to do a behavior. And this all got figured out in this strange, heartless, but freaking beautiful town I live in called Las Vegas. Wow. Yeah. I would love to go to a casino with you sometimes. Just sometime
166:00 just to like watch you analyze people and be like, that’s what’s happening to this person. Well, you their baseline on dopamine is dropping. They’ll get the little inflections, the wins or the perceived wins, right? what you don’t perceive is your baseline. Right. Right. We’re not in touch with our dopamine baseline. We’re in touch with the inflections from that baseline. And and that can be very distracting. I mean, and there’s a whole set of parallel conversations about addiction here. Uh I mean, this is what you just described. um makes me remember what Anna LMK, one
166:30 of our first guests ever on this podcast, right as Dopamine Nation um was published said, which was that her formerly addicted patients who get sober from whatever cannabis, alcohol, gambling, whatever it is, that they are her heroes. And I thought, oh, that’s beautiful, right? She her patients are her heroes. What what more beautiful thing could a doctor say? She’s an MD after all. And now she’s saying, “No,
167:00 no. I not only do I respect and admire them, but they’re my heroes because they are better equipped to deal with the landscape of life than people who have not experienced the deep hole that addiction can bring and then getting themselves out of it and understanding these dopamine dynamics, these catakolamine circuits as I’m referring to them.” That’s what she was saying. She wasn’t saying they overcame a lot. I mean she was saying that too but it was that they understand life at a deep level to be able to go into the world
167:30 now and to really glean tremendous meaning and benefit from the smallest of things and that’s where I distilled it down to as I needed to make it uh succinct for social media ironically to the statement that addiction is a progressive narrowing of the things that bring us pleasure and that happiness or maybe even enlightenment if there is such a thing is a progressive expansion of the things that bring us pleasure. But what she’s saying is these people were in the pit, got out of the pit, and therefore she admires them. So, um gosh,
168:00 I want to visit this um very diabolical casino. I guess all casinos are kind of diabolical. I actually really like gambling. Um my team knows this. Um I do too. I really enjoy it. I I it changes my um internal kind of RPM. this vague language here, but when I I play uh a little roulette or I’ll like just I don’t know gamble on a on a game or something like I can feel the lift it gives me, which is why I don’t gamble. I
168:30 know myself and I can feel that thing. It’s like a it’s an energy that feels kind of like throughout the body and and you’re unaware of of really um anything else. It’s a little bit of a tunnel. And I’ve never gambled much money. I’ve never thought to, but I recognize that feeling and I’m like, “Oh, no.” Yeah. Yeah. You You have it, too. I enjoy it. I also once I hit a certain amount of and I keep my threshold very low for when I’m going to gamble because I live
169:00 in Las Vegas. Like, probably not a good idea to get really into gambling if you live in a town where it’s everywhere. Like, you go to the grocery store and you can gamble. Um, so I keep it pretty low. We gamble like once a month. I mean, we’re like, you know, we’re not spending much money, but it’s enjoyable. That’s that’s the thing, right? Is like with so many things that can be um addictive is there’s vastly more people that can go in, have a little bit of fun, that was a good time, and then move
169:30 on with their life. And then there’s a small subset of the population that gets, for whatever reason, it’s that thing that does it for them, and it sucks them in. There’s also because we’re talking about gambling and addiction. There’s uh some research. I believe this woman was at NYU and she studied uh problem gamblers and went to Las Vegas, interviewed a bunch of them and she found that a lot of the seriously problem gamblers when they would get a big win, it would piss them off. And
170:00 here’s why. Because when you get a big win, if it’s over 1,200, now you got to pay taxes on it. They weren’t there necessarily to win. They were there to just get in the flow of the machine and just have the ups and the downs and just like ride that out and having a big win, it would interrupt that and that would frustrate him, which is just nuts. the way you offer up these real life
170:30 examples for me and I know for the listeners provides such a rich um substrate for for understanding the the kind of universal circuitry and I’m so grateful to you for that. You talked earlier about the the speed of the of the slot machine. Yeah. So what I think is very dangerous um and we talked about before on this podcast is um this notion of dopamine that’s not preceded by effort. But I think you said it best and I’d like to replace that with something that’s uh
171:00 much more fasile for people and hopefully intuitive as well. Basically, anytime we find ourselves in frictionless or low friction foraging, we’re in serious trouble. Get out. Get out then. Like the moment you you’re in a frictionless foraging mode, your your baseline’s dropping and you don’t realize it. Totally. A good exa a good example of a way this was used um relatively recently that has I think been disastrous especially for younger men is in um sports betting. So sports
171:30 betting gets you know legalized in a bunch of different states. Well, it used to be that in order to place a sports bet, you had to drive to the casino and you could bet on the game that was hours away and then maybe you would watch the full game at the casino. How long does a game take? three hours. So, you wait at the casino and then you either cash in or, you know, you lost your bet. Well, once it gets sort of legalized and now it’s in all these different states and
172:00 it goes to cell phones. Okay. So, now it’s like I don’t even have to drive to the casino. I can do this right now through two buttons. And then one thing that the gambling industry did that was good for the profits, probably not good for the user, is to go, okay, well, if we know that speed will increase gambling rates, and the more a person gamles, we can look at the math and go, we just need them to gamble more because that’s how we win our money. It’s in the volume. Um, what can we do to solve this problem of the fact that a game is three
172:30 hours long because how many games are there in a day? Wait a minute. What if you could bet on a play? How many plays are there in a game? I don’t know, hundreds. Okay, let’s bet on this play. So, now you have like these live in-game thing. Like, is this person going to score up to bat? Is this There’s all these different ways a person can bet. And then the addition of uh parlays as well where you’ve got like 12 teams or whatever and like these like bonus things they throw in. It’s just like it
173:00 is a train wreck. When you said there’s a growing problem nowadays among young men, I thought you were going to talk about frictionless foraging and online pornography. Oh yeah, that’s we got we got plenty of problems. And so what I’m realizing is there are numerous examples of this out there. But hopefully this framework of um rate and um low frict low friction high-speed foraging means you’re you’re just gonna end up in a pit. Yeah,
173:30 totally. You gota figure out ways to slow things down if you can. I think there’s I think it’s hard but I think there’s ways to do it. Um another interesting example and this one isn’t I don’t think is as sort of onetoone as the others we’ve been talking about but there’s a guy from junk from the junk food industry and you see this rise in junk food in the 1970s and what happened is um sort of like the casinos looking at sports going well like well these things are long there’s long stretches between these events. Um in the 70s the
174:00 food industry was like well people are eating three square we need them to eat more food. What if we invent snacking let’s make snacking a big industry. So they start they come up with this new thing snacking right like snacking becomes this thing. And this guy from the junk food industry basically said if you want to get a um a junk food to sell and take off it’s got to have three V’s. It’s got to have value. It’s got to have variety. And it’s got to have velocity. meaning cheap, meaning lots of different
174:30 options. So, think of Doritos. There’s like 10 different flavors, right? You got nacho cheese, normal cheese, chili cheese, whatever, on and on. Uh, and then velocity. It’s got to be quick and easy to eat. It’s got to be a food that you can just pound a bunch of calories in one sitting and want to just keep going. And once they sort of lock that in, you start to see that’s really you start to see obesity take off in the 70s in the US or mental obesity and Tik Tok. Yeah, seriously. I mean, again, these these uh these parallels between the
175:00 physical and the cognitive, right? You know, it’s I mean uh there’s a incredible moment in the the Bad Men series where they bring a a um a vending machine into the office and suddenly, you know, like people are eating at work before they would leave to to go eat. No one was eating at their desk, right? I remember uh when I was a postocck no excuse me when I was a graduate student so this would be 2000 to 2004 when I was doing my PhD we had a German postoc come from overseas and um and he was just
175:30 blown away that people would take their coffee in their car now you hear this you’re like of course he was like this is crazy like you would go to the cafe you would drink your coffee or you would make a coffee at work after lunch and then drink it in the lunchroom and then go back to your bench and But everyone’s walking around. He’s like, “Everyone’s walking around with their coffee all the time.” Like, “What’s going on here?” You know, now he’s a professor up at the University of Oregon. I bet you he uh he carries his coffee around. Yeah. He’s been here a while. But um he was like,
176:00 “This is crazy.” Yeah. Like people carry their drinks around, you know, and now you’d be uh you’d be hardressed to find someone not carrying their coffee out of a coffee shop. Most it’s it’s more like a like a fast food restaurant. You’re trying to get people in and out as fast as possible. Yeah. and and snacking in general, just food, eating food in all sorts of situations, too, I think, is is relatively new. I mean, if we were getting more productive and there was more incredible creative work, I’d say, okay, fine. Like, it’s all in service to something else. But once again, we land
176:30 ourselves in the in the landscape of neuroscience where it’s one circuit. So, um I don’t believe how you do one thing is how you do everything. Otherwise, based on my strawberry hole example earlier, like I’m really in trouble. Yeah. But I believe that we have areas of life where we are a little bit uh less regimented in others where we’re even just like outright neurotic. But I do think that once we start to see these patterns and where they are, um hopefully it helps people navigate better. Uh I mean, I think the way you described they’re
177:00 making the the the the slopes on the that narrow trail very like steeper and steeper. It’s getting more perilous to be a human. Yeah. It’s getting riskier, harder despite these conveniences. And it’s it’s no coincidence. It’s it’s because of the conveniences. Yeah. And I think too one of the issues is we face is that a lot of this is is all technologically driven. Um but one of the issues becomes that um it’s becoming harder and harder than ever to opt out of the technology.
177:30 So I’ll give you an example is I have this uh uncle and um he’s old school railroad worker, not a big fan of people. does best when he’s in his 1960s bus up in the mountains just alone. Awesome. Awesome dude. Far out. Um he was totally anti- getting a smartphone. He’s like, “No, I’m not getting a damn smartphone.” Like, “No, no way.” Well, now that guy can’t even get on a plane if he wanted to without a smartphone, right? So, like there’s all these things
178:00 in life that you normal you basically have to do to function that run through a smartphone. And by the way, the smartphone is the thing that is making you crazy. So you can’t even opt out of the technology. And that’s where it starts to get scary. One thing that I’ve done that’s been very helpful for me is I put social media. So Instagram and X on a on an old phone. That’s smart. So if people send me something like if you were to send me a clip on Instagram, I can’t on my normal phone. I I can’t look at it. I mean, I suppose you can go in
178:30 through the the annoying thing where you have to cancel out some windows, but I just don’t do it. And by the end of the day, no one writes to me and goes, “What do you think of that thing I sent you?” you know. So, um, so I make very designated time that I’m on social media and then, you know, I don’t access it elsewhere. But it is tough. I we have the fact that we have to set up these barriers. Yeah. But you’re doing incredible work. I I must say I I think of you as a researcher even though you’re a writer. you research things in depth uh for your writing and uh it’s
179:00 clear you put so much care and time and thought into your craft and I’ve loved your book, The Comfort Crisis. I uh we’ll put links to all your books and to the Substack links that were uh discussed today. Um I’m curious what the next book is. I feel like you should write a book about addiction and dopamine and you know how to overcome it. You might have the the I I know that you have the recipe. He told us the recipe today. Um, can you share with us what it’s about or is that like parents
179:30 who are expecting a kid revealing the name before it’s born? You’re not supposed to. I think it’ll be a mental health extension of the comfort crisis and um a little bit of a case for adventure. And you know, I think the question that I really grapple with is why when you look at our world sort of objectively, things have never been up better than ever. Look at all the numbers. like we’re living longer. More people know how to read. Fewer people are hungry. You can get from point A to point B in like 30 minutes. It used to
180:00 take you, you know, a entire day to walk that. All these things. And yet people are less satisfied and more neurotic than ever. So it’s like, well, why is that? And then what is the answer to it? So I think the book will probably get into that somehow with the with the uh my long hike I just did being the overarching narrative and some lessons I learned along the way. Awesome. Yeah. Um, and let me thank you for having me on doing the work that you’re doing. You’re changing a lot of lives, man. Um,
180:30 I can’t tell you the number of people because I I got sober when I was 28. I can’t tell you the number of people who have reached out and said, “I watched this Huberman episode and I decided to stop drinking and my life is way better.” And that’s like bam, that’s like all happening right here. and the amount of people that’s rippled to and changed. And not just them, because when one person stops drinking, it’s not just their life that improves. Everyone in their orbit’s life improves if they drink like I did. And so that’s awesome.
181:00 And everything else you’re doing is awesome. So, I really appreciate you having me, man. Thank you. Uh, I’ll take that in. And I want to thank you for coming here today and for uh sharing with us your knowledge and wisdom. It went places I didn’t anticipate. And as always, I learn from you. Uh, as I started off today’s conversation by saying, you’ve completely changed my life because I do things differently every single day. I look at the friction points of like I don’t want to do this as like opportunities and I do think it’s made uh my life better and hopefully me better for the other people
181:30 in my life. I also curse you every day. Decide to save this to the end. I have a 72lb kettlebell set in my living room. And when I wake up in the morning, I pick it up and I suitcase carry it back and forth once with one arm and I suitcase carry it back and forth with the other arm and the entire time I’m cursing you because awesome. It hurts. It doesn’t feel good to do first thing in the morning. My grip isn’t as strong as it is in the midm morning after a cup of coffee. And um I have this little forearm twinge thing. But I told myself
182:00 if I do this every single day, then I’ll be able to um continue to do it the rest of my life. It’ll probably make me live longer. And that’s a that’s a uh Michael Easter um curse cursing carry process done every single day. So you’ve changed my life for the better in uh some painful ways that pay off certainly with less pain down the road um and certainly with more meaning. So really want to thank you for everything you’re doing. You put so much intention and heart into what you’re doing. And thanks also for sharing a bit about um
182:30 addiction, about the value of going to meetings and um and the landscape that we’re all facing out there. It’s not easy, but you’re making it better. I appreciate it. I’ll make you a deal. I’m going to do the same thing every morning. I’m going to get my 72 pound kettle bell and I’m going to join you in those morning walks and then I will be cursing your name from now on. So, it’ll be fair. Perfect. Appreciate you. Come back again. Yeah. Thanks, man. Thank you for joining me for today’s discussion with Michael Easter. To learn more about
183:00 his work, his books, and to find links to the Substack that he mentions throughout today’s episode, please see the show note captions. Michael has generously made the Substack articles mentioned during today’s episode available to Huberman Lab podcast listeners at zero cost. You can find that link in the show note captions as well. If you’re learning from and or enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. That’s a terrific zerost way to support us. In addition, please follow the podcast by clicking the follow button on both Spotify and Apple. And on both Spotify and Apple, you can leave us up to a
183:30 five-star review. And you can now leave us comments at both Spotify and Apple. Please also check out the sponsors mentioned at the beginning and throughout today’s episode. That’s the best way to support this podcast. If you have questions for me or comments about the podcast or guests or topics that you’d like me to consider for the Huberman Lab podcast, please put those in the comment section on YouTube. I do read all the comments. For those of you that haven’t heard, I have a new book coming out. It’s my very first book. It’s entitled Protocols: An Operating Manual for the Human Body. This is a
184:00 book that I’ve been working on for more than 5 years, and that’s based on more than 30 years of research and experience. And it covers protocols for everything from sleep to exercise to stress control protocols related to focus and motivation. And of course, I provide the scientific substantiation for the protocols that are included. The book is now available by pre-sale at protocolsbook.com. There you can find links to various vendors. You can pick the one that you like best. Again, the book is called Protocols, an operating manual for the
184:30 human body. And if you’re not already following me on social media, I am Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. So that’s Instagram, X, Threads, Facebook, and LinkedIn. And on all those platforms, I discuss science and science related tools, some of which overlaps with the content of the Huberman Lab podcast, but much of which is distinct from the information on the Huberman Lab podcast. Again, it’s Hubberman Lab on all social media platforms. And if you haven’t already, subscribe to our neural network newsletter. The neural network newsletter is a zerorost monthly newsletter that includes podcast
185:00 summaries as well as what we call protocols in the form of one to three-page PDFs that cover everything from how to optimize your sleep, how to optimize dopamine, deliberate cold exposure. We have a foundational fitness protocol that covers cardiovascular training and resistance training. All of that is available completely zero cost. You simply go to hubmanlab.com, go to the menu tab in the top right corner, scroll down to newsletter, and enter your email. And I should emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. Thank you once again for joining me for today’s discussion with Michael Easter.
185:30 And last, but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science. [Music]