Are you scared of dying?
No? Yet, that doesn't stop us from speaking with unbridled confidence on what will be and to me, it really shows that we humans, we don't want to die. He has spent millions of his own dollars to never die, maybe even cracked the code that limits the human life span and the King of Longevity, Brian Johnson.
What drives someone to spend two million dollars to not die?
Let's just say we fast forward a few hundred years. That's when humans figured out they were transitioning from die to don't die. One night of bad sleep reduces your NK cells by seventy percent. Your NK sales are was killing cancer cells.
I'd never heard that before.
My grandfather was full of lead, my parents are full of asbestos, and n I'm full of microplastic. We think they're causing very serious health problems. It may be worse than we think. I had this general idea that there must be some system in place in America. They're like watching out for us. Not true.
What age are you predicting to live to the Number one health and wellness podcast, Jay set Jay Sheeta Set, Hey, Everyone, welcome back to On Purpose the number one health and wellness podcast in the world. Thanks to each and every one of you that keep coming back every week to listen, learn and grow. Now, today's guest is someone who says they're not going to let themselves die. Brian Johnson is
known as the world's most measured human. Brian spent four years creating Project Blueprint, which is an endeavor to achieve humanity and Earth scale cooperation within self. As a forty seven year old, he has the metabolic health of the top one point five percent of eighteen year olds, inflammation sixty six percent lower than a ten year old, and reduce the speed of aging by thirty one years. With a lifestyle that costs him two million dollars annually. He
is the real life Benjamin Button. Please welcome to On Purpose Brian Johnson. Brian, it's great to have you here.
Yeah, thanks for having me here.
Yeah. I wanted to dive in straight away, and just to ask you, what drives someone to spend two million dollars to not die?
I think it's very confusing to a lot of people. I think when you read the headlines and you view I'm just unintelligible by most people. And I think if you look back, you know, let's just say we fast forward a few hundred years and you live in the twenty fifth century and you're reading the history books of this time and place. I think it'd be pretty obvious to them. They would say, like, oh, of course, that's when humans figured out they were transitioning from die to
don't die. Like that's the big thing that they had the technological and medical progress to say they could now begin extending their lifespans to some unknown degree. So I think it really just we're on this inevitable trajectory towards radically standing how long and how well we can live. And I'm really the forerunner in trying to start that process.
And how did you compute the amount of two million? How did it get to that? Like what does that involve and include to get to that level?
So the two million is primarily spent on the research and the measurement, and so the actual what I do day to day is very low cost. I'd say the majority people can afford it. Most things are actually free. So a lot of people see that the two million dollar headline and they think, oh, this can't be achievable or reachable for me. But actually is. And so what we did that was unique is when you're trying to do something to improve your health and wellness, it's important
you can verify it does or doesn't work. Like if you hear a story about doing drinking this kind of drink is good for your health, it's a story until you can measure it and say it has this kind of change in the body and either change it increases your biological age or lowers or do something else. And so I became the most measured person in history, and that's really expensive. So really the expensive portions have been measuring every organ in my body. The actual protocols are really low cost.
What was the most expensive thing to measure?
It really is in chasing the cumulative measurement across the entire body. For example, like I'm the most I've spent more time in an MRI than anyone in the world. I think this new technology called DNA methylation, you're looking at these patterns of the body. I'm the most measured person with that meeting inflation in the world. And so like doing this consistently routinely, we do thousands of data points a week, and so I think it's just all
these things adding up. It's just expensive to do the test, analyze the data, continually have that process. We need like a large team to do it.
Do any of the measurement tools have adverse effects on health?
Yeah, MRI we think is very safe. Okay, Yeah, but CET I've only did once. I just did a calcium score and then we do blood draws. I've done a ton of blood work. We did ultrasound on my veins a while back, and to see if we have scar tissue that have been building up because I've done so
much blood drop, we couldn't find any scar tissue. So we do actively measure for negative repercussions of are we met too much to the extent of damage, So like we're even measuring measuring the measurement so in every way we can possibly interrogate the body. We're trying to acquire data.
And how did you pick the areas to measure? Like, how were you able to say these are the five eight? I don't know how many. There are metrics that I believe are the most important too, longevity, How do we even know what are the things to focus on.
We looked at every organ so if we have roughly seventy plus organs depending on how you count, and so you can say like I'm chronologically forty seven years old, but that's not really a useful number. It's like a general approximation. Then if you measure the heart, you can say, okay, what is the biological age of the heart, And you can then dissect that and say what is the structural age of the heart, And then what is the functional
age of the heart. Like you can look at the functional age of like what is the max heart rate? You know, you can take two twenty minuture age roughly for a rough calculation. Then you look at the valves and you look at all the cell types and so you can break each organ down into a different ways
to understand what is biological age. So for example, like my heart art is thirty seven, my left ear is sixty four, my diaphragm is age eighteen, And so you can any part of the body, any organ or biological process, you can assign an age score if you've got data to show data to make that comparison.
Your left ear a sixty four, Yeah, walk me through that.
I shot a lot of guns as a kid, and so I would aim the gun like this with this left ear exposed sound this this ear is more protected and then also loud music and so yeah, so this is the thing. Is like now when I'm at social events, I have this app on my phone decibel where like last night I was at a social event and the room was one hundred and five decibels, So anything over
eighty can cause hearing damage. So just in a social environment with people talking at in a voice that's like loud enough for the other person to hear, you've got sustained ear hearing damage.
Yeah. Interesting, I think it's something we don't realize. I saw my mom lose her hearing in one ear and the other one pretty weak. Yeah, and it's been really sad to watch because it's completely changed her personality exactly, and it's completely changed her ability to connect in a conversation. She's super fun, she's bubbly conversated, but as soon as she started losing her hearing and the hearing aid technology is definitely not caught up with any of the technology
you're talking about. We got are the best ones that I possibly could know about, and it's still so hard for her to engage and it's such an underrated part of human life, Like you don't think losing your hearing maybe that impactful.
It's huge, entirely true, and we've tried for the past few years. So we take all these measurements and we say, like, what is the biological age of blank organ? And then we say, all right, now we've reviewed all the scientific literature that's out there, how do you either slow down
that speed of aging or reverse aging damage. So, for example, with my left ear, we've said, can you take my left ear from age sixty four to age sixty three and sixty two and all the way down to like age eighteen, and so in that case, we've had no success with hearing. There are a few stem cell therapies are in research, but no effective treatments, so we've had no success at all. So once you lose it right now,
it's gone. Whereas other parts of my body like my speed of aging and my heart and my lungs, we've had great success lowering that biological age if you look at it anatomically or functionally, and so some things we've had great success. But this is the point where when people look at me and they say, you know, the guy is so busy trying not to die. He's forgetting
how to live. And the flip side of that is when you lose function, movement, eyesight, hearing, right, your life begins to deteriorate two degrees like your mother saw, in ways you can't even imagine. And so it really is like this respect for our conscious existence and our biological capabilities. And so really I think that's what I'm trying to do, is that the new virtue is caring for our conscious existence and not being whimsical and throwing it away with behaviors that just are not necessary.
Yeah, it's so funny, isn't it. It's really interesting how we judge intentionality and you only recognize how intentional you wish you were when you lose something. And it's like that. I think there's that famous quote that says the best time to plant a tree was like one hundred years ago, but otherwise it's today. Like the idea of like you're just never gonna you will always feel you wish you started earlier. Yes, always, yes, but that only hits you
when sadly, something really bad goes happen. Bad happens, and then you're like, gosh, I wish I thought about this when I was twenty five, twenty et cetera. Yeah, and yeah, So I mean when I'm thinking about what you're saying, what is there an age or damage level from which there is no return? What parts of the body Is there a specific age where you're like, if you're this chronological age and your biological age of this body part is this, it's over.
I guess this is I think the coolest question right now is that in previous time periods, you were born and you died in predictable fashion. There was nothing you could do to stop the process. And so now what's different is that we are making progress on age related decline even before a baby's conceived. So now there's embryo selection, right,
so it's don't die as happening before conception. And then recent studies have shown that you can take a mouse and it's like last week of life and regenerate it and double the lifespan of that mouse. And so we have technologies that can extend life before conception, midlife, and
even at the end of life. And so now that I'm saying this is really it's full spectrum that there is no point of no return at this at this moment, I mean in this moment, yes, but like increasingly it's becoming this open question is there, And I think that's the most interesting and exciting thing that my dad is seventy one. I think most of his friends are just like, we're getting close, it's almost time. But man, he's got this ferociousness to live life that I'm really inspired by.
Yeah, that's brilliant. What age are you hoping or I guess you don't have to hope predicting to live too.
I don't think that any human can say anything intelligent more than one year from now, like we might. We can say, you know, we think the Earth is going to continue to orbit around the Sun with a certain degree of stability in terms of like how long are we going to live, how will cultural norms persist? What will be normal will not be normal? I think given how fast AI is developing, we cannot say anything intelligent beyond a year.
Right, But your physical self you still feel.
That, Yeah, I mean I think that, Like if you look at some of the best AI companies, like Dario from Anthropical the to Day wrote this blog books where he's imagining and I agree with him that it's possible we make one hundred years worth of progress in the next five years, that when we when to bring up these new AI models, that we can do things that otherwise would take us a hundred years to do. Now that is mean that these therapies will be available overnight,
like we still have to go through the process. But I do think that we are looking at this possibility. So it's like when I say things like we may be the first generation to not die, people are like stupid, Like no, I get that from this vantage point, we can't see how the pieces of the puzzle come together, Like it's not clear to us which things do what and when. But that's not the point. It's really you're
trying to pattern match large macro scale trends. And if you say, how fast is intelligence moving and when you acquire intelligence, what can that intelligence do on a macro scale? I think it really is a robust hypothesis that we may be the first generation is not.
Die And what kind of compromise do you think that's going to take on a personal level or sacrifice? And you may not use those words, yeah, but if someone was looking at it and was thinking about it from that perspective.
If we just put this in context. Let's imagine you and I travel back in time a million years ago, and we're with homo erectus, and we say, home, Erectus, tell us about the future of intelligent existence, like what
are we going to evolve into? Right now? Homo erectis has models maybe of hunting, of like you know, weather patterns, or of like danger, But homo erectus is not going to be able to tell you that in this new science field called biology, we're going to figure out that there's molecules and we're going to or they're not going to be able to tell you that in this new world of quantum mechanics or in this new world of silicon transistors. They don't have any models to articulate what
things could come about and why. And so they just lack any models to articulate anything intelligent. And so I wonder in this moment if we are just like homo erectus, where if you say, like, what will the future bring, what will the norms be, what will our proclivities be, what will we want? We have no idea of we
don't have any models that help us understand. And so that's why I think that if you want to be a genius lean into that you probably don't know that everything we think we have known is now going to be called into question, and that the new genius is leaning into the unknown.
Yeah, how bad was your health before all of this?
Awful? Like the worst. So I started entrepreneurship, as you know, twenty one years old. I start building companies. And the ethos is, you know, you would hear stories of like so and so stayed up two nights in a row, coding all night. They're amazing, they're a genius, they're so you know, great, and so that story would be like a status symbol, like they're important, they have power, you should respect them. And those stories propagate that. Others are like I want to have status when I want to
be respected and I want to do cool stuff. And so you repeat these patterns of sleep deprivation and you know, harming your health. Now, that's just foolishness, like that we know from the evidence that you stay up for over twenty four hours, you're legally drunk, like you're just as intoxicated had you consumed, like you're a point zero alcohol level. And so we've really bought into this myth. I did in myself and so I ran myself ragged, like just awful,
terrible sleep, terrible diet. I was depressed for ten years, So I was kind of obsessed with myself for ten years and it was the most awful decade of existence. So I was that was my starting point. And so now I mean, I arguably have the best biomarkers of anyone in the world. I've openly shared all my information.
They're publicly posted and arguably down the line like fift ten to fifteen twenty measurements, and so it's been actually really motivating that if you can start where I was and then turn this hard, others can do the same. So to me, it's been a really motivating experience that the body is highly responsive to change.
Was there a diagnosis or a particular day or event that happened that made you go, this is my turning point.
Like I grew up on biographies. I understand the world to biographies, and I just love reading about people in time and place who are able to snatch out of the ether the future, Like the future is always present, it's just that it's very hard to see, and then over time we look back like, oh, of course that was the future in that moment, and like a certain people thought, And so I came obsessed with this question at twenty one, like what is the future of existence
on a timescale a few hundred years into the future. And I basically grappled with that problem for twenty plus years, and I didn't know what to do. So I said, I'm going to go be an entrepreneur. I'm going to make a whole bunch of money, and with that money that I'll try to do something interesting. So like it, It's kind of been this like twenty five year long journey for me to try to identify something that would
have the power of changing the course of humanity. And just in the past twelve months, I think it finally all came together.
How old were you when you decided to make the shift to say I'm going to start turning back the club?
So I was forty three. I'm not forty seven or four years ago.
So four years ago, right, And at which age do you wish you started today?
I wish I would have been an embryo selected based upon genetic markers woke me through that. Yeah, I mean, like now, you mean when you're going through a fertility you create a bunch of embryos and choose the best, you know, like along certain dimensions. And you know, I'm like most humans on the planet where I was just born through the typical process of but now you can really go in that earlier stage. And so I wish
it was happened before conception. And then I wish growing up, you know, like my I grew up in Utah, which was very much a culture of sugar, cereal, you know, soda, excessive sun exposure without some protection, terrible sleep. Like, I just grew up in a culture that was extremely destructive to health and wellness. And so my entire life has actually been in this American culture, and it's been really and that I was consuming microplastics, you know, from like
the earliest days, like all of us have been. And so I would say, yeah, I really wish it would have started before birth, if if not before then, very early in my childhood, I wish I wouldn't have been consuming sugar and things like that, which really has those have long term complications that we just I don't know, I'm not sure we're fully aware of them.
Yeah, for those that don't know, walk us through the microplastics, because I feel like that's been a trendy term right now people are becoming more and more aware. Walk it through for someone who's unaware of what's happening there.
Yes, I mean like on a large scale, Like my grandfather was full of lead, my parents are full of asbestos, and nine full of microplastics. Right, Like every generation has kind of had their environmental toxin. That has been a very ascourage in the world now. Microplastics have been this recent phenomena because plastics is a very low cost and
high quality material and so they're everywhere. And so microplastic is less than five millimeters in length, and we get them in our bodies either by inhaling them, by ingesting them, or through our skin. Like in the average male testicle there's eight point two milligrams of microplastics in the average brain. There's fifty percent more microplastics now than there was ten
years ago. So it's increasing really really fast. And so my company, Blueprint, we just launched the world's first at home microplastics test, Like we're realizing that this is a major problem. And the difficulty is we don't have any data, Like no one knows what these levels are in their life, and they Without that data, how do you know what
things are working? Like if you stop drinking water out of plastic bottles, what happens, you know, Like what happens if you change the clothing you wear, what happens if et cetera, et cetera. And so, yeah, I have my levels measured. My whole team did it. Mine came back lower than anyone on my team. And we have reasons why we think that's the case, but we're not quite sure. So we're excited that we'll have the world's largest data
set of microplastics in the next month. And then as a community, we can start saying like, now, let's all start running these tests and let's build therapies so we can start doing things to minimize microplastics in the body.
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Me For example, women that have higher levels of BPA have or had fewer eggs retrieved. So it affects, you know, very the fundamental processes of the body. It's been tied to all kinds of things, neual degeneration all. I mean, basically every health malady is potentially related to microplastics. Now, like the science is still emergent and we're still figured it out. But it's like, it's not a situation where we're saying microplastics are a good idea and you should
consume more. It's a situation where like we are consuming an enormous amount of them. We think they're causing very serious health problems. It may be worse than we think. So it's really an area that we need to understand better. But I think minimization is probably the most important stepp.
So what are three simple steps that someone could take right now to minimize the influx of microplastics.
Water is one of the worst offenders, So don't drink out of plastic water bottles. Number two is have a water filter at home. So I have a reverse osmosis system at my house. It's very good. Mine reverse osmosis is the brand, A bunch of brands who make it.
Who do you recommend?
Mine's custom made. So I'm on my website. I have my water filter system listed out of every component. So if you go to blueprint dot Brian Johnson dot com and my protocol, I haven't listed there. And if you're in the United States, the guy who set it up for me, I have his number and name. If you don't, just call him. There's other systems that are better. They're like comparable. They are like three hundred dollars. So it's a very common technology. It's easily accessible. But have that
in your home. Is water filter because microplastics are in water. And so that's why when people they say, like, well, I get my food at a farmer's market, therefore right, but they don't realize that the water that is, you know, coming there too for the farm is like could be filled with microplastics. So there's just there's no safe place
anywhere for microplastics. Number two is, for example, canned soups in one study, they showed that a person who consumed canned soup for one week increase their their levels by twenty folds just in one week. Wow, gigantic. Yeah. Also be aware of clothing, so try to use like hemp, cotton, silk, et cetera. Use a hepa filter when you're vacuuming because they can be airborne in the house. Don't handle receipts
that has a lot of plastic microplastics. Using cookware that have the stainless still or cast iron instead of nonstick is really helpful. But there's those are the kind of the big ones to be aware. If you go through your house environment, just say, like where is plastic? You might find you have a plastic cutting board, you might find you have plastic kitchen utensils, you might have plastic plates.
So just be plastic aware. Once you have that mindset, you're going to realize that plastic is like everywhere, So just slowly make progress and trying to replace that with stainless still, aluminum things like that.
What's fascinating is you have no idea how it's entering the system. Yes, because it's not a physical, tangible experience. You're not like feeling something.
Exactly merging into your skin.
Yeah, well becaus through the What I was thinking about as you were talking, is this idea of what happens to water in a plastic bottle versus a glass bottle.
Yeah, I mean you're getting leeching from the plastic. And so I think the average plastic bottle has I think two hundred thousand microplastic particles something like that, So it's a very large amount. And so generally speaking, so I've just made this rule. Like today, I brought my stainless still, I just carried this around with me everywhere I go as my primary container for liquid. But yeah, so just
try to avoid plastic as a water bottle generally. And the thing is, like most more on a bigger scale, the things which we can't see are now humanity's biggest threats. Like we are we're evolved to say, is there a lion in the bush or not? You know, we can we sense it, can we smell it, can we see it? Whereas now the dangers of like CO two build up in the atmosphere. We can't see it, we can't smell it, like we don't know it exists. So the only thing
we know how it exists. If we see like a number on a screen that's like, this is bad because in this number, we're like, what does that mean? We can't see it. There's no real threat. The same as true with microplastics. It's like this unknown threat, we can't see it, we can't fill it. And so that's why what I've been doing is I've been trying to say, like we the reason when we measure everything is to
basically give your body superpowers of awareness. It's like, now we understand, like what's happening when you ingest fast food, we understand what happens when you ingest microplastics, what happens when you ingest when you don't sleep well? Like you see the whole system effect, and so it's really cool in real time to see like actually, yes, like for example, one night of bad sleep, can I think it's four hours or less, reduces your NK cells by seventy percent.
NK sales and K sales always killing cancer cells. So like your army of defense systems, like seventy percent of your army is wiped out after one bad night of sleep, and so it just has these really catastrophic effects.
I'd never heard that before, Yeah.
Yeah, or like there's this thing called S one B, and so you want these levels to be like in between twenty one hundred minor six sixty three point eight. When you don't sleep well, it's a toxin that gets inside the brains. The blood brain barrier breaks down. When you have a bad nights sleep. It's the same level as a traumatic brain injury. And so like the body is responding as though you had a traumatic brain injury from one bad night sleep. So these things accumulate over time,
and that's why it's sleep is so critical. It's why this culture of entrepreneurship is like, oh, sleep on you're dead is so lethal to your wellness.
I'm so glad you're you're talking about it, and I love the you know that idea that it's almost like the worst prison that you can be in is one where you don't know you've got handcuffs on. Yeah, like you don't realize it. And I mean social media is kind of like that, Like you're in this prison of a world and you don't even realize you're being trapped. And our health's the same way I was. My friend's dad was in town from London, a couple of weeks back, and he has this app on his phone that shows
the air pollution. I don't know what it's called IQ, right, okay, And he had it on his phone and he lives outside of the city of London, so he's not really in the heart of London. And he said that pollution score where my friend grew up, where my wife grew up is around two. Like I think it's on a
scale of zero to one hundred unless I'm wrong. And he did it here in la and it was sixty yes, And I was like, I have no to me when I wake up, I feel like the yeas Like, I mean, everyone knows La is polluted, but I don't feel that exactly right. I don't know that. Whereas like if I go to a certain country in the world which is
known for its horrific pollution, I can somewhat tell the difference. Yeah, But it was like I could tell no difference from this between where my wife grew up in England, yet exactly it's extraordinarily different.
Yeah, that's right. Yeah, on the air pollution, I agree with you. I live in la as well, so I have a air measurement device in every room in my house and filters, and so we measured the air quality in every single room twenty four seven. So you're right, Like, LA air quality is typically around the sixty mark, which is like kind of bad. But my house it's perfect. It's zero, And so I'm always aware of where the air quality is outside and inside. So, yeah, I wish
LA had better air quality. I love LA for so many reasons. I really wish the air quality was better. But ye, I agree with you. It is a significant health threat and it's not a good idea to have a lot of exposure to that air.
How do we go about purifying air inside of our homes? Obviously we can't control the air in the city we live in.
Yeah, there's there's quite a few filters. I'll get you the names the ones I use. But I just have one filter per room and it does a great job taking down multiple contaminants. So if you're just mindful, like for example, I'd never leave my windows open, so it's always a pretty tight air block. I do go outside, you know, when the air quality is nice. I try
it mindful. But also like if we're going to play like basketball game with friends, I'll also do that, So I kind of have like some flexibility, but yeah, you can actually maintain near perfect air quality in the house. And so if you go to my house, like I'd love to have you come see it, Like it's basically we have perfect water, perfect air. It's the optimal state for health across all the spectrum.
And when you talk about water too, have you changed the water you're showering in as well? Because I think that's sometimes that's something me and my wife have been talking about. We have a reverser as most this machine for water that we drink. Yes, but recently we were talking to a skin health expert and he was talking
about the water we showering having a different effect. And I literally tested washing my face with the water I drink and washing my face with shower water, and he could immediately tell the difference using the tools and devices he was measuring, just with how it affected my skin.
Yes, yeah, that's very true. So we actually did the same measurements where I took water that was from our filter system and water tapwater, I put it into a humidifier in my room, I turned it on, and then I measured the air quality based upon humidified tapwater and filtered water. The tap water set off all the alarms. It was like danger zone, something bad is happening. So
we're doing the analysis now. But I agree like they'd cause a lot of harm on skin inside the body, so yeah, and they have to be practically managed.
Yeah. What I find fascinating about so much of this stuff is then you said you were going to India soon and you'll see it there. Like when I grew up and when I used to visit India when I was young, and even when I lived there for some time, we always use stainless steel to drink in like that was the norm. And it's almost like now it's like all these new you know, now everyone's using stainless steel in the Western world. But now if you'll go back
to India, lots of plastic bottles everywhere. And so it's such a like weird thing as to how we went away from tried and tested wisdom that we already had. Like in my home, every cup for drinking water growing up would be stainless steel, Yeah, because it was the Indian way to do it. And I always didn't like it because I didn't like the clanging. It felt weird because when I'm in a friend's house is they didn't have stainless steel cups and things. It felt a bit
awkward and strange. Now when I think about it, I'm like, well, that was the right way to do it.
Yeah, that's right.
Yeah, And somehow, somehow we went away from that because I guess cost it was cheaper to produce, cheaper to scale. I wonder how much human health has been sacrificed over saving and making money.
That's exactly I think. You know that is like the biggest game in the world right now is capitalism. That's what drives the majority of what exists in the world today. Like religious hasher adherents doesn't really affect the effects of capitalism all that much, right, It's a very moderate effect. Capitalism is the absolute dominant effect in the world. It's more sol than democracy, mor solinity, religion. It's the primary game plane. So I think, yeah, and that's my primary
objective in life. Is I'm calling it a question that the capitalism no longer answers the questions that are imminent for us as a species.
It's funny though, because a lot of people will say that all of these new health trends are just disguised capitalism, but they're really simple and accessible, like you're saying, like, I loved how you started off by explaining that the two million dollars isn't on the protocols, which we'll get to, but the two million is actually on the research and the measuring so that you can prove that the protocols were exactly right, and so it's actually accessible to everyone.
But often people are like, like, I remember when when celary juice was the thing which has helped me a lot in my life, for sure, at least from a story anecdotal point of view. But I remember one being like, oh my god, they're just trying to make money off of salary farms. And I was like, I don't know. I don't think everyone. I don't think there's one person that owns every salary farm, so I don't think that's working. What's your take on that? If that'sn't making any sense?
Yeah, it does. Yet when I entered this world four years ago, I thought there's so many patterns that were similar to religion, where like you take the King James version of the Bible and you can support one hundred different denominations. Right, they all fight like we're the true religion because like the scripture, that scripture. So then you walk in the world, you're like, how do I even know, like what's going on? It's all in the same book.
And so health and wellness was very similar. If like take your guru, take your chrismatic personality, and like do this thing. And we wanted I wanted to say, like we're going to be strictly science and strictly data and we're going to open source publish everything I do. There's no gatekeeping involved here. And so that's what we did. I think the card that uniqueness is that we just said, like, we don't care about story, we just want to see the data.
Yeah.
So I think that's really been successful is that we are impartial. We don't care what the answer is. We just want it to work.
Yeah, and you're doing it to yourself.
Yeah.
Yeah, so that's the greatest test. So, yeah, your sleep score has been one hundred percent for the last eight months. What does that require?
I mean I wanted to, like Amelia Earhart flew a plane across the Atlantic, you know, people went to the top of Everest, went to the bottom of the ocean. Shackleton was trying to I was like, what would a modern day explorer do? Like, what is like an epic thing? I thought, no one has shown, no one has mastered sleep in human history, right, Like we have no quantify like a gold medalist of sleep. There's no like world record of sleep. And I thought, I'm going to set
a world record of sleep. And so eight months of perfect sleep, and I wanted to demonstrate you can achieve high quality sleep every single night if you try it. And so I rebuilt my entire life around it. So yeah, I mean I became the world's best sleeper.
And what does that require to become the world world's best sleeper?
I mean, really, five simple things which everybody can do. It's so funny. I tried hundreds of things and I just landed on five. So one is you have to reframe your identity that you are a professional sleeper. So just like you take your professional job seriously, you show up on time, right, you learn, you grow, like you have a lot of self respect on what you do. The same matrure for sleep right now, Like we sleep when it's convenient, or when we're done watching our show,
or when we're finished like having friends over. But sleep is actually a profession like, you need to become really good at it and respect it. Number two is the last time of the time of your final meal to day is really important. So at least two hours before you go to bed is your final meal. Then start three hours before and then four and five. MINEU is currently nine hours before, So I go to bed at roughly eight thirty. That's not true. I go to bed
at eight thirty on the dot. So then my last bill of the day's around eleven thirty am, And so I do that, and my resting heart rate at that point is forty four. And when my resting hertbry's forty four, I'm guaranteed to have a perfect night sleep. If I eat two hours for bed, my resting herbay is going to be like fifty six because your body is still working hard to digest, and that will reduce my sleep quality by thirty five ish percent. Just like clockwork, it's
very predictable. So last meal to day and then what you eat is really important. If you have like a big pizza or pasta or breads or alcohol, you're going to disruptive sleep. So final meal, eat earlier and lighter, and the right kinds of foods. Three is you want to be aware of light, so knock out blues no screen time time. There's an app called flux Flux that knocks out blues on your screen even before that last minute.
So an hour before bed, no screen time, take lights down in the house, and then also use red lights amber lights. Four is consistency. So whatever your red time is, it's ten thirty be in bed plus or minus thirty minutes every night. Now, if you want to get more precise, like five minutes, that's kind of hard for some people, but thirty minutes is a pretty good one. Your body will give you a super power of assistance if you're consistent.
Like when I was going to bed on time, when I do my eight months of perfect sleep, I was in bed plus or minus one minute of my bedtime, and my body would when I eight twenty nine would arrive, my body would just like knock out. It was unreal how powerful my cycle was. So if you can harness that consistency, your body will be more powerful than any sleep pill, any other intervention. It's really good. And then the fifth, and this is really important, is a wind
down routine. So one hour before bedtime, you switch from work mode to sleep mode. And so it's really a mind game because when you slip into your sleep mode one second later, your brain's gonna say, oh, what about this idea or what about this concern? Or what about this problem or what about this thing I forgot to do? And your body, your head just gonna your mind's gonna pin you with all these things. You'd have to say like, thank you ambitious Brian for the new idea I what
to do. We really appreciate you. You're doing a great job in life. Also tomorrow we have all day long to address this. Right now we're in sleep mode, so I do this self talk, you know, like, oh, you had this conversation today when you're with Jay, you said this thing. You probably offended him. Now he probably don't want to hang out with you anymore. You're like, you have to cycle to all these all these anxious thoughts, and so you have to do this self talk and
be like I hear you. It's okay, I've heard your concern. Because what you're trying to do is when your head HiT's a pillow, you want to be somewhat reconciled with reality. Otherwise you're going to all night long, just loop through those thoughts all night long, and you'll be in light sleep and you'll just be in the same fast space and you're missing your deep in your rim. So so
then the white everteen you switched to sleep mode. But then you also want to do things like read a book or for a walk, do breath work, meditate, you know, have a nice conversation with a friend, like don't fight with your partner in that window, like don't create in a rousing situation. So those five things will give you the best sleep of your life.
Yeah, it's almost like we wait for our head to hit the pillow to reflect on the thoughts that we didn't choose to reflect on before we got into bed because we don't have that reflection time before getting into bed. Because that's what I was going to say. I think for most people, they can get into bed, but then they sit there for an hour's worrying and stressing and they're feeling anxious or nervous or overwhelmed. But you're saying
that's going to happen. You just got to do that before you actually get into.
Bed, exactly, like you have to go through this decompression time. You kind of have to let yourself like air out all of its grievances, all of its ideas, like all of its reconciliation, and you have to talk to you, like talk through it with yourself, like hey, Brian, like and be soft like I hear you like and it's okay, like tomorrow we're all right. But otherwise, yeah, you're right, like you really people most people think you lay down and that's the time to do the reconciliation and it
just leads to disaster. But there's like there's five metrics to pay attention to or I guess four, your sleep is good if when you if your head is on the pillow, you're asleep within a few minutes. If you're longer than that, then you need some work. Two is you want to be up less than thirty minutes per night total, So if you're up for one bathroom break, you know, back to sleep quickly. Three is like roughly two hours of rim, roughly two hours are deep. There's
variance there. People are different on that one, but like those are roughly the sleep stats. If you're in that category, you're like early twenties, like in your sleep quality. As you age, it's harder to get sleep, And that's especially true for women. They have to spend much longer time in bed than men do. So it's really important these habits you cement otherwise like you're really fighting against multiple fronts.
And do you think for people who are waking up often when they're asleep, or and they're awake for longer than just a few moments, what should they be looking at? Like what metrics should they be pushing towards to be like that's what's causing it? How do they deduce that?
Sometimes it's the last mill of the day, So if their bodies agree, they'll robustly digesting. Then you have you Basically, you'll miss your deep because when you go to sleep, you fall into a deep sleep window very quickly, and then if you miss it, you can't get it. So last week I was at a conference and everyone went out for this big party, and I wanted to try to accommodate, like I wanted to be with everyone, So I went to bed at seven pm. I woke up at nine pm, so I got my two hours of
deep sleep. Then I went out with everybody. We had a great time. I came back home, I went to bed. I think at one or two, and then I got my remaining six hours of rem you know, I get two hours of rim but six hours of sleep, and I still had a great night sleep and I felt wonderful the next day. But if you wait and go to bed like at midnight, for me, I would just miss my deep sleep. It would be gone. And so like I'm trying to like functionally be adaptive to societal
norms while it was still logging in those metrics. But yeah, you have to be mindful of like if you build your life around it, then you can make these adjustments. But you really have to make a professional effort to do this because it takes like structurally, just get it right and then you'll win.
Yeah, I feel I feel a big difference. So I'm pretty disciplined in my sleep times as well, have been for a long time. I maybe haven't measured it for as long, but I'm thankful and grateful to have great sleep. But the I found that when I'm sleeping after midnight, it doesn't matter how many hours I sleep for I never feel as good in the morning exactly. It's so significant. Why is that what's happening when we're sleeping consistently after eleven PM or midnight, what's actually happening.
I mean, your body has a production line, so like you have a rhythm and you can get your deep sleep. So if you go to bed at ten thirty, your deep sleep's going to happen between ten thirty and twelve thirty, may have a bit more deep sleep, like a two or three in the morning, but the majority is gonna be front loaded. So if you miss that front window, you just miss it and you can't pick it up.
Why is that front window so much more important than the later window.
Yeah, because you have a few sleep types. You've got REM, you have deep, light and deep. So many restorative processes are happening in REM. You've got a bunch of memory, reconciliation and whatnot, but deep you just have this restorative building process. So you basically miss out on all those sort of processes if you miss it, which is why, like the brain hurts when you don't get it. You can't do like garbage collection, Like you miss the garbage truck.
What about Oh yeah, that's a great way of looking at it, To miss the garbage truck. That's I've never heard that. I've heard the dishwasher analogy before, but the garbage truck one's even better. Actually, Yeah, the idea that if your garbage didn't get picked up and it's still outside your house or your apartment or.
Even in your home, you're stuck with it the next day.
That's pretty terrible, and you struck with it for another week.
Yeah, exactly, no one, no one's coming.
No one's coming to correctly, that's great, and yeah, that feels really really true. And I feel like what we don't realize because we often say I know so many people who say, but I do my best creative work at night.
Yes, exactly.
I know a lot of people who say, oh, yeah, but I need to go to that party or whatever it is right, or I feel left out or fomo or whatever it is, or people who just go, yeah, I just can never get to sleep, So what's the point. Yeah, And what would you say to someone who says any one of those three?
So I've learned to be in doing this for four years,
I've learned to be very humble. I don't know how much we know and how much we don't know, like if it maybe, for example, like we actually know two percent of what we will know in ten twenty thirty years, and so we're very humble, Like for example, I am vegan, i'm color restriction, and yet you know if you hear those stats, and I also do low protein, and so if you hear those stats, the cultural norm would be like, oh, he for sure is broken, weak, not capable, not athletic,
not strong. But in every category, like my cardiovascro fitness, my actual physical stresin all my metrics are top one percent. And so we've defied the cultural norm of what is good health, how you achieve good health. And so I know this is probably true for others as well. Is many of the things we believe are probably not true. And so I'm soft also that I've learned that people have a justification for everything. There's just no way around it.
That's that's humans. And so I don't try to resist it, just say, like, great, do your thing. Just measure your data, because we know the stats, like for example, if you're not sleeping well, your other marketers are going to be off, like your SB one hundred, like all these different all these markers are going to be off. I invite just look at the data.
What are the data driven insights of poor sleep? Like, what really is going to happen to you? You already taught us what happens after one night of sleep? What does it look like when you have seven nights seven months of.
Bad I mean, like if you notice, like I did this my company kernel, we built this brain interface, this wearable e fhimri, and we were measuring the effects of my brain of willpower with deep sleep and without deep sleep. So with deep sleep, my willpower was significantly high. Without deep sleep it significantly dropped. And so like if the next day, after deep sleep, you're trying to decide do you eat the brown or not, do you work out
or not? Do you have a drink or not? Like, right, the chances of you caving in that moment are significantly higher if you've not had deep sleep. So then it has this cascade effect. So if you don't sleep, then you're also going to this bad thing, which also leads to poor sleep, which also leads to doing more bad things. So it has this domino effect where it really cements bad habits and it becomes harder for you to come out from underneath it of actually making meaningful change.
I can so relate to that idly again, I see myself craving sugars when I've had bad sleep exactly, And when I haven't and I've worked out and everything, I feel great, Yes, And as soon as a bad night sleep, the next I know, all I want is some sugar and stay anyway to get through. And you're so right, it's just a repeating cycle exactly.
It just devastates your willpower and like all these other cascading things. And so that's why, like I think in even like five or ten years, I think that health is gonna it will become the zeitgeist. And I think we'll look back and we'll be like, what, like we used to just sleep depart ourselves and we had no idea what it was doing for these follow on effects like I wanted to Actually, what I like to do
is tie sleep to IQ. You don't mess with someone's IQ, right, Like, if you can show that IQ drops post a bad night's sleep, it basically decimates these ideas of like genius person does blank without sleep. So the ultimate argument is data. So it's the study I want to do is take these patterns, measure IQ throughout the day, and if you can show that drop, like there's very few things that will be more effective than showing that you basically become dumb when you don't sleep.
Yeah. Yeah, yeah, we're gonna have to find a way of convincing people. Yeah that sleeps a good investment. And it's hard, right because it almost feels like I think we don't look at a part that part of our health as something we can be good at. Yes, and that's why your whole idea or becoming a professional sleeper, like I think we do think about, oh I want to be a professional runner, I could be a professional bodybuilder, Like, these are parts of our health that becoming good at
seems aspirational exactly. But becoming a good sleeper, or even becoming a good meditator to some degree, aren't seen as professional accomplishments or pursuits because they don't have this competition, and nor should it be a competition. I don't think it needs to be. But this idea of competing against yourself, which is what a sleep score is, yes, seems like the healthiest way.
To do it, exactly. I did this as well with so when this endeavor went viral, people were confused, and so I got a lot of name calling. So people be like, you're an eccentric billionaire, rich Patrick Bateman, Prometheus, you know, like all the possible things they could call me. And so they were just confused. And so I say, like, okay, Lebron James spends one point five million dollars a year on his health, right and you see him play in the court. You're like, good job, Lebron, Like you're doing
a good job. But someone like myself, if you've worked really hard at health and wellness, I'm weird in an outcast and should be an eccentric. And so I had to clarify for people that actually I'm a new category. And I came up with this idea that I'm a professional rejuvenation athlete. It's a new sport, it's a new game. And they created a leaderboard so looked at speed of aging. So there's a clock inside of our body that tells
you how fast or how slow you're aging. And then I said, all right, world, let's compete, because right now you have like all these health gurus who are saying like do this, do that, but how do you know what thing works? And so I was like, all right, just show us your data. So now we have a liderboard and so same thing. Just like a professional sleeper, there's now a professional Reuvenian athlete and we have a
lider board. People compete, So it's like it helps humans understand what the game is and how to win and how score points.
Yeah, and I think we underestimate how much we do function like athletes. Like athletes are playing or four big games a week if you're playing basketball, if you're playing soccer, it's probably like two to three American football. I don't know, maybe it's a game a week or a couple of games a week. But it's like we don't realize, like that tough conversation at work, that presentation at work, that bed, that sale, like whatever, it is, like all of that
is taxing us in a different way. Like we're not pushing our bodies that far, but we are pushing our brains, We are pushing our guts, we are pushing our minds. And I wanted to talk to you a bit about food because you brought up a few interesting things. They're about eating that much earlier before bed. But I wanted
to start with the low protein. So I'm vegan too, so that's why I was listening to So I was like I'm vegan to measure caloric intake, but hearing you talk about being low protein, that's something I'm always told to do the opposite for, So walk me through that.
Yeah, what's your protein intake?
So I've been told or I've been told to try and do like my body weight, right, and so that's impossible for me. My gut doesn't not enjoyed that, And so as I tried to increase my protein intake, I found that it was harder and heavier on my gut. If I'm honest right now, I'm probably doing like eighty grams of protein a day, and that's good if I get there like realistically and my gut can handle that.
Whereas I saw my gut health struggling as I tried to get to one hundred and twenty grams of protein one hundred and forty.
Yeah, yeah, I'm in the same range. So I'm roughly one twenty so I weigh one seventy four. Yeah, And so I say that's low protein. So it sounds like for where you're at, that's about where you're at. But most men I know are typically in like the two hundred and two fifty range. They have an idea that just there's no upper bound of too much protein and
so they just pound it. And so, yeah, I guess my one twenty is generally speaking, on the lower side of how most men think about protein assumption, right, especially with an hour every day working out, it's like a really rigorous schedule, so most people just assume you have to have more.
So I'm I'm vegan, I work out an hour every day. But yeah, just when I was being told to eat like one hundred and sixty hundred and seventy grands of protein, I couldn't go beyond one hundred. I was like, my body just does not like it. Yeah, and I'm about to destroy my gut to try and get a protein goal. But then my gut help's going to suffer.
Yeah. Yeah, So we look at it. So we say, like, basically, you can look up blood biomarkers and say, because once you get too much protein it has a negative effect
on the body, you can tease out those biomarkers. But then we've used MRI to say what is my total muscle mass, what is my fat, you know, liver fat like throughout So for example, on my latest MRI scan, I'm in the top one percent for ideal muscle and fat and so by every marker, and then my cardiovascular fitness, I've top one point five percent of eighteen year olds. So like that's the end point. So if you say what is the protein intake, it's not solely based upon
a dietary recommendation. It's like what is happening in the body, and what is my muscle status, what is my cardiovastrostatus, what is my energy? And so like those the endpoints where again you move away from story and you move to data and let data resolve the debate.
What's what's your body five percentage right now?
Around ten?
Okay? And it was that a goal you had.
It was like an approximate goal, but we were really trying to say, if you're taking every organ in the body, we're trying to make every organ in my body age eighteen. That's kind of a ridiculous idea in this moment, but it may not be in five or ten or fifteen years. We've been successful in slowing down my speed of aging and then reversing the biological age of semi organs, not
all like, for example, my left ear. It's really this methodical progress to say, can you measure age and then move the organ back.
And from a diet perspective, what helps you get to age eighteen?
Yeah, we've tried to construct a perfect diet, so every single calorie I consume has a specific objective if it doesn't achieve a goal, Like we've basically tried to just stack superfoods across the board. And so there's nothing I eat which is like cool or fun or culturally in. It has to have rigorous scientific evidence and we have to measure in the body that's actually working. And so yeah, I eat a lot of broccoli, cauliflower, lentils, pea protein, hemp, protein, berries, nuts, seeds.
Could you walk me through your exact meals like a rough day, because I'm going to try mirror these meals.
Yeah, so my first meal the day is called super veggie and it's a broccoli, cauliflower, black, lentils, ginger, garlic. Yeah, that's the first mill, and the second mill is called nutty pudding, which is macadamia nuts, walnuts, flax seed, pomegranate juice, some berries and p and hemp protein. And the third mill the day varies every day, so it's like some vegetables some berry nuts seed, but a total of two thousand,
five hundred calories. And then I do one tablespoon of extra version olive oil with each mill so I do three tablespoons a day. Yeah exactly, yeah raw, so I never cooked with it. And then I do college in peptides. So that's the only thing that's non vegan is the collagen peptides, and it's two thousand, two hundredfe Oh. They also do some cocoa, one hundred percent pure cocoa, six grams a day, and then I take around fifty pills. So there's no diet, no vigan diet, no carnival diet
can satisfy the body's entire needs. So you have to supplement if you want to be ideal, and then if you want to be on the frontier of like really slowing down your aging and robustly addressing the body's needs, you need to supplement. Some things just cannot be acquired through through diet, and so these are like this is just scientific fact. It's very hard to have this conversation.
Like the moment you bring up diet, people just go crazy, like war breaks out between the vegans and the carnivores, between this and that. It's just so I just I don't talk about it much because people get so triggered by it, and so I just try to like say, like do your thing, like whatever it is, do your thing, just measure and then follow your market.
It's like no processed foods, no packaged foods, that you're not eating anything out of a packet scene.
Yeah, I mean actually all blueprint food. So basically when I started doing this, we started measuring everything I was consuming, all foods, all supplements. And as you might expect, these supplement labels are not accurate, companies are not truthful, and the food is terrifyingly toxic. Like we know the food systems thirty but I had this general idea that there must be some system in place in America. They're like
watching out for us. Not true. So unless the food is killing you on the spot, there's like this gray area of like kind of just do whatever. And so we're finding these foods that I was eating, we're very toxic. And so we basically spent the past year sourcing food from all of the entire world, the very best foods, lowest levels of toxins, and so we've made it out into a product. People are like, I want to do this, but it's way too complicated. So we just made it
easy for everybody. But it's like, I think we've created the most scientifically robust product out there, plus the cleanest all third party lab results posted.
So wait, what can people buy? Yeah?
So this is my company blueprint?
Yeah.
So yeah. When the company went viral diluin this endeavorment viral, people are like, love it. I want to do it, but it's way too hard, Like no way can I put this all together? And so I thought, Okay, I'll do it. So we put together the whole thing in this low cost, easy to consume package olive oil, protein eight pills a day, and then a bunch of other stuff. But we're trying to basically say, like you can get
every calorie you need from us, got it? And so we're trying to do most scientific scientifically rigorous and cleanest and then transparent like here the lab results. So I think we've built the best thing in the entire world.
And you don't think that's different from getting your calories from whole foods and real foods.
You can Yeah, so I eat whole foods down.
That right, right, right, so this is more of like a supplementary package. It's not a replacement meals.
Yeah, I mean so like protein. The protein is a replacement mill. Yeah, it's like you need to get P and MP protein somewhere.
Yeah. And what does your supplement intake look like? What I You said fifty pills? I do.
Yeah, but the our blooeprint stack has eight. So it's like, if you want the best longevity stack in the world, we've put together eight pills.
And what do does eight include?
About sixty two or so health actives. So they're some of the best molecules known to anti Asian science for the body.
Amazing. I can't wait to try it out.
Yeah. Yeah, I brought it here for you to day.
Oh very cool. Thank you so much. I appreciate it. Yeah, looking forward to it. And wait, so wait, what time are you eating then? Because if you're finishing me at eleven thirty am, what time are your meals?
Six am is my first meal and then I finished by eleven to eleven, So you.
Eating everything within five and a half hour. What does that do to the.
Body so far? The data says it's good. Like if you look at my speed of aging or any of the marker in my gut, it seems all fine. So I really this protocol is built around sleep more than anything else.
Do you have any cheat days or any.
I don't know one. No. Now, the idea of eating a piece of pizza or a whole pizza, or like a donut or something just makes me sick because I'm going to do it. There'll be like five seconds of maybe enjoyment, and then you've got like an entire day of misery. You feel sick, you feel lethargic, your sleep is going like I've just ruined my sleep. I thought awful about myself, Like the cost is so high, I just don't want to do it. The other day, I ate a potato chip. My friend was like, just have one,
and it tasted like gasoline. Like I'm so surprised, Like we're just so normalized this these processed foods. We can no longer taste it. But it was just wild to go back in time and experience it new.
It is interesting how quickly your taste buds rewire. Yeah, when you kind of disconnect from some of these foods. I've definitely done like long refined sugar free fasts for you know, I don't know the longest one I've ever done, but definitely a few months. Yeah, And I feel like after that, as someone who grew up addicted to chocolate, what you were talking about when you grew up in a family where yeah, sodas and drinks, it was like for me, I grew up in a family where all
we ate was chocolate all day. And so for me to go back to there are days when I'm like, that does not taste anywhere near as I thought it was good? Is it was going to taste? Something that I loved and adored before has kind of lost it. And you just notice how quickly do you have any day on how quick it takes to rewire your taste once? Because I feel like that is such a interesting feeling because now it's not like you even fighting it, Like you said, when you taste you're like, god, I didn't
even want that. That's a really fascinating place to be at. So have you seen any day on how quick we can rewire our taste works?
Within days?
Days?
Yeah?
Wow?
Is very very fast.
Right.
That's that's the thing about being human, is like if you take any given circumstance and you say, like, what do I abhor? What do I What am I repulsed by? What kind do I find unimaginable? What? You know, take any kind of vector or and you imagine that that is an impossible thing for you to be or do, and then if you actually got in that circumstance and you did it for a few days, you may find yourself renormalized to the exact thing you just found unimaginable.
Like we humans can adapt to anything and almost instantaneously. It's just crazy and so like most of the time, the realization is just like we're trapped in this idea that we found how somehow found truth and that anything else is non true is not truth. But like it's like we can adapt to any reality like that. It's like we've seen that again and again.
So do you Are you someone who gets stressed if you walk into the room and you sense that the moistures off or the air qualities off, or you ate something like, how do you react to that?
I've had enough cycle times now with measurement where I can feel things intuitively. I can feel my HRV. I absolutely know my heart rate at any given moment. Yeah, so I definitely my sensory awareness has dramatically increased.
And then how do you react to that because you can't control the humidity in every room or wherever you are, for.
Example, Yeah it's okay, yeah.
Right, yeah, yeah, So you're not you're not. You don't you're not like, oh my god, like this is gonna set me Like, you don't you don't have that reaction.
I'm playing the power laws. So that's why, like last week, when being with friends, I wanted to try and new think, go to bed early, get your deep sleep, stay up and have fun. If you go back to bed, like it's okay. So really trying to be adaptive.
So I love that. Let's talk about that because I think that what's interesting is to live a highly intentional life, but then to be adaptable and know where the wiggle room is. Yeah, that seems like a great way to live, and it also seems like something that isn't usually possible. What we usually see is and this isn't just to do with health, but with anything. We usually see people who are control freaks. We're like, everything has to be super controlled, and as soon as one control is off,
they freak out. And that's not a great way to live. Whether it's business, health, marriage, whatever it may be. Or you see the opposite where someone has no rules whatsoever, They just do what they want when they want, and life kind of goes on and we all know where that ends up. So how have you managed to create that mindset that allows you to have space, have time and then live a really regimented, discipline life because I like that a lot. Yeah.
I mean my mentality is that I'm really motivated by being respected by those that exist in the twenty fifth century. Like when they read about this time and place, I would like them to say that I saw something that was invisible that was incredibly hard to do, that the predictable pushback from the status quo was pretty violent, and so I'm really trying to demonstrate the future of being human. I'm not trying to be normal. I'm not trying to bow the status quo. I'm not trying to fit in.
I'm not trying to soothe. I'm trying to say the speed at which technology is traveling, we're basically probably evolving like you know, five, ten, twenty, thirty, forty fifty years equivalent in months of time, Like our speed of evolution is increasing rapidly and so I'm trying to anticipate where we want to be and not be a lagging indicator of status quo. And so in my mindset, I really don't care what anyone right now who lives has to say about this. I don't. I just really am entirely
in that future headspace. And so that really I find to be liberating, because like so much of our society, you're tethered to social expectation and the punishment of what a company's violating that expectation, and I just found it. I had to come up with a mental model to like try to fully explore this without that tethering.
Are you are you scared of dying? No, what's your relationship like with death? What are your thoughts about?
For me, it's kind of an interesting conversation because we humans do not know what happens after death. No one knows. Now, you can imagine what happens, you can tell a story about what happens, you can hypothesize what happens, like all those things are true, but it's an unknowable thing. And yet that doesn't stop us from speaking with unbridled confidence
on what will be. And to me, it really shows that we humans, we don't want to die, like desperately, we do not want to die, and we want to try to address this omnipresent concern of what exists after life? What is death? And so I try to be very sober minded to say like, I don't know, and no human knows. Therefore, the thing I value most is that that existence is the highest virtue. Whereas before be when death is always inevitable, you just naturally soothe yourself with
these stories. And what I'm saying now is like, actually, we might be able to do something about this that we never could before, and therefore we can have a reimagination of what existence truly is.
Yeah. Yeah, the Eastern perspectives always fascinated me with how our consciousness is eternal and the body is temporary, and therefore that desire to live forever comes from this, yeah, very innate truth that we are eternal. We're not limited in the way the body is limited to some degree, I guess. And it's always been fascinating to me how the desire to live is a very natural one, actually, yeah, and it's uniform, Yeah, but it's almost one that we
are scared to ask. There's a lot of fear around even talking about death. It feels morbid. It feels when it's the most it's you know, guaranteed and the most common thing that will it's the number one thing that will happen to everyone who's worn.
So like if you tell, like, let's just take an entrepreneur and say, like, if you show up to do this thing and you're just present and do some minimal amount of work, you're going to become a billionaire, Like that's the prize. But in reality, you have to be an entrepreneur. It's like to defy all odds and work a crazy amount to achieve some level of success. And I feel like the death narrative that we have a species is it's kind of the same ofs like you
get this afterlife with this minimal set of effort. And so basically it sacks people of inviting them to work hard for existence because it's already guaranteed. And so to me, it has this really negative consequence where it's like, oh, taken care of. Therefore, you can have poor health habits, you can risk your life, you can do these things. So I think we're really on this bigger time scale.
We're wrapped up in this moment, where are we should be working a lot harder and a care a lot more about our existence, about the planet's health, about our kids' help, about societal's health. And we're lacks of daisical because we have some sort of idea that somehow in the afterlife things are sorted. So I think it really weakens us as a species.
From the point of view of data. What's different about what men need to do for longevity and what women need to do for longevity.
We have much more in common than we do differences. So a lot of people immediately jump to They'll see my protocol and they'll say, well, certainly there has to be personalizations that you know are done from you versus me or whatever. And I would draw their attention back to say, we have much more in common than you think, like instead of saying, like, what are the major commonalities,
they immediately go to differences. And so what we have in common is sleep works great for men and women, right, and eating vegetables right also great for men and women. And again you can look at the data, exercise great, and so there's nuances on the exercise of like around a woman's cycle. So yes, there's nuances been generally speaking,
the basics of health of life. Health practices are good for both males and females, and so then the nuances like you have a protocol I've published publicly, there's nuances of a woman's cycle what to do around that for both food and exercise. So so yeah, those are details I've listed out, But generally speaking, the benefits are in the power laws of health and wellness of getting the basics right and less so the tail things which people focus on.
Yeah, and how does someone lower their inflammation which is known as like the silent killer.
So my body, for example, has barely levels of any detectable inflammation. It's almost entirely gone.
I want that. That sounds amazing.
Yeah, do you know your inflammation level?
I don't know my level recently, I've got a blood test coming up again, so I need to check it out with Darshan. So but yeah, it's always been one of those things that's been hard for me to manage.
Yeah, okay, interesting. Yeah, so you're looking probably at your hs CRP. Yeah yeah, so yeah, it has to do with it. A lot is sleep. Yes, Like again like back to the basics of life and then stress Yeah, so it kind of always comes back to the basics.
Yeah, and what are people getting wrong in their daily schedule with stress that they could easily change to kind of lower that because, like we talked about earlier, not everyone's in a position to take care of their own schedule, build the thing that may be work in a job in a certain way. Like what are some things people can do to manage that throughout the day.
Yeah, first is sleep. So, like sleep is a superpower to manage stress. I know that when I'm well rested, if a stressful event happens, it just kind of I can brush it off. If I'm not well rested, it feels very painful and I react very strongly. So sleep is probably the most powerful thing to manage stress. Too, is you know, if you're exercising and feel well, also lowers like stress response than a balanced diet every single yea the same stuff, like you get those power laws
in place. Agree, a lot of people like when they can't get those power OUs in place, they want to take a pill. And so I realize that's how a lot of people think. I do want to urge people like get those habits in place. They are the most robust, highly performing things you can do.
What does your one hour workout look like?
It's cardio, weights, balance and flexibility.
Okay, yeah, very balanced.
Yeah Yeah.
What I love about everything you're saying is that it's things that it's almost like some of it, we know, some of it, we're aware of the biggest challenge I guess when it comes to all of this is discipline. Like discipline, if there was one word, what word would you choose? If there's one thing that you said, is that the core of everything you've.
Talked about today, it's systems.
Systems.
Yeah, So like if you design, if you say, like I go to bed at this time of day every single day, you build your life around it. If you say I work out in the morning right and wake up every day and never change it. So the thing that most people do is they leave the decision to their willpower. They say do I feel like it or not? And then in that moment, it's like, now I'm gonna skip today because like I've been working really hard. I need to rest anyways, like you rationalize it in whatever way.
So just build systems. I basically when I started doing this, like and when I came here today, I put your address in to my navigation system, and I was like, take me there. I didn't like memorize the streets right, and so I trusted the algorithm. I had more data than I had, and so I proposed this four years ago. When I started, I said, can we build an algorithm
that takes better care of me than I count myself? Like, just measure my body, put it into a competitional system and pair the science then tell me what to do. I wanted to do like navigation for my body, and that's what we've done. So I basically I do not
make decisions in my mind. Yes, the algorithm does all the things for me, and so I just like I feel like inevitable that we humans will not do this weird thing of make decisions on a daily basis of what to eat, when exercise would just be done by an algorithm, and we'll be like, this is amazing because like it just does what's right for me. I feel amazing. I was scared of it before and now it's the best thing ever. It's like, it's just inevitable we're going to be in that path.
Now.
A lot of people when they hear that, they will think it's this topic which, like I get it from where you're at, but like we have said yes to algorithms everywhere, and it's entirely reasonable that we'd say yes to our health.
Yeah. I think the system's point is so true. And a big part of systems is focusing on how you feel after the system is complete, not before. Yes, Like I have the same system. I know what days I work out and what times I work out, and it's still hard before one of those days to feel like I really want to do it. Yes, but I know
for a fact I'm going to feel great. So even when I'm in that moment to message and be like, oh I don't want to work out today, I know I'm going to regret that later, Yes, and I'm actually going to appreciate later that I got that workout in even when I felt tired, even when I felt sluggish. Yes,
that's actually going to be the best time. And so I love the answer of systems, but I think it's kind of programming the mind to be committed to the feeling after you complete a system, never how you're going to feel before.
That's true, and like I learned this when I was depressed, you know, my mind was like, hey, you should commit suicide, like life is awful, You're never going to feel a hope again. Die and like it was just on repeat saying that, and I learned, Like it was the biggest breakthrough in my depression was when I learned I am not my thoughts such a simple concept, but like you see it Land, It's like, Okay, this came from somewhere,
but it's not me. And so even now, like do I want to work out or not, I don't care what my brain says. It is an unreliable source of information. Systems are a more reliable form information. So like, set up your system and like you're saying, do you know if you do the system, you're going to be happy, And just never trust my mind to tell me what I do and don't want to do.
Yeah, And what's interesting about that is a lot of people say, well, are you just not ignoring your emotions and how you feel? What I find is the opposite, that the system makes you better at dealing with any emotion that then comes up exactly right. So it's not that you don't have emotions and you don't have feelings and you don't experience stress or anxiety, but the system being in place actually just gave you all of this willpower.
Going back to your point, and I think that's where we go wrong, because I think we've kind of got to this place in society where it's like, well, how you feel is the reality is the truth, and it's like, WHOA, If I just listen how I feel all the time,
I'll probably never do anything that's good for me. I'll probably eat lots of stuff that's bad for me, and I'll never choose the thing that's right for me, and I'll keep doing what's wrong for me because it's easier, exactly, and my mind is constantly trying to get me to do what's easier exactly, and what's easier is really good
for me entirely. Yeah, I find that to be the I mean, that feels like it's it like what's good for me is not easy, and what's easy is not good for me, and what's uncomfortable is probably the right decision, and what's comfortable is probably the wrong decision. What did it take you to program yourself to say yes to that algorithm? Like?
Two things? Like one, when I built my previous company, in brain Treamo, we would build version one of our software, and then version two and version three we never showed up. And the software is like, guys, now I don't feel like doing out work today. I'm not going to perform Like the software is just performed in its most robust way possible. It's very reliable. Now there are bugs and
we can fix the bug. But then, whereas me as a system of intelligence, just like software, I would make all the same errors every day, go to bed late, eat the wrong foods, maybe have alcohol, like waste time on things I didn't want to do, Like I would just be this walking disaster of errors and I would do the same behaviors every single day. And I thought, this is crazy, Like this form of intelligence I can just program to be like this great robust intelligence, whereas
I can't do anything reliable. And I thought, I want to build myself in a way where I can reliably be robust as an intelligent system. So like this is kind of cool, Like we can now can imagine this as humans. So I wanted to build systems. And like, I know a lot of people will be like that's so weird, You're not a computer, But so I get it.
But I guess like I would say two things. One is that when I talk about these things in these terms, people will say, but you're not happy, Like I find that I find happiness in life and spontaneity like stain up all night, and like they have all these elegant explanations about you know why they love to the following things, which is fine. So there's like two ways to look at this one and say, like what does your health look like? What does my health look like? What does
your happiness look like? And what does my happiness look like? And like, quantitatively, I think this system is superior. Now it doesn't mean you have to do a specific thing. You can still have flexibility and you can have spotan eighty. But generally speaking, people are very reluctant to release the status quo of like do they just like do whatever they want whenever they want to a more rigorous stance of like you can be happier with these systems in place.
But it's just like I've I've had this conversation so many times. I know, like the deep, deep resistance people have to just shut this down. But I'm suggesting, like this is really the reality of the future of being human. I'm prototyping it right now, and it actually is a superior system to whatever we're doing as humans.
Now, what's holding us back from thinking health can lead to happiness? God?
What a good question. Honestly, that that is like a bull's eye in capitalism. You're you're fighting for resource accumulation, for wealth accumulation, and for status, and you're willing to sacrifice everything to achieve that goal because health is not the goal, like resource accumulation is a goal. Power is a goal. Like you, I guess you can kind of
map everything back to status, power, sex. Yeah, it's I guess it's like the goals the society has and the if the imagination is that if existence is the highest virtue, like we want to hold onto this with everything we have. Those other objectives become secondary considerations but subject to our own well being, and we just haven't made that transition yet. Yeah, but but yeah, what do you think I.
Was trying and think about it from from you know, my knowledge base of Eastern literature and philosophy, and it's there's there's four archetypes in Eastern philosophy, and they all have different goals within a society, and one archetype aims for knowledge, one aims for power and control and influence, one aims for resources and wealth, and one aims for
comfort and stability and security. And I think that in times like these you become pretty much only two of them, which is you either aim for security, stability, and comfort, or you aim for resources, accumulation, power and control. And the thirst and pursuit for growth and evolution and improvement
has become kind of bottom of the pile. It's the hardest and it's the most powerful, but it requires so much, And like you said, because we've been wired to either want to remain the same or want to achieve in a very external way growth something unseen. Right like right now, as I see you, I can't see that you're eighteen years old. I can't see that you're any of these things. And so then I'm like, well, that's not important then,
because life's based on what I see. Yeah, And that's obviously not a healthy way to live or the right way to live, or maybe it is for some people, but it's definitely not an accurate way to live because what you see is not necessarily what's true. And so I think we've become a very visible surface level society and growth and focus and discipline or systems are such
unseen parts. It's almost like the idea that everyone wants a successful business, but people may not want to do the work to build a successful business, right, and so the work is unseen. The foundations of the building are unseen, the bottom of the iceberg is unseen, and we still are figuring that out.
Yeah, yeah, I think yeah. To build on yours R, I'd say like, when death is inevitable, humans choose games within the selection options, so you can pursue those four archetypes. If death doesn't is not inevitable, it changes the underlying structure of society. Everything changes. And that's my primary hypothesis is that's what this moment is about. Like that is
the only thing happening right now for humans. Is like we knew we're going to going to die before, and now there's this open question of will we be the first generation to not die? If that's true, everything we've imagined we care about changes.
And I'm really happy that you're putting yourself out there as someone who's not trying to appease or not trying to keep the status quo, because I feel like when we see human brilliance in sport, music, drama, film, TV, whatever it may be. The truth is we love it, but we can never be it or do it because there is a certain distance between you doing what Lebron James does. And yes, there may be a distance between what we can do and what you're doing to the
extreme and the top one percent. But the thing is, the possibility of us getting closer to that is probably higher. Yeah, so everyone's trying to get good at golf. Yeah, chances of you being Tiger Woods is pretty impossible. Yeah, but for us to actually reverse aging is probably more likely and helpful to us in the long run as well.
Yeah, everyone, Yeah, if you look at this from like the biggest time skills, like a quick review of history. Buddha was like, hey, like there's some suffering with life, and the best way to approach this is to detach yourself. You know, this all a ful path. And then Confucius had this idea of familiar relationships within community. Mohammad said, we should submit to God. Jesus said, I am the
son of God. Adam Smith said, there's this invisible hand of markets and capitalism and these systems that can emerge and then America was like we the people, and car Marx was like, actually it's class warfare. And you know, it's like, we have these big ideologies that have shaped our reality, but really humanity is run by a very small number of things, right, political structures, economic structures, ideological structures. And in this moment, we're experiencing a radical change of technology.
And when that happens, we humans want to find things that are useful to our objectives, and so we say like, hey, capitalism, can you help out? Hey democracy, Hey Christianity, Hey Islam. Like we kind of search and say who has answers? And right now, every system society has fails to answer the fundamental question what do we do as a species? Like what do we do as individuals? Like when AI is emergent, when we're building superintelligence, what do I do?
And what do we do? And no existing structure can answer that. That's true, Like you look throughout history, these theologies largely emerge in response to technological change. It happens, and we say, like we need help with a new ideological structure. And so that's what don't Die is is don't die as basically meant to answer, like be the answer and that's why I think it can become on par with the major ideologies in a few years time, that this is the new way we structure society.
Yeah, Brian, thank you so much for your time today. It's been really illuminating and fascinating to talk to you. And I'm hoping that we get to hang out more because definitely share a lot of values and share a lot of desires for humanity and for each other, for ourselves, and so I hope I get to learn a lot more from you, truly. Yeah, I'm very excited to learn from you. We end every On Purpose episode with a final five. These questions have to be answered in one
word to one sentence maximum. Although I know I'm going to break the rules because I'm fascinated, but Brian Johnson, these are your final five. The first question is what is the best health longevity advice you've ever heard or received?
Build habits?
Second question, what is the worst health of longevity advice you've ever had or received?
Cheat Days?
Why a cheat day is bad for us?
They teach you bad habits. They are they inflict damage upon the body, They set unreal estic expectations. It's a bad mimetic all the way.
Down Question number three, What do you do for fun?
I love outdoor adventure, so I drove a dog sled in the Arctic, I raced in the Moroccan desert. I went to a volcano in Iceland. So I'm rich with irony where I'm the most don't die person in human history, and I also love to play in adventure.
I love that. I'm going to add a three B. Do you drink coffee?
I do not drink coffee.
Why don't you drink coffee?
My emotions and intellect now are so steady from high quality sleep and a good diet and routine exercise that anything that creates a roller coaster of change I avoid. And so I don't do caffeine. I don't do nicotine, no stimulants, and my mood is just stable all day long. It's beautiful.
Should people avoid drinking coffee?
Some people do very well with it. So I'm just sensitive to caffeine, So I think a lot of people do well. Do your thing again all my responses, do you and follow the data?
Question number four. I recently invested in a company called function Health because I was upset about the idea that getting great data was hard, and I wanted to make it more accessible to lots of people, And so there are tens of thousands of people that are using Functional Health. Now I have access to two hundred data sets that they didn't have before through a blood test made really simple.
What other great data tools do you believe in that you recommend to other people to get more data because I think a lot of this is because you just never know exactly.
Yeah, we with Blueprint, we have I think the most robust measurement protocol in the world. It's blood, it's your speed of aging, eleven organ ages, full body scan, and microplastics. So it's basically a measurement profile that gives you the same value as like a twenty five thousand dollars executive physical and a fraction of the price. So we've tried to make full body measurement the most affordable and best in the world.
Fifth and final question we asked is to have a guest who's ever been on the show? If you could create one law that everyone in the world had to follow, what would it be.
To not follow laws? Ah?
Which ones are? Which laws? Are you taking out all laws? Wait? Wait? How far does that? How far does that go.
To reframe it from don't do to how to, So society would be instructions on how to. We would have enough alignment within us and among us that not do would be a thing of the past because we just wouldn't be motivated to do bad behaviors to Selp and others, and it would be a relic of the past that we'd be amazed looking back that humans did things that would be on that would be harmful to sell for others.
You host Don't Die dinners. You've had a friend and guest of the show, Kim Kardashian at one of the dinners. What does it don't de dinner look like? What happens at these dinners?
We can't tell you. Yeah, crazy things. Yeah. People who attend will say it's the most consequential conversation of their life. So we spend two hours. We do a bunch of age tests to just introduce the idea that you can measure biological age. Then we serve everybody food, and then we have a two hour discussion led by five thought experiments, and everybody participates, So everybody talks, everybody engages. I'm the moderator, and so it's very snappy, but people leave. Even years later,
people still measure music. I just can't stop thinking about these ideas. So it's really a transformative time together.
So you do get to eat.
I don't eat everyone else my guests, I don't.
Yeah, amazing, Brian, Thank you so much for tuning in. Please recommend where our audience should find you, where you'd like them to discover your work so that they can get more day, to get more insight and transform their health.
Yeah. I'm on all social platforms and Blueprint provides the supplements nutrition health. My endeavor is about the future of the human race. I'm trying to do a world a solid in providing every calorie, every test for the best health entire world. So if I interest you, great, If not, my objective primarily is the future of the species.
Brian, thank you so much. Thanks appreciate it. If this year you're trying to live longer, live happier, live healthier, go and check out my conversation with the world's biggest longevity doctor, Peter Attia on how to slow down aging and why your emotional health is directly impacting your physical health.
Acknowledge that there is surprisingly little known about the relationship between nutrition and health, and people are going to be shocked to hear that, because I think most people think the exact opposite