I am dying right now, Mayim Bialik and Andrew D. Huberman together!! I am fan-girling so hard. It is a treat to hear them both talk about their field of study. Wow.
Andrew is one of the few people out there who will give vitamin/mineral advice without being a snake oil salesman about it. He keeps it realistic that most of the things he talks about are simply ONE tool that MIGHT help, and I really appreciate that.
Besides being extremely knowledgeable, Dr. Huberman really is an amazing communicator. And he’s a great interviewer as well on his podcast. His ability to hone in and summarize everything in an articulate, thorough, and focused way is just so good. I like the way he sneakily flipped roles and became the interviewer, asking Mayim several questions.
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You're both brilliant and so helpful! I'm 72, unfortunately physically disabled, but was a neuroscientist... now, neuroscience is exploding with new information at an exponential rate! You and your colleagues are able to help so many people!
As a DBT & mind/body therapist- this was possibly my favorite episode thus far! My nerdy brain was so excited to learn more skills to pass on to my clients and hear his ways of explaining it! I’m genuinely leading a therapy group today featuring your podcast and these specific skills for my patients! ❤️ Thank you for helping to seriously change lives ❤️
I recommend viewing Andrew’s interviews on Lex Fridman’s YT channel. Lex has interviewed Andrew 3 times with all 3 covering 2.5 - 3+ hours (each) of fascinating info. I linked the most recent interview below. Enjoy. ua-cam.com/video/lvh3g7eszVQ/v-deo.html
For me it's fascinating how Andrew Huberman manages to get me excited to explore myself and learn so many new things, here I am watching this podcast and thinking I have so much work to do on myself and I am not sad, but excited to unravel my mind's and my body's potential.
EMDR helped me very much. I dealt with the trauma of losing a beloved brother to suicide when I was a child. EMDR was the therapy that moved me beyond that. Huge difference and I'm grateful for it.
His ability to retain information of names of studies, who authored them, what school they were from and then the summaries of the studies and what they found is just amazing. I have listened to him for many years and for you to ask him the top four things that we are lacking or what we should get more of every day crystalized the manual of good health. Dr Attia should be next.
Right, Dr huberman just comes out and gives you information while letting you know where he got it and who he got it from. He's not taking credit, he's not telling you what he thinks you need, he's learning and passing along the information. I appreciate that very much.
Thank you Mayim & Jonathan for this new season SUPERB #101 EPISODE! My recap of it and the thing that will be print and hung in my office in front of me from now on regarding the Essential Things for Mental & Physical Health (along with the breath sequence inhale-inhale-loong exhale). And it’s not only a list but a sequence: 1.- Sleep 2.- Regulate autonomous nervous system (a thing I can do as I gave birth w/o drugs walking to shops and watching the Tour of France not feeling “pain” but “pressure” till my cervix went 9 cm dilatated..) 3.- Focuse 4.- Motivation How I’ve enjoyed having Dr Huberman here!
I have a fondness for smart people who care and share. In the process of sharing, their humanity is exposed. It's rare and beautiful to observe. I love how open Mayim and Jonathan can be and what it brings out when other smart people are their guests. The crossroads of spirituality, western science, and human experience is of utmost interest to me. I consider the Breakdown to be the best podcast as far as the meeting of intelligence, spirituality, human personal experience and potential. My favorite Breakdown episode is with Michael Singer. I have to say that this particular episode gave me a more profound understanding of Michael and his teachings, due to the insights and personal experiences of Mayim & Jonathan. Michael's books are great, but this interview was very satisfying. I loved all the twists and turns in that interplay. It told me so much about all three people (all good) and myself. I've recommended this Breakdown interview to a few people, especially ones who follow Michael Singer. I'm 70 years old, began learning yoga at 15 and zen buddhism at 19, from both books and live teachers. My parents were highly educated but my degree is in life from the school of hard knocks. My best qualities are awareness, openness, curiosity, honesty, hard working, with a motivation to be kind.
Bialik Syndrom: I’m here, with all due respect, contradicting the good (& wise) Dr. Huberman. Bialik Syndrom is the one that all the followers of this podcast suffer! Jokes apart, such a FABULOUS RETURN to regular episodes after the summer ones having Dr. Huberman! If any of you have still not watched him at Huberman Lab, go and enjoy the wonderful of our brain, hormones & nervous system!
Whst an educational epidode - Dr Huberman's beauty and utility of biology are modalities I will worship - Thank you Mayim and Jonathan for these wonderful giants of knowledge sharing their experiences with all of us❤
Mayim, You & your hubby & your podcast make the world a better place! I discovered Huberman because you mention him as a favorite episode in your 2022 wrap up episode. Thank you for introducing me to his work! I have since been so fascinated with his knowledge & ability to communicate. It's been a joy learning so much, so quickly from him & finding the information he shares actually turned out to be very timely for me since the new year. Thanks again! Be well!
One of my absolutely favorite podcasts ever. Dr. Huberman is so generous with his knowledge, lifestyle suggestions and science based reasoning/data. Mayim and Jonathan did a great job bringing this bright and wise scientist to the Mayim Bialik Breakdown podcast. After listening twice, I am taking early morning walks and trying cold showers to retrain, wake-up and nourish my nervous system and brain. I really appreciate everything all the bright, capable, willing to share scientists, Dr’s, Mental Health Advocates and all around good folks are bringing to the table these days. Thanks for keeping it interesting. Much respect, Wendy
I recently lost my sister in law while my brother was in end of life status. During this time I was doing heavy sighs as the bodies natural response to extreme stress. It reminded me that a focused meditation was in order. The double breath method has helped me thru this loss. This interview helps further. Thank you all.
The summer I integrated some of Dr. Huberman’s visual protocols and my mood improved immensely (also probably in response to better sleep). I became distracted by other priorities but have restarted the protocols and came to the realization discussed on this pod that my relationship with light and visual activity is key to my well/being. It reminds me that drawing and painting and studying art have always been fundamental to develop and nurture my personal agency.
These two together, is perfection This is absolutely fascinating. I should be sleeping right now. But I've been binging these podcasts and cleaning my house.. Now it's 4am and I regret nothing. Thank you for sharing!!
I love what say here, very liberating… “The notion that once you have the awareness that things start shifting because you understand that it’s not happening to you it’s happening through you that is hugely important”
I think I need to listen to this another 5 times and takes notes for all those AMAZING nuggets of info&exercises to sink in 🤯 I am in awe at the whole thing, as I'm 35 and have spent my whole life in and out of therapy, yet never heard ANY of this before!!! 👏🤩
I had five kids drug free. I started before the idea of hypno birthing was known. During my first labor I sort of went into my own trance; I stared at one spot on the wall opposite me and slow breathing (slow long exhales) and it was a total game changer. I felt intensity but not pain.
That is the focused breathing technique I used for my 4 kids. Simple and uncomplicated. Never understood the rational of the Lamaze with all the different types of breathing,
I recently came across your podcast and i’ve been bingeing episodes and I absolutely love every single out of them. I get so much out of them. But then this with discussion of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems etc is also just incredible - it’s more of the exact type of thing Ive been interested and invested in over the past year or so!
I love listening to people who are way smarter than me talking about things in a way that I can easily understand. This has been my favorite Breakdown so far because I suffer from anxiety (who doesn't?!). Thank you so much. ❤
My teen was having an anxiety freakout/meltdown as I happen to be watching this. I had him do the deep breath in with second quick additional breath in then full long exhale. I kid you not, his entire demeanor calmed.
Thank you, he is confirming many things about sleep that l have been doing. Sleep is such a challenge with ADHD I might have to revisit this podcast again!
Wow!! What an amazing episode!! So much to process! I love to just sit outside with my dog and enjoy nature, just watching all the living creatures go by and just be present. I notice immediately how much more awake I am and how much happier my dog is, which is different from walks, when I concentrate more on getting from point A to point B, a more anxious state of mind.
I do believe I experienced adrenal fatigue syndrome this year based on a lot of things that pointed to that including having to catch my breath, not having enough energy to do basic things, etc. I read that eating within 1 hour of waking helps the adrenal glands and can help heal from adrenal fatigue and it made a HUGE positive difference when I did that. I'm convinced that I did have adrenal fatigue syndrome. There's a lot more I can say about it but it's too much to type here. But I also experienced a dysregulated autonomic nervous system and was stuck in fight/flight and couldn't calm as well. I used grounding/earthing, meditation, prayer, affirmations, deep breathing, etc, to heal that. I do wake when my body feels warm. Now I know that's cortisol. Thanks for that.
Born in 1969, my mom was knocked out, woke up, and there I was. I, myself, took Bradley classes and birthed 2 children without medication. Recently, my anxiety is up and motivation is not what it once was. The breathing techniques in this episode are very helpful! I am so glad that I watched! Thanks!
Love this! He is absolutely correct about light. I work nights and if i get home after the sun comes up, i have the hardest time sleeping. It's like drinking coffee lol
Omgooness, I love Mayim so much, and Dr Huberman, has changed my life! This has got to be my favorite episode so far ❤ I studied/applied the Silva Method long ago, it sounds like a similar method (to EMDR), in regards to accessing the Alpha/Beta wave states.
I love the topic of EMDR. I have really been wanting to see your take on EMDR and now with Andrew Huberman as well, this is great. In the past, I went to a therapist (in FL) who used EMDR to cure me from Nail biting. It only took one session. I had been biting my nails for more than 45 years. It has been 4 years since I was cured of Nail biting and have had no relapses or other issues at all. I told my mirror-image identical twin brother (in TX) about it, and he went and received therapy and it worked for his nail biting issues after one session! My niece had a couple of issues and I was able to help her with them; One was Nail biting, another was dealing with a situation that whenever her husband and kids would start horsing around in the living room (visible from kitchen) she would get very upset. She never has known why, but just wanted to stop the effects of her getting extremely upset, yelling, and then leaving the area. After EMDR, she no longer has any ill reaction at all to the playing around, and to the extent that her husband and kids even noticed she was OK and mentioned it to her. Then another thing EMDR helped her with which is directly related to this story today about regulating stress. She setup via EMDR a way to say a phrase to herself and immediately be able to "Take a breath", and physically Relax. She is a children school teacher for difficult students at the school. On a less serious note; she also uses it for when she goes to hockey games and gets too hyped up and yelling for her team :) . I wanted to share this since many people think EMDR is only for Serious Trauma, PTSD, abuse, etc., but the truth is that there are many, many uses. I recommend highly someone seek a professional for help if needed for things they are not comfortable with thinking about themselves. I later went ahead and studied and became certified at EMDR, but I am not taking on clients. I prefer to let people try and help themselves on light stuff, and get help if they need it. With that said, I also believe there is a lot of support for Self EMDR (Google books on it..), so I feel safe in sharing. So, I made it free and anonymous for anyone. This will let people check it out without any cost and at their leisure. Here is my channel on the subject of EMDR: ua-cam.com/channels/gcHLqv-3l4kxdfy3x77zvw.html
This is a video in which you are able to learn so much from. Andrew Huberman was a really great guest in this awesome episode. I have found this podcast of yours Mayim so therapeutic, thank you so much Mayim!
@@MayimBialik You're really awesome! I hope you someday act in a really nice movie and I hope you win an Oscar! I also hope you someday get a star on the walk of fame!
This is an amazing podcast. The information shared is truly everything I’ve been learning about for months now with the nervous system. Thank you both for this amazing topic. Please have him on again!!!
I was so excited to see the two of you together-my two favorite scientists! ❤ Viewing sunlight in the morning is my favorite part of the day. Andrew Huberman has changed my life in in so many ways! ❤
Wow, two of my favorite podcasts come together! Thank you Mayim for this episode! @Andrew, could you please write the book that you have realized all of us are missing? A hand book/ owner manual on how our body works and how we can positively influence it? I have many notes that I took during your podcast. But I would love to have that in printed form including perhaps check list to memorize it and transfer it in a healthy set of habits. P.s : I love your ability to explain these complex issues, scientific findings in such an eloquent and entertaining way. I hope nobody ever finds a cure for your scientific Tourette syndrome. Your biggest German fan! Verena
Great episode. And I love Huberman. A great story about your breathing during childbirth, Ms Bialik! I'm from the Netherlands where natural childbirth at home is the norm. When I gave birth to my daughter 30 years ago, there was no mention of pain relief EVER. You can try and prepare for childbirth by taking a "prenatal course". They tell you what to expect, how to breathe (puff puff puff!) when you have a contraction, but nothing really prepared me for the mindblowing reality of the actual event. Somehow, I was able to remain calm and not get overwhelmed by nature taking over, by telling myself that women all over the world do this all the time, that I would have my baby in my arms in another 12 hours or so, and by extending my exhalations. No pain. No puffing. No screaming. Btw: childbirth as shown in most films is total BS. You cannot scream while pushing your baby out.
Well I was mooing like a cow and there was no way anyone was keeping me puff puff puffing😮😮😮😮 each birth is different. My children were tiny which can be harder to birth. Was all natural but yes I was noisy and swore and screamed and cried 😊
Dr. Huberman: "Knocked up and knocked out" 🤣🤦🏼♀️ So fun listening to your talk with Mayim! Always a listener and follower of your fantastic and truly wonderful podcast (although I watch you on UA-cam). Please never stop your good work 💗
I've studied anatomy and physiology for decades and somehow never made the connection of the parasympathetic nervous system being so named because it is on two sides of the sympathetic system. I love it when learning something new clicks so many things together!
I love your podcast! We just welcomed a baby with Prader-Willi syndrome into our family last month. The syndrome is something that fascinated me when I learned about it in college. If I were to express it, my excitement at this case study opportunity may border on unethical 😅 I'm loving learning more about the beauty and utility of biology with her severe human condition.
I love Andrew Huberman and now I love you!! I am someone who was prescribed a benzodiazapine for sleep and now I have spent the last 7 years trying to taper off this prescribed drug which is causing me to be in a state of fight/flight and/or freeze regularly! I now have severe PTSD and severe health anxiety, so I think I’m dying on a regular basis. In addition, I have multiple stress related health issues & I am basically home bound and I have fear of being alone. There are hundreds of thousands of people in the same situation. Would it be possible for you to do a podcast on this. And maybe even ask psychiatrist/hypnotherapist, Dr. David Spiegel from Stanford to join your podcast and maybe show us how to use self hypnosis for something like being in benzo withdrawal, even though benzos actually damage the gaba receptors which ultimately cause the extreme anxiety. In other words, it’s a physiological induced anxiety, not psychological. Thank you so much!!
I recently began listening to your podcasts and I love them! I am finding a lot of good points that I am beginning to use in my live, I took many from this one! so good! thank you for what you do!
A great podcast, incredible information, Dr. Huberman have an incredible knowledge and also great voice, although he use a lot of neuro Science terms, but Mayim was there to clarify them or make him clarify
Loved this episode. I've been doing the getting up and watching the sunrise thing since you mentioned it on one of the summer episodes. I was able to fall asleep earlier (10:30pm compared to 1 or 2 am) and sleep through the night. I haven't done that in 17 years. My mental health has improved immensely. I've added in the things Andrew mentioned in this episodes and is really making a difference for me.
@@vitorbarradas7430 Jonathan and Andrew said: Get up and watch the sun come up. It's been a bit chilly lately so sitting out meets the cold requirement. Not sure what I'm going to do once we start getting snow. Just that has made a huge difference for me. Can't do caffeine because of BP so no coffee but I do have a cup of tea while sitting out watching the sunrise. 3 days a week I have an exercise class I go to. Then try to watch the sunset every evening. That's a little harder as my skyline is mostly blocked by houses and trees.
@@jonniebgd1126 do you have to take a nap during the day? I am trying to switch my schedule around since it’s been upside down for two years. I have been a night owl. Now that I’m getting up early in the day I feel very tired in the afternoon, but I’m also trying to do intermittent fasting during the day which I had no problem with when I had the nighttime schedule but now in the daytime, I get so exhausted way too early. Too late for a nap but too early for bed.
@@HH-gv8mx I do tend to feel the need for a nap in the afternoons. I don't think necessarily from following Andrew Hubermans advice but as a result of a combination of factors; stress, menopause, etc. I think if you limit your nap to less than 30 min it won't hurt to take one. Longer makes me groggy and then can't fall asleep at bedtime. After watching this interview I went to his UA-cam page and watched his video on Sleep Tool Kit: Tools for optimizing sleeping and waking. It explains all the science behind a good routine and gives all his best tips for sleeping, napping, and feeling energized.
I really liked learning about Andrew’s likes and hobbies, that was interesting, after listening to him in several podcasts, and I like that he asked mayim what her interests were.
So I did incorporate Dr. H's light upon waking, and my lifelong struggle with waking early shifted so that I can now awaken 2 hours earlier. My entrance into my work life has a completely different feel. I have suggested his work to some of the families and student I work with and they are finding some success as well.
Hey Dr Bialik. I think I need some motivation because I still don't know what I want to work as. I'm also noticed you returned to normal since this isn't a Summer edition. I really miss seeing you on Big Bang Theory! I hope Amy someday gets a spin-off when she was a girl and I'd really love to hear you narrating it! I'm 1st by the way!
Yessss, now I understand why the hypnotist I went to see back in the day, got us all to look up and close our eyes. Then he came to us, opening our eye lids individually. From there he sent many people back to their seats for the show and some of us stayed on stage. I was highly hypnothesizable and I'm CANADIAN 🤣🤣🤣🤣Honestly thank you
I love this episode ❤️ I have been a mouth-breather for years, and now I am undoing my bad habits. This purposeful breathing will help my stress levels 😊
First. I love you three. Emdr:. I went to one sided marriage counseling, because he refused to go, to help "live with his behaviors" that disrupted our family life of raising babies, and my therapist used this and it helped. Simple, kinda asked questions like, is it real? Does it have to affect you? Totally at the moment things. But I found it helpful. I really like that you asked if he had a partner. I've followed him for quite some time and wondered. Thanks. 👍 It was good hearing you all interact.
Wowsers! The best yet. My wish is that you choose to collaborate with Dr. Huberman at least one podcast a month. Pretty please! I feel smart just listening in to you smarty pants.
That’s why having a dog is the BEST! I leave my phone at home and we have a snuffle walk in whatever the weather I was diagnosed with SAD years ago when I had a one hour commute, in the dark both ways and taught all day in a windowless classroom with fluorescent lights! I was put on antidepressants for YEARS all I needed was a light box for our west coast northern hemisphere rainy seasons and I soak up the real rays with a ball cap and NO sunglasses. ❤
This was really a compelling interview. I work nights and sleep days and my sleep is very interrupted. I took notes and will start a new routine to incorporate some of these techniques so that I can become a body systems influencer. LOVED this conversation. You really shine bright in your science realm. More please! xoxo. P.S. Go Canada!!
@@elise9537 After watching this I started taking 50mg of Apigenin, 200mg L-Theanine, 144mg mg Magnesium L-threonate, and 10mg Melatonin two hours before bed. It has worked like a charm. If I take it at bedtime I am too sleepy in the morning so if I am running late to bed I just take the melatonin. I am getting a deeper sleep and dreaming more too.
This guy's smart. He's really exploded in popularity. I like the idea of him giving simplified, no cost, actionable advice to the general public
Don't let him know!!...
He is already too good!!
I am dying right now, Mayim Bialik and Andrew D. Huberman together!! I am fan-girling so hard. It is a treat to hear them both talk about their field of study. Wow.
Yeah me too
Whats your email address?
I would ditto this!
@@backfruW rizz
Yes, yes yes!!
Andrew is one of the few people out there who will give vitamin/mineral advice without being a snake oil salesman about it. He keeps it realistic that most of the things he talks about are simply ONE tool that MIGHT help, and I really appreciate that.
We're all about practical tools that anyone can use. So glad this episode resonated with you!!
@@MayimBialik this is jeopardy
Besides being extremely knowledgeable, Dr. Huberman really is an amazing communicator. And he’s a great interviewer as well on his podcast. His ability to hone in and summarize everything in an articulate, thorough, and focused way is just so good. I like the way he sneakily flipped roles and became the interviewer, asking Mayim several questions.
😢😢uuykhhhhhyhhyhhmr🎉. 😊😊😊lll😊ll😊l😊😊
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You're both brilliant and so helpful! I'm 72, unfortunately physically disabled, but was a neuroscientist... now, neuroscience is exploding with new information at an exponential rate! You and your colleagues are able to help so many people!
As a DBT & mind/body therapist- this was possibly my favorite episode thus far! My nerdy brain was so excited to learn more skills to pass on to my clients and hear his ways of explaining it! I’m genuinely leading a therapy group today featuring your podcast and these specific skills for my patients! ❤️ Thank you for helping to seriously change lives ❤️
Wow, thanks so much for sharing, Elyssa, and for all the important work you do!!
I'm on my second run at this particular episode. Please have him back soon. Maybe a series?
You should check out his UA-cam videos, Huberman Lab and others.
I recommend viewing Andrew’s interviews on Lex Fridman’s YT channel. Lex has interviewed Andrew 3 times with all 3 covering 2.5 - 3+ hours (each) of fascinating info. I linked the most recent interview below. Enjoy.
ua-cam.com/video/lvh3g7eszVQ/v-deo.html
I've been crushing hard on this intelligent man for years! So glad to see him on your show. Thank you Mayim and Jonathan!
Me too!!
He he me too 😅
Smart and looks like a marvel superheroes. Just a great combo😅😅😅
agreed😊
Me too! And he seems so kind and graceful.
My two favourite neuroscientists in one video - this is what I've been waiting for.
For me it's fascinating how Andrew Huberman manages to get me excited to explore myself and learn so many new things, here I am watching this podcast and thinking I have so much work to do on myself and I am not sad, but excited to unravel my mind's and my body's potential.
That's definitely the spirit!! Thanks so much for listening!
EMDR helped me very much. I dealt with the trauma of losing a beloved brother to suicide when I was a child. EMDR was the therapy that moved me beyond that. Huge difference and I'm grateful for it.
His ability to retain information of names of studies, who authored them, what school they were from and then the summaries of the studies and what they found is just amazing. I have listened to him for many years and for you to ask him the top four things that we are lacking or what we should get more of every day crystalized the manual of good health. Dr Attia should be next.
Right, Dr huberman just comes out and gives you information while letting you know where he got it and who he got it from. He's not taking credit, he's not telling you what he thinks you need, he's learning and passing along the information. I appreciate that very much.
Thank you Mayim & Jonathan for this new season SUPERB #101 EPISODE!
My recap of it and the thing that will be print and hung in my office in front of me from now on regarding the Essential Things for Mental & Physical Health (along with the breath sequence inhale-inhale-loong exhale). And it’s not only a list but a sequence:
1.- Sleep
2.- Regulate autonomous nervous system (a thing I can do as I gave birth w/o drugs walking to shops and watching the Tour of France not feeling “pain” but “pressure” till my cervix went 9 cm dilatated..)
3.- Focuse
4.- Motivation
How I’ve enjoyed having Dr Huberman here!
You're awesome m e mayim!
Don’t forget the cold shower alternative - 25 deep breaths in rapid succession - when you’re in a car crash & can’t take that shower…
44:30 to get straight to the breathing technique.
Thank you Andrew Huberman for existing!
I have a fondness for smart people who care and share.
In the process of sharing, their humanity is exposed.
It's rare and beautiful to observe.
I love how open Mayim and Jonathan can be and what it brings out when other smart people are their guests.
The crossroads of spirituality, western science, and human experience is of utmost interest to me.
I consider the Breakdown to be the best podcast as far as the meeting of intelligence, spirituality, human personal experience and potential.
My favorite Breakdown episode is with Michael Singer. I have to say that this particular episode gave me a more profound understanding of Michael and his teachings, due to the insights and personal experiences of Mayim & Jonathan.
Michael's books are great, but this interview was very satisfying.
I loved all the twists and turns in that interplay. It told me so much about all three people (all good) and myself.
I've recommended this Breakdown interview to a few people, especially ones who follow Michael Singer.
I'm 70 years old, began learning yoga at 15 and zen buddhism at 19, from both books and live teachers.
My parents were highly educated but my degree is in life from the school of hard knocks.
My best qualities are awareness, openness, curiosity, honesty, hard working, with a motivation to be kind.
Bialik Syndrom: I’m here, with all due respect, contradicting the good (& wise) Dr. Huberman. Bialik Syndrom is the one that all the followers of this podcast suffer! Jokes apart, such a FABULOUS RETURN to regular episodes after the summer ones having Dr. Huberman! If any of you have still not watched him at Huberman Lab, go and enjoy the wonderful of our brain, hormones & nervous system!
ummm.... huh??
@@elizabethheyenga9277 They're making a joke, saying the people hooked on these videos have "Bialik Syndrome"
Whst an educational epidode - Dr Huberman's beauty and utility of biology are modalities I will worship - Thank you Mayim and Jonathan for these wonderful giants of knowledge sharing their experiences with all of us❤
Mayim, You & your hubby & your podcast make the world a better place! I discovered Huberman because you mention him as a favorite episode in your 2022 wrap up episode. Thank you for introducing me to his work! I have since been so fascinated with his knowledge & ability to communicate. It's been a joy learning so much, so quickly from him & finding the information he shares actually turned out to be very timely for me since the new year. Thanks again! Be well!
I think I clicked faster than I could blink. Thank you so much for bringing Andrew Huberman, he's amazing!
Mayim, we need a reading list on adrenaline, dopamine, nose breathing, natural light and all that after this amazing talk!
One of my absolutely favorite podcasts ever. Dr. Huberman is so generous with his knowledge, lifestyle suggestions and science based reasoning/data. Mayim and Jonathan did a great job bringing this bright and wise scientist to the Mayim Bialik Breakdown podcast. After listening twice, I am taking early morning walks and trying cold showers to retrain, wake-up and nourish my nervous system and brain.
I really appreciate everything all the bright, capable, willing to share scientists, Dr’s, Mental Health Advocates and all around good folks are bringing to the table these days. Thanks for keeping it interesting. Much respect, Wendy
I recently lost my sister in law while my brother was in end of life status. During this time I was doing heavy sighs as the bodies natural response to extreme stress. It reminded me that a focused meditation was in order. The double breath method has helped me thru this loss. This interview helps further. Thank you all.
The stage of “nerd” that was hit in this episode nearly brings a tear to my eye.
He has been one of the most innovative influential and insightful researchers and Podcaster that I go to to educate myself, my family and my clients
I love Andrew Huberman and the availability of his wealth of knowledge.
The summer I integrated some of Dr. Huberman’s visual protocols and my mood improved immensely (also probably in response to better sleep). I became distracted by other priorities but have restarted the protocols and came to the realization discussed on this pod that my relationship with light and visual activity is key to my well/being. It reminds me that drawing and painting and studying art have always been fundamental to develop and nurture my personal agency.
These two together, is perfection This is absolutely fascinating. I should be sleeping right now. But I've been binging these podcasts and cleaning my house.. Now it's 4am and I regret nothing. Thank you for sharing!!
i could listen to huberman for hours. have him again pls. and make it 3-4 hrs.
I love what say here, very liberating…
“The notion that once you have the awareness that things start shifting because you understand that it’s not happening to you it’s happening through you that is hugely important”
I think I need to listen to this another 5 times and takes notes for all those AMAZING nuggets of info&exercises to sink in 🤯 I am in awe at the whole thing, as I'm 35 and have spent my whole life in and out of therapy, yet never heard ANY of this before!!! 👏🤩
I had five kids drug free. I started before the idea of hypno birthing was known. During my first labor I sort of went into my own trance; I stared at one spot on the wall opposite me and slow breathing (slow long exhales) and it was a total game changer. I felt intensity but not pain.
That is the focused breathing technique I used for my 4 kids. Simple and uncomplicated. Never understood the rational of the Lamaze with all the different types of breathing,
I recently came across your podcast and i’ve been bingeing episodes and I absolutely love every single out of them. I get so much out of them. But then this with discussion of the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems etc is also just incredible - it’s more of the exact type of thing Ive been interested and invested in over the past year or so!
Yes, Andrew Huberman is amazing and full of excellent information.
I love listening to people who are way smarter than me talking about things in a way that I can easily understand. This has been my favorite Breakdown so far because I suffer from anxiety (who doesn't?!). Thank you so much. ❤
Andrew was such a great guest! I learned so much and plan to share with my clients! (Mental health case manager, here)
Yes!!! Thanks so much for listening and for the important work you do!
@@MayimBialik You're one of my favorite actresses ever! I really miss you as Amy on Big Bang Theory! She's my favorite fictional woman character ever!
Thank you, Mayim and Johnathan, for giving us the gift f this podcast ! This is so incredibly valuable ! 🌅🌅🌅
My teen was having an anxiety freakout/meltdown as I happen to be watching this. I had him do the deep breath in with second quick additional breath in then full long exhale. I kid you not, his entire demeanor calmed.
Loved! This episode! I am a huge Huberman fan. Thank you!
Yay! I am so ready for this! Thanks for inviting Dr. Huberman, Mayim! You are the best
Thank you, he is confirming many things about sleep that l have been doing. Sleep is such a challenge with ADHD I might have to revisit this podcast again!
Wow!! What an amazing episode!! So much to process! I love to just sit outside with my dog and enjoy nature, just watching all the living creatures go by and just be present. I notice immediately how much more awake I am and how much happier my dog is, which is different from walks, when I concentrate more on getting from point A to point B, a more anxious state of mind.
Definitely the best podcast so far and I've watched them all!
Wow, thank you! This is an extremely helpful episode - a great topic and everyone is clear and thorough in their descriptions. Well done!
Incredible!!! Thank you to all 3 of you, for giving us brilliant information to keep us healthy!!
Thank you for bringing on Andrew. I m so happy you connected. My two favorite podcast together?
I do believe I experienced adrenal fatigue syndrome this year based on a lot of things that pointed to that including having to catch my breath, not having enough energy to do basic things, etc. I read that eating within 1 hour of waking helps the adrenal glands and can help heal from adrenal fatigue and it made a HUGE positive difference when I did that. I'm convinced that I did have adrenal fatigue syndrome. There's a lot more I can say about it but it's too much to type here. But I also experienced a dysregulated autonomic nervous system and was stuck in fight/flight and couldn't calm as well. I used grounding/earthing, meditation, prayer, affirmations, deep breathing, etc, to heal that. I do wake when my body feels warm. Now I know that's cortisol. Thanks for that.
Born in 1969, my mom was knocked out, woke up, and there I was. I, myself, took Bradley classes and birthed 2 children without medication. Recently, my anxiety is up and motivation is not what it once was. The breathing techniques in this episode are very helpful! I am so glad that I watched! Thanks!
1😊❤❤❤
Yes 10 min walk every morning is helping me mentally.
Loved this episode. So much helpful information.
Love this! He is absolutely correct about light. I work nights and if i get home after the sun comes up, i have the hardest time sleeping. It's like drinking coffee lol
Omgooness, I love Mayim so much, and Dr Huberman, has changed my life! This has got to be my favorite episode so far ❤
I studied/applied the Silva Method long ago, it sounds like a similar method (to EMDR), in regards to accessing the Alpha/Beta wave states.
Two of my favorite people..together! Thank you!
Best episode by far. I have to listen to it again. So much useful and applicable information.
I love the topic of EMDR. I have really been wanting to see your take on EMDR and now with Andrew Huberman as well, this is great.
In the past, I went to a therapist (in FL) who used EMDR to cure me from Nail biting. It only took one session. I had been biting my nails for more than 45 years. It has been 4 years since I was cured of Nail biting and have had no relapses or other issues at all. I told my mirror-image identical twin brother (in TX) about it, and he went and received therapy and it worked for his nail biting issues after one session!
My niece had a couple of issues and I was able to help her with them;
One was Nail biting, another was dealing with a situation that whenever her husband and kids would start horsing around in the living room (visible from kitchen) she would get very upset. She never has known why, but just wanted to stop the effects of her getting extremely upset, yelling, and then leaving the area. After EMDR, she no longer has any ill reaction at all to the playing around, and to the extent that her husband and kids even noticed she was OK and mentioned it to her. Then another thing EMDR helped her with which is directly related to this story today about regulating stress. She setup via EMDR a way to say a phrase to herself and immediately be able to "Take a breath", and physically Relax. She is a children school teacher for difficult students at the school. On a less serious note; she also uses it for when she goes to hockey games and gets too hyped up and yelling for her team :) .
I wanted to share this since many people think EMDR is only for Serious Trauma, PTSD, abuse, etc., but the truth is that there are many, many uses. I recommend highly someone seek a professional for help if needed for things they are not comfortable with thinking about themselves.
I later went ahead and studied and became certified at EMDR, but I am not taking on clients. I prefer to let people try and help themselves on light stuff, and get help if they need it.
With that said, I also believe there is a lot of support for Self EMDR (Google books on it..), so I feel safe in sharing. So, I made it free and anonymous for anyone. This will let people check it out without any cost and at their leisure.
Here is my channel on the subject of EMDR:
ua-cam.com/channels/gcHLqv-3l4kxdfy3x77zvw.html
Welcome back! Hope you had a good break. Thank you for this episode. It's much needed. 💗
This is a video in which you are able to learn so much from. Andrew Huberman was a really great guest in this awesome episode. I have found this podcast of yours Mayim so therapeutic, thank you so much Mayim!
Really glad you enjoyed the episode, and thanks so much for listening!
@@MayimBialik You're really awesome! I hope you someday act in a really nice movie and I hope you win an Oscar! I also hope you someday get a star on the walk of fame!
I loved it!!! Mayim you are amazing. Every time I hear your post I'm thrilled. 😢Thank you very much Mayim and Jonathan
This is an amazing podcast. The information shared is truly everything I’ve been learning about for months now with the nervous system. Thank you both for this amazing topic. Please have him on again!!!
That was so informative!! Please have him back to finish talking about the Focus and Motivatin part!!
YAAASSSSSS!!!!! This is going to be the absolute best episode! I freaking love Andrew Huberman
I was so excited to see the two of you together-my two favorite scientists! ❤ Viewing sunlight in the morning is my favorite part of the day. Andrew Huberman has changed my life in in so many ways! ❤
Wow, two of my favorite podcasts come together! Thank you Mayim for this episode! @Andrew, could you please write the book that you have realized all of us are missing? A hand book/ owner manual on how our body works and how we can positively influence it? I have many notes that I took during your podcast. But I would love to have that in printed form including perhaps check list to memorize it and transfer it in a healthy set of habits.
P.s : I love your ability to explain these complex issues, scientific findings in such an eloquent and entertaining way. I hope nobody ever finds a cure for your scientific Tourette syndrome.
Your biggest German fan!
Verena
My two favorite content creators in conversation. It's a good day 🙂
Great episode. And I love Huberman. A great story about your breathing during childbirth, Ms Bialik! I'm from the Netherlands where natural childbirth at home is the norm. When I gave birth to my daughter 30 years ago, there was no mention of pain relief EVER. You can try and prepare for childbirth by taking a "prenatal course". They tell you what to expect, how to breathe (puff puff puff!) when you have a contraction, but nothing really prepared me for the mindblowing reality of the actual event. Somehow, I was able to remain calm and not get overwhelmed by nature taking over, by telling myself that women all over the world do this all the time, that I would have my baby in my arms in another 12 hours or so, and by extending my exhalations. No pain. No puffing. No screaming. Btw: childbirth as shown in most films is total BS. You cannot scream while pushing your baby out.
Well I was mooing like a cow and there was no way anyone was keeping me puff puff puffing😮😮😮😮 each birth is different. My children were tiny which can be harder to birth. Was all natural but yes I was noisy and swore and screamed and cried 😊
ok... this guy is the perfect man! how is he so intelligent but also so frickin physically attractive?! my goodness he's beautiful on every level!
Dr. Huberman: "Knocked up and knocked out" 🤣🤦🏼♀️
So fun listening to your talk with Mayim! Always a listener and follower of your fantastic and truly wonderful podcast (although I watch you on UA-cam). Please never stop your good work 💗
I love and admire this guy. Thank you💫🐾
I've studied anatomy and physiology for decades and somehow never made the connection of the parasympathetic nervous system being so named because it is on two sides of the sympathetic system. I love it when learning something new clicks so many things together!
Thank you. This is a very very good podcast. Thank you for doing what you do
I love your podcast! We just welcomed a baby with Prader-Willi syndrome into our family last month. The syndrome is something that fascinated me when I learned about it in college. If I were to express it, my excitement at this case study opportunity may border on unethical 😅 I'm loving learning more about the beauty and utility of biology with her severe human condition.
Thanks so much for sharing, Mary, and wishing you all the best with the new addition to your family. Thanks so much for watching!!
I’m glued to HUBERMAN Lab podcast - every Monday morning gems
Great guy, this Dr. Huberman. Reminds me a lot of the few of the teachers I had when I attended Redwood High School in the Bay Area, California.
The cross over we’ve all been waiting for
Completely enjoyable! Besides the nervous system knowledge, it was fun hearing Dr Huberman speak about his outside science interests.
I absolutely loved this! Thank you for the informative session! Love it all!
I love Andrew Huberman and now I love you!! I am someone who was prescribed a benzodiazapine for sleep and now I have spent the last 7 years trying to taper off this prescribed drug which is causing me to be in a state of fight/flight and/or freeze regularly! I now have severe PTSD and severe health anxiety, so I think I’m dying on a regular basis. In addition, I have multiple stress related health issues & I am basically home bound and I have fear of being alone. There are hundreds of thousands of people in the same situation. Would it be possible for you to do a podcast on this. And maybe even ask psychiatrist/hypnotherapist, Dr. David Spiegel from Stanford to join your podcast and maybe show us how to use self hypnosis for something like being in benzo withdrawal, even though benzos actually damage the gaba receptors which ultimately cause the extreme anxiety. In other words, it’s a physiological induced anxiety, not psychological. Thank you so much!!
I recently began listening to your podcasts and I love them! I am finding a lot of good points that I am beginning to use in my live, I took many from this one! so good! thank you for what you do!
We're so happy we could help! So glad you found us, Maria - thanks for watching!!
Excellent Episode. I could listen to these topics over and over again. I kept saying to myself….”Wow! That is so incredibly interesting”. 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻😊
So glad you enjoyed it, and thanks for listening, Mary Ann!
So glad the pod is back, I hope everyone had a fantastic summer!!!
He remembers the details of a conversation he had with Mayim 20 years ago... the amount of information in his head ...
A great podcast, incredible information, Dr. Huberman have an incredible knowledge and also great voice, although he use a lot of neuro Science terms, but Mayim was there to clarify them or make him clarify
Thanks so much for the kind feedback, and for listening!!
Mayim, have him on everyday!!!
Loved this episode. I've been doing the getting up and watching the sunrise thing since you mentioned it on one of the summer episodes. I was able to fall asleep earlier (10:30pm compared to 1 or 2 am) and sleep through the night. I haven't done that in 17 years. My mental health has improved immensely. I've added in the things Andrew mentioned in this episodes and is really making a difference for me.
Hi, what things you do that she said? What changes you made? Can you share with us? :)
@@vitorbarradas7430 Jonathan and Andrew said: Get up and watch the sun come up. It's been a bit chilly lately so sitting out meets the cold requirement. Not sure what I'm going to do once we start getting snow. Just that has made a huge difference for me. Can't do caffeine because of BP so no coffee but I do have a cup of tea while sitting out watching the sunrise. 3 days a week I have an exercise class I go to. Then try to watch the sunset every evening. That's a little harder as my skyline is mostly blocked by houses and trees.
@@jonniebgd1126 do you have to take a nap during the day? I am trying to switch my schedule around since it’s been upside down for two years. I have been a night owl. Now that I’m getting up early in the day I feel very tired in the afternoon, but I’m also trying to do intermittent fasting during the day which I had no problem with when I had the nighttime schedule but now in the daytime, I get so exhausted way too early. Too late for a nap but too early for bed.
@@HH-gv8mx I do tend to feel the need for a nap in the afternoons. I don't think necessarily from following Andrew Hubermans advice but as a result of a combination of factors; stress, menopause, etc. I think if you limit your nap to less than 30 min it won't hurt to take one. Longer makes me groggy and then can't fall asleep at bedtime. After watching this interview I went to his UA-cam page and watched his video on Sleep Tool Kit: Tools for optimizing sleeping and waking. It explains all the science behind a good routine and gives all his best tips for sleeping, napping, and feeling energized.
I really liked learning about Andrew’s likes and hobbies, that was interesting, after listening to him in several podcasts, and I like that he asked mayim what her interests were.
Never heard of him before, 🤔 he is an expert for sure. Such calming voice, he exhales goodness.
So I did incorporate Dr. H's light upon waking, and my lifelong struggle with waking early shifted so that I can now awaken 2 hours earlier. My entrance into my work life has a completely different feel. I have suggested his work to some of the families and student I work with and they are finding some success as well.
Hey Dr Bialik. I think I need some motivation because I still don't know what I want to work as. I'm also noticed you returned to normal since this isn't a Summer edition. I really miss seeing you on Big Bang Theory! I hope Amy someday gets a spin-off when she was a girl and I'd really love to hear you narrating it! I'm 1st by the way!
Yessss, now I understand why the hypnotist I went to see back in the day, got us all to look up and close our eyes. Then he came to us, opening our eye lids individually. From there he sent many people back to their seats for the show and some of us stayed on stage. I was highly hypnothesizable and I'm CANADIAN 🤣🤣🤣🤣Honestly thank you
That sounds like the Elman induction into a hypnotic state
I love this episode ❤️ I have been a mouth-breather for years, and now I am undoing my bad habits. This purposeful breathing will help my stress levels 😊
First. I love you three.
Emdr:. I went to one sided marriage counseling, because he refused to go, to help "live with his behaviors" that disrupted our family life of raising babies, and my therapist used this and it helped. Simple, kinda asked questions like, is it real? Does it have to affect you?
Totally at the moment things. But I found it helpful.
I really like that you asked if he had a partner. I've followed him for quite some time and wondered. Thanks. 👍
It was good hearing you all interact.
I have only one thing to say about this episode: *MORE!!!*
Wowsers! The best yet. My wish is that you choose to collaborate with Dr. Huberman at least one podcast a month. Pretty please! I feel smart just listening in to you smarty pants.
That’s why having a dog is the BEST!
I leave my phone at home and we have a snuffle walk in whatever the weather
I was diagnosed with SAD years ago when I had a one hour commute, in the dark both ways and taught all day in a windowless classroom with fluorescent lights!
I was put on antidepressants for YEARS
all I needed was a light box for our west coast northern hemisphere rainy seasons and I soak up the real rays with a ball cap and NO sunglasses. ❤
Love that she referenced John Sarno MD! His decades of work was WAY ahead of its time!
It will be incredible to have a series both of them talking about female hormones, pre menopause, menopause, etc.
Yes! Definitely a topic that needs more attention!
What an amazing episode. I'm saving it for future reference.
This was really a compelling interview. I work nights and sleep days and my sleep is very interrupted. I took notes and will start a new routine to incorporate some of these techniques so that I can become a body systems influencer. LOVED this conversation. You really shine bright in your science realm. More please! xoxo. P.S. Go Canada!!
what worked for you ?
@@elise9537 After watching this I started taking 50mg of Apigenin, 200mg L-Theanine, 144mg mg Magnesium L-threonate, and 10mg Melatonin two hours before bed. It has worked like a charm. If I take it at bedtime I am too sleepy in the morning so if I am running late to bed I just take the melatonin. I am getting a deeper sleep and dreaming more too.
There is no one like Andrew Huberman. He is
The most straight forward teaching from Andrew as usual. The interviewer is just too full of herself. Andrew just communicates sincerely.
What an absolute wonderful podcast you have! Huberman brought me here. (So sad about Costello dying though, I've heard how much he loved that dog)
Best podcast . Love love love Dr. Huberman❤
Wow. Quadruple wow. Practically speechless. THIS was amazing!