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The Tim Ferriss Show
#557: Q&A with Tim Tools for Better Sleep, Musings on Parenting, The Different Roles of Fear, The Delight of Deepening Friendships, The Purpose of College, How to Boost Your Mood, HRV Training, and More
#557: Q&A with Tim  Tools for Better Sleep, Musings on Parenting, The Different Roles of Fear, The Delight of Deepening Friendships, The Purpose of College, How to Boost Your Mood, HRV Training, and More

#557: Q&A with Tim Tools for Better Sleep, Musings on Parenting, The Different Roles of Fear, The Delight of Deepening Friendships, The Purpose of College, How to Boost Your Mood, HRV Training, and More

The Tim Ferriss ShowGo to Podcast Page

Tim Ferriss
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57 Clips
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Dec 22, 2021
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Episode Transcript
0:00
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2:07
This episode is brought to you by eight sleep. My God. Am I in love with eight sleep? Good. Sleep is the Ultimate Game Changer more than 30 percent of Americans struggle sleep. And I'm a member of that, sad group temperature is one of the main causes of poor sleep, and heat has always been my Nemesis. I've suffered for decades tossing and turning throwing blankets off, putting them back on and repeating Ad nauseam, but now, I am falling asleep in record time, faster than ever. Why? Because I'm using a simple device called.
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4:16
this altitude. I can run flat out for a half mile before my hands start shaking the Netherlands a closer question. Now, we're just living tissue over metal endoskeleton.
4:39
Hello boys and girls ladies and germs. Welcome to another episode of the Tim Ferriss show. As I garble my words because this is a fast-paced Q&A episode. We're going to cover a lot and thanks to everyone who is joining live. We have a lot of people who are joining live. We have people who have submitted questions in advance, and we're going to cover a lot of topics. I'm going to alternate between live and submitted questions will probably do two to four at a time and
5:09
I'm
5:09
happy to see everyone here from all over the world and people can submit questions, right? Meow in the chat. So feel free to type those in and specifically, you can focus on the general. You can go anywhere you want. This is a topic free-for-all and I see a question here in the live chat from Clayton. I apologize. I'm going to say l, i don't know how to pronounce the last name. What work best to help with your plantar, fasciitis? A number of things, a splint to keep my
5:39
My toes dorsiflexed while sleeping. That was one, a second was rolling the bottom of my feet and also using percussion devices like their gun as an example. And oddly enough. This might sound really strange because it's in some ways, the opposite of what I just suggested but a physical therapist asked me at one point because I was so sensitive in my lower legs during massage therapy, during soft tissue treatment. He asked me, do you?
6:09
Cross your legs under your chair, when you sit and type. I thought that was a strange question. But I did that I would put my feet under the chair and cross them and that was always pulling my toes and my feet back towards my knee and he said, try not doing that and see what happens. He said, are you really tight in your calves? When you do say downward, dog? And yoga? I said yes, and so I began experimenting with really being mindful about keeping my feet flat on the ground instead of Crossing them under my butt or
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My chair, and all of those things seem to have contributed mightily to the recovery. Also not overdoing it with minimal Footwear the way that my plantar fasciitis really flaring up and became a problem is, I walked in very, very minimal Footwear. Imagine slippers or moccasins basically, on cobblestones for a few days while traveling and that just about did it. So those are a few recommendations.
7:07
Related to plantar fasciitis. And I am going to take a look now at both the live chat and the submitted questions. I see one here from a mere or Amer gergich. I'm guessing I'm sure I'm completely butchering that name. Hey, Tim. Do you ever do breathing exercise next to yoga? So, breathing exercises are something that I pay attention to and most recently.
7:37
The type of breathing I have done, is in concert with HRV training, and you can check out a doctor named. Dr. Leah, Lagos La gos. She also has a book that discusses HRV, training and using breathwork basically as the API to the autonomous nervous system. So the what is it? Application programming interface? I think of it as the Gateway into your automatic or autonomous nervous system, so you can use breath work to produce what you would term.
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Resonance that can affect everything from the vagus nerve to many many other things. And I was doing 20 minutes of breath work twice a day for 10 weeks and my breath work tends to have an objective in mind, but I do think that breathing since it is. This Gateway into the deliberate control, which seems paradoxical of the autonomous nervous system, or at least some of its functions. I find it very, very
8:37
interesting. All right, let's jump into some of the submitted questions. First one is from the crazy Bulgarian. What did you implement from Ander hubermanns advice on sleep? So, Andrew huberman is a neurobiologist from Stanford University who I had on the podcast and he gave me a lot of recommendations related to sleep. He is really studied the visual system circadian rhythm, everything associated with it. And I followed a bunch of his recommendations and it is dramatically improved. My sleep. Here. Are a few of them.
9:07
So I did take his advice to get my fish oil, consumption up to the point that it is at least 1 gram of EPA and there's EPA DHA contained in fish oil among possibly other things and getting the EPA to at least one G. I do that in two divided. Doses, taken with meals before sleep. I'm taking magnesium 3 and 8 which
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Selectively targets, brain tissue or at least, is well absorbed by brain. Tissue apigenin is another, I believe I'm taking 50 milligrams, but you should listen to the full podcast and other supplements that I'm taking, which I have to disclose because I started taking them around the same time. And perhaps these are the causal agents quite apart from his advice following a number of blood test. It was recommended to me that I begin taking. And this is recommend to move by my doctors. So get your own Medical.
10:03
Please, I started taking higher levels of be six in the morning and also in the morning. I began doing two things as suggested by Andrew. Number one. I began getting outside as soon as I got up. So no dilly-dallying and burning an hour inside getting outside exposed to the sun. Even if it's through cloud cover for the first, say 5 to 15 minutes of the day, and I had been doing this on some level.
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Often jumping rope for even two or three minutes, really, just to wake up the system and to get that exposure to the sun. I've made that a must-do and I've also delayed my intake of caffeine for 60 to 90 minutes. After getting up think like a lot of people, my routine was to wake up and immediately consumed some form of stimulant or caffeine whether it's yerba, mate, or coffee or otherwise. And the point he made is and I'm paraphrasing that when you wake up there is this
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It's natural and desirable production of cortisol, which then does a number of things, including imagine breaking down glycogen into usable glucose and so on and so forth. And this provides you with a jolt of energy to start your day. And that is an important what they might call zeit, zeit Gaba our time Giver, that helps to establish a bookmark for the rest of your circadian rhythm. And that can dictate and inform your
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Sleep later. So pushing off the caffeine for 60 to 90 minutes allows your body to do what it's supposed to do without supplementation without any type of caffeine replacement therapy if that makes any sense. So those are a number of things that I've taken from Andrew that at least together all of those factors including the B6, which is individualized. I'm not recommending. Other people do that seem to have really produced a change in me so that I'm very grateful for. Let me jump
12:03
You
12:04
Clayton, this is another question. That was submitted. Tim. It's been over a decade since the for our body. If you had to revise it, what would you change? Has your opinion changed in regards to components such as keto. Intermittent fasting, multi day fasting pag Etc. The 4-Hour Body, even though it was produced in 2010 has held up. Remarkably. Well, and many of the things that were first discussed, or at least first, widely discussed in the 4-Hour Body, cold exposure and so on, as it relates to Fat Loss, or thermoregulation with Ray.
12:33
Cronies and others have really stood the test of time and entered the mainstream. So a lot of it holds up. I would want to take a second. Look at Pali Coast in all as found in pack, to see if there's any additional research that either confirms or disputes, the efficacy of including Pali Coast in all, in terms of things that I might add. I would likely put in a more sophisticated chapter on
13:03
Fasting now that I understand much more of the science. And I've done many, many, many experiments and had the input of say, Dominic, D'Agostino and Peter, Atiya and various phds and doctors, those additions. However were put into tools of Titans. So, a lot of the additions that I would have made to the 4-Hour Body were put into tools of Titans, and many of the updates that I would have put into the 4-Hour Work week, but more. So the 4-Hour Body and the 4-Hour chef.
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Were added into tools of Titans. It's kind of a simultaneous update of all of those books, but certainly fasting especially focusing on more extended fasting. So, a three day fast say, once a month and longer fast 7 to 10-day Fest. Once per year. I do feel quite confident, those convey, many benefits. Only some of which are understood at this point. And last one, for now, from the submitted questions, before we go back to the live feed from Jordan. Why did?
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Stop gymnastic strength training. Do you think you'll pursue it again? I hit pause on some of the gymnastic strength training as you might Define it as GS T / coach summer, the former Men's National Team coach in part because I injured my wrist and you're my wrist doing assisted training with iron cross and Maltese cross on rings and just felt this incredible pop in my wrist and couldn't really use my hand for a number of
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Weeks, maybe even as much as a month or two. That was my fault. So, I'm not in any way, maligning the system, and I've continued to use components of gymnastic strength training. Although, some of the exercises are not terribly portable because you would require something like a stall wall, for instance, and people can look that up s-- tahl, which is an incredible piece of equipment, but you don't find it in very many places. I have, however, continued with gymnastics strength, training on the callisthenic, her body weight.
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Side, so I'm doing plenty of inversion training, otherwise known as handstands. Although there are many different variations Farm stands Etc. And I am continuing with developing active strength and active flexibility in the end ranges. And that could be through doing Jefferson curls with say, kettlebells or any number of things like Pike pulses, which you can also look up. Those are found in tools of Titans as well. Alright, so let's get
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It now back to the live stream, Dennis P. Whatever, I have David goggin on the podcast. I would have him on the podcast. David goggin has also done an excellent job of appearing on many podcasts. So I don't know if I would be able to cover new ground and that often gives me just a bit of hesitation. But Goggins is incredible. And in fact, I had looked at David Goggins, back in 2009 2010, as it related to the endurance chapters in the 4-Hour Body.
16:03
Ended up not being able to connect with him in time to include something for publication. Let's look at some more of these questions or with me. All right, this is from Kalapana home from getting that right? Or maybe kale put a hole. When you're learning about a new subject. You still follow the DS3 method from the 4-Hour, Chef, given everything you've learned about learning since publishing any possible, alterations to learning. I'm sure there are many alterations. But for those who don't know, the DS3 refers to see if I
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remember exactly what the acronyms are at this point. It's so second nature to me. The first is deconstruction. So that's breaking down a skill, whether it's swimming or learning Japanese or chess or podcasting or anything else into smaller component skills. So identifying the elements that constitute this larger skills that you can break it down into more addressable pieces. Then you have selection. That's the first s and this is effectively 80/20 analysis. You're looking for the
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20% of material or less. The 20 is somewhat arbitrary, that provides you with 80% of the utility or the performance. And in language, for instance. This would very easily be demonstrated through High Frequency Word. Lists. Some words are used more often than others. If you choose. The proper say 1200 to 2000 words, based on high frequency by looking at ideally material that reflects conversation, but it could be newspapers textbooks and so on, you can really develop conversational fluency.
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Or at least adequacy in 8 to 12 weeks in most languages. That's my belief and experience. And
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Selection being first indicates that I believe material beats method. So what you choose to study, what you choose to practice is more important, ultimately than how you practice, because you can get very good at efficiently studying or practicing things that are a very little importance. All right, so we have deconstruction. We have selection, then we have sequencing and this is deciding and what order to practice things. So, for instance.
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Recently, when I was looking at rock climbing and applying this lens, one recommendation that came up a lot was fingerboard training. But fingerboard training can also produce a lot of injuries because your connective tissue, your tendons and ligaments, develop strength, tensile strength and diameter at a much slower rate than your skill and muscular development. Therefore, whether it's in powerlifting.
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Or specially in something, we're using the smaller digits a lot. As in rock climbing. You can really injure yourself. So, as a function of going through this process and looking at sequencing, I decided that even though it was recommended many, many, many, many, many times. I would push the fingerboard inclusion to, at least say, six months into my training and only, if I had achieved a certain level of proficiency, technically speaking. And then the last you have steaks.
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Steaks, as ta ke s. You can think of that is consequences and that can take the form of a bet with a friend, say for weight loss, very, very effective. It could take the form of prepaying and committing to some type of group exercise. Whereby you are both financially benefiting from some sunk cost in terms of attendance and then also getting the both encouragement and as necessary ballbusting from a group of people, if you don't attend and comply, I
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We'll
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use this with just about everything. So yes, the answer is I still use DS3 or dsss as described at Great length in the 4-Hour, Chef in The Meta, learning section. All right, let's go back. All right, kale is just like the vegetable kill. There we go. Groaning rock climbing. This is from Jordan, born. Great name. Are you familiar with Dave MacLeod? I'm not familiar with Dave MacLeod.
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Mac Elio. Di he has written a few books on training for rock climbing as well as putting out. A lot of good content on YouTube. I'll take a look. Thank you Brian Williams. How is the work with Wolf Conservation going? What are the impacts of your support? This is a great question in, this is a very controversial subject. It's called the Middle East of conservation, by a lot of people for good reasons. There are many issues with Wolf Conservation, a reintroduction if people want to understand perhaps some of the reasons for reintroducing the
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For re-introduction or conservation? They can listen to my podcast episode with Mike Phillips who led the reintroduction effort at Yellowstone. And I think there are many arguments whether it's related to trophic Cascade and sort of ecosystem development and people can look at a short documentary called how wolves change rivers or Y wolves change Rivers, the only sort of cinematography mistake.
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That I would point out is I think they refer to elq, and they show deer or they refer to deer and they show elk in the visuals. But if you can allow that not to distract you, I think it makes a good point about how the absence or presence of one species, especially a predator that keeps herbivores, moving can affect everything. And since we also extirpated, meaning locally, or regionally exterminated, the gray wolf from many of its sort of natural historical range. If we're
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Problems, as you would witness say where I grew up on Long Island with rampant Lyme disease and deer overpopulation with no natural Predators. I think there is an argument to be made for introduction. So, the work that I did, if you see Tim dot blog, / wolf, you can look at some of what I tried to facilitate in Colorado and elsewhere. I think is having an impact on the national conversation. Unfortunately, wolves as a symbol have become part of identity politics and the
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They're basically an outlet for some upset and frustration and aggression that is most easily applied to something that can be killed easily like a wolf. So we're seeing, I think overharvesting and over killing of wolves. I do believe there is a place for the management of wolves the calling of wolves and the management of those populations through hunting. For instance. I absolutely believe that there is a place
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For that. But that as it would be, the case with elk or anything else. They need to be monitored very closely and those policies should be informed and based on science and not based on populist politics. And it's a touchy subject. There is an article that lays this out. It's actually very well done. It's a feature piece called The Way of the Wolf Woman or something like that.
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Might be wolf lady in the New Yorker. So if you just search wolf lady or willful woman and New Yorker, this piece will pop up and it paints a very compelling nonpartisan picture. Because the fact of the matter is, there are individual ranchers who are significantly affected by wolf predation on livestock. And there are many ways to mitigate that with flattery and other techniques that are non-lethal. But the fact remains, it's some individual ranchers, really have there.
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Lively Hood affected by wolf populations. However, as a whole, the effect on livestock, and this has been studied at Colorado State University, and many other places. The effect on livestock over time is very, very minimal. And I have some posts on social that is sharing the research related to that. But again, these are controversial subjects that provoked a lot of emotions and as soon as we get into Red Line territory, it doesn't matter if you're on
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the right or the left or somewhere in between, it's a big fucking mess. So that having been said, if you want to learn more, I suggest listening to my episode with Mike Phillips, who's fascinating guy? And you can check out Tim top log / wolf for part of what I was involved with and I have more involvement likely coming. So that is that I was a long one. Alright, let me dive in. Okay, so another
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One, this is from Andy Donovan. Tim. You've talked about having kids one day, any thoughts on what you teach them at home, which you would worried. They wouldn't learn at school or indeed, which they might need to survive school. This is a great question. And I think the two things that come to mind immediately our optimism and resilience. I do think that the infantile ization of
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Not just adults, but children in the United States, handling, everything and everyone, with kid gloves, ultimately produces very, very fragile people and if the culture by and large wants to swing in that direction, that's fine, but I will want to ensure that my kids are as resilient and confident, and optimistic as possible. And I think part of that will be both, loving them unconditionally, maybe what you would think of, as
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Motherly love but also having very high standards and encouraging them to try things that they think they can't do or that they think will be very difficult or the think will be very uncomfortable. And that is how you build confidence through competence. You can't think your way reason your way into confidence. If you haven't actually put in the time and put in the flight time and mileage to develop skills and resilience under
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Dress you have to do things to develop persistent and durable confidence. So I think those are a number of things that I would focus on the forms. Those of take I'm not sure but I think that there are many many good Role Models. Fortunately who I know a lot of them are coming out of military and they've basically turned in a few cases turn their daughters into Hannah. If anyone wants to watch the trailer to Hannah, hannah0.
26:38
That
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only half kidding, but at the end of the day, their kids are very capable, very tough and very happy from what I can tell. So I'm going to try to emulate that as much as possible. All right, let's look at some questions from those submitted. Next one is from Brad, Patterson outside of psychedelics. What? Others somatic experience, / physical modality has created the largest positive shifts for you. I would say there are three that immediately come to mind and I'll give you the
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The answer though. If I had to pick one and I would say the one answer I would choose would be acroyoga if I had to choose one because of its effects on my relationship with my beloved, my significant other because of its blend of mobility and strength in and ranges as well as athleticism overall. And those are not automatically the same thing. Sort of adaptable athleticism is not the same.
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As being really good at six lifts in a few planes of motion. And I think that even though this has changed more recently. Remember a number of years when there was a softball or baseball throwing competition within the CrossFit games. You can look at those videos to see, just how poorly people did, who were not previously, competitive athletes in multiplanar sports with rotation and so on. So acroyoga on top of that is just fun. It is a blast
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And you always end up laughing because you're going to make mistakes and it's pretty funny. Usually pretty funny. When you do assuming that you're being safe about it. And acroyoga is really combination of acrobatics acrobatic training which you can think of on some level is gymnastics and Therapeutics. So it's also a blend, not only of the strength training and Agility and flexibility, but at the end of sessions, you would also experience in an ideal session, say, 15 minutes.
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Of partner Thai massage for Recovery in the cool down and you get very good at both building and restoring and I think those are incredible. So I've learned a tremendous amount through acroyoga, particularly in, working with Jason Nemer, any mer. Look him up. He's amazing. I've also had them on the podcast, the two others that I would mention quickly. Our Excel mention. I'll mention three more GST, says the gym.
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Asik, strength, training, still component. And I still think there's a lot to be gained from gymnastic strength training GST, / coach summer, Som mer. If you search his name in my name a bunch of pop up. The next is very incremental happy body training and happy body training is gonna settle areas to a lot of people and it should but they can look up jersey. Je R. Zi y, Greg Erick.
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UK his wife's names on yella, Greg Erick Anie. L.a. They both have multiple World Records in Olympic weightlifting and are originally from Poland. They have devised a system of training that is truly remarkable. And with what I might call Micro stretches, where you're really only sustaining an inner age for half a second or a second maybe less but doing repetitions with wait the
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Gains that I've seen in mobility and active flexibility through their program, is just incredible. It's really remarkable and combined with that would be Olympic weightlifting, but I never got very aggressive with it. However, using as a training goal, and as a training standard, kind of the meat and potatoes of some of my training, in addition to kettlebell swings, the overhead squats became an incredible tool for diagnosing weaknesses.
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In deficits to fix but also really just developing overall functionality. And that would be overhead squats with a barbell press overhead. As if you were doing a military press and then dropping down to ask to heels Olympic Squad which also over time developed much more mobility and flexibility in my ankles, which helped with the plantar fasciitis. It was mentioned earlier and last was swimming. I learned to swim in my 30s. If you look at my first Ted Talk, it. Describes how
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How I used total immersion Swimming by Terry Laughlin who's also been on the podcast. So you can go to ted.com and search my name. In the first Ted Talk. That I gave focused quite a bit on swimming and that'll give you an idea of how I learned to swim and how it became a moving meditation. That one.
31:28
Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show. This episode is brought to you by athletic greens. I get asked all the time. What I would take if I could only take one supplement. The answer is invariably a G1 by athletic greens. If you're traveling, if you're just busy, if you're not sure if your meals are where they should be, it covers your bases with approximately 75 vitamins minerals and Whole Food, sourced ingredients. You'll be hard-pressed to find a more nutrient-dense formula on the market. It has a multivitamin.
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32:49
John lamb, is the next one. What vacation or place you've traveled to? Would you most like to go back to? There are many places I love but the first two that come to mind are Italy and Taiwan have spent some time in both. It's been decades. Since I really spent meaningful time in either and I love the people and the cultures and the food of both. So Italy and Taiwan are two that come to mind.
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And I'll do one more in these submitted and then I'll come back the live. So the next one is Joel. Chirico. What are one or two of your super long term big goals? I generally don't have
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Super long term, big goals. I tend to view things as two-week experiments within kind of six-month projects. And then I look at what Windows, what doors, open, I guess, is more the expression for opportunities don't jump out of any windows, but you can walk through doors and very often. I find that if I apply myself fully to
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Being excellent or at least diligent in an experiment for two weeks or projects, for six months, like experimenting with fiction. Right? Now. The opportunities that I will have in the lenses that I will gain through, which I can look at the world and my life are things. I cannot predict at the outset, so I don't generally have super long term. But if I had to pick a few things and I don't know if these qualifies super long term, hopefully, they're not super long term to related to psychedelic science and psychedelics. One would be
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To get to the point sooner, rather than later that the federal government, or the agencies within the federal government, like the NIMH and IH etcetera, are providing funding to scientist, doing research related to psychedelic compounds on the clinical side, on the basic side across the board. And that is a significant problem currently. Because since let's just call it 1971, the controlled substance act under the Nixon Administration, once these compounds are put into schedule 1, which means
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High potential for abuse, no known medical application, both of which are ridiculous for most of these compounds.
34:58
It was impossible. If not, at least close to Impossible, but generally impossible to get any type of federal funding for these studies. Which meant scientists had to spend a lot of their time doing two things going to philanthropists usually for small dollar amounts, which is incredibly time-consuming. Secondly. They had to write grants Grant applications for other types of work, unrelated to their core interests of psychedelics to pay.
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Their salaries and ensure that they would be able to support their families while pursuing this interest in the therapeutic applications of psychedelic compounds. So they were spending a ton of time simply to ensure they had a bare minimum of funding to do small studies because that's all they could afford the other option in the last few years, especially so either High Time, Low dollar amount philanthropic Fund Raising + grants or
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Take money from well-funded, for-profit companies startups, and that's not intrinsically bad, but it's fast. Easy money with a lot of strings attached, generally speaking and rightly. So if I were a company, I would want certain IP Provisions. I would want may be certain types of data, exclusivity and that can get very squirrelly and start to look like big Pharma, lock down very quickly.
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Breaking news update very
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exciting since the recording of this episode. Dr. Matthew Johnson, professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences at Johns Hopkins. Received a u01 grant from the National Institute on drug abuse, otherwise known as Nida to study psilocybin for tobacco addiction. It's the first Grant from the US government in half a century to directly study a classic psychedelic. This is a huge deal and decades in the making. This is also been a primary hope and target of mine for the last several years and I'm super, super excited.
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Cited to be involved with the Hopkins team. So congratulations to Matthew in team. There are also some other folks to watch very closely been K D at Yale and others. But suffice to say that is a very exciting updates since the recording of this episode.
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So I would like the scientist to have a third major source of funding, which is the federal government. So that is one. I'm very heavily focused on and I'm hoping the initiative at Harvard Law School that just launched which a part of it's called Poplar the project on psychedelic law and regulation will be able to help with that, and I hope they will also be able to help with insurance reimbursement. So getting to the point where these psychedelic therapies are reimbursable.
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For insurance, which means a broader patient population has access because right now, even if they are rescheduled and proscribable, the therapies will be very expensive because you have preparation, you have integration. You have sessions that are safe for 28 hours in length, all of this equals expensive. So to make it available to millions of people who are suffering with say, complex, PTSD, treatment resistant, depression Etc. You need insurance reimbursement. So that is a second.
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Big one for me and then last but certainly not least is building a family and moving into fatherhood and being a partner to my lovely, lovely beloved and I think that will be a huge phase shift for me and TBD what that means. But those are a few of my super long term big in all caps goals. All right, let's take a look at what we have here. I'll do my best to answer some more.
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Sheila McQueen. I'm getting that, right. There's been a lot of talk of experiential, therapy techniques like, psychedelics. Are there any promising? Research research programs using VR Gaming? I'm not aware of them. Although I know that there are some researchers, including Andrew huberman, who I mentioned earlier as a neurobiologist at Stanford who have captured footage of, for instance, great, white sharks in the hopes that they can take these type of stimuli and turn them into
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Representations in VR so that they can study, not just fear, but fear Extinction and contending with phobias and so on using virtual reality as a tool as a modality. I think there's a lot there it may take a while until the potential is demonstrated definitively and some fashion or maybe not nothing's definitive but in a compelling way with some type of clinical study, but I do think
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Tremendous promise. And we just have to look at 2D gaming to see where it could go in 3D gaming, or simulations, or therapies and Adam, ghazali. GA Z Za L. Ey. Whoo, recently launched along with Robin Carhart Harris and others, the psychedelics division of neuro scape at UCSF, which is a very, very big deal Adam with some of his previous research. He and his team developed software called Akili and a Kil.
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Why is the spelling and it recently became the first FDA-approved treatment for ADHD as software? So I do think that digital Therapies in 2D and 3D and in virtual reality augmented reality will be certainly should be tested as legitimate interventions and tools. All right. Let's check here. See some more. So Jordan. Chimed in there's a psychedelic VR experience called tripped.
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I pee pee. It's trying to do something like this. No idea on anything beyond that. Certainly there are going to be people who want to replicate or simulate the benefits of psychedelic treatments without psychedelics themselves. There is a company called resonate. Also that is doing some interesting work in this space and take a look at that and many others. So this will be a crowded and very, very exciting space. So I do expect some Innovation to come through. All right, question from Brad Patterson.
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Favorite book from past year. I read both lion trackers Guide to Life, which is great book and Brotherhood of the screaming Abyss good for you. That's a long one per your Rex and enjoyed. Thanks. Well, I would reiterate that the line trackers Guide to Life by Boyd, VAR D is excellent. That's a very short read for people who are looking for something that I found very compelling and very short, the Brotherhood of the screaming business by Dennis McKenna. And that is not short, but certainly for those interested in psychedelic.
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And interested in the history and the biography of not just Dennis wrote. This is an autobiography. But his brother Terrence McKenna who is very well known. Thought of as the Irish bard of psychedelics and was author or co-author of things like the archaic revival, true hallucinations, and many others new books. I would say that of wolves and Men by Barry Lopez.
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And I think it's of somebody could tell me I might be on wolves, but I think it's of wolves and Men by Barry Lopez is one of the best non-fiction books I've ever read in my life. It is incredible. It is just just phenomenal. I would definitely recommend that people check that out and I'm going to do a quick search to double-check the name of that. The title of that Barry Lopez. Also wrote Arctic dreams for which he won many, many awards has not
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Action is absolutely incredible. So let me look very Lopez wolves.
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Of wolves in men by Barry Lopez, that is the title, the cover. The original cover is absolutely stunning. I have it in hardcover. I very rarely have things in hardcover. That was given to me as a gift and I was supposed to be socializing and spending time with my girlfriend's family. In fact, and I did I did spend time with them, but I was so pulled into and engrossed by this book that I started reading it with every free moment that I had. I carried it around with me everywhere to the restaurant, to, you know, to them too.
43:18
Park everywhere. I just carry this book with me. So I would say of wolves in men by Barry Lopez would be my recommendation and let me take a look at a couple more Darcy Leffler has questioned since moving to Austin. It appears to me that you've become more reflective. If this is the case, what brought this about what has been the impact on your life. I think I have been more reflective in the last few years, and I think that that
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Can be attributed in part to moving to Austin, certainly but more, so it's moving out of San Francisco. I think that I would have been more reflective had. I moved to who knows Montana or Pennsylvania as long as I was outside of a major city, even though Austin is a city. It is not one dominated by a monoculture Romano conversation in the same way that San Francisco is dominated by Tech. It is pervasive. It is soaked drenched.
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In tech tech tech Los Angeles in. Many parts is drenched and soaked in entertainment, entertainment entertainment, and it's very easy to end up in an not just an echo chamber but in a race where you feel like a greyhound chasing that rabbit around the track and you never quite catch it. No one quite catches. It, everyone is agreed upon the rules. Seems to think it's important and it's, it's a pull to the external in many senses. So, by removing myself, some
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What from that environment even though? Austin has a million people? Or so in the Greater Austin area. I've been able to come recalibrate and think about which interests of mine are actually mine or those that I've absorbed or inherited which drives of mine are mine or simply absorbed through osmosis in some conscious or unconscious way, subconscious way if need be
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And I think that has caused me particularly, as I contemplate, family, fatherhood and so on. It is brought up a lot of the big questions. Where do I want to be? And why, what do I want to be doing? And why, what do I not want to be doing? And why, who do I want to spend more time with as the sort of Horizon at the vanishing point at the end of my life? Draws closer. Now that I am at least based on the historical,
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all ages of death in my family on both sides from Men. I'm past the halfway mark, who do I want to deepen relationships with? Do I want to deepen relationships with people? I already know. Do I want to develop new friendships and in either case why with whom and these are questions that take time at least for me to explore properly in a really think on into journal on and to test also, so I think that it's been
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Removal from a high-density Urban environment with a monoculture or a mono conversation. I should note that even in a rural place or a smaller City. It is possible to put yourself in circumstances such that you end up in Echo Chambers. So I've also been very deliberate about trying to avoid that and I hope that helps to answer the question also had a lot of death in my family. My uncle just in the last few weeks died of an
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Alcohol induced, heart failure and passed away on the day, literally, to the day of Richard Nixon's, announcement of the drug war. 50 years ago, calling Public Enemy, Number One drugs, and it just goes to highlight for me. At least that better treatments are part of the answer. Not necessarily better punishments, and these have all caused me to pause. These types of events periods of morning.
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So on, so whether I like it or not, I've been given opportunities to reflect and I'm grateful at least for that. Let me take a look here. Here's one, Peter Grand, I think, gr. Ahn. Have you ever been in any of the Scandinavian countries, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Finland? And what is your image as an American of these countries? Well, I have spent time in Sweden in Norway and in Denmark. I've not yet visited Finland, but I would love to make it to fit.
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Island and do some rally racing. You guys have some incredible, incredible Racers and even some of the techniques in rally car racing like pendulum. Swing is also called The Finnish flick. So love to come to Finland at some point. What is my image? I wouldn't say, I have an image across the board of Scandinavians because in my experience, I've found Norwegians Danes and swedes to be quite different. But I came away with a very, very favorable impression. I've spent a good amount of time in all three.
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And some of my blood is from Denmark. So when I went there, I remember I launched the four hour work week in Danish. I decide to go to Denmark. I've never been at that time and it was hilarious because I was walking around, you know, pretty much bald as is looking as I do and it was like, reverse. Where's Waldo? So in Japan, you could like, see a crowd of 5,000 people and be like, there's Tim in Denmark, that was impossible. I looked like 90% of the people there and
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So we were launching the 4-Hour Work week, which I think is Fatima's a bike or something like that. And I was having drinks with the publisher and the editor who is responsible for this book. And I said, yeah, you know, but something something, you know, I have this huge head in this gigantic Bridge Troll forehead, which I get made fun of, and have been made fun of for ever in the United States. I have a huge head. I look like bobblehead and the United States. And that's what part of the reason I continue to weight train because I need a big enough neck and body, not to look.
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Lollipop and everyone had a bit of booze at that point. And the editor said, you don't have a huge head. You have a normal Danish head and that made me feel a lot better about myself. So I have a very positive association with Scandinavian countries. Would not surprise me at all. If I ended up spending a bunch more time in Scandinavia. In fact, trade Baldwin. I loved your podcast at Jerry Seinfeld. I'd love to hear you and Steve Martin talk. I would love to do a podcast, Steve Martin. I don't know if he would be game or not, if you were gay.
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Game, I would love to do it. I think his book my life standing up, something along those lines, his autobiography. I listen to an audio, which I recommend everyone do. And I did that a long time ago. When it first came out. It is spectacular. It is one of the best autobiographies I've ever had the pleasure to enjoy, especially via audio. So, yes, if Steve Martin is out there, listening or anyone who's close to him. I would love to have them on the show.
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The Intrepid guide. Here's a question. Hey, Tim, how do you maintain the languages? You've studied? Do you have one tip? You recommend for language Learners? Yes, if you are working on multiple languages. Well, number one go to Tim dot blog. There is a topics languages or language learning link on the right hand side. And if you click on that there, a number of articles that go into great depth about this, their articles by been the Irish polyglot. There are articles by many others who have learned.
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5 6 10 12 languages and they talked at length about this. In my case. I try to create a chain of languages such that I'm reviewing a prior language as I'm learning a new language. So for instance when I learned Spanish and this was a long time ago, 2004-2005 mostly in Argentina. I chose one Japanese comic book series because a lot of the Japanese comic book series a have dozens of volumes. You're not going to run out of material and they're popular enough to have been translated into just about any popular language.
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Comic books are by definition conversational. A lot of it is dialogue 90-plus percent of its dialogue. So you're getting spoken language instead of written language. So I chose one piece which is a very, very popular comic book and I had the Japanese version and then I had the Spanish version and Page by Page. They are identical and I would read in Spanish to the extent that I could. And if I came across something. I didn't know I would
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Then go to the Japanese and I would look at the Japanese version and see if that reminded me of the proper word. If I could translate the Japanese, in other words, so I would use a Japanese to reinforce the Spanish and Spanish to reinforce Japanese. The Japanese one. I already knew the Spanish is my target. Then I learned Spanish pretty well. My Spanish now is Rusty but I can get by keeping in mind. This is 2004-2005. So, 16 years ago. I haven't studied since, and then when I later in,
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I suppose 2005, it would have been wanted to learn German and I might be getting these two mixed up. Actually, might even German first, but nonetheless, the the illustration will be coherent. When I then want to learn German. I had the Spanish version of one piece and let's say learning Spanish. I'd gone from volume 10 to 15. Right? Each volume is 200 Pages or something. Then I picked up at 16 and I had the German one piece and then I had the Spanish one piece. So I try to read the
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and if I couldn't go to the Spanish and if the Spanish wouldn't get it done, then I would go to an electronic dictionary. Now you have Google translate. So it makes it a lot easier and so on and so forth. So I created These Chains these connected Links of one language to the next but I highly suggest for those interested in digging into this. I think some of the best articles written on the web about language. Learning are on my blog at Tim dot blog and you can find the language learning topic or tag. And I can say that comfortably because many of
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The best articles are written by other people. All right, Vibe, have mythical think the name is, what principles have you learned from chess that you can use outside of the game? Quite a few and if anyone saw the Tim Ferriss experiment episode where I did chess and Brazilian jiu-jitsu, I think this this is a good illustration and you can also find a discussion of this in the 4-Hour Chef. There's actually pretty extensive discussion of Josh waitzkin, his work with pain.
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Dolfina, I think it was and various principles that he applies and that I apply in other areas. I would suggest if you're looking for the translation of Chess principles, high-level chest principles to many other fields, pick up a book called the art of learning by Josh waitzkin. So the art of learning by Josh waitzkin, wa-ait Z Ki n, he was the second or third ever podcast. I did on this podcast that now has almost six hundred episodes.
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Every episode with him, I think is solid gold. So you can also listen to the first episode with him. Some of those would be learning the macro from the micro. So taking or creating scenarios of decreased or minimal complexity. Let's just say going to the end game and chess and having King and pawn versus King to learn the macro principles that will allow you to, then become a better chess player. When all the pieces are involved. There are a number of others.
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I'll leave it at that for now. But learning the macro from the micro with simulated conditions of reduced complexity, is something that he's applied all over the place, to chess to investing to Tai, Chi Push Hands in which he was a world champion to Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu in which he became the first black belt, under Marcelo Garcia, who is considered the greatest of all time, nine-time world champion and so forth and so on. So those are a few that come to mind. Let me take.
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I look at some of these submitted questions. The Intrepid guide up date. Thank you for answering my question. What you described as chains is called laddering. There you go. So it's called laddering. There. You have it, folks. All right. So question from time, your sháá Tim. I feel often like my energy to think deliberately is low. How can I improve this? My recommendation would first, and foremost be to get comprehensive blood testing with your doctor because you may identify, especially if you do a micro.
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Nutrient analysis. On top of that, that you have some type of deficiency or some type of explainable issue that can be treated. It's not necessarily a thyroid issue, for instance, but there are things like hypothyroidism. That could explain something like this. There are many other things. Perhaps, you have a selenium deficiency. Perhaps you're taking too much zinc and you've developed in response a copper deficiency, right? So overdoing it with supplements and drugs can produce.
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Various issues. But stop number one is talking to your physician and getting comprehensive blood testing. All right, let me take a look at some of the questions here, question from Matt Ridley outside of sleep. What is your biggest Force multiplier? Be 5 to 20 minutes of exercise, in the morning, with sun exposure, even without sun exposure. I think there's tremendous value in. As soon as you get up, doing five to 20 minutes of exercise. It could be
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be just about anything that moves your body. And I do think that motion whether that's jumping rope, kettlebell swings, something Dynamic swimming is a great value. It seems to really turn on my neural Drive in a way that helps my cognition and mood tremendously for the rest of the day. It is astonishing. How big a difference, even two minutes of jumping rope outside. Like everybody is two minutes, you have no
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Choose not to do two minutes of something, but doing two minutes of jumping rope outside in the sun. Seriously, if that's all I do, it is a complete step function change in how I feel. And how I think for the rest of the day could be Placebo. I don't really care if it is possible, but that would be the force multiplier outside of sleep, five to twenty minutes exercise in the AM, which consequently helps with sleep also, so, it's a two-for-one mirror Levy. What about cold showers? First thing in the a.m.? Yeah.
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I like that too. I like exercise more. But what I'll often do right now is I will exercise for the 5 to 20 minutes. And then take a cold shower to rinse off and then move on with the day. So that's how I approach it. This is question from Alex after undergoing isolation stress. And Trauma. How would you suggest individuals deal with a lingering psychological effects and cognitive biases of the pandemic in parentheses height and scarcity, mindset risk aversion Etc. So that one can keep making growth based decisions as opposed to fear based ones and there's more
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It, but I'll tackle that first. So the first thing I would say is.
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The cognitive biases or frames that remain at this point, and I should say during, and not after the pandemic, because I don't think we are clearly out of the woods yet. Certainly not on a global scale. Fear has a place and fear can be a teacher and we have evolved to observe and learn from cues in our environment. So, having a certain degree of fear or apprehension or wanting
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Have extra cash reserves right now. I don't view as a pathological adaptation. I think that is actually very reasonable. So while I don't think it's additive, probably or healthy to sit in your house on the floor, rocking yourself all day with the curtains drawn, you know, if you have something like complex PTSD, I think that is maladaptive ultimately long-term, but if you're simply
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A little more conservatively because of what has happened in World and local events over the last year. I think that's a very intelligent adaptations. So I don't take that to be a bad thing. However, to address your question more directly. I'll give you two things. So, the first I think is too. And I've learned this the hard way multiple times rather than trying to fix or suppress.
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Scarcity. Mindset risk aversion anxiety. If you want to begin to improve the situation. I find that reading a book like radical acceptance by Tara. Brach is incredibly helpful. If you are trying to block things out or compartmentalize them or get rid of them. I do find you can do a lot of damage in the process and the solution is very rarely long-term durable solution. So radical acceptance by Tara Brach, which was recommended to me at one point by a
1:00:12
Our science PhD, which is very surprising. I think that book is spectacular. If you are interested in a therapeutic modality, a therapy that can complement to that or be done independently. I think ifs, internal family systems is exceptional and I've seen tremendous results personally from that. For that reason. I had Dick Schwartz or Richard, Schwartz on the podcast. If you search, my name and ifs that podcast should pop right up. And I suggest listening to that.
1:00:42
And the last this is this is effective. Highly effective for worrying and anxiety side. Note. I remember someone said to me, worrying is like praying for what you don't want. I thought that was quite clever and memorable and useful to keep in mind. But the book is an old one, how to stop worrying and start living by Dale Carnegie pretty sure I'm getting the title right? How to stop worrying and start living by Dale Carnegie. I have yet to meet a single person.
1:01:10
I should say a friend. I've yet to run into a single close friend of mine, who has been suffering from anxiety, who has not benefited from this book and come back and then incredibly happy that they read it. Some of its going to be outdated. That's fine. It's an older book, but it is outstanding. So radical acceptance. The book ifs is training. Modality can get a taste of it. I do a live demonstration of it on the podcast with Dick Schwartz and then how to stop worrying and start living by.
1:01:40
Dale Carnegie, let me take another look here at the submitted questions and we're making good progress here. So I'm going to keep going if people want to keep going right, one hour, but I'm just going to keep rolling some having a good time, side note on finance and money for those who are looking at the video. You can see this this painted Circle. It's kind of like the eye of Sauron. It's this red circle with a yellow and white center and green on the canvas around it.
1:02:10
I have had more compliments on this piece of artwork from people who've seen it then perhaps any other piece of artwork I've ever had. This was bought for $60 at a warehouse yard sale basically. So for what that's worth, Katie would asks, what advice would you give to someone just getting started in podcasting or what? Would you have done differently? When you first started note, I realized that very few people actually can monetize their podcast in a meaningful way. So I'm not as interested in that as I am. And
1:02:40
Something worth listening to thanks. As always. You're welcome, Katie. Let me take a stab at this. What would I do differently? I wouldn't do anything differently. I think I made all the right mistakes and think I approached it in a way that I'm very, very happy with. And I'm going to rephrase something that you said though, if that's all right, you said.
1:03:02
And I'm summarizing here, but I'm interested in making something worth listening to, I would suggest you think about creating podcast by asking, how can I make this worth doing personally for me? And the way I thought about that was informed by conversations, I've had with Scott Adams, the creator of Dilbert. He's written about this extensively and he is excellent, excellent writing and essays on this but how to win even if
1:03:31
Loose. And he, and I also talked about this on the podcast. So if you want to listen to that, you can find him there. By the way. He also predicted everything that happened with Trump. Well, in advance of any one thinking, it was anything more than joke. So his predictive powers are also pretty good. But the way I approach podcasting was asking myself, what skills can I develop? And which people can I develop or deepen relationships with, by doing this? So that
1:04:01
Even if I stopped after six episodes, and I did initially committed to six episodes. I think it's important to commit to some critical mass of say, 6 to 10 episodes because you will need the repetitions to develop skills. And as a consequence of developing better skills to deepen relationships or develop relationships with people, and I approached it as a win-win.
1:04:25
Proposition in the sense that I enjoy researching and interviewing people. That is my favorite part of putting together. My books is identifying.
1:04:36
Experts interviewing them and pulling out unusual findings. That's my favorite part of the book writing process. I was burned out after the 4-Hour, Chef didn't want to even look at a book for a while at least a couple of years. And I realized that by doing the podcast because I'd really enjoyed being on a few podcasts during the 4-Hour, Chef launch specifically. Nerdist podcast, Joe Rogan, Marc, Maron and others. Some of the longer form podcast.
1:05:06
I really enjoyed being on that side and I thought to myself, if I approach it in the right way. I can become better at interviewing. And therefore, I can become better doing research, which will help future books. If I decide to go back to books and I'll interview people initially people. I know because it'll be less intimidating and they'll hopefully be more forgiving although Kevin Rose busted my balls like crazy in the very first episode because that's Kevin and that's what good friends do but I approached it so that even
1:05:36
In if I had zero listeners, it would still be a success after six episodes. And on top of learning to ask better questions in listening to the audio. I would be able to identify and fix a verbal tics and by fixing verbal tics like like, you know, so etcetera, Etc. You become a better thinker. Usually, the easiest way to do that is through writing is to trap your writing on paper and then you can edit or have proofreaders, edit your thinking.
1:06:06
Hard
1:06:06
to do in conversation unless you record and you can not just record you can transcribe so that you can review transcripts. And see, just how awful your verbal tics look when they are put on the printed page. So those are a few of suggestions, but think about how you can win.
1:06:27
How you can be really happy to spend the time doing it. And in my case, that's developing skills, developing relationships, deepening relationships, and an example of that would be in the next couple of weeks. I'm hoping to interview my parents. I'm not planning on ever publishing those. I hope to share those with my kids when they're old enough, but that's really too deep in my relationship with my parents and also to have a recording of them in Vivid detail and Rich depth.
1:06:57
Or my own kids because my grandparents passed away when I was very young. I really didn't get to know them very well and that's an example of sort of winning no matter what. Even if no one in this case, the intention is kids, but even if you don't have a guaranteed audience, if that makes any sense,
1:07:15
Okay, one more submitted question that I'll go back to live. This is from IV patent. Any thoughts on Gap year travel all to edge for young adults, not in lieu of college necessarily. But as a way to better, understand yourself before the enormous investment of a college education, furthering the truth that not all classrooms have four walls and not all people are cut out for desk learning. So, perhaps the question is, do you think college is a must? Well, let me back up and comment on the lead, which was related to Gap here. I think that
1:07:47
Almost everyone would benefit from having the option of a gap year in the United States. And I would love one option for that Gap year to be national service of some type That Could Be Peace Corps. It could be volunteering with a national nonprofit, like, Teach for America could be military, could be anything and that was actually suggested on this podcast. So, I've absorbed a lot for my guests, but I do think a gap here whether that is traveling abroad, whether that is doing something in the United States, but
1:08:17
Stepping outside of the Four Walls of the classroom to really gain life. Experience that broadens, your thinking of the world. And the people in the world is tremendously tremendously valuable as to the question of whether or not college is a must. It's hard to say that anything is a must. There are always exceptions. So I can't say, college is a must but what I will say is that at this point in
1:08:47
In time for most people, if we're approaching it from a professional perspective, the vast majority of people will benefit from having a college degree. There are always these tales of the Bill Gates, the Zuckerberg 's, and so on, who drop out of Stanford, or Harvard, or whatever might be. But there's some fine print on that. That is really important. Those people very rarely drop out. They are not burning their ships. They're taking a leave of absence.
1:09:17
Many of these schools will allow you to take a leave of absence and come back and finish your degree at any point in time. That is not the same as dropping out. It is also not the same as not going to college. If you attend Stanford, if you attend Harvard, you say, I dropped out of Stanford. I dropped out of Harvard and you succeed and people repeat that you are still getting the benefit of The blue-chip Branding associated with Stanford or Harvard. So it's important to recognize that and I would be very skeptical.
1:09:47
Love anyone who has benefited a lot from a degree or diploma. If they tell you that you should not go to college. I would carefully assess how that has impacted their trajectory, for instance, going to Princeton help me. Absolutely help me. Was it necessary hard to say, but did it open doors? Did it allow me to get replies to emails and so on where otherwise it would have been harder. Absolutely. So one could say, from a professional perspective. I'm going to come back to
1:10:17
The topic of education and cognition more broadly speaking, but from the professional perspective, you know, one could make the argument that if you can get into an excellent school, it is more valuable and getting into a non excellent school. I happen to think again for most people a college degree is going to be of great benefit whether or not it is a top-tier school when it gets to mbas and things like that.
1:10:46
At professional degrees graduate degrees, if you are doing it for professional advancement. Let's take a look at an MBA program. I think that the value of an MBA is dramatically lowered. If you are not going to one of the top 10 15 schools in the country who are well known for their MBA programs, that advice could differ, if you are coming out of a management consulting job or one of the big five accounting firms.
1:11:17
Within which getting an MBA is encouraged for career advancement promotion where they pay your way that is a different situation. All right. Let's come back to the broader question. Do you think college is a must? But now, let's look at it from the perspective of what I would consider in the most literal sense, not in the typical sense, a liberal arts education. So this again, differs a little bit from technical degrees, but I never received a technical degree, so I can't really speak.
1:11:46
Speak to that. I do think that going to a school.
1:11:50
And not going to say it's a must, but going to college being forced to take mandatory course work. And then depending on your department having required coursework. And course, load broadens your intellectual curiosity. I do think, at least, in my case, you end up taking things that you expected not to like that. You really like, you take things that you thought you would like that. You really don't like you take things that
1:12:20
Thought you'd be terrible at the, you turn out to be pretty good at you. Take classes. You think are going to Breeze that completely kick your ass and I do think that broader education with assignments. How old-fashioned? Mm. I are really valuable to someone in that phase of life, that being the age range of an undergrad because you don't know what you want. Even though you might think you do. You don't know what you're best at. You don't know where your life will be in 2, 3, 4, 5 years.
1:12:50
And it is absurd to think that you have comprehensive self-awareness of your strengths and weaknesses. You simply don't and you're not cognizant of where you have the greatest potential either. In that case. I do think there's a benefit to college. So to speak. Now could that take the form of something online? Yes, could it take the form of something in another format? Absolutely, but
1:13:19
most people left to their own devices without some investment of time and money and without the accountability of classmates and having to be a certain place at a certain time are just not going to study as much as people who are operating within those constraints. And constraints, aren't always things that prevent you from doing what you want to do. Sometimes? Constraints are the things that you are wrecked or that you deliberately engage with so that you can focus.
1:13:48
I'm doing the thing you want to do. So I think positive constraints were very important. That's a long answer, but Ivy patent, I hope that helps. Let's take a look at some of the live questions. Miguel light a light you. I don't know how you pronounce that Tim. How are you going to cope with sleepless nights. Once you become a father, I've no idea. That's one of those. I'll figure it out when I get there, kind of things. I don't know. I'm not looking forward to no sleep, but if my friends,
1:14:18
Any indication they seem to adapt and not die. So I assume I will do the same. All right, let me take a look here. Jonas K. Do I know tea time with Tynan? I don't know. Tea time of Tainan. You have seen a bunch of T. Times people can look back at this podcast and that blog post and see that I did tea time with Tim quite a long time ago. So I don't know what's going on with the T times, but I do think I was one of the the early adopters to tea time with X. So, who knows?
1:14:48
Knows maybe I'm an imitator. Maybe unbeknownst to me. I have copied many. Many other people have done the same thing. I do not know.
1:14:54
Question, what's my take on global warming? How are you preparing for possible? Worst-case scenarios? I am paying incredible attention to climate change and thinking about it on every possible level. I would say that it singularly is what produces the most existential anxiety and preoccupation in me. So, I'm looking at it from every possible perspective and thinking about the implications on food security.
1:15:24
On migration within countries, both in the US and elsewhere water supply and I think we're going to have a lot of trouble in the next 10 to 20 years possibly sooner. So that is not a comprehensive answer. But I am extremely occupied and preoccupied with thinking about climate change and researching it and spending time reading about
1:15:50
The kind of latest findings and potential implications from experts ruthann. Also, that eight sleep pod is changed my sleep life dramatically. So that's awesome to hear Ivan 8, sleep, right? Upstairs. I am a huge fan, especially when it's 95 plus degrees outside had the AC die, and if it weren't for the eight sleep, I would have been just an omelette with zero hours of sleep question from Jessica Downey. I'm joining late. So maybe you answer this already. Why are
1:16:19
You suddenly hosting these more frequently. What do these sessions bring to you? Honestly, I don't get out that much. I'm pretty introverted and very, very, very private with my personal life. So this is a way for me to engage socially and have fun and meet people and answer questions. I never would have come up with on my own and to also turn the tables and have a chance to just riff since I'm the one usually asking questions. So I get a lot out of this. I really, really dig it. Thank you for asking.
1:16:49
Thank you for joining. All right, there's some questions about psychedelics and psychosis schizophrenia Etc. I absolutely do not recommend psychedelics. If you have had multiple psychotic episodes, or if you have history family history of schizophrenia or personal experiences with schizophrenia or multiple personality disorder or anything like that. These compounds can absolutely in
1:17:20
from what I've seen and also this supported by some degree of the research accelerate, the onset of some of these conditions or exacerbate, the symptoms and severity of some of these conditions. So I absolutely would suggest that people who are concerned about that, not take psychedelics and with respect to my own manic, depression, or bipolar disorder, I experienced more
1:17:49
Or symptom a logically or sort of phenomenologically, although that's usually used in the context of fancy papers in my life with respect to psychedelics, in terms of the presentation of symptoms. I experienced what resembles more major, depressive, disorder or treatment resistant, depression. I don't have much in terms of amplitude change with Manic episodes. And I think the more you experience that the higher the
1:18:19
Danger or the greater the risks involved. I am not suggesting that anyone with bipolar should use psychedelics. I should also note that I have access to pretty much every one of the world's top experts with respect to psychedelics Chances Are that most people listening to me do not have that degree of professional guidance and input. So my suggestion would be if you have pre-existing psychiatric conditions that you only
1:18:49
Use psychedelics in conjunction with advice from your psychiatrist and from your medical doctor. And one first step there is to introduce them to how to change your mind book by Michael Pollan and if they're willing to read that since I think also psychedelic to represent the possible, I shouldn't say the future of Psychiatry, but a future Paradigm. That will dramatically change the nature of
1:19:19
Psychiatric treatment and also overlap with. I think in some cases medical treatment. If you look at some of the beta-carbolines in Ayahuasca, for instance, like Harmony, and I think they're tremendous possible applications to what we might consider physiological illnesses, physical illnesses, IBS Crohn's and so on or neurological damage experienced by those who suffer from chronic depression, Etc. But this is all a very long way of saying, if you have a
1:19:49
Listing psychiatric condition. Do not use psychedelics without.
1:19:53
Discussing this and without the support and guidance of your psychiatrist as well as your medical doctor, because whether you are on medication or not, there are significant risks, and if you swim a little closer to the bank of chaos and entropy, then the bank of rigidity, and I had a conversation with graham. Duncan about this on the podcast. But if you, if you flow in this direction, you can get yourself into a lot of trouble psychedelics and my cousin by marriage.
1:20:24
Used a lot of LSD when he was young and there are some in the family of think that that precipitated early onset of schizophrenic symptoms and is very, very, very challenging. He's fortunately doing extremely well now but these are things you should be very careful with. So cautionary notes complete, but work with your psychiatrist and your doctor and you do need both.
1:20:49
Okay, take a look at some more of the live questions.
1:20:54
Ranjit Singh, am I still interested in Bitcoin crypto? Yes. I'm still very interested in crypto and blockchain. Although there is a sea of noise and garbage out there. Alright, question here. What do you think about the insert? Oh, maybe it's in Certo by Nassim Nicholas. Taleb. I haven't read the insert. Oh, orange shirt. Oh, I'm not sure how to pronounce that honestly, but I have read the Black Swan Fooled by Randomness and some of his other writing and I find it tremendously compelling.
1:21:24
So I have not dug into and Certo or the insurer toe and Sarah toe. So, I have no opinion of that but antifragile Fooled by Randomness and the Black Swan, not necessarily in that order. I found all of them to be very thought-provoking and worth reading. I don't say that lightly. See what else we got.
1:21:47
Actually somebody pointed this out and I should highlight it. Kevin Rose also has a fantastic podcast called modern Finance. I think it's modern Finance on the web. You can find it wherever you find your podcasts. I think it's at modern underscore fi on Twitter, but it is exceptional with respect to defy and new Innovations in the world of Finance, banking money, Etc. We take a look at a few more of these and I'll probably
1:22:17
Hop off and maybe 15-20 minutes. That's what gives you guys even if it's not. Okay with you guys. I'm going to do that. All right. All right, here's a good question and it's related to my disclaimer and warning earlier. Linda E. Robledo. I found myself asking, if the subconscious should always be examined. If we are functioning. Are we prepared to open Pandora's box with the use of psychedelic treatment options. It seems very scary to me and not sure why I will repression rear its ugly head later. This is a great question and
1:22:48
Always is a really strong word. And I think it's it's aptly used here. So should we always examine the subconscious if we are functioning, if you are highly functioning and
1:23:03
Things are going. Well, it would be hard for me to say that you should automatically use psychedelics or that you have to use psychedelics. They are not a Panacea. There are risks involved and you can open up Pandora's Box and experience things that will require processing. So if you dont have space in your life to do that, you don't have slack in the system to contend with material that might come up, then you should consider very carefully whether or not
1:23:32
This is a good time or if there is any good time for you to use these compounds. I am not a
1:23:41
Messiah at all. I don't view myself as a hammer looking for nails with psychedelics. They are contraindicated in many circumstances. They are extremely powerful. People who take them lightly, generally get punished, and you can have long-term consequences that are very difficult to resolve. And if your Cavalier with some of these compounds, even if they have short duration in Earth, time, like, 5, Mod m t,
1:24:10
15 minutes, five to 15 minutes and people refer to it as the business mans. Hi, the businessman Strip. This is a dramatic underestimation of just how destabilizing and reorienting or disorienting. These compounds can be there, very, very powerful. So I continue to feel that they are and will be as important as Stan grof has said, as important to psychiatry in the understanding of the mind is the microscope was too.
1:24:40
Biology, and the telescope was to astronomy. I believe that. I completely believe that both from firsthand experience, and from the research and from anecdotal reports in great numbers and right along with that, you can inflict upon yourself.
1:24:56
Instability or ontological shock that is incredibly difficult to contend with. So I don't think that one should always open up, Pandora's box with these compounds, nor do I think that everyone should use them even once. And you know, for many of these reasons, I also think it's a great State of Affairs and a great place right now with respect to phase 3 trials to have mdma-assisted psychotherapy.
1:25:26
As the tip of the spear because MDMA is a compound in the right context with properly trained therapists. That is much easier to facilitate and to navigate also to prepare for, and to integrate, then classic psychedelics, or novel newer synthetic psychedelics. So I'm very pleased that we will hopefully have time with larger numbers of patients, to refine the systems and
1:25:56
And the way in which these substances are administered, the way that Adverse Events are dealt with with MDMA before even psilocybin. I'm very very pleased by that. Okay, coming to next question.
1:26:15
Casey merciful.
1:26:18
What do you do to pattern, interrupt? When you notice you're slipping into a low point? I find often that the fall gains momentum, and I would be curious how to hedge against this. There are a couple of really simple things and it's easy to neglect. The simple, the obvious seems perhaps,
1:26:38
Less like a secret because of course, it isn't a secret but the fundamentals I should say exercise in the morning getting out in the sun first 5 to 20 minutes, putting off caffeine for 60 to 90 minutes. So you don't over caffeinate and therefore given the half-life and quarter, life of caffeine, interrupt your sleep using different tools, to improve your sleep quality and Track Your Sleep Quality. You don't have to necessarily spend money on this but eat sleep for instance, or a ring for tracking. These are things that I use exercise.
1:27:08
Ensuring that you are exercising enough that you are physically tired. When you get into bed, and then there are personally ways in which I microdose. I'm going to put psychedelics aside because I don't want to give any prescriptive advice related to psychedelics, but you could also microdose as was recommended to me by a very very well-respected doctor. I know with the approval of your doctor. I'm not providing medical advice. So please speak to your medical professional about this low dose lithium orotate which
1:27:38
I purchase on Amazon. I Take 5 mg before bed. If I'm starting to slip or feel like I might be slipping. I take five milligrams in the morning as well. That is not a mono therapy or high dose. This is not
1:27:54
Lithium at 1500 mg or something like that. Lithium can produce very significant side effects, especially in high doses. I take it at very low doses, to effectively mimic, or I should say an act to the takeaways from an article. I read a long time ago in the New York Times, which was sent to me called something like, you'll be able to find it. Maybe we all just need a little bit of lithium and it talked about the inverse correlation of groundwater lithium levels and Hospital admissions.
1:28:23
Ian's of psychotic episodes cause of death, attributed to Suicide, things like that, but certainly read the article and speak to your medical professional, but don't forget the basics exercise, son, mitigating caffeine cutting out alcohol. That's a big one. And also, cold exposure. There are, I think very legitimate reasons why back in the day people like Van Gogh would be prescribed to cold baths per
1:28:53
X x. It does have least in my case nificant antidepressant effects, an anxiety attack effects. That would be anti anxiety, affects. So those are a few. Okay. Let me take a look here. Aha. So for clarity, Tim the interior toe, I'm assuming it's in Certo, since he likes Italian is the collection of the following books, Fooled by Randomness. The Black Swan antifragile. Some will include skin in the game. Great, then I'm a fan of the collection there.
1:29:23
You have it. All right, we take a look here. Lauren O'Brien has a question. Do you have plans to engage Congress and federal changes related to psychedelics? Or is that a longer-term objective? Once the science is solid. I will be enabling other people to do both of these simultaneously. So the answer is
1:29:46
Both end. I think that furthering the science is critically important on many levels and then there's policy legal and separately, advocacy, work that can be done an education that can be done. And thankfully, there are some figures former political power houses and current who are very much.
1:30:09
Paying attention to psychedelic therapies and how they can be applied to certain populations who are politically immune in some respects like veterans with complex PTSD. And I'm absolutely fine more than fine with starting with that subpopulation because it's important to have defensive capabilities or better yet political immunity meaning that no member of any political party, can say, fuck the veterans and get away with it. It's just not going to work. So they
1:30:40
In that sense, an immunity idol or Talisman that enables them to further certain types of Investigation in a way that is very difficult. Otherwise, so, I will be pursuing all of that. And we take a look here, the two more.
1:31:01
Here's a question. What's your favorite wrestling movie? Do you ever watch A Vision Quest? Oh, yeah. Vision Quest is fantastic. I mean, it's for people now. I think it's going to age probably quite poorly. It's pretty cheese ball, but fantastic movie, loved it. When I saw it. My favorite wrestling movie is a documentary called Dan Gable competitors. Who cream? And if you can find it. That was my press play. Watch to the end and then start over and press play. This is back when it was VHS and then later I got the DVD, but Dan Gable.
1:31:30
Competitor Supreme is about Dan Gable. One of the most dominant athletes of all time, who I'm going to get this wrong, but he had a high school and college record of something like, 250, 3 and 0. And then in his I want to say his last match in his
1:31:50
last NCAA Final, he lost by one point and he was so upset by this that he trained 7 hours a day 7 days a week for the Munich Olympics and then won a gold medal. I want to say without having a single point scored on him.
1:32:07
Now, that's enough to make you a legend, but then, Dan Gable went on to become a coach and to become, I don't know. Now. There are John Smith and are many other coaches who have done amazing, amazing thing. So I'm not sure if this still stands, but certainly for a while. He was one of the most dominant coaches not just in wrestling, but in any sport, he produced just an endless string of championships and champions. So Dan Gable, competitors, Supreme. I haven't seen it in many years, but
1:32:37
If you have a chance to watch it, check it out and let me know what you think. It's intense and it's great. I really, really, really enjoyed it. All right, Jonas K. What gets most people the most bang for the buck in terms of time management. When you exceed 200 K, annual income example, given executive assistants.
1:32:54
Whether it's 200k or less, or more, I think it becomes increasingly important to revisit certain Concepts. And the way I do that is through books. So the effective executive by Peter Drucker, Read that read it at least, once a year essentialism by Greg McEwan read that highlight it. Highlighted on a Kindle so you can export your highlights and then review your highlights.
1:33:21
Another would be the 80/20 principle and if you're so inclined. The 4-Hour workweek, because certain synthesis of a lot of those in the 4-Hour Work week, but I don't read my own book because I would be fucking bizarre. So I don't read my own book be really, really strange to be spotted walking around. Reading my own book at restaurants and so on. So I read that's not the only reason I mean, I already know that content, so I'm going back to catch things that perhaps I didn't catch the first time or to review my
1:33:50
On highlights in all of those books. Those are a few. All right, two more questions from the submitted questions from Michael Friedman or Friedman. Could you please give some examples about how having a sleep tracker helped improve your sleep? I'm on the fence about buying the one that you have had for a while and a little push would be great. Thanks a lot for all your amazing work. I've been a huge fan for over 10 plus years. Thank you, Michael, for most people who use a sleep tracker. Many of the takeaways will be obvious.
1:34:20
So if you use say or ring, which I still use, because I do constant experimentation. And I like to see what happens for instance, without the or ring. I would not have realized that if I have a sauna right before bed or too late at night, within three hours of going to sleep, it interferes with sleep and also negatively impacts HRV the next day. However, if I have a sauna at say, four or five PM few hours before dinner, it dramatically improves HRV for the next day or two, also, something that
1:34:50
Nearly, everyone will see, is that two or more alcoholic drinks, if you're drinking stiff drinks, like gin and soda, as I often do might be only one drink dramatically damages, Your Sleep Quality. And for me, that's especially true of deep sleep. And I find that to be valuable as a reminder, even though it is obvious. And it makes self-denial or denial of that very, very hard. And I would say that overall.
1:35:20
Main benefit of wearing a Tracker, is it makes you more aware of your sleep and it facilitates it encourages paying more attention to your sleep. So honestly, even if the only thing I got from wearing an ordering was seeing it on my hand and thinking about my sleep and knowing that I shouldn't have that second glass of wine or that 2nd gen soda or whatever the alcoholic beverage might be, it would pay for itself.
1:35:47
A thousand times over in my life and there are certainly other devices. But eight sleep helps to track. It also helps to modify because of the way that it provides cooling and heating. Depending on the Zone on the bed. There are other options, of course, and then you have many different tracking devices. My favorite being the aura. Oh, you are a ring, but could you improve your sleep? Could you become aware of these things without those? Yes. Can you modify? Yes, you can still modify your sleep, but there's
1:36:17
Thanks, technically. That are a lot easier with something like eight sleep or the chili pad, things of that type. All right, I'm going to do one more Wesley. Awry. You're highly efficient and seem to be knowledgeable about everything you do. Is there anything that you do that? You just say f it, and do it willy-nilly. That's a good question. So, first of all, I'm picking the questions that I answer. So that creates the illusion that I'm knowledgeable about everything that I do. So I am, I'm curating this.
1:36:47
These questions, I'm not answering the questions that would leave me stuttering and giving nonsense answers or making things up. So that's an illusion. I appreciate the comment, nonetheless. It's there anything that I do just to say, fuck it and do it willy-nilly, yeah, tons of stuff. There's lots of stuff all over the place. So if, you know, I went boating recently tried to learn how to sail, didn't know what I was doing at all, but I had a great time, you know, I had a few drinks with friends on the water and it was fantastic. Had a lot of fun. So when I am invited to do new things,
1:37:17
Yes, I'm constantly just saying. Fuck it playing with new instruments, musical instruments. Fuck it. Let's play around and I'm not putting it into some dsss framework and sitting down and saying, hold on. Hold on. I'm not going to jam with you guys. Give me give me two hours to figure this out and watch YouTube videos. I'm not doing that. And might be the only time that I play around. But I do certainly play around and it's important to me for my personal growth that I do more of that. So thank you for the for the reminder. And the last question is gonna be the last one. So I think
1:37:47
It's a good one to end on. This is from Brandon Beckett, I practice mindfulness and gratitude but still can't find a way to temper. My drive feel satisfied and enjoy the present moment. How do I slow down and enjoy life? Again, without being so focused on the future? Okay. So if I take a look at this, there are two things that jump out of me. And the first is you say and enjoy life again with that. Mmm.
1:38:17
Eyes to me is that you have enjoyed like before in other words, what you're striving to be able to do you've already done at some point. So I think journaling on that.
1:38:27
Even if it's several days in a row in the morning longhand, stream-of-consciousness, something along the lines of morning pages and I suggest you just look up my name and morning pages. And that I'll give you a lot on how I think about these things and use these things. That would be step number one. Although this can be done simultaneously with step number two, which is really simple. Read an article called The Tail End by Tim Urban.
1:38:57
Tim Urban has a Blog. Although it's calling it, a Blog seems to not give it. Sufficient gravitas. His website is called wait, but why? And you can find it wait, but why spelled out wait, but wh-why.com, and there's an article called The Tail End, which everyone should read and that was introduced to Me by Matt mullenweg.
1:39:26
And it really changed how I look at the world, how I look at my life because it shares with you multiple ways of visualizing your remaining time on the planet. Visually your remaining time with loved ones visually and it is a gut punch. It is a sober and catalyzing.
1:39:48
Reminder. It is very short as an article and I have read that probably 20 times. It is incredibly good. It's so good that I believe that Tim Urban very graciously allowed me to reproduce it in either tools of Titans or tribe of mentors. That is how strongly I felt about it. But you must if you have not read The Tail End by Tim Urban and if you've read it, print it out, read it again, read it.
1:40:18
Morning. It is that powerful.
1:40:21
And with that, I will wish you all a wonderful week and a wonderful weekend. Thank you. For joining everyone. This has been a lot of fun for me. So hopefully it's been fun for other people as well. And let's do this again tea time with Tim is my tee time with all of you and I enjoy it very, very much. I will include links to everything discussed in the show notes, which people can find when this is published.
1:40:51
Teamed up log forward, slash podcast. And until next time, thank you for tuning in. Be safe experiment constantly and I don't mean necessarily with drugs. I mean with behaviors with getting sun in the morning was trying cold, exposure and accepting. What you find useful, rejecting, what you find useless and adding what is uniquely your own? Allah Bruce Lee, Baby Steps, baby steps. That is from
1:41:21
What About Bob one of the greatest philosophical movies of all time? And with that, I bid you adieu.
1:41:29
Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just one more thing before you take off and that is
1:41:33
five. Bullet Friday. Would you
1:41:35
enjoy getting a short email from me? Every Friday? That provides a little fun before the weekend, between one and a half and two million people. Subscribe to my free newsletter, my super short newsletter called five bullet Friday, easy to sign up, easy to cancel. It is basically a half page that I send out every Friday to share the coolest things. I found or discovered or have started exploring over that week, kind of like my dad.
1:41:58
Really, of course, those it often includes articles and reading books. I'm reading albums. Perhaps gadgets, gizmos, all sorts of tech, tricks, and so on, they get sent to me by my friends, including a lot of podcast guests and these strange, esoteric things end up in my field and then I test them and then I share them with you. So, if that sounds fun, again, it's very short. A little tiny bite of goodness before you head off for the weekend. Something to think about if you'd like to try it out, just go.
1:42:28
To Tim dot blog, /, Friday, type that into your browser. Tim DOT, log, / Friday, drop in your email, and you'll get the very next one. Thanks for listening. This episode is brought to you by eight. My God. Am I in love with eight sleep? Good. Sleep is the Ultimate Game Changer more than 30 percent of Americans struggle with sleep. And I'm a member of that, sad group temperature is one of the main causes of poor slave and heat has always been my Nemesis. I've suffered for decades tossing and turning throwing blankets off.
1:42:58
In the back on and repeating ad nauseam, but now, I am falling asleep in record time, faster than ever wide, because I'm using a simple device called the Pod Pro cover by eight sleep. It's the easiest and fastest way to sleep at the perfect temperature, if hairs Dynamic cooling and heating with biometric tracking to offer the most advanced, but most user-friendly Solution on the market. I pulled, all of you guys on social media, about best tools for Sleep enhancing.
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Sleep and eat sleep, was by far and away the crowd favorite and people were just raving fans of this. So I used it in here. We are, add the Pod Pro cover to your current mattress, and start sleeping, as cool as 55 degrees Fahrenheit or as hot as 110 degrees Fahrenheit. It also splits your bed in half. So your partner can choose a totally different temperature. My girlfriend runs hot all the time. She doesn't need cooling. She loves the heat, then we can have our own bespoke temperatures on either side.
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Exactly what we're doing. Now for me. And for many people, the result 8 sleep users fall asleep up to 32 percent faster, reduce sleep interruptions by up to 40% and get more restful sleep. Overall. I can personally attest to this because I track it in all sorts of ways. It's the total solution for enhanced recovery so you can take on the next day, feeling refreshed. And now my dear listeners. That's you guys. You can get $250 off of the Pod Pro cover. That's a lot, simply go to eight sleep.com.
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Tim or use code Tim, that's a tall spelled out. He IG HT sleep.com / Tim or use coupon code. Tim t.i. M8. Sleep.com Tim for $250, off your pod, Pro cover. This episode is brought to you by give. Well, I love these guys donating money to help other people is wonderful. But how can you be confident that your donations are actually doing things? Are they improving or saving lives? Effectively?
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It can be really hard to parse. You could do weeks of research to find the Charities that are out there and what programs they run, what they're adamant overhead is how effective blah blah blah on and on you can take forever. I know from experience doing the research is really hard for you could simply visit give well.org for short fitted list of the Charities. They found to be best per dollar and donations at saving or improving lives. Givewell spends more than 20,000 hours each year, research and charitable organizations and only recommends a few of the highest impact evidence.
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It is back Charities. They found, they do all this without any sign of these without taking a cut of your tax-deductible donation. If Will wants to empower as many donors as possible to make informed decisions about their donations. So give well is free. I've recommended give well.org for a while now and donations from listeners of this podcast. That's you guys amount now to roughly four hundred eighty three thousand three hundred ninety nine dollars and 27 cents. So close to 500,000 dollars, which is incredible. So first and foremost thanks to everyone who has donated in
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