After finding Dr Huberman, my life has exponentially changed in ways I never knew were possible! The well rounded balanced enlightenments has greatly brought more meaning and value into my life! There are no words that can express my thanks for these priceless life lessons! Thank you for helping change my life and the way my mind operates! Much appreciation and admiration!
@scoobyrex247 honestly don't remember. I think at the end of the podcast there was an option to donate. Or after I posted the comment, there was an option to donate. If neither of those work, let me know and I will look futher. Good luck and thanks for reaching out!
@@emmettsummers1881 I'd love to hear what podcasts made the biggest differences in your life. I've just discovered this podcast and there are so many episodes!
Because of your podcast I have stopped smoking weed, observe a low carb & low sugar diet, and don't drink coffee in the afternoon. All in attempts to have more energy and improve my mental health. It has truly helped A LOT. Thanks for all that you do!
I've been a caffeine user since I was a toddler, and it's difficult for me to maintain my energy levels during the day even when I have had many cups of coffee (four or five). Now in my 30s, I started drinking coffee 90-120 minutes after waking up and eliminated coffee 10-12 hours before bedtime and the change has been almost magical. This is the first episode I've seen of Dr. Huberman's, and the impact this information has had on my performance has been much better than I imagined. I will definitely be watching all the other episodes!
i was suffering sleeping and afternoon fatigue for a while. After watching this i am convinced it is because of afternoon coffee that i have all the time. it is now 1 week i restricted my coffee hours to: | wake up + 1.5hrs | coffee time window (2 hrs) | 12h NO coffee | sleep | It worked! i am now able to sleep just in minutes, and no more afternoon fatigue. Of course with the other things mentioned in the podcast on top of this coffee regulation. Thanks a lot for that great episode!!
This video SINGLE-HANDEDLY turned my avoidance of morning jogging into EXCITEMENT for a morning jog. Why? Because it's now a "cortisol spike" so I don't crash later, instead of one baby step closer to the massive goal of getting in shape. Short term benefits, I like!! Thank you! I jog as soon as I wake up now and it's turning my whole life around. 🙏❣️
I second this. I have always heard morning workouts were great, but I was not willing to put in the hard 90 minutes right when I woke up. Now, I am considering bright light exposure while I do my morning routine (more on this in the Dopamine episode, which will go hand-in-hand with this one), followed by a short jog or skipping routine. This should kill off most of your adenosine, and increase your cortisol peak to get a maximal effect. Again, this is only based off of the great knowledge learned from both episodes, but I hope that new routine works out for you!
@@mycrazylife408 Go to bed earlier and get up earlier. Maybe you won't get the sun, but you'll still get a cortisol spike from working out. You can order caffeine pills online (way cheaper than coffee) and take one to work in your pocket.
Gave up all caffeine last year and it took 140 days before I felt normal. But now without having caffeine I have so much more energy. I use to say that if only we could ‘bottle’ energy of kids, yet it’s simple… you wouldn’t give your kids caffeine, don’t take it yourself. Life changing breaking the caffeine addiction!
Yh I noticed after having coffee for a month I started to feel depressed for no reason and my energy levels were low constantly. I started sleeping longer than 7 hours. When I gave it up I was a lot better mentally
andrew huberman seems like such a good person. seems so humble and down to earth. extremely knowledgeable and seems to back ideas with actual studies. even tries to present the information in vernacular in which not so educated people like myself can understand. i really enjoy listening to him. and again, i really like it that he doesn't seem to have a big ego. not uncommon at all for people with his education and status to have
From personal experience with caffeine withdrawal from dozens of tolerance breaks: 1. Higher regular amount of caffeine consumed leads to longer time before significant withdrawal symptoms start. With 4mg/kg once a day: 60 hours, 2mg/kg once a day: 36 hours. 2. Symptoms were worse with higher dosage, but number of days with withdrawal symptoms were the same. 3. withdrawal was worst on the second day with withdrawal symptoms. No significant symptoms on fifth day. 4. Withdrawal was low in the morning and progressively got worse for each hour awake. Taking a nap helped. 5. Consuming caffeine while having a withdrawal-headache made the headache even worse. 6. Tried starting with 300mg once a day and then lowering 10mg each day. 290-80mg: No withdrawal symptoms. 70-50mg: mild withdrawal. 40-0mg: Similar withdrawal as going cold turkey. 7. Tried 14 days and 28 days abstinence (only once each). Did not notice any further benefits vs 7 days.
You are right Sir. But every case is different and my doctor (addiction specialist) said that in some extreme cases - withdraw from stimulants can last 12 months - yes caffeine and nicottine too - not only heavy drugs.
You're very built too! Hehe ✊🤜🤛🤝🔥💪💪 Hopefully vegan too! Health, various ethical reasons, sustainability, tastes and textures (mockups often beat animal products in tastes and textures), and financial savings. Hehe :3
@@EmilWestrum and he better not be swatting any mosquitoes or flushing ticks, and all that clothing, let’s make sure no animals were killed to make any of it. On top of that, veganism is actually way worse in terms of all the animals who die from all those veggies needing to be cultivated. And this is someone who loves animals. Just hate the hypocrisy
My experience with caffeine almost every other day for the past 6 months: I drink coffee Tues/Thurs/Sat with no negative side affects and moderate to high levels of productivity, positivity, motivation and mental clarity. However recently I tested my limits and added another day of coffee on Wednesday. On that Saturday I started to feel had negative affects of fatigue, irritability, increased anxiety, and heartrate. I have since taken a 5 day break and today I am starting back on my 3 days a week coffee routine. Thank you so much for what you do and the information that you share.
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!
Get it Patricia! I hope you are doing well a month later. I'm here because I'm thinking about quiting caffiene. Not nearly as difficult of a bridge to cross as you have. I can't imagine. You have inspired me. Keep up the hard work! You deserve your happiness! Don't look back stay in the present! You got this.
Great Stuff! I started the new year by not drinking coffee first thing in the morning and having a glass of water instead. My energy level actually improved and I stopped having an afternoon knuckle-dragging crash! Awesome!
Thank you for this! Explains why people who smoke and drink caffeine struggle to quit. As a doctor noticed that people who smoke and drink coffee together really struggle much more to quit. This is going to be a gamechanger as i try to help these patients. Really appreciate all you do Prof. Huberman.
Please look at the lung cancer and emphysema rates between smokers vs nicotine Vape users, and advise your patients accordingly. It could mean significant reduction of disease and extension of lifespan.
Thank you Dr. Huberman, I greatly appreciate your videos. After years of suffering from anxiety, and depression, I am finally starting to turn things around. And for once I actually feel like I'm alive. Now I am able to walk on the correct path in my life, and your podcast has no doubt helped me achieve this. I'm really grateful for your help. Stay strong.
I use caffeine every other day (Mon, Wed, and Fri). Sometimes I skip Wednesdays even. I only take it to workout and it works great. When caffeine was a daily thing I would start to have anxiety and panic attacks but taking those 4 days off really helps. I also had problems with sleep when I took caffeine every day. Also, when I took it daily I was much more tired without it. Now I have 0 withdrawals on the off days, and it hits way harder when I do take it. Nothing feels better than when a caffeinated workout is finished and I can go on with my day full of energy
I'm cafeine free for 6 months now - when I drank coffee everyday I had same experiences like you - BUT taking it every other day seem like a good idea! Maybe I'll try it cause I miss coffee
What you're describing is definitely better than consuming caffeine daily. But it's even better to stop altogether. Because whenever you consume caffeine, your cortisol levels go up, which inevitably means stress. So the very best option is to stop altogether.
Thank you SO much for the details about adenosine piling up in my body! Of course, I've known about the circadian system, getting light early and the hormonal cascade....but I really didn't until you went through it. That my "first thing" coffee has actually been trapping adenosine is life-changing. This is not an exaggeration. For decades, my days have dragged. More and more caffeine isn't working. This is my third day of going out to open the chicken coop and to stay out there for 90" of daylight before having coffee. Today is my first day of feeling great energy instead of dragging my corpse through the hours. Your work is much appreciated!
I arrived at the "every other day" protocol by introspection, and it naturally evolved to "only days when I workout" cause it gives a great boost. I think it's great, and the fact that I've done it by pure self-experimentation indicates that there's something to it.
I’ve always said that those who can explain a complex phenomenon in a simple and understandable way, is a key indicator that this person is incredibly clever ❤ love your work Huberman
For your consideration: I’d be hugely interested in an episode on the effects of music and, more broadly, aural stimulation on the brain and body. I’m a classical musician (French horn) and while orchestral music is my drug of choice, I’m fascinated with how sound of all kinds, “music” or “not music,” produces changes in mood and physiological state. Many thanks for a great episode as always.
Dr. Huberman I just want to tell you how thankful I am that I've found your content. I've been applying the tips you gave here in this episode for the past three days and it has worked wonders! I used to take another dose of caffeine after lunch to blunt the afternoon crash but after heeding your advice I'm surprised that I'm able to survive the day with just my morning caffeine pill. I have more energy for the whole day and I have better sleep at night. Thank you so much!
This podcast is so important for my journey as a person who don't drink coffee, tea or any caffeine beverages. I was diagnosed with ADHD last October and after intense researchers I started drinking coffee "café latte" every morning & it changed me in wired way no more fatigue & tiredness, more focus, more productivity. Thank you Dr. Andrew
@droid16beta97 Caffeine is a stimulant, similar to other ADHD meds, but like you pointed out its much less strong (and less potential side effects). If it works, it's definitely a safer choice.
5mths ago I stopped drinking coffee and reducing other caffeine containing foods (I also don’t drink any energy drinks, I do have caffeine-free teas). I was easily having 600mg of caffeine per coffee, consuming 4-6 cups per day (I’m 55kg - so far too much per cup, and far too often I now see!) 2 months ago I was craving a coffee, and started allowing myself 1 coffee on Saturday, 1 on Sunday. Since then, I have felt my work (Mon-Fri) energy levels and motivation deteriorate dramatically. Thanks to this video I think I have realised I have been training myself that weekends are better than weekdays/work (we all KNOW that, but I think I’ve been subconsciously doing it on accident). Thanks for a great video and helping me realise this!!
As an avid ice coffee drinker, I can definitely confirm if you skip one or two days . It hits so much better when you do have it ! Almost like a nice high to me and my alertness is optimal
Thank you Dr. Huberman and team for the excellent, as usual, podcast. The impressive examples you give of where and how caffeine worked its way into life on earth makes me think that while you were not consulted at the design phase, perhaps the Caffeine Sprites were. No pun intended ;) As briefly as I can: I love coffee, but I love sleep more, for that reason, at age 40, ten years ago, I gave up my beloved single morning cup. It was one of many things I did to improve my sleep hygiene. For years I had resisted, reasoning that surely one cup of stovetop espresso early in the day could not hurt my sleep. Then my ER doctor husband returned from a toxicology lecture where, as an aside, the speaker mentioned that people vary in the speed with which they metabolize caffeine. He explained that effectively, some people may clear one cup in a matter of hours, while others may be walking around with the equivalent of 3-4 cups in their system at any given time. That was enough info for me; I gave up coffee that day. The first two weeks were horrific - on my daily run I felt like I left my jet-pack at home! What would be the point if I couldn't enjoy my run anymore? But then at the two week mark I felt completely fine. And sleep, while not always 100%, became much better. (And then became fantastic once your podcast came on the scene, but that's another story involving early morning light, etc...) Why do I tell you all this? Because I think my experience touches on some nuances that perhaps your podcast missed*, which may be relevant to others: -You did mention the half-life of caffeine, but I'm wondering about this, based on the above lecture I mention. I will look for the studies on how/if people metabolize caffeine differently. -Given that caffeine is a psychoactive drug, I think it is wise to take a drug holiday from it, from time to time, as one is typically recommended to do for any psychoactive drug. I had been on caffeine for a good twenty years without ever checking in on what life was like without it. When I gave up caffeine I became newly aware of how aggressively people were driving on the morning commute, for instance. You talk about giving up caffeine to experience a positive bump in performance when you go back on it, which is interesting, and useful, but I propose another additional goal: give it up for a while to see who you are without it. I found that I like myself more without caffeine. Turns out I'm more mellow than I realized. Just as motivated, just as active, just no background low-grade sense of urgency anymore. -Perhaps it is the case that as we age the way we metabolize caffeine changes? I'm curious, I wonder. I was fine with it at 20, not so at 40. But then at 20 I had less to keep me up at night. Food for thought. -My jet lag pretty much disappeared after giving up caffeine, and I fly from San Francisco to London fairly frequently, so I take this as pretty decent anec-data. -I really enjoy not feeling drawn to, or "controlled by" a substance. There's still air, and water, and food, (and small amounts of chocolate of course), but I feel much freer now. -I enjoy the smell of a cup of coffee as much as ever, and just content myself with that and lots of cups of Rooibos. Thank you for considering these notes. Kate. *I should probably re-listen to be certain, but I'm on to your next podcast...
In my experience, coffee addiction (cause it is kinda like a drug) had negative effect on my mood, sleep etc. It was my "go to drink" to get things done. I had been drinking coffee for 8 years or so everyday in various forms. Coffee, Mate, even Tea. I stumbled upon videos with testimionals about caffeine withdrawal. I was scared but also curious about side effects and benefits that might come with caffeine-free life. I went cold turkey and struggled with motivation and mood for 4 weeks. First two weeks were horrible. It's 2 months caffeine free. My digestion dramatically improved. I sleep like a baby and have 4-7 dreams every night. I don't have to drink coffee every time I want to do something. It is not just my experience. I do not consume caffeine in any form. I have a lot more energy which is stable throughout the day. I don't experience anxiety (which happened almost everyday). I love coffee and Mate, I really do, but I do not plan to drink any caffeinated stuff probably ever. I'm not saying that coffee is bad, I think it is like many things in life - the bigger dopaming hit - the bigger crash will be afterward. Coffee can be used wisely, as Dr. Huberman advises. My body does not react good to caffeine, probably processes it slower than normal and it messes up my sleep even after drinking small cup before 12 o'clock
Wise man,👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 i was Starbucks coffe mastwr for 3 years and IT support for volkswagen gor 6 years (drinking coffe like crazy to fix computers) now im off for 2 years and im feeling pure not perfect 💪🏼👁
Totally agree, wonderful observation. I spot people addicted to coffee with the monotonous talk, he way they talk - like robots, I observed my friend I had to live with for a year, how she suffered from insomnia and energy crushes and mood swings all connected to coffee and anxiety she got from it, she actually already became OCD person. She can never admit that coffee really is the culprit, she says it does not effect her but it vividly does.
I never drank coffee until I hit 40, when I needed it. This year I started a daily cold shower then added alt day fasting and like magic, my need for coffee disappeared. I have the occasional cup when I see clients but I don't feel a perk up with the coffee anymore. I feel the same. Best days are fasting days. It is nothing short of amazing. Month 11 of this regime. I don't think of coffee or crave it. I don't drink caffeine tea either. I just don't need it.
@@justinwayne445 trying skipping breakfast and see how well you perform or how productive you are. Then have a light lunch and gauge your energy levels. For me all I need is a small high protein snack like yogurt or a protein bar to stave off the hunger around lunch time and I’m still pretty alert and active through out the afternoon. Anything more and I’ll start feeling sluggish and tired. When the work day is done and I’m ready to relax I’ll have a large dinner.
I think of you as my virtual mentor, Andrew. I'm not sure how you would feel about that but I have learnt so much from you and I strongly believe that you haven't even scratched the surface of your own potential yet, I know there will be lots more to come from you that will benefit humanity and science as a whole. I look forward to it. Thank you!
A while ago I decided to completely cut out caffeine for about a month in order to understand my relationship to the substance a little better, and also because i was experiencing some negatives since I am apparently pretty sensitive to caffeine. After that month I went back to caffeine but in a very low amounts, early in the day, and only on workdays (which means about 4 days a week). I have found that this every-other-day-method gives me the increased performance that I missed during my month of abstinence, whilst the days off of the substance keep the amount of caffeine in my system low, improve my sleep and keep my mood nice and mellow which were the biggest positives I wanted to keep from my month of abstinence. It feels like this way I get the "best of both worlds" so to speak, although I bet there's more ways to improve. For instance, I'm definitely going to try your advice on waiting till 90/120 minutes after I've woken up. Thanks for the video.
It's always a unique conversation to listen and or have for me towards the concept of energy. As a shorter male who has been considered bipolar, I have found that literally anytime I want energy all I have to do is think it. Essentially I'm like "hmm, I need a boost" I bounce on my feet a couple times and simply think "let's go" then off I go. I can wake up at any time during the 24hrs of the day automatically ready to partake in any type of activity.
Prolonging caffeine intake 90 minutes after waking is an absolute game changer. Caffeine seems to work more effectively and I don’t appear to be experiencing the afternoon crash.
I've been running for years, and every time after a long run of moderate intensity I've always had crashes in mood in the evening several hours later. For lack of a better term, I call it my "runner's low". I've found nothing in the popular running literature to explain why this is - I assume they don't want to discourage people from running as it's easier to emphasise the high than talk about the low. The dopamine stacking explanation in this podcast was the first plausible mechanism I've heard that explains it! Especially as I make sure I'm sufficiently caffeinated before embarking to ensure good performance. I just want to say thank you for this podcast series. On a variety of topics, I've learnt a lot that I'm surprised isn't more widely available seeing how important it is. Seeing dopamine depletion as a potential mechanism for that low, I'll be sure to listen to the dopamine podcast and look to experiment with ways I can try to raise dopamine naturally after my longer runs to see if I can find ways to offset that crash.
Ive been a shift worker for 10 years now. Paramedic and then police. I can say for certain that large amounts of caffeine have played a major role in my life so far but Im ready to transition to a more natural, healthy lifestyle and work that will allow me to do so.
I use caffeine daily to get ready for work, but I feel the afternoon productivity dip (even waiting 1.5 hours after waking before drinking). I'm glad you mentioned stacking and an every-other-day schedule. I think those will help. Thanks!
Even though I don't really do all of it, it is important to keep in mind many of the things mentioned. With this information, you can really classify your caffeine consumption differently and not just go by how your body feels. A strong recommendation for anyone
Listening to this episode made me grateful that no one was able to patent caffeine before we learned all this great stuff about it. Imagine how much they'd be charging for it if they had!
Andrew! Please make an episode about how to gain weight in a healthy way. Especially if you're dealing with chronic underweight issues, or have an auto immune illness. Love the work ❣️
This podcast was one of the best podcasts Andrew Huberman has done🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤ Most people can’t consume caffeine because they don’t pay attention to the dose
Instead of taking theanine separately to offset jitters from sources of caffeine such as coffee or pills, one could always just drink tea; Caffeine and theanine are naturally occuring in any tea made from the Camellia sinensis plant - white, green, black and oolong. Coffee shouts, tea whispers :)
First huberman video I've watched, wanted to say that you have really good presentation skills, you reiterate what needs to be said again and obviously do good research. Thanks for contributing this video to the world. I hope that you continue to make videos like this to keep people informed. I don't think anything like this was present but because of the way you present these videos, it makes it really easy for people to accept whatever you say as fact. In light of that, please continue to do good research so you get to the truth of a topic and work to keep your own personal biases out of this kind of content. Once again, thank you so much. I feel more informed!
I highly recommend the host to try the “every other day” method. I stumbled across it when I was trying to get rid of headaches. I found that if I didn’t drink more than two days in a row that I did not get any headaches. It also made me a lot more productive, because I was actually getting the benefits of the coffee; instead of being totally addicted and tolerant to it. My schedule is M, T, H, Sat are my caffeine days; others days off.
Might also be worth tying just taking 1 day off every week as a “reset”. Instead of every other day having an off day, this minimizes the performance impact and can be planned on the day of your choice (I do Sundays), while still preventing tolerance (for me).
@@jjtitusDepends on dose. The problem is due to caffeines 6 hour half life. For a 100mg dose, you'll have ~7mg going through your veins after 24 hours. Timing the last dose as well as the amount is essential.
@@jjtitus if I drink coffee 3 or 4 days in a row then take a day off, I get bad headaches. I found two days on, one day off is my limit before becoming addicted (headache withdrawals).
Please keep sharing all this information Dr Huberman. This is crucial information that will greatly improve people’s lives! Blessings upon you and your staff.
Thank you for changing my life! I'm enjoying my total capacity as a human being and high productivity to reach my true potential as a businesswoman, mom, and girlfriend. My physical strength is excellent, so I can work out every day too!
Please discuss health benefits or detriments of inversion, that is, hanging upside down with head lower than feet, or inverting on a slant, that is, with head lower than feet but on an angle less than 180°. Thank you for all you do, Dr. Huberman!
Im so excited for the episode on menstrual cycles ! I feel like I hear all kinds of different information & it’s hard to know what to trusttt. Im so ready to have a whole episode dedicated to reliable info & facts on a topic I’ve always found so hard to get clear info on!
First of all, a huge thank you to the Huberman Lab Team for their work. Both Andrew Huberman and Lex Fridman are my heroes. Not only they have an incredible work ethic, but more importantly they always emphasise the significance of being a good person. Deeply grateful I stumbled upon these two podcasts. Anyway, I'd love to know more about IQ and intelligence. Are you going to make a podcast about this topic? There are a lot of talks about it. Many people say it's a gift, and you simply cannot enhance your intelligence or IQ across your lifespan. Moreover, there is a lot of debate about what intelligence is. I see it as the speed of pattern recognition and the depth of abstract thinking. Probably I'm wrong. Jordan Peterson even presented the table that maps IQ to jobs. I understand that this topic is complicated not only in terms of neuroscience, but in terms of ethic as well. Nevetheless, we probably should talk more about it. P.S. If you are also interested in this topic, please like this comment in order to HL team to see it :)
It's widely known that very few gifted people are born with a photographic memory, or the ability to solve complex math problems similar to a calculator. Having said that, the concept of the "empty slate," was a philosophical concept popularized by the philosopher John Locke in the 17th century and proposed that the mind was an initially empty slate that could be filled with the empirical observations one makes about the world.. However, a man named Friedrich Nietzsche claimed that humans were born with innate knowledge, rather than being born with a "blank slate" that was filled in by experience. While I accept that others are born with advantages, I also believe that one can vastly improve their understanding and ability through experience.
Some are born with speed, others with strength. Some are born with a tall light frame, others short and stout. Some are born with empathy and a conscience, others become Republicans.
Dear Dr. Huberman, First off, thank you very much for your contributions. You have provided many great insights and benefits from your experience. You have also been candid and admitted that you are not a nutritionist. And let us assume, you are also not a physician, a biologist, naturopath, or homepath. Or to put another way, a holistic practitioner. Regarding coffee, while it may be beneficial in some ways, it is hugely detrimental in other ways. For example, it increases uric acid and causes uric acid deposits. Uric acid has been linked with several disorders and illnesses, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Uric acid deposits affect the brain, the joints, and can be especially felt in the feet. Furthermore, the caffeine is quite high, and it leads to adrenal fatigue. The majority of Americans are suffering from adrenal fatigue. We could take much to recover, and only seconds to go back into adrenal fatigue again.
Hey Andrew! I know this is an older video but you mentioned caffeine being good for asthma. Just wanted to let you know that when I was much younger I had asthma and my mom read somewhere that black coffee could help with that. She hated the inhaler because for some reason it turned me into “an angry little monster”😂 anyway she started giving me strong, plain black coffee. It very quickly got rid of all of my asthma and today at 15 years old I don’t struggle with it at all and actually have pretty good endurance without any trouble breathing. I do have to confess to being a little addicted to plain black coffee at this point in my life though. I know I drink too much but this podcast has helped me organize it in a helpful way. Thank you.
I quit drinking any sort of caffeine at all for the last 5 years. In that time I had 2 kids. I have been extremely exhausted for the last 5 years and it’s affected my mood greatly. I started drinking coffee again 5 days ago and my mood has improved significantly and my energy has tripled. I was also overeating before (my body was craving energy) and after starting to drink coffee I eat an appropriate amount for my body size. I never thought I’d incorporate coffee back into my life but the improvement has been too significant. I’m topping out at 100mg of caffeine a day, so just 1 cup of coffee.
Caffeine helps me prevent my migraines. I was diagnosed with chronic migraine disorder (16 or more per month) about 8yrs ago and I learned that migrainous people thrive on routine. Having the same amount of caffeine at the same times each day helps me prevent migraines. But this need for routine applies to everything- same amount of sleep (even getting 30 min more sleep can trigger a migraine), same relative diet/eating schedule, same water intake, same amount of physical activity... just having a lazy day of watching movies and snacking on things that are outside of the usual diet can trigger an awful 72-hr migraine. Stress and also excitement (cortisol spikes) can also trigger migraines. We have to just find what works for us, and then try to stick to it as much as possible, especially in the hours and days before an event that we need to be migraine-free for. I hope this helps someone who suffers from migraines!
Nice. Also, go vegan, proven best diet by largest health studies, human anatomy shows it, carbs grew our brains, and it's blatant with rising statistics in non-vegans and their major health issues. Also, the average person, unlike me, is dehydrated, which destroys energy levels by 20-35% or so by only 1-2% dehydration, cause migraines, confusion, etc. ;p They say about 75% of Americans drink only about 2.5 cups of water on average a day. Thankfully, I'm not one of them, and I thankfully live abroad, but I was born and raised in infamous Miami, FL, USA. Exercise gives more energy, and yoga and walking are what I stick to these days, accompanied by taking stairs when I walk daily. Hehe.
have you tried meditation? hyperstimulation is the cause of mine. i thrive on silence and i limit my internet hours. i can only watch maybe couple of videos like these (informative ones) and i spend my hours on relaxation and silence. it cured everything. i tend to hyoerventillate when i use my phone. it would hurt my right shoulder blade by engulfing more air and storing there. and when that happens, i would just lie down on my bed and rest. the air will come out on its own lol
Interesting and I’m glad you have relief!! If you don’t mind, for my horrible migraines, salting my foods helped cure them!! Caffeine made my headache types worse. And I have Stan Efferding to thank for this!! Salt salt salt!!! Especially if you exercise. Game and life changer for my headaches and for athletic ability. Just in case anyone has those types of headaches!! Just be sure you aren’t salt sensitive obviously
Going to my shift work job and listening to this… I over indulge Deathwish coffee every work day, I should seek intervention but it’s my last vice (actually just cutting out cocktails during the work week too) the protocols that I’ve picked up from Andrew Huberman have been life extending at least I hope Professor Huberman, thank you for igniting my curiosity in science, I mean this from the bottom of my heart
I haven't tried a strict every other day caffeine schedule but I do occasionally skip caffeine for one or sometimes two days, and I certainly notice that every time I ingest caffeine again after the break, I feel ELATED. My mood, energy, focus, etc all skyrockets for awhile. Whereas after many days in a row of drinking caffeine, the effects quickly become very blunted.
Thank-you for explaining caffeine, it makes me understand those lines I see at Starbucks. No matter how much inflation hits and we pay for gas, it hasn’t changed anything. You are a valuable man in America Mr Huberman.
An outstanding episode, Dr Huberman Thank you very much for your fine expertise and your incredible generosity of sharing your knowledge with general public. This is simply priceless. You are a true Mensch.
Caffiene (in the form of sugar free energy drinks) is the single most addictive thing I have ever encountered. I can drink any amount of alchohol, smoke any amount of cannabis, be put on any amount of morphine or opioid pain killer during a hospital stay or following an accident and I'll have no issues. I've never abused opiods or used cocaine/meth etc but caffeine based on things I have used, it's a whole different beast. Nice to finally understand some of the reasons why.
Thank you for these videos , instead of wasting time scrolling or watching pointless tv i am listening and learning information that is helping my life
I stacked caffeine, naps, and cold showers to help me increase my baseline dopamine levels. I would ingest caffeine, take a 10-minute nap with my feet up, and right afterward take a 2-3 minute cold shower. For about 4 weeks, I would do this twice a day, once after an hour after waking and then again around noon.
I fall asleep listening to your voice on various videos, depending on how stressful work was that day, and I swear I wake up each day refreshed and somehow more intelligent. 🤜🤛 thanks! Thank you for the indepth explanations.
Thank you for touching on the effects regarding women's menstrual cycle. I think it is great that you on Huberman Lab is educating about hormones and menstrual cycle to normalise and inform about the human sexuality. I am also looking forward to hear about the episode completely regarding the menstrual cycle! Thanks for the episode, and the podcast in its whole. I have been listening to your podcast for one year now!
Whew, this podcast is consistently the best part of my week. One thing I would love to know more about on this topic is the different types of caffeine. For example, I stopped drinking coffee for a while a couple of years ago and switched to matcha. I experienced more sustained and subtle effects and stopped crashing in the afternoons (or having energy spikes). I waited until I had my own experience before reading too much about it, and then found that the qualities of the caffeine in matcha (is it true for all green tea?) include exactly what I'd noted - sustained alertness, no jitteriness, no crashes late in the day, and no dramatic energy spikes. Could you say anything about why that is, and whether the 1-3mg:kg ratio is the same for all types of caffeine? (On that, I assume so, as you include caffeine in pill form in the recommendation). Thanks so much for all you do 🙌
I've lived most of my life without caffeine as I am super sensitive. I even have to be careful ingesting chocolate. I'd love to know why that is. I'm also very sensitive to alcohol. I'd also love to participate in a study on caffeine but since I'm super sensitive not sure if that would be a problem. That said I recently started drinking a small amount of caffeinated tea in the mornings. Thanks so much for this episode! I'm really able to understand how to use it to benefit me without doing any damage!
I’m the same way! I’m extremely sensitive to caffeine.. chocolate, anything with stimulants, alcohol. I wasn’t always that way, it started in my mid 20s. It seems like I developed an allergy/intolerance. I can’t even have decaf. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.
I think this can be due to low low stomach acid. I have similar issues with all 3😅 until 4 years ago I used to drink black coffee, red wine and sometimes indulge with dark chocolate. But 4-5 years ago I stared having stomach issues and learned I had SIBO which is caused by low stomach acid. I found lots of info through different natural path podcast and created my own protocol. I even fasted for a 72 hours to kill the bacteria 😅 now I’m ok. I can enjoy decaf coffee but small amounts, and a glass of wine here and there. But can’t go back to drink caffeinated coffee.
I work third shift 14 shifts a month and have been skipping caffeine on my off days to allow me some sleep flexibility for a couple years and definitely noticed a spike in overall efficacy of it on the days I do use it with very little impact on the days that I don't so these studies certainly track with my own experiences.
I’ve gotten so much value out of your podcasts. Thank you for providing this resource for free, it’s incredible. Learning about the systems that control my behaviors has given me a lot of confidence to pursue making large scale changes to my everyday life that I don’t think I would have attempted otherwise. Thank you so much.
I stopped drinking coffee about 3 years ago. At least. Before that I had 2 coffees a day. I quit just to have less addiction in my life, nothing particular. Beside a few days of headache it was no problem. I started dringking mate. I drank usually one or two daily. After a few years I noticed that when I dont drinking mate I'm kind of the same, it does not add that much energy, so I stopped mate for a month. I had still a lot of energy throughout the day. Now I sometimes drink one mate for a few months and sometimes I dont take any cffeine for a few months. Sometimes when I drink a coffee I feel a lot of energy but also feel strange, constantly thinking, wanting to DO THINGS.Get things done, cant be calm. I noticed lately that any type of caffeine maes me agitated, too alert. Makes me a bit aggressive and too alert. impatient and nervous. I'd like to drink a coffee now and then but I stop myself always lately because of these above....
I found that the best way to stay alert and energetic is any kind of keto diet - that is, no or very little carbohydrates. Caffeine helps, but its effects are not nearly as transformative, as that of the diet's.Though, I still drink coffee, but only in the morning (about 9 AM). I brew it in a geyser coffee maker from the same amount of freshly ground beans every time. That way I control the amount of caffeine I consume (although a pill or measured amount of powdered caffeine would give better control), get all the health benefits and none of the sleep problems. When coffee is too much, green tea is a great option, and it tastes better too (I prefer oolong, puerh an some other fancy variants).
Another great episode. Understanding the science behind the timing and effects of caffeine is invaluable. I just started drinking coffee to minimize afternoon crashes. I now understand why the coffee has gone from tasting "meh" to very good - science!
Rating: 7.9/10 In Short: Caffeine is one HELL of a drug Notes: A really good and classic huberman episode, especially given his love of Yerba Mate. The 4 mechanisms for caffeine are very interesting and make a lot of sense, really pretty simple. Then explaining how in nature plants with caffeine improve animals 'mood' and 'feeling' and thus make them more attractive stamps this home even more. Basically the fact that we as a species are attracted to caffeine is neuronal across any species, down to even bee's, and the science and underlying the positive effects of caffeine are so strong and overwhelming. However, huberman is rightfully cautious and doesn't just recommended you go crazy, and instead discusses a lot of ways to abstain from caffeine to achieve a stronger effect later, and to not try to get dependent on it. Huberman does a great job not making too many strong claims based on the data and does a nice dance of mechanism and tools here that make this a classic and high quality solo episode.
Awesome talk! I realized many things that I was doing wrong as a daily coffee drinker (like drinking it right away in the morning, almost 400 ml per dosage, and putting sugar on it). The understand of how it works internally in the body and some best practices to drink it will sure help a lot
As someone who suffers from migraines that are often triggered by caffeine amounts, I'm so glad I found this podcast! One thing I did not hear discussed in the episode is pros/cons of drinking caffeine at steady,low doses throughout the morning/day. Are there any studies on this? Thanks so much!
Ye gods man, you’re right! Yesterday I deferred my coffee and powered through the day!! I usually take a nap or nidra at 3pm cos I’m literally falling asleep but no siree, not yesterday and I suspect not today (which is lucky cos I have to work). I was so energetic yesterday arvo I even did yard work for a few hours whereas normally I’d be ‘resting’ reading quietly after my nap. All this time I thought I was getting old pffffft not at all! Thank you yet again! Life changer, particularly when time is my most precious resource and work and study demands so much of it; you’ve given me a heap back! 🙏
Petition to do an episode all about vitamins and their effects on the nervous system. Along with vitamin deficiencies and other actionable tools one can take.
Today was day 1 of waiting for 120 min after waking up to drink caffeine ! Usually drink it RIGHT when I get up to get ready for the gym but the afternoon crash around 1pm is HARDDD. As a law student I don't have time for naps lol Thanks Andrew - excited to see the outcome
Hi Andrew, I have mixed opinions about the every other day coffee cup. Surely It boosts the caffeine effect (I'd say it feels more than a 2x), but the day you don't drink it, you can be very distracted. I guess it's because you know there is caffeine the next day, and by anticipating to that 'reward', you're making the effort more painful on the other day. But if you can overcome that day, I do believe this way of drinking is better than daily
Just wanted to say THANK YOU for your amazing input, you explain everything really well and it's really comfortable to listen to, which makes those 2 hours+ pass in no time at all. Thanks again! Great stuff
I've demonized caffeine due to its withdrawal effects in the past. Thank you for providing me with the information I didn't know I wanted and eliminating my bias.
I'm almost 100% caffeine free for 10 months now. Started tapering it off in January. This isn't something you'd expect or see from googling it, but for me, it resolved my tinnitus which I had for over 10 years. I tried having 1 coffee again 2 months ago, and the tinnitus returned for a little over a day. I'm also finding that I sleep through the night now, and sleep longer (7-8 hours), but I don't wake up as refreshed as I used to when I had the interrupted sleep while drinking coffee. Thinking about trying it again but with that tea Huberman keeps mentioning every few podcast episodes.
@@nicolasrealMD They were terrible for a long time actually. It took somewhere between 4-5 months before they got back completely to what I considered "normal", as in, when I was drinking coffee. If you're not having any health issues, I don't recommend stopping, it doesn't seem like it's too harmful for healthy people. Only up-sides other upsides are sleeping through the night (though not feeling particularly refreshed in the morning) and my hands used to shake very slightly (noticable when I was doing very fine soldering work) but they don't anymore.
Love listening to your podcasts Dr. Hubernan! I learn so much from you. Refreshes all those things I forgot back in my PNB classes many years ago. Great stuff please continue to share! 👍
I've always said caffeine is the last thing I'd ever give up. If I abstain I get a nasty headache and usually lose a day of productivity, my homeostasis is disrupted. Delaying it an hour or so is challenging, depends on the day. I also find it really best from hot coffee. I don't seem to enjoy caffeine as much from tea or yerba mate. I wonder why? Thanks for all the good info Dr. Huberman!
I'm currently cycling off coffee, day 6, after consuming way too much. Don't have the energy I used to for now, but I know it'll be better for me in the long run. When I stop seeing the benefits of focus and need more to keep me going, it's a problem. Careful out there guys! It's everrrrywhere!
@@glacialimpala at the time of the post it was my 6th day of an undetermined period, at least a month. I dont like the dependency on it. I love the ritual and the mouthfeel as I make bulletproof coffee when I do have it. But for me at this time, no caffeine is best.
man, not to be another echo in the wind, thank you, again. honestly. Having the "unfortunate/fortunate" ability to let the mind just wonder like as if someone just turned on a switch, your teachings have taught "how to control" that reaction through diet, exercise, sleep. I always followed a plan, but taking it to the next level was what helped. Thank you for allowing me to gain access to parts of the mind through such "basic" yet extremely beneficial, needless to say. If you happen to read this, and I promise to check if there are any (I'm sure there are, not doubt); words spoken on the heart would be nice to learn. I really would be pleased to know more abooot that (a lil Canadian humor). Awesome, till next time! 🙏
After finding Dr Huberman, my life has exponentially changed in ways I never knew were possible! The well rounded balanced enlightenments has greatly brought more meaning and value into my life! There are no words that can express my thanks for these priceless life lessons! Thank you for helping change my life and the way my mind operates! Much appreciation and admiration!
how are you able to donate? I want to donate.
@scoobyrex247 honestly don't remember. I think at the end of the podcast there was an option to donate. Or after I posted the comment, there was an option to donate. If neither of those work, let me know and I will look futher.
Good luck and thanks for reaching out!
@@scoobyrex247 if you're on a pc is should be near the like/share/download buttons
@@emmettsummers1881
I'd love to hear what podcasts made the biggest differences in your life. I've just discovered this podcast and there are so many episodes!
Because of your podcast I have stopped smoking weed, observe a low carb & low sugar diet, and don't drink coffee in the afternoon. All in attempts to have more energy and improve my mental health. It has truly helped A LOT. Thanks for all that you do!
I'd never quit weed, I just incorporate it into the other areas in my life. I get stoned before I exercise Lol
Agreed. Weed does too much good for my life, in terms of mood, energy, motivation, relaxation... the examples are endless
You know it's really bad when you can't imagine life without a drug
@@BencioW Well I'd imagine Rick James wrote that damn song for an equally damn good reason LOL
@@BencioW Well, another point of view might be, how grateful I am that there exists such a benign drug that helps so endlessly with my psyche
I've been a caffeine user since I was a toddler, and it's difficult for me to maintain my energy levels during the day even when I have had many cups of coffee (four or five). Now in my 30s, I started drinking coffee 90-120 minutes after waking up and eliminated coffee 10-12 hours before bedtime and the change has been almost magical.
This is the first episode I've seen of Dr. Huberman's, and the impact this information has had on my performance has been much better than I imagined. I will definitely be watching all the other episodes!
i was suffering sleeping and afternoon fatigue for a while. After watching this i am convinced it is because of afternoon coffee that i have all the time. it is now 1 week i restricted my coffee hours to:
| wake up + 1.5hrs | coffee time window (2 hrs) | 12h NO coffee | sleep |
It worked! i am now able to sleep just in minutes, and no more afternoon fatigue. Of course with the other things mentioned in the podcast on top of this coffee regulation. Thanks a lot for that great episode!!
This video SINGLE-HANDEDLY turned my avoidance of morning jogging into EXCITEMENT for a morning jog. Why? Because it's now a "cortisol spike" so I don't crash later, instead of one baby step closer to the massive goal of getting in shape. Short term benefits, I like!! Thank you! I jog as soon as I wake up now and it's turning my whole life around. 🙏❣️
I second this. I have always heard morning workouts were great, but I was not willing to put in the hard 90 minutes right when I woke up. Now, I am considering bright light exposure while I do my morning routine (more on this in the Dopamine episode, which will go hand-in-hand with this one), followed by a short jog or skipping routine.
This should kill off most of your adenosine, and increase your cortisol peak to get a maximal effect. Again, this is only based off of the great knowledge learned from both episodes, but I hope that new routine works out for you!
i wish i could do this but i have to work early
@@mycrazylife408 Go to bed earlier and get up earlier. Maybe you won't get the sun, but you'll still get a cortisol spike from working out. You can order caffeine pills online (way cheaper than coffee) and take one to work in your pocket.
@@SonnyEverywhere Did you even check the video title?
@@SonnyEverywhere correct
Gave up all caffeine last year and it took 140 days before I felt normal. But now without having caffeine I have so much more energy. I use to say that if only we could ‘bottle’ energy of kids, yet it’s simple… you wouldn’t give your kids caffeine, don’t take it yourself. Life changing breaking the caffeine addiction!
Bees like it and they work like bees…
The same, for me the caffeine is a definitely net negative in the long term.
Same here! I'm free.
Yh I noticed after having coffee for a month I started to feel depressed for no reason and my energy levels were low constantly. I started sleeping longer than 7 hours. When I gave it up I was a lot better mentally
I probably should, I get over stimulated probably
andrew huberman seems like such a good person. seems so humble and down to earth. extremely knowledgeable and seems to back ideas with actual studies. even tries to present the information in vernacular in which not so educated people like myself can understand. i really enjoy listening to him. and again, i really like it that he doesn't seem to have a big ego. not uncommon at all for people with his education and status to have
From personal experience with caffeine withdrawal from dozens of tolerance breaks:
1. Higher regular amount of caffeine consumed leads to longer time before significant withdrawal symptoms start. With 4mg/kg once a day: 60 hours, 2mg/kg once a day: 36 hours.
2. Symptoms were worse with higher dosage, but number of days with withdrawal symptoms were the same.
3. withdrawal was worst on the second day with withdrawal symptoms. No significant symptoms on fifth day.
4. Withdrawal was low in the morning and progressively got worse for each hour awake. Taking a nap helped.
5. Consuming caffeine while having a withdrawal-headache made the headache even worse.
6. Tried starting with 300mg once a day and then lowering 10mg each day. 290-80mg: No withdrawal symptoms. 70-50mg: mild withdrawal. 40-0mg: Similar withdrawal as going cold turkey.
7. Tried 14 days and 28 days abstinence (only once each). Did not notice any further benefits vs 7 days.
You are right Sir. But every case is different and my doctor (addiction specialist) said that in some extreme cases - withdraw from stimulants can last 12 months - yes caffeine and nicottine too - not only heavy drugs.
The caffeine addict in me has been waiting for this day since I discovered this channel!
Sahaj! I love your channel man. Glad to see your sources are of such high caliber haha
Yeee! He did one on caffeine before though. Hehe
You're very built too! Hehe ✊🤜🤛🤝🔥💪💪 Hopefully vegan too! Health, various ethical reasons, sustainability, tastes and textures (mockups often beat animal products in tastes and textures), and financial savings. Hehe :3
@@ReligionAndMaterialismDebunked stop, the cringe is too painful.
@@EmilWestrum and he better not be swatting any mosquitoes or flushing ticks, and all that clothing, let’s make sure no animals were killed to make any of it. On top of that, veganism is actually way worse in terms of all the animals who die from all those veggies needing to be cultivated. And this is someone who loves animals. Just hate the hypocrisy
My experience with caffeine almost every other day for the past 6 months:
I drink coffee Tues/Thurs/Sat with no negative side affects and moderate to high levels of productivity, positivity, motivation and mental clarity.
However recently I tested my limits and added another day of coffee on Wednesday. On that Saturday I started to feel had negative affects of fatigue, irritability, increased anxiety, and heartrate.
I have since taken a 5 day break and today I am starting back on my 3 days a week coffee routine.
Thank you so much for what you do and the information that you share.
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!
Proud of you
@@Ollie-uo5bo thank you so much! happy new year!
Get it Patricia! I hope you are doing well a month later. I'm here because I'm thinking about quiting caffiene. Not nearly as difficult of a bridge to cross as you have. I can't imagine. You have inspired me. Keep up the hard work! You deserve your happiness! Don't look back stay in the present! You got this.
Congrats brother
@@SM-gl3in Sistah, LOL I know you can't see past my hair lol! Thank you so much!
Great Stuff! I started the new year by not drinking coffee first thing in the morning and having a glass of water instead. My energy level actually improved and I stopped having an afternoon knuckle-dragging crash! Awesome!
Thank you for this! Explains why people who smoke and drink caffeine struggle to quit. As a doctor noticed that people who smoke and drink coffee together really struggle much more to quit. This is going to be a gamechanger as i try to help these patients. Really appreciate all you do Prof. Huberman.
Please look at the lung cancer and emphysema rates between smokers vs nicotine Vape users, and advise your patients accordingly. It could mean significant reduction of disease and extension of lifespan.
I am having my morning coffee while watching this video about caffeine. Perfect stimulation for the morning.
Thank you Dr. Huberman, I greatly appreciate your videos. After years of suffering from anxiety, and depression, I am finally starting to turn things around. And for once I actually feel like I'm alive. Now I am able to walk on the correct path in my life, and your podcast has no doubt helped me achieve this. I'm really grateful for your help. Stay strong.
Once I have a son will name him Andrew, because Mr. Huberman changed my life to the better, especially with fixing my sleep and stress
I might do this as well... Andrew Kausel, sounds great doesn't it?
@@fernandokausel4925 lol Awesome
I will call him Andrés.
Andrew Tate
I would name my kid Caffeine 🤣
I use caffeine every other day (Mon, Wed, and Fri). Sometimes I skip Wednesdays even. I only take it to workout and it works great. When caffeine was a daily thing I would start to have anxiety and panic attacks but taking those 4 days off really helps. I also had problems with sleep when I took caffeine every day. Also, when I took it daily I was much more tired without it. Now I have 0 withdrawals on the off days, and it hits way harder when I do take it. Nothing feels better than when a caffeinated workout is finished and I can go on with my day full of energy
I'm cafeine free for 6 months now - when I drank coffee everyday I had same experiences like you - BUT taking it every other day seem like a good idea! Maybe I'll try it cause I miss coffee
Have you tried pure Therapeutic ketones?
@@keatsu Just do once every-other week, 100mg. Your tolerance is gone now, so you can be superman twice a month.
@@keatsuprob drinking it every day again right 😂
What you're describing is definitely better than consuming caffeine daily. But it's even better to stop altogether. Because whenever you consume caffeine, your cortisol levels go up, which inevitably means stress. So the very best option is to stop altogether.
Thank you SO much for the details about adenosine piling up in my body! Of course, I've known about the circadian system, getting light early and the hormonal cascade....but I really didn't until you went through it. That my "first thing" coffee has actually been trapping adenosine is life-changing. This is not an exaggeration. For decades, my days have dragged. More and more caffeine isn't working. This is my third day of going out to open the chicken coop and to stay out there for 90" of daylight before having coffee. Today is my first day of feeling great energy instead of dragging my corpse through the hours. Your work is much appreciated!
I arrived at the "every other day" protocol by introspection, and it naturally evolved to "only days when I workout" cause it gives a great boost. I think it's great, and the fact that I've done it by pure self-experimentation indicates that there's something to it.
So you drink 1 cup only on workout days???
I’ve always said that those who can explain a complex phenomenon in a simple and understandable way, is a key indicator that this person is incredibly clever ❤ love your work Huberman
For your consideration: I’d be hugely interested in an episode on the effects of music and, more broadly, aural stimulation on the brain and body. I’m a classical musician (French horn) and while orchestral music is my drug of choice, I’m fascinated with how sound of all kinds, “music” or “not music,” produces changes in mood and physiological state.
Many thanks for a great episode as always.
Great idea!!
I have a feeling something will be coming on the creative process featuring Andrew’s good friend Rick Rubin. Hopefully! 🎉
Dr. Huberman I just want to tell you how thankful I am that I've found your content. I've been applying the tips you gave here in this episode for the past three days and it has worked wonders! I used to take another dose of caffeine after lunch to blunt the afternoon crash but after heeding your advice I'm surprised that I'm able to survive the day with just my morning caffeine pill. I have more energy for the whole day and I have better sleep at night. Thank you so much!
This podcast is so important for my journey as a person who don't drink coffee, tea or any caffeine beverages. I was diagnosed with ADHD last October and after intense researchers I started drinking coffee "café latte" every morning & it changed me in wired way no more fatigue & tiredness, more focus, more productivity. Thank you Dr. Andrew
Why not get medication? Usually much more effective than self-medicating with coffee.
@@droid16beta97 I don't want to & if you think caffeine isn't a medication do your research
@@hwwplp I have. It's fine you don't want to, I'm just wondering why, since you're willing to use caffeine which is usually much less effective.
@droid16beta97 Caffeine is a stimulant, similar to other ADHD meds, but like you pointed out its much less strong (and less potential side effects). If it works, it's definitely a safer choice.
5mths ago I stopped drinking coffee and reducing other caffeine containing foods (I also don’t drink any energy drinks, I do have caffeine-free teas). I was easily having 600mg of caffeine per coffee, consuming 4-6 cups per day (I’m 55kg - so far too much per cup, and far too often I now see!)
2 months ago I was craving a coffee, and started allowing myself 1 coffee on Saturday, 1 on Sunday. Since then, I have felt my work (Mon-Fri) energy levels and motivation deteriorate dramatically.
Thanks to this video I think I have realised I have been training myself that weekends are better than weekdays/work (we all KNOW that, but I think I’ve been subconsciously doing it on accident).
Thanks for a great video and helping me realise this!!
As an avid ice coffee drinker, I can definitely confirm if you skip one or two days . It hits so much better when you do have it ! Almost like a nice high to me and my alertness is optimal
Yes its true😊
Thank you Dr. Huberman, team, sponsors and supporters☀️
Thank you Dr. Huberman and team for the excellent, as usual, podcast. The impressive examples you give of where and how caffeine worked its way into life on earth makes me think that while you were not consulted at the design phase, perhaps the Caffeine Sprites were. No pun intended ;)
As briefly as I can: I love coffee, but I love sleep more, for that reason, at age 40, ten years ago, I gave up my beloved single morning cup. It was one of many things I did to improve my sleep hygiene. For years I had resisted, reasoning that surely one cup of stovetop espresso early in the day could not hurt my sleep. Then my ER doctor husband returned from a toxicology lecture where, as an aside, the speaker mentioned that people vary in the speed with which they metabolize caffeine. He explained that effectively, some people may clear one cup in a matter of hours, while others may be walking around with the equivalent of 3-4 cups in their system at any given time. That was enough info for me; I gave up coffee that day. The first two weeks were horrific - on my daily run I felt like I left my jet-pack at home! What would be the point if I couldn't enjoy my run anymore? But then at the two week mark I felt completely fine. And sleep, while not always 100%, became much better. (And then became fantastic once your podcast came on the scene, but that's another story involving early morning light, etc...)
Why do I tell you all this? Because I think my experience touches on some nuances that perhaps your podcast missed*, which may be relevant to others:
-You did mention the half-life of caffeine, but I'm wondering about this, based on the above lecture I mention. I will look for the studies on how/if people metabolize caffeine differently.
-Given that caffeine is a psychoactive drug, I think it is wise to take a drug holiday from it, from time to time, as one is typically recommended to do for any psychoactive drug. I had been on caffeine for a good twenty years without ever checking in on what life was like without it. When I gave up caffeine I became newly aware of how aggressively people were driving on the morning commute, for instance. You talk about giving up caffeine to experience a positive bump in performance when you go back on it, which is interesting, and useful, but I propose another additional goal: give it up for a while to see who you are without it. I found that I like myself more without caffeine. Turns out I'm more mellow than I realized. Just as motivated, just as active, just no background low-grade sense of urgency anymore.
-Perhaps it is the case that as we age the way we metabolize caffeine changes? I'm curious, I wonder. I was fine with it at 20, not so at 40. But then at 20 I had less to keep me up at night. Food for thought.
-My jet lag pretty much disappeared after giving up caffeine, and I fly from San Francisco to London fairly frequently, so I take this as pretty decent anec-data.
-I really enjoy not feeling drawn to, or "controlled by" a substance. There's still air, and water, and food, (and small amounts of chocolate of course), but I feel much freer now.
-I enjoy the smell of a cup of coffee as much as ever, and just content myself with that and lots of cups of Rooibos.
Thank you for considering these notes.
Kate.
*I should probably re-listen to be certain, but I'm on to your next podcast...
In my experience, coffee addiction (cause it is kinda like a drug) had negative effect on my mood, sleep etc. It was my "go to drink" to get things done. I had been drinking coffee for 8 years or so everyday in various forms. Coffee, Mate, even Tea. I stumbled upon videos with testimionals about caffeine withdrawal. I was scared but also curious about side effects and benefits that might come with caffeine-free life. I went cold turkey and struggled with motivation and mood for 4 weeks. First two weeks were horrible. It's 2 months caffeine free. My digestion dramatically improved. I sleep like a baby and have 4-7 dreams every night. I don't have to drink coffee every time I want to do something.
It is not just my experience.
I do not consume caffeine in any form. I have a lot more energy which is stable throughout the day. I don't experience anxiety (which happened almost everyday). I love coffee and Mate, I really do, but I do not plan to drink any caffeinated stuff probably ever.
I'm not saying that coffee is bad, I think it is like many things in life - the bigger dopaming hit - the bigger crash will be afterward. Coffee can be used wisely, as Dr. Huberman advises. My body does not react good to caffeine, probably processes it slower than normal and it messes up my sleep even after drinking small cup before 12 o'clock
Wise man,👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽 i was Starbucks coffe mastwr for 3 years and IT support for volkswagen gor 6 years (drinking coffe like crazy to fix computers) now im off for 2 years and im feeling pure not perfect 💪🏼👁
Totally agree, wonderful observation. I spot people addicted to coffee with the monotonous talk, he way they talk - like robots, I observed my friend I had to live with for a year, how she suffered from insomnia and energy crushes and mood swings all connected to coffee and anxiety she got from it, she actually already became OCD person. She can never admit that coffee really is the culprit, she says it does not effect her but it vividly does.
Addics will always protect their gold haha :D
@@eatmybutt42069is there similar thread for those who try to get rid from alcohol addiction? Thanks
Have you tried pure Therapeutic ketones?
I never drank coffee until I hit 40, when I needed it. This year I started a daily cold shower then added alt day fasting and like magic, my need for coffee disappeared. I have the occasional cup when I see clients but I don't feel a perk up with the coffee anymore. I feel the same. Best days are fasting days. It is nothing short of amazing. Month 11 of this regime. I don't think of coffee or crave it. I don't drink caffeine tea either. I just don't need it.
How long do you fast? and when?
@@justinwayne445 trying skipping breakfast and see how well you perform or how productive you are. Then have a light lunch and gauge your energy levels. For me all I need is a small high protein snack like yogurt or a protein bar to stave off the hunger around lunch time and I’m still pretty alert and active through out the afternoon. Anything more and I’ll start feeling sluggish and tired. When the work day is done and I’m ready to relax I’ll have a large dinner.
First day of delaying caffeine use until 90 minutes after waking up. And I can confirm that it does get rid of the post lunchtime drowsiness. Crazy!
I think of you as my virtual mentor, Andrew. I'm not sure how you would feel about that but I have learnt so much from you and I strongly believe that you haven't even scratched the surface of your own potential yet, I know there will be lots more to come from you that will benefit humanity and science as a whole. I look forward to it. Thank you!
A while ago I decided to completely cut out caffeine for about a month in order to understand my relationship to the substance a little better, and also because i was experiencing some negatives since I am apparently pretty sensitive to caffeine. After that month I went back to caffeine but in a very low amounts, early in the day, and only on workdays (which means about 4 days a week).
I have found that this every-other-day-method gives me the increased performance that I missed during my month of abstinence, whilst the days off of the substance keep the amount of caffeine in my system low, improve my sleep and keep my mood nice and mellow which were the biggest positives I wanted to keep from my month of abstinence.
It feels like this way I get the "best of both worlds" so to speak, although I bet there's more ways to improve. For instance, I'm definitely going to try your advice on waiting till 90/120 minutes after I've woken up.
Thanks for the video.
It's always a unique conversation to listen and or have for me towards the concept of energy.
As a shorter male who has been considered bipolar, I have found that literally anytime I want energy all I have to do is think it.
Essentially I'm like "hmm, I need a boost" I bounce on my feet a couple times and simply think "let's go" then off I go.
I can wake up at any time during the 24hrs of the day automatically ready to partake in any type of activity.
Prolonging caffeine intake 90 minutes after waking is an absolute game changer. Caffeine seems to work more effectively and I don’t appear to be experiencing the afternoon crash.
I've been running for years, and every time after a long run of moderate intensity I've always had crashes in mood in the evening several hours later. For lack of a better term, I call it my "runner's low". I've found nothing in the popular running literature to explain why this is - I assume they don't want to discourage people from running as it's easier to emphasise the high than talk about the low. The dopamine stacking explanation in this podcast was the first plausible mechanism I've heard that explains it! Especially as I make sure I'm sufficiently caffeinated before embarking to ensure good performance.
I just want to say thank you for this podcast series. On a variety of topics, I've learnt a lot that I'm surprised isn't more widely available seeing how important it is. Seeing dopamine depletion as a potential mechanism for that low, I'll be sure to listen to the dopamine podcast and look to experiment with ways I can try to raise dopamine naturally after my longer runs to see if I can find ways to offset that crash.
I can watch/listen to your podcasts without losing attention. Thank you so much Dr. Andrew!
Ive been a shift worker for 10 years now. Paramedic and then police. I can say for certain that large amounts of caffeine have played a major role in my life so far but Im ready to transition to a more natural, healthy lifestyle and work that will allow me to do so.
I use caffeine daily to get ready for work, but I feel the afternoon productivity dip (even waiting 1.5 hours after waking before drinking). I'm glad you mentioned stacking and an every-other-day schedule. I think those will help. Thanks!
Even though I don't really do all of it, it is important to keep in mind many of the things mentioned. With this information, you can really classify your caffeine consumption differently and not just go by how your body feels. A strong recommendation for anyone
Listening to this episode made me grateful that no one was able to patent caffeine before we learned all this great stuff about it. Imagine how much they'd be charging for it if they had!
You are one of the few things on the planet that can keep my attention's level up for 2h plus. Incredible
Andrew! Please make an episode about how to gain weight in a healthy way. Especially if you're dealing with chronic underweight issues, or have an auto immune illness. Love the work ❣️
I hope Professor does so in the future podcasts. I'm in the same situation as you are.
stacks of protein, my mum was suffering bone loss problems and I started air fryer chicken everyday.
She is back up to normal weight
This podcast was one of the best podcasts Andrew Huberman has done🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤❤
Most people can’t consume caffeine because they don’t pay attention to the dose
Instead of taking theanine separately to offset jitters from sources of caffeine such as coffee or pills, one could always just drink tea; Caffeine and theanine are naturally occuring in any tea made from the Camellia sinensis plant - white, green, black and oolong. Coffee shouts, tea whispers :)
First huberman video I've watched, wanted to say that you have really good presentation skills, you reiterate what needs to be said again and obviously do good research. Thanks for contributing this video to the world. I hope that you continue to make videos like this to keep people informed. I don't think anything like this was present but because of the way you present these videos, it makes it really easy for people to accept whatever you say as fact. In light of that, please continue to do good research so you get to the truth of a topic and work to keep your own personal biases out of this kind of content. Once again, thank you so much. I feel more informed!
I highly recommend the host to try the “every other day” method. I stumbled across it when I was trying to get rid of headaches. I found that if I didn’t drink more than two days in a row that I did not get any headaches. It also made me a lot more productive, because I was actually getting the benefits of the coffee; instead of being totally addicted and tolerant to it. My schedule is M, T, H, Sat are my caffeine days; others days off.
I heard some young fitness guy recommend that, hearing your success confirms I should try it.
Might also be worth tying just taking 1 day off every week as a “reset”. Instead of every other day having an off day, this minimizes the performance impact and can be planned on the day of your choice (I do Sundays), while still preventing tolerance (for me).
@@jjtitusDepends on dose. The problem is due to caffeines 6 hour half life. For a 100mg dose, you'll have ~7mg going through your veins after 24 hours. Timing the last dose as well as the amount is essential.
@@jjtitus if I drink coffee 3 or 4 days in a row then take a day off, I get bad headaches. I found two days on, one day off is my limit before becoming addicted (headache withdrawals).
Please keep sharing all this information Dr Huberman. This is crucial information that will greatly improve people’s lives! Blessings upon you and your staff.
Thank you for changing my life! I'm enjoying my total capacity as a human being and high productivity to reach my true potential as a businesswoman, mom, and girlfriend. My physical strength is excellent, so I can work out every day too!
Wasn’t needed to mention that you’re a businesswoman, mom or girlfriend
Please discuss health benefits or detriments of inversion, that is, hanging upside down with head lower than feet, or inverting on a slant, that is, with head lower than feet but on an angle less than 180°. Thank you for all you do, Dr. Huberman!
Im so excited for the episode on menstrual cycles ! I feel like I hear all kinds of different information & it’s hard to know what to trusttt. Im so ready to have a whole episode dedicated to reliable info & facts on a topic I’ve always found so hard to get clear info on!
What podcast is this? 5 days before i see my mood changing and brain fog
I learn something new every time I listen…you, my man, are a pro at presenting material in a clear and digestible manner!
First of all, a huge thank you to the Huberman Lab Team for their work. Both Andrew Huberman and Lex Fridman are my heroes. Not only they have an incredible work ethic, but more importantly they always emphasise the significance of being a good person. Deeply grateful I stumbled upon these two podcasts.
Anyway, I'd love to know more about IQ and intelligence. Are you going to make a podcast about this topic? There are a lot of talks about it. Many people say it's a gift, and you simply cannot enhance your intelligence or IQ across your lifespan. Moreover, there is a lot of debate about what intelligence is. I see it as the speed of pattern recognition and the depth of abstract thinking. Probably I'm wrong. Jordan Peterson even presented the table that maps IQ to jobs. I understand that this topic is complicated not only in terms of neuroscience, but in terms of ethic as well. Nevetheless, we probably should talk more about it.
P.S. If you are also interested in this topic, please like this comment in order to HL team to see it :)
It's widely known that very few gifted people are born with a photographic memory, or the ability to solve complex math problems similar to a calculator. Having said that, the concept of the "empty slate," was a philosophical concept popularized by the philosopher John Locke in the 17th century and proposed that the mind was an initially empty slate that could be filled with the empirical observations one makes about the world.. However, a man named Friedrich Nietzsche claimed that humans were born with innate knowledge, rather than being born with a "blank slate" that was filled in by experience. While I accept that others are born with advantages, I also believe that one can vastly improve their understanding and ability through experience.
Some are born with speed, others with strength. Some are born with a tall light frame, others short and stout. Some are born with empathy and a conscience, others become Republicans.
@@6789uiop Why did you have to get political 😂😂
People who say that you can't increase your IQ are factually wrong just because it's a test and you can train for it, lol.
@@justinwayne445 US science is imbued with politics, of course.
Dear Dr. Huberman,
First off, thank you very much for your contributions. You have provided many great insights and benefits from your experience.
You have also been candid and admitted that you are not a nutritionist. And let us assume, you are also not a physician, a biologist, naturopath, or homepath. Or to put another way, a holistic practitioner.
Regarding coffee, while it may be beneficial in some ways, it is hugely detrimental in other ways. For example, it increases uric acid and causes uric acid deposits. Uric acid has been linked with several disorders and illnesses, such as Alzheimer’s disease. Uric acid deposits affect the brain, the joints, and can be especially felt in the feet.
Furthermore, the caffeine is quite high, and it leads to adrenal fatigue. The majority of Americans are suffering from adrenal fatigue. We could take much to recover, and only seconds to go back into adrenal fatigue again.
Hey Andrew! I know this is an older video but you mentioned caffeine being good for asthma. Just wanted to let you know that when I was much younger I had asthma and my mom read somewhere that black coffee could help with that. She hated the inhaler because for some reason it turned me into “an angry little monster”😂 anyway she started giving me strong, plain black coffee. It very quickly got rid of all of my asthma and today at 15 years old I don’t struggle with it at all and actually have pretty good endurance without any trouble breathing. I do have to confess to being a little addicted to plain black coffee at this point in my life though. I know I drink too much but this podcast has helped me organize it in a helpful way. Thank you.
Wow😊😊😊
I quit drinking any sort of caffeine at all for the last 5 years. In that time I had 2 kids. I have been extremely exhausted for the last 5 years and it’s affected my mood greatly. I started drinking coffee again 5 days ago and my mood has improved significantly and my energy has tripled. I was also overeating before (my body was craving energy) and after starting to drink coffee I eat an appropriate amount for my body size. I never thought I’d incorporate coffee back into my life but the improvement has been too significant. I’m topping out at 100mg of caffeine a day, so just 1 cup of coffee.
Caffeine helps me prevent my migraines. I was diagnosed with chronic migraine disorder (16 or more per month) about 8yrs ago and I learned that migrainous people thrive on routine. Having the same amount of caffeine at the same times each day helps me prevent migraines. But this need for routine applies to everything- same amount of sleep (even getting 30 min more sleep can trigger a migraine), same relative diet/eating schedule, same water intake, same amount of physical activity... just having a lazy day of watching movies and snacking on things that are outside of the usual diet can trigger an awful 72-hr migraine. Stress and also excitement (cortisol spikes) can also trigger migraines.
We have to just find what works for us, and then try to stick to it as much as possible, especially in the hours and days before an event that we need to be migraine-free for.
I hope this helps someone who suffers from migraines!
have you ever tried taking magnesium for migraines? high humidity days do that to me sometimes or dehydration
Nice. Also, go vegan, proven best diet by largest health studies, human anatomy shows it, carbs grew our brains, and it's blatant with rising statistics in non-vegans and their major health issues.
Also, the average person, unlike me, is dehydrated, which destroys energy levels by 20-35% or so by only 1-2% dehydration, cause migraines, confusion, etc. ;p They say about 75% of Americans drink only about 2.5 cups of water on average a day.
Thankfully, I'm not one of them, and I thankfully live abroad, but I was born and raised in infamous Miami, FL, USA.
Exercise gives more energy, and yoga and walking are what I stick to these days, accompanied by taking stairs when I walk daily. Hehe.
Fasting too, breathwork, Baoding balls, regular stretching, breaks from electronic devices, meditation, etc.
have you tried meditation?
hyperstimulation is the cause of mine. i thrive on silence and i limit my internet hours. i can only watch maybe couple of videos like these (informative ones) and i spend my hours on relaxation and silence.
it cured everything. i tend to hyoerventillate when i use my phone. it would hurt my right shoulder blade by engulfing more air and storing there.
and when that happens, i would just lie down on my bed and rest. the air will come out on its own lol
Interesting and I’m glad you have relief!! If you don’t mind, for my horrible migraines, salting my foods helped cure them!! Caffeine made my headache types worse. And I have Stan Efferding to thank for this!! Salt salt salt!!! Especially if you exercise. Game and life changer for my headaches and for athletic ability. Just in case anyone has those types of headaches!! Just be sure you aren’t salt sensitive obviously
Going to my shift work job and listening to this… I over indulge Deathwish coffee every work day, I should seek intervention but it’s my last vice (actually just cutting out cocktails during the work week too) the protocols that I’ve picked up from Andrew Huberman have been life extending at least I hope
Professor Huberman, thank you for igniting my curiosity in science, I mean this from the bottom of my heart
I haven't tried a strict every other day caffeine schedule but I do occasionally skip caffeine for one or sometimes two days, and I certainly notice that every time I ingest caffeine again after the break, I feel ELATED. My mood, energy, focus, etc all skyrockets for awhile. Whereas after many days in a row of drinking caffeine, the effects quickly become very blunted.
Thank-you for explaining caffeine, it makes me understand those lines I see at Starbucks. No matter how much inflation hits and we pay for gas, it hasn’t changed anything. You are a valuable man in America Mr Huberman.
An outstanding episode, Dr Huberman
Thank you very much for your fine expertise and your incredible generosity of sharing your knowledge with general public. This is simply priceless. You are a true Mensch.
every statistic mentioned is literally about us. thanks dr.huberman for this amazing podcast
it is THE most jawdropping podcast (along the podcast with Peter Attia), that i have listened to date.
Caffiene (in the form of sugar free energy drinks) is the single most addictive thing I have ever encountered. I can drink any amount of alchohol, smoke any amount of cannabis, be put on any amount of morphine or opioid pain killer during a hospital stay or following an accident and I'll have no issues. I've never abused opiods or used cocaine/meth etc but caffeine based on things I have used, it's a whole different beast. Nice to finally understand some of the reasons why.
Thank you for these videos , instead of wasting time scrolling or watching pointless tv i am listening and learning information that is helping my life
I stacked caffeine, naps, and cold showers to help me increase my baseline dopamine levels.
I would ingest caffeine, take a 10-minute nap with my feet up, and right afterward take a 2-3 minute cold shower.
For about 4 weeks, I would do this twice a day, once after an hour after waking and then again around noon.
A true biohacker. Very cool idea
Why feet up?? Increase bloodflow to brain haha?
@@KellyPie to reduce pressure on the heart
I fall asleep listening to your voice on various videos, depending on how stressful work was that day, and I swear I wake up each day refreshed and somehow more intelligent. 🤜🤛 thanks! Thank you for the indepth explanations.
The audio is processed by your subconscious while sleeping.
Thank you for touching on the effects regarding women's menstrual cycle. I think it is great that you on Huberman Lab is educating about hormones and menstrual cycle to normalise and inform about the human sexuality. I am also looking forward to hear about the episode completely regarding the menstrual cycle! Thanks for the episode, and the podcast in its whole. I have been listening to your podcast for one year now!
Im thankful for you man! You and jordan petersons early work has changed my life exponentially!
Hello class good morning, for those you do enjoy coffee, enjoy it, I just got mine before working out.
Thank you Mr. Huberman. This episode is very appreciated!!!
Whew, this podcast is consistently the best part of my week. One thing I would love to know more about on this topic is the different types of caffeine. For example, I stopped drinking coffee for a while a couple of years ago and switched to matcha. I experienced more sustained and subtle effects and stopped crashing in the afternoons (or having energy spikes). I waited until I had my own experience before reading too much about it, and then found that the qualities of the caffeine in matcha (is it true for all green tea?) include exactly what I'd noted - sustained alertness, no jitteriness, no crashes late in the day, and no dramatic energy spikes. Could you say anything about why that is, and whether the 1-3mg:kg ratio is the same for all types of caffeine? (On that, I assume so, as you include caffeine in pill form in the recommendation).
Thanks so much for all you do 🙌
I’m sure there’s a lot more to it but tea contains L-theanine whereas coffee does not and this may the difference I think your talking about.
Most people do not understand the differences between types of fat cells. So good to get a better understanding of this.
I've lived most of my life without caffeine as I am super sensitive. I even have to be careful ingesting chocolate. I'd love to know why that is. I'm also very sensitive to alcohol. I'd also love to participate in a study on caffeine but since I'm super sensitive not sure if that would be a problem.
That said I recently started drinking a small amount of caffeinated tea in the mornings. Thanks so much for this episode! I'm really able to understand how to use it to benefit me without doing any damage!
I’m the same way! I’m extremely sensitive to caffeine.. chocolate, anything with stimulants, alcohol. I wasn’t always that way, it started in my mid 20s. It seems like I developed an allergy/intolerance. I can’t even have decaf. I don’t know what’s wrong with me.
I think this can be due to low low stomach acid. I have similar issues with all 3😅 until 4 years ago I used to drink black coffee, red wine and sometimes indulge with dark chocolate. But 4-5 years ago I stared having stomach issues and learned I had SIBO which is caused by low stomach acid. I found lots of info through different natural path podcast and created my own protocol. I even fasted for a 72 hours to kill the bacteria 😅 now I’m ok. I can enjoy decaf coffee but small amounts, and a glass of wine here and there. But can’t go back to drink caffeinated coffee.
You might have IBS
@@anapadilla7133what's wrong with you my friend is PLACEBO effect. Can't drink decaf? Oh, come on, that's 97-99% caffeine free...
I work third shift 14 shifts a month and have been skipping caffeine on my off days to allow me some sleep flexibility for a couple years and definitely noticed a spike in overall efficacy of it on the days I do use it with very little impact on the days that I don't so these studies certainly track with my own experiences.
I’ve gotten so much value out of your podcasts. Thank you for providing this resource for free, it’s incredible. Learning about the systems that control my behaviors has given me a lot of confidence to pursue making large scale changes to my everyday life that I don’t think I would have attempted otherwise. Thank you so much.
I reinforced Huberman podcast with a cup of mild coffee before noon. Thank you!
I stopped drinking coffee about 3 years ago. At least. Before that I had 2 coffees a day. I quit just to have less addiction in my life, nothing particular. Beside a few days of headache it was no problem.
I started dringking mate. I drank usually one or two daily. After a few years I noticed that when I dont drinking mate I'm kind of the same, it does not add that much energy, so I stopped mate for a month. I had still a lot of energy throughout the day.
Now I sometimes drink one mate for a few months and sometimes I dont take any cffeine for a few months.
Sometimes when I drink a coffee I feel a lot of energy but also feel strange, constantly thinking, wanting to DO THINGS.Get things done, cant be calm.
I noticed lately that any type of caffeine maes me agitated, too alert. Makes me a bit aggressive and too alert. impatient and nervous.
I'd like to drink a coffee now and then but I stop myself always lately because of these above....
I found that the best way to stay alert and energetic is any kind of keto diet - that is, no or very little carbohydrates. Caffeine helps, but its effects are not nearly as transformative, as that of the diet's.Though, I still drink coffee, but only in the morning (about 9 AM). I brew it in a geyser coffee maker from the same amount of freshly ground beans every time. That way I control the amount of caffeine I consume (although a pill or measured amount of powdered caffeine would give better control), get all the health benefits and none of the sleep problems. When coffee is too much, green tea is a great option, and it tastes better too (I prefer oolong, puerh an some other fancy variants).
Thank you very much, Andrew! Whoever is creating all this world, it manifests through you and your work, which is indescribably fantastic!
Another great episode. Understanding the science behind the timing and effects of caffeine is invaluable. I just started drinking coffee to minimize afternoon crashes. I now understand why the coffee has gone from tasting "meh" to very good - science!
Rating: 7.9/10
In Short: Caffeine is one HELL of a drug
Notes: A really good and classic huberman episode, especially given his love of Yerba Mate. The 4 mechanisms for caffeine are very interesting and make a lot of sense, really pretty simple. Then explaining how in nature plants with caffeine improve animals 'mood' and 'feeling' and thus make them more attractive stamps this home even more. Basically the fact that we as a species are attracted to caffeine is neuronal across any species, down to even bee's, and the science and underlying the positive effects of caffeine are so strong and overwhelming. However, huberman is rightfully cautious and doesn't just recommended you go crazy, and instead discusses a lot of ways to abstain from caffeine to achieve a stronger effect later, and to not try to get dependent on it. Huberman does a great job not making too many strong claims based on the data and does a nice dance of mechanism and tools here that make this a classic and high quality solo episode.
Personal approval seeking episode for us.🤗
Awesome talk! I realized many things that I was doing wrong as a daily coffee drinker (like drinking it right away in the morning, almost 400 ml per dosage, and putting sugar on it). The understand of how it works internally in the body and some best practices to drink it will sure help a lot
As someone who suffers from migraines that are often triggered by caffeine amounts, I'm so glad I found this podcast! One thing I did not hear discussed in the episode is pros/cons of drinking caffeine at steady,low doses throughout the morning/day. Are there any studies on this? Thanks so much!
Sipping my morning coffee as I listen 😊
One of the best episodes yet in my opinion! Thanks huberman
Ye gods man, you’re right! Yesterday I deferred my coffee and powered through the day!! I usually take a nap or nidra at 3pm cos I’m literally falling asleep but no siree, not yesterday and I suspect not today (which is lucky cos I have to work). I was so energetic yesterday arvo I even did yard work for a few hours whereas normally I’d be ‘resting’ reading quietly after my nap. All this time I thought I was getting old pffffft not at all! Thank you yet again! Life changer, particularly when time is my most precious resource and work and study demands so much of it; you’ve given me a heap back! 🙏
Petition to do an episode all about vitamins and their effects on the nervous system. Along with vitamin deficiencies and other actionable tools one can take.
Today was day 1 of waiting for 120 min after waking up to drink caffeine ! Usually drink it RIGHT when I get up to get ready for the gym but the afternoon crash around 1pm is HARDDD. As a law student I don't have time for naps lol
Thanks Andrew - excited to see the outcome
Hi Andrew, I have mixed opinions about the every other day coffee cup.
Surely It boosts the caffeine effect (I'd say it feels more than a 2x), but the day you don't drink it, you can be very distracted.
I guess it's because you know there is caffeine the next day, and by anticipating to that 'reward', you're making the effort more painful on the other day.
But if you can overcome that day, I do believe this way of drinking is better than daily
Thank you! Your eloquent podcast is really helping me curing a brain tumor in the speech centers of my brain! A future student at Stanford.
Just wanted to say THANK YOU for your amazing input, you explain everything really well and it's really comfortable to listen to, which makes those 2 hours+ pass in no time at all.
Thanks again! Great stuff
I feel so good at 3:30 PM in this afternoon that I want to tell the Internet. Thanks for the advice doc!
I noticed that I get a longer deep sleep if I listen to Andrew's voice right before sleep. Last night was 2 hours ❤️
I've demonized caffeine due to its withdrawal effects in the past. Thank you for providing me with the information I didn't know I wanted and eliminating my bias.
I'm almost 100% caffeine free for 10 months now. Started tapering it off in January.
This isn't something you'd expect or see from googling it, but for me, it resolved my tinnitus which I had for over 10 years.
I tried having 1 coffee again 2 months ago, and the tinnitus returned for a little over a day.
I'm also finding that I sleep through the night now, and sleep longer (7-8 hours), but I don't wake up as refreshed as I used to when I had the interrupted sleep while drinking coffee.
Thinking about trying it again but with that tea Huberman keeps mentioning every few podcast episodes.
How long were you caffeine free before you noticed the tinnitus was getting better or gone?
What about your energy levels?
@@paigeallen7479 So I tapered off gradually over 4 weeks. About another month later I noticed it was gone.
@@nicolasrealMD They were terrible for a long time actually. It took somewhere between 4-5 months before they got back completely to what I considered "normal", as in, when I was drinking coffee.
If you're not having any health issues, I don't recommend stopping, it doesn't seem like it's too harmful for healthy people.
Only up-sides other upsides are sleeping through the night (though not feeling particularly refreshed in the morning) and my hands used to shake very slightly (noticable when I was doing very fine soldering work) but they don't anymore.
Love listening to your podcasts Dr. Hubernan! I learn so much from you. Refreshes all those things I forgot back in my PNB classes many years ago. Great stuff please continue to share! 👍
We love you professor Huberman!❤
Can't say it enough 😊
I've always said caffeine is the last thing I'd ever give up. If I abstain I get a nasty headache and usually lose a day of productivity, my homeostasis is disrupted. Delaying it an hour or so is challenging, depends on the day. I also find it really best from hot coffee. I don't seem to enjoy caffeine as much from tea or yerba mate. I wonder why?
Thanks for all the good info Dr. Huberman!
I'm currently cycling off coffee, day 6, after consuming way too much. Don't have the energy I used to for now, but I know it'll be better for me in the long run. When I stop seeing the benefits of focus and need more to keep me going, it's a problem. Careful out there guys! It's everrrrywhere!
Why go for 6 days when you could just cut the amount a bit?
@@glacialimpala at the time of the post it was my 6th day of an undetermined period, at least a month. I dont like the dependency on it. I love the ritual and the mouthfeel as I make bulletproof coffee when I do have it. But for me at this time, no caffeine is best.
@@Truthseeker88888 Sure, I was just curious! If it no longer brought you just joy makes sense you weren't happy about dependency.
man, not to be another echo in the wind, thank you, again. honestly.
Having the "unfortunate/fortunate" ability to let the mind just wonder like as if someone just turned on a switch, your teachings have taught "how to control" that reaction through diet, exercise, sleep. I always followed a plan, but taking it to the next level was what helped. Thank you for allowing me to gain access to parts of the mind through such "basic" yet extremely beneficial, needless to say.
If you happen to read this, and I promise to check if there are any (I'm sure there are, not doubt); words spoken on the heart would be nice to learn. I really would be pleased to know more abooot that (a lil Canadian humor). Awesome, till next time! 🙏