Thank you for watching. If you enjoyed this topic and episode, please click the "like" button and subscribe to our channel here on KZbin. Thank you for your interest in science! -- Andrew
@realanonymousofficial4 ай бұрын
Bro you are brilliant yaar.. bahud badhiya 🙏 ❤
@yousufgharib74733 ай бұрын
At 2:08:59, isn't that the mesocortial pathway? because you said the mesolimbic pathway?
@yousufgharib74733 ай бұрын
2:11 isn't the ventral tegmental area concerns both the mesolimbic and mesocortical pathway?
@Nick-qn6sp3 ай бұрын
This feels illegal to watch it for free. What a life changing video.
@daisytoromanzano88652 ай бұрын
I have a friend that doctor told her that they needed to get her off lorazepan after being on that for several months. Not sure if do tor guided properly but she was almost 3 wks ago taking one pill then half dose for the following week. Was without it for a wk but couldn’t manage the headaches and other withdrawals side effects and doctor said last wk to take some back. It just break my heart to see her not doing well. Any research for natural alternatives?
@Catholic-Redpilled-Spaniard3 жыл бұрын
I am a 21 year-old engineering student from Madrid, Spain. This is unbelievably helpful. What a wonderful time we live in, that I can listen to a top-notch neuroscientist talk about perhaps the most important topic for me in this particular moment in my life. And all this from the comfort of my bedroom and for free. You, Sir, are one of a kind. God bless you and love you
@Catholic-Redpilled-Spaniard3 жыл бұрын
@Bernie MPMD? Lol.
@gibillanmagnificul11603 жыл бұрын
eres de tajamar?
@antoniojurado64133 жыл бұрын
VIVA ESPAÑA
@grettalemabouchou67792 жыл бұрын
💓
@SuperGuanine2 жыл бұрын
@@grettalemabouchou6779 😁😁😁
@petsematarykeeper3 жыл бұрын
When history looks back on this time....Mr. Huberman, you will be one of the names that changed the way people see the world. Thank you for your contribution to this world. Your reach and inspiration reaches so much further than you will ever know.
@phamawa3 жыл бұрын
He's easily one of the most important podcasts out there. Helpful info, no BS and incredibly professional/credible
@ARNWadz3 жыл бұрын
that's why he needs to write his book...nobody knows if KZbin will still be around in the future. A book, or many, that would be his legacy
@youtubedestroyedmylife3093 жыл бұрын
Naw I agree with petsem dude. Honestly a lot of podcasters are important and incredibly influencial in society today, and really that translates to influencing societies trends towards changing in this way or that way. Podcasting is still kind of new seeming to most people as a media platform. But overall its super powerful, cuts through bullshit that shorter more adhd-ish traditional media like television doesnt, which is usually owned by some big corperation with their own goals in mind other than educating or sharing information etc anyway. You can change the fucking world with your iphone using a fucking podcast nowadays.
@Chrisko14923 жыл бұрын
Dude, calm down. Yes, he does great episodes summarizing scientific papers and other work, but that‘s all he does. And he certainly won‘t go down in history by summarizing information, lmao.
@Chrisko14923 жыл бұрын
@@youtubedestroyedmylife309 Give me an example where someone changed the world with an iPhone. Except Steve Jobs, obviously ;)
@7575tavin2 жыл бұрын
Practical summary: 1. Dopamine management - Abstain from or limit highly desirable activities for up to a month so the dopamine levels are replenished and the baseline dopamine release returns to normal - Peaks of dopamine decrease our baseline dopamine, required to general motivation and satisfaction with life. - Go for intermittent, random releases of dopamine - Don't bundle pleasurable activities with things you want to do (gym and music) - Flip a coin and choose how much pleasure bundling you'll do to the next activity - Otherwise the activity alone becomes less pleasurable 2. Direct practices - Cold water exposure - 2.5x increase and sustained for hours afterwards - Peaks - Chocolate - 1.5x - Sex - 2x (act and pursuit of it) - Nicotine - 2.5x - Cocaine - 2.5x - Amphetamine - 10x - Exercise - 2x (up to 2x, the more you enjoy it subjectively) - Coffee combined with another activity (coffee makes the dopamine release more effective) - Connection with other people 3. Mental strategies - Subjectivity, perception and belief - Hearing something that validates our belief about an activity, makes it more pleasurable - Journaling, thinking positively about something you remember or you're experiencing now releases dopamine - Learn to spike dopamine from effort - Don't spike dopamine prior to engaging in effort - Don't spike dopamine after engaging in effort - Learn to spike dopamine from effort itself.
@yac75712 жыл бұрын
so we should avoid dopamine peaks from chocolate, cocaine, nicotine etc but do cold water exposure and exercise instead right? why? they peak dopamine as well -> our dopamine tank gets depleted -> our dopamine baseline is on a lower level, no? i dont get it
@sl33pyTea2 жыл бұрын
Great synopsis 👌🏾
@supercharging2 жыл бұрын
Otavio; While your summary is accurate, the good Professor's content is minimally accurate. Not one, rather, several of his conclusions are based on wholly inadequate controls. One phat example is using gamers' experience. Shallow achievement is a world apart from licit profit. Winning a video game has no relation to meritable achievement delivering longer-lasting or broader benefits. -- Have clicked on "free-click charity" buttons every day for about 7,000 days, and still feel SUCH a thrill at the action every day. Every click saves a life! Never a decrease in baseline dopamine. Long list of other examples. I admire Prof. Huberman enormously, and he speaks with charm and authority. That doesn't elevate his accuracy level. Your note-taking and your skills at summary are nearly exquisite. What huge potential you show. Best of energy to the best of your efforts.
@zholnerchuk2 жыл бұрын
@@yac7571 as far as I remember the thing about cold water exposure is that it increases the baseline and has a long lasting effect. So it’s not like an immediate spike and consecutive plummeting but more of a gradual thing improving your mood and being. You might also want to keep in mind that cold water exposure has other benefits that improve your overall well-being and it can’t be compared with most dopamine spiking activities. Furthermore, cold water increases your adrenaline baseline first and it’s directly related to your dopamine levels but I forgot the exact mechanism :D
@yac75712 жыл бұрын
@@zholnerchuk I see, cold water exposure is different. Thanks for the answer and the details mate, cheers!
@Ziggle-ky9kv2 ай бұрын
The fact that nobody talks about the book Dopamine Enigma Unveiled, speaks volumes about how people are stuck in a trance.
@c.mac.new_2 ай бұрын
Splerrrrg
@laughingbat1695Ай бұрын
bot?
@YouCanMakeFireOutOfIceАй бұрын
This a bot comment.
@hugimi3807Ай бұрын
I think it speaks more so about how no one knows it exists
@diarmuidbrady89873 жыл бұрын
This is the highest quality science-based podcast in existence, hands down.
@spotmebro35893 жыл бұрын
It’s so well organized and he has sufficient knowledge to present it. I’m sure a lot of work goes on behind the scenes to get it to be so smooth. I appreciate it, Dr. Huberman!!
@misse20133 жыл бұрын
100% agree
@Sendet3 жыл бұрын
I, too, am particularly impressed. One thing I love is that the titles on his website seem short and gimmicky, like we're about to hear something trite and pseudoscientific, but then you start one and he goes right into very discrete definitions and hardcore science, cites his sources and even points out problems with them if any, points out pseudoscience and misconceptions... And builds up to practical uses of the information given, such that his resulting advice is neither trite nor incomplete, and not likely prone to being taken with misconceptions that undercut success of the advice or its use. Yeah. He's very good.
@AgendaInMind3 жыл бұрын
There's no such thing that some diseases you can "catch", but not all. It's not that complex! If you can't "catch" cancer, diabetes, MS, arthritis, etc., from other people, then you can't "catch" colds, flu and Boogey Viruses. So governments around the world are CAUSING fear frights in everyone based on an unproven THEORY by one man, Louis Pastaur, who redacted his claim of the germ theory on his death bed, yet no one listened. So of course, when everyone is allowed to escape the hostage situation the governments have put their people into, and they start relaxing about the Boogey Virus, that's not in any way transmissible, they will begin their healing phase (get sick), and believe they then have it, and more panic will ensue as well as martial law. The longer people allow this government to hold them hostage in their homes, the more severe the "sickness" will be. Can anyone put 2 and 2 together to figure out what I'm saying?? Western Medicine is pure fraud, and people's lives are destroyed because of it. There's no critical thinking anymore. People think they're educated because they've memorized the lies they've been told for 100 years.
@333btd3 жыл бұрын
Why just because it uses the science words? Those words make you feel smarter
@villealla4190 Жыл бұрын
I've hurt myself and others by not knowing these things. It's borderline criminal not to teach this stuff at school. Show a teenager this one video and their entire life could be different.
@aaronyeomans5799 Жыл бұрын
The entire system is designed to get people addicted to things they think they need that they don't, why would they teach you to be able to think for yourself and all that. That's less profitable
@shortsguy.69 Жыл бұрын
yea its literally a crime to not teach these at school, im still a 18yo student and i found my self doing stupid mistakes in every aspect of my life
@Sodabowski Жыл бұрын
@@shortsguy.69 luckily you realized it early on!
@arhansen85 Жыл бұрын
I have kids 7 yrs and under. I plan to start now in ways they can understand
@jixpuzzle Жыл бұрын
@@shortsguy.69 Same brother, I'm also 18yo student, who has realised his prior mistakes and making changes in life!
@filouchar Жыл бұрын
I am amazed by the fact that this podcast is available for free, it is pure gold
@thobekanintuli75410 ай бұрын
its 2hours not free
@shinchannohara951110 ай бұрын
Anything changed??
@hemuvee10 ай бұрын
@@shinchannohara9511good question
@weekendmagus99949 ай бұрын
@@thobekanintuli754 if I pad, would it be shorter?😂
@3drzl7168 ай бұрын
ikr frr
@EleanorEllis-w4i9 ай бұрын
How listening to this podcast boosts dopamine is unfathomable.
@jesselam58678 ай бұрын
So right, I literally had low dopamine prior to listening and 30 minutes in I was feeling better
@iggmeister41376 ай бұрын
I stopped and immediately felt a drop hah
@lodeyo5 ай бұрын
I drank some coffee before and now i regret it
@emmanuelguillermo30132 жыл бұрын
Your content is a game changer. Upon being prompted for a donation request I gladly sent the maximum amount, no questions asked. I wish you more success, Andrew. The human race needs what you have to offer.
@hubermanlab2 жыл бұрын
Thank you for your interest in science! Best wishes, Andrew
@glgl14722 жыл бұрын
Ah the old dopamine hit
@yooanto94652 жыл бұрын
@@hubermanlab money talks
@HyenaXS2 жыл бұрын
Congratulations. You just donated money to someone wealthier than you. Bravo.
@artoniq2 жыл бұрын
@@HyenaXS, this way, he showed his gratitude for the lesson he had received. What's wrong with you? None of your money, none of your business.
@carlosmares3042 Жыл бұрын
Bro i know you dont know me but you changed my life. Saved it really. My adhd was eating me alive, i was an alcoholic, a junkie and i hated everything. Im sober now, and im in therapy….my family doesnt hate me anymore. Im actually liking life….idk anyway thank you so much. Your doing great work.
@Deleteallmemoriesofme Жыл бұрын
Something similar ;) although still a bit in the middle of it 😢
@whoosh3532 Жыл бұрын
Damn bruh i am on that shit rn hope i reap the same benefits hope u still ballin
@artemthetrain14 Жыл бұрын
Saying s prayer for yall
@mramenlordi3098 Жыл бұрын
Let's go folks ! Stay HARD !
@ChrisTisking12256 Жыл бұрын
@@whoosh3532bruh. If you’re watching this, you’re already in the right direction. Props to you. You’ve already won half the battle.
@motomow Жыл бұрын
I'm a recovering meth addict...3 months Sober today! Thank You Doctor Huberman for giving me the tools necessary to get my "Happy" back. Your videos on addiction and dopamine have delivered the skills I desperately sought to remain an inspiration to those I deeply care for who still suffer from addiction and who WERE too scared to take the initial steps necessary to a longer, healthier and happier future. Seeing how much happier I am and how fast my life is blossoming at 44-after doing Meth Since I was 15-is blowing minds and helping people I know who had given up rethink they're potential. Your Amazing and I want to thank you for changing peoples lives in such a noble, infectious way. Sir you are a blessing! Thank you for saving my life!
@onerider808 Жыл бұрын
Here’s to one more day, three more months, etc. Huge life-changing win! Congratulations.
@deklenjones3041 Жыл бұрын
hey man, i know this will probably go unread but,, good job brother. seriously, it's not easy to kick even the smallest habit or addiction, let alone freakin Meth. congratulations :)
@kowikowi8718 Жыл бұрын
respect for you withdraw is a bitch. i can only speak for alc drinking too much much you feel sick, not drinking 6times worse. im thankfull that i didnt do "hard " drugs.
@TatTwamAsiShwetketu Жыл бұрын
The tools that you're mentioning, are they in this same video or scattered across multiple videos. If possible can you please share the links? Thanks!
@ItsRealDoe Жыл бұрын
Godspeed sister, onward!
@elijahmandeville847511 ай бұрын
I cannot BELIEVE this is a free resource. Your ability to teach and pass along information is the best I’ve ever seen. I can’t thank you enough for all that you do, Andrew!
@ElderFoxDocumentaries3 жыл бұрын
So to recap.. 1) Don't trigger dopamine all the time, even if gained through various sources. Try to dopamine fast. 2) Cold showers can raise dopamine without the crash. 3) Don't layer in dopamine raising activities with things you want to get more motivated for. E.g Listening to music while working. 4) Don't reward yourself before or after hard activities, let the activity itself produce dopamine. Anything I missed?
@ElderFoxDocumentaries3 жыл бұрын
Ah, 5) Intermittent schedule of celebrating your wins. Don't celebrate every time and use a randomiser to dictate when to celebrate.
@speed7473 жыл бұрын
6) exception to the rule is caffeine (I.e coffee, tea)
@pecoguy3 жыл бұрын
Cold showers don't last long enough for the effect of cold bathing. It's was like 20 min to 1 hour exposure at least.
@misstrunchbull39533 жыл бұрын
@@speed747 time stamp for that if you can? I didn't catch that one
@northernwildshewolf17293 жыл бұрын
Wow! Ur no fun 😂 thanks for that
@vankoutedar Жыл бұрын
After listening to this podcast, I laced up my running shoes and went for a 1-hour run on the snowy former Berlin airport, -5 °C, no music and no podcast for the majority of it. I felt so damn frozen and but also so damn high and accomplished. Thank you so much Prof, for all the work you do, you are a great teacher.
@irelax8595 Жыл бұрын
Great job mate. Keep it up!
@Im_Tired777 Жыл бұрын
Just the beginning 💯
@vankoutedar Жыл бұрын
@@Im_Tired777 right, i will keep it up, aiming to run that marathon eventually, not for the sake of the marathon, but for the sake of the journey a.k.a the effort itself.
@BearThatSwings Жыл бұрын
for the effort buddy
@TooBanger Жыл бұрын
Thats very healthy for your Cardiovascular system and mental strength good stuff.
@imalex0749 Жыл бұрын
1. Cold Water therapy effects on dopamine, adrenaline and nor adrenalin 2. Dopamine can be released in 2 ways: Local release and volumetric release 3. How pleasurable or satisfying you feel doesn't depend on peak level of dopamine. It depends upon difference in baseline level and peak level of dopamine. How you feel depends upon your previous level of Dopamine as compared to present level. Many drugs just increase both baseline level and peak level instead of increasing the difference between them. A big Dopamine release makes it more challenging to achieve higher dopamine release the next time. There should not be High level nor low level of Dpamine for long. 4.Just Increasing dopamine level will make us excited but that excitement will be for very less period of time 5. Chocolate increases Dipamine 1.5 times but it goes away in few seconds. Desire of sex or act of sex increases dopamine 2 times 6. Nicotene(smoked) increases dopamine 2.5 times above base line (Very short lived) 7. Amphetamine, Cocaine, Nicotine, Sex increases dopamine in everybody that takes them. Exercise, Hard Work and Studying increasea dopamine but it is subjective 8. After achieving something, Dopamine increases but after some time it falls down. It falls down even below the baseline. The extent it drops below the baseline is directly proportional to how high the peak was. After achieving something, if you feel preety happy, the dopamine will not fall that much but if you feel extremely happy, your dopamine will fall extremely after a day or two. (Eg:- Postpartum Depression). Anyway, we return to the baseline after some time. 9. If we continue to engage in something exciting regularly, after sometime it will be less exciting to us. 10. Some people release dopamine at higher level after a certain activity which deplete the releasable pool of dopamine. So, after sometime, dopamine falls below base level and it leads to a low feeling. Some people do the dopamine spiking activity again and again to bring back dopamine up to experience pleasure again since they are feeling low. But as we know, they have depleted the stock of releasable dopamine. The baseline begins to lower again and again. This is called ADDICTION and Addicted people don't feel pleasure at all. 11. Addiction is the progressive narrowing of things that bring you pleasure. If I am addicted to video games. I will feel happy in only playing it. I will not feel happy in exercise, study, social activity and my life will be ruined. After a some time, my system will stop releasing dopamine even after playing video games and nothing is left for me which can increase my dopamine. This is the start of depression. Spiking dopamine again and again is the main cause of decline in The baseline level. 12. If you experience a win whether it is school, sports or relationship; be highly careful about allowing yourself to experience a huge peak of Dopamine. 13. You kind of like exercise and to do exercise you increase dopamine by drinking energy drink and listen music to do exercise then you are increasing the number of conditions required to achieve the high level of dopamine by doing exercise. Don't use stimulants everytime you study or everytime you workout or anything in which you want to enjoy the process. Taking these stimulants (Music, energy drinks, Motivational reels) before the task will reduce the level of enjoyment and undermine the ability to stay motivated. The best way is to get excitement and motivation from the task itself whether it is Study or Workout. So. ENJOY THE PROCESS only. 14. Some Healthy ways to increase Dopamine so that the base level is maintained:: Cold water Therapy which increases Adrenalin and nor-adrenalin rapidly while dopamine shows gradual increase to 2.5 times above baseline and comes back to normal in 3 hours (Here there is a sustained increase instead of Rise and Crash) 15. If you work hard for the end result then the process will become very challenging. 1:39:02 is an amazing example. When someone gives reward or we reward ourself then we tend to associate our pleasure with reward rather than the work itself and if the reward is stopped, we lose interest in the process of the work. But again, Take a special care of not spiking dopamine just prior or even after to the effort. Learn to raise Dopamine from effort itself. 16. Example of Porn: Those who are indulged in it find it difficult to seek enjoyment in the productive process. Watching porn and Masturbation increase dopamine level⬆️ and then fall down very quickly⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️⬇️ below base line . Now to raise dopamine level much higher is difficult to feel pleasure again.
@onegorgeouschick Жыл бұрын
Wow
@Moustique20009 ай бұрын
Thank you 🎉
@hareef.v79509 ай бұрын
T
@tejiyo9 ай бұрын
I wish I could copy paste this in my notes😢
@egjream9 ай бұрын
If you screenshot on iPhone and go into photos you can copy and paste the text 😉
@danadelaney65989 ай бұрын
This video is changing my life. Incredibly intelligent and informative. Pretty sure my entrapment in ADHD is going to change dramatically. I’ve been living all wrong.
@GeorgiDimitrovX2 жыл бұрын
1:45:25 How to attach pleasure to effort: "In those moments of the most instense friction you tell yourself this is very painful and because it's painful, it will evoke an increase in dopamine release later, meaning it will increase my baseline in dopamine, but you also have to tell yourself that in that moment you are doing it by choice and you're doing it because you love it."
@tbbbtoolsbooksbladebones5562 жыл бұрын
That's what she said.
@shijinbadarudeen99202 жыл бұрын
Its as if the dragon (pain) is ready for a fight with me but its ok i am ready because i am the one who provoked it.🙂
@mihiershandilya27362 жыл бұрын
Find Meaning in suffering
@hsukesan2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic. Now I know why I am resilient.
@maxd35893 жыл бұрын
This is the best podcast on the internet. Seriously, I can barely believe we're getting this for free. I can't say enough how much I've managed to change my health and my entire life through this podcast alone. I particularly loved the bit on caffeine. I was terribly unsure about caffeine in my life. Now I'm free to take it without stress! The coin flip tool to remove predictability is quite amazing as well!
@sendnoodles54373 жыл бұрын
Hey may I ask, what are a few other golden pieces of practical you’ve acquired along the way? I’m working my way through his content but I’m curious
@danyj243 жыл бұрын
Max- So true. Literally the best one. Comedy podcasts and sexual drama podcasts really do detrimental harm to the mind whereas this one serves to spiral everyone who listens upwards so they can chase their best self. Love it!
@maxd35893 жыл бұрын
@@danyj24 Yeah, it's quite astounding. Makes you feel like Dr. Huberman contributed to the advancement of the human species.
@tarekbaidane75953 жыл бұрын
I😀 can't believe it is for free either
@phamawa3 жыл бұрын
I agree, its apparent hes not full of shit o imo. Huberman essentially provides you with the science based info that all the 'self help' and 'wellness' crowd tries to convey but might not fully understand. He can snuff out BS studies that others might use in their books or way of thinking.
@matthewanning92523 жыл бұрын
Hubermanity. Giving life back to humans. Thank you. 🙇♂️
@KenStentiford6 ай бұрын
Been on antipsychotics fot nearly three years, y'all should appreciate your chemicals, because without them, life is very hard. Happiness, purpose, mojo, connections, motivation, energy are just some of the things antipsychotics take away. You try and live without these human nessesities. Be grateful people.
@eliotdiaz68962 жыл бұрын
As a pastor who struggles every week to study for my weekly sermons and other teaching a speaking engagements, this information is incredibly valuable to me. I am on a journey of trying to understand how to be motivated and develop healthier study habits. It is so challenging for me. However my calling depends on it.
@alexjugureanu8532 жыл бұрын
congratulations! keep pushing!
@Sahil-jg8bd2 жыл бұрын
@@siddhantsikarwar9237 ye sab bakchodi hai bhai partner vagera ...wo bhi online...
@havenbrauer39902 жыл бұрын
As somebody who isn’t a pastor 😂, but an average working 19 yo trying to push through college. I’ve found that speaking to people (especially through English class) comes from “the heart.” I’ve found that when people say this, they don’t realize it, but they are saying to rather speak from calmness and resort your attention away from the constant nervous and hyperactive brain. So when he mentions that a mixture between alertness and calmness is the perfect baseline mixture for a perfect baseline level of dopamine, it’s ultimately referring to the distinguish between both I mentioned above. In conclusion, I think that is brilliant that you’ve used this podcast to improve in a certain aspect of hardships in your life and it would only be my duty to elaborate on the topic because I myself are going through a painful time in my life and I know exactly what you mean when you talk about preparing for life’s tasks.
@emmanuelobareki46552 ай бұрын
He just gave a scientific emphasis on exhibiting the FRUITS of the Spirit, I would think? It's tantamount to continous FASTING from those things that are lawful but not expedient. The "hurts" like your weekly sermon preps, get rewarded eventually with not just healthy Dopamine modulation but with our heavenly rewards at the White Throne Judgement.
@davids42532 жыл бұрын
Actions you can take from this Lecture: 1. Avoid dopamine layering with challenging activity: Entertainment (music, smartphone, etc), substance, and social stimulants. 2. Derive dopamine from effort itself not the reward after. 3. Try cold exposure therapy and/or intermittent fasting 4. Avoid dopamine spiking drugs, sugar and pornography.
2 жыл бұрын
That's correct... And one needs to be a total moron to NOT get it without all of this neuroscientist crap.
@budoka1112 жыл бұрын
Thanks 🙏
@MrCaipiroshka2 жыл бұрын
oh... porn and sugar... hard my friend, hard to let it go.
@incrdble97042 жыл бұрын
@Married Texan #2 makes perfect sense for those who watched the podcast. The trick is in doing self-affirmations, i.e. you affirm yourself that you really need to do that work and/or you really enjoy that, and of course in order for that to work you should have some strong reasoning for why is it important for you and what real benefits you may get out of completing this work.
@MrBarosxp2 жыл бұрын
avoid porn is funny as hell..
@kereamohau2 жыл бұрын
Timestamps: • 00:00:00 Introduction & Tool 1 to Induce Lasting Dopamine • 00:04:48 Sponsors: Roka, InsideTracker, Headspace • 00:09:10 Upcoming (Zero-Cost) Neuroplasticity Seminar for Educators • 00:09:58 What Dopamine (Really) Does • 00:15:30 Two Main Neural Circuits for Dopamine • 00:18:14 How Dopamine Is Released: Locally and Broadly • 00:22:03 Fast and Slow Effects of Dopamine • 00:25:03 Dopamine Neurons Co-Release Glutamate • 00:28:00 Your Dopamine History Really Matters • 00:30:30 Parkinson’s & Drugs That Kill Dopamine Neurons. My Dopamine Experience • 00:36:58 Tool 3 Controlling Dopamine Peaks & Baselines • 00:40:06 Chocolate, Sex (Pursuit & Behavior), Nicotine, Cocaine, Amphetamine, Exercise • 00:46:46 Tool 4 Caffeine Increases Dopamine Receptors • 00:49:54 Pursuit, Excitement & Your “Dopamine Setpoint” • 00:56:46 Your Pleasure-Pain Balance & Defining “Pain” • 01:00:00 Addiction, Dopamine Depletion, & Replenishing Dopamine • 01:07:50 Tool 5 Ensure Your Best (Healthy) Dopamine Release • 01:15:28 Smart Phones: How They Alter Our Dopamine Circuits • 01:19:45 Stimulants & Spiking Dopamine: Counterproductive for Work, Exercise & Attention • 01:22:20 Caffeine Sources Matter: Yerba Mate & Dopamine Neuron Protection • 01:24:20 Caffeine & Neurotoxicity of MDMA • 01:26:15 Amphetamine, Cocaine & Detrimental Rewiring of Dopamine Circuits • 01:27:57 Ritalin, Adderall, (Ar)Modafinil: ADHD versus non-Prescription Uses • 01:28:45 Tool 6 Stimulating Long-Lasting Increases in Baseline Dopamine • 01:37:55 Tool 7 Tuning Your Dopamine for Ongoing Motivation • 01:47:40 Tool 8 Intermittent Fasting: Effects on Dopamine • 01:53:09 Validation of Your Pre-Existing Beliefs Increases Dopamine • 01:53:50 Tool 9 Quitting Sugar & Highly Palatable Foods: 48 Hours • 01:55:36 Pornography • 01:56:50 Wellbutrin & Depression & Anxiety • 01:58:30 Tool 10 Mucuna Pruriens, Prolactin, Sperm, Crash Warning • 02:01:45 Tool 11 L-Tyrosine: Dosages, Duration of Effects & Specificity • 02:05:20 Tool 12 Avoiding Melatonin Supplementation, & Avoiding Light 10pm-4am • 02:07:00 Tool 13 Phenylethylamine (with Alpha-GPC) For Dopamine Focus/Energy • 02:08:20 Tool 14 Huperzine A • 02:10:02 Social Connections, Oxytocin & Dopamine Release • 02:12:20 Direct & Indirect Effects: e.g., Maca; Synthesis & Application • 02:14:22 Zero-Cost & Other Ways To Support Podcast & Research
@MOAB-UT2 жыл бұрын
Nice job.
@ryanstells2 жыл бұрын
Is it just me or is there no tool 2?
@Kal-EL_Volta2 жыл бұрын
The timestamps are on the description
@eatthewoke51702 жыл бұрын
Thanks. This was VERY helpful!
@rufeezo2 жыл бұрын
Tysm. I listened to the first 10 minutes and fucker still didn’t get to anything.
@tick999 Жыл бұрын
I did a 10 day meditation retreat and the difference was unreal. Everything looked brighter and shiny. Even the weeds in the cracks in the paving were beautiful
@earth74518 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing this experience.
@selfdevelopment2825 ай бұрын
Bro, how to meditate??
@maxeadon20215 ай бұрын
Tell me more.
@tick9995 ай бұрын
@maxeadon2021 sure, I'm happy to The 2 most popular types of meditation retreat seem to be Goenka and Mahasi Sayadaw My favourite is the Mahasi Sayadaw because you're not just sitting down for too long and getting uncomfortable, you get to do lots of walking meditation which feels amazing after 5 days. You really need 10 days. Everything appears brighter because your dopamine receptor regain sensitivity because they're not being constantly over stimulated, like when we're watching KZbin all day 1 exercise: Try doing some house chours like washing dishes or hanging laundry (which we all hate because we just want it to be over) instead, focus your mind on the present moment while working. Do every movement in super slow motion, very gently, control each movement of your hands with your mind as opposed to autopilot, conentrate on every centimeter of movement of your hands (you can experiment with different speeds and closing your eyes) You may feel moments of subtle bliss. Set your timer for 1 hour and see how you feel after. This should train your mind to be more in the present moment where there is deep peace and contentment, as opposed to worrying about the past and future which don't exist. Try to continue throughout the day. Exercise 2: Try the same with walking. Concentrate on each footstep 👣 gently, super slow, controlled. Start by walking slowly, and get slower, slower, slower until you're barely even moving. Focus your mind on one foot and slowly, heel up, foot up, foot forward, foot down and repeat. 1 hour. Try different speeds to see which works best for your mind. The purpose is to bring the mind to be fully synchronised and settled with the present moment, each movement we do is a moment in the present, so by focusing on the movements of the body everyday (such as breathing) we train our minds to come to the present, this is meditation, "when the mind is with the body", simple. 5 days with this in a retreat will have you on a whole other level of peace, happiness and contentment
@Lem-t4w5 ай бұрын
Look up vipassana and find a centre near you.
@Dominickq2 жыл бұрын
This was incredibly generous and packed with information. An online masterclass like this would be sold for hundreds of dollars, and you've shared it for free. Big gratitude.
@marselshtylla Жыл бұрын
i wanted to leave a very important message here to myself i had given up from trying to quit my addiction after failing for years of thinking and working and trying everything i could to stop.i can't even say what it is because i am embarrassed 17 years later and 2hours of a legendary podcast i today on 17th of June saturday 2023 8:43pm i have managed to control my brain for an entire week with nothing but willpower and i feel i can never fail i will continue to update andrew thank you for blessing our lives with your knowledge
@miguelvangel Жыл бұрын
👏
@dmingod999 Жыл бұрын
How is it going? What strategy worked for you?
@Iron_Willed Жыл бұрын
How is it going bro. Keep on putting a fight.
@marselshtylla Жыл бұрын
i just cleared the thoughts whenever i would get even the slightest desire i would be like to myself remember how low it feels after and how long that low stays yea i prefer this unlimited long lasting high and just allways do stuff dont be sitting home doing nothing go out run work create something allways do so much that you feel ready to pass out and then just go sleep and do it again tomorrow this is a shortcut towards becoming a legend i am sorry but from me there will be no more updates i will be focusing on creating an online business and currently learning more about more fields good luck all
@meltygear5955 Жыл бұрын
"nothing but willpower" is setting yourself for fail. You need strats. You don't just (for example) sit in front of a chocolate cake to try how hard you can resist it with sheer will. You just don't buy the cake.
@nathaliemagdalena67439 ай бұрын
I really believe this and the interview with David Goggins are the Huberman Lab's best videos, and I've seen hundreds of his videos...every second of it is a treasure. Thank you!!!
@Overthunk.9 ай бұрын
Hey Nathalie! We love Dr. Huberman's videos just the same and make shorts animations based on his findings. Would love for you to tell us what you think =)
@nathaliemagdalena67439 ай бұрын
@@Overthunk. hey! Where can I find that??
@bhumikjoshi34302 жыл бұрын
Why is this info not taught to all of us at a school/university level? It is beyond my comprehension. Great work Dr.Huberman! Lots of love from India.
@BlackMamba-lt8oe2 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂 the country that teaches u piss and dung cures cancer, will they teach you
@samyoe2 жыл бұрын
Deffo
@CHIROTHECA2 жыл бұрын
why??? What do yo think the purpose of schooling is? An Intelligent population?
@vatanc47462 жыл бұрын
They need them worker ants brother.
@BlackMamba-lt8oe2 жыл бұрын
@@vatanc4746 you are also worker ant
@tys.2113 Жыл бұрын
This is my first super chat. The amount of depth and knowledge about Dopamine is just insane. During covid era, I have been struggling with depression and had many suicidal thoughts its been three years still I couldn't achieve a state of calmness. Thanks to Quora I found out you (I am still a high school student ) Hope these podcasts never stop, love from India 🤗
@marydelaney2894 Жыл бұрын
Your life will get better…life is full of lessons, keep on trucking!
@yamu208 Жыл бұрын
Sending u virtual hugs
@Viralvideos1223910 ай бұрын
@tys.2113 how are you now did your life improved are you doing well now
@pramath68677 ай бұрын
I love you bro, I believe in you. Keep on striving
@ΓιώργοςΧατζηδάκης-ω8ρ2 жыл бұрын
This was the most constructive and eye opening 2 hours that i had in a long time
@sevastos21682 жыл бұрын
wraios
@alexluc76322 жыл бұрын
@@sevastos2168 ελα ρε αδελφιαα
@SaadKhan-jd9vv2 жыл бұрын
agreed!
@Wildflowermiles9 ай бұрын
Alhamdullilah, I find so much comfort in your humble transparency and straightforward nature
@erikamarkoch67633 жыл бұрын
I feel like these Monday drops are the glue that holds my life together.
@laracamp26273 жыл бұрын
i’m here for that glue!!!
@matthewanning92523 жыл бұрын
Me too
@adamtomecko68173 жыл бұрын
Beats the heck out of Elmer's, that's for sure!
@Shadow779993 жыл бұрын
@@adamtomecko6817 lmao
@hailynewma91223 жыл бұрын
hopefully you get a life real soon
@Dam3k2 жыл бұрын
Going through a dip in motivation, this video was EXTREMELY helpful. For some reason, it feels like when you start understanding things about your brain and body at an intellectual level something clicks in you... Something that somehow helps...!
@robertozotti22352 жыл бұрын
Same for me buddy 💪
@bimald3v2 жыл бұрын
This is so true! This is exactly how I felt!!
@Aashu24ahuja2 жыл бұрын
it feels like when you start understanding things about your brain and body at an intellectual level something clicks in you - May be this is also releasing dopamine ;-)
@Dam3k2 жыл бұрын
@@Aashu24ahuja Very true
@calebbreeland6439 Жыл бұрын
That's why they say "knowledge is power."
@missyethio13983 жыл бұрын
WOW! What we traditionally refer to as the highs and lows of everyday life, and the why of the swinging feelings, explained scientifically. Dr. Huberman, you are a gem to our generation!! I LOVE your podcasts! Thank you very much!!!
@annetteyoutube7423 жыл бұрын
Great extrapolation of this presentation 👏
@JuggLIVE9 ай бұрын
Just this video alone rationalized my depression. I realize now I've been chasing that "dopamine hit" most of my young adult life. Thank you, Andrew Huberman and the neuroscience community.
@Chasdt203 жыл бұрын
"Try removing multiple sources if dopamine release...from activities that you want to enjoy." That was awesome, thank you for the hard work you put into these podcasts. They are so helpful.
@bricktamland79643 жыл бұрын
This episode is far better than any other motivational video I came across on KZbin. Keep doing what you're doing Dr. Huberman. You're positively impacting many people's lives with this content.
@kaveendayananda80633 жыл бұрын
Indeed! This is next level stuff.
@PetrollCoaching2 жыл бұрын
Every time I watch a Huberman video, I feel like I just got an entire semester of knowledge in 2- 3 hours! He is a national treasure!
@svetlanapokrovets39549 күн бұрын
Your podcast “makes me look outside myself, pursue things outside myself and crave things outside myself”, when my dopamine levels are down. The knowledge you share is the best motivation. Thank you, Mr Huberman. Your work is highly appreciated.
@DoctorErtan Жыл бұрын
Professor, I love the way you explain things in a way that both people who are really interested in neurobiology and the people who are not can understand. I am grateful for the effort, time and energy (probably tears too) you put into this podcast. World needs more people like you.
@90kcmarti Жыл бұрын
La
@nicolas_sch Жыл бұрын
👏🏼
@Lucasvoz3 жыл бұрын
Everything you said today confirms many of my own experimentations with pleasure and dopamine. You will truly experience life the most if you don’t overindulge in the high dopamine behavior, also learning how to enjoy the process instead of the reward, and lastly to not expect a reward every time you work for it. Amazing, insightful, and so informative. You’re the best Andrew!
@advocate15633 жыл бұрын
Grest advice. Giving up my vices has led to less excitrement (highs and lows) but much great peacr of.mind (flow). I lool back at my behaviour and realise I was incredibly self destructive, but can now see that much of that was dopa related.
@Lucasvoz3 жыл бұрын
same story here! glad you feel so good now:)
@sdterv Жыл бұрын
I am a 68 year old female. I was diagnosed with Parkinson's Disease in July 2022. My complaint of small writing got my family doctor's attention. I have stiffness and balance issues. I went to two different neurologists who had no information on something else other than sinemet. Its side effects compared to benefits are not worth taking! I am researching and embracing vitamins and minerals. That, and movement/balance PT has improved my quality of life. Not much info out there on dopamine and Parkinson's depletion of dopamine. Your info has given me a direction for research. Thank you for this (and other podcasts). Your examples are relevant and easy to understand. Brilliant.
@jimbrausky10 ай бұрын
I love 1 hr or longer videos because they really go in depth into the matter
@ramanjotsingh98942 жыл бұрын
I’ve been thinking for years that there’s something wrong with me and all it took was some knowledge about my own bodily systems to get me back on track with myself and now I’m all ready to make things better!! Thank you Huberman! you are the best 🙌🏻
@dibbyarupdutta3525 Жыл бұрын
I generally don't comment on any videos but I have to say that this work by Andrew Huberman is pure gold. It gave me a fresh perspective towards my life and the things that are going on. Moreover, this video came at a time when I was not miserable but kind of not able to figure out what I enjoy doing, what I really wanted and I am in a downward spiral in my life because I don't find anything meaningful or just feel purposeless most of the time. I do understand that I am spiking my dopamine right now saying all this but I would definitely implement whatever is being advised here and see what works for me. It's like controlling the very processes that lead to how we feel, what we do, ultimately shaping our lives and if such a thing can be done for the betterment of us then why not!
@amartya8101 Жыл бұрын
how is the process going? you feel better?
@killroy81462 жыл бұрын
As someone who was using vvyanse, weed, nicotine, caffeine, and seratonin/dopamine meds daily to overcome my absolute loss of motivation and severe depression, this is genuinely life changing even just from a mindset perspective. Even at the absolute minimum that I've taken away from this video, I feel renewed knowing that I have more control over my drive than I ever thought. This has given me hope, and I thank you.
@Thinkofsomethingnew2 жыл бұрын
I've not watched this yet but you sound similar to me. Looking forward to watching.
@3ulogy2 жыл бұрын
I wish it did the same to me, I was just getting annoyed with all the technical crap throughout the entire episode. Knowing the intricacies of how neurons work is just not applicable. Found myself fast forwarding 90% of the episode. Got more from the comment sections than anything.
@PushYourEdge2 жыл бұрын
love this comment 🙏🏽
@jennifercarleton75502 жыл бұрын
@@3ulogy I actually enjoyed the scientific info, although I can certainly understand it is not for everyone.
@icanwin36511 ай бұрын
In a world full of noise, this video is the real deal for getting your life together. The lessons hit deep and show you the way to become your best self. It's not just advice; it's a guide to dragging yourself out of the shadows and into your awesome potential. Dive in and let this be the start of your epic journey!
@-TroyStory-3 жыл бұрын
Knowledge of knowledge… I can’t help but think that I’m learning how to be a better human having listened to everything this generous, articulate, and knowledgeable man gives us. Thank you so much Dr. Huberman for sharing this knowledge with us - you are an exemplary human being!
@ubiqanon64053 жыл бұрын
Fascinating that so much of this seems to reinforce some eastern philosophy ideas - embrace the suffering of the moment for what it is, be comfortable with experiencing suffering as life is comprised of both suffering and joy... the goal is not to seek happiness in itself, but to let it emerge from the pursuit of meaningful / effortful things. The pursuit of pleasure / reward for its own sake is counter productive and ultimately self destructive. This reinforces Dr Gilbert's work on happiness as well.
@dvmcvaanimalwellnessworld3833 Жыл бұрын
Andrew!!!! I listened to this whole thing …while listening, decided to take a run without music, and I am now sitting in my cold pool in Florida writing this review !!! 😂 I love this podcast. I felt like I was back in veterinary school. The amount of content you covered in such a digestible way was amazing. Thank you so much for putting effort into your podcast. I know these things take time to write out plan out and it’s a lot of extra effort on your part to bring the information to people and I just want you to know you made an impact on me and I’m so grateful! I have already shared it ! ❤
@RebeccaBecquart10 ай бұрын
Thank you Andrew and team. I have watched a small number of your videos and they are helping me to build a toolkit for myself to live well and thrive. Up until now I've been surviving and I want better for myself. I've realised that I'm otherwise in the dark. It strikes me that we've lost a lot of built-in wisdom from old generations lifestyles through our fast-paced and disjointed modern living. Your expertise and time to share the science behind thriving is a welcome antidote in a sea of confused misinformation and over-worked doctors. I am truly grateful. Thank you again.
@melbbb5673 Жыл бұрын
I had always felt that drop after a high of accomplishing - I could never understand it before this. Below baseline makes so much sense - thank you!
@strahinjajelic8692 жыл бұрын
Just to recap for the people who don't have time to go through whole thing: 1. go through whole thing it's pure gold 2. Thank you Andrew, you are the best there is!
@juandavidobando26622 жыл бұрын
I've had a dopamine release, listening this. It's a priceless podcast. Thank you so much for doing it.
@AY-eq8rw2 жыл бұрын
Now be careful to spike the dopamine than required. By not adding other stimulants and taking a break after the podcast to reset the base line levels. Writing summary of the points and moving onto some boring task might help too. ( :P me trying to be dopamine engineer here)
@ivanyegoh3420 Жыл бұрын
@@AY-eq8rw nice one mate
@denverlightinganddjservice91018 күн бұрын
Topic suggestion: the effects of practicing gratitude (writing down in journal) on the brain, body, and life of people. Additionally, I feel like “applying” gratitude to future outcomes helps us shape the future we desire. Would love to hear your thoughts on this. Sending my THANK YOU letter to your website separately. I’m grateful for you, no pun intended.
@samuele56953 жыл бұрын
I just increased my dopamine release by learning how to increase my dopamine release. Thanks Andrew
@sticklebacketienne3 жыл бұрын
Oh yeah yeah
@MENTIONNN3 жыл бұрын
I just increased my dopamine release by reading a comment of how a person increased their dopamine release by learning how to increase their dopamine release.
@DavidStrife72 жыл бұрын
You've taken all of the fragmented and isolated information I've been trying to get to grips with for a few years now, brought it all together in a single, cohesive, and understandable form, that I'm finally able to sit back and get an understanding of. I'm desperately in the middle of applying myself to all of this, and having it delivered to me in the way you've packaged it has been absolutely crucial. Whether I succeed or fail, this video will have solely given me the push I've needed to give it yet one more try. Thank you kindly sir. Good luck to us all.
@OVOXO232 жыл бұрын
THIS! I knew i was on to something when i made a connection between releasing massive amounts of dopamine and feeling horrible mentally
@bvictory56982 жыл бұрын
May you be successful in your endeavors. Amen.
@TheBoon142 жыл бұрын
Same, Godspeed.
@ameliasilkworth88333 жыл бұрын
I'm so inspired. I fed my 5 kids a low-sugar breakfast. I told them we are resetting our dopamine response by minimizing serum glucose spikes. They haven't talked to me in 3 days. Sooo... winning!! Thanks Doc!!
@oUncEblUnt4202 жыл бұрын
Trick kids into not wanting sugar by using the food professor Huberman mentioned in one of his podcasts that flips your sweet and sour receptors(probably a freudian misattribution. The sweet and sour part)
@actuitivevisrl10142 жыл бұрын
@@oUncEblUnt420 using the food professor?
@SpeedyThingGoIn42 жыл бұрын
@@actuitivevisrl1014 I hear there's a kind of berry that does that. Just search "make sour things taste sweet" or similar and you'll find it. Now, I don't know if artificial sweeteners are healthy, or what it would be like growing up in a household where I eat a dessert berry before my sour desserts... Interesting times, these are.
@bossgd1002 жыл бұрын
😂
@gaberoyalll2 жыл бұрын
Lol they are probably crabby from the sugar withdrawal but will soon feel 100x better🙌😎
@ellah.villar048 ай бұрын
I have Hypothyroidism and will stop medication (L-thyroxine) for the next two weeks for my scan, and am currently addicted to my phone (9 hrs+ average screen time). With this information I could expect and leverage the side effects in the next two weeks, and now understanding how I could control my addiction tendencies will help me get thru this. Thank you sir.
@huijunzhang-i3r Жыл бұрын
Through this podcast, I finally understand why everytime I play with my phone, I have no motivation to do anything else, I feel extremely low energy, that is because when I play with my phone , I experience Dopamine peak, so it is very hard to put it down.After I have to put the phone down, I experience dopamine drop, I feel worse. After I understand that, I have more motivation to leave my phone at home, I feel more motivated at work now. Thanks andrea, your podcast save a lot of people's life, I am so lucky to be one of them
@sulaninetumila Жыл бұрын
I am a medical student. Recently I feel so miserable in my life for no reason. I don't enjoy the things I did before. I thought that there is something wrong with me. But now I can understand that low level of dopamine level could be the reason for that. Thank you so much for all these informations. I am going to improve myself better.❤
@UncleHam1337 Жыл бұрын
"Is the reason..." - Fix that with "Could be the reason.." and your better life COULD start right after reading this :)
@elizabethfletcher1487 Жыл бұрын
How are you doing now? I would hate to think that you are still in that hole. You have chosen a difficult field, and a great deal of that difficulty is artificial, induced by whatever insanity seems to provoke the people who direct the training. Hang in there, sleep whenever you can, no alcohol, good wholesome food. Good luck.
@angefallen2024 Жыл бұрын
Good lucky bro, I hope you can reach your goal and improve your mental health!
@_utsavdas_ Жыл бұрын
Not even halfway through the Podcast and I'm already compelled to write this that this is a pure gem of a lecture. Can't thank you enough Sir. Keep Smiling! :)
@peterweltweit Жыл бұрын
..but enjoy intrinsic!!
@dinaaperazzo56995 ай бұрын
I don't have too many things that I enjoy anymore, or motivated to do anything. 62 yo and have had a very stressful life, ate the SAD American diet. I have been battling chronic fatigue (adrenal fatigue) for a good ten years. I abused caffeine and sugar for most of my adult life and I finally got off of it too and eating healthier but have zero energy or motivation. I listen to, or watch KZbin videos to kill time. Certain ones, I can't wait to watch. I guess that's my "Dopamine hits". I even became a Christian 4 years ago and that was really a "Dopamine Hit", I have since calmed down and now focusing on my health. I think families need to really pay attention to all this raising their children, we are all a society of being over stimulated, "Junkie's" waiting for the next hit. Kids need to learn to use their imagination, not cell phones, TV's, or computers.
@thedude89764 ай бұрын
We agree with you 💯 percent. I've recently been going through the same thing. I'm only 48. Being in Construction since I was 14 my body doesn't work the way it once did that in itself is depressing. Having Lyme disease really sucks. Being a husband and father is the only way I muster up the energy to make it a good day.. really feel like garbage most days even on vacation < now that sucks. Good luck and God bless I wish you the best.
@sfwssdd4 ай бұрын
I am 48 in August. I often hear people say it sucks getting old, but maybe I just have not experienced that. When they mention the affliction being experienced and relate it to age, I remember having similar instances when I was younger. There are also younger people that have bad backs, knees, wrists, etc., ergo I do not think that can be age alone. I know we can not take care of ourselves and/or experience extreme conditions - boxing or a car wreck for example - and have lasting affects. Placebo is also very real. Our minds are amazing, and through them we create our life scenario. We can heal ourself or begin the process of cellular decay. Things will always happen, the good the bad and the ugly, we cannot change that, though we can help influence it by our decisions haha.. What we can change is how we deal with the things that happen, perspective and perception are key. Some people get bitter, some choose to get better. Is the glass half empty or is it half full.. or is it the perfect two fingers of whiskey *winks. Life is a grand adventure! Every adventure is full of hardships, it is inherent. Who wants to read or watch a hero that has a cake life. If you love steak and eat it every day, does the love grow or diminish - such is it for our endurance of hardships. There is so many amazing questions, so many things to learn about. I can't get enough. I have taught myself guitar, crochet, sewing (women and men in the past that had these skills were math geniuses), replaced a cv joint on my vehicle myself, discovered undocumented behavior in wolf spiders, fish for big catfish from spillways and pull them up myself with a drop net... and so much more. I think what people are missing is happiness which does not come from outside of ones self. New jobs, moving to new places, new friends, new cars and toys ... are band-aids and short lived. We have families and it is easy to give ourselves away.. to our jobs, to our children, spouses, brothers and sisters - leaving us exhausted and ready to veg to lame theatrical bs on a flickering box, or scroll through 90% crap content for 10% we might like .. .might being the operative word. Tis time to feed your soul .... nosce te ipsum. Have several hobbies that you do by yourself and occasionally with others - I fish, play with my see damn far machine (telescope), read, research, game, play guitar, sew things from my imagination ..... only boring people get bored. If you have several things to fuel your fire, then you never run out no matter how much your job or other drama in your life try to take from you. It could also be because I never grew out of the "but whyyy" stage and am excited to have knowledge at my fingertips verses only an encyclopedia ha! Think about what you respect in others - become it, think about what you always thought about doing - do it. This short little stent we have here, we the universe getting to know ourself, is over and done all too quickly. Make the most of it while you have it - live hard, love fully, and laugh at it all because it is all smoke and mirrors. ;)
@RighteousDevil3 Жыл бұрын
This is hands down the most helpful video I have ever watched - thank you Dr. Huberman! As a 68 year old man, as I look back at my life in the context of this knowledge, I realize that much of my previous struggles with depression were likely the result of drugs/alcohol and other dopamine-spiking activities. I'm currently sharing this knowledge with my friends and adult children, and am committed to better dopamine management for myself. Thank you, thank you, thank you!!!
@karlbe8414 Жыл бұрын
Exactly!, from 62 y/o man, etc. etc.
@iifridgeii99332 жыл бұрын
wow, i'm currently doing a bachelors in psychology at uni and I feel like I've just sat down for a zoom lecture with a top quality professor. very good and very appreciated
@elizabethmolnar46432 жыл бұрын
Watch Robert Saplosky 's lecture on Dopamine. He has a couple lectues on Dopamine. But - Anticipation is the key. Outstanding lecture. Please give this lecture your time.
@iifridgeii99332 жыл бұрын
@@elizabethmolnar4643 Thank you, will do :)
@TheChristPillFlock2 жыл бұрын
They teach you outdated and useless information in colleges nowadays. They also indoctrinate you on beliefs not based in fact, aka wokeism. Its better to save your time and money and not go to college. College kids that are indoctrinated are causing the destruction of our society and values.
@iifridgeii99332 жыл бұрын
@@TheChristPillFlock not sure if its exactly the same scenario in England where i go to uni… Plus every individual has the capability to think for themselves and decide what to agree and disagree with. Like Aristotle said, a good mind can analyse books/information without being consumed by it. Most things aren’t as white or black as they may seem, even “wokeism”.
@TheChristPillFlock2 жыл бұрын
@@iifridgeii9933 most of the population doesnt have what Aristotle described, that's what the elites take advantage of.
@richcox Жыл бұрын
I spent most of my research career studying dopamine and the N-S pathway as an in vivo electrophysiologist. This is an excellent and easily digested overview/review. I'm currently retired from science, but am doing literature reviews on the neuroscience of "creativity"
@marquellbrackett8671 Жыл бұрын
Do you have any types of sources for where the creativity research from you or others is?
@carlabumstead92332 ай бұрын
Hi. I was diagnosed with a hereditary degenerative neurological disorder known as Fragile X-associated Tremor and Ataxia Syndrome- FXTAS. I just started watching your videos upon recommendation. I have a feeling they will both fascinate me and terrify me. But I look forward to the journey. I’m glad you’re doing these.
@peterbandsholm88532 жыл бұрын
I have misused pleasures throughout my life, without knowing that it could inflict this damage to my reward pathway. Thank you Andrew, this is godsent
@rubengarcia96552 жыл бұрын
Same for me. I always wondered why Sundays were crappy for me. I thought it was because I had to go to work on Monday’s. But now I realized it was all the dopamine highs I had Saturday night
@sierrablanco56722 жыл бұрын
Same and working with children.. reward is used often. Now im questioning
@caninecuts2 жыл бұрын
Peter, I have spent 60+ years destroying my motivation. 30+ years on ADD drugs were the most vicious. But this podcast will help me go forward. I think there are a LOT of us out here in the same boat
@heathermichelle62542 жыл бұрын
You have saved my life on many days. When I have been having a hard day, your voice, reason, intelligence and humor, have all made me feel better! Thank you for your guidance and your life's work! You are a good human! Sending gratitude!
@nataliasastre69672 жыл бұрын
his voice, totally
@kayleenwrigley3 жыл бұрын
This podcast was amazing! As someone who suffers from depression, this was so eye-opening. Thank-you!!
@ShahromIbodulloev-m8g11 ай бұрын
Thank you so much ❤ You are literally saved my life and existence. I was struggling with ADHD whole my life, and fortunately to youtube algorithms I find your channel, where I can explore the ways how to improve the quality of my life. Thank you so much, Andrew! Absolutely amazing work!
@JulesVermunt10 ай бұрын
What tools or tips of this video did help you the most?
@shirintobie-paul35013 жыл бұрын
Thank you Dr.Huberman, team, sponsors and supporters. “There wasn’t anything wrong with me….there was something wrong with the approach I was taking.”☀️Sitting with that for a bit. So happy for that young man! The human is a brilliant organism! I love that you were able to advocate for your health and that the doctor followed your instructions. EPISODE 48-1 MILLION SUBSCRIBERS
@lunarribbon917 Жыл бұрын
Dr. Huberman, thank you for existing and wanting to help humanity! I just discovered your channel and am extremely fascinated by all this helpful content you present! You explain concepts in a very clear and interesting way, also using recent studies from prestigious medical journals to present facts and ideas in non-biased ways, allowing us to utilize this information to improve our lives. Part of depression is not feeling any joy or motivation for anything (even for things that we once found enjoyable), because it's not engaging as it was before, and there's a lack of meaning or purpose behind it. Especially for high achieving people, always accomplishing at their highest level, and there's always that underlying question of "what's next?". Part of it is needing extremely high levels of a certain substance/drug/activity in order to feel joy and excitement, and if we can't feel that "high" anymore, then what's the point of wasting our time and energy searching for these highs that never last and these lows that only continue to worsen. Everyone experiences depression differently, some might feel persistent sadness and guilt, while others will feel baseline neutral to everything (even if its something considered pleasurable, like sex/alcohol/drugs/eating your favorite food, etc). Like you can literally get a high raise/promotion and still feel "meh" about it.
@ROFLance3 жыл бұрын
I did 22:2 intermittent fasting for 4 months from 2/9/21 through 6/9/21, and not only did I drop from 230 to 150 lbs, but my personality has changed drastically. I went from being in a depressing mental fog with no energy to exercising daily and feeling incredibly motivated and happier than I ever thought possible. I now see that it was due to dopamine release from my effort. What an incredible video. Thank you so much for this invaluable tool that you've given to the world. I wish I was rich so I could send you money, but all I've got is love, so take it! ❤❤❤
@gaberoyalll2 жыл бұрын
Awesome story! Thanks for sharing with us
@utkugercik66616 ай бұрын
Sir I have AdHd Im 30 years old and depressed for nearly over 10 years. Also having incredible pychic pains that I dont understand why. Learning from you changed my mind . God bless you all
@gordonmiles6543 Жыл бұрын
Jeeze, I was accidentally doing a fair amount of this back in my college years and I loved life, was so excited for the future, was proud of myself, was excelling, everything was great. Then I left college, and because I didn't know I was doing these, my baseline dopamine just dropped and dropped, drinking, eating, loud music, etc. Now I feel like I've been re-united with an old friend who made me feel the best I ever have. Thank you sincerely. This time I'm doing it on purpose, because I want to :)
@elizabethanderson29683 жыл бұрын
Being a musician, and needing to "access" my dopamine "as and when" I need to, this podcast was a brilliant addition! Seems to be the same as mastering your "work-rest" cycles ... equilibrium! Brilliant work, so detailed!
@cyrusadamrevilla38512 жыл бұрын
I'm not exaggerating when I say this: This video will change my life forever. And I will never be able to thank you enough for it.
@storyzen6834 Жыл бұрын
How is it going
@Brooklyn-ep2qk4 ай бұрын
you've changed my life. after listening to this, I'm going to kick my dopamine addiction. I've never been so determined and will use this video to help me understand that what I'm going through makes perfect sense and in time, I will regulate myself and do well again.
@Alex.In_Wonderland3 жыл бұрын
this has been BY FAR! the most helpful discussion on the dopamine I've ever come across! thank you so much! I can't wait to practice what you've talked about!
@Sendet3 жыл бұрын
This plus the ADHD one: I second this statement.
@shashaarah Жыл бұрын
Late to this, but this content is a total game changer for me. Was struggling what the heck was wrong with my brain. Super grateful for your work, it's not much but hope this tiny support helps. And definitely subscribing!
@agnimagar230 Жыл бұрын
Yeah man ❤
@anthonygordon-e4x Жыл бұрын
Cheers.. hang in there fam
@emagodoy2227 Жыл бұрын
be well
@keeplovely747 Жыл бұрын
À😊😊😊😊
@westmainmusicАй бұрын
Thank you Dr. Huberman. At 55, I am learning just how much I don’t know about how to live my best life. I am so excited to learn more from you. Thank you for your generosity in sharing your wealth of knowledge to us for the mere cost of an open mind and heart.
@fityfofilms2 жыл бұрын
Cold showers, foraging, addiction, gold stars, growth mindset, the rewarding properties of deprivation…this is so powerful! Thanks so much!
@huijunzhang-i3r Жыл бұрын
I am a PhD student from Germany. First I want to say thanks for all the efforts you made for the podcast. I know it is one thing to understand scientific research results, it is another thing to explain in a easy way to people not in this field. But Andrew nailed, I can easily understand all the contents he said and I really like how he put everything in a smooth logic flow. This podcast is a masterpiece. I feel so lucky that I find this podcast.
@artfender7300 Жыл бұрын
So, if sex increases dopamine 2x over the baseline and smoking 2.5x does it mean that smoking during sex increases 4.5x? and what about if you also eat chocolate at the same time 😛 Would be interesting to study such combination as part of PhD research.
@Oldysrv10 ай бұрын
I feel sry for ur Phd from Germany
@analiza2652 жыл бұрын
I'm watching this for the second time and I'm recalling how I learned to control what I now understand to be bipolar tendencies in my mid twenties was to not allow myself to get over excited and in doing so I didn't crash emotionally afterwards... or if things didn't work out as planned. After listening to this video, I realize what I was doing was regulating my dopamine levels.... in a round about way. My challenge now is that I have to take Progivil to work as a home health nurse because of narcolepsy and I crash when it wears off which makes going home and finishing my charting absolute drudgery. Besides being grueling anyway. I will definately try PEA or L-tyrosine those evenings... and tell myself I enjoy it. Thanks a million for the wealth of info. You are truly a Godsend.
@Kaeso972 жыл бұрын
Have you tried gym+healhy food and friends ?
@elseverehmedli881911 ай бұрын
One of the most precious channels on KZbin, I can't believe it and really regret that I didn't discover this channel much earlier
@BoloBouncer3 жыл бұрын
I was reading Unbroken, the story about the U.S. military airmen who were stranded in the Pacific during WWII. There's a short passage about when they drifted into the doldrums after weeks on the raft. Instead of writing, "We were in a torturous hell, starving and not going anywhere," he describes it as one of the most peaceful serene moments of his entire life. I can't help but think at that point they had been so bereft of any dopamine-rewarding anything for so long that they were perfectly honed to appreciate the extreme stillness of that moment.
@carolhopetyler21783 жыл бұрын
Yes
@vidalskyociosen33263 жыл бұрын
The body including the brain will do anything to survive , in some instances it will shut your conscious mind , next thing you know woke in hospital stable, sometimes the body is much better without you.
@napozayac88973 жыл бұрын
Zamp!
@ericlyons62512 жыл бұрын
I’ve been on a personal crusade for a long time to contextualize the issues I face with ADHD and other aspects of my life. This one video has 10x my resolution on those issues. It’s like I was almost there; I had a working theory, but now I have data. Thank you very much for this information AH.
@TheBoon142 жыл бұрын
Relatable as hell, Godspeed sir.
@jamesharvarduk2 жыл бұрын
What @@TheBoon14 said 👍
@onurcavusoglu16892 жыл бұрын
relatable
@tomzor89712 жыл бұрын
People with ADHD have a lower baseline to begin with, does that mean they get to collect more dopamine on regular basis without spiking? I'm curious about fellow ADHD's take on this.
@lune717soul2 Жыл бұрын
57:30
@ElectricFuture3 жыл бұрын
I got in the habit of exercising first thing in the morning. It was my favorite part of the day. Big energy drink, playing my favorite music, jogging by the water maybe some weightlifting. I’d feel great during, flooded with ideas and inspiration, but then afterwards When it came time to sit down at my computer and do some work for the day i’d feel a bit…uninspired, burned out. I never put two and two together because I’ve only heard exercise is supposed to be healthy and great for mindstate. But I think I may have just had a realization, need to shift my schedule around and save some dopamine for mental effort as well.
@sarahzmayfitness3 жыл бұрын
@Dave How do you implement that, if that is time you have? I feel the same way with exercise... I feel like I accomplished a lot afterwards, but then feel the crash. Maybe I just need to see exercise as a means to an end, and not a reward? So I don't get that crash?
@austinheyman3 жыл бұрын
@@lowaimnobrain i agree the energy drink has to go first, then you should see if you experience the same effects without the energy drink. Otherwise, there are too many variables. Don’t forget that you also have to enjoy it! Satisfaction from different forms of exercises are subjective to different people so find what fits you best, try some variation in how you move your body and and keep it interesting!
@andrewconnor44293 жыл бұрын
Consider on top that there are ultradian rhythms plus your expectation so you're training your body "at this time we are going to do some great stuff, at this time we will sit down and do the grunt work" so in a way you're training your body to be dull at that time, if you sit down to work at your regular running time, then go work out at your regular sit down time, what happens? Probably a great computer session and an uninspired workout? Maybe!
@BlakeAndrewz3 жыл бұрын
Lay off the energy drinks I'd say
@ghostwriter83513 жыл бұрын
I have good results from writing first then exercise. Not only is my half asleep mind more creative, but it's also full of potential energy. After my minds fatigued I start exercising to circulate the blood. I sort of cycle on and off with writing and exercise. But everyones different
@heatison117 ай бұрын
I experienced alot of what he's describing when I went through army basic training in 2010, after about 3 weeks us guys routinely started singing our favorite songs because of how much we missed just basic things like music, at week 15 we were allowed to order pizza and relax for the first time in what seemed like eternity, I'll never forget that feeling
@thekidwithin2 жыл бұрын
Your work is beyond normal praise. The amount of good you are delivering practically free for the people of this world is unbelievable. A Nobel prize for doing good should be made in your name, while making you the first recipient of the same. I fail to accept that this is free, on a weekly basis. The notification of yours is a big Dopamine trigger for me.
@abdolhamedsharef2924 Жыл бұрын
Professor Andrew is like a book you have to read more than once ❤
@thechildofprophecy9135 Жыл бұрын
If i copy paste the video transcript that'll be a million dollar book.
@Oldysrv10 ай бұрын
He is not a professor.hes just a podcaster
@zachariahdrown84353 жыл бұрын
Monday has turned into one of the best days Of the week Bc of this podcast
@vademecor3 жыл бұрын
Dr. Huberman has fixed mondays. I thought it couldn't be done.
@papitosabe4 ай бұрын
My father had early onset alztheimers...he started to have poor walking/gait where he shuffled his feet real bad and couldn't turn around without shuffling. I read about it and it didn't seem to be Parkinson's, but parkinsonism, which isn't the same. The neurologist my dad had didn't even know what parkinsomism was. I asked to put him on L-dopa. He said it prob won't help but he could put him on it if we wanted. At about 12 days or so, it was a night and day difference. No more shuffling whatsoever. All I have to say is, as many of us know, doctors don't always know, even what they specialize in.
@maryhalverson57134 ай бұрын
Especially in this country, and yet the arrogance is through the roof.
@Arcaerus3 жыл бұрын
Man I have watched one episode of this podcast and it already had an impact on my life for the better. I realized of so many mistakes that I was making. Thank you Dr Hubermann
@FrostBite-yh4wm Жыл бұрын
This is my first podcast from dr. Huberman. Very practical and helpful and he kept all the contents of the video very simple and understandable. AND his soothing voice is great. And certainly last but not the least - thank you teaching us science.
@ARNWadz3 жыл бұрын
now the quote "enjoy the process" makes much more sense to me...this podcast is pure gold!!
@victorolatunji980124 күн бұрын
Thanks, Dr. Huberman. It is always nice and a privilege to listen to your podcast
@aldowaldo052 жыл бұрын
I'm a 35 year old ADHD patient who has been on a long difficult journey. This is the type of information that I wish I had when I was first diagnosed. I'm implementing the dopamine fast and I'll report back how it goes. Thank you!