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This Is What Happens When You Rely on Stimulants

This Is What Happens When You Rely on Stimulants

Duration:
10m
Broadcast on:
22 Jun 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

Owning a rental property sounds like a dream until you realize how much work goes into getting it ready. Determine a competitive rent price, market the property, schedule the showing screen, tenants drop at the lease at a rent collection, handle maintenance request, maintenance application. Whew! Sound complicated? Runners' warehouse is here to take the hard work off your rental to-do list. Qualify tenants, check. Rent collection, check. Maintenance coordination, you got it. Go to Runnerswarehouse.com for a free rental analysis to find out how much your home can rent for. Or call 303-974-9444. Because from now on, the only thing you need on your to-do list is to call Runnerswarehouse. I'm Victoria Cash. Thanks for calling the Lucky Land Hotline. If you feel like you do the same thing every day, press 1. If you're ready to have some serious fun, for the chance to redeem some serious prizes, press 2. We heard you loud and clear, so go to luckylandslots.com right now and play over 100 social casino-style games for free. Get lucky today at luckylandslots.com. No purchase necessary. I think that people rely often too heavily on psychological motivators, and we overlook this entrainment phenomenon, the ability for our body to entrain to certain times. For instance, it's a terrible thing, but I like to get up, hydrate, caffeinate, slowly do some mental work, and then in my ideal training time, if I ever retire, I don't know that I ever will, but would be to train mid-morning, like 10/30. Amazing. I love it. My workouts are always best, et cetera, but my life isn't organized that way, so I like to try and exercise within an hour of waking up, but I have to drink caffeine first. I don't do my 90-minute delay thing. I drink my caffeine first if I'm going to exercise right away. And I should say that for people that feel amotivated, what do we do, generally? We consume things like caffeine, which, as we know, disrupts the adenosine system, so the adenosine being a molecule of sleepiness or fatigue, also upregulates dopamine receptors incidentally. It's actually shown in human dopamine receptors, pretty interesting there. Regular caffeine consumption very likely increases the sensitivity and/or number of dopamine receptors available, so whatever dopamine is released can have, quote-unquote, "more of an effect" in terms of motivation and reward. People will take nowadays, and I'm not passing judgment here, but there's a lot of use of things like Adderall, Modafanil, Vavant, stimulants. What do all those stimulants do? They release the catecholamines, mainly dopamine and epinephrine. They are amphetamines. Okay, people go, "Oh, am I going to see a speed?" Yep, that's what they are. Again, not passing judgment. They can have certain positive effects for certain clinical issues, in some cases. Again, not promoting or discouraging, just stating the reality. But what do people do? They take stimulants. What did I do right before this podcast? I'll come clean. I don't hide these things. I've been experimenting lately with two milligrams of nikorat, nicotine, in the form of gum. I don't smoke, vape, dip, or snuff. Those are all bad, carcinogenic, etc. I know people say vaping's not as bad as smoking. Vaping's bad, okay? It's as bad as smoking. Probably not, but it's not good for you. Don't vape. I just got some enemies, but that's my read of the data. More coming. But nicotine taps into the acetylcholine system, increases focus. It also will tap into the epinephrine and dopamine system. It's highly reinforcing, so I limit myself to two milligrams, maybe four times a week total. And I'm thinking about stopping altogether, because I'm just running this as an experiment on myself. And it really, really works for me. What does it do? It makes me more alert, more motivated. That also scares me. And many people I know that take, they're these pouches that come in canisters. I've never tried them. I don't want to. Those are generally four to eight milligrams of nicotine per pouch. I hear over and over again that people take one, they love it, take one pouch. They then will do two a day, three a day, and pretty quickly they're consuming a canister. So if not every day, every couple of days. So it's a very quick route to, let's just call it habit. Is it addictive? Maybe. Is it habit forming clearly? And this is becoming all the rage. Now, I don't recommend it. Nicotine is a vasoconstrictor, which isn't good, raises blood pressure, etc. There's some evidence that nicotine can be a cognitive enhancer, and maybe later in life. It might be something that I'll return to for that reason. But it does have certain health hazards. Clips always get cut of me saying the cognitive part, the cognitive enhancing part. But the point here is that when people feel amotivated, they tend to look for something that they can ingest. Remember, no effort. Get the molecules going. There's nothing wrong with that. A cup of coffee or espresso or yerba mate, you know, I'll do all three sometimes. And you're more alert, you're more arousal. You need to do something with that energy and then try and lean into work. The problem is with pharmacology, it's hard to get the dose just right so that you have the ideal level of focus, ideal level of alertness, but not so much that you have agitation, and your mind is kind of darting all over the place. So my typical thing is I will use coffee or yerba mate or both prior to a hard weight workout. But when it comes to cardio, I try and do my cardio without any caffeine or even and certainly no excessive caffeine, maybe a half a cup of coffee, maybe a yerba mate or two, and then just get out and go run in my case or do the HIIT workout and let the workout itself be its own source of neurochemicals. But that's just me. I know some people are doing the energy drinks combined with nicotine, combined with, I mean, all sorts of stuff and it's wild because then what they find is in the absence of those things, they're a motivated. Well, why? It was minimal to zero effort followed by high amplitude dopamine release and probably less directly from the exercise that you're doing. Right. You talked about the stacking of things that are releasing dopamine because you enjoy them or they're something that can release dopamine a substance is what will cause you to have the really high amplitude peak and then you can go below baseline. How does caffeine from coffee affect? So you mentioned the dopamine receptors, is that so is there like long term because then you start to like you never feel as good as like if you take a break from caffeine, then you have the first cup of coffee. I can't say I relate because I can't remember the last time I took a break from caffeine. I've done it when I had flues or I was cold, you know, I had colds or flues because I just don't want to drink caffeine under those conditions. Usually like chamomile tea and I'm just huddling in bed or something. I love caffeine. I don't drink that much of it, you know, but probably told loud about four, 500 milligrams a day. You know, I weigh 215, 220 pounds. So that's not that much and I'm pretty caffeine acclimated and I tend to drink caffeine in the early part of the day and not so much in the evening. Certainly not after 3 p.m. so I can sleep well. But, you know, the stacking is something that, you know, I don't want to give the impression that if, you know, you have an energy drink like a pre-workout and you've got the music blasting and you're hydrated and you slept grading, have a great workout, like crush will work out every once in a while. But don't be surprised if the next time you're walking into the gym, you don't feel quite as motivated. And I don't think one should rely on that every single time, you know, that you need to, if you need a stimulant every time you're going to exercise, you are creating a pattern of behavior and likely some underlying neurochemical habits that are not going to serve you well in the long run. You're going to feel less motivation to do the thing that itself can generate feelings of motivation. And that's what we've been talking about. A cold shower would be a great one because of that long, I'm just fascinated by this. I've never seen anything else, no drug, prescription or otherwise, no supplement, no workout that I'm aware of. But I haven't explored every single one that creates that long arc of dopamine, epinephrine and norepinephrine release that one minute, one minute of being uncomfortably cold can create. Now, in that study, it was a longer exposure. They used warmer temperatures and it was much longer. But I think based on my understanding of things you presented and what I, as I understand it, the shorter, colder exposure, no doubt creates similar subjective experience. Yeah. Well, I was going to ask you about that, because there's a lot more papers looking at norepinephrine release with respect to cold exposure. And that can be even 20 seconds, like at 39 degrees. It's very cold. That quickening of the breath that adrenaline is an incredible molecule. But I'm wondering, with the dopamine, what you think, and this can be some of your opinion, is the minimum duration and what the temperature should be to get increase in the dopamine peak above what you're at, like you're talking about. Yeah. So, unfortunately, there hasn't been a lot of exploration of this and there needs to be in. At one point, my colleague at Stanford, Craig Heller, who's done a lot on cold exposure and in particular, polymer cooling for lowering core body temperature before exercise as a way to increase and prolong effort. A lot of Stanford athletes do this. Other athletes, pro athletes do this as well. Interesting topic. And I were considering doing some work on this, but we haven't gotten around to it. I guess we've both been busy with other things. [BLANK_AUDIO] Owning a rental property sounds like a dream until you realize how much work goes into getting it ready. 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