Transcript

00:00:00So dopamine is this chemical in our brains
00:00:02that we figured out how to hijack in the modern world.
00:00:05Things like our phones and social media,
00:00:12fast food and alcohol,
00:00:14all of these things spike our dopamine
00:00:15and give us instant feelings of reward and pleasure.
00:00:18But the big problem is that we are increasingly
00:00:20becoming addicted to these factors
00:00:22that cause these huge surges in dopamine.
00:00:24So now we find it really hard to actually do more
00:00:26of what actually matters to us.
00:00:28And so many people in the modern world
00:00:29are just struggling to take action
00:00:31towards what they're seeking for.
00:00:33They're struggling, they have dreams in their mind
00:00:35with their careers or, "Yeah, I really want to be healthy."
00:00:37And they get a little bit motivated for a second
00:00:39and then it crashes.
00:00:40And society really needs to understand
00:00:43that operating and getting this chemical into balance
00:00:45is what's going to enable you to actually get focused
00:00:47and stay consistently motivated.
00:00:49This is TJ Power.
00:00:50He's a neuroscientist who runs the Dose Lab,
00:00:53which specializes in understanding
00:00:54the four main brain chemicals
00:00:56that influence our day-to-day lives.
00:00:58That's dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins.
00:01:01We're going to be exploring each one of these
00:01:03in this four-part video series.
00:01:04And there's going to be actionable tips in each of them
00:01:06to help you increase these brain chemicals in a healthy way
00:01:09to completely level up your life, fingers crossed.
00:01:11So in this video, which is episode one
00:01:12of the four-part series, we are talking about dopamine.
00:01:15Let's go.
00:01:16Part one, the law of dopamine.
00:01:18So dopamine has lots of different functions in our brain,
00:01:20but in our reward system, dopamine is the major currency
00:01:23that motivates us to do stuff.
00:01:25As we evolved as homo sapiens,
00:01:27dopamine was the chemical that motivated us
00:01:29to do things that kept us alive,
00:01:31which is very different to how we live today.
00:01:33Our brain spent 300,000 years developing them
00:01:35for an entirely different lifestyle,
00:01:37a lifestyle where you had to wake up,
00:01:38hunt for food, build shelter, connect with each other,
00:01:41fight one another.
00:01:42That's what they're designed for.
00:01:43And dopamine was this chemical that lived deep within us
00:01:46that enabled us to take action
00:01:47toward these challenging things that would keep us alive.
00:01:50In our modern world, we basically figured out
00:01:52how to hack that feeling, that hunting
00:01:54or connecting with people or building shelter,
00:01:57and we'd hack it with things like porn and TikTok
00:02:00and cigarettes, alcohol, whatever it may be.
00:02:02And then it goes on to create very big challenges
00:02:05within our dopamine system,
00:02:06specifically with our dopamine baselines.
00:02:08So dopamine is made inside nerve cells
00:02:10called neurons in our brain.
00:02:11We start off with an amino acid called tyrosine,
00:02:14which then gets converted into L-DOPA.
00:02:16L-DOPA then becomes dopamine.
00:02:18And this dopamine is stored in these vesicles,
00:02:20which are at the end of our neurons.
00:02:21So the dopamine is ready to be released at synapses,
00:02:24which are basically the junctions
00:02:25in between the neurons in our brain
00:02:27and how they communicate with each other.
00:02:28But the really cool thing
00:02:29about this whole manufacturing process
00:02:31is that we make dopamine when we do hard things.
00:02:34And the harder the thing is, the more dopamine we make.
00:02:37(upbeat music)
00:02:39Effectively, the chemical evolved within us to be earned.
00:02:44So the whole way in which it operates
00:02:46is that if we do something that is effortful,
00:02:48dopamine will begin to generate in our brain.
00:02:50And dopamine actually operates in little bubbles,
00:02:52they're called vesicles.
00:02:53And any kind of activity that requires hard work
00:02:56will literally manufacture these vesicles in the brain.
00:02:59So if the first thing you do in the morning after waking up
00:03:01is go on your phone and scroll through Instagram or TikTok,
00:03:04then your stores of dopamine are gonna get used up
00:03:06and you won't feel motivated to do anything
00:03:08with the rest of your day.
00:03:09It's like bursting all of these bubbles.
00:03:10Whereas if you start your day, for example,
00:03:12by doing something like exercise or making your bed
00:03:14or going outside,
00:03:15then you'll build up your reserves of dopamine
00:03:17instead of depleting them.
00:03:19And you'll have so much more motivation
00:03:20to work towards the stuff you actually want to achieve.
00:03:23And this is basically the law of dopamine.
00:03:25Law of dopamine is to take action when you wake every day.
00:03:30And what I mean by that is
00:03:31as soon as you open your eyes in the morning,
00:03:33the most important thing you can do
00:03:34is get moving effectively.
00:03:36Dopamine is literally involved in movement.
00:03:38There's actually this really big phenomenon
00:03:40on TikTok at the moment called rotting,
00:03:42which is where people literally can't get out of their bed.
00:03:45And particularly teenage girls call it rotting
00:03:47where they like cannot move.
00:03:49They can't get out of their bed to do anything.
00:03:50And the reason that's happened is cause dopamine is so low
00:03:53from the TikTok and the sugar and so on
00:03:55that they can't take action at all.
00:03:57If you wake up in the morning
00:03:58and you just immediately get the system moving,
00:04:01even if it feels horrible,
00:04:02actually the more horrible it is,
00:04:03the more dopamine you're gonna generate
00:04:05cause it operates in terms of that pain,
00:04:06pleasure type balance.
00:04:08And if you start adopting that kind of principle,
00:04:11take action when you wake every day,
00:04:13it just means dopamine is on a very good path
00:04:15from the moment you begin.
00:04:16Now there are two really good questions
00:04:18you can ask yourself to find out
00:04:19if something is good for your dopamine or not.
00:04:21Number one, how quickly does the thing give you pleasure?
00:04:25So things that are naturally pleasurable
00:04:27are gonna slowly increase your dopamine levels
00:04:29and you won't have this massive crash afterwards.
00:04:31But if something gives you a massive hit of dopamine
00:04:33straight away and that feeling of instant gratification,
00:04:36then it's unlikely to be a healthy way
00:04:38to increase your dopamine
00:04:39because it'll just come crashing back down again
00:04:41and you won't feel great.
00:04:41If you suddenly get super high TikTok spike of dopamine,
00:04:45you then put the TikTok down and you're suddenly like,
00:04:47"Oh, I feel like shit."
00:04:48You're apathetic, you can't take action towards anything.
00:04:51And it's 'cause your brain is just so confused
00:04:52by the unnatural spike that it crashes out effectively.
00:04:55And then question number two is,
00:04:56is this going to benefit me or someone else in the future?
00:05:00If the answer is yes, then this is healthy dopamine.
00:05:02Things like cooking dinner instead of eating out,
00:05:04going for a walk with a friend
00:05:05or smashing the like button for the YouTube algorithm.
00:05:07But if the answer is no,
00:05:08then it's generally not a good healthy way
00:05:10to increase your dopamine levels.
00:05:11And this might include things
00:05:12like scrolling on TikTok for hours
00:05:14or smoking or vaping or drinking alcohol.
00:05:16I'm not saying that you're only ever allowed to do things
00:05:18that contribute to personal development in some sort of way.
00:05:20But if we're interested in how to take back control
00:05:22over our dopamine,
00:05:23if you're finding yourself struggling to focus,
00:05:25getting distracted all the time,
00:05:26then it's worth appreciating the role that dopamine plays
00:05:28in this whole system.
00:05:29And maybe like nudging your balance
00:05:30away from instant gratificationy things
00:05:32that just let you experience joy and reward
00:05:34in the present moment.
00:05:35More towards slower things
00:05:36that actually can help improve your life in the long term.
00:05:38If you want, I'm not telling you how to live your life.
00:05:40These are just some suggestions.
00:05:40Feel free to take them or not.
00:05:42By the way, singing with a group of people
00:05:43or doing exercise with a group of people
00:05:45or working with a group of people
00:05:47makes whatever you're doing feel much better.
00:05:49And that is where the sponsor of this video comes in,
00:05:50which is actually me,
00:05:51because this video is sponsored
00:05:53by our own product, Productivity Lab.
00:05:54If you're the sort of person who works from home a lot,
00:05:56maybe in your day job or maybe on your side hustle
00:05:58or your book project or your memoir
00:06:00or your YouTube channel or whatever,
00:06:01and you find yourself sitting at the computer
00:06:03and then not actually doing the thing
00:06:05that you intended to do,
00:06:07then Productivity Lab is gonna be absolutely perfect for you.
00:06:09Essentially, Productivity Lab is an online platform
00:06:12and community of entrepreneurs
00:06:13and creators and professionals.
00:06:14And we all get together
00:06:15and we work together through focus labs.
00:06:17We do reflective workshops each week
00:06:19where you reflect on how your week has gone
00:06:20and set goals and plan your next week.
00:06:23So it's sort of serves as an accountability mechanism.
00:06:25And I like to think of it
00:06:26as like CrossFit or Peloton for productivity.
00:06:28You're joining a Zoom coworking session with other people.
00:06:31I joined these for three hours each morning
00:06:32because I just get way more work done
00:06:34when I'm in a focus lab session,
00:06:36knowing that other people around me on screen virtually
00:06:38are also doing their work.
00:06:39And doing this stuff every day
00:06:40pretty much doubles my productivity.
00:06:41And we've had so many success stories
00:06:43from students in Productivity Lab
00:06:44who've said things like,
00:06:45"Hey, I've been procrastinating on starting
00:06:48my YouTube channel for ages
00:06:49and then I joined focus lab sessions
00:06:51and now I've actually done it."
00:06:52Or things like,
00:06:52"I've spent five years planning to make this new iOS app
00:06:55that I've been planning to make
00:06:56and then I never actually did it
00:06:57but then I joined a few focus lab sessions
00:06:59and now I've built my minimum viable product."
00:07:01And so students in Productivity Lab
00:07:02are getting a lot of good results.
00:07:03There's a link down below.
00:07:04You can check out productivitylab.com
00:07:06and you can see if it's the sort of thing
00:07:07that might be right for you.
00:07:08And who knows,
00:07:09maybe I will see you in one of our coworking sessions
00:07:11or in one of our reflection workshops
00:07:12or in one of our planning sessions
00:07:13or in one of our book clubs
00:07:15or maybe in one of our in-person meetups as well.
00:07:17Part two, four ways to control dopamine.
00:07:20Okay, so now let's look at four actionable ways
00:07:21that we can take back control of the dopamine in our brains.
00:07:24And what I love about these tips from TJ
00:07:26is that anyone can start putting them into practise
00:07:28as pretty much as soon as you finish watching this video.
00:07:30Action number one, phone fasting.
00:07:32Yeah, so with dopamine,
00:07:33the first thing to understand,
00:07:35the most effective thing we've seen
00:07:36in all of our research and training
00:07:37is this concept we've developed called phone fasting,
00:07:40which is just having agreed times with yourself
00:07:42where you will fast, quote unquote, from your phone.
00:07:45The most important time in your whole life
00:07:47to fast from your phone is when you wake up in the morning.
00:07:50Your brain wakes up, it's seeking for dopamine,
00:07:52it's seeking to attack the day.
00:07:53If it goes straight into the phone,
00:07:54you're really setting yourself on
00:07:56a much more difficult journey.
00:07:58So if you, for example, unlock your phone
00:07:59as soon as you wake up,
00:08:00then probably the best thing to do
00:08:02is to put your phone on charge
00:08:03somewhere outside of your room
00:08:04and use something else as an alarm clock.
00:08:06And then you might wanna do these three things
00:08:08straight away when you wake up.
00:08:09Number one, go and brush your teeth.
00:08:10I hope you're doing that every day anyway,
00:08:12so you might as well do it first thing when you wake up.
00:08:13Number two, splash your face with cold water
00:08:15that helps you wake up.
00:08:16And three, make your bed.
00:08:18And all of this is aligned with the law of dopamine
00:08:20because we are physically taking action
00:08:22and you're immediately increasing these stores of dopamine
00:08:24in our brain instead of immediately depleting them.
00:08:26Ideally, we wanna be phone fasting
00:08:28for at least 15 minutes every single morning.
00:08:30And then ideally in the evenings,
00:08:31we would have 60 minutes of time before bed
00:08:33where we're not on our phones.
00:08:35I struggle to do this,
00:08:35which is why I have an app called Opal.
00:08:37They are not affiliated with me in the slightest.
00:08:39I wish they were.
00:08:40I wish I owned the app or invented the app or something.
00:08:42But Opal is a great app
00:08:43that I've been using for several months now.
00:08:44And it essentially blocks social media apps
00:08:46from 10 p.m. to 9 a.m.
00:08:48Then it's like, if I'm on my phone,
00:08:49I'll read on my Kindle and then I go to bed.
00:08:51Easy.
00:08:52It's just massively improved my quality of life
00:08:53by not being physically able to access
00:08:55these offending apps at nighttime.
00:08:57Now something else I find really interesting about dopamine
00:08:59is that we build up our stores of dopamine when we're bored,
00:09:02but we normally don't let ourselves experience boredom
00:09:04because we're always reaching for our phones
00:09:05or whatever device we happen to have on our present.
00:09:08Actually in a state of boredom,
00:09:09your brain will be generating dopamine.
00:09:11It goes into this like restorative state
00:09:12where it's sitting there thinking,
00:09:13oh, I've got a break right now.
00:09:14So it's gonna build some dopamine.
00:09:16If you constantly just crash your dopamine
00:09:17during your moments of boredom,
00:09:18it's not great for the brain chemical.
00:09:20And this is why TJ recommends
00:09:22that we try and do a two hour phone fast
00:09:24on Saturdays and on Sundays.
00:09:25And to try our best to embrace this feeling of boredom
00:09:28instead of always running away from it.
00:09:29For me, the way I apply this is when I go on walks,
00:09:31I try and avoid having my phone
00:09:33where I'm listening to audiobooks or podcasts
00:09:35or music or whatever.
00:09:36And I keep my phone with me, my AirPods with me,
00:09:38just in case I'd like a little pocket notebook type thing
00:09:40and a pen.
00:09:41And so if I chill in a cafe or a coffee shop
00:09:43or something or a park bench,
00:09:44I can do some little pen and paper journaling.
00:09:46And I like to think that that helps increase
00:09:48overall my dopamine levels over time.
00:09:50Action number two, find your flow.
00:09:52Okay, so I'm gonna quote psychologist,
00:09:54Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi here.
00:09:56"Our most rewarding activities are not natural.
00:09:59They demand an effort that initially
00:10:00one is reluctant to make.
00:10:03But once the interaction starts to provide feedback
00:10:05to the person's skills, it usually begins to be intrinsically
00:10:08enjoyable."
00:10:09Now here Csikszentmihalyi is describing the flow state,
00:10:11which is something that he came up with in the 1970s.
00:10:14So when we're in our flow state,
00:10:15we are hyper-focused on that one thing
00:10:17that we're trying to do.
00:10:18And in general, to get into this flow state,
00:10:20there needs to be a match between our skill levels
00:10:22at doing the thing and how challenging the thing actually is.
00:10:24So if something's too easy, then you're likely to feel bored
00:10:27rather than being in the flow state.
00:10:28But if something is too difficult,
00:10:29then you might feel anxious and stressed.
00:10:31And so if you wanna get into this flow state,
00:10:32we wanna be trying to find that balance
00:10:34between challenge and skill level,
00:10:36and sometimes even artificially adding in a challenge
00:10:38if we feel like something's too easy,
00:10:40or trying our best to reduce our anxiety and stress
00:10:43associated with something if we're putting too much pressure
00:10:45and importance on the thing.
00:10:46Now what's really cool is that researchers have done studies
00:10:48where they scan people's brains to see which areas
00:10:51are the most active when they're in a flow state.
00:10:53And these studies tell us that our reward system
00:10:55and dopamine pathways are heavily involved.
00:10:57When we enter this flow state experience,
00:10:59it builds dopamine in crazy, crazy amounts
00:11:02because our brain's like,
00:11:03"Oh, they obviously need me right now."
00:11:04You wanna think of this dopamine chemical as your friend.
00:11:06And when you're trying to engage in something
00:11:08that's challenging, it's like, "Oh, he needs support.
00:11:10"He needs support, help him focus."
00:11:11So we know that flow is really common in athletes
00:11:13and artists and scientists
00:11:15because their work is highly skilled and challenging.
00:11:17But we can all experience flow
00:11:18in the more mundane things in our everyday life
00:11:21like cooking and studying and cleaning
00:11:22if we find ourselves in these optimal conditions.
00:11:24And on average, it takes about 15 minutes
00:11:26to get into a flow state.
00:11:27So recognize that the first 15 minutes of doing something
00:11:30that might seem a bit boring
00:11:31are always gonna be the hardest
00:11:33because that's when your dopamine will be at its lowest.
00:11:35A good example is something like cleaning a bathroom
00:11:37because that's a particularly annoying task in our home.
00:11:39What you'll find is the first five minutes, pretty annoying.
00:11:42And gradually you begin
00:11:43to what's called gain momentum, effectively.
00:11:45After 10 minutes, you might start getting
00:11:47more and more into it.
00:11:48And then what can happen is the opposite can occur.
00:11:50Rather than thinking, "I can't really bother to do this,"
00:11:52you actually get more into it than you even expected to.
00:11:54And that's because you're effectively
00:11:56entering cleaning flow state.
00:11:58I find this to be a really useful insight.
00:11:59Like the starting bit of anything that you're trying to do
00:12:01is always the hardest.
00:12:02It's like procrastination is generally a difficulty
00:12:05in getting started with a thing
00:12:06rather than in doing the thing.
00:12:08When I'm filming, for example,
00:12:09this is like my job these days to film these fricking videos.
00:12:12And the first hour I always spent just like procrastinating,
00:12:16looking at the scripts and thinking,
00:12:17"Oh, it's not good enough."
00:12:18I'm thinking, "Oh, it's not gonna get any views."
00:12:20I'm thinking, "Why does anyone care?"
00:12:20I think, "Why am I even qualified to talk about this?"
00:12:24And then when I hit record and just start filming,
00:12:26slowly the dopamine builds up over time.
00:12:29It becomes kind of fun.
00:12:30I start like having a bit of fun with it.
00:12:31I start feeling a bit more animated.
00:12:33And like right now, I'm enjoying filming this video.
00:12:35It's a fun thing to do.
00:12:36I recognize this was also the case when I was in med school.
00:12:39It was really hard starting to study for the exam.
00:12:41But then once I got into the flow of it,
00:12:43I had my study with me music playing in the background
00:12:45at Pirates of the Caribbean and Lord of the Rings
00:12:47and Harry Potter and the whole shebang.
00:12:48It starts to become fun.
00:12:49So if you struggle with starting stuff,
00:12:51recognize that it's completely normal.
00:12:53Your dopamine levels are low
00:12:54and over time they will increase.
00:12:56All right, let's move on to action number three,
00:12:57which is cold water immersion.
00:12:59And this has actually been shown
00:13:00to cause a somewhat similar increase in dopamine as cocaine.
00:13:03But the key difference apparently
00:13:04is that cocaine spikes our dopamine very quickly
00:13:07in about nine minutes,
00:13:08but then it quickly falls down afterwards.
00:13:09But going into cold water increases our dopamine
00:13:12more gradually over a two hour period.
00:13:14A brilliant psychologist back in 1998 called Sramak
00:13:17discovered for the first time
00:13:19that cold water immersion can raise our dopamine levels
00:13:22by 250%, 2.5 times.
00:13:25And when you get into this
00:13:26cold water immersion conversation,
00:13:28it's really important to understand this concept
00:13:30called the pain pleasure balance.
00:13:32This pain pleasure balance
00:13:33comes from a really interesting theory published in 1980
00:13:36by a behavioral psychologist, Richard Solomon
00:13:38called the opponent process theory of acquired motivation.
00:13:41This basically says that pleasure and pain
00:13:43are opposite emotional states
00:13:45and we need to keep them balanced on either side of a Cecil.
00:13:47So when you eat your favorite food, for example,
00:13:49and it makes you feel great,
00:13:50the Cecil tips towards the pleasure side,
00:13:52but then afterwards an opposite emotional reaction kicks in
00:13:55like guilt, if you're like me
00:13:56and you ate a whole mango sticky rice with ice cream yesterday
00:13:59and that guilt tips the Cecil back
00:14:01into more of a neutral position in theory.
00:14:03Now, Dr. Anna Lemke is a psychiatrist
00:14:05at Stanford University School of Medicine.
00:14:06And she talks about this in her book called "Dopamine Nation
00:14:09"Finding Balance in the Age of Indulgence."
00:14:11She writes, "I tend to imagine this self-regulating system
00:14:15"as little gremlins hopping on the pain side of the balance
00:14:17"to counteract the weight on the pleasure side.
00:14:20"The gremlins represent the work of homeostasis,
00:14:22"the tendency of any living system
00:14:24"to maintain a physiologic equilibrium."
00:14:26And things actually get really interesting
00:14:28because as Dr. Anna writes,
00:14:29"With repeated exposure to the same
00:14:31"or similar pleasure stimulus,
00:14:33"the initial deviation to the side of pleasure
00:14:35"gets weaker and shorter
00:14:37"and the after response to the side of pain
00:14:39"gets stronger and longer,
00:14:40"a process scientists call neuro-adaptation.
00:14:43"That is, with repetition,
00:14:44"our gremlins get bigger, faster and more numerous
00:14:47"and we need more of our drug of choice
00:14:49"to get the same effect."
00:14:50And obviously this drug could be anything
00:14:52that we find addictive like fast food or alcohol
00:14:54or TikTok or whatever.
00:14:55But then the opposite happens when we experience pain first
00:14:58like going into cold water,
00:14:59as TJ suggests we do to increase our dopamine.
00:15:02At first, it's really hard and uncomfortable
00:15:03to stay in cold water,
00:15:04like having a cold shower or doing an ice plunge or whatever.
00:15:06But then in response to the pain,
00:15:08our body activates reward pathways
00:15:10so the seesaw tips back into balance
00:15:12towards the pleasure side.
00:15:13And the more you do this,
00:15:14the less intense the initial pain will be,
00:15:17but those feelings of pleasure
00:15:18will happen much sooner afterwards
00:15:19and might even be more intense.
00:15:21The most sustainable way to do this
00:15:23is just to every single time you have a shower,
00:15:25have 30 seconds of cold at the end.
00:15:27And that will provide a good natural increase
00:15:29in this dopamine chemical to create a rise in motivation
00:15:32and your capacity to focus.
00:15:34And then the final action,
00:15:35action number four is what TJ calls my pursuit.
00:15:38And this comes back to the importance of a human
00:15:40always having a very clear mountain
00:15:41that they're climbing in their life.
00:15:43And this was huge for me.
00:15:45I actually was someone that struggled a lot
00:15:47with all of the different addictive behaviors
00:15:50our modern world has to offer.
00:15:51And I had to go through the clarification
00:15:53of what am I gonna chase instead of all that quick dopamine?
00:15:57And this is where the whole idea of my pursuit came from,
00:15:59that if you are someone
00:16:01that is addicted to all these different things,
00:16:03really the only way to get off of them
00:16:05is to have something else that you're chasing
00:16:07that you're willing to sacrifice for.
00:16:09If you are doing stuff without a clear mission
00:16:11or purpose or goal in mind,
00:16:13eventually your brain is just gonna sabotage itself
00:16:15because the brain is very good at recognizing
00:16:17when we are doing something
00:16:18that feels fundamentally pointless.
00:16:20Whereas if you're working towards something,
00:16:22you know, if you're building something
00:16:23or like supporting your family
00:16:25or like whatever the goal is that you're trying to go for,
00:16:27if you have that goal firmly in your mind,
00:16:29it means that all of the stuff you have to do to get there,
00:16:32it feels very directed
00:16:33and it becomes quite like fun to do the thing
00:16:36when you know that you're working towards a particular goal.
00:16:38Now, a question I often get asked is,
00:16:39well, okay, but how do I figure out what my purpose is,
00:16:42what my mission is, what my primary pursuit is?
00:16:43This is a whole thing.
00:16:44I have a whole three-part playlist about this
00:16:46that talks about how to figure out what you truly value,
00:16:48how to sort of connect it with your own life experiences,
00:16:50how to turn that into goals.
00:16:51That'll be linked up there or down there or something
00:16:53so you can check it out.
00:16:54But TJ's solution to this, which I agree with,
00:16:56is to start spending at least 60 minutes in nature every day
00:17:00without your phone, without music, and without a podcast.
00:17:02Now, at first, you'll probably feel bored and frustrated,
00:17:05but once you push past those uncomfortable emotions,
00:17:07it becomes a lot easier to answer that question
00:17:10of what is my primary pursuit?
00:17:11What do I really care about pursuing?
00:17:13In my case, I personally feel most creative
00:17:15when I'm going out and about on walks
00:17:17in Regents Park in London or something,
00:17:19or if I'm just walking to a local coffee shop
00:17:20and just sitting there alone with my thoughts.
00:17:22And the more you ask yourself this question,
00:17:24the better you'll get at working out what your goals are
00:17:26and figuring out the plans and systems
00:17:28you've got to put in place to achieve them.
00:17:29This is a whole philosophy called a productivity GPS.
00:17:31GPS stands for goal, plan, and system.
00:17:34This is like a productivity method
00:17:35that I've been cooking up over the last couple of years.
00:17:37If you're interested in finding out more,
00:17:38this is something I teach as part of my productivity lab,
00:17:40linked down below, but I'm planning to make more videos
00:17:42about it here on this YouTube channel as well.
00:17:44If you enjoyed this video,
00:17:45then you'll probably like the others in the series
00:17:47that are about oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins,
00:17:49and those will be in this playlist
00:17:51when those videos come up.
00:17:52Thank you so much for watching,
00:17:53and I'll see you hopefully in the next video.
00:17:54Bye-bye.

Key Takeaway

Modern life hijacks our dopamine system with instant gratification, but we can regain control through strategic practices like phone fasting, cold exposure, finding flow states, and pursuing meaningful goals.

Highlights

Dopamine is hijacked by modern stimuli like phones, social media, and fast food, causing instant gratification but depleting motivation for meaningful activities

The 'Law of Dopamine' states that taking action immediately upon waking builds dopamine reserves, while scrolling social media depletes them

Phone fasting for 15 minutes in the morning and 60 minutes before bed helps restore healthy dopamine baselines

Flow state takes about 15 minutes to achieve and massively increases dopamine production through challenging, skill-matched activities

Cold water immersion increases dopamine by 250% over two hours, unlike cocaine which spikes quickly then crashes

Having a clear 'primary pursuit' or life mission is essential for sustaining motivation and avoiding addictive behaviors

Spending 60 minutes daily in nature without devices helps identify your true goals and values

Timeline

Introduction: The Dopamine Crisis

TJ Power, a neuroscientist running the Dose Lab, introduces how dopamine has become hijacked in the modern world through phones, social media, fast food, and alcohol. These stimuli create instant pleasure spikes but lead to addiction and inability to focus on what truly matters. The video establishes that understanding and balancing dopamine is critical for maintaining consistent motivation and focus. This is the first episode in a four-part series covering dopamine, oxytocin, serotonin, and endorphins, with actionable tips for improving brain chemistry.

Part One: The Law of Dopamine

Dopamine evolved over 300,000 years to motivate survival activities like hunting, building shelter, and social connection. The modern world has hacked this system with artificial stimuli like TikTok and pornography that provide instant gratification without effort. Dopamine is manufactured from the amino acid tyrosine through L-DOPA and stored in vesicles at neuron synapses, with production increasing when we do hard things. The 'Law of Dopamine' emphasizes taking immediate action upon waking, as morning phone use depletes dopamine reserves while physical movement builds them. The phenomenon of 'rotting' on TikTok, where people can't get out of bed, exemplifies severe dopamine depletion.

Understanding Healthy vs. Unhealthy Dopamine

Two key questions determine if a dopamine source is healthy: how quickly it provides pleasure, and whether it benefits you or others in the future. Natural pleasures increase dopamine slowly without crashes, while instant gratification causes unnatural spikes followed by apathy and inability to act. Activities that benefit future outcomes like cooking, walking with friends, or personal development are healthy dopamine sources. Unhealthy sources include hours of TikTok scrolling, smoking, vaping, and excessive alcohol consumption. The goal is not eliminating all pleasure but balancing instant gratification with longer-term rewarding activities that improve life quality.

Sponsor: Productivity Lab

Ali Abdaal introduces Productivity Lab, an online platform and community for entrepreneurs, creators, and professionals struggling with home-based productivity. The platform offers focus labs (Zoom coworking sessions), weekly reflective workshops, goal-setting sessions, and in-person meetups. He describes it as 'CrossFit or Peloton for productivity,' noting that joining three-hour morning focus lab sessions doubles his productivity. Success stories include members finally launching YouTube channels and completing iOS app projects after years of procrastination, demonstrating the power of group accountability and structured work sessions.

Action 1: Phone Fasting

Phone fasting involves designated periods without phone use, with morning being the most critical time. Waking up and immediately checking phones sets a difficult trajectory for the entire day by depleting dopamine reserves. Recommended practices include charging phones outside the bedroom, using a separate alarm clock, and starting the day with three actions: brushing teeth, splashing face with cold water, and making the bed. The minimum morning phone fast should be 15 minutes, with an ideal 60-minute evening fast before bed. Ali uses the Opal app to block social media from 10 PM to 9 AM, significantly improving his quality of life by preventing nighttime scrolling.

Boredom Builds Dopamine

Boredom triggers a restorative brain state that actively builds dopamine reserves, but modern life prevents experiencing boredom through constant phone access. Implementing two-hour phone fasts on weekends and embracing boredom instead of avoiding it helps restore dopamine balance. Ali applies this by taking walks without audiobooks, podcasts, or music, carrying only a notebook and pen for potential journaling. This practice of allowing the mind to wander without constant input enables natural dopamine restoration and creative thinking, contrasting sharply with the constant stimulation that depletes these reserves.

Action 2: Finding Flow State

Psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi's concept of flow state describes hyper-focused engagement requiring matching skill level with challenge difficulty. Too-easy tasks cause boredom while too-difficult tasks create anxiety; the sweet spot produces flow. Brain scans show reward systems and dopamine pathways heavily activate during flow, with the brain providing support for challenging tasks. Flow typically takes 15 minutes to achieve, meaning the first 15 minutes of any task will be hardest when dopamine is lowest. Examples include cleaning bathrooms, where initial resistance transforms into engagement and even enjoyment after building momentum. Ali experiences this filming videos, where initial procrastination and self-doubt gradually shift to enjoyment as dopamine builds.

Action 3: Cold Water Immersion

Research from 1998 by psychologist Sramak showed cold water immersion raises dopamine levels by 250% over two hours, compared to cocaine's rapid nine-minute spike and crash. The explanation involves the pain-pleasure balance from Richard Solomon's 1980 opponent process theory, where opposite emotional states balance on a seesaw. Initial pleasure tips toward gratification but creates opposite guilt or discomfort afterward, with repeated exposure requiring more stimulus for the same effect (neuro-adaptation). Cold water works inversely: initial pain activates reward pathways as the body compensates, with repeated practice reducing pain intensity while increasing and accelerating pleasure responses. The sustainable approach is 30 seconds of cold water at the end of every shower, providing natural dopamine increases for motivation and focus.

Action 4: My Pursuit - Finding Your Mission

Having a clear 'mountain to climb' or primary pursuit is essential for overcoming addictive behaviors and maintaining motivation. TJ Power emphasizes that breaking free from quick dopamine sources requires having something meaningful to chase and sacrifice for. Brains recognize pointless activity and self-sabotage, but working toward building something, supporting family, or achieving specific goals makes effortful activities feel directed and even enjoyable. The recommendation is spending 60 minutes daily in nature without phone, music, or podcasts to push past boredom and discover true pursuits. Ali connects this to his productivity GPS philosophy (Goal, Plan, System) taught in Productivity Lab, noting that creative insights emerge during solitary walks in Regents Park or coffee shops. Regular reflection on 'what is my primary pursuit' helps clarify goals and develop actionable systems for achievement.

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