cover of episode Episode 399: Ben Greenfield on Biohacking vs. Simplicity: The Future of Longevity for Body, Mind and Spirit

Episode 399: Ben Greenfield on Biohacking vs. Simplicity: The Future of Longevity for Body, Mind and Spirit

2024/11/19
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Key Insights

Why did Ben Greenfield shift from being a high-performance fitness enthusiast to focusing more on longevity and biohacking?

Ben got burnt out on high-performance sports and realized there's more to health than just exercise and diet. He started doing blood work and biomarker evaluations, which led him to explore functional medicine, naturopathic medicine, and biohacking for overall health.

What are the potential downsides of eating the same foods repeatedly for extended periods?

Eating the same foods can reduce dietary diversity, leading to a less diverse microbiome. This can create a vicious feedback loop where the biome becomes weaker, making it harder to digest a wide variety of foods and potentially leading to health issues.

How does Ben Greenfield manage to retain so much information and stay knowledgeable in his field?

Ben keeps a clear head by writing down everything to get it off his plate. He focuses on his category of health, fitness, and longevity, immersing himself in that field for over 20 years, which has allowed him to become an expert through osmosis.

What is Ben Greenfield's opinion on fructose and its impact on health?

Ben believes fructose can elevate triglycerides and contribute to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, but only if liver and muscle glycogen stores are already topped off. For physically active individuals not overeating, fructose in moderate amounts from fruits and juices is generally not an issue.

What are the benefits of Ben Greenfield's morning routine involving light, sound, and vibration therapy?

His morning routine enhances creativity, focus, and energy levels. It provides a sense of relaxation and meditation without the use of drugs, making him feel ready to tackle the day with a calm and refreshed mindset.

What is the 'oil change for your body' that Ben Greenfield is interested in?

Ben is interested in a process called extracorporeal blood ozonation and oxygenation, offered by a company called Lumati. This treatment filters out toxins like glyphosate, microplastics, and COVID spike protein, providing a complete blood detoxification over a three-day process.

How does Ben Greenfield approach social media, and why?

Ben uses social media as a producer and creator rather than a consumer. He has a social media manager who posts content, allowing him to focus on creating meaningful content without getting sucked into the time-consuming aspects of managing social media accounts.

Chapters

The conversation explores the concept of dietary diversity and its impact on health, emphasizing the importance of not isolating proteins from fats and the potential issues with low dietary diversity.
  • Eating lean chicken breast without the skin and gristle can be less beneficial than eating the whole chicken.
  • Low dietary diversity can weaken the microbiome, leading to less ability to digest a wide variety of foods.

Shownotes Transcript

Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins. You're listening to Habits and Hustle. Crush it. All right, you guys, we have the one and only Ben Greenfeld on. Feld, Feld, Feld, Feld. I think Feld does sound pretty cool. I need to go by that like a, like a spy. I thought it was Greenfield. In World War II, going in to kill Hitler. Ben Greenfeld. Yeah, but you're not even Jewish. It's my new identity.

Well, that could be your like alter ego. We could just do a whole podcast about how we would assassinate Hitler. I would love that. Well, he's not. Well, you know, the whole theory about that is like a butterfly effect. And if somebody had killed him, somebody worse might have come up in his stead or, you know, because there's a whole moral philosophical argument of like, is murder wrong? And would you, if so, would you go back in time? And if you had the opportunity to kill Hitler when he was a baby, and this is a really weird way to start a podcast talking about how we would kill Hitler, but.

But if my name was Greenfeld, you have a lot of energy drinks here. I know. A lot of just drinks in general. Well, first of all, that's actually, I don't know where you got that one from. Your refrigerator. Oh, okay. I don't know what that is. We usually start this podcast with these magic mind shots, and I'm sure you've had a million of them before, have you not? I always look at the ingredient label. Okay, look. Well, I got lots of stuff in front of me. This is a protein drink. This is Slate protein drinks. Have you not? You don't know about this?

No. I thought you know about everything, Ben. No, I live in a cave slash do have a lot of stuff in my mini fridge in the garage, but some of this stuff just slips me by. I always like to look at the ingredient label though, like this one, caramel latte, because a lot of people see the stuff that they're told is held. Hopefully I don't throw any of your sponsors under the bus. Totally.

talking about this stuff. No, you can't. Actually, this is one of these companies that I drink at least one a day and I like it. But so you tell me what you think. Okay. So this one, when you look at the ingredient label, it's brewed coffee.

Water and coffee. So the only thing I think about there when I'm looking at cans and ingredients is do they filter the water? Do they look at the aluminum lining of the can? Have they assessed it for microplastics, et cetera? Yeah. And sometimes that's not on the label. So you literally have to ask. Like I interview not really popular company Zevia. Yeah, of course. It's not artificially sweetened soda. Stevia sweetened soda. I interviewed their CEO there.

years ago and that was one of the first questions I asked was do you guys pay attention to the cans? Yeah. Because you can have a super healthy drink and then just screw it up by putting it in the wrong delivery mechanism. He was like, yeah, we go aluminum free and we test it for metals and I thought that was cool considering you can find it in like

Safeway or Rosars or whatever, which a lot of times means they would be cutting corners. So you don't know about the can necessarily. But wait, what did he say? He said he was good with it. Yeah, it was clean. Yeah, but it's an aluminum can. It is, but you can have some kind of like a liner inside the can that keeps the metals from leaching. Could you actually prove that they do that though? You could do a third party independent test on the can itself if you wanted to. Right, but you never did that.

I didn't do it. I did take him at his word, but I don't think he's lying to podcast and say he's a lobe because that could blow up in your face if somebody actually does. If actually someone did it. Test it later on. So they've got brewed coffee, unfiltered skim milk. And when you look at, this is one of the,

the terms that I sometimes don't like in the health industry, lean protein, right? Because you hear about eggs, for example, right? If you eat just egg whites, you get a huge dose of albumin, the protein in egg whites. And many people have an inflammatory response to just eating egg whites. When you look at eggs as nature's perfectly packaged protein that include protein,

the fat soluble vitamins, which also can help out with the vitamin absorption, with the protein absorption, et cetera, then you've got a little bit more of a cleaner profile. So there's the idea of like in the health industry, right? Eat lean chicken breast.

I'm like, no, like you get a lot of the fat, soluble vitamins and the good stuff and even more of the collagen from the, from the gristle, from the bones, from the skin. So like if I make chicken, yeah, it's going to be more calories if you eat the skin and have the oils and everything on there, but you're arguably getting more nutrient density and better health long-term versus separating the proteins from the fats.

Okay, wait, hold on. Again, this happened last time. We haven't even started. We're only two ingredients into the label of one drink. But I love this because we can rabbit hole as we go. It's crazy. Okay. So you're saying, let's get with, say with the egg. So then people, if they just eat the egg whites, they can have a bigger allergic reaction or an intolerance than if they have the egg whites and the yolk together because you need that extra fat.

and whatever all the other minerals and nutrients to counterbalance the egg white. Yep. Because I was going to say that I feel like I've gathered my body. I've been eating eggs every single day for 25 years that I now feel like I become allergic or I have an intolerance, but I do eat the yolk. Now,

It is true that when you get one of these food allergy tests, a lot of times foods that are staples in your diet can end up giving almost like a false positive that you're allergic to them. And it's because your body is doing a really good job creating antibodies to certain proteins in those foods. So it flags as a high antibody response, even though you're not actually allergic. So if I look at the results of somebody's food allergy test or food intolerance test, and it says, hey, you flagged

read on eggs, you must be allergic to eggs. I asked them, are you eating eggs every day? Because a lot of times that can cause it to be elevated. That doesn't mean that if you're eating eggs every day and you feel like crap, you're not sleeping well, you have gas or bloating or poor energy levels or whatever, and you cut the eggs out and those symptoms go away. Maybe you actually were allergic to eggs, but anything that flags on a food allergy,

profile as an issue that is also a staple in your diet, first, make sure that it's not just because you've been having a lot of it. And then does that mean that you shouldn't be eating the same thing over and over and over again just because it can act as an intolerance or an allergic reaction for you? That is something that would fall into the category of dietary diversity, meaning that the more

myopic you are about eating just a select group of foods, the less dietary diversity you will have. So the less diverse your microbiome becomes, which can create this vicious feedback loop because the

by eliminating foods constantly and going gluten free and lectin free and then low fiber and then low FODMAP and beginning to get rid of all these foods, your biome becomes weaker and weaker and you paradoxically become less and less able to be able to digest a wide variety of foods. So

the idea of eating the same thing day in and day out, if that also means that you've got low dietary diversity, then the answer is yes, that can create problems long-term because you're essentially starving off your bacteria. But if you were say eating eggs every day and you were also, you know, like you hear a lot of these blue zones doing eating a lot of different herbs and spices and plants and

and fruits and a wide variety of meats and eating seasonally, meaning there are certain periods of the year where you're not eating certain things, paying the jet fuel to fly the avocados and the coconuts in an environment where you normally wouldn't have access to that stuff, then that's where you can also create an issue, right? Low amount of seasonal eating, low amount of dietary diversity, eating the same things over and over again, which seems easy and

and convenient, but isn't great for keeping the biome healthy. That's so true. So basically, in the fitness world, right, it's all about like if you stay eating the same things, that will optimize your chance of like staying within a certain weight,

certain body composition, all the things. But it can actually work very much in reverse for your actual health and microbiome. It's true that if you have a predictable set of meals, I have my yogurt with my berries in the morning and I got

my lean protein on my whole grain sandwich for lunch and eat the same thing for dinner. If you're trying to count and control calories, that makes it very simple and also makes it more likely that you're going to have fewer types of foods around the house. Because one of the things that dietary diversity can cause is the more access to foods that you have, the more calories you're likely to eat.

Right, exactly. If you walk up to a superfood salad bar and there's like 20 different things, walnuts and pecans and avocados and salsa and mushrooms and two different kinds of all, you're going to load up the plate in many cases and wind up with way more food than you normally eat. It's buffet syndrome. Exactly. On the flip side.

If you're limiting your dietary diversity so that you do a good job following a diet, yes, it could be good for weight loss and calorie control, but that is not synonymous with good health and high micronutrient and vitamin and mineral intake. So I think a part of it does come down to like self-control. If I'm going to have

20 different types of fermented foods and yogurts and superfoods and chlorella and bee pollen and dark chocolate and pastured eggs and three different kinds of meat and all this stuff in my pantry and my fridge, which I do because I love the idea of dietary diversity. It also means you're either

injecting a GLP-1 so you're controlling your appetite or you're actually just cognizant and aware. Which isn't that, like if you're writing it down anyways, you're using an app like Chronometer or some other calorie counting app to keep track, then it makes it a lot easier. So I think you can have your cake and eat it too. Cake in this case being dietary diversity combined with moderating the amount of calories that you consume. But it does take more mindfulness. It does. And I think mindfulness is good. It is. It is.

But I do think self-control is the most difficult thing in the world, right? I think most of us at this point in life, especially with all the information overload, we know what to do. We've heard it all. We just don't have the self-control and the discipline to actually execute on it. That's where we get stuck. Yeah, and so is Zempik.

But you could look at it like with exercise, right? So let's take a trendy workout right now, like the 12-3-30, right? Walk at a 12% incline on a treadmill and three miles per hour for 30 minutes. And you're going to see huge drops in weight loss or increases in aerobic fitness, et cetera, which is complicated.

kind of true. But if similar to the diet, your exercise program consists of you doing the same thing every day because it just makes it easy for you and that's what you're most likely to do. Yeah, it's better than nothing. But don't fool yourself into thinking that you're going to be more fit than the person who's like,

working with the trainer or doing their own research to switch things up, you know, every week. And one week you're doing kettlebells and maybe the 12, three 30. And the next week you're doing a, you know, a high intensity interval training set on that air dine and super slow training. And the next week you're traveling. So you're doing like BFR training and cold plunges. And the more you can mix it up, the more you throw at your body, the,

harder it becomes to kill or the more fitness you see. So you see the better microbial fitness or gut fitness by throwing a lot of different foods at your body. And if you look at things like an increase in the surge of gluten intolerance or so-called gluten allergies or peanut intolerance, a

A lot of that is due to heavy restriction of those compounds, especially to kids at an early age. So they don't build up the ability, the microbiome-based ability to produce the enzymes that can help to digest those foods. So this is why if you go gluten-free for a really long time and then you have gluten, it's way worse than having gluten back when you weren't

gluten-free. Or when you feed a kid who's never been exposed to peanuts at two years old, a bunch of peanuts or peanut butter, and they have this anaphylactic reaction, it's far less likely that they would have had that if they would have had mild exposure to peanuts. Totally agree.

That makes perfect. And by the way, I know we're only two ingredients in and we're not eating. Oh, we'll get there. I know it's going to be a long, I won't forget. I know you won't. Um, so what do you think about the fact of when you do high intensity workouts and exercise? I, when I do it anyway, my appetite goes through the roof. I eat five times the amount of calories cause I'm ravenous and hungry. So isn't it a better strategy than to do like the 12, three, three that we just said, or any kind of lower impact diet?

or lower intensity exercise because then you're able to control your appetite just on a weight loss, fat loss level. Let's not talk about all the other things, but just on that, because that's what I find. I find cardio at a high intensity, you end up gaining weight because you're starving.

There is what's called a compensatory mechanism that kicks in post-exercise. That compensatory mechanism is of exercise and I'm hungrier. And there's two reasons that that could happen. So there's two different things we need to consider here. The first is pretty straightforward.

I've burned more calories. I've been more glycolytic because I'm doing high intensity interval training or weight training, not just a walk on the beach. So I've subtracted more carbohydrates from my muscles or my liver. So my body's naturally going to tell me that those need to be refilled because carbohydrates are good for brain fuel and for thyroid activity and for the joints and for the endocrine system. There's all sorts of messages your body begins to tell you that are crave-like messages when you've

depleted a bunch of carbohydrates from your body for a good reason, right? This is why a strict ketogenic diet could be good for managing epilepsy or Alzheimer's, but long-term can cause some issues to your testosterone, your estrogen, your thyroid, your joints, et cetera, because there's just not enough glucose to go around. And you can't make glucose

So when you finish a hard workout and you're getting these cravings to eat because A, you've burnt through a lot of calories and your body needs more calories or you've burnt through a lot of carbohydrates and your body needs to refill those or both, that's a natural urge and you shouldn't necessarily resist that urge.

because in my opinion, it's healthier to be strong and fast and have a high VO2 max and good grip strength and good lactic acid tolerance and lots of mitochondria and be eating more food to fuel all that goodness versus doing the same thing day in, day out because it doesn't make you hungry and eating less food.

I'd rather be strong and fast and fit and also eat more calories than do the same thing day in, day out and just restrict my calories. Right. But let's say running versus walking, running versus incline walking. Would you say that it's good to do a combination of both or that doing the incline walk is better? Yeah.

Because you're maintaining muscle mass. You're not breaking it down and all those things. The idea of fitness does need to be considered in the terms of kind of like a blueprint for the body. I'll explain what I mean by that. But before I do, I didn't address the second reason that you might get hungry after you do a hard workout. To me, that's the more concerning reason. It is the train to eat, eat to train type of phenomenon where either A, you're

you're exercising so that you can stuff your face later, not so that you can get fitter. So the only goal of exercise is to burn as many calories as possible so you can enjoy your whatever, $25 smoothie or pizza or whatever it is that makes you happy because you're addicted to food. And the only way that you can be addicted to food without becoming morbidly obese or having some metabolic disease is to exercise your butt off, right? And so then we get into the whole realm of like exercise anorexia, which is a thing. It's a huge thing. And in a similar vein,

We also will finish a hard workout many times and feel like we need a reward, right? And that reward is not necessarily due to the calorie burn because some people will just go face stuff on a huge breakfast after doing 50 burpees. I did the 50 and the 50 burpees doesn't burn a ton of calories. You have to walk like an hour to even burn a cookie. But people will say, hey, I did the hard thing. I'm going to reward myself with food. So using food as a reward or as something that's

allows you to get that dopaminergic rush and not as something that you'd be using to refill the body and restore nutrients and vitamins and minerals, that can be an issue. And that's a more concerning issue. And that's where we get into the willpower self-control component. And in my opinion,

the best way to manage that is what gets measured gets managed, right? That's where you take photos of your food and upload them to the new GPT image recognition technology like GPT-4-0, where it'll just tell you, you know, on your own notes app or whatever, how many calories that you're eating based on image recognition of that food or using an app or website like a

chronometer or macro factors to actually keep track. And some of my clients who I work with, they won't follow the diet adequately that I have written down for them based on their labs and their blood work and their activity levels and everything, unless they know I'm going to be looking at their diet at the end of the week. And if they write it down, then

They adhere to that diet and they're less likely to do that second compensatory mechanism from exercise, which is just like eat a bunch of food just because you're rewarding yourself for having exercised and not necessarily considering the calorie intake versus the actual calorie burn. Right. So that GPT thing that you, well, not the, what did you say that thing was that people can use to, because I've been using or people I know, the best one I've heard of is

to do all that stuff. Is this one better in terms of like, is it easier? Using GPT,

to count your calories or to tell you what it is that you're eating is not a diet or calorie counting app per se. It's just you literally going into GIF. So if you want to get super fancy, you could use something like Fitness Pal or something like that. Some of them have image recognition technology built into them now to where you can photograph your food rather than... Because it is a pain to write it all down sometimes. And those are good to practice. And go into the things like, I had three ounces, I had six ounces.

It's so... Like, eventually... It's just like to do all the little nuance things. Those are annoying. So you're saying going to GPT now, you can actually scan your food in the chat GPT? GPT 4.0 is the new version that has image recognition capabilities. Meaning...

And same thing with the Google notebook that like you were doing an Instagram story before we started recording. I told people, Hey, use the new Google notebook LM to take your notes. So a couple of cool things, like I was out hunting about three weeks ago. And before I went out, I found one of my water filters that I was going to take out there with me. And there were pieces missing. I'd tell there were pieces missing because there was like a tube that was supposed to come out of it. And then a clamp on the end of that. So I took a picture of it and I uploaded it to GPT for, Oh, I said,

tell me what is missing from this water filter. Tell me the brand. Tell me where I can go download the manual and tell me where I can get the missing pieces. And I know people who are even doing things like working on their car engine and taking photographs using their phone and then uploading that to 4.0 and it's telling them what needs fixing or where they can get certain parts.

which is pretty cool. So you could literally take a picture of breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and you could say like, hey, I want a protein carb fat ratio of 30%, 40%, 30%. And I want to know if this meal is hitting that. And I want to know what my total calorie count the rest of this day is going to be based on this photo I just sent you of the breakfast that I just ate. And it will tell you all of that stuff. The other one, the notebook book,

What that will do is you can feed any PDF, any text, any, you know, I've even fed things like legal contracts into it. And here's an example. Let's say you have a big sticky legal contract or scientific document and you just don't have the time to take the deep dive into it and roll up your sleeves and interpret it all and have smoke coming out your ears trying to read through this thing. You can upload the document into Notebook LM.

And not only can you tell it to create like a user guide or a study summary or anything else that's super palatable for you based on what you uploaded, but there's even an audio function and I can upload. And I did this a couple of weeks ago. I uploaded a DNA test that one of my clients got, and I told it to generate a discussion between two people about that person and what it is that they saw on that DNA test that could help that person improve. And it created like

like a mini podcast of two AI people who sounded very much like humans having a nice friendly chat about my client's gene results. And so if I'm going for a walk and I've got, let's say, a consultation call coming up with that client, I can listen to the AI talking about my client, filling me in on what was going on in a way that could be way easier to understand than digging through the whole gene test. And that's all just based on PDF or image recognition technology. It's pretty cool. Cool.

Wow. We are living in convenient times. And I mean, don't get me wrong, you still got to double check and make sure AI didn't make mistakes because occasionally it will still do things wrong, but it's still, it's pretty convenient.

That's amazing. So like, you fascinate me, I tell you this. I keep on repeating myself. I know I sound like a broken record, but you do. Like, you meet a lot of people in this world, in this business, but you always have fascinated me from the minute I even like knew who you were because of all the, like, because you're not a doctor. You're not like, you're just like, you're just some guy who has an insane, amazing,

amount of memory and the ability to take information and retain literally everything that you've ever seen, like saw, read. Your brain is like a computer. How do you even keep all that information in there? I don't think it is like a computer. I think it's more like...

The Arthur Conan Doyle character Sherlock Holmes, who says to Watson at one point early in the book when they first meet, he says something like after Watson tells him his name, Watson's name, he says, "Oh, I'm going to forget that." Watson says, "Why?" He says, "Because the more things I have rolling around and clunking inside my head, the less I'm likely to be able to do a good job being a detective and sleuthing because I just want a clear mind so I don't like to have my head jumbled around with facts."

So there's two things that I do. The first is I keep a very clear head, meaning I will tend to ruminate on things, think about things, wake up at 2 a.m. I have notes apps all over my phone with all of the little notes that I take right away to get them off of my plate and out of my head. So it's basically the idea of an

ever living journal that goes along with you wherever you go. For me, all through college, it was like little paper journals that I keep in my pocket. Now it's just the notes app on my phone. So I'm constantly keeping a clear head. So I'm not sitting here during this podcast trying to remember those three things that I promised three other people that I do later on today.

You put it, you write it down. All those little things start to gum up the subconscious. So I put, I write everything down. So I keep very good notes on everything. And then second, I focus a lot on my category, right? Which is health, fitness, longevity, biohacking, nutrition, whatever. And, and

And because I've been in the sector for like 20 years now, a big part of it too is just once you start seeing the same things over and over again, reading the same things over and over again, it's like grooving that part of your brain to where you asked me about politics or crypto or anything like that. I'm going to be a complete idiot.

because I spend a lot of time immersed in health and fitness, it's almost like osmosis, you know, long-term osmosis. So there's something to be said for like, if you're a young person getting a career or something like really rolling up your sleeves and telling yourself, hey, I'm going to be a pro in like 20 years. And I'm just going to stick at this every day and learn as much as I can. If you really want to become like an expert in your field. So a big part of just not jumping around too much.

But, and you've been like, but it kind of, I feel like it's evolved. Like, what did you start when you first started 20 years ago? What were you doing? Were you a trainer, like a, like a personal trainer? Were you

Were you like a physical trainer? Is that what you did? What was the first thing you did? So I realized I still owe you an answer about the exercise blueprint piece, but I'll come back to that. Did you write it down in your Google notebook? No, I've got it in my head. Just don't let too many things train wreck in my head and I'll come back to it. I have a few other things. You've got the exercise blueprint and we still got to finish these drinks. Yeah, the ingredients. But I'll tell you how I got into this first.

I was not interested in exercise or fitness or physical sciences at all for the early majority of my life. I was homeschooled in North Idaho, K through 12, had very strict parents, didn't get out much, played violin for 13 years. I was president of the chess club. I would sit in my room and read fantasy fiction and write tales about princesses and orcs and dragons. I was

a total nerd. I got into tennis when I was 14. And for some reason, I was just really good with a racket in my hand and wound up playing for the local high school teams, playing for the USTA, the United States Tennis Association. Got really good, got a really high ranking, wound up walking onto the

college tennis team. Wow. And I wasn't quite sure what I wanted to major in at the time. Which college, by the way? LCSC, Lewis Clark State College, NAIA College in Lewiston, Idaho. And I transferred up to University of Idaho. I had started like eating healthy after being on a standard American diet most of my childhood, like fast food hamburgers and taking baked pizza and macaroni and cheese and just standard American diet. Yeah.

And I had gotten interested in fitness, like running up and down the hills behind my house. And I got my first little pair of 10 pound dumbbells from the sporting goods place down the road. So I'd also started training and paying more attention to my diet. So I was getting somewhat interested in this whole realm. And then like, you know, three quarters of the student athletes at college, they were kinesiology or exercise science majors. So I was like, what the heck? I'll, I'll declare this as a major. And

even though I got very little exposure to that during my largely classical Christian homeschooling education that didn't really have much of a focus in the physical sciences at all, I fell in love with all that stuff. Anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, biomechanics, organic chemistry, all of the science, like the hard science stuff, I loved it. And that surprised me, but I wound up getting so in love with that that I went pre-med,

I took the MCATs. I actually did get accepted to six different medical schools and opted not to go to medical school, but all during college, I worked as a personal trainer. I worked as a nutritionist. I helped to manage the wellness center at University of Idaho. So I was immersed in this all through college. And then I got a job in hip and knee surgical sales.

after I got my master's degree in exercise physiology and biomechanics. Oh, so you have a master's in it. So you have an education backing. It wasn't just like a human. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. A pretty large amount of education in this as a background. But the reason that I took that job in hip and knee surgical sales was there were two MD-PhD programs, one at Duke and one at UPenn, that I did not get into that I really wanted to get into. So I thought, well, I'm going to go work in the private sector for a while and see if I can...

have a better resume for applying to medical school because my MCAT scores were good, but I just, you know, I don't want to, I don't want to say anything offensive, but I guess as like a young white male at the time, I had kind of an uphill battle to get into some of the schools that I really wanted. That's not the only reason. That does play a role. So you didn't get into the school that you wanted. So you went, that's why. Which school did you want? Duke? Which one did you want? I was going to Duke or UPenn. Yeah, I was super interested in both of those because I wanted to do medicine and research. Okay.

And I got nine months into that job in hip and knee surgical sales. And I hated it. I hated being in hospitals. None of the doctors seemed to enjoy their lives or their existence. Nobody told me it would be a good idea for me to go to medical school. I missed fitness. I missed nutrition. I didn't like standing there with a laser pointer showing how an orthopedic surgeon had to like put $40,000 overpriced knee and hip implants and the people who would have been better served.

through exercise and dietary interventions. And one day I just quit and I walked into the gym across the street from the condo I was living in, in Liberty Lake, Washington, and asked for a job at the Liberty Lake Athletic Club. And I got hired as the fitness manager there.

And I had a good resume at the time just because I was loaded up with everything I've done in college. And long story short is a year into that and managing their fitness center, I met up with a doctor who was interested in creating a one-stop shop for sports medicine where you have like chiropractors and massage therapists and physical therapists. And I was going to be the director of sports performance, which I was super excited about. And so we opened this center and

And I operated that for five years. And during that time, I got voted as America's top personal trainer. This was in 2008. You did? Who even did that? The National Strength Conditioning Association, which is the creme de la creme personal training search for the U.S. What's it called? NSCA.

So how did they even know? How did they even know you existed? I was nominated by a bunch of the local physicians because of the work we were doing with the government's Exercises Medicine Initiative. So we were taking a lot of the patients and transforming them in our facility because we had like the best of the best stuff. We were doing blood analysis, calorimetry analysis, VOT to max analysis, high-speed video cameras, blood work, nutrition coaching, testing. Like I had a

like this was way before all these fancy biohacking facilities, but I was kind of like early adopter of a lot of that stuff. And so that's what kind of thrust me into the limelight, that 2008 nomination. And that's when I started doing more podcasting and writing and more

more online coaching and advising and investing and a lot of what I do now. But that's kind of like long story short, my journey of, you know, nerded out homeschooler in the backwoods of Idaho to really, you know, starting a big health and fitness business. So then, so basically 2008, when things started to really take off for you.

When did Instagram start? When did social media become something? What year? I have no clue. 2016? I mean, when I started my podcast, there was maybe 100 podcast tops and like five in the health and fitness category. It was like you had to code your RSS feed and submit it to Apple and wait two weeks. And if it was over like 100 megabytes or something like that, it would break. And it was wild, wild west of podcasting. That's crazy. And then now, okay, are you shocked now?

Like in the area of biohacking, I feel like you're most known for the biohacking stuff, right? Like, are you shocked at like how popular you became in that world or you're not really shocked? The majority of my following for years was the triathlon and endurance sports world.

I raced Ironman. I did the world championships in Hawaii six times. I coached. I had clients all over the world. I was repped by or I repped a wetsuit company and a shoe company and a bike company and raced for Team Timex. So I was actually kind of like a big name in the triathlon world. Like endurance and like high performance. So I wrote like marathoning manuals and a lot of my early books were about triathlon training. And when I got out of triathlon,

triathlon just because I got burnt out on that sport. I kind of just started to shift into what got me out of triathlon in the first place, right? Like burnt out, working out the wrong way, healthy on the outside, but not healthy on the inside. Started doing blood work and biomarker evaluations and realized, hey, there's a lot more to being healthy and living a long time than just like exercising your butt off and eating lean protein and egg whites. Right, exactly. So that's what kind of like got me down the road of like,

into what functional medicine is and naturopathic medicine and biohacking and recovery modalities and self-quantification and all the things that I think now, if you piece them all together, can allow you to be a really well-functioning person without just taking the exercise and the nutrition box. Right. So basically how it was, now I understand more. So you kind of were really into the high-performance fitness, wellness,

world. And then as you kind of got older and as your career kind of evolved, you kind of then got into more of the longevity stuff or like from, no, because actually went from high performance, how to train really hard, how to train really, how to perfect the training. Then you got into like a lot of the crazy stuff. Like that's when I kind of recognized who you were. You were like trying out all sorts of wackadoo things. Methylene blue and laser lights and coffee enemas. Yeah. All the things. And part of it too is like, you just learn about,

And you tried everything. My podcast for the longest time was strictly a Q&A podcast. So I went from answering questions about like, how do I bench press or how do I run a 5K to, well, I've already answered those questions in episode number 82 or 83. So I'm going to answer this question about which side do you lay on when you do a

coffee enema and I've never done one. So I better go do these and figure out and reply to the question because it's like my audience kept me evolving by asking all these weird questions. That makes sense. And as podcasts got bigger and bigger and the information era blew in, now there's all these different biohackers and fitness enthusiasts. And I still would get and do get asked, what do you think of this? What do you think of that? So it's like a constant evolution of

not really trying to be weird or attention grabbing, but almost winding up doing that organically by replying to a bunch of weird

questions. Viral questions, like the 12, 3, 30 treadmill workout or whatever. And it's funny, but then I feel like you kind of like hit, like you were doing a lot of that for a while. And then like, you kind of like leveled out. And now talking to you, even recently, you see much more, and don't be offended by this. I mean, it's in a nice way, but more normal. Like you're more of a normal guy who does normal, like you are really fit, but you're not like as...

intensely crazy about all the extreme extreme as you were maybe three or four years ago. Is that accurate? It depends on your definition of extreme. I'm definitely not like, cause I was racing Spartan races and doing Ironman's the body. That's true. That's kind of all that crazy extreme stuff. I don't do that anymore. I think probably though, you know, cause I still get, you know, hired to shoot videos for people or, you know, to, uh,

whatever, you know, do methylene blue tongue sticking out shots or whatever. And so there is a certain extent to where like, if you're an influencer, if you're in social media, or if you're trying to be a pattern interrupt, you do have to step outside the box a little bit and not just be like a talking head.

Totally. And you do all that. But what I mean is like, there was not a time, there was a big chunk of time where like I would scroll and see like, you would never be just like, I don't, it would always be something like unusual. And then I think, I think I met you really at the biohacking conference in London. Do you remember when that was? Yeah.

And I remember when you weren't talking to people, I was like, oh, where's Ben? I wanted to ask you a question. You were behind the stage. You had your legs up. You had this thing on your head. Do you remember? You were getting into everything. I felt like every second of your day was accounted for doing something that would be beneficial to your- I don't like to waste time. Yeah. I like that Oliver Berkman book, 4,000 Weeks. You have 4,000 weeks to live. Yeah.

Like I don't grasp at straws. I mean, I just told you I'm a Christian. Like I believe I'm going to live forever in eternity. And so I'm not trying to like do it all in this life. But I also don't like to waste time. No. I can't even sit through a movie. Right. Like you're not interested in like small talk. You're like, it's everything with you is like every moment is accounted for. Yeah. Like,

Even right now, like I'm self-conscious that like I just opening the kimono like two minutes ago, I started thinking, have I told the audience anything like in the past five minutes besides talking about myself? And so I'll start thinking that way because I'm like, I don't want to waste their time. You're not hearing Ben talk about sitting in his bed in Idaho reading fantasy fiction. No, but I actually don't think it's I think people would be curious like how.

how you became so intensely, like, just knowledgeable to, like, such a crazy level. Like, I know if I ask you, there's nothing really under the sun of health or fitness. You may not... You always give an answer that is...

way more detailed than anybody I've ever talked to in my life ever. It's, I, that's why I, and you may be, it's maybe your opinion, but people don't agree with you, but at least like, there's like, I know that it was, there's something that you either read about it, thought about it, tried, like you have an experience with it.

And by the way, you've given everybody, I'm still taking my notes. Okay, so now I understand how the evolution is. These guys came to give us an IV, by the way, so let them put us into like a- Have you ever gotten hooked up to an IV while you're recording a podcast to try to keep conversation flow going? No, this should be interesting. I've done it before. The only part that sucks is if they miss a vein or something and then they start poking you. That'll be really uncomfortable. Let's hope they're good.

Should we usher them in? Yeah, let's try. I mean, this is because of you, by the way. We're going to be getting the, I think we're getting the NR Niagen IV, which is like for Niagen. Have you had it before? Yeah. Long story short is you and I were both at an event for founders and executives and entrepreneurs called Founderland and they were doing IVs there. And I met one of the doctors at the after party and

And I told her at some point we were doing this podcast. I said, we should get an IV during the show. And then it just happened. And next thing you know, well, I've actually, I think I, well, I got this IV one time before. It's like the NAD IV, but it's like NAD, but easier. It's nicotinamide riboside to get less of like a flushing reaction and your gut doesn't flip and it's better absorption and it's shorter.

Wow. With arguably very similar effects on things like sleep deprivation and energy and mitochondrial health. Wow, you should be a spokesperson. I am now. How long does it actually last in your body, though, to get an NR? I don't know what the half-life of an NR is. Do you get a lot of IVs? Are you an IV person? Are they coming in? Okay, cool.

Cool. Yeah. I got a stem cell IV yesterday. Yesterday? Yeah. Where? At here? At Joy Kong's office up in Malibu. Really? Are you able to get this many IVs and be okay? We'll find out. If any veins bust open. Oh my God. I think I'll be okay. Excess IVs can cause scarring of the vasculature if the needles are repeatedly placed in the same location over and over again. But the idea of like, if you're using a

different delivery portal. There's no reason that you can't get like stem cells one day and NAD one day and a multivitamin cocktail the next day. So isn't also, aren't these IVs really good for brain, like cognition and focus and brain fog? The NR ones? Yeah. Yeah.

And also for the mitochondrial health. Yeah. As a matter of fact, my favorite stack for sleep deprivation is NR, NAD, or NMN, which are all just like NAD precursors, and creatine. Because when you're sleep deprived, two things happen. You get less ATP in the brain and creatine, the phosphagen and creatine can help to replenish that. And then the NAD assists with the cellular repair mechanisms that should have occurred when you're sleep deprived.

And so, yeah, I mean, coffee and energy drinks and all that stuff and kind of band-aid sleep deprivation. Right. But using about 10, higher than what you use for strength and power, like 10 to 20 grams of creatine a day. And that will give you disaster pants if you take it all at once. So you can do like four or five gram portions spread throughout the day if you're sleep deprived. You don't need to do this every day.

And then NAD, IV patch, oral capsule, whatever. Okay, wait, so that's actually a good clip. Fantastic for sleep deprivation. Okay, so say that one more time because I want to make sure people get that. So if you are sleep deprived, here is a cocktail that you should do that's very effective. Go ahead. Say it again. The NR. If you're sleep deprived, then...

coffee, five-hour energy, green tea, all these central nervous system stimulants can short-term jack you up. But NAD combined with creatine, that stack is incredible because it helps to simulate a lot of what you would have gotten during sleep, ATP restoration in the brain and cellular repair mechanisms. Okay, this is my question. Can you take NAD, if I just took a truniogen supplement,

And a creatine scoop. Yeah. That would work? A couple capsules, although I recommend more than you'd usually take. So you'd take like four capsules of like the true nitrogen and then you'd do 20 grams of the creatine, but you split that into four or five gram portions throughout the day. Can't that bloat you to take that much creatine? That's why you wouldn't want to do it every day, but you also shouldn't be sleep deprived every day.

That's true. We've got deeper issues to address. Are you not wearing any trackers anymore because of all the EMFs? I wear this ring. Oh, you do? Yeah. I wear a ring. Rings don't produce an appreciable amount of EMF. Yeah. Like a class three Bluetooth signal is not a big... Like maybe if you had it next to your head, like an AirPod inside your ear all the time, some people say it affects red blood cell flow and can cause clumping or heating of tissue. But Bluetooth is way...

less important of a fish to fry compared to like wifi and radio frequencies from phones, et cetera. So I use a cheapo actually just replaced it. My last one pooped out after six years, but he's a cheapo like $30 Timex watch and a ring and a blood glucose monitor.

Oh, so you do wear the blood glucose monitor. I do wear a blood glucose monitor. Why? Not because I don't know by this point after using one for two years what does and does not spike my blood glucose, but just because what gets measured gets managed. I'm less likely to like blow through a bunch of dark chocolate trail mix on an airplane if I know I got to look at the levels later on. I love that line, by the way. Or drink a 100 calorie cane sugar infused caramel latte high protein iced coffee. This one,

maybe let me say it's going to hate me. With false advertising on the front of it. Why? It says lactose free energy, but it's got skim milk in it. However, they added lactase enzymes. So the lactase enzymes digest the skim milk. Oh my God. I'm going to get, I'm going to get fired. It's not that bad of a, like that's good that they put lactase in there a

along with the skim milk, I would rather like this one. If I could wave a magic wand, I'd rather they be using regular milk because all the studies on the benefits of dairy tend to be much stronger with full fat dairy compared to low fat or fat free dairy.

The fats in dairy, especially for the metabolic function, for the satiety, for brain function, and for bone health. If you go with full fat instead of low fat or fat-free. So it's kind of like back to eggs. I'd rather you eat eggs with the egg yolk rather than egg whites. I'd rather you have chicken with the chicken skin and the gristle and the bone than have just pure skim milk. It's more than just calories. And obviously, we're talking about calories. Yeah, it's skim milk, but there is...

calories in this and they do use art or they do use, um, uh, low calorie sweeteners. Looks like, uh, Stevia and,

And, uh, yeah. So, so if I'm looking at ingredient label, I do like to see stevia or allulose or D ribose or erythritol. If people's guts can handle a sugar alcohol, then like acetyl sulfamipotassium or sucralose. But when I'm looking at an ingredient label, this is actually pretty clean. I would give this like a, like an eight on a one to 10 scale, but I would say if you're concerned about

about like fat-free milk and isolating the proteins from the fats, you know, like a, like a, either a nut milk, like an almond milk or a coconut milk or an oat milk without the cane sugar added, or just like using whole milk would be a little bit better. But isn't that better than having, so by the way, Slate, Ben said eight out of 10. So that's still very good. Yeah, it is. It is good. And for the average Joe, who's not Ben, who is a fitness fanatic, not health, you

you know, health phenom, it's a really good thing to have because at least it's getting 20 grams of protein into somebody who otherwise would not be having that. And it's better than having, you know, a milkshake at McDonald's. Right. I would drink this, honestly, if I weren't myself a little bit lactose intolerant and I

I know if I can have dairy, if it's fermented, and this is the case for many people, if you ferment the dairy, if you do like a good fermented yogurt or a kefir, or those would really be the two primary delivery mechanisms for fermented yogurt. You can do better if you're lactose intolerant. You can also do better on milks that have lower amounts of lactose sugar, like goat milk, camel milk, et cetera. But if- Hold up, what did you say? Goat milk, like a lot of-

I raise goats, so we do have goat milk. Of course you do. How about camel? You said camel milk. It's a thing. You can find it. Stop it. Yeah. Okay. Yak milk. Where do you buy camel milk? The camel milk company out of California is where I've gotten it in the past. From a camel? Yeah. It's from a camel. Surprising. Do you drink it? It comes from a camel. I have, but it's also really expensive. I wouldn't. How much is a camel?

How much is a liter of cow's milk? I don't know because I don't really buy it anymore. But it is better for the body. Why? Cow's milk. Because of a few reasons. Lower amounts of lactose, a smaller protein that's more bioavailable than the larger protein found in cow's milk. And also a lot of cows are bred now for A1 protein instead of A2 protein. So when you see at the grocery store that you can buy A2 milk, that is milk that tends to produce a little bit less of an immune response in the body.

And camel's milk and goat's milk are naturally more like an A2 or they have less of the A1 based protein. Because goat's milk, goat milk I see all the time. So are you suggesting to people that they should maybe switch from maybe even their almond milk or their oat milk to a goat milk? Would that be healthier? Well, the nice thing about nut milks, again, if you are adding a bunch of, you know, cane sugar to them and thickeners and fillers, is that a lot of people who just don't do well with milk in general are,

do better with that and they're lower calorie in most cases. There's some that are higher calorie like I think macadamia nut milk is the highest. Yeah. But one issue is if you want to be careful with your calorie count, a nut milk is a better substitute compared to a dairy milk. But that

How about the carrageens in them and all that stuff like that? Yeah. Yeah. And you can see on this can, they say no carrageenan, right? That is a filler that can upset a lot of people's stomachs. So, yeah. And it says lactose-free, sucralose-free, erythritol-free, but I don't want to throw them under the bus when I said false advertising. It's technically, they have an enzyme in their lactase that allows you to digest the lactose. So it's not lactose-free, but it's more like they have the carrier agent in there.

that helps you digest lactose. So technically, by the time it gets into your stomach, it is lactose-free. Okay, that... Okay. Theoretically. Thank you. They're going to hate me now for even bringing you on this podcast. That I don't care about, but here's... This one has erythritol in it, which can be a little bit... Like if people have like...

Small intestine bacterial overgrowth. That's not from my fridge. I don't know how they got there. It's not bad, though. It's oxygenated. Yeah. Okay, this is the next one. This is Magic Mind. I love... It's a hydrogen-infused water. That's good. That's good. I got that for you. Okay. And then these Magic Minds, I want you... I'm blind, so I can't even read the ingredients. I do know there's amazing stuff in here. Sorry, I ate my carrots. Let me see it. Okay, good. See? All right. It's pretty small. So Magic Mind, Nulixer, Matcha Green Tea, Agave...

And it's a very small bottle. So a lot of people see agave and they'll be like, oh, that's just a 100% sweetener. And agave does have a higher amount of fructose in it. The thing with fructose, fruit juices, fruit sugars, et cetera, is a lot of people have vilified them. You know, the idea that fructose is a poison. I think Dr. Robert Lustig introduced that concept in his book about calories.

Do you believe that though? So it is true that fructose can elevate triglycerides and contribute to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, but only in a case in which the liver and muscle glycogen stores are already topped off. That's at which point fructose starts to spill over and cause issues. So if I'm burning 2,000...

calories a day and i'm drinking 2 000 calories a day of coke and that's all that i'm drinking i would theoretically not elevate my triglycerides or get a lot of the issues associated with fructose because i'm at a net calorie balance i wouldn't advise it because you're also going to be like you know you're going to have low nutrient density and you're not getting enough protein etc if you're just drinking coke but if people see agave or fructose or

you know, high fructose corn syrup, sometimes there's some harsh chemicals and things like that used to make that. So that's a whole separate side issue. But the idea of fructose in general is that if you're a physically active person and you're not overeating and you're having, you know, fruit juices, you know, fruit in a blender, agave in a drink or whatever, it's usually not an issue unless you're eating too many calories.

at which point fructose can become an issue. Right. I mean, this is the whole conversation about like, people are like, fruit does not get you fat, please. I mean, this nonsense. No. Fruit's not going to get you fat. Yeah. If you eat, if you eat like,

everything else, plus you eat nine pounds of grapes, like maybe I do sometimes, that can be not the greatest thing. Right. And if the fruit is sweet and has a high glycemic index, which grapes do, long-term, you're getting so many insulin surges due to that high sugar content that you could create a long-term state of insulin insensitivity. And then you get some appetite control issues, you get some metabolic issues that long-term could cause problems, even if you're not

overeating the grapes or fruit, you're just eating enough to spike your blood sugar repeatedly throughout the day. How long did the stem cell one take yesterday? Like an hour. And what kind of stem cells were they? The first thing she did was remove a bunch of my blood and ozonate it and then inject that ozonated blood back into my body, which is kind of like an antiviral, antibacterial, oxygenates the blood. Then she did laser lights, which sounds kind of

funky and weird, but the light helps to direct the stem cells or activate the stem cells using photonic absorption of the light. So they're more efficacious. Then after all that and a few other little things like hydrogen water and some peptides, et cetera, then she did the stem cells.

As the icing on the cake. Okay, so how is that different than our friend Dr. Khan's stem cells back in... Well, if you get stem cells in the U.S., they're usually not expanded. So that means that they haven't grown them to increase the amount of mesenchymal stem cells, which are the active stem cells that would theoretically be rejuvenative or have some type of anti-aging qualities.

And if you go overseas, MUSE stem cells, I don't know if those fall into the category of expanded cells, but that's a brand new form of stem cells that not a lot of people know about. It's a multilinear lineage undifferentiated stem cell extract is what I believe MUSE stands for. Multilinear undifferentiated stem cell extract.

And the reason that that's interesting is because normally stem cells called ISPC stem cells have a high mesenchymal stem cell count, but they also have very low histocompatibility, meaning a lot of people have an inflammatory or an immune response that can be unhealthy or dangerous or very uncomfortable for people.

And the Muse cells do have a high amount of histocompatibility, meaning if you were to get an infusion with them or an injection into a joint, there's a very low likelihood that you're going to feel crappy afterwards, but they have a very high amount of healing capacity. Issue is you do have to travel internationally and they're expensive. However, for

from what I understand, they require fewer expansions than a normal expanded stem cell. And every time you expand the stem cell lineage, you run the risk of mutations, you run the risk of impurities, and you run the risk of them causing issues in a patient in which they're injected. So if you get stem cells in the US, they're unexpanded, but they're also arguably a little bit safer unless you're getting something like, let's say, a mu cell.

You mean, you're talking about it's safer internationally or safer... Domestically, if you're concerned about histocompatibility, because the FDA is pretty strict about how stem cells are regulated. Actually, I don't think they're technically regulated by the FDA, but they're considered to be almost like a pharmaceutical drug, or they're treated a little bit like one. They're not quite classified as a drug, even though they're trying to classify them as a drug, but there's so much regulation in the US that you do have a...

lower risk of side effect issues, but also a lower stem cell count. So you're getting less of the good stuff. Arguably, the question is how much less of the good stuff for it to be an issue. Now, what I did was simply a stem cell infusion. This is an anti-aging or longevity or brain health play, right? Stem cells straight into the bloodstream. They go throughout the body. It's like a shotgun approach.

If you were to go to, let's say, Dr., like you just mentioned, Dr. Khan, like he has clinics in Cabo and Dubai and Toronto. He will do stem cell infusions, but he also does injections into different joints using ultrasound guided imaging. And this is something you can do for like back treatment or knee treatment or shoulder treatment. And even though you can also do that in the U.S.,

The idea of regenerative medicine using safe expanded stem cells overseas is a good idea, but it's going to be a lot more expensive and inconvenient than doing it in the US. So there's benefits to both. And I bounce back and forth. I've done international stem cell treatments. I've done domestic. If you're literally just in it for anti-aging and you want to do like

You know, like the doctor I was with yesterday, Dr. Joy Kong, she's like 53 years old and she looks like she's 40 and she's been doing quarterly stem cell infusions. So every three months for like eight years or something like that. And that's, you know, that's not something out of the reach of someone who just wanted to go to a clinic and get a stem cell infusion every quarter. How much is it? I don't know.

Of course not. Yeah. I know if you were to go overseas and do the full meal deal, like the super duper fancy stuff, and you were to get like gene therapy and T cell therapy and stem cell therapy, that's the whole anti-aging package that a deal does. And I think that's 50K. But it gets these IVs though, right? You get the IVs with that. If you're doing stem cells, you want them to go into a really stress-free, low inflammation environment. Yeah.

So everything from like eating a really clean diet, avoiding alcohol, you know, grounding and earthing and exercise, but not too much. And, you know, avoiding toxins in your food. And, you know, they're like really babying your body before and after is better because essentially if you think about it, you just injected a whole bunch of fragile new baby cells into your body. And so you don't want to go like have a couple of old fashions afterwards or something like that. Right. So basically you can't drink, but you said also like easy exercise. You don't want to stress your body is basically your point, right?

yeah and you know this this kind of harkens back to the idea of like the goldilocks zone of exercise right there's a researcher named dr james o'keefe and he's identified that if you exceed about 75 minutes per week of vigorous intensity exercise 150 per week of moderate intensity exercise the potential for plaque accumulation atherosclerosis and inflammation begins to exceed the benefits of the exercise

And there's a lot of people like people who are doing CrossFit every day or training for an Ironman or a marathon or whatever, who are definitely exceeding those numbers. So you wouldn't want to be overtraining. You would want to be over drinking. You wouldn't want to have tons of exposure to like, you know, EMF and Wi-Fi and stress and, you know, all these unhealthy things, especially if you're focusing on stem cell therapy.

So do you have, you seen any kind of benefit by you doing this? How often are you doing these types of, this is not stem cells. This is not, it's an NR niagen IV. We can pretend they're stem cells just to be cool. Just to be cool. Yeah. How often have you done the stem cells and how,

Do you see any benefit? Have you seen any benefit? I have probably done like 20 stem cell therapies, everything from joints to infusions. And I don't know what 42 year old Ben would be like not having done those. So I don't really have a good comparison. Yeah. But I can tell you that I feel really good.

I don't have a lot of like the aging issues that it seems like a lot of my friends are having to deal with. I feel like I've maintained a great amount of youthfulness and I would attribute some of that to the stem cells. I've been able to fix some worn and torn joints like a knee with stem cells. And I mean, I feel like I'm 18 years old, so I feel pretty good. You know, it's funny. I would, I'm going to say that you look younger now than you did when I first met you even. There you go. But I don't know why that is. It's like, I think it's a con.

It's everything. Or maybe it's just genetics. I think a lot of this stuff, just like anything in the biohacking or the health, it stacks, right? Like I go in the sunshine, but not too much UVA. And I put on good, clean sunscreen if I'm going to do that. Do you wear sunscreen? I use red light therapy. I do if I'm going to have a high UVA exposure. And now...

I recently did a podcast about this. Toxins, poor air, bright overhead lights, airline radiation, sunlight coming in through a window or it's blocking some of the UVB. All of these things dictate that a small amount of low SPF sunscreen is not a bad idea a lot of the time, especially for fragile, thin skin like the face. So I've been using, I have sunscreen on right now. Like I've been using a lot more of it and I use the,

Yumgoose products. Basically, every two months I use their anti-aging package. It's like six different bottles plus sunscreen. So it's like a cleanser, moisturizer, serum, and those are all based on peptides. They've got a bunch of transdermally bioavailable peptides. And that's probably, I would say, it's made the biggest impact on my skin health is when I started using those products. Well, you look really good.

Thanks. So what other things would you say is good for your overall youthfulness, skin? Well, I do... How about this? Do you mean brothers and sisters? Yeah. Do they look like you? Two brothers and two sisters. Do they have your skin? I would say I'm self-conscious, like comparing myself to my brothers and sisters. I think my skin has aged less than theirs possibly, but...

I don't know. Have you gotten stem cells in your skin? I haven't done like a thorough analysis of side-by-side analysis. Well, maybe you should. Yeah. I have had my skin treated with stem cells also. Yeah. Has that worked? I think it does make a difference. I think that if you're looking at beauty using good, clean skincare products and taking advantage of the newer developments and things like peptide absorption for skin health is a good idea. So I like

that the company, for example, Young Goose is one that I use. Although I found out from Joy Kong last night that she's now making a skin cream. I've got a couple in my backpack that she puts umbilical stem cells and peptides into. I even ask her how much it costs. It's probably like the world's most expensive skin cream. Can I have one of them? But I have it and she's just up the road. I would give it to you, but she told me that I'm supposed to do like a before after and use the two different bottles for a month and then

Well, you can't look any younger now. Your name could actually be Benjamin Button because you literally look like you're like 22. Benjamin Greenfeld or Benjamin Button. Yeah. And then a clay mask once a week.

come out with red light therapy daily. I think red light therapy for collagen and elastin for the face is fantastic. The clay mask helps to draw out toxins, moisturizes. I do a derma roller before I do the clay mask. So I'm getting some of that dermal abrasion. I think if I were to go to a beauty clinic and do a microneedling protocol, that would be better than derma rolling, but I don't really have the time or the desire to do that. So wait, hold on. You're going too fast. God, I gotta get my bat. Okay. So you're telling me you do a clay mask how often? Once a week.

Okay, which brand are you using that? Alitora. All the way down to like, it's got like six day old baby goat derived colostrum in it. Like you read the ingredient label and you're like, are they kidding me? Like just crazy stuff. Colostrum and all these different like antioxidants and nutrients, like face food. How much is that? I don't know. I think it's probably like around 50 bucks for like a little. Think of it. Can of it, yeah. Okay, so wait, you put the clay mask on and then you put the red light on top? Mm-hmm.

For how long? 20 minutes. Okay. And then I actually walk around for a little while longer and just let the clay dry just while I'm doing my thing. Then I go shower it off. And that's once, okay. Yep. Okay. Give me some other stuff you do for your skin. In addition to the clay mask, I do a scrub once a week. So twice per week, my skin is getting embraced. Once with the derma roller plus the clay mask, once with the scrub. You wouldn't want to get skin turnover all the time because then you're just going to wear away the skin layers too quickly and have a very, very fragile face. But-

Scrub once a week, clay mask once a week with the derma roller. Young Goose products, the moisturizer, toner, serum, their whole suite, once in the morning, once in the evening. And then I probably had stem cells on my face three times. Three times. Did Dr. Kahn do it to you? Everything I'm saying is nowhere near what, you know, there's like biohackers like freaking Brian Johnson who are doing a full laser resurfacing. Crazy. I was going to ask you about him though. Yeah.

Wait, finish what you're going to say, then I'm going to ask you about him. So did you do with Dr. Khan the stem cells on your face? No, I did that with Dr. Adelson. I did Dr. Adelson's full body stem cell procedure. I've done that twice in Park City, Utah. And they go toe to head. They do literally hair, skin, nails, genitals, every joint up and down the back. And I mean, you're like, you're literally...

under anesthetic induced surgery for like four hours and they do everything. I remember you were talking to that Dr. Adelson at the biohacking conference in London about this whole stem cell. That was like in 2020 or something you did, right? Yeah.

And you did that again? I've done it twice. Yeah. Why? Why? Why do you need to do it twice? Well, as you age, you do decrease your bioavailable stem cell pool. The first time that I did it, he used my own stem cells. He tapped my hips and used my own bone marrow and made like a

bone marrow soup with stem cells and then injected that into all my joints, skin, everything. And then he came out with a new protocol in which he uses umbilical stem cells. And because of the reasons I was talking about earlier, you get a little bit less of like an immune response, cytokine inflammatory response to those who recover faster. And I wanted to see what that second protocol that he does was like. So I went down there and did it again, both times that I've done it

You feel kind of like you got hit by a truck for a few days because you're kind of sore and you got everything injected. And then within a couple of weeks, you start to feel like Superman. You recover faster. Your erections are better. Your skin looks better. Your hair, skin, nails, everything grows faster. So it definitely turns back the clock.

And how much is that? Like if you're getting full head to toe? That I think is $70,000 to do. Yeah. It's a pretty big procedure. And how long does it last? I know you did it twice, but how long does it, do you have- I mean, theoretically, the benefits would last for your life. But I would say, you know, if you were doing this a full on anti-aging play, this would be something you could do like every four or five years. You don't have to do it.

I mean, if you did it just once, you'd see huge benefits in turning back the clock. So how long apart did you do both treatments? About five years. Five years. Yeah. Does Dr. Kahn do that one too? He doesn't do the full body one. Dr. Allison's one of the only guys I know of in the world who specializes in, because it's a pretty intensive procedure and there's two doctors working on you at the same time. And it's kind of, it's kind of one of those things where, hey, let's just shotgun everything. Yeah.

And not a lot of doctors will do that. But Dr. Khan is very good at joints. He's very good at back. He also does, like I said, gene therapy, T-killer cell therapy. What is gene therapy really? He does like a vagal nerve block where he resets your nervous system with an injection into the vagus nerve. He has some cool tricks up his sleeve that you can't do in the States. So you can travel internationally and get some crazy stuff. What does that do though? What you just said. Which one? The one where you like the vagus nerve.

The vagus nerve is the nerve that kind of snakes through your whole body, innervates the pacemaker cells of your heart. It helps you to manage stress if it's well-toned. There are things like chanting, singing, humming, gargling, cold water face dunks, even electrical vagus nerve stimulators you can hold up to your neck, all of which work well.

to specifically increase your heart rate variability, like lower stress by toning the vagus nerve and increasing your ability to have good balance between your fight or flight nervous system and your rest or digest nervous system. That's basically how...

addressing your vagus nerve can have benefit. Lower stress, improves digestion, improves cardiovascular function, improves focus, et cetera. Like that's the benefits of the vagus nerve. The more stress that you're under, the more likely it is that you have poor vagal nerve tone or poor nervous system balance.

Now, if you wanted to just say, okay, I'm going to roll up my sleeves and use the big guns on this thing, that's where you could literally go to a doctor. And this would be normally something for like extreme PTSD or trauma or just stress that someone cannot manage at all. That won't go away that you would do this. You wouldn't normally just like wander into a doctor and have them jam a needle right behind your carotid artery because it's a delicate procedure. And often because there's some throat swelling involved, you do one side one day, then you wait a couple of days or at least a day to do the other side, but you're supposed to do both sides.

Is it dangerous? It's also known as a stellate ganglion nerve block. It could be dangerous if the person doing it, it's kind of like if you would get a brain surgery, you'd preferably want the surgeon who's done like thousands of them versus the person every once in a while does them. Adele does a lot of them. Um,

Another doctor, Dr. Matt Cook in San Jose, he does them. Dr. Avi Herskovich, also he's in San Francisco, he does them. So there's a few people you can go to to get them done. And you sit up after having had the injection and you feel like you've smoked a joint and had a glass of wine all at once and your stress levels just melt away and it feels like that for at least a couple of weeks. Just a couple of weeks? Yeah. But...

think about this. If you open that window, it's almost like ketamine therapy for addiction, right? Like if you do ketamine therapy and you realize after ketamine therapy, you've got a window for a few days where if you avoid that thing that you were addicted to, which is easier to do after the ketamine therapy, then you can break that addictive cycle. And it's kind of like with stress. If you do a procedure like that,

and your body suddenly receives the message that it's safe and down regulates the sympathetic nervous system, it's going to allow you to be able to be less stressed even after the acute effects wear off. Does that make sense?

It does. But eventually it comes back though, unless it's managed. Yeah. You're not going to get like anything. It's not going to be a bandaid. Yeah. Like it sounds like all of these things are just like they're short lived. They're short term. Yeah. Like if you get on Ozempic and you're going to control your calories and you're going to lose weight. But once you get off it, if you haven't developed healthy eating patterns during that time or use the Ozempic as training wheels to do so, say, oh, this is what it feels like to not be hungry.

This is what it feels like to sit down and not eat all the food. Or this is what it feels like to have one plate at the buffet because I don't feel like I need more than if you were to wean off a drug like that, you would theoretically, if you, if you built the mindfulness during get to the point where you'd use it as training wheels and then you don't need it anymore.

you know it's like even like my wife and i did freaking like mdma couples therapy right and that was the training wheels that it took for us to like really have long deep meaningful honest transparent discussions which we now have without drugs yeah it's like sometimes i don't think

Every couple, you know, for the rest of all time used to go out and do MDMA therapy to have honest discussions. But my wife and I were at the point where we just developed, you know, almost like a barrier to doing that. And now we can have great dates and sit in bed and talk for a long time. We don't have to like go use MDMA beforehand. Right. So a lot of these things are like training wheels. No, it makes perfect sense. That's actually a really true point. I know a lot of people, a lot of people, my friends, um,

who swear by that in terms of for couples therapy, because it gives you an opportunity to like open up the, or it loses your inhibitions that you would otherwise have after so many years of doing the same thing over and over again. Exactly. What did you guys do that? Like how long ago? We did it six times over the course of three years. Last time we did it was six years ago. Really? Yeah. And it made a big difference.

Pretty big difference. And I'm cautious saying that because I don't want a bunch of couples who are having issues to feel like they need to go do drugs or plant medicines together to get over that barrier. If I could, it was very difficult, kind of like what would I look like with stem cells versus without. It's very difficult to rewind the clock, but

I think we could have made an even more concerted effort to just talk through our problems and have honest discussions without that. But that's just the way that things panned out. But I don't like I'm I have twin 16 year old sons, right? Like I will be coaching them and training them and talking with them many times once they do get engaged and they're preparing for the months leading up to marriage to talk with them about how to have honest, open discussions with their significant other and

how to have evening prayer meetings like my wife and I have now, and how to do quarterly retreats like my wife and I do now. So that hopefully- - What do you mean? What are you doing? - So that hopefully they and their wife don't get like we did, like 14 years into our relationship and realize, oh, we have a lot between us 'cause

I mean, I don't know about you, but my parents didn't like train me that much to be married. A lot of this stuff I just had to figure out on my own. So for me, I want to do a better job training my sons on what to expect during marriage and how to navigate discussions and living with another person, hopefully for the rest of your life. Did you date a lot? Because you said you were very much like you're homeschooled until all these years. Did you have a big chunk of time that you dated people before you got married? Yeah.

Or did you, your wife, one of your, I, um, probably dated less than the average normal traditional public school kid, just cause there weren't a

There weren't a lot of girls around. Yeah, I was going to say. Prom was very lonely. Yeah. Dancing with myself. Did you go to prom even? I probably had like eight girlfriends before I... Well, I met my wife in second grade Sunday school. So I have known her for a really long time. But I didn't start going out with her until senior, junior year of college. And up till that point, we'd been hanging out for a couple of years and been best friends before we even fell in love and started to go out together. And...

She went to like a local classical Christian school called Logos and also by the nature of going to a classical Christian school also, you know fooled around less didn't have a lot of boyfriends, etc So we relative to the general population probably had fewer partners than than the average person and we didn't have sex at all until we got married You didn't know

No, that was just something that we committed to each other. And I promised to her parents when I asked them if I could marry her and I wanted to stay true to my word. So really? Yeah.

Which was really hard. Oh my God, I can't believe that. It was like a year and a half of torture, but. Wait, so you dated for a year? Pay off was great. Yeah, I was going to ask you, did it turn out okay? Yeah. So for a year and a half, you guys dated then? Mm-hmm. Did you guys do anything, like how does it work when you have no sex? Are you doing nothing else? Are you kissing even? Like what are you doing? Everything but? Like what do you do? We got maybe to second base, so. And then you guys got married? Well, yeah.

Yeah. By the way, that's become a big thing now. Have you heard about this whole celibacy trend that's become hot right now? Have you heard about this? No, what is it? I don't know. Like my friend Emily told me about it. I don't know what it is. You mean like guys going into monk mode and just like living in their basement and working out? I don't know. I don't know. I'm going to ask her again. It was like...

something that became like trendy for like a hot minute. I don't know if it's still happening to be honest, but. Celibacy, like waiting until you're married to have sex, like that definition of celibacy. I don't, I don't know if it was a way into, I don't know if it was waiting until you got married or if it was, it was a trend where people weren't having sex. Yeah. I got to find out. I mean, the reason I think it's a good idea is the same reason that I think just like

Serially dating or treating sex as a casual event is potentially risky for long-term relationship and societal stability. I think that if you set up sex as something sacred and you set up marriage as something sacred and you don't get into marriage having developed the habit of as soon as something a partner does annoys you, you can ditch them and move on to the next person or try on some new flavors, then you're going to be more likely to...

commit to a long-term relationship, to have children, to build legacy, to build generational wealth, to set the foundation for what made this country great. And I think that even though it sounds kind of trite, if you have a bunch of young people sleeping around and not treating sex as sacred, getting into marriage, not understanding what a sacred committed relationship, even when the other person that you're with is not perfect, actually feels like and looks like, then you can create a lot of long-term societal and familial instability.

And so I think the idea of celibacy lends itself better to the foundations of a great society than the opposite.

You know, it's funny that that is... I'm sure you've noticed that we're living in a society now where people are not getting married anymore. People aren't even dating properly. Men are just watching porn. There's no men to even be dating, for women to even date because apps and everything else has now ruined how people even socialize. They don't even know how to socialize. They don't know how to date. And they're not interested in relationships because everything is just about like...

a swipe to the next person, right? Like it's actually really sad how like we've evolved into this strange place where people aren't even having, they're not getting married. They're not having children. You know what I mean? Honestly, like I, I hate to say it's almost like the lesser of two evils, but I'd rather, let's say like,

young men who right now are spending a disproportionate amount of time on social media, playing video games in mom's basement, whatever, not to stereotype too much. I'd rather them be going out and doing dangerous things, jumping off cliffs, partying, drinking, et cetera, than I would a generation of young men who live in their parents' basements and don't get married till they're 40. And like, I'd almost rather see young people doing dangerous things than I would them doing nothing at all.

Absolutely. Of course. And if you've seen the decline of what's happened since people were born after 1995, actually, what was happening is 83% of the things that we used to do, we don't do anymore. Like go out and date, like get in trouble, like jump off cliffs, bike ride, just basics, right? Because people are now stuck on their screens. Yeah. My son's graduated high school two months ago and I kicked him out of the house.

Really? They're in, I think they made it to Arizona so far. They got a used car. They don't get a dime from me. And they're just off driving around the country for, well, they're supposed to be home by Thanksgiving. They got a tent for the top of their car. They're like parking by the side of the road and camping and getting water from springs and eating oatmeal and beef jerky and just learning how life works and getting out of the house for a little while to just go explore, which I think is a great idea. That's so amazing. They're ready for it.

So you basically said to them, you're leaving the house, come back around Thanksgiving and go fend for yourself. They knew it was coming. Yeah.

It wasn't just like they graduated and I said, leave. We have a whole Greenfield family constitution. Tell me. Meaning there's rites of passages. There's everything in there. What we do for Easter, what we do for Thanksgiving, what we do for Christmas, what time we meet for meditation in the morning, what time we have dinner at night. Everybody's all the way down, like everybody's end of life and memorial services planned and what we would want at our funeral in terms of like songs sung and the dress code all the way back to what each family's

power animal is and symbol and hex color and font and what the family crest looks like and what each element of the family logo represents and the family logo is on the flags outside our front door and our throw pillows and the hoodies and hats that we wear out to dinner and everything but

in that greenfield family constitution, which by the way, having a constitution like this is a great way to back to building generational wealth, building a sense of pride in the family name, building a legacy that can be passed on to my sons and then improved upon in their families. So there's a lot of benefits to having this idea of almost branding your family, like your brand of business. But in that constitution,

are rites of passage, particularly for young greenfield men, meaning when they turn 13, they have a rite of passage into adolescence. Three days out in the wilderness, backpack, blanket, knife, they've

have a wilderness survival instructor who they've worked with since they were six, and he oversaw that rite of passage. When they come out, there's a ceremony, there's a fire, there's a feast with friends and family, and that marks that they are now adolescents, and they're given more responsibility and chores at home, they're treated less like kids, they pitch in more with family dinners, and they're just expected to be a greater contributory member to the family.

at that point when they are 16. And again, this is baked into the constitution. So they've known this was coming since they were eight years old. They have to leave the house for three months. It could be an international trip. It could be a domestic trip. It could be whatever, but they just can't be under mom and dad's roof for three months. They just have to go out and

Fly the nest. And you give them money or no money? No money. No, but they've had time to think about this and save up and budget and they know how much they can spend every day to be able to not drain their bank accounts. So they do all of that. And then at age 17 is the final rite of passage into adulthood, at which point there'll be like.

stamped hopefully is ready to be contributory adults to society and ready to go off and marry and start their own families or whatever it is they want to do. So age 17 is a 10 day vision quest, uh, that solo in the wilderness, uh, no food, no water, unless they can collect it themselves while they're out there again, backpack, wool blanket, knife, uh, you know, and a full on, you know, facing your own fears for 10 days and being alone and, and, uh, you know, doing almost like a native American style vision quest.

Who put this whole thing together? Your dad or? I did. And I did after, you know, some of my podcasts and some of my interests has been in the realm of parenting, education, raising responsible adults. I've learned a lot.

from different people who I've interviewed about legacy, about rites of passage. And I wove all of this and the constitution together just based off of years of learning from people who have done similar things with their children and just kind of like borrowing from the best of the best. This is amazing. I wrote a whole book about this, by the way. You did? Yeah, it's called Boundless Parenting.

It's like the boundless. It's like you have the blueprint for biohacking in your lap. I also have the blueprint for parenting. That's like the tools of Titans for parents. I interviewed like 32 of the top parents that I know, these super successful entrepreneurs with super impactful children who are already out changing the world in politics and business and tech. And so I asked every parent the same set of 32 questions.

My wife has like 50 pages in there, 70 pages of advice. Then there's all these 700 pages of just like deep in the trenches parenting advice. What was the top thing?

three pieces of advice that really stuck with you that would help build mentally strong children? There's one page in the book that's like common threads, right? Things that would pop up over and over again, consistently from parent to parent. The biggest one was more is caught than taught. More is caught than taught. Meaning no matter how much you tell your kids that they need to eat healthy food and

and that they need to get outside and move more and that they shouldn't have their devices at the table. If they see you like sneaking in Ben and Jerry's, you know, multiple nights per week and sitting inside at your desk all day without taking a break and having eight hours of sedentary time during the day and whipping out your phone like five times during dinner to check on that one last important email, they're going to catch you.

way more onto that than they are onto what you told them, right? So children see by example, they don't, they don't learn by word. They see by example. So you have to be the person who you want your children to be when it comes to the positive habits that you want them to develop. So that's number one is anything you tell them, understand that you better be willing and ready and

and already doing that thing yourself another one would be caution with forbidden fruits it's all parenting approach that formally is known as love and logic meaning the more that you just have hard no's or hard yeses in your home like no we don't talk about

porn it's not a discussion you don't learn about porn is just like you're gonna eventually find that out a friend slumber party or you know wherever else and and that's just you know it's off limits we don't talk about that or no you don't you don't get alcohol you don't taste alcohol that's off limits if it's forbidden fruit that's for adults stay away you know weed drugs porn any any vice if it's a hard no you're creating forbidden fruit in your house so for for us i've had

very frank discussions with my sons about porn. Here's what it is. Here's what it does to your brain. Here's what it does to society. Here's what it does to the way that you think about women when you're interacting with them. Here's what it does to your objectification of the opposite sex. Here are the issues that it can even create in countries with things like sex slavery and sex abuse. And you're not banned from viewing or watching porn, but here's everything that it can do. Now you go out and make the decision.

Not you can't have a cupcake at your friend's birthday party because gluten is the devil, but rather, hey, if you have too much gluten, it can cause neural inflammation. It could cause some protein inflammatory issues. It may cause some gut issues. You make the decision about whether or not you're going to have gluten. Alcohol, right? My first experience with alcohol was stealing a bottle of scotch from my dad's office and getting drunk in my bedroom because for me, alcohol was like the totally off limits thing that just the parents did at the dinner table or whatever. We do like to

Dry farm wines, quarterly organic wine delivery service to our house every month. And when it comes, I open up the little brochure and we taste the wine and we have a little shot glass and the boys get a sip. Like they're never going to go take a bottle of wine from our pantry and go get drunk in their bedroom because it was just forbidden for them.

So using, and this takes more time and attention and presence for you as a parent, but instead of having a hard no or hard yes, you explain to your child the consequences of any decision that they're going to make. And then you let them deal with the consequences of that decision with some exceptions, like a

one-year-old toddling towards a hot stove, don't say, no, it's going to burn you. Like actually pull them away. And, you know, if you need to slap their hands so that, you know, the, this mild sting of a slap is a lot less damage than whatever, a third degree burn from a stove. Right. Right. Um, and,

I would say the last one was I was shocked at the number of people who didn't necessarily like homeschool or private school, but who had really good, frank discussions with whatever school that their children were going to. And many of them would just like pull their kids out of public school at random times to go on a trip or one family, like sent their kids to school an hour late.

every day so they could just have amazing family breakfast every morning before their kids went off to school. And so people who like game to the system almost, and would not necessarily not send their kids to public school or private school, but who almost adopted a hybrid model of homeschooling, travel, more time at home, et cetera, while still being able to use the learning environment accordingly that their kids were in. So there's so much in the book though. Yeah, it's like 750. That's such an interesting one that you just said.

So who would tell you to do a hybrid model so you're not homeschooling the child and you're not

to putting this, you're not putting the kid in a regular school system. So you would kind of modify what's out there already and make it work to your advantage. Yeah, they'd like go and talk to the teachers and just be like, hey, we know it's not summer break, but we're leaving for a week to go travel with the kids and they'd get their homework and they'd make sure they did their assignments. And they basically would think outside the box when it comes to education in general.

which is kind of like Seth Godin's philosophy that if your kids are going to go to school, your number one job when they walk in the door from school is to start unschooling them or teaching them about how life really works versus just like the rote memorization and pure adherence that they were getting at school.

That book sounds, I didn't know you wrote that book. Yeah. And I self-published it because if you're a health and fitness author, you're not going to get a deal in the parenting and education category. So it was kind of an uphill battle. Even though you've sold so many books, it wouldn't give you a shot? If you've sold a bunch of books in one category, it doesn't transfer over into a publishing deal in a different category. If anything, it makes a publisher a little bit reticent to publish you in a different category, which I didn't know until I tried to do it.

Yeah. No, I mean, that's, but that's actually, and is it as big as this book? As big or bigger. Who did you, who did you go to for your, like for your experts or for your. Amazing parents who I personally knew and whose children I'd interacted with. And it just, I probably asked a hundred different parents and I had about, I think 30, 32, somewhere in that range. The final, final book.

That's amazing. Yeah. And how did you get... Are you and your wife just naturally on board with the same stuff? We are...

pretty much on board with a lot of the same stuff when it comes to education and parenting, just because of how much we talk about it. But wait, did you homeschool your kids? Kind of. We did private schooling for a little while. And then when we realized that they were just getting a bunch of homework and memorization and that private school just seemed like a glorified version of public school and they didn't have a lot of time to pursue their passions and their interests and their desires. In fifth grade, we pulled them from that and we started not homeschooling, but like unschooling.

Meaning not a lot of books, not a lot of curriculum, a lot of time spent just being outdoors, visiting museums, going on trips, cooking, taking care of animals, exercising with dad. You know, just basically this idea of learning through experience, right? So like for their sixth grade math, they built a tree fort all summer, you know, learning geometry and woodworking and angles rather than doing a math book.

So unschooling is focused a lot more on experiences in life than it is on rote curriculum or hefty memorization. I love that. Unschooling is what you call it. Unschooling is what it's called. You know, there's a good book called Unschooling to University, which kind of like decodes how to K through 12. And still, if your kid wants to go to college, go to college while unschooling.

I'm getting more and more interested in this. I just did a TED Talk, actually, why I'm asking you this. I did a TED Talk last week in Miami about how to raise mentally strong kids in a coddling world. Oh, I did. Yeah, and I did a ton of research on it. I also, like, I tend to try to speak to the best of the best in the world, experts, whatever, like, of how to do this, because what I've found is

what's happening is we're really are raising very soft kids, which is not good for our future generation, right? Like, I'm sure you saw the studies and how like 20% of kids now, kids are now taking their parents to job interviews. Did you see this whole thing? They're taking their parents to job interviews? They're taking their parents to job interviews because they don't feel mentally strong enough to go on their own. Oh, geez. So the coping mechanisms and coping skills have been very diminished since, you know,

over many, many years of the helicoptering parents and everyone's getting a trophy. It's kind of ironic. You've got to take your parent to a job interview, but you don't have to take your parent to have your sex changed. Interesting phenomenon. But this is where we're living now. Isn't that just crazy? So that's why when I'm asking you, I would have loved to have read the book. Interesting, what happened is

It was in Miami. It was basically hurricane season and all the power went off on the entire block. And so I had to sit there in the dark for two hours. And so when I went up to finally do my talk, the sound was off. So I have to now rerecord it. So I may want to read that book and see if there's anything in there that I can maybe include. There's a long book.

Should I shoot this thing, by the way? This magic formula? Yes. By the way, I can't believe you still haven't done it. This is magic, Mike. Okay, so yeah, I was saying the agave. So, by the way, all the other ingredients in this look great, and I'm sure the agave is such a small amount that it's not a big deal. No, this is an amazing one. They've got theanine in there that balances out the... Yeah, this looks like a good... Yeah, the fruit thing...

To unpack that glycemic index part, it is interesting because I used to think that if you drank fruit juice or if you blended fruit, it would make it way more sugary and cause a higher glycemic index and more of a spike in the blood sugar. And it turns out research has since shown that fruit juices don't spike your blood sugar any more than eating the whole fruit itself. Really? And when you blend fruit, you actually get

a lowering of the glycemic index and less of a blood sugar response because something about blending helps to take a lot of the fibers and the seeds and the antioxidants and concentrate them in such a way that your blood sugar response is lower. It's really funny you should say that. Versus eating whole fruit.

Well, take the shot and then I'm going to tell you why. Tell me if you like it. And I want to see if you're more energized and focused. Like right away? No, it'll take you like a few minutes. Placebo effects. I mean, I can tell you I've tried a lot of the ingredients in here before, like Bacopa for memory and Cognizant for function. Yeah, it looks pretty good. Well, I'm going to send you some. All right.

It's called Magic Wine, and they're delicious. And I like the taste of them because most of these other things taste like crap. Yeah. But these are good. But I wanted to say something that you just said. What were you just saying? You said something about... I was talking about the blending of fruit or the juicing of it. I was going to say, I had this guy, I had Gary Brekka on this podcast a while ago, and he said that... The ultimate human. The ultimate human. Yeah. And he...

He did this thing and we talked about how he said that when you blend, when people have these smoothies and you're blending all the fruit and in the blender, blah, blah, blah, it skyrockets your glycemic. Gary, I love you, but you're wrong. First of all, that clip...

was shared, I don't know how many times. It was insane. Yeah. Because people were like just railing on him that it was wrong. Like, all those people that normally do it. Like, all the regular suspects who like, you know, look at these things and like, and like, like,

Like Lane Norton. Yes. And like, who's that other guy? He's like from South Africa or South America. Like reaction videos? Yeah. Well, no, no, no reaction. He's a guy who's like a doctor and he like goes and like finds. Oh, geez. Anyway. I don't remember. It was like unbelievable. I have no clue how I've escaped having anybody done those things to me. Nobody's ever done that to you? Nobody's ever done anything like that to me. I have no clue why, because I've said some pretty crazy things.

And nobody's ever done it? I haven't said wrong things that I know of, but I've said crazy things. Well, what do you think of all these people? Do you like, do you like, do you watch and follow these people that like are other biohackers or other people who are really very popular in the wellness and health space who have a really big audience? Yeah. I mean, I, I, most of them are my friends.

Gary Brekka, Andrew Huberman. I wouldn't say Brian Johnson is a friend, but we talk. That's different though. He's on podcasts. He's hacking his whole biohacking, his entire... What do you think of all the stuff that he's done? It's pretty impressive, but it requires you to have a highly systematized and regimented existence when you're eating back to the same thing, breakfast, lunch, and dinner, and going to bed at... I don't know, starting to get ready to go to bed at some ungodly early hour. I don't know.

I don't know what time it is. You don't do those things? That's pretty early. What has he done that you have not done? Well, let me think. I don't think there's much that he has not, there's much that he does that I've not done. Yeah.

if you want to count some of the less sexy stuff like eating the same thing for breakfast lunch and dinner yes i've done that on some days but it's not something okay that's not what i do or going to bed early or eating a super early dinner so you can sleep better i've done that but because we enjoy our big fun family dinners i don't do that i would say of the things that he's done that i know of the only thing he's done that i haven't done is laser resurfacing of the face

which is a pretty intensive protocol and makes you look like a zombie for like four weeks, but it has incredible results. My friend up in Spokane, Cameron Chestnut, he's an incredible cosmetic surgeon and he does those procedures

And he did one on my wife and I got home from a trip and she opened the door and it looked like a zombie movie. She couldn't leave the house for like two weeks. And then in like four weeks, she started to look younger. And so she's 42 and she's

I would estimate that it probably took a good like eight to 10 years off her face. It's crazy. And he does the hands and the neck so that the hands and the neck don't look old in correlation to the face. I've never seen, cause I've seen a lot of, but living with someone and actually seeing that happen nearly overnight from REM procedure was pretty nuts. What does he do? So my wife's done that and Brian Johnson has done that, but I haven't done that. Okay. Why haven't you done it? Honestly, even though I, I,

I like the idea of maintaining youthfulness and vigor and you know, that's good for confidence and obviously it's on brand for me. I am like speaking so much video cameras in front of my face so much doing podcasts so much. I don't know of a period of time that I could go for like four weeks without having a camera on my face. And I suppose I could just do it with my face all bloody and stripped and swollen and stuff. But yeah,

I mean, I think Brian Johnson just did it like in the past couple of weeks because it popped up on my feed and he looks like shit right now and it'll look better later. But I just don't mean even the full body stem cell procedure. I'm kind of like out of commission for maybe five days tops. But yeah, I mean, if someone were to offer me that laser resurfacing on a silver platter and

and were to do it to me, for me, it would just be a matter of where do I find the time to take off. Is it really a month? It's a long time. Yeah. Really? Look it up. Laser resurfacing. It's pretty intensive. Okay. I'm going to look. I think my friend did. Because what they do is first they do stem cells that take the fat out of your butt and inject it into your face. But then the finisher is a laser resurfacing, and that's what makes it look like your face got run over by a truck.

And that sounds scary though, too. I was a little scared when I saw my wife. You didn't know she was getting it done? I knew she was getting it done, but I wasn't prepared for it to look like that. I mean, she would like be throwing up from the pain meds and her eyes bleeding. Her eyes were bleeding? Oh yeah. She's bleeding out her eyes. Yeah. Yeah.

But this is something like a lot of celebrities do it. Or like I know people who fly to Cameron's office up in Spokane to get it done. So it's not like people don't do this, but most people after they do it just stay totally hidden for like a month so you don't see them. And then they come out looking super young and, you know. How much is it? Apparently they were just juicing vegetables really well. Apparently, yeah. It's more than $100,000. Yeah.

Did your wife spend that or did she get a discount at least? She got discounted just because he's one of my buddies. Yeah. He gave her a good deal. What kind of deal? Could I get one done? Is it worth it? I don't remember exactly what it was that she got it for, but it's, I mean, if you wanted like what the top of the top thing that apparently all the celebrities are doing is the best thing for reversing age. I mean, I can tell you like she looks incredible after, as long as she looked crappy before, but I was surprised like.

It definitely. Can you show me a picture before and after? I'm trying to think. He has, he has one, Cameron does on his Instagram. He has a ton of before and afters on his Instagram. Okay. Cameron, what's his last name? Cameron Chestnut. Okay. Name me something else. He'd be an interesting guy for the interview, actually. I was going to say, he's super interesting. Can you put me in touch with him? Yeah. Yeah. He's really interesting. Name me something else that you haven't done that you're like interested in doing or the, and I want you to tell me the one thing that you have done that, that yielded the most attention.

amazing results that you were shocked about. Okay. Let's start with that second question. Okay. Because we've covered a lot of the sexy stuff, right? Like stem cells, peptides, a lot of the things that I think would be super sexy or fringe that move the dial a lot, we've talked about. But I would say

One thing I've been doing recently that has absolutely transformed particularly my mornings and just my general enjoyment of the rest of the day is combining sound light electricity and vibration

for meditation. So this is kind of fringe, but it's totally doable. Anybody could do it. So I have this chair now. It's called a shift wave chair. You sit in it and you wear a little fingertip monitor and it monitors your heart rate and your heart rate variability and then vibrates in correspondence to the beats of your heart.

and comes with audio tracks that you can listen to that coach you through breathwork sessions while the whole chair vibrates your body, which in and of itself is pretty cool. I sat on it at the American Academy of Anti-Aging Medicine Conference. It was so cool. I got one and I used it for, I probably got it like six months ago and I used it for a while. But then I also got my hands on a light sound machine. And these are machines that you lay underneath that blast you through closed eyes. You

You can barely, well, not barely, but you can detect the light, but your eyes are closed and it's almost like you've taken six grams of psilocybin without actually taking any drugs or anything. It automatically just shifts your brain into a whole different state using light stimulation. And in the past, I've used headset versions of that, like this one called the BrainTap. Yeah. There's one called the NeuroVisor that I actually like. I have my bag upstairs, the NeuroVisor, because I still travel with it. What does it do though? It shifts your brain automatically.

in the same state that you'd be looking for from let's say like ketamine lsd psilocybin these you know entheogens or psychedelics people use for brainwave shifting but it does so using light instead light and sound stimulation so i figured out how to take an av cable from the light and connect it to the chair so now i've got the light the sound and the vibration all going at the same time and then

Nikola Tesla said, if you want to understand the universe, think in terms of energy frequency and vibration. So I've got the light frequencies and the sound frequencies and the vibration, but then I was looking for a way I could incorporate electrical energy into that. So then I

I outfitted that whole setup with a PEMF coil. PEMF is Pulse Selective Magnetic Field Therapy. Wow. And there's one called a Halo, H-A-E-L-O, and I put it in my lap during one of those sessions, and that can be set for like meditation, inflammation, digestion, whatever. So now if you go into my downstairs living room, in the room beside my office, in the corner there's a chair, and the chair is the shift wave, and above that is the Ruxiva lamp, and next to that is the Halo PEMF coil, and

Then I will just like pull on a gravity blanket or one of those infrared sauna blankets. And I do this usually at about four 30 in the morning. So I literally get out of bed early and go downstairs and I do like a, anywhere from a three to a 60 minute session. And it is just the coolest thing ever.

What does it do for you, though? It's like total checkout. Better creativity, better focus, even though I'm getting up early, feeling like more energy than I've ever had. One of the things I miss the most besides my family when I travel now is my vibrating light sound therapy chair. I don't have to take any drugs, even though I feel like I used to feel when I used to experiment with plant medicine and journey. I don't do any of that stuff now.

But it's a similar feeling of just like relaxation, forgetting all your worries, meditation all at once using technology rather than drugs to shift you into that state. And the cool part is you sit up from it and you're just like ready to tackle the world, but you're not simultaneously metabolizing a bunch of drugs out of your system. And for example, there's one session on there. It's probably my favorite session. It's called Rebirth. And it's,

the session starts with fetal heartbeat, you know, whooshing of, of mom's womb, darkness, occasional flashes of light. And then as the session goes on, it progresses to like a whole birthing experience where you're going down the birth canal and there's light and like heroic epic music. And I've never done that and not sat up a crying and be just like ready to tackle the world. Like literally feeling almost like reborn.

But you do that every day? All just with light and sound stimulation. I've probably done that 10 times, like in the past two months. Okay, but wait, but people have to buy one of these machines though. Everything I just described to you, if you were to put everything in your living room, you'd probably spend about $20,000. Yeah, that's a lot for the average person. It's a lot of money. Okay, so let's go back to people who are like- Less than a car, but- Okay, less than a car. But for the person who's listening to this and like now they're like familiar with who- The cheap-

Travel hack version. Yeah. What's the more cost? The Neurovisor, I don't even think that's $1,000. And it's like wearable glasses that do light sound stimulation. And then there's a vibrating wristband called the Apollo. And so that's what I travel with is I'll wear the wristband or my wrist or my ankle. That does the vibration. And then I lay back and I put the glasses on and those connect to headphones. But what does the vibration do on its own? Hmm.

vibrating or so-called the haptic sensations can shift your brain into a certain state based on the frequency of the vibration it's like the Apollo can be set for calm for stress for how often do you wear it focus they should take this needle out of my arms soon I know start starting starting to hurt to feel yeah you can feel like when it's done me I know yeah so the

You know how like some animals when they've been chased, I think Robert Sapolsky talks about this in his book, zebras don't get ulcers. They'll kind of like shake it off to shake off the stress. Or sometimes like if you've been really stressed, you just shake it off. So vibrating does that similar function. It's almost like a, like a, uh,

a mild moving sensation that causes your brain to just like shift into a state of calm or focus or creativity or whatever it is you're looking for. And then the chair that I was talking about is basically neural feedback because it's detecting, based on your heart rate, where you're at and adjusting it as you're breathing. Is it similar to what we did at the Founderland when you're like, oh, go to this thing. There's like a pod in there. It's a new device. I forget what it's called, but a little bit similar to that. It's like a pod that you lay in that vibrates, that plays sounds. Yeah.

Yeah. What if you just have like, did you go to the Therasage one when they had the pod and it was like a vibrational sound and then they had the red light around it? Yeah. Did you try that? All these things, they're very, like, they're all kind of going after the same thing, right? Like using electricity, light, sound, frequency, vibration, et cetera, to shift your brain into a certain state and to preferably do it without hefty supplementation or drug use. Okay. What's the other thing that you were going to tell me? Other thing? Yeah.

That was the thing that you've been using that you think have been. Oh, yeah. But wait, what if you had to say what that thing has done for you? What has it done for you in like two sentences or less? Made me feel way more rested. Okay. Throughout the entire day. I'm getting out of bed a little bit earlier. Better creativity, better focus, lower stress, higher on average heart rate variability. So it's affecting my nervous system and it is very enjoyable.

Like you get this big dopamine rush. You just feel incredible when you finish it. And we'll see. Okay. Now what's the other thing that you said that it was the two questions I asked you was the thing that you've done. The thing that I've done and the thing that I want to do. Yeah. Besides the laser resurfacing. Yeah. I would say there is an idea of an oil change for your body. And.

And there are some medical clinics that will do things like ozone therapy, where they'll pull the blood out of one arm and ozonate it, and it goes into a machine that ozonates it, then it goes back into the other arm. There are other therapies like ozone plasmapheresis, where they're doing that, but it's passing through like a filter. It's also called extracorporeal blood ozonation and oxygenation, where the blood comes out, it gets filtered, goes back in. It's almost like kidney dialysis before your blood. Okay. Okay.

Well, there's a new company called Lumati, L-U-M-A-T-I, and they've developed two different filtration systems over a three-day process of four to six hours per day. It filters out glyphosate, microplastics, COVID spike protein, Lyme, Epstein-Barr, pretty much gives you completely new blood, completely filtered blood.

You fly into Encinitas, they shuttle you across the border every day to Tijuana to do the treatment, bring you back. You stay in like a luxury hotel, get great food, and you go back the next day and do it again. You go for three days in a row, completely detoxifies the entire system. This is something that just got developed and approved like in the past couple of months. And I think it would be incredible.

Are you going to do that next? I'm going to do it in like three weeks. Are you? See, you know, it's probably super cool. I just got signed up for it last week. Really? Yeah. See, you get to try everything. And I don't have any of those things that I know of, like Epstein-Barr or Limeweb, but I think it is an incredible technology. See, I think it's super cool because you get to try all these things and like, okay, how do you spend your time though? Like now, do you do mostly podcasting? Do you like do a lot of speaking gigs? Like, how do you like, what do you do with your day? I mean,

Besides exercise and all that. I spend 10 to 15 hours a week talking to people on the phone about their health problems. Do you coach people? I do lab work. I do blood work. I do coaching where some people pay a monthly fee for me to monitor their training and their nutrition. And they just have access to text me or email me or interact with me throughout the month. And then other people will just like...

purchase a one-off phone call with me where they'll usually be sending me their labs and stuff like that beforehand. I'm not a doctor. I don't practice medicine, but we just talk about issues that they're having. And I tell them basically what I would do if I were in their shoes. So I can't prescribe medications or prescribe labs, but often they're coming to me with labs they've gotten from their doctor or problems they've had that other people haven't been able to figure out. And so that's like 10 to 15 hours a week, just literally helping people. So you do that. So wait, so you have co-co-you do- Well, like distance training. So you do like-

You take, you have, cause you kept, you said a few times on the podcast, clients, clients. Yeah. So you do have clients. I do. Yeah. I mean, I used to coach like 40 people a month. Now I coach eight. And so how do you do, how much do they pay you for this? $5,000 a month. And then you basically are like giving them a program of some, some kind of protocol. Yeah. And then they just have to do it and then they can. I just do everything for them. They just wake up in the morning and do what it is that I wrote down. Keep their logs. I monitor their HRV, their sleep, and just basically, you know, everything from, you

actors getting ready for movie roles to executives, to athletes. Like it's, it's just basically like one-on-one coaching. And then I also just do random calls with other people aren't necessarily like paying a monthly fee, but just doing consoles with me. So do that. I do the podcast twice a week. So 17 years, twice a week. Haven't missed a session. Never, never. No, no. And sometimes I won't record any in a week cause I'm traveling, but then I'll get back and record like seven. So, um,

So the podcast. Alone ever or just guests or both? You do some alone? Both. I have solo sodes where I'm answering listener questions and reporting on the latest research and then guests. So I just get, that's a huge part of my education. Just getting to talk to super smart people, way smarter than me who would normally never give me the time of day who are like talking to me for an

hour and a half and I just get to feed through the fire hose from some author whose book I've just read or some scientist who just released some new technology. That's probably the favorite part of my job. Yeah, me too. And then I do article and book writing. I'm usually writing for anywhere from 30 to 60 minutes a day. I'm just working on a new book or working on an article or working on a copy for something. And then I do advising and

and also investing. So I advise a bunch of companies in the health and nutrition and fitness space and then invest in companies too. And then I own a supplements company called Kion. And even though I don't do a lot with that company anymore, there's still a little bit of management, some calls and things related to that. And

And then I'm trying to think if I have any other jobs. I think those are my main jobs. And then besides that, I just hang out with the family and work out in the morning and play a little tennis and pickleball and go on walks and hikes. You seem so much more, again, take this the right way. You seem so much more calm and chilled than when I first met you.

I don't remember where I was when you first... In London. In London. Yeah. Well, I was also like traveling, getting ready to speak to a whole bunch of people. I know, but you seem much sweeter now. You seem so kind and nice. Like, you look like you're 18. Yeah. I don't know. Maybe you just caught me on a bad day. No, no. You were really nice then too. But I'm saying like, you seem like you're at a different place in life and I don't know what it is. Yeah.

I think so. Obviously life is a constant evolution. We're always transforming and always becoming the people God has called us to become or becoming a better version of ourselves or hopefully engaging in things that help us to just become more grounded, more dialed, more authentic, more the people we are rather than who we think that the world expects us to be. And I think probably

probably the thing that if you ask me that I've most doubled down on in the past couple of years it would have been my own personal spiritual time particularly when I travel I neglected a lot when I travel and then it'd be pretty good at home but now I mean I was I

Walking to Sun Life Organics this morning, just memorizing James 5 in the Bible and listening to a sermon and taking care of my spiritual health before I focus on physical health or work or business or anything else. And I would say similarly, the at-home attire.

attention paid to prayer time with the family meditation with the family reading the bible as a family i mean if you fill yourself up with good positive things then it's likely that good positive things are already going to come out or like my mom used to say like if somebody bumps you and you're full of honey sweet things will come out and then bump you in your full vinegar then bitter things will come out and i think that just like intentionally and systematically focusing on making sure that

my, my intake at the beginning and the end of the day, and my work is specifically focused on spiritual health. I think that that manifests itself physically and emotionally and from a character standpoint. So I'd say that's, that's probably the biggest thing. That's a big one though. Yeah. Yeah. So you, so you pray, what other modality has helped you with your spiritual or spirituality to be more grounded and be more happy? Yeah.

I used to read a lot of positive self-help books and devotionals and books related to spirituality and now I mostly just read the Bible. I just read the Bible and I have an amazing study Bible where I can read the notes and unpack stuff and go back and forth between chapters. So I don't

a reading plan per se, but right now I'm just reading the whole book of John. And then every morning or every evening I memorize a verse from the Bible.

And so that is also not like through the whole Bible. Typically, I'll pick a section that's really spoken to me lately. I have had some health issues in the family in the past few months. And so right now, again, I'm memorizing James 5 just because it's about it's a section of it called the prayer of faith. It's about healing through prayer.

And so I'll choose something that really speaks to me in the moment. Before that, it was Psalm 23 about how God helps you during trials and tribulations and tough times. So that was another one that I needed at the time. Before that, it was Proverbs 3 because it's filled with a whole bunch of wisdom for young men. And I was preparing my sons to go and leave on this trip. So we were memorizing that together. So just...

kind of like cutting out all the distractions and kind of just like super old school and simple, just opening up the Bible and reading the Bible. That's one thing that I've kind of changed recently versus reading a whole bunch of books written by other people about the Bible versus just opening the one book that I feel not to get too woo almost kind of has magical powers in and of itself and is the only book that when you're reading it, you can turn around and talk to the author right afterwards. So don't say that. And

And then also really doubling down on how I end the day.

Meaning, you know not Instagram or YouTube or devices or kind of like coddling myself with social media or whatever I'll just turn off the brain at the end of the day But instead just praying so me and my wife and every day, you know before my mouth tape goes on and my head hits the pillow We just pray and we pour our hearts to God together, you know, it's like a spiritual sacred thing you can do together and

And yeah, we just, we talk to God and we pour out our hearts and we start our day like that too. But just like starting and ending the day with a real focus on the spirit and on speaking with God and learning from God. To me, it's just, it's so fulfilling, more fulfilling than a workout and a smoothie and, you know, a good day of work or anything else. Wow. How long is it? Probably because it's eternal, right? It's like our spirits are, for better or worse, the one thing, the one part of us that goes on to exist for eternity. Yeah.

And each prayer, like every, how long is the prayer practice? Is it a few minutes? Is it 10 minutes, 15 minutes? I pray in the morning for about five to 10 minutes. I pray before all my meals and just occasionally throughout the day when I have a decision to make. And then my wife and I pray for five to 10 minutes in the evening. So it's not crazy. I mean, it's not like an hour of, you know, like, you know, dancing and speaking in tongues and burning candles and incense. It's just- It keeps you grounded though. Yeah. It's more like a habit, like a consistent habit. It's like running a marathon every-

week is not as palatable as running two miles a day. Absolutely. And then the other, the last question is social media and all that doesn't strike. You don't strike me as somebody, even though you are a social media person that you would spend a lot of time on social media. Do you?

That's kind of a funny question. So my sons have social media accounts because they're starting a tabletop gaming company. And I told them the same thing that I kind of do myself. Like, don't you don't have to have all the apps and spend all your time reading the comments and posting yourself like get a social media manager. It's well worth it because then you just don't get sucked in and you have somebody else who's posting your content. You focus on the content. You're not the manager. You're the maker. You're not the consumer. You're the creator. Right.

So that's what I coach them to do. And I have a very similar mindset for myself. I'm on TikTok, but I don't know how to access TikTok. I don't have the username or the password or anything. I have a social media manager who posts that stuff. If I do a video, I'll send it off to them and they cut it and post it and figure out when they're going to time it. There is such a thing as what's called organic posting. And I

I literally have a calendar on my phone and it'll say like, don't post anything on Instagram today, Ben, because my social media team knows when stuff is supposed to get posted and when I don't fully understand, but all I know is I'm not supposed to mess stuff up. So I, I don't ever, uh,

scroll on social media. I never got it. Twitter, Facebook, Instagram. Yeah. I follow people and you know, when you first open it, whatever you see, there is the first post that you see, which is so weird because I opened Instagram on the way here and you and I hadn't even talked today. And the first post was from you.

Really? So it's almost like they knew where Uber was taking me or something. I don't know. Are you serious? I'm serious. You know that phones have capabilities. How weird though? I don't know. Maybe it literally, I mean, because it does say in my calendar on my phone, I have an appointment with Jen today. So maybe it has calendar access. I don't know.

That's crazy. But I don't actually do the scrolling thing. I have just never gotten that. And I know that it's engineered to keep me scrolling if I start doing it. So I'm on social media, but I use it as a producer and a creator, not a consumer or a manager. I don't go into the comments section. I don't scroll through feeds. There's occasional times when, I'll give you an example, when...

recently attacked Israel. I clicked on that section on Twitter and read through the post to catch up on the news. But it's pretty rare that I do something like that. If there's some current event that I just want to catch whatever's trending on it pretty fast, I'll do that. But I not only am I kind of a Luddite when it comes to social media, but I've purposefully kept myself a Luddite with a lot of that stuff. Good for you. I don't even know how to log into my own website anymore. I don't know if I did get locked out of social media, I wouldn't know how to get back in. It's just not a big

part of what I do. And that's why you're so, I think this is part of why you're, A, you're so productive. Like, you're the kind of person where you're not saying, you said, like, if I'm not saying something that's meaningful or I'm not spending every minute

kind of accounted for, you feel like you're wasting your time. And that's probably why. Because social media is just a huge time suck. Yeah. You know? And you've like, by the way, I know we have to wrap this up because, what time is this? It's been like forever. Oh, yeah. It's been like two and a half hours again. I do have to wrap pretty soon. Okay. So do you wear shoes? Did you come here without shoes, by the way? They're outside.

outside. Oh, okay. So you do wear shoes. Yeah. Okay. One more question and then I'm going to, I'll fly and wrap this up. What's the one thing that people ask you about the most? What supplement should I take? And what would you say? It's different from person to person. Go test your body. There are a few that seem to have broad applicability across a wide range of individuals, namely creatine.

fish oil, a multivitamin, and increasingly I'm saying NAD or some variant of it, but everything else. We live in an era where you can go test it and find out if you need vitamin D or if taking vitamin D would give you vitamin D toxicity. Or if you need XYZ probiotic or your microbiome is balanced just fine, thank you very much because you need a diet rich in fermented compounds. Or do you need a fish oil or is your omega index at 8% or above? All this stuff now is testable. So I

I tell people, hey, there's a few base ones that work, but besides that, go test your body because it's not that expensive or difficult to do now. And then you did ask me one question I didn't answer. Which one? You asked me if it was better to walk on the treadmill or do the high-end test. That's so true. That's right. And the answer is, I'll see if I can spit this out in 60 seconds.

Your cardiovascular fitness is split into four different categories. Your fat burning capacity, your VO2 max, your mitochondrial density, and your ability to be able to tolerate lactic acid, aka the burn. If you are just walking or just sprinting, you're not going to hit all those variables. For VO2 max, once every one to two weeks, you do a hard maximum sustainable pace effort, like a four by four minutes on a bike with four minutes of recovery after each.

For lactic acid tolerance, you go hard and then you recover, but not for very long. This would be like the classic Tabata set. 20 seconds hard, 10 seconds easy, eight times through, four minutes, boom, done. That can be a couple of times a week. For mitochondrial density, you go really hard, then you recover for a long period of time. So this would be like five 30-second sprints with two to four minutes of recovery after each one. The sprints are really hard. The recoveries are really easy.

And then for fat burning capacity, you could do like a 12, 330 or go out for a long hike or whatever. But you need to be aware that cardio fitness is not just cardio. Cardio is technically four different things. So if you hit those four, VO2 max, mitochondrial density, lactate tolerance, and fat burning capacity, and those are kind of like woven throughout your week, then you're going to get all of them. Now, if you're lucky enough to be a soccer player or a

Tennis player, lacrosse, or one of these sports that has a lot of start, stop, and endurance baked in, you're kind of getting all those from your sport. But if not, you kind of have to intentionally program them in if you want the most bang for your buck, aerobically speaking. Someone in their 40s, what's the best exercise to do? Depends.

I knew that. My wife with the high risk of bone density, weight training. If you're morbidly obese, endomorphic with a lot of fat sores, long, slow fat burning walks. If you're getting ready for a triathlon, high intensity interval training. So it depends. The reason why I'm asking is because I think a lot of times we're, as

as you get older anyway for me especially you get injured much more easily your bodies are a wear and tear they of course it's about like building strength training and doing cardio and all those things however if you had to pick one exercise if someone's not an exercise person what would you suggest something that involves axial loading of the spine the arms and the legs so it would probably be something very much like a squat to overhead press

Building arms, legs, functional, training the core. And there is loading across the entire spine, the arms and the legs. And I mean, it can be a little bit of a difficult exercise to learn. Best, most biomechanically friendly way to start off with something like that would be with a med ball, 20 to 50 pound med ball. Hold it to your chest, squat down, stand, press it overhead.

You'd be a great trainer. You should be a trainer again. You should do that. I know you should do it again. You should do it again. Another life. I'm telling you, I would hire you. Okay, Ben, when can we do part three? Next time I'm down here, let's do it. When are you back? I don't know.

You don't come around often. I avoid LA, but I sometimes come down here and just batch a whole bunch of stuff. I'll probably back here before the end of the year. I hope so. Yeah. Because every time I'm like, listen, I have like a whole other, I didn't even ask you any of the questions from your other book, if you can believe it. Oh, geez. I have a million questions. Well, I've always got to know them. I know. You're going to be like a co-host. All right.

Hilarious. Okay, Ben, I love having you on, as you know. Thank you for coming on. Thank you for spending two hours with me or however long it's been. God knows. Thanks for doing an IV with me. Thank you for inviting me along on your IV experience. By the way, I will say again, those NRV IVs are really good for me and great for everybody. And so I'm actually very fortunate that we got one. So thank you for making that happen. Yeah. All right. So

If anyone wants to know more about Ben, check him out. He also does coaching. He has Keon, his supplement company. And just check him out on Instagram because even just looking at his clips and you learn so much. What else can I say about you? Comment. I might not see it, but I might. Yeah, he probably won't see it, but you can still comment and there you go. Thank you, Ben. Thanks, Jen.