Huberman LabIdo Portal on Huberman Lab: How postures trap your motion
Portal shows wordlessness trains non-verbal attention to sharpen awareness; habitual postures in body and mind limit movement range even as technique improves.
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
30 min read · 6,005 words- 0:00 – 0:20
Ido Portal
- AHAndrew Huberman
[upbeat music] Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials, where we revisit past episodes for the most potent and actionable science-based tools for mental health, physical health, and performance. I'm Andrew Huberman, and I'm a professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. And now for my discussion with Ido Portal
- 0:20 – 2:08
Movement Practice, Self-Inquiry
- AHAndrew Huberman
Ido, thank you for coming here today. Over the years, we've been in communication, and I've come to realize that you're a true intellectual of the topic of movement. And I define an intellectual as somebody who can understand a topic at multiple levels of granularity. To start off, could you inform us how people should think about approaching a movement practice? What is the first layer of any good movement practice?
- IPIdo Portal
It's an open system. It has no center, it's decentralized, and it can be approached from anywhere, and, uh, that's its magic, and that's, that's the benefit of it. Some people, uh, find the body a good entry point, and then playfulness can be an entry point, an attribute or... And this is so open, so I, I don't want to limit, uh, people and limit their minds in the way that they engage with the practice. But I also want to encourage the self-inquiry. So when people enter movement practice, it is about education, bringing some awareness to the fact that they are living in a body, that they are living in motion, that their mind is a type of movement, that their life is a type of movement. Uh, bringing attention to the movement o- of the emotions as well, bringing just attention to the fact that things are in motion. Uh, and this, for me, is the movement practice, is, is this examination and bringing this awareness into things. As we sit now here, I'm also aware of my body. I'm also aware of the way that things make me feel, the way that your face is communicating to me, and, uh, and I'm not just i- in some limited, overly verbal state because it misses a lot of the beautiful flux.
- 2:08 – 6:35
Wordlessness, 3 Core Elements of the Body; Focus & Movement
- AHAndrew Huberman
Actually, in anticipation of you arriving here today, I noticed that as I was going up and down the stairs in this, in this house, um, that I was injecting a little bit of playfulness in the way that I might have many, many decades ago, but haven't for a very long time. And I asked myself whether or not that's what Ido is referring to, as opposed to, but of course not exclusive from just saying: "I have forty-five minutes. I'm going to do movement practice before I shower and have some dinner." Could you share with us just some ideas to get people thinking about or maybe even, uh, incorporating movement practice into their day, and maybe even, uh, touch on the, the potential role of play or playfulness?
- IPIdo Portal
One thing is this, what you call wordlessness. Uh, I, I have been recommending to people non-verbal experiences. The awareness of motion is a very good way to start to, to bring awareness to that layer, and that layer will start to get clarified more and more and more, the more you practice. And then it will enable, for most people, a safe haven, away from many states and difficulties, and will unlock a lot of potential, uh, attributes and strengths and, uh, freshness, and a lot of beautiful things. Really, uh, one of the pretty perspectives about who we are comes, uh, from a person who influenced my thinking a lot, Moshe Feldenkrais, the late Moshe Feldenkrais. And he talks about the body as the core three elements: the core nervous system, two is the mechanical system of muscle, skeleton, et cetera, and the third is the environment, which is a unique way to look at it. And he talks about how the nervous system is both get- receiving information from the outside and from the inside. And in the first years of life, you work a lot on differentiating those, what am I-- what is me and what is not me. And I think when you feel movement, you feel the movement of the outside that is, of course, arriving to you and receiving this, and also your own internal movement, and the same can be said for stillness. So bringing the attention into those layers, it's a tricky thing. It's one of those elusive things to look at, but it's definitely of huge benefit to start to train it, start to practice it, to feel not our thoughts, not necessarily our body, but to start to recognize the dynamic nature, the flux, the motion. And it occurs in all these layers. You will need to find it in multiple locations before you start to more and more m- make it your own, make it really yours. For example, uh, simple pragmatic things. I used to do this, uh, I spent some time in Hong Kong, uh, I would, uh, need to get my practice in, but n- I'm, I'm really turned off from commercial gyms, and th- there is not a lot of nature accessible there. So I would just strap on my bag, and I would walk the streets of Hong Kong, which are very crowded, and then I would try to avoid touching anyone. And it would be like two hours of, of just, like, moving, involved, fully involved, fully in my body and experiencing beautiful things and enjoying and developing myself as well. So this is an example of a, a way to, to practice. And then the way that we're sitting, like these chairs, for example, our chairs are not very dynamic, but there is rocking chairs, right? And this is something I recommend for a lot of kids. Uh, like in schools, I used to rock on the chair, uh, which is very common. I would make the chairs even more mobile, and, uh, I, I would support more motion, and then I, I would be able to bring attention there, but I would also be able to bring attention away from it into other things, and it keeps refreshing me.... so I don't become stale, the water doesn't stand. This is the beauty of, of movement. So you can focus for long periods of time and do incredible things with the mind, with focus, with awareness, attention, um, and it's with skin in the game. So that's how movement keeps me very honest and humble i- in the way that I view humility and, and, uh, in a way that protects me, um, and, and keeps me, yeah, it keeps me
- 6:35 – 11:03
Mental & Physical Postures; Virtuosity
- IPIdo Portal
fresh.
- AHAndrew Huberman
What are the different domains of movement practice? And as I ask this, I realize I d- I am in serious danger of fractionating movement into a list of words like strength, and speed, and explosiveness, and, uh, suppleness, uh, a word that I've heard you use before. And yet, I think for most people, because we think in words often, some of those categories can be useful. So let's say I was going to embark on a movement practice, or a child was going to embark on a movement practice, eh, either throughout the day or for a dedicated period of time. What are the sorts of categories of movement that I might want to think about? Ballistic movement, smooth movement. Maybe you could, uh, just enrich us with some of the, uh, some of the landscape around that.
- IPIdo Portal
One thing that does seem to, to, to, to appear for me when I look around is these, the concepts of unique postures. Uh, and I think this is true for postures of thought, emotional postures, and movement postures. You take someone who moves in a certain way, and you teach them all these new sports or techniques, but essentially, if you look deeply and you're sensitive, you see it's the same postures that he will have to work with till the end of his life. The same thinking postures, and these- this is really problematic, where we are, [sighs] we are not freeing the mind beyond this, uh, scaffolding of thinking, and we are actually letting go of the content. We, we, we get more and more focused on the, the way of thinking versus the thinking itself, or, or habitual ways and f- forms of thinking, associative thinking, et cetera. And emotionally, the same, we are constructing these emotional postures, and then we have to go through the rest of our lives working with that. So this is the dark side.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
But of course, there are always possibilities, um, both, I think, invading this early system to some extent, even if it's 5% or 7% or whatever percent, and also on the freeing yourself of going beyond all postures, period. Working with the postures you have, but towards a postureless way of doing things. So this is something interesting, uh, to work when you- when people work with movements, but finally are able to go into movement, and this magic starts to happen, and then the techniques fall apart, and something appears. Um, and, and it's a phase change.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
It's, it's a binary moment. There is a jump there, for sure, and it's very rare to see, both in thinking and emotionally and, and other ways. We have many names for it, and some talk about enlightenment, and some talk about all kinds of processes related to it, and I think most of them are, uh, shadows of the sun, but it's not the sun itself, really.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Yeah, those... That exploration of degrees of freedom is where the opportunity for, um, uh, real advancement and expansion of skill shows up. As a- I think the way it's been described to me is that we go from unskilled to skilled, and then there's mastery, and then there's this top tier, which is this beautiful thin layer that so few people occupy, which is virtuosity, in which the practitioner invites variability and chance back in as an opportunity to do truly new things.
- IPIdo Portal
As long as you're not out of this sleeve, you're still within the boundaries of achieving the result that you're after. And then there are- there is all this adaptation of all these elements inside to keep you in the sleeve. The sleeve is not constricted as we once thought. Oh, beautiful technique. There are many ways to skin a cat. Um, and, and that experience and that variety, that diversity, goes into virtuosity. It's tr- true freedom because your focus is on the right thing. You don't point at the moon, look at your finger, and, and, and that's really, in essence, uh, being a virtuoso for, for me, like mastery, let's say, if there is such a thing.
- 11:03 – 16:20
Vision & Eyes; Focus vs Relaxed Vision; Tool: Panoramic View
- AHAndrew Huberman
I'd like to talk about vision and the eyes. We have this incredible ability to adjust the aperture of our visual window. We can focus very narrowly, and we can focus very broadly. When you begin a practice or a, and as you move through a practice, do you apply a regimented, uh, way of focusing your vision? Are you in panoramic vision? Are you in, in a very narrow field of view, or does it entirely depend? And for the person who's a true beginner, a true novice like myself, how should I show up to the practice with my eyes?
- IPIdo Portal
We do not move the eyes as well as we think we do.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm.
- IPIdo Portal
Because as long as you can see and move the eyes, people never think about it, that it can be trained, that it can be improved, et cetera, and the effects of it are far-reaching. The eyes lead to the inner eye. You can think of it in a beautiful me- metaphorical way, uh, and it's a representation of the way that we use various cognitive and mind processes, and also, of course, affect the body. For example, you-... when, when you teach boxers how to bob, usually it's not done in the way that I, I believe it, it should be done. They teach it from the feet because they have the idea, which is correct, that you need to do it in spatial conditions, in movement. But in reality, the head will organize the feet for you. Because if I'll pull your head now to the side, you will immediately start to organize your feet under you.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
That's how I would teach someone something like this. So it's a very powerful way to address movement, not the only one. You need to start to have some kind of a checklist of what you're looking to do, and then by this, you can start to tailor the way that you use your eyes. The same thing I do for posture, the same thing I do for stance, the same thing eventually I do for state. And there is different flavors. There is no correct way to use the eye. Sometimes it's very peripheral, soft, open, awareness orientation. Sometimes it's very focused. Notice that I'm pulling these two opposites, awareness and focus, which is often put together and confused.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
And then the eyes are the immediate and the easiest entry point into that. Another thing is the placement of the head and the eyes. Like, for example, when we lower our chin, we seem to, to see better.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
When we raise the eyebrows, there is too much exposure of top light sources, and so people would usually, when looking into the distance, will tilt their, their chin in. And in many scenarios, tilting of the, the chin to the side or placing, just like listening with the ear, placing a certain eye or dominant eye, depending on various scenarios. And this is all like information that I can come in cerebrally and think about and jump my practice forward. Instead of just h- letting the experience teach me that, I'm using some kind of a thinking process to improve, and th- this is not cheating. This is great.
- AHAndrew Huberman
There are two separate clusters of neurons in the these cranial nerve nuclei that when eyes are up, it increases our level of alertness. When our eyes are down, we go into states of more calm and quiescence. When we are in this more panoramic, soft gaze, as, um... and broad awareness, big, big swaths of visual field, as we say, the neurons that control that come through a pathway called magnocellular pathway. In any event, those neurons are much thicker, thicker cables. They transmit much faster, just like thick, uh, pipes can carry more water more quickly. And your reaction time is four- at least four times what it is in this awareness mode than it is when you're narrowly focused on something. When we drive, we're in this peripheral vision, and our reaction times are much, much faster. And I think what you and I, I hope, agree on, correct me if I'm wrong, is that exploring these different extremes and everything in between is where the real value is.
- IPIdo Portal
Another pragmatic bit here, if I can offer, is, um, [lips smack] um, since our culture has been more geared and pushing us towards focus, the u- the focus use of the eyes and primary language, reading, and, and other things, we l- have less opportunities to work with the more open panoramic one. So it would be smart to start to balance things out a bit more. When you're in nature, you don't look at each leaf. Everything is moving, and you are kind of immersed in that, and then something attracts your attention. "Oh, it's a bird." Then you focus, and you go back into the general state, the basic state, which is open awareness. Here, we switch things around. In our modern culture, we are mostly focused, and then we sometimes daydream, which is maybe some kind of a, some kind of a balancing act that comes from deep within. I don't know. M- m- maybe you can, you can share some information about that, but I see that many time people need to... The focus is overly done by far in our, in our lives.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Earlier,
- 16:20 – 19:25
Hearing; Different Opinions
- AHAndrew Huberman
you mentioned the cone of auditory attention, the other sense that we can play with in our practice. Where is your hearing when you approach your practice?
- IPIdo Portal
Uh, another set of parameters to, to think about and to play with and to be aware of, I have the experience that some people are, uh, better at using this system or that system. And, uh, and you would be amazed how differently the same results, seemingly outside results, are done by different practitioners and in different scenarios. This goes into this mutation and change idea. All of our culture and practices and success puts us closer and closer to each other, so we have the same opinions everywhere around the world, becoming more and more the same, less and less different. But the real hope comes from the different. We have a difficulty promoting that. Um, and, uh, so this is another thing that can be promoted with the right practices, the right... For example, I, I, I, I work with corporates or even worked with governments before to bring in some of that freshness with simple habits in the workday or in the education of children or in, uh, in, uh, in companies, increasing productivity.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm-hmm.
- IPIdo Portal
I don't really give a fuck, but I'm there to give what I view is important. And what is important, i- maybe increases productivity, um, but it's more important to me that it improves people's lives who are involved. Thinking about hearing, the way that people use their ears, the way that people use listening, again, we can talk about placement of the head and posture, um, sometimes angling as well.... sharper angle, chin down. Some people tend to use the-
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm
- IPIdo Portal
... uh, the shape of the ear. Uh, people with different ears, closer or further out, this is, uh, it's r- if you're very sensitive and you're looking around, you would see, uh, this, uh, is affecting people's motion, even the shape of our face. Like the development of the vocal cords and speaking will totally change how we are- how we look, but how we listen-
- AHAndrew Huberman
Mm
- IPIdo Portal
... also, uh, will do the same, uh-
- AHAndrew Huberman
Well, people will even make their ears bigger. I mean, a lot of people don't realize that's actually why we do this, is to capture more sound waves, right? The localization of sound is based on a simple brainstem calculation of interaural time differences, the time in which something, uh... The, the brain intuitively, it just knows, 'cause it's a pretty hardwired circuit, that if a sound arrives first to this ear, then that ear, that it's likely coming from over here. Whereas if it's dead center, arrives at the two at the same time, that it's, um, it's almost, you know, ridiculously simple when one hears it, no pun intended. But, um, it's, it is, uh, an incredibly valuable way of thinking about how the architecture of the body changes our experience.
- 19:25 – 22:19
Body Shape; Developing Many Walks
- AHAndrew Huberman
When I see people walking, I sometimes, you know, sometimes I think, "Wow, they really move in a strange way." People come in different shapes and sizes, short torsos, long arms, et cetera. Um, do you think that if people have a, a body type that facilitates certain kinds of movement and not others, that they should intentionally try and move in the way that is right at the edge of the kind of friction and challenge in order to, um, [lips smack] shape new possibilities? Or do you think that they should lean into the smooth execution of what comes most naturally to them?
- IPIdo Portal
Yeah, I think, uh, a good practice is to have many walks. There is a, a lot of emotional things related to walk, like how I'm walking into a business meeting or how I'm walking out of a bad situation. There is a lot of, uh, beautiful things to, to research there. Practically, with yourself, trying to approach someone with the chin slightly down, very linear, very efficient, in the straightest line, or trying to approach someone a little bit more rounded from the side, and you- and tilting your head, and you will see totally different results, totally different communication that happens over people's heads. But if you're sensitive, you realize that, wow, this opened the door. But it's, it's part of the approach. You can affect that. So this is, um, something to play with and to work with. And then you have, of course, body proportions and ways and, and we have all these, like, technical invasions, uh, mathematics, and trigonometry, and architecture, they invaded our bodies, they invaded our nervous system. And now our walk and our physical practices, they look linear and efficient. The path between two points is a straight line. It's not. This is biomechanics, it's not mechanics. Nothing there is a given. There's no gospel. So the walk is sometimes have to go around or sway from side to side, and there is coiling and coiling, and there are moving bits. And what about the, the coordination of my breathing with my walk? Because if I walk too linearly, there is less pumping of the air naturally in and out, so now I have to forcefully bring it in and out. I, I'm wasteful. And, uh, that's why you see in last years, these incredible runners, uh, especially in long distance, doing things we never thought were possible, pronation and, and all kinds of things. Like, our technical, uh, thoughts were totally misguided and wrong. And then somebody comes in and does it in some way that is totally wrong, and he, he, he gets results we, we could never get. That's, that's the beauty of playfulness, experimentation, change, being different.
- 22:19 – 25:00
Playful Exploration, Openness
- AHAndrew Huberman
One of my favorite neuroscientists, he's out of the University of Chicago, he said, "One of the major jobs of evolution is to take existing cell types and circuits and give them new functions. But that can only be done through the playful exploration of new possibilities," which I think maps very well to what you're saying, that at the extreme thresholds of technical execution, you know, mastery, mastery, mastery, you- your obviously, performance is very high, but the opportunity for evolution of the sport or the music or the dance or the intellectual endeavor is, is limited because you're not introducing variability. In the attempt to get proper execution, it- you're limiting oneself.
- IPIdo Portal
We are the biggest improvisers around, like, that's, that's what made us who we are, I think, and, uh, this is incredible what, what we can do with it. And there is something about this openness that we humans need to keep, and also may be something for our leaders to be more of, less specialist and more in this openness. Less capable in this or that way, but more capable of doing the whole thing. By the way, I think that scientists get it right. It's where you transmit the knowledge out of the scientific field. Because science have debate and everything, you're not so connected. Of course, this can happen as well, but [lips smack] then when it goes out and the, the s- simple person without the experience takes it more as a gospel, as a fixed thing, and then it was just a report.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Right.
- IPIdo Portal
It was just reporting some functions here, and play with it, see what it does for you. Because with all the greatest information that I can give, the person will examine it, and it might be not useful at all for him. This is the practitioner. Make it your own. Go practice, try, heat, cold, light, movement, uh, awareness to this, awareness to this.... and this is up to you to make it yours, but we don't like to have this responsibility.
- AHAndrew Huberman
Now, people prefer to have the, "This will work the first time every time, and, uh, will serve you best compared to everything else." And, and while there are more reliable tools than others, i- in my mind, the more reliable tools tend to be ones that are grounded in our innate physiology, um, as opposed to some... I don't like the word hack. In fact, I loathe the word biohack, as I- we were talking about again earlier, um, because it- the hack, in my mind, is, is something that is designed for one purpose, that's used for another. It's not the most efficient use of that tool, nor is it naturally the best solution, whereas biology has some very good solutions, but they don't always work, not every time.
- IPIdo Portal
Mm.
- 25:00 – 29:52
Peripersonal Space & Movement, Proximity, Reactivity, Discomfort
- AHAndrew Huberman
Earlier today, we did a practice in which, um, which involved, uh, invasion, uh, shall we say, of peripersonal space. We were close enough together, we could touch one's torsos, and we were doing that as part of this practice, and, uh, you encouraged me to pay attention to, you know, how does it feel to have someone in your peripersonal space, and then this notion of reactivity. I know a lot of people suffer from anxiety just being in a face-to-face conversation. Some people have a lot of anxiety about being physically close to people, whether or not they know them or not, and many people are reactive. They are in that anticipatory state of something is going to happen. Maybe you could, um, talk about that a little bit more.
- IPIdo Portal
Touch, proximity, all these things, uh, also taking very-- it, it takes a very, uh, I think, limited place in our lives. People are not touched, and they don't touch enough. There is certain bubbles of peripersonal space, according to culture, according to environment, what is right, what is wrong, and then came all the, of course, politically correctness and harassments and all kinds, and this is a problem. It's a problem to navigate all this, uh, scenario, and I think we are- uh, there, there is definitely this side which is suffering. Proximity, being able to, as you said, remove certain reactivity and to learn to control that, um, that volume, volume control over how reactive I am, and in other scenarios, how do I remove this reactivity altogether, is very important for performance and also for our lives, for clear thinking, et cetera. Because everything is moving through us and is being monitored by us, so everything has the potential to detract us from a certain direction of exploration or... And, and if you're reactive, you're a slave, and, uh, it, it becomes worse and worse and worse. Or as, for example, a fighter or a football player, et cetera, has to know what to take, what not to take. The fact that you can sense more doesn't mean you should react to it. The- and the practice helps that by bringing people into these scenarios, but oftentimes disarming them. Like when we were working closely today, and because you have a certain background with boxing or fighting, I can tell you, you are missing some kind of a way to be in that space that is not martial. So you carry a certain tone, although you're a very kind person, but oftentimes you held me without realizing you're holding me with a lot of strength, for example. And, and, uh, it just- it was clear to me you're not fully aware of what is unfolding, and it's just, of course, a question of experience. So to be able to be in this scenario, but do something else, which is not, uh, geared towards, uh, winning, losing competition, or just being able to play with another person. Like, for example, contact improvisation took that and played with that, and the work of Steve Paxton, for the ones who are not familiar. It's very important to explore many ways of being within different distances and spaces from other people and touched in different ways, and not contextualizing it always in the same way. I can touch your chest, uh, in one way. I can touch it with the exact same pressure and speed, but it will feel very different. The parameters, I'm not sure. Certain intentions, certain combination of postures or ways, and this is beautiful exploration. And again, I would encourage you and others to explore the discomfort. For example, certain discomfort, uh, to be, uh, with a man in a certain scenario or with a woman, and trying to see what is that? Because if we're truly strong, we are not afraid of anything, and this will improve our culture tremendously. Of course, there must be agreement. You never force yourself, but you meet someone who is also interested in that exploration, and then you do it, moving together in all kinds of ways. Sometimes it's walking together, but sometimes it's, uh, all kinds of- it can be game, playful, it can be romantic, and there are many shades. Sex doesn't start here and end here, right? It's like a continuum, and we don't even need to define it in that way. So with time, I think it unlocks a lot of things. People become much stronger in a good sense, in sense of becoming, being, and, uh, we abuse less, and we can approach, uh, yeah, other aspects to us.
- AHAndrew Huberman
For many
- 29:52 – 35:17
Exercise, Traditional Movements; Examination of Movement
- AHAndrew Huberman
people, they approach movement in the form of weight training or yoga or running. Yoga is a bit more dynamic, but, uh, fairly linear types of exercise [chuckles] and movement, uh, Peloton, rowing. One thing that I have started doing on the basis of some of your teachings, um, and I just sort of [chuckles] created this idea, is rather than statically standing there and lifting weights, actually walking from as I alternate repetitions. It occurred to me that I'd never done-... uh, a curl, a bicep curl, with one foot in front of the other, and then I'd never actually switched that up, and it's a kind of an odd stance to be standing in parallel and curling one's arm. It's kind of a ridiculous movement when one thinks about it. So I started incorporating some of that. You get some strange looks in the gym, but I just give them strange looks back. [chuckles] So what are your thoughts about these very linear forms of exercise? And, um, and do you encourage people to expand the play space, um, as it were, for these kinds of exercise?
- IPIdo Portal
It's definitely a problem, and it's, [sighs] it's approachable. People want a quick, uh-- People want a hack. People want the, the, the icing. There is no cake. There is no cake, and, and it's just like industries of icing, icing. Icing on what? What are you putting it on? You are movement. There is a dynamic entity to you. The body is a huge pa-- is a huge part of it, communicating. You have genetic layers. There is personalities that got developed and built around various influences, but then there is also some kind of an essence. So I think these practices, they're very good, but they are not designed for the goal that we think they were designed to. It, it orients towards something else. For example, yoga, there is a good book called The Yoga Body, uh, which will destroy a lot of people's yoga practice. Um, and it goes into, how did we get to this yoga? The influence of Swedish gymnastics and Mongolian contortionists, Western, the West affecting it, and then the ancient practice, which was barely asana-related, posture, position. So actually, you said yoga is less linear. Yoga is very linear these days, these lines. Look at all the traditional dances. They look like nothing like yoga. Look at Thai dance. Look at Chinese dances, martial arts. It's all rounded, it's all curved. It's like nature, what you see in nature and the movement of the animals. So where does it come from? These are s- things to understand because it designs you now. It, it shapes you. You're placing yourself in these forces of change and these streams of change, and you have a good intention, and you just want this or that, but the joke is on us. And this is-- The movement practice for me is, first, education. Let's start to think about this. I have nothing that I can just sprinkle now, some magic powder, that will help resolve this because it's a start of a deep investigation. Let's talk pragmatically, because what you described is not about you placing the foot in front when you're curling. It's about the examination. This is why it is a very good direction, and then you will need another one and another one. Don't get stuck on that foot in front of it, and try to do with the eyes closed or with a different head posture, and you will see things arrive, unrelated things, because the associative mind, the thinking, this relates to this, doesn't get to the heart of it, never. This is a playful approach, and this is a researcher approach. Um, I don't t- try to fit my truth into something. I'm, I'm there to examine. I don't have a motive yet. Why? Because I'm fine. I don't depend on that to define myself. I'm a human being, but, but if I don't have that sense of worth, I, I'm already, like, geared towards, "I need to do this. I need to prove this. I have this agenda." And this is how we get all the lies in the world and, uh, all the, the problems and difficulties. So these practices, they are related to it, to prove this, that, this way, um, why we need muscles for X, Y, Z. And a lot of the reported outcomes are often, from my place, it's, like, funny. Uh, I hear about something like I, I heard you say about gratitude practice. If somebody tries to feel gratitude, just sit with the eyes closed or watch a movie and sense the gratitude there, it would be clear to you. One is very difficult to do, and the other is very easy. Hence, if gratitude is achieved easier this way, that's why it works like that. Although all the traditional practices are about you, and by challenging yourself to sense that gratitude yourself, weight training, the benefits, uh, or the way that the, uh, the hormonal effects, uh, the effect over cognition, et cetera. When you open a bit and you go far out, you see certain things, not the truth, but maybe less delusion. If you don't get the weird looks, you're not moving in the [chuckles] right direction. You already know the result of that direction, let's say, at least that. What happens when you do it with a smile, the same workout, and when you do it with a frown?
- 35:17 – 36:09
Exploration; Acknowledgements
- AHAndrew Huberman
Love it. I think it's a wonderful message. Uh, what I keep hearing from you over and over again is that people should explore, explore, explore. You know, the, the greatest compliment that one can give in science is the one that I'm gonna tell you now because it's entirely appropriate, which is we say you're an N of one, right? And you truly are. I don't think there's anyone that has been as willing to embrace existing practices, evolve them, create new practices, and, and, um, and to share so broadly, to really be willing to give and teach so much knowledge. You know, earlier, you made the mention of your, your goals of, uh, in part, of being wild and wise, and I'm here to tell you that you are both wild and wise, and so thank you so much.
- IPIdo Portal
Thank you very much. Thank you. [upbeat music]
Episode duration: 36:09
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