
Dr. Alan Castel, PhD, is a professor of psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) and one of the world's foremost experts on human memory and cognitive aging.
Loading summary
Dr. Alan Castell
Good learning happens through making mistakes. Just seeing something many times doesn't mean you'll remember it well. You've seen the apple logo so many times, of course you know all the features. But then when you quiz people and test them and I do this in my class, people aren't sure is the bite on the left or the right hand side, is there a stem or a leaf? The best way to remember something is to again failures. I'll have you draw it without looking at it and you struggle and you're wait, is it on the left or right Instead is it stem or a leaf? And you're starting to question all of these things. Then when you look at the logo again, you're going to engage in better learning than if you hadn't done that error Full kind of trial beforehand welcome
Andrew Huberman
to the Huberman Lab podcast, where we discuss science and science based tools for everyday life. I'm Andrew Huberman and I'm a professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine. My guest today is Dr. Alan Castell. Dr. Alan Castell is a professor of Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is one of the world's foremost experts on human memory and cognitive aging. Today we discuss what determines if we remember something, like a name or an event, or how to do something. And we discuss how to improve our ability to remember information of all kinds at any age. We also discuss how anytime we plan or imagine something about our future, we are always building that on memories of our past and what that means for our ability to come up with new ideas and plans for our lives. And we discuss how our memory changes across the lifespan and why some people retain exceptional cognitive abilities well into their 80s and 90s and even beyond, and what any of us can do to improve our chances of maintaining or even getting better at memory as we age. Indeed, while most people assume that memory decline is an inevitable consequence of getting older, Dr. Castell explains research that tells us the story is far more nuanced and more optimistic. In fact, we cover one of the more powerful and perhaps surprising influences on our rate of cognitive aging, which is your beliefs about aging itself. And finally, we discuss so called super agers, which is the name given to older adults whose memory performance rivals that of people decades younger. He explains which superager protocols are accessible to anyone and how they can be incorporated into everyday life to benefit our mental and our physical health. Before we begin, I'd like to emphasize that this podcast is separate from my teaching and research roles at Stanford. It Is, however, part of my desire and effort to bring zero cost to consumer information about science and science related tools to the general public. In keeping with that theme, today's episode does include sponsors. And now for my discussion with Dr. Alan Castell. Dr. Alan Castell, welcome.
Dr. Alan Castell
Thank you. Nice to be here.
Andrew Huberman
You're going to tell us how to build up and keep our memory. But let's start by asking, what is memory? Or rather, how do you conceptualize memory from the standpoint of we move through life, we experience things, let's call it passively, or we try to remember certain things. What determines what information, information we hold on to, how long, and so on.
Dr. Alan Castell
It's a great question. And memory is really a mental representation of the past. And by its very nature it's reconstructive. It's never always accurate. And I think that's why it's so mysterious and fascinating that you and I can see the same event and then remember it differently a week or a day later. And it starts kind of almost at the sensory level. And sometimes our mind plays tricks on us. And that's how I got interested in this field that how can I think I know something and yet not know it as well as I do? And this is something that's called metacognition, our awareness of our own cognition. And as a personal anecdote, when I was in fifth or sixth grade, I had one line in the play the wizard of Oz. It's a line I practiced again and again. Listen everyone, there's a cyclone on the way. Hurry and get into the cellar. And of course on opening night, listen everyone, there's a cellar on the way. Hurry and get into the cyclone. And I was thinking, how did I manage that? Having memorized this line? Most of the probably didn't even notice. But that to me was an early exposure to memory is not always kind of a function of what you do with the information. And then in high school, I had another exposure to memory where I just memorized a lot of things. And that got me pretty far in algebra and chemistry. In fact, I almost memorized the entire periodic table, but this was using mnemonics, little rhymes or songs. And I realized in my first year of college that I really didn't have a strong understanding of chemistry, even though I could use all these terms. And thankfully I took an introductory psychology class. And I realized people studied learning and memory and kind of false memories and why memory can and cannot be accurate. And I was hooked. I found that so fascinating and I still do today.
Andrew Huberman
I'm both impressed and intrigued to ask more about memorization of the periodic table. First question is about mnemonics and ways that we try and batch and learn information by pairing it to other things. Trying to remember a room full of people's names, and you could pair the first letter of their name with a fruit or what people do these things. To me, that seems like a very inefficient way to learn because you're adding more information that you need to store away. So the first question is, is that the best way to learn large batches of information?
Dr. Alan Castell
I think it's almost a workaround. And that's the first kind of problem people say is I can't remember names. And by their nature, names used to be descriptive of person's occupation. Someone's a baker, we call them Mr. Baker. But that's, of course, evolved with time and names. You know, I tell people, if you can't remember someone's name, that's probably a natural forgetting. But you remember if you had an interesting conversation or you remember if you can trust them, that's probably more important. So then to engage our knowledge base so that we can remember names, we need to make this arbitrary link. And so I tell people my last name is Pastel. Castel. Castel rhymes with pastel. And my grandfather used pastels, let's say. And so people can then make this link. But like you say, that's effortful. It takes time. It takes time away from kind of the essence of something else we could talk about. And it also leads to these kind of predictable memory errors. So people say, oh, I remember his name was Pastel, when in fact it's Castel. So I think we have to almost trick our memory into remembering things that might be somewhat arbitrary, and that becomes more pronounced as we get older. There's more Davids, there's more Andrews. And it's just more interference to get around that. We have to use deliberate practice, retrieval practice, use the name several times. But I tell my students whose names I often forget that I'll still remember topics we've talked about or how they felt about something. I think that's more important than sometimes just remembering a name.
Andrew Huberman
To remember chemistry or some other subject that involves nomenclature, not everyday terms, unless you're a chemist, but to really understand the deeper mechanics of that thing and remember that, what are some better tools? I want to say, and I'm not a memory researcher, that it might be helpful to think in terms of verbs, not labels. So rather than thinking about a particular element, just in terms of its name. But think about how it interacts with something else or how it gives or receives a charge in certain conditions.
Dr. Alan Castell
Absolutely. I think that's what you're looking for is deeper learning, deeper semantic learning. And this has been referred to as levels of processing. So I was working at a very low level of processing when I'm making up Happy Henry for hydrogen and helium. But if you can start to visualize things or interact with them, and that's why we want to have chemistry labs or places where I found chemistry very abstract. I think that's why I didn't really engage with it. But I found psychology to be something that we were interacting with every day. I was making these memory errors. I saw my parents and grandparents remembering and forgetting things and I thought, how does that happen? And the brain is so complex that I don't think we'll ever completely understand why this memory error might happen. But I think this awareness is really important. And a lot of good learning happens through making mistakes. I play piano and I struggle, but I know when I make a mistake I'm going to have to work on this. And I see that with my children. You learn a lot by making these mistakes. And I think that illustrates also how our memory works, that just seeing something many times doesn't mean you'll remember it well. And this is a classic demonstration that you've seen a penny many times. You don't remember all the features on the penny. I've updated that to the apple logo. You've seen the apple logo so many times, of course you know all the features. But then when you quiz people and test them, and I do this in my class, people aren't sure is the bite on the left or the right hand side is there a stem or a leaf. But if you make people draw it while they're looking at it, they're going
Andrew Huberman
to remember it better while they're looking at the actual.
Dr. Alan Castell
While they're looking at it. Or if they actually the best way to remember something is to again failures. I'll have you draw it without looking at it and you struggle and wait, is it on the left or right instead of stem or a leaf? And you're starting to question all of these things. Then when you look at the logo again, you're going to engage in better learning than if you hadn't done that errorful kind of trial beforehand.
Andrew Huberman
Even if you don't redraw it correctly.
Dr. Alan Castell
Exactly. Yeah. So this sort of thing is in an academic setting, we don't want failure, we want people to do well. But I think this sort of retrieval failure with some corrective feedback is really beneficial. And that's kind of how you learn through life. You make mistakes and then you correct them. But if you're constantly just doing it the right way, you're not really noticing these features. And we've tried to extend this to other domains like, you know, it's called habituation. You stop noticing things around you, like where the nearest fire extinguisher is, let's say. And I guarantee hopefully there's one somewhere nearby. And you've probably walked by it many times, but you stop noticing it. And it's only until you'll need it, you'll realize, wait, where is it? And so we've done this study where you have to, instead of me telling you where it is, you have to get up and find it. And so now you're engaging with the environment, you're going to go look for it and be like, gosh, it's been there the whole time. I've walked by it so many times, I've never noticed it. And I think, think that's the difference between seeing something and noticing it. So someone who studies vision, we know a lot of information reaches the retina, but then how much of it reaches our kind of more conscious level and not all of it does. And I think that's what makes psychology interesting.
Andrew Huberman
In today's financial landscape of constant market shifts and chaotic news, it's easy to feel uncertain about how to save and invest your money. Wealthfront is the solution that helps you take control of your money while managing risk. For nearly a decade, I've trusted Wealthfront to navigate this volatility. With the Wealthfront cash account, I can earn 3.3% annual percentage yield or APY on my cash from program banks. And I know my money is growing until I'm ready to spend it or invest it. One of the features I love about Wealthfront is that I have access to instant no fee withdrawals to eligible accounts 24 7. That means I can move my money where I need it without waiting. And when I'm ready to transition from saving to investing, Wealthfront lets me seamlessly transfer my funds into one of their expert built portfolios. For a limited time, Wealthfront is offering the Huberman Lab audience an exclusive 0.75% APY boost over the base rate for three months, meaning you can get up to 4.05% variable APY on up to $150,000 in deposits. Over 1 million people already trust Wealthfront. To save more, earn more and build long term wealth with confidence. If you'd like to try Wealthfront, you can go to wealthfront.com. to receive the boost offer and start earning 4.05% variable APY today. That's wealthfront.com huberman to get started. This is a paid testimonial of Wealthfront. Client experiences will vary. Wealthfront Brokerage is not a Bank. The base APY is as of January 30, 2026 and subject to change. For more information, please see the Episode Description Today's episode is also brought to us by Helix Sleep. Helix Sleep makes mattresses and pillows that are customized to your unique sleep needs. Now I've spoken many times before on this and on other podcasts about the fact that getting a great night's sleep is the foundation of mental health, physical health and performance. When we aren't getting great sleep on a consistent basis, everything suffers and when we are sleeping well and enough, our mental health, physical health and performance in all endeavors improve markedly. Now, the mattress you sleep on makes a huge difference in the quality of sleep that you get each night. How soft it is or how firm it is all play into your comfort and need to be tailored to your unique sleep needs. If you go to the Helix website you can take a brief two minute quiz and it will ask you questions such as do you sleep on your back, your side or your stomach? Maybe you know, maybe you don't. Do you tend to run hot or cold during the night? Things of that sort. You answer those questions and Helix will match you to the ideal mattress for you. For me, that turned out to be the Dusk D U S K Mattress. I've been sleeping on a dusk mattress for more than four years now and it's been far and away the best sleep that ever had. If you'd like to try Helix, you can go to helixsleep.com huberman take that 2 minute sleep quiz and Helix will match you to a mattress that's customized for you. Right now, Helix is giving up to 27% off their entire site. Helix has also teamed up with True Med which allows you to use your HSA FSA dollars to shop Helix's award winning mattresses. Again, that's helixsleep.com huberman to get up to 27% off. Yeah, the big revelation for me when learning about neuroplasticity and it was such an obvious one once I heard it was that if you can perform a mental or physical task, there's no reason for your brain to Change. You clearly already have the circuit. So it's the gap between desired performance and current performance that actually triggers the opportunity for plasticity.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And those can be uncomfortable positions. Right. Where it's like, I don't know this, am I going to be able to learn it? And I think that's this metacognitive aspect of when are you aware of that? And a lot of learning now is unsupervised learning. It's not that you're going in classrooms and teachers are telling you what to do. You want to learn a new instrument, you might do a lot of it on YouTube. Right. You're going to try and figure it out. You want to learn a new language, you want to learn how to communicate with people. There's going to be a lot of trial and error. I think kind of the best learners are the ones who persist, who are curious, because that's how you're going to get a lot of feedback, asking not just lots of questions, but the right questions.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah. And I think the frustration and agitation, I do believe that's the, you know, the release of catecholamines, you know, epinephrine, norepinephrine, and those change the milieu around synapses and let them change, you know, all the things that we want to avoid, the things that actually allow us to learn. It could be that people that are very good at learning and have this willingness to embrace so called beginner's mind, like, you know, like, okay, they're excellent in one domain and they're perfectly happy to be a raw beginner in a different domain. I always wonder if they experience agitation the same way that anyone else would, but that they don't have the same relationship to it. Like, oh, here's that autonomic arousal again. You know, here it is. And maybe they don't conceptualize as frustration. So in terms of getting better at learning and remembering things, have you or any other laboratories parsed kind of people's framework around it? Like, I know there's a vast literature around growth mindset, but I'm thinking more in terms of how people think about their own levels of frustration. Because if you go, oh, like, here I am frustrated again, awesome, let's go. Now's the opportunity versus, like, I'm terrible at this. I know I should push through. I just wonder whether or not mindset can actually make a difference.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think it can. I think our goals can play a big role. A lot of the learning we do is sometimes, you know, learning to take a test or learning you know something, because it'll be on a test. But as we get through life, we realize if you're interested in bird watching or music or skateboarding, a lot of this is going to be observational learning. It's going to be talking to other people. So I think it comes down to curiosity, which is almost closing this knowledge gap, where here I am, but I want to be here. How can I get from here to here? And some of it is there's a strong motivation there. And that's something we've started to study with older adults as well, because we know memory declines happen with age. But not all things change equally. And in fact, there are certain memory systems that might actually remain stable or even improve. And I think some of the keys here are curiosity, being interested in listening to a podcast, talking to someone else, closing that knowledge gap, and then kind of extending that and going further. And I sometimes find there's topics that I'm not so interested in, but then there's some that I will almost become obsessive about that. It's like I'm going to watch that YouTube video and the next one and the next one, and then it's 45 minutes later. And I think that that can be a waste of time in some ways, but it shows that our brain is craving this information. And that's something that I'm really curious about, how that will change as we get older. And some of our research suggests that as we get older, we're more selective about what we focus on, and I think that can be beneficial. So maybe you don't waste as much time on trying to learn everything, but you're more focused on the things you want to learn about.
Andrew Huberman
Do we know that it's important to continue to seek out new information as we get older in order to maintain our memory, or is it sufficient to just make some effort to remember the past, what we need to do to get through our day? You know, I think this gets down to the question. People think I really should be striving to keep my memory. Everyone wants to keep their memory. Sure, that makes sense. But how hard should people push to learn new information as opposed to, you know, maintaining what they've got?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, it's a great question. I think it's a little bit of both. And you want to have that sort of balance. So if, you know, if you. If you play piano. My father, in his 80s and 90s, still plays piano. I don't think he's learning new pieces, but he's strengthening the pieces. He knows and that keeps him sharp. On the other hand, being exposed to new things, if you're traveling, if you're talking to different people, that can be really important for things like even neurogenesis. You want to, you know, develop new brain cells, which we know doesn't just stop as we reach a certain age. So it's probably a bit of both. And people ask me, what's the best thing to keep my brain sharp? Is it crossword puzzles? And that's interesting because I think as we get older, our actual verbal knowledge is maintained, if not improved. So in a way, you're strengthening a strength, and I think that can be beneficial. But probably the other things to do are do new things, go outside and appreciate the birds, or talk to someone who has a different perspective, or you go to different restaurant, even all of these things. I find as I get older, I have a lot of routines. But it's when I start to violate these routines, take a different way to work or try something different at a restaurant, I can almost feel like, wow, that was a different experience today. I did something else. I think both are really important.
Andrew Huberman
We do get set in our ways. That's a real thing.
Dr. Alan Castell
Habits can be healthy. And we can talk more about that because those routines. I drove this way, and I didn't get into a car accident, or I even notice my students in my classes after the first couple of weeks. They all sit in the same seats. I'm always like, why is that? And it's like, well, I didn't get attacked by a snake here, so it's safe. Maybe evolutionarily it makes sense, but I'll sometimes halfway through the quarter say, okay, I want everyone to get up and switch sides and sit somewhere else. And students are like, this is terrible. I have to move. But there's some benefits to having a different perspective, both physically and possibly mentally, that you're going to then remember things differently. And I know if I. I've taken a class in a different classroom every year, I can almost revisit each of those rooms and try and recall what I learned. But if you learn all in the same spot, there's a lot of interference. So I think there can be benefits to changing our habits, but it can be uncomfortable, especially at first.
Andrew Huberman
I went to a lot of scientific meetings early in my career, and I would change seats after every break. It was the only way I could stay awake through all the talks. Some talks would naturally keep me awake, and some just wouldn't. I mean, they don't tell you this, but there are a lot of great talks at meetings, often a lot of boring ones do. And you feel obligated to stay. Later in my career, I give myself permission to get up and take a walk. But, you know. So I do think that one learns differently. Even if you just change the novelty of seat position.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And I think that's a great example of as you've gotten older, more experienced. First of all, you give yourself the leeway, like, hey, I can get up if this isn't working for me, or I want to see something else. But I've also learned. I learn better if I sit over here and then over here and then over here. And those are some principles of memory that I think when you have this metacognitive insight, you can use it effectively. And I've learned and I've seen my children learn, sometimes through mistakes or sometimes this works better for me. And I think that's fascinating that we can do that.
Andrew Huberman
It is interesting that almost everybody has an experience of saying a gaffe, saying something stupid or getting the wrong answer publicly. And the. The shame and the arousal that comes with that means a. We're never going to forget the right answer. But we tend to remember the experience of embarrassment more than. It sort of swamps the information somehow. And it just raises this question for me. Is there a slight to severe emotional tag on every memory we have?
Dr. Alan Castell
I think a part of our brain, like the amygdala that's involved in processing emotions is very active and is maintained throughout age. It's other parts of the brain tend to decline. So I think you're right that there can be an emotional attachment to a lot of our memories. Some of them are bittersweet. Some of them are things we go back to for comfort. Sometimes we even change them a little bit so they fit the way we might have thought they happened.
Andrew Huberman
I think that happens.
Dr. Alan Castell
And that can be writ large. Sure. And that's part of our emotional tuning, like what makes us feel good. Some memories we don't want to revisit, some ptsd. There's a lot of research on how we can try and help people. So I think memory can be tuned that way and a lot of it can happen. Emotional valence. And those are usually the memories that we cherish. They're the ones that we might be afraid of. I still remember, even though I'm not sure I remember it accurately, this wizard of Oz. And now when my daughter was in wizard of Oz, I was like, oh, this is such a great play. So I was thinking positively about it. Even though at that time.
Andrew Huberman
Of getting the line wrong.
Dr. Alan Castell
Of getting the line wrong, what do
Andrew Huberman
you think happened there?
Dr. Alan Castell
I was probably just distracted. You do a lot of these dress rehearsals. I'm not. Clearly, I'm not an actor. But you do a lot of these rehearsing, and you don't see the audience. You don't appreciate what's going on, especially when you're young, you know, all of a sudden, like, oh, there's all these people watching me. And I know what I'm supposed to say, but I kind of. I'm not convinced most people even remembered it. I'm not even sure my parents were there, you know? So I think we then think of it as a very strong emotional memory, but it guides us. And to me, that's a lasting memory in a sense, because it's. That kind of forced me to think, how does memory really work? I thought I knew how it worked. And I see a lot of people studying in ways that aren't always as effective. We know some of the work. This is colleagues at UCLA who've studied desirable difficulties. How can you make learning kind of uncomfortable, but that you'll remember things better? And it goes against a lot of our intuitions. A lot of teachers will want to say, how can we make learning easier? I think that's probably the first problem, is you don't want it to be easy. You want it to be not a struggle, but a challenge so that you can appreciate it. Appreciate just how difficult it is. So if I learned nothing else from that, wizard of Oz is now when I do a presentation or talk to other people, I love to see the room I'm going to be working in. Or maybe a scientific presentation. Maybe you've done this too. The night before, you're like, oh, this is the auditorium. And probably raises your arousal level, but it makes you feel more comfortable than the day of.
Andrew Huberman
I don't have a photographic memory. I wish I did, or maybe I wish I didn't. But a long time ago, I decided I was in a.
Dr. Alan Castell
A.
Andrew Huberman
In a really cool circumstance. I was on a picnic. It was my first girlfriend. And I remember thinking, like, oh, she's so beautiful. I'm just gonna take a picture. We were just sitting at this park that's up in the hills behind where I used to live. And I just went and I decided, okay. Like, I remember the picture now. Of course, in my mind now, it's. It's blurry. Like, I don't remember specific details, but I remember more or less. I think I remember that. The angle. And then like a year and a half ago, I was in. In Manhattan. I was in an Uber. And I just was like, maybe I could just do that for a. Like a trivial street scene. So I was like, look, there was that one of those scaffolds for construction. And I just decided, you know, just do that. And there was a guy walking by. And I'm like, I wonder if I'll remember it. And I still remember it. Now the question I have is, do I actually remember the content of what I saw? Besides just their crude, you know, the scaffold, the guy, in one case, you know, my girlfriend, we were sitting on this nice big lawn above. There's this lake there. It's a beautiful spot in Palo Alto. It's still there, or is what's stamped in my decision to do that and the sort of conscious collection of it. These weren't like big, emotionally salient events. The difference between these visual memories and other visual memories is that the emotional load wasn't that high. But I made the decision to do it. It was like it was coming from me. So I'm not just trying to remember. We also went to. Was her senior, my junior prom. I remember a few things from that prom, but I can't remember. I don't have a visual picture of the prom. But the prom was also a lot more emotionally laden than anything I just described. Does that make sense?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, it's a fascinating question because I think selection is the important thing here that you're making a conscious decision. Like, this is special moment. Can I just take a picture of it? And the work on visual memory is interesting. We are very visual people. But the research on photographic memory does show that even people who have very strong visual memory will make memory errors. So it's not that it's exactly photographic, but their visual memory is exceptional. I think what's interesting here, and this is something I think is important, is the selection process that you're choosing. This is a special moment. I'm going to timestamp it and remember it. And you're not doing anything special other than realizing a lot is going on now. There's probably some emotional valence there versus taking this random picture in New York City. And it would be interesting to kind of test your memory later because we know sometimes we think we remember something well, and in fact we misremember things or details. And hopefully you got the right girlfriend, of course. But maybe the hill looks a little bit different. Or sometimes people are like, of course it was spring because we went to the prom. But it's like, no, actually now you. That it was a different season entirely. That was fall and confusing with the other picnic I took. But I think that's important, especially as we get older, that there are some memories these days. We have our phones for everything. So you probably couldn't then, but you could have pulled out your phone and actually taken a picture. And you see a lot of people offloading information now. I'm not going to remember this. I'll take a picture. There is some research showing that that act of deciding to take the picture actually improves your own memory for the event. For the event.
Andrew Huberman
Interesting.
Dr. Alan Castell
Now, it can also make your memory worse because you're realizing, I'm taking this photo so I don't need to remember it later. And so you could see it going both ways. But that selection process is important. So sometimes you're choosing, this is mundane, I'm going to offload it and take a picture. Or this is a special moment. I want to take this picture. And I see it, you know, when I take pictures of my family. This is a special moment. I want to take this photo. But there are times where I'm like, I don't have my camera. I don't want to going to interfere. This is going to be like an internal memory that I can take. And hopefully it lasts forever.
Andrew Huberman
I tell myself that my mindset at the time was, this is a special moment. I never want to forget this. Yeah, I hope I never forget it.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, you know, memory is reconstructive. And I think, you know, the more you retrieve it and go back there, the more you'll have this feeling of remembering it. And our brain does a lot of interesting things in terms of, you know, reconstructing the past also has a similar brain signature as imagining the future, which in some ways makes sense. We shouldn't have separate parts of the brain for thinking about the past and thinking about the future. But that can kind of then predict why you might misremember something. Why your imagination has to be based surely on the experiences you've had already. Right. Or if I say, what would it be like to go to Mars? Well, you've never been to Mars, but you've seen movies in the past about it. So our. If I said imagine a space alien, you and I being similar age, are probably going to think of the ET version of one, whereas someone who's younger than us might have a very different kind of representation of that. So it's interesting to think of memory as kind of A reconstruction of the past. But also imagining the future involves our past experiences.
Andrew Huberman
Never thought about it that way. It's the perfect time, I think, to raise the quote that a former guest on this podcast put on social media the other day. They weren't his words, but this Morgan Housel who did a really wonderful episode on the Psychology of Money. And I. I really love his first book, but also his second book, the Art of Spending Money. He put out a. He said it's a Russian quote. The past is more unpredictable than the future.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
Goodness. That raises questions about eyewitness testimony, spousal arguments. You know, I occasionally will get an email. My wife and I are. Have a debate or my husband and I are debate. And. And I have a rule. I don't get into spousal debates or arguments of any kind. So do we remember things the way they happened or do we confabulate? Do we muck it all up?
Dr. Alan Castell
You know, I don't think we muck it all up, and I don't think we do it intentionally either. But as a result of all the information we have in our memory, we're constantly interpreting, you know, the future and our current state. And you spoke a little bit about eyewitness memory. I think that's a really good example of that, where something horrible might have happened and like your experience where you think you're taking a picture and you're going to remember everything. And it feels like you will. I can remember the shirt. I can remember the smell. I can remember the weather. And sometimes that can be accurate. A lot of research shows that sometimes we misremember these things and some of these classic cases, unfortunately, now that there's DNA evidence, you can determine that maybe they got the wrong person. And when that happens, you want to look back and say, how could that happen? And some of it comes down to faulty eyewitness identification. And these are not cases where people are lying or intentionally changing things, but they'll identify someone. They'll say, that's the person. And as a result of identifying that person in a lineup, that person then replaces what they actually saw. So our memory can be contaminated, just like any form of evidence could be contaminated. And then when you replay it again, you're replaying the person you identified, not the person you actually saw.
Andrew Huberman
Wow. So it's almost like we, as we become more familiar with this person that we identified, quote, unquote, our knowledge about them, facial features, et cetera, is elaborated in our brain, and we superimpose that that on the actual experience yeah, and
Dr. Alan Castell
this is, you know, one of the most famous cases, Ronald Cotton case, where really horrible event happened. And the woman made a point of trying to remember her attacker. So it wasn't just she got a quick glance, but she had a long interaction with him and, you know, a traumatic event. And she said, if I survive this, I want to remember his face so I can identify him later. So this is like the perfect situation where your memory should be sharp. And it was cross race identification, which we know is not as reliable as identifying someone of your own race. And when she saw a lineup she identified, she took her time and said, this feels like it's a multiple choice test. And I studied hard for it. She took her time and she identified the person and she thought in her mind, this is the person who was inches from my throat. And she identified him and he had an alibi that didn't stand up. And he was then know, found guilty. And it was only, you know, decades later that DNA evidence exonerated him. And she felt horrible. She felt like, you know, and there's a lot of reasons why this could happen, you know, whether leading questions or how the identification process was conducted. But she was trying to do what she felt was her job and take someone who she thought was guilty off the street. And later they got to meet in fact, and she, you know, could apologize to him. She felt terrible. And so this is one case study, and I wouldn't draw any conclusions, but it had a lot of the principles that we've talked about where you feel like you're taking a photo. It's a cross race identification where your confidence might be high for good reason, but accuracy might not be. And then this kind of changing of the face, whereas once you identify that face, that's what you start to remember. And so I think there's a lot of interesting memory principles at play here.
Andrew Huberman
How does the legal system deal with this kind of thing? I mean, nowadays there's so many more cameras and phones which can track location. I like to think those things have improved the courtroom scenarios, that it's harder for people to make genuine mistakes.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I think it's, you know, memory should be treated as one source of evidence, just like DNA, just like any sort of evidence. But also we need to be aware that it can be contaminated just like any other source of evidence as well. So we can't just say, oh, well, DNA evidence, evidence is perfect. Well, it can also be contaminated in predictable ways. And I think coming back to this idea of metacognition, most people Feel like they have a pretty good understanding of how memory works, but it's not always accurate. And sometimes confidence. High confidence doesn't necessarily mean high accuracy. I think part of the reason we're fooled is usually the more you see something, the better you'll remember it. Just like the Apple logo. But that's not always the case and there's predictable reasons why the more you see something, the more you might stop attending to the features or you don't need to use it. And so that is a more kind of predictable memory principle. But we don't have this always accurate metacognitive insight. And I think that's interesting. I think that's both concerning in the eyewitness memory case, but it's also important for learning. How can we be kind of effective and maximize our learning?
Andrew Huberman
I have a question about. About what I want to call medium term memory. I don't even know if that's a real term, short term memory. Working memory. Listeners of this podcast may or may not be familiar, but working memory is like keeping a phone number online in your head or a string of numbers until you need it and then kind of, you may or may not remember it. Long term, long term memory. Obviously, long term memory. But there's this thing that I do today is a bit of a confessional. So when I check into hotels, I always look at the map of how to get out in a fire. Because once staying at a hotel in San Francisco for a donor event, the alarm went off in the middle of the night. Everyone of course, stuck their head out to look to see if anyone was leaving. And everyone like, we're not leaving. And then they called everyone's room. It was an actual fire, which taught me like when the alarm goes go right, but. And it was pretty confusing. Yeah, Wide hallways, wasn't clear. Exit sign was not to like the actual stairwell. It was, you know, it was not a good situation. But of course got out fine. But from now on, before I go to sleep, I go and I look at the. Where you are here. I look for the exit. I occasionally walk the hall. I don't want to be in this situation again, especially in a high rise. I just do not want to be in a situation where I can't get out of a building that's on fire. I figure it takes like five minutes. People laugh at me. I do this, but I make a mental map. Okay, so let's assume it's smoky. I do the same. Okay. I would. Which is the closer door. I would go right, then left. Right.
Dr. Alan Castell
Then left.
Andrew Huberman
Right. Okay. So I drill it in my head. Good. Then I go to sleep. I never remember the maps. But it's not working memory, it's not short term memory. I couldn't tell you for the life of me what the last hotel map looked like in my head. I had a you are here red dot, had doors add exit. So it had these component parts. But what term memory is that? And thank goodness I don't remember because it's going to change every time I'm in a different hotel. So what are the mechanisms that allow for selective forgetting? That's healthy. And also, is medium term memory an actual thing?
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, I think when you're saying medium term, that's your everyday basic memory function where you're like, I need to remember things, but I don't think I need to remember them that long, but I really need to remember them today or tonight. And it makes me sleep better at night. And I've had a similar experience. I was staying in a hotel with my family and the fire alarm went off and we're like, what do we do? Well, we know we don't take the elevator. That's what you're always told. And I don't think I looked at the map, but I looked down the hall and I swear when I looked down the hall I saw smoke. And so I'm like, let's not go that way. So we went down the other way, we rushed down the stairs, we got outside and the kids were pretty know, traumatic. And actually one of our children was like eight stories ahead of us going down the stairs. But what's interesting is I thought I saw smoke and that's, maybe I didn't have my glasses on, but that's my mind playing tricks on me. So maybe that was my concern. But I think that, you know, this everyday memory is really relevant. And when you're studying that map, you're making notes of like, okay, it's close by, it's down the hall, I've got to go down here. And that can be very informative and useful for survival. And there's some research saying that that's basically what our brain is tuned towards is surviving. Where am I going to eat? How am I going to sleep? How am I going to. So when you say everyday memory, I think that's probably the most important thing. And part of that memory formation is also then forgetting it and updating it. It's as simple as you need to know your hotel room number when you're staying there. But if I ask you, your hotel room number, a week later it's gone on. But that's good in a way because you're going to have other numbers to remember and other hotel room numbers to remember. So there's benefits of forgetting. I think that's an interesting insight. You're doing some processing to remember something, but then you need to update it and forget it. And it's the same thing. I think the best thing you can do in that case is studying the map is one thing, but some people aren't great with maps. And where am I in the hotel is doing that active learning of actually walking the halls, of like, well, I go down here and there's the yellow elevator, so I can't go there. Oh, there are the stairs. I'll remember that. And then you can kind of encode it. So that sort of act of learning is like us with the fire extinguisher. We made people get up and find it instead of telling people where it was. And I'm always, you know, when you're on a flight, they'll always say, there's six emergency exits on this plane. And then I think they do the wrong thing. They tell you where they are. I think the best thing would be to say, you know, there's six emergency exits on this plane.
Andrew Huberman
I'm not going to tell you where they are.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, I'm not going to say not where they are, but go find them. And I notice maybe it's just myself being anxious. As soon as they say that, I'm looking behind me, I'm making sure I know where they all are. Whereas most people are like, oh, they pointed here, here and here. And I'll even say, sometimes the nearest one is behind you. And I'm like, well, I want to see where it is behind me. And so I think that sort of act of learning, whether you call it everyday memory, is really important. And I think when we talk about memory, people are like, I can't remember names. And like, that's kind of a common thing. But if you, you need to sometimes remember, like, what medication are you taking? Or how did you react the last time you saw this person? And those sorts. I think it's really important to be in tune with what you're calling this kind of everyday, average memory.
Andrew Huberman
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor, AG1. AG1 is a vitamin mineral probiotic drink that also includes prebiotics and adaptogens. I discovered AG1 way back in 2012, long before I ever had a podcast. And I'VE been taking it every day since the reason I started taking AG1 and the reason I still take it every day is because AG1 is to my knowledge, the highest quality and most comprehensive of the foundational nutritional supplements on the market. AG1 is designed to support things like gut health, immune health, and overall energy, and it does so by helping to fill any gaps that you might have in your daily nutrition. I get asked pretty much all the time if I could only take one supplement, what should that supplement be be? And my answer is always AG1. It has just been so helpful for supporting all aspects of physical health, mental health and performance. If you would like to try AG1, you can go to drinkag1.comhuberman to get a special offer. For a limited time, AG1 is giving away a free bottle of their new Omega 3 Coenzyme Q10 product. Omega 3 and Coenzyme Q10 are known to support cardiovascular health, cellular health and energy, general brain health, and much more. I personally take them both every day. Again, go to drinkag1.comhuberman to get a free bottle of the new Omega 3 Coenzyme Q10 with your first AG1 subscription. Thank you for that. And I'm going to use that as weaponry when I get teased for walking the fire exits. But it was because the in part because the first time people were asking, hey, do you know if we should leave? Do you know which way to go? And I realized, okay, next time it might as well be me. I'll be the guy that knows which way to go, certainly for myself. And then I can tell other people which way to go. Nobody else here knows where to go. And most likely they're not going to know the next time I do the thing on the plane too, I think, okay, I actually read the thing of how to Take it out because I figure, well, I've experienced how under conditions of very high arousal, you just default to what almost feel like whatever was trained, whatever reflexes you have. I mean, I had a scuba diving accident years ago and I don't like to say came close to the end, but it was an air failure and it was a whole mess. And you just default to yeah, we had to do the whole share error thing. It was a precarious situation to begin with and you just default to these routines. Actually, recently I watched what I think is a spectacular documentary about Dean Potter. He was a free solo climber, a predecessor to Alex Honnold. He was kind of the guy to beat, and Honnold passed him up pretty early and he got into wingsuiting and BASE jumping and the whole thing. And there was this. There's a scene where, so be warned, if you watch this amazing four part series, there's a scene where people are doing BASE jumping in Yosemite, are advocating for it being legal in Yosemite. It's illegal. And so there are a bunch of spectators there and they were doing this big demonstration jump. And a woman who was a very, very seasoned BASE jumper, she didn't want to use her own gear because they were confiscating people's gear at the bottom. So she borrowed someone else's gear and she jumps and she's pulling from a leg, a leg pull, I guess it is. And you just see her the whole way down, the whole way down. And she's got, you know, she's got a parachute on.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And just, you know, not to give it away, but I guess, you know, gave it away that she dies. But the whole way down you can see her just doing this routine movement.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And she put on a different pack. She knew that it was a different pole location. So under conditions of very high arousal puzzle even highly, highly trained people for that condition, they just default to whatever it is that they're used to doing. And if you don't know what to do, you default to not knowing what to do. If you know what to do, you default to what you think you need to do in one situation. And I've had that experience scuba diving. It's very clear from this documentary and I think we're all a little naive in thinking that, oh no, when the alarm goes and everything is crazy, I'm going to sort through this in a regimented way or I'll be so keyed up I'll have to figure it out. This is not quite the case. The brain seems to not that way.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I think we discover that, you know, in these extreme situations, but also even kind of in some simple situations, there's, there's a really concerning thing that happens that people will leave children, infants in the back of their car unattended and you know, these infants will, will die on hot days. On hot days. And when you look at these investigations, the reason this happens is, you know, these are very responsible, very intelligent parents who will, you know, put their child in the car and then get in the car and then you just get in this mode of I'm going to work, I'm going to do my job and you're in this routine, the baby falls asleep, you drive to work, you go upstairs you do it and then you. And then you get this phone call like, where's your infant? Or why haven't they been dropped off? And you're thinking, what? What are you talking about?
Andrew Huberman
Whoa.
Dr. Alan Castell
Exactly.
Andrew Huberman
I'm sure many people listening to this are like, there's no way. There's no way.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, I think there's, like, there's no way that could happen to me. This must be some person who's super distracted or has this, this. Sadly, it happens too often to people of, you know, all sorts of people. And I think that's part of the issue. Like, you're saying she's going to grab the strap where it normally is. You drive to work a hundred times this way, but it's this one day where it was your turn to take the infant to daycare. And you just get into this mode, this habit, this routine. And now we have to have our car talking to us. Some cars will even say, have you checked the backseat for an infant? And it's like, gosh, have we come to that level where we need to be reminded of these things? So I think that's where you're right. It becomes lethal that sometimes it's talked about in terms of prospective memory, remembering to do something in the future. We think of memory as usually as remembering to do something past, but a lot of it is, what do you have to do today? Are you meeting this person? We offload this to our phones and get reminders, but we're prone to forgetting. And especially under. You're talking about high arousal, especially person's falling. But it's even as simple as when you're in the car and you're probably aware when you're in the car, you start mind wandering. You're thinking of a million other things, and all of a sudden you've arrived somewhere or you missed your turn. So our brain kind of takes over in ways that we might not be sure about.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah. One of the things that spooks me about scuba diving and I love scuba diving, is, you know, I got my PATI certification because it's a bit more involved, but it worries me that you actually don't have to update date. And if you do, not very often you can. It's been, gosh, it's been four more five years since I went scuba diving last time. But I've got my card, I have my gear, and if somebody wants to go scuba diving tomorrow, I can do it legally. Yeah, but there's a lot involved, like, you need to brush up. And so, you know, I Mean, here in the United States, we have all this, like, you know, people can sue each other, there are all these legal protections, but there's still a lot of ways in which we can do damage to ourselves or others, just by virtue of the fact that we don't have to brush up on driving skills. It's kind of a shock to me that we don't have more problems related to forgetting.
Dr. Alan Castell
It's true. I think the more you think about it, it's amazing how much we do remember, especially under some circumstances. But I agree that a lot of this, scuba diving too, because you're underwater with buoyancy, you have to figure things out. And I got certified too, when I was 20. I wouldn't trust my, myself to do it again. I'd want to probably take the entire course again. But when you're 30, maybe you feel confident, and especially drivers, like new drivers, you give very little training to younger drivers. And then you're like, you're on your own. I've seen it with my children learning to drive. I also realize I'm not as good a driver as I thought I was. I'm certainly passing on some habits that I probably should be more aware of. And there's. They're more rule based, they're aware of how to do things. But I have this feeling, like this wisdom, well, you don't need to do that, or that's the rule. But I do it this way. So I think you're right. I think revisiting these things more often and being more cognizant probably would make us safer.
Andrew Huberman
On the lighter side, many people who are concerned about their memory as they age will ask about forgetting. I want to know why. As people get older, they tell the same stories over and over again, same jokes over and over again. Have they forgotten that they've said the joke? Or are they just doing it for their own entertainment? Or. I don't know, like, what, what is this about? Like, I feel like someone needs to do that study. Like, like why. Why do people tell the same stories as they get older?
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, I. I think there's a lot of reasons. And, you know, a lot of memories do change with age. And some forms of memory, like source memory, memory tends to decline with age. You can't remember where you saw the headline or who you told the joke to. And sometimes I'll even say, have I told you this before? But sometimes it's just such a good joke or such a good memory. I'm like, I don't really care because I'M going to tell it to you again because I'm enjoying this. And my kids will be like, yeah, we've heard that so many times. I'm like, yeah, but it's so good. So it's probably a little bit of both. But I think there's also some nostalgia. Like, we do share family histories this way. And I think, you know, when families get together for Thanksgiving, there's this rehashing of, do you remember when this happened? It's like, yep, we tell that story every time. A lot of our histories used to be oral histories where, you know, we're telling stories and reminding people and it's how we determine what foods were safe. But yeah, I can see it's certainly frustrating. And I think we think, gosh, I'm talking to this older person, they're telling me the same thing again. And you're nodding, but I take a certain amount of enjoyment from it. There's a nostalgia, there's also a feeling of familiarity. And so probably it's a collection of things. But you do see more pathological aging that people will completely forget. They'll say the same things. They'll ask, what's for dinner again? Five minutes later, what's for dinner again, what's for dinner again? And that's where it's probably more concerning. But it is an interesting thing to note that as we get older, we might engage in that sort of behavior.
Andrew Huberman
What does the consensus now on Alzheimer's and memory loss generally mean in Is it inevitable that people lose some amount of memory and conditions like Alzheimer's are just a more rapid downward trajectory? And we could talk about superagers, these people that seem to maintain cognition well, better than their peers anyway. Are there people who just are sharp till the day they take their last breath, and that last breath comes in their 90s or even past 100?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I think just the diversity that a company's aging is really interesting. You could look at a 100 year old who's doing really well and a 60 year old old who's not doing so well. So we can't just use kind of biological age as the marker. And as a psychologist, of course, I'm interested in psychological aspects. And there's an old study on nuns who. It's interesting to see how you can test different people. But nuns are very committed to their profession. And you found that these nuns, how they age, some of them, certainly when they passed away, their brains had these kind of hallmark signs of dementia, plaques and tangles. But behaviorally they were still High functioning, functioning. So it's really interesting that the hardware shows what we see as dementia and specifically Alzheimer's disease, but their behavior was that of a fairly healthy cognitive person. So something else has to be going on. And some people say it's having a sense of purpose, could be having social connections. We know that's incredibly important. I think we do have a certain amount of control over it, and some of it might be based on physical exercise and sleep. So I know things you've talked about before, and some of it is having kind of a positive attitude about aging, that if you feel like you. Some people say, well, it's all genetics. So what do I have to do? Well, if you go on a walk, some really good research shows that walking three, four times a week can enhance hippocampal function. The part of the brain that's very involved in declarative memory. And that part of the brain, I, having turned 50 recently, tends to decline by about 1 to 2% a year in terms of volume. So this is kind of physical shrinkage of the brain. But in the walking group, the group that was randomly assigned to walk three, four times a week for 40 minutes, compared to a stretching group who's still engaging in exercise, but not cardiovascular exercise, the walking group, their hippocampus, actually increased in volume by 1%. You're changing the brain pain, but you're also changing the behavior. Their memory was much better a year later. So I think if you saw a doctor and said, I'm having some memory problems, what can I do? Most people are looking for a pill, or sometimes it's eat this or do that. But I think physical exercise can be so important. And the mechanism, we don't know exactly, but it probably trickles down to things like improvements in sleep as well. If you're getting exercise maybe earlier in the day, you're going to have better mood, you're going to sleep better. We know a lot of memory formation happens when you're sleeping. We know as we get older, our sleep quality tends to decline, even if our quantity tends to increase. So I think just knowing that there are some things we can do. I'm using physical exercise as the example, and it doesn't have to be the extreme version. Walking, dancing, a lot of people enjoy being outside. That can be incredibly important to offset some of the things we do know can. Can lead to dementia.
Andrew Huberman
What's the walking vigorous?
Dr. Alan Castell
You know, in this group, I think it's really 30 to 40 minutes. And there's nothing special certainly about walking, but it's something where you can randomly assign people to either walk or engage in stretching. So if you're biking, if you're swimming, if you're dancing, any of these things can be beneficial. But here it's, you know, you can randomly assign people to walk, and it should be at a rate where it's barrier. You know, there's research showing that the people who walk slightly faster actually live longer. So, you know, you're not sure exactly causality. There could certainly be that. And a lot of this research, it's tough to do aging research because it's hard to randomly assign people to certain conditions. But I think as a psychologist, knowing that you have a little bit of control over the process is important. And I think, you know, most people, when they talk about aging, they're so worried about dementia and, you know, Alzheimer's disease as a specific, specific form. But balance is even more important, I think. And most people aren't even aware of their balance. So one in four people over the age of 65 will experience a fall. And that fall can be very detrimental. You can break your hip, your collarbone. Often you're getting up at night. More frequently, you trip over a carpet or a rug. And if you're in bed, if recovering from these falls, you're not walking, your hippocampus is shrinking. Thinking. If you ask people, how's your balance? Most people are like, well, it's fine. I haven't had a fall. But there's a very simple test. We could do it now if you wanted, where you just stand up and see if you can balance on one leg for at least 10 seconds. And I have. When I do presentations, I do this ideally 30, 40 minutes into the presentation. We shouldn't be sitting for so long. And most people do pretty well. It's a younger group, and sometimes it's older adults I'm speaking to. And you can tell. I'm like, make sure you have something you can hold on to. And you can tell that balance changes considerably with age. And then I say, okay, now try doing it with your eyes closed. And I actually usually don't do this with my older adult group because then you see the younger people start to tip. And, you know, it's very. We get a lot of cues from our visual environment for balance.
Andrew Huberman
The young, the older people tip everyone.
Dr. Alan Castell
You'll see the younger people start to tip. That's why it's even more surprising.
Andrew Huberman
It's like a field sobriety test.
Dr. Alan Castell
It very much is, but it's again, from this metacognitive standpoint where you think your balance is fine because you haven't had a fall, but you could be close to falling at any given point. And so the cerebellum, the almost very primitive part of the brain is involved in a lot of this. What's interesting with balance is it's very trainable. And so there's parts of balance that are involved, visual, inner ear. But if you engage in some training and it can be as simple as standing on one leg or doing yoga or Tai chi, you can improve your balance considering considerably within a month or two. And so I think when I talk to older adults who sometimes are even middle aged worried about their memory, I think balance is often overlooked and it's something that's trainable. So I've started to do it a little bit and I've noticed changes in my balance sometimes. Good. I also notice I don't sleep well, my balance isn't as good. And I think that's probably the most important thing to be on the lookout for because these things are related. If you, if you, if you lose your balance and you have a fall, you're not going to be engaging in physical exercise, your memory is going to decline.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, the old skiers and the old surfers look to be in pretty awesome shape. There are a million compounds there. The sunlight, the social connection, the water, the cold, the, you know, I mean, there are a bunch of things. Obviously it's not just the skiing or the surfing, but there are certain sports where you look, look at the people and you say, okay, they're not the biggest and strongest, nor are they the ones with the most endurance. But on balance they seem strong, their posture looks good, they seem relatively happy. Who knows, right? I'm intrigued by the fact that I look at a lot of these videos of superagers and athletes in their 70s, 80s, 90s, who, who are doing remarkably well. It's very rare to see a video of athletes or Non athletes past 80 where they're breathing through their nose with their mouth shut. Almost always, you see. Now I'm not saying it's causal, but there does seem to be a shift in the way that people breathe as they get older. Just look at some of the. I forget his name now. He's a television personality who's been around a long. He's in his hundreds and he's been on, on YouTube and news programs recently. But at rest, it's like a mouth open breathing pattern. You kind of wonder whether or not they're getting enough oxygen to their brain and I do think that the shift in how we breathe, spontaneous movement, these things all go together and I do think each component part needs to be looked at individually. So, okay, so it's the movement, it's the exercise, the novelty, the social connection. But ultimately there's a lot of other things going on. Like we know older people just don't, they don't move spontaneously very much. We had Twyla Tharp in here, the, you know, world famous choreographer and she's in her, somewhere in her 80s. You know, she can deadlift her twice her body weight, works out at 5am every morning for two hours. She boxed for a while, but actual boxing, because she's Twyla, right? She's a really, she's got a lot of spirit but, but she doesn't sit like I'm sitting like kind of lazing back. She's, she's fully active and she's, she's moving, she's nasal breathing. When unless she's speaking like she's, she's, her nervous system is turned on. I notice that and I go, God willing, I'll be, I'll be like that. But I notice with each passing year I take a few more opportunities to lean against things as opposed to standing up, not leaning against them or starting to resemble, resemble the bulldogs I've owned. There's an opportunity to lie down, they lie down. If there's opportunity sleep. And I don't know that that's good. Maybe we need to nudge ourselves to be a little more active than we're comfortable.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think the insight is so important to be like, I notice I'm doing more of this or I'm looking a lot like this and I'm surprised that things starting like posture or even breathing and I think I'm not an expert in this area but just getting more oxygen to the brain is so important. I think that's probably the mechanism of, and be, you know, for physical exercise you're getting more oxygen to your brain which really, as you get older it's harder to do that. And so exercise might be kind of the mechanism that does that. And maybe with the, you know, advances we're going to find other ways to do that. But I think that insight is really important. And it's also, you know, we have age based stereotypes of what happens like oh, as you get older, you know, let's say, you know, and my knee hurts and some people are like, oh, well you're just getting older. Well my other knee is the same age and it feels fine. Good Point. So something's going on. Maybe there's some trauma. There's something. But it does give you this feeling like, hey, there's something I can do. Or maybe I'm a firm believer in physical therapy. A lot of the exercises we do, if you keep doing the same thing, that's great, but then you lose a lot of the other muscle mass. And I think exercise, even walking, people say it's really like a controlled form of losing your balance and regaining it and losing your balance and regaining it. And so you add that into hiking, which has unpredictable surfaces. You know, all these muscles that are, you know, you're not using too often now have to be engaged. And so I think. I think that coming back to, like, challenging yourself can be very important. Putting yourself in uncomfortable positions. I mean, it's great to be on this podcast, but there's a time where I'm like, I'm not sure I want to do this right. Like, you know, how do you.
Andrew Huberman
Do you get that you're feeling that way now?
Dr. Alan Castell
No, now I feel fine. But I think as we put ourselves in these uncomfortable positions, and I remember when I first started teaching, like, gosh, 300 people, this is an uncomfortable situation. One of my mentors said, you know what? There's only one thing you need to do, and that's breathe. Because you start to forget that that is the most primitive thing to get oxygen to your brain, that then you can do what you probably can do quite well. And that's a psychological oversight where we just kind of start. I don't know if it's just mouth breathing, but as we get older, you know, or there's more stress, we stop being aware of, you know, the things that can really help us.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, I notice with each passing year, I get a little more difficult with myself about the little things, you know, just like. So I try. And to this day, I would have to push myself. I take the stairs a little bit faster than I want to. I. I don't take escalators unless there's no stairs available. When I travel, I really. I find that. But I have to push, you know? Yeah, I have to. I mean, perhaps, you know, collateral advantage of doing this podcast is I say things like that. And now I don't want to get spotted in an airport on an escalator. The other day, I normally train at home gym, but I was in a commercial gym, and I was listening to music on my phone, and this kid came up to me and he tabbed. He goes, I think I thought you don't use your phone when you work out.
Dr. Alan Castell
I'm busted.
Andrew Huberman
I was like, sometimes I listen to things. I just. I'm not texting and sending messages. And he's like, okay. You know, it's like, wow. I have to be careful what I say. But it's nice. It actually has a forcing function.
Dr. Alan Castell
Sure.
Andrew Huberman
And I think that as we get older, there are a lot of things where we're not being observed. We know we should do them, but then we don't do them. And I think the injury thing is. And the pain thing is a big one. You know, I hear this all the time. Time, you know, like, yeah, I would exercise more, but I got this shoulder thing. I got this. And I think that's why there's so much excitement about these peptides. And it's still very unclear, you know, what's going to be useful or not. Actually, there's a study out of Helen Blau's lab at Stanford on mice and humans where they found an inhibitor of the molecule that inhibits cartilage regeneration. They knock out this inhibitor, or they have a drug kind of analog that can do this in humans and they observe regeneration of knee cartilage. I. I'm sure this is going to be sourced to pharma. That's going to be the path, because that's the typical path for labs at Stanford if they have a discovery like that. But how cool would that be?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
Right now, knock on wood. I have, like, no, no joint issues. But how cool would that be? Because I think a lot of people just think, well, the body wears out.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
You know, the hip wears out, the knee wears out. And so when they have that pain, they don't think they could overcome it by movement. They assume, well, the chassis is kind of going. And then.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, a lot of this comes down to habits and some of it is motivation. It's hard to get motivated to go to the gym. And as you get older, more aches and pains, it's harder to get up, it's easier to sit down. But I think knowing you have some control over it, that a lot of, especially in midlife, people have back pain. It's probably the most common thing, and it's probably from sitting. We work a lot, and especially in midlife life, there's some interesting, you know, it's not always a linear decline with age. And in fact, there's some interesting work on, you know, happiness being more curvilinear. Like, midlife is actually some of the lowest levels of happiness and life satisfaction really.
Andrew Huberman
Like our age 50.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
Really?
Dr. Alan Castell
So I hope in some ways that can. Well, in some ways it can make. Yeah. Well, it can make you feel good because it. You know, a lot of people who might not feel great at 40 or 50, if you said, well, actually, that's the lowest point in the graph. And it can. Actually, we get better with age, the title of my book. But it makes you realize that as we get older, there are more aches and pains. And yet, why are older adults, some of them who are fairly healthy and active, are doing really well, whereas kind of when you're younger and your body's in decent shape, we're doing things like sitting, we're working a lot, we're stressed, we're not handling our emotions as well as we could. And so I think that's why aging is an interesting thing that, you know, we think when we're young, that's the best times in our lives. It actually might be some of the most confusing times.
Andrew Huberman
Are you happier at 50 than you were at 40?
Dr. Alan Castell
I think I am. I think I'm more content. But when I was at 20 or 30, I could do whatever I want. I could scuba dive, I could play basketball. I'd bounce back from an interior.
Andrew Huberman
Was your internal landscape more peaceful or more happy?
Dr. Alan Castell
Absolutely not. And I actually see it in a lot of undergraduate who are like, it's a confusing time. You're trying to figure out what you want to do. You're in a different place, you have different partners. It's a. You know. And yet we say, we almost romanticize that college is the best time in your life.
Andrew Huberman
Oh, my God, no.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I am.
Andrew Huberman
I'll. I'll say, I. Even though I am very happy. 40 was rough. My 40th birthday, I was like, this is rough. And coming up in sciences, I loved doing it, loved the experience, but it was very stressful. Raising money for your lab, a postdoc is a very uncertain time. A lot of uncertainty, a lot of stress.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And now, I mean, I have stressors, but I view them differently. I feel completely differently about stress in general. I mean, I do a lot of things, but I don't think teen years, certainly not for me, or 20s or 30s, are the best years of your life. I can attest it didn't suck, but it was rough.
Dr. Alan Castell
I mean, there's fun parts to it, and there's a lot of novelty. And you did things then that you probably wouldn't do now. But I think when we talk about aging, we're talking about how negative it can be and all these things that can happen physically. But a lot of the older adults I talk to and I've interviewed for my book are saying actually 60 or 70 was probably the best time in my life.
Andrew Huberman
Nice.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And that makes me feel, I mean it's a select group who I'm talking to, but it's not like it's the best time in terms of my aches and pains or, you know, sure, I Wish I was 40 for some reasons, but those times can be very challenging. So from a psychological standpoint, it's interesting to look at these kind of non linear dynamics. It's not a linear decline. It's not that happiness just gets better with age. There can be this midlife dip and I'm not a clinical psychologist. Some people call this midlife. Well, of course there's a conflict at midlife. Well, there's really conflicts at every stage. Some of Erickson's work said every decade there's a conflict and it's how you resolve it allows you to move on to the next stage of life. And I think, you know, sometimes we don't think about midlife as much as, well, this is what happens when you're young and this is what happens when you're old. And it's probably how you deal with what happens in the middle which allows you to age well. So when I'm, you know, when I talk about aging, most of the older adults I talk to, I'm not educating them on how to age well, they've, they're there and they're doing it. It's often middle aged people who are like, well, I have older parents, you know, how are most people when they're 20 or 30, they're not thinking, what's my life going to like when I'm 70 or 80?
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, even now that's hard for me to conceptualize.
Dr. Alan Castell
Sure, yeah.
Andrew Huberman
I just try and do the best I can to take care of myself every day so that maybe I'll hit, hopefully I'll hit 60, 70, feeling great. I actually feel better physically now than I did in my 40s and 30s. But I was working so much then, you know, a lot of people, I'm not boasting. It's actually probably should be more of a point of shame. I don't know that I recommend it for most people. I, I mean I worked non stop and I don't know that I'd wish that on anyone. I think a little more balance would have been healthy. Now I work a lot, but I definitely take Time to meditate, to pray, spend time with people in my life. I really try and savor things a bit more. The problem with academic science, as you know, is there's always a deadline, a revision or something. There's always something. So once you realize there's always something, something.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think it's in a lot of professions, you know, people are very driven early. They have to prove themselves. You're either. You're trying to survive, make money, make a name for yourself, and that puts a lot of stress on you. And as you get further along, you might realize maybe it's not worth it, or maybe I need to backtrack, or maybe there's more important things. And I think it really does come down to balance. And you know John Wooden, the UCLA basketball coach, I got to interview him, you know, he was in his 90s, and he said it really comes down to two things. And I thought, oh, this is great. Coach Wooden is going to tell me the two things. And he thought of himself as a teacher, not just a coach. So he did a very effective thing. He had me guess those two things. The two most important words in the English language is how he said it. And here I am a student again, and I'm thinking, gosh, he's a coach, so I don't know, success, teamwork, what is it? And he said, the most most important thing is love. Be around the people you love. Do the things you love. And, you know, he lost his wife well before he passed away. He wouldn't sleep on her side of the bed. He would write her a letter every month.
Andrew Huberman
Wow.
Dr. Alan Castell
You know, he had report cards from his grandchildren's on the wall right next to letters from presidents. You know, so he's really surrounded by a great community. Former players calling. His former players were by his bedside when he passed away. And then the second most important word is something I think a lot of people struggle with, we're talking about is balance. And it's partly physical balance. He did have a fall like we were talking about, and it's interesting because he had a life alert that he could press around his neck. And this is why I think technology is great. Maybe there's ways we can prevent falls, but he fell in the middle of the night and. And he broke his collarbone and his wrist, and he had this life alert button, but he didn't press it because of pride. Exactly. He didn't want to bother anyone.
Andrew Huberman
That's like a Y chromosome.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. But, you know, you give people all this technology and, you know, and then you Realize there's a psychological part to it as well. He waited until the morning his caretaker arrived, rushed into the hospital. Thankfully he survived. But that's pride, guilt, shame, didn't want to bother someone. So that's the physical balance and then I think the mental balance, as he said, like you were saying, is he was a very driven person, very successful with his coaching, but it meant a lot of time traveling, a lot of time away from his family, not focusing on the things that he found incredibly important. And as he got older, he felt like he could achieve more balance, you know, spend more time doing the things he wanted, be around the people he wanted. And I think that's a struggle for a lot of people. We get really into something and, you know, we forget about it. You know, we're having a conversation, it's hard to stand up. You know, it's, you know, you get focused on things, but as you get older, maybe you're a little bit better at finding that balance and finding that peace.
Andrew Huberman
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor Function. Function provides over 160 advanced lab tests to give you a clear snapshot of your bodily health. This snapshot gives you insights into your heart, heart health, your hormone health, autoimmune function, nutrient levels and much more. They've also recently added access to advanced MRI and CT scans. Function not only provides testing of over 160 biomarkers key to your physical and mental health, it also analyzes these results and provides recommendations for improving your health from top doctors. For example, in a recent test with Function, I learned that some of my blood lipids were slightly out of range. As a result, I did decided to start supplementing with nattokinase, which can naturally help reduce LDL cholesterol. And it did. In a follow up test I could confirm that this strategy worked. My blood lipids are now back exactly where I want them. Comprehensive lab testing of the sort that Function offers is just so important for health. I mean, how else are you going to know what's going on under the hood? And while I've been doing blood work for years, it used to be time consuming, complicated and expensive. In fact, I used to spend thousands of dollars per year, year trying to get this kind of data. And the data, frankly, we're not all that good. But now with Function, it's extremely easy and affordable. A Function membership is only a dollar a day, $365 a year. And if you think about the information it provides and the health challenges it helps you avoid, and the Proactive things that it can do for you to enhance your health. I truly look at it as a savings. To learn more, visit functionhealth.comhuberman and use the code Hubert Huberman for a 50 credit towards your membership. Again, that's functionhealth.comhuberman yeah, the notion of having to prove to oneself or even to others that one can do something, that's a. I'm a hallmark of being younger. I suppose some people escape that, but I think most people struggle with that social comparison thing. And it can be very useful. Useful as a lever, can generate a lot of hard work, great work through competition, even competitions in one's own head. But eventually you realize you're the only one in this fight. I don't know. This podcast has a very broad audience in terms of age ranges. And so it's interesting. The younger crowd, let's just say 35 and younger, tend to have questions about how to pick direction, what direction to go. The older crowd generally is asking about things related to keeping their memory, their health, and these days asking a lot of questions about whether they should revise their notions of what age appropriate physical ability or mental ability should be. I think that's a big shift out there right now because, you know, 20 years ago it was assumed, you know, people would hit 70 or 80 and start to slow down. And, you know, now people are like, well, if I feel great at 50, maybe I could feel great at 60. If I could feel great at 60, maybe I could feel great at 90. You know, the possibility feels real. And I'm not talking about living longer. I actually don't consider myself a longevity person. Sometimes I'll get lumped there. It's like I've never actually focused on that. Yes, I think it's great to live as long as you can at a vibrant life. But what do you think about the messaging that we could go longer or could make more of our time? Do you think it's net positive or do you think that's creating a pressure for people to not live into their. The reality that, hey, they're like 70 and maybe slowing down and maybe telling those stories two or three times. Maybe. Maybe they're supposed to shed wisdom and not supposed to be jogging around the block.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, it's so interesting to see these age related differences, but also to see how that's shifting. And we're certainly living longer for the most part. If you look at our history, and there's a variety of reasons for that, but you want to make sure those years that we're adding are healthy ones because the longer you live, the greater the chance of developing dementia. I think from a psychological perspective, it's interesting because if you ask someone, how old do you feel? That's very different than your biological age. Let's say you didn't have access to your birth certificate. Your parents actually said, sorry, we can't actually remember how old you are. How would you figure that out?
Andrew Huberman
We're actually not your parents. Yeah, I'm sure they're my parents. Yeah, that's an interesting question.
Dr. Alan Castell
And this is known as subjective age. And, you know, there's a physical feeling, there's also this mental feeling. So how do we assign that? And actually, after the age of 40, most people feel about 20, 20% younger than their actual age. And so I don't know if it's deceptive, but if you're 70, we just turned 50. And I'm like, wow, that sounds old. Yeah, it sounds old because I feel about 40. 40 seemed more recent, but yeah, I can see some things. But as you get further along, it's like, gosh, I'm in this age group, am I supposed to do this now or behave like that? But my parents are different than I was. And so I think it's interesting. It's also interesting that that subjective age is a better predictor of how long you'll live than your biological age.
Andrew Huberman
Age. Fascinating.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. So, you know, you go to the doctor and you're told like, so give me, how old are you? Well, that all of a sudden is like, well, I guess I should behave like a 75 year old or an 80 year old. You're not gonna, the doctor's not gonna say, how old do you feel? And in some ways, people do feel their age. I certainly feel my age when I have an injury or when I'm like, I'm tired, or why am I getting. I'm at five in the morning now when I can't get back to sleep. But there's some times where it's like, no, I feel young. And I'm not saying I'm running marathons, but I know when I coach my son's baseball team, I feel young. I mean, I feel old in some ways, but I'm like, oh, I remember how much fun this can be. And it's nice to be around kids. And, you know, when I'm on a college campus, I'm like, this is nice to be around younger people. And I'm learning a lot from younger groups and I'm seeing how they're confused in different ways. So I think there's a lot of age related stereotypes that are sometimes accurate, but we don't need to necessarily subscribe to to them at all times. And in some ways you can have also, and this is partly the motivation for my book, kind of like Mentors for aging. And I think when I ask my class who are some people that you really look up to who've aged well or successful aging, a lot of it comes down to like a grandparent or a parent or an aunt or an uncle. And that's really interesting because you share some genetic overlap with them. But the stories, the reasons are really impressive. And not that they're running marathons, but like, oh, we have this recipe. Or every holiday they do this or they're still walking doing this. And sometimes it's a public figure, but having these role models is really important and oftentimes it is a parent. So probably my favorite podcast that I watched recently, yours was with your father, right? Because you can see this dynamic and you can see like, gosh, this is an older person and this is the younger version. But they're different in so many ways and kind of some people can retire and some people clearly can't. And so I don't think there's any secret to successful aging like you have to do this or that. But there's certainly some people, and I've seen it in my family who can't retire or they have a career shift. I saw my dad go from being a theoretical physics professor to being an editor of a literary arts journal. And it's like such a shift. But I think it revived him and allowed him to kind of like you've got gone from being a professor to kind of more public outreach and that keeps people going. And that can happen again at 60 or 70. And so I hope there's not this. There's certainly age discrimination. You're not going to hire a 70 year old to run your IT department. But I think there are things that older adults can and want to do that will kind of lead to this sense of purpose, which is really important. As you get older, do you map
Andrew Huberman
out about your future? I mean, do you have like a three or a five year plan? I find that academics tend to operate on the three to five year plan because grants generally are somewhere between three and five years. That's pretty much all we can reasonably predict about where we're going to go with our ideas. We update as we discover things and, and so on. But do you ever recall having a Plan currently, do you plan like where you're going? This is just really new. But as a, yeah, as a template for people to ask themselves the same question, I don't think I was ever sat down and said, listen, you want to focus on day to day, but you got to have a plan. And the plan should be put the horizon at three years or five years. I just, I sort of defaulted to that because of academics.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And it's very hard for me to think past five years.
Dr. Alan Castell
No, I think people often will say in business to the plan you have. And I think plans are important because they can motivate you. And you know, when I first got this job at UCLA la, I was thrilled to leave the cold weather of Toronto and live on the west coast. But I also said, you know, if it doesn't work out, let's see, in three to five years. So I don't think I had this specific plan if I have to do this. But I also had a plan like, hey, I'd love to write a book that is accessible and can kind of capture the lessons I've learned. And I didn't put a timeline on that, but when I first met my wife, I told her I was really interested in doing this and she was very encouraged, encouraging. And 10 years later that book finally comes out. So I think when you articulate plans, there's definitely research saying that you can realize them. And when other people are thinking that's something you can or should do, I think it's beneficial. But yeah, in the academic world there can be pressures to get grants and publish, but I think that can also hamper some creative outputs. I don't have a plan of like in three to five years I need to do this and this. And sure, it'd be nice to get another grant, but maybe if you don't have a grant you can have a little more freedom and flexibility. I'm really interested in how it's a concern now with AI, how people are subjected to a lot of information and a lot of this can be used for scams and fraud. And so I'm interested in how older adults can be kind of aware of these scams that can be devastating and how we can make the world better for, for older adults. And when I say older, it's like we're not that far away from why can that self driving car be so appealing to a younger person but not an older person? And if we can make technology more accessible to older people, it can certainly help. And I think there's simple Ways to do it. Some it starts with attitudes about how do I engage with this, will it work, will I break it? Whereas younger people will just, they get a new iPhone and there's no instruction manual. They're just playing around with with it. So I'm interested in that. I don't think that has a publication that I'm going to get out of it. And maybe there's a grant, maybe there's consulting, but I think it's having a broader kind of approach might be beneficial. So these are more abstract goals and hopefully some of them can be realized. But it's not as tied to when I was younger. Yeah, I wanted to get tenure at ucla. I was happy to have children and have a house where we could be centrally located without a long commute. So I think those were the practical goals. But I think as I get older I feel fortunate that I've achieved some of these goals that make my life more comfortable. But there's still things out there that I'm like, are we really ever going to know how memory works? Maybe, maybe not. But maybe we can make things easier to use. Or now that we know memory sort of works this way, maybe we can make this technology geared to help, help us in some meaningful way.
Andrew Huberman
Well, a comment and then a question. My comment is if anyone needs self driving cars, it's older folks, right? Right. I mean if you look at the accident data, look at the visual data, I mean there are people who are, I don't want to say legally blind, but their peripheral vision is really lousy and they're driving and most of driving is peripheral vision. So you know, for everybody's sake. But of course, very young people with new licenses, they're all, you know, it's not a, you know, a linear distribution of accidents by age. It's a U shaped function. But the other thing is nested in my question about whether you set goals is the question of whether setting goals helps us stay alive.
Dr. Alan Castell
Alive.
Andrew Huberman
You know, I, I covered before some of the data on these super agers, more of the neurosciences anterior mid cingulate cortex which seems to maintain or increase volume as superagers.
Dr. Alan Castell
Right.
Andrew Huberman
Age and they hold on to their memory, et cetera and what we understand of that structure, it's involved in pushing into friction, pushing oneself to do something that's hard or not desirable for oneself. It seems to come up on more and more episodes, episodes of the podcast and like I teach neuroanatomy to medical students. When I started teaching neuroanatomy, we didn't know what the anterior mid singular cortex does, but my colleague Joe Parvizi probed it with electrodes in humans, and every single one, they got stimulated. They'd say, feels like a big storm is coming. There's a challenge. I want to lean into it. They would kind of come up in their chair. They, you know, they're not. I mean, they're in a halo. They're getting surgery, so. But they would get physically and mentally activated. Like, I'm gonna, I'm gonna. I can take this, I can do this. And it's very clear that that's the brain structure that grows. And so I feel like going after a goal, having goals, something to look forward to. I wonder whether or not this is the basic evolutionarily, you know, hardwired circuitry for if you're striving, it means you're trying to get someplace. If you're trying to get someplace, there's a concept of a future. If there's a concept of a future, well, then you plan to be there, or you want to leave something behind, but that it might activate literally this kind of will to live. And I want to sound mystical here, but kind of at a cellular level, because when people don't have plans, then there's really no. I mean, you could just enjoy the smell of the roses, but that becomes a bit of a closed loop. I don't know many people, maybe monks or something, who are really tapped into something that just. That they just want to live in the bliss of the moment constantly. A lot of life is about what comes next and trying to make that thing happen.
Dr. Alan Castell
I mean, it's so interesting to look at cellular and then anterior cingulate and then superagers and then sense of purpose. If you look at all those different levels. And then what we look at in a Western culture, too, is very different than some cultures that age much better than Western cultures. And maybe there's lessons to be learned there, because a lot of it is, like you're saying, goal setting and motivation. But the goal is. Goal is not just to live forever. It's to make the most of these moments and have this sense of purpose. And a lot of older adults do want to have this connection to younger people or connection to a hobby or an interest. And it's not as professionally driven as it is in kind of midlife. And I think the super ages is really interesting because I've read about that and I've seen this. And these are not people who said, I want to live forever and I'm going to. That's not their goal. And a lot of them are not people who are like, I went to the gym four times a week. They built into their. It's the same with blue zones. It's built into their daily life of they eat well because that's the food that they enjoy and that they can find. They exercise not from going to the gym, but from having to walk uphill or on uneven surfaces. So I think. I don't want to say it's an American focus on goals and motivation and biohacking and long longevity, but if you can build this into your daily life, it's so much easier, right? And then it just becomes, you know, I saw my father bike to work every day. In fact, he wouldn't even call it work because he didn't want to make it think like it was work. And I. I don't know why. I bike to work too, in Los Angeles, which is probably not the best thing to do. But I've been able to set up my life that I bike two miles uphill to work and then two miles downhill is probably. Sometimes it's the best time of my day. Sometimes it's when the best ideas come through me. I also have to be vigilant, you know.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, I just think the only thing, you know, I do wear a helmet. I only met you today, but I. I feel like something's coming out where I'm thinking just. I just. Having lived in LA a while, it's just doors, cars opening. That's just the simple, you know, Other cities too.
Dr. Alan Castell
In Toronto, it's even worse, you know, But I think with the super agers, it's also resilience. And these are people, when you look at their lives, sometimes, you know, they've had, you know, easier lives. And that can be beneficial in some ways, you know, having wealth and health. But often there's a lot of resilience. You know, you bounce back. You saw this during COVID We at first thought, Covid is going to be terrible for older people, right, because they're going to be socially isolated. They don't know how to use technology. And there's certainly reasons why older adults could be more vulnerable. But what we found, at least at the psychological level, we did some of this research, older adults were much more resilient than younger adults. I think we've learned younger adults went through a lot of difficult times, being socially isolated, being through probably their first major kind of situation where they can't behave the way they're normally doing it. And the older adults were the ones who are like, eh, I've lived through X, Y and Z wars, financial meltdowns, changes in family structure, deaths of close people. And older adults seem to show a lot more resilience here. And when I've interviewed people for this book, it's sometimes the most interesting. People lived through the Holocaust who are like, I appreciate every day. I think the best advice I got from one person was like, when you're going up or down stairs, think I'm going up or down stairs. They're very present. They know if I'm mind wandering or doing something else, something can happen. So maybe I shouldn't be mind wandering on my bike ride. I should be like, that's my.
Andrew Huberman
But you're considerably younger and clearly very mentally aware to be able to use that time. I have a friend. He was actually a guest on this podcast. His name is Ryan Suave. He's a trauma therapist. He also treats addiction and a number of people. He said occasionally he'll get a patient who was suicidal or tried to attempt suicide or who attempted suicide, excuse me, me, because of a breakup, like in high school or in their 20s. And he said at first when he would get these people coming through his clinic, he would think, listen, you want to sit this person down and just say, look, you got your whole life ahead of you. You're going to have other opportunities. There are other fish in the sea. But he quickly came to realize that to these, what by all arguments are still kind of like kids, young adults, to them, it feels like a loss of the entire future because they haven't had that future yet. And when he started approaching it through that lens, he was able to be more effective clinically to just really acknowledge like, yeah, it really feels like the whole world is coming to an end. They just don't have the perspective of having had some relationship challenges and found someone else. And so it really feels like their whole life is over because their whole life is up to that point. Point. It's interesting to think, you know, and I remember thinking like, oh yeah, that makes total sense when you say it. I mean, obviously not the suicidality. You know, one hopes that wouldn't be where people would go with a breakup. But as we get older, yeah, we, we can integrate over, you know, oh, I've been had my ups, I've had my downs. You know, I'm still here. I'm hard to kill. You know, as I sometimes tell myself, I go, I've had some ups and downs and I'm taking you Know, some heat. I just go, okay, well, I know one thing is I'm, I'm hard to, to kill. Yeah, you know, resilience. Exactly. Then you go, okay, cool, like, what did I learn? I'm just going to apply the same principles here again. And you know, and then 10 years later you go, I'm still here.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I mean, it's just too bad you have, I mean, in some ways you have to go through those struggles to, to, to realize that, oh, I'm still here, or in retrospect it was bad, but now I'm on to something else and, or in some cases it's
Andrew Huberman
the best parts of life. This I don't understand. And maybe this is a more memorable memory disruption than it is accurate experience, whatever that is. But I feel like our emotional selves integrate in the way that we compare. Like things really, really sucked at a moment, which makes the moments afterwards that just don't suck a little bit so much better. There's some adaptation or habituation or whatever. And then you look back and you're like, things are so good because things don't completely suck. Which is a very different perspective than I need to need things to be. So, you know, I need a bunch of stuff. It's, maybe it's just the absence of suck and you can really savor that.
Dr. Alan Castell
No, I think there's, there's a memory component to that as well. And you know, some people have studied this looking at what's called the positivity bias, that as you get older, you're more likely to focus on positive things, positive information, positive events. But when you're younger, you're more likely to focus on negative things and that might be for survival. It might not benefit your mental health. But as you say, you know, these are big events that happen when you're 20, 25. You're like, this is horrible. How am I to ever going, going to get through this? Well, people do. Look at all these 70, 80 year olds who've, you know, gone through breakups and horrible things that have happened, financial losses.
Andrew Huberman
People in the tech and business world, they're like, went from so high to so low and then back again and you just go, oh my. Most people would just be devastated. And they're like, well, this is the rhythm.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And it's tough, but I think as we get older, you know, we might focus more on the positive things to enhance our mood. And maybe that's what leads to this kind of uptick in happiness as we get older. It's not just Rose colored glasses. But it's also saying I'm going to focus on the things that are positive or be around the people that make me feel good. I've also heard a lot of older adults will say as I get older, I just don't have time for that anymore. I don't want to focus on these negative things or talking to people who bring me down. But when we're young, we're all around different people and might complain about things and maybe that's beneficial so you can see the bad things and rise above that. But again, it's interesting to see these non linear changes. And I think there is definitely a memory component. And getting back to that. Why do older adults tell the same story several times? Well, sometimes it's a negative story, like I had to walk this far to school. But it usually has a positive spin to it. And so maybe we do this is because we have this positivity bias or we want to relay this positive information kind of to wash out some of the negative, negative things that probably happened. Some of the happier older adults I spent time with in South Florida lived through some of the worst times in Eastern Europe, let's say. And I'm like, how is this possible? And it's their brain changes in ways that might make them look like they're not as sharp as they used to be. But they're telling jokes, they're less inhibited. I learned some of the dirtiest jokes from these individuals. And I think that these people are really interesting to talk to. And I, I love teaching at UCLA and being around students, but it's very different than talking to older adults. And every once in a while we have the Senior Scholars Program that allows older adults to take these undergraduate classes. And to me that's probably the most enriching thing. I teach a class on the psychology of aging and here in the classroom there's four older adults. I mean, this is a case study. And this year several of them were therapists. They had of a lot, a lot of information to share, but they're even told in the part of it is that they're not supposed to ask questions. I thought that's so strange. In my class I want them, I assume if they're in astronomy or art history, they could be asking tons of questions. But I think this is such a great way to have this kind of intergenerational component. And a lot of the students, I tell the students I have two tests, but I don't have a final exam. And I tell them the final exam is the test of life.
Andrew Huberman
Life.
Dr. Alan Castell
I know it sounds a little kind of corny or hokey, but I'm like everything you learned about aging you're hopefully going to use in the future. Either your parents might not be relevant. When you're 20, you're not thinking about it. But it was the older adults in the class that they often said were I like to think I'm a good professor, but they learn the most from these older adults. And so I think having more of this intergenerational interaction is really important and in different cultures, cultures that's built into the community. In the Western culture, not so much. I mean some people grow up with their grandparents in the same household. I didn't, but the times I did have with my grandparents were very informative. And you share genetic overlap with these individuals, yet they also have wisdom and knowledge. Some of it is dated, but I think that can be very beneficial being around older adults.
Andrew Huberman
I'd like to take a quick break and acknowledge our sponsor Link Lingo. Lingo is an everyday wearable that tracks your glucose 24 7. Glucose drives a lot of key processes that support energy, body composition and long term health. When glucose is constantly spiking and crashing, that's where we can start to see metabolic dysfunction and over time that can even progress to pre diabetes. Right now about 115 million adults in the US have prediabetes. Most don't know it and a higher percentage of men have have it than women do. Often there aren't clear symptoms of pre diabetes early on so people don't tend to look into it. But the fact is that metabolic health is shaping how your body functions every day, whether you feel it or not. Tracking your glucose with Lingo can help you see how food activity and stress impact your glucose throughout the day. I personally have used Lingo and it's been an invaluable tool for improving my metabolic health. If you would like to try Lingo, Huberman lab listeners and the US and UK can save 10% on a four week plan. Just visit hello lingo.comhuberman for more information. Terms and conditions apply. Again, that's hello lingo.com huberman There's a really cool course at Stanford Medical School that I sat in on years ago about neural regeneration which was a topic of study for my lab for a while and they had a young person that year. It was a guy in his 20s who had a spinal cord injury, came in, talked about his spinal cord injury, talked about what life was like for him before and after how he's thinking about things. And then on a separate lecture, there was an older individual who had also had a spinal cord injury. And it was striking to see the divergence in attitude. You could look at this as tragic or redeeming, depending on how you think about these things. But the older, other gentleman was saying that, you know, he had this injury, he knows he's never going to walk again, but he's like, you know, he's lived a lot of life and he's done a lot of things and, you know, and here he is and so he's going to focus on what he can do. Focus on what he can do. And he actually noted, this was some years ago, that he wasn't that much worse off compared to his peers, unless he let himself become a pessimist. So if he was an optimist, then he actually, actually was still doing better than a lot of his walking able peers. Whereas a younger gentleman was talking about how, you know, there's just so many things in the, in the horizon that he's gonna, that he hasn't done that he really wanted to do that he doesn't have access to, which is really heartbreaking to hear. It was a very honest discussion. And this was of course mainly focused on the biology and limitations of biology to try and overcome regeneration. But they brought these people in because. Because really wanted to highlight the differences in terms of patient need. And I thought this comes to mind now in this conversation. I think if you accrue enough experiences, good and bad, we kind of bucket list life. We're like, okay, I did this and I did that, and maybe I would have liked more of that, but I can't do that anymore and definitely didn't want more of that. We can kind of bucket list life.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And I never had a bucket list growing up. It would have been very useful, like sit down and at any age, I guess, and just write out what are the things you absolutely don't want to leave this life not having done and try and make those happen. Because God forbid, if you have one of these injuries or you stroke out and die or have a heart attack, not to sound morbid, but then you've done the things. And I think that's the responsibility, Real tragedy of when people are limited early on. And I don't know what became of the younger guy. Hopefully he figured it out because I know a lot of people because of that work that are blind or paralyzed, who live very enriched lives with families and all that. But it's curious, it's like, I didn't think we'd get to the meaning of life here, purpose in life. But we should probably plan and carry out on those plans and not just live by default. Wait till we're older and then try and figure out how we can go longer with a little less pain and a few more memories.
Dr. Alan Castell
I mean, it's an interesting case study when you compare those two individuals and then say, what do you want to get out of life? And it's kind of a big picture question. But a lot of older adults will say they have pretty good life satisfaction. Happiness. Life satisfaction could be similar and related. And again, it's the midlife people who seem to be lacking. And I don't know if we're at that stage, but I feel like maybe I'm on the uptick. I don't know if I have a bucket list, but I certainly would like to do more things like, hey, I really enjoyed that trip to Sedona, Arizona. I'd like to do that again.
Andrew Huberman
Sedona's amazing. I just went for the first time.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
My girlfriend and I went out there and we were like, this place is awesome.
Dr. Alan Castell
It's awesome.
Andrew Huberman
It's so beautiful. The air feels so good. The light is amazing.
Dr. Alan Castell
And I definitely go back. My son and I climb. Climbed up, you know, part rocks that we, you know.
Andrew Huberman
Oh, you're a climber.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, I'm not a climber. I've climbed then. But we, you know, we went there five years ago when he was too young to do that. He wanted to go back. And I was like, these are the sorts of moments I really enjoy. And it doesn't necessarily have to be Sedona. You can go up the coast here in California and get. So I feel like those are the moments that I'm like, I'm not sure whether it has to be in Costa Rica or Matador beach, but I feel like those are the moments that I really enjoy. Um, you know, before it was like, yeah, I want to fly an airplane. That would be really cool. But I have friends who fly airplanes. And I'm like, you know, I have a family now. I don't need to fly an airplane anymore. I'd probably. I think we look at these. Maybe I shouldn't be riding my bike either in la, but I think we start to look at, like, what really, you know, captures you and matters. And some of it are, like, even some simple hobbies. Like, we were talking about drawing earlier, something I wouldn't have time for when I was 20 or 30. Like I could be spending that time programming computer or writing something. And now those are very kind of important moments and times that I enjoy. So, yeah, having a sense of purpose, I think, sharing information. A lot of older adults will say it's really nice to be a mentor. They don't want to go back and go through the grunt work of their job, but they'd love to share experiences or be an educator. And you see big benefits for older adults who volunteer. Again, it's correlation. But older adults who are engaged in some sort of kind of generativity, like influencing the next generation feel very connected and useful. And that's something some older adults will say. It's like, you know, I'm retired, but I still feel like I'm useful. I think, you know, certainly how can we, you know, that'll be us, God willing one day that we'll be older and be like, well, what are we supposed to do now?
Andrew Huberman
Maybe that's what grandkids are about.
Dr. Alan Castell
Perhaps.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, because then you can be really useful to. Almost everyone in a family has some unique skill set they can contribute. Like, like my stepdad is, he's a really impressive carpenter and with tools and he built my niece's dollhouses when she was young. Like if there's something to fix, like he's the man, you know, or something to build his tool shed is in insane. Yeah, it's incredible.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think grandchildren, I mean, it's family. People will often say when they're, you know, close to the end of life, what were the most important things? And they'll say, you know, family rich. So there's Thanksgiving or Passover when everyone got together and got to doing something. And so those are kind of some very important memories. And I think you realize you can also influence the next generation in a meaningful way. I think some research, again, it's correlational shows that people who spend five hours a week with their grandchildren have improved memory. So that seems. We don't know if it's causal. But it's interesting that those who spend more than 20 hours a week don't show this benefit, in fact might show the opposite.
Andrew Huberman
They're exhausted.
Dr. Alan Castell
They're exhausted or they're in an unfortunate situation where they're forced into child care. There's a single parent or someone's incarcerated. So it's interesting to get that insight that yes, being around younger people or doing some meaningful interaction, whether it's mentoring, whether it's grandchildren can be. And I think it's bi directional. The children learn from it. I didn't spend a lot of time with my grandparents, but I have very vivid memories of one grandfather showing me how you can clean a penny in Coca Cola. That's like science. And it was like, that's crazy. Should I be drinking this? There's all sorts of questions I had. And so I think that sort of interaction can be very useful for the grandparent and the grandchild.
Andrew Huberman
I think about what really enriches one's life in addition to deliberately trying to build memories. The decision to not fly planes, but maybe to get out to Sedona or Matador or Big Sur or something like that. Yosemite. I'm putting in a strong vote for Yosemite. You want to have an amazing experience in life. It's very low cost. If you can get yourself to Yosemite, drive up to the high country and hike clouds, rest, it's the. It's the best thing you'll ever do.
Dr. Alan Castell
That's on my bucket list.
Andrew Huberman
But get there early because you'll be coming down in the dark if you don't. And bring water, because there's no water along the way. Amazing place. I'm putting a big plug for national parks because I love Yosemite. The discussion you had with Wooden, you said the two takeaways that he offered were love and balance. And then, ironically, he got harmed and eventually died from a fall because his pride got in the way. Was there anything else in that conversation that didn't get into your book or that it's just maybe was more subtle that you think about, if not no big deal?
Dr. Alan Castell
I mean, first of all, it wasn't the fall that led to his death. It was, you know, he had a fall. He didn't press his leg. He. He was resilient. He bounced back. And, you know, eventually, you know, I think nearly 99 is when he passed away. So several years after the fall. That was such an inspiring interview. And I remember when I first got my job at ucla, you know, growing up in Canada, I'll admit the reason I knew UCLA was the basketball team, the football team. I remember watching the Rose Bowl.
Andrew Huberman
Okay. Many people throughout the world think that UCLA is a basketball team. Yeah, yeah, that's. They. I'm not sure that they know. Know that.
Dr. Alan Castell
And they've had their ups and downs,
Andrew Huberman
and there's a school there, but I
Dr. Alan Castell
also thought, gosh, that place sure looks nice in the winter. And so I. It was. I was thankful to be connected to Coach Wooden, who actually used to lecture in a. In a leadership class once a year. And he was very interested in, you know, serving as a coach but also as a teacher. So I think this sort of generativity, you know, he was so kind and thoughtful and then you come into his, you know, as a two bedroom condo in Encino. This is not how a famous basketball coach would live now. And he had no problem with that.
Andrew Huberman
He wasn't interested in wealth or anything like that.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think partly he didn't have and led a very fulfilling life in the absence of that. Whereas now you see in professional sports and all, you know, wealth can lead to all sorts of problems. But so I was impressed with that and just all the, you know, the pride he had and you know, sharing the love and balance quote I thought was, was helpful and I tried to distill it in, in the book to capture not just what Wooden said but others that what I call the ABCs of successful aging, it's a kind of an easier way to. And A is, is an attitude, having a positive attitude about what can happen as you get older. And actually more recent research shows that those who have a positive attitude attitude live longer. They're less likely to develop dementia. And so it's probably maybe less stress, better behavior. But more recent research shows that if you have a more negative attitude overall of what can happen as you get older, but a more positive attitude about what you can do, your own personal kind of agency over the process that leads to kind of longer life, that's that friction again. It's the friction, it's the balance.
Andrew Huberman
You don't want things too easy. You don't want them too hard like landscape too easy or too hard again and again. I've just been tracking during our conversation, it's the delta, it's the difference between where you're at versus where you'd like to be and not letting that turn you into a cynic or a curmudgeon, but feeling that friction. We can't just kick our feet up all the time, right?
Dr. Alan Castell
And I think if you notice, look, bad things can happen as you get older but I'm going to have to rise above it by doing these things. That's, that's the adapt component. So you know, attitudes, but also adapting. There's a lot of you're not going to have an easy time. And a lot of the older adults I've talked to said, you know, had to adapt to changes whether it's physical, whether it's mental. So I think you know, to make call A adapts and also attitude is very psychological and then B is Balance, which is what we talked about already. You know, I don't think it's. The super ages are not extremists. They're not like running marathons and eating. Eating only blueberries. It's usually something like, yeah, I just do this or that, and it works out.
Andrew Huberman
That suggests some sort of genetic component.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think there is a genetic component, but I also think it's not the extreme. It's not like you need four cups of coffee a day to prevent dementia. It's probably having some level of balance and some genetic component. And then C is often overlooked as a. From a psychological standpoint, is can connection. And that's also what Wooden was emphasizing. You know, be around the people you love, do the things you love. Social connection, I think we learned during COVID all of a sudden people are like, oh, my gosh, I can't be around people. Or I can see them on zoom. But it's different. All of a sudden, it hits home that social connection is important now. It's different for different people. You know, how they want to engage in it. But I think that's often lost, sadly, because of technology. You know, you can have tons of. Of Facebook friends, but how many friends could you call up once a week to ask how their day is or their week is gone? Is probably limited. And as we get older, our social circle tends to shrink. People move away, people pass away. But some research shows the quality of those fewer relationships can actually be improved. And I think that's, again, an interesting kind of nonlinear change that when we're young, we know lots of people and we're interacting with a lot in a social way. But as we get older, it's those more meaningful kind of relationships that are important.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, the connection piece comes up again and again. I think it, you know, as we talk about all this, like, it must be kind of daunting for people in their 20s and 30s now, because there's like all this stuff that you can do to make yourself better that frankly, what we weren't aware of back when, it's like, oh, I like running, so I ran. I wanted to get stronger, so I lifted weights. I wanted a PhD in neuroscience, so I did it. Like, I just sort of followed my interest. There wasn't this idea that you could, like, fundamentally transform how long you were going to live or how great you were going to feel at a given age. But so I kind of wonder if it's both good and bad. I don't want to undercut the idea that we can strive for Those things. But I also don't want to promote the idea, idea that, that we should all be thinking about what it's gonna be like when we're 70. I mean the, the unit of life being the day, I think is true in the circadian sense. Our biology resets every 24 hours. Having recently pulled the first all nighter in a while to finish some book edits, last minute little nip tuck stuff with, with my producer and friend Rob, we legitimately pushed through. It was like, it's midnight. Okay, we'll go to two and then at two it's like I get. Then we're like, looks like we're going through, through and Been a while. It was fun to just be able. You know, as much as I talk about the benefits of sleep. Yeah, it's like, that was cool. Like, haven't done that in a while. Still got it. It hurt. The next day we get a nap. Next day you sleep a little longer. Like, you know, I can. Did I shorten my life? I don't know. I feel like I got. I'll remember that.
Dr. Alan Castell
You'll remember it. And you're contributing to something that, you know, you think is important. You know, this is a book, this is something that you want to make sure it's accurate and, you know, thoughtful. And I think when you work hard at something, it does make you feel good. You're probably getting a lot of neurotransmitter reward mechanism kicking in.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, it was so much fun. This is why I always say the occasional late night out or all nighter, as long as it's for the right reasons. I wish that for people. Occasional. As you can tell, I'm really intrigued by this idea that there's something about pushing ourselves. And as Wooden pointed out, there's also something about coming off the gas, being able to lean back and forth into those things. Like life is an oscillation. It's a circadian oscillation. And then it's like this push, push, push. And then being able to come off the gas. And it's an art. It's not a science. There's science there, but it's not trivial. And it actually raises this question for me. You're an interesting guy. You're young in my opinion, but I'm 50 also. So you study memory, but you seem to have a genuine interest in care for the older generation. Like how are we going to take care of them in the AI age? How are we going to take care of them? Is that something that's always been Intrinsic to you. Like, I don't want this to sound glib, you know, but what's the obsession with older folks? It's cool. It's very nurturing, but it's not typical. You know, most people aren't thinking about the older generation. It's natural for us as a species to think about the younger generation. Right. We just have a. What I think is a healthy reflex to, like, how can we make things better for kids that are coming up? Young people make it better. Yeah, but you. You're unique in this way. You know, you study memory in the age cohort that has arguably some of the worst memory.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think it's maybe growing up around a lot of older adults. Again, you know, I grew up in Canada partly, but also in Florida, and I was around a lot of very interesting older people, you know, kind of in their prime of their retirement life, who'd spend a lot of time with me. And, you know, I have aging parents. I've seen that. So I. I don't know if it's also, like a respect for older adults, but it's also, I mean, maybe it's. I don't want to say egocentric, but in a good way. If we're lucky, we're going to be there one day.
Andrew Huberman
You're making the discoveries that you will yourself benefit from.
Dr. Alan Castell
I hope so. I hope so. And I think it's an investment. You know, we invest a lot in our children, and that's, you know, incredibly important and to be nurturing parents and, you know, have government that can help, you know, with education. But I think we look the other way once people are, well, you're on Social Security or you're retired. And, you know, and I think culturally there's, you know, other cultures that treat older adults with more respect. And so I don't know what the reason is. And, you know, I teach a class on aging at ucla. It's a popular class, but it's not as popular as the class on relationships or, you know, things that I think younger people would be interested in. But oftentimes after students take it, they say, you know, I never thought I'd be interested in aging, but I'm actually, you know, now that I think about it, you know, it's really interesting to see how my parents age. And I'm like, well, you know, give yourself 30 or 40 years, and I hope you'll remember something from this class. And I think maybe that's my early exposure made me think this is really kind of an interesting thing that happens. And I remember, you know, with my grandparents, they would forget, get my name confused with my brother's name, but they could remember the price of bananas. So how are they remembering this very detailed information versus forgetting things that are presumably important? And I think it comes down to focus. It comes down to the era you grew up in. And so I don't see it as very different than older adults are not different than younger adults in that they're like, that's the old and this is the new button, but it's this progressive change. And in some ways I can see in my own children, I think, what are they going to be like when they're 80? What habits are going to stay with them and what things might change? And I think in some ways there's a lot of things that you could see it kind of as a seed that just gets more pronounced as we get older, but also that we're better at regulating emotions and doing things that when we're young, we're not so good at. And we often think of, like, how can we make older people, you know, better by making them look younger? And in fact, I sometimes think, gosh, how could we instill some of that? Not just the wisdom, but make younger people feel like older people in some ways, kind of from a psychological standpoint, you know, better at regulating emotions, less likely to take risks.
Andrew Huberman
You know, it's the whole, like, if, you know, if I knew then would I know now? It's why it's interesting that Wooden said that the two most important words in life are love and balance. I have a friend who's a psychologist, and he said, you know, the two most dangerous words in the English language are if and only, and especially when they're next to each other. And it's interesting to watch my mind, I'm just going, like, if only this, if only that. It's like, we can default there. And it's. Yeah, it's dreadfully useless and maybe even destructive. So, yeah, I encourage myself to watch out for the if only, thinking it's maybe even deadly.
Dr. Alan Castell
We've run a lot of simulations in our brain, like, what if I did this? Or what if I didn't do that? Or what if I met this person? Or what if I took this job? And I think at some point when you're young, maybe that's helpful, trying to figure out what would work out best. But as you're older, it's like, well, these things have happened and I've learned from them. And, yeah, I think it's really interesting to Think of that. That is, what if, what if this happened? And you can get yourself into a lot of trouble thinking what if that happens? And what, you know, the world can be an incredibly dreary place when you think of it that way, but it's also amazing to see. And maybe that's why I'm interested in older adults. It's like, look, these people, 70, 80, 90. I'm not just looking at the 90 year olds who are doing incredible things. I'm looking at the 90 year olds who are perhaps at peace with themselves, you know, feel comfortable talking about things that they want to talk about. I, you know, I enjoyed your father's podcast partly because I'm like, here's a guy who's not afraid of saying some things and he'll appreciate that you maybe, maybe it's not always, you know, what people would expect.
Andrew Huberman
He has an irreverence to him. I mean, he's very polite and believes in etiquette, but he doesn't let people constrain him.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And you know, I just found that, you know, there's a lot of these politics podcasts have a lot of science in them, but he had a lot of things that made me think, gosh, that's interesting. Could we test that? Is that really how Curiosity. One of our more recent studies has shown that as we get older, memory does decline in many ways. But older adults can remember prices, let's say that makes sense. So the bananas being 299, but as soon as we say bananas are 1849, that just doesn't make sense. And older adults quickly forget that. And that's something we were talking about, that the benefit of forgetting things that just don't fit your schemas, that just don't make sense. Whereas younger adults, a lot of undergraduates will be like, I highlighted 80% of the textbook. Why did I get a C on the exam? It's this inability to kind of selectively focus on what's important. And I've seen that even in myself. Like when I was younger, I'd be taking notes on everything. But by your fourth year, you realize, you know what, let me sit back and look for the overarching themes that connect them. And that's almost how I did well in psychology is I'm like, okay, some of these findings make sense and so I can remember it that way. But some of them are counterintuitive. And a lot of this, like, people aren't always rational. This Kahneman and Tversky, all these biases people have well, that's fascinating. So I just remember it that way, the things that made sense and the things that didn't make sense, and that's kind of how you can organize things. And I think that that can be kind of a useful principle as you get older, is knowing what to overcome, overlook, and kind of knowing what to focus on. And so older adults, even though they'll say, my memory is not as sharp as it used to be, as long as you can remember the things that are kind of critical, that's what's important. And so in the study on curiosity, we found that older adults tend to remember the things that they're most curious about, but they're also really good at forgetting the things that they just didn't care about in the first place.
Andrew Huberman
Sounds great.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
Honestly, it sounds great, right? Yeah. I. I can't wait.
Dr. Alan Castell
Right.
Andrew Huberman
Because I want to learn more about certain things, remember certain people and certain things. But there's a lot of stuff that rolls through my phone or through my email, luckily not through my daily experience, but that I don't want to think about that stuff.
Dr. Alan Castell
And it captures your attention, and all of a sudden you're like, where did the last 10 minutes go? I've been reading about this. Now I'm remembering this useless thing. So I think if you can prune these things, and as you get older, maybe you realize, I've even realized, gosh, I forget this. I need to focus more. It's not just conscious focus, but it's like, I, you know, I'm interested in this. Let's put more resources and time and energy into that. It takes me longer to learn a piano piece than, you know, my daughter.
Andrew Huberman
You play piano?
Dr. Alan Castell
I try, but, you know, I see my daughter, like, picking these things up so quickly, and I'm like, I know I'm not going to be like that, but I can be more selective about what I try and learn, what's in my wheelhouse, and what's just beyond it.
Andrew Huberman
Developmental plasticity is amazing, right?
Dr. Alan Castell
It's amazing.
Andrew Huberman
I don't know how old she is, but I know she's younger than you.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, she's young. You know, I've two daughters and a son, and I see them all excelling. My older daughter is like, wow, her cognitive skills are probably beyond mine in terms of speed of processing. She might even be a better driver than I am. She's good at planning things. My daughter playing piano, it's like, gosh, if I could have those skills now, how I would practice more. My son will hurt himself in baseball. And I'm like, oh, he's out for three weeks. Three days later he's pitching again. So those are things where it's like, yes, aging sucks in some ways. All I'll be upfront about it, but I think you appreciate those things as you get 40, 50, 60, it's like, yeah, that's, you know, it's hard to recover from injuries. It takes you maybe longer to learn something. But the things you really do care about, you can use all this kind of knowledge and wisdom and metacognition to focus on kind of what matters the most.
Andrew Huberman
So it's almost as if as we are able to do less with less pain or just do less, less attitude starts to become more and more important. That's what I'm hearing. But I don't want to lead the witness.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, I think that's definitely the perspective. And, you know, this is built on some developmental theories of social, you know, social learning, but also selective optimization with compensation. You know, that as you get older, maybe you're not going to be doing all these things and scuba diving and hiking, but you'll be like, you know, that one hike I really enjoy, I want to be able to do it once a week, week. And so you're still doing the things you like, but you're not doing kind of the wide range of them. And another related theory is socio emotional selectivity theory. Laura Carstenson at Stanford. Another perspective saying that as we get older, our mindset shifts, that we don't have as much time to live, so we want to focus on the things that are important. Whereas when you're young, it's very abstract to say, save for retirement or what are you going to do when you, you're 60? It's like, what am I going to do next week? Right. But her work has shown that when you give people different time perspectives, they make different choices. So if you unfortunately tell someone who's younger that they only have five to 10 years left to live, they're going to make choices very much like older adults, too. So I don't know if it's conscious that we're thinking these things, but as you get older, maybe you realize, I want to focus on the things that matter the most. Maybe I won't worry so much about the things that I used to worry about all the time. Time. And that can be kind of a healthy way to approach life.
Andrew Huberman
This might sound a little mystical, but I've always wondered if, barring accident or injury, whether people have some unconscious knowledge about how long they're going to live you. I grew up near Steve Jobs. He used to come into the skateboard shop that I worked to get rollerblade wheels and things like that. And he was around. He didn't have security. He'd walk Walker. When I was a postdoc, you'd still see him walking through downtown Palo Alto in the evenings. My dad and I would walk about once a week. We'd take a walk together and you'd see Steve. He was, you know, passed away, I think in 2015 or something like that. That sound about right?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
In any case, he, he was thinning out then he was going through his various treatments. But, you know, if you listen to his biography with Walter Isaacson, written by Walter Isaacson, it, I mean, it was very clear that he had a mission, he was on it. That like, life was. You had to maximize on your life that you couldn't compromise. And okay, that led to some kind of high friction personality traits in him too. But I don't think anyone would argue that he didn't do something super impressive in what he built. It transformed the world. I mean, most everyone listening to this has an Apple product in their vicinity, as I say this, right. And it almost seemed like he had some deeper knowledge. He wasn't going to live that long.
Dr. Alan Castell
Long.
Andrew Huberman
And when I think about like the 27 Club of, you know, amazing artists dying at 27, and just like, it's almost like there's a life energy that's either packed into a shorter period of time, a medium amount of time, or a longer time. Now, of course, accidents, injuries and things can happen to. But I wonder like, if we have a sense based on our parents, our grandparents, our life notion of like, I'm gonna be around a while or because it really seemed to benefit. Benefit him to have this attitude about life, like, you get one life, you have to live it on your terms. You don't want to compromise your soul and your, your heart, and you just go for it. And then there are these people that sort of live life as if it's going to go on forever. And for them it seems to go on a long time. And it seems to be kind of a lower, slower arc. I'm not saying one is better than the other. Right. It's impossible to compare, except, you know, to compare that the object objectively just say, okay, one live shorter, pack more in, one live longer. Maybe it didn't have as intense a life. Do you think there, there could be something in our biology that we have some Awareness based on our genetic fingerprint that, you know, I've probably got about. If I think about my dad and mom, they're doing well in their 80s, but you know, I probably have about 90, 100 years if I take care of myself. So I'm going to live that that way.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, it's an interesting conjecture and in some ways we probably do know, like our lifespan is about this. But you're right, accidents can happen. Things can happen. And I've seen, you know, from my own family, you know, I can take the average age of my mother and father and sadly, my mother passed away when she was young, My father's still alive. So I think I have this perspective of life can be short. And when people are like, I'm 50, but I haven't done this, this, and this part of me is like, I'm 50 and I've made it this far. I'm pretty happy with things. But of course, your perspective could be different. And I don't know, in the case of these high performing individuals, maybe they lead every day like it could be their last and they want to stay up all night and transform the world. I think a lot of the super agers are probably not doing that. They're probably getting good rest, having some routines and habits. They're more chill, they're more chill, but maybe it's not intentional. It's like, I just don't want to ruin tomorrow by not sleeping a lot tonight. So a lot of people say, what's the secret to successful aging? And I think the secret is not to look for one thing, probably. We've talked a lot about exercise, sleep, and a lot of people say it's moderation. It doesn't mean don't drink coffee or drink seven cups a day. It's like, if you want a cup of coffee, have one. But you can realize maybe you don't want it every day, get eight hours of sleep. Well, not every night. Clearly pulling an all nighter might have been a benefit for you and even a good investment. And I don't want to do it
Andrew Huberman
again for a very long time.
Dr. Alan Castell
But then you've probably learned from that. You're like, I don't want to be editing books late at night once a week. Right. But once every few years, especially if it might pay off. That's part of the deal I've made
Andrew Huberman
with myself, the friendship I'm realizing as you say this, the fact that someone else was there is what kept me out of like, you know, swearing like, this sucks or what. It's it's fun. It reminds me of being in graduate school. We used to run physiology experiments all night or imaging experiments all night. And you get pretty loopy somewhere between 3 and 5am and you just acknowledge like, oh, here we go again. Like, like mild psychosis because you are a little bit psychotic and sleep deprived state.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
You make it through and you're like, hey, we did that. That was, that was fun.
Dr. Alan Castell
Maybe that's why people say college is the best time. Because you're going through a lot of things like that. Staying up late, working hard, struggling through this, trying to figure out that. But there's a social component. You're doing it with other people. And even when I think like the Steve Jobs thing, or even when I talk to older adults, they're like, I like this part of my work life. When it was a challenge and we had to travel here and do that, it was exciting. They wouldn't say it was relaxing and it's not something they want to revisit. And it's interesting. If you ask people, what age would you want to go back to? Not a lot of people will say 20 or 15. It's usually kind of closer to midlife, which is interesting because maybe everything's kind of firing on all cylinders. Then your cognition's still pretty good, your family's still around, you have your job, you're reinforced by a lot of things. But it's not going back to this age when you're like 20, 25.
Andrew Huberman
Any experiments that your laboratory is doing now that you can even just tell us about the design of the experiment, if not the results?
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah, well, we've done some work on curiosity and I think that's something. Something that from a lifespan perspective is interesting. We've been measuring different types of curiosity. One is known as state curiosity and one is known as trait curiosity. And trait curiosity is just in general, are you a curious person? Do you kind of get into things and have trouble if you don't learn the answer, which I think a lot of people can have. But as you get older, that tends to decline with age, which I thought was kind of perplexing because a lot of curious people. But we've found that levels of state curiosity, when I give you some interesting bit of information, but I don't give you the answer if it's something you care about, that actually increases with age, your level of curiosity and learning. We think this is interesting because it probably guides our memory. As we get older, we're going to remember the things we care about. And if you're curious, especially so. And there's probably some neurochemical pathway that is still engaged, even though we know all sorts of things kind of decline with age. So that's, that's one. And we've been testing it with trivia questions, things we have experimental control over. But I think it has implications for lifelong learning that if you're really interested in hiking or bird watching or skateboarding, that might still percolate when you're 70 or 80, which I think is really interesting. And the other thing we're looking at is kind of the flip side of the curiosity, which could be a double edged sword, is that I mentioned scams and fraud, right? That's like if it's almost like opening Pandora box, right? As soon as someone calls you with an offer that's too good to be true or limited time or something, it's that thing you always wanted and now it's at this price or worse. You know, we kidnapped your granddaughter and don't you know you need to pay this amount of money and she doesn't want you to call mom and dad. And all of a sudden you hear her voice on the line and she's saying, please help me. All of a sudden you're wiring the money.
Andrew Huberman
People are running those scams.
Dr. Alan Castell
People are running. And that's an old one. That was when. And younger people are posting things on Facebook and all of a sudden their voice is captured. Now their voice is played to a grandparent who's like, oh my gosh, I need to help this person, my loved one. And it's preying on socio emotional selectivity theory that we focus on family and feelings and emotions. And older adults get caught by this. And AI has just made this even worse because you're going to get phone, you could get a phone call from Steve Jobs that sounds just like Steve Jobs right now, even though, you know, he's not around. And so we're looking at how, how as we get older are we able to distinguish between kind of this fake information and what's real? And it's not just older adults who are prone to this, it's younger people too who are in a rush, might not be paying attention to something more likely to get identity theft. Whereas older adults, they have more money, they have more to lose. And so I think that's on the more practical side of being able to identify how scams and fraud target people. But there's a psychological, psychological component, emotions, again, that might engage older adults more. So whereas younger people are more interested in, oh, my loan is going to be forgiven if I give some information. Great. So it's kind of using psychological mechanisms in a very nefarious way. So I'm interested in how we can try and kind of prevent that. And I feel like there's a lot of amateur psychologists out there who are engaged in this, this kind of form of fraud. So that's another area of interest. And you're trying to design experiments but also look at more practical implications.
Andrew Huberman
It's cool. You have a lot of care for the older generation, your protector. That's really great.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
A lot of discussions on this podcast about youth and everybody, every age, but I don't recall a conversation anyone, much less a scientist who's interested in protecting older folks. Yeah, I know you thought about. And maybe you can tell us what this wisdom thing is about. Right. I mean, it's like, I feel like I'm not trying to be facetious here when I say, you know, there seems to be a kind of transformation of advice from just advice to wisdom after somebody dies. Dies. Right. It's like when they're still around, it sounds like advice and they die. And it's like wisdom.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
You know, and I'm not trying to make light of it, but it does seem like we look at knowledge from people that have passed away as different.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
Like, I haven't read much about Wooden. I like basketball, but I like track enough that I read, you know, the book about Bowerman, the coach up at Oregon, like the Men of Oregon is a really. He was another one of these amazing coaches that was much more of a mentor and teacher. He made all his runners get jobs outside of school while in school and running for, for this incredible track team.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah.
Andrew Huberman
And he would place them in not always manual labor jobs, but he made sure that they understood that the town that they were running in was much more than a university. And you know, he was like, took the time to do this stuff, right. And he was a hard nose guy, but, you know, so you, you. But I often wonder as I read these things like, oh, when, when he was alive, was, was everyone revering him? Because as soon as you die, you're like a thing, right?
Dr. Alan Castell
You know, it puts you in a.
Andrew Huberman
One advantage of dying. You know, your, your words move from advice to wisdom. So what, what is that?
Dr. Alan Castell
I think Wooden got a lot of play for his wisdom. He retired at an earlier age than most people do. He didn't need to. He didn't. I don't think he made as much money as you know, coaches do now. Now. But I think you're right. It's interesting how knowledge goes into wisdom. And I think even when I was thinking of my own interest in wisdom and aging is I had an older math teacher who also was my basketball coach. And I think he was formative. When I think of why I'm interested. And he was older, and he said, listen, you're not going to be starting this year if you don't put the time in to your calculus class, that you're putting the time into basketball. And he was very clear about that. And I was like. He said, you have tremendous potential in calculus. He didn't say anything about basketball, but he's kind of saying, you need to work harder. The motivation is there. I've had older rabbis who've given me advice growing up that not even being religious then still resonates with me. And so I think even at the practical level, the wisdom, sometimes it's nice to hear it from the horse's mouth. You can read this cute little quote or something, and that's reasonable. And then I think wisdom also has a very practical kind of application. So Sully Sullenberger, the pilot, the plane, I don't know if you've seen the movie or if you remember the history, is that a plane takes off from New York City and both engines go out, and he's over New York City, and he has to engage in an emergency landing, and he has to. So who do you want? Do you want a younger pilot who has faster reaction times, better memory, or do you want an older pilot who has more experience flying but has never landed a plane on water? And we know how the story ends, thankfully. But most people would probably, as I asked my class, this. This is like the dilemma where, you know, where is the wisdom? Where is the knowledge? You know, if you're the faster pilot, maybe you turn around and land at an airport. That makes more sense. But Sully eventually decided that he had to make this water landing. And he said there was reason he knew he could pull this off, is he used to fly gliders. And he said the principles are the same, but it's going to be a very different physics and weight management. But he said he felt like he'd made a number of investments over the years of boosting his knowledge so that he could make one enormous withdrawal, basically landing this plane on the Hudson river, which is an amazing, amazing feat.
Andrew Huberman
That's wild.
Dr. Alan Castell
Yeah. And so I think that's, you know, it's a dramatic Hollywood. And there's a movie about it as well. But I think it's a nice illustration of you can accumulate all this knowledge, not just so you apply what you've learned. You're having to transform that knowledge. Say now I'm going to apply it in this one emergency situation. So maybe that's the difference between knowledge, which is like I know so much and then wisdom of how to carry it out or when it's appropriate.
Andrew Huberman
It does help when the coaches have played like Steve Kerr, but some of
Dr. Alan Castell
the best coaches are the ones who are the worst. You know, Tommy Lasorda, you know, all these people are like, they struggled and they've seen it and now they're going to go into coaching. And maybe that's the same with older adults. You know, again, these two older adults who took my class who are therapists, you know, it's like if you see a therapist, would you want to see a 20 year old or would you want to see a 50 or 60 year old old? Right. It just seems like there's going to be a difference in what they bring
Andrew Huberman
to the table nowadays. I think a lot of people are going to say ChatGPT, which, you know, I've found great use of AI in the self testing thing. Not looking for knowledge, but having ChatGPT generate a self self test, you know, test me on my knowledge of something. Yeah, awesome. Because I, as we were talking about before we went on Mike, you know, self tested is one of the best ways to learn information. Realize, ah, I got that wrong, I didn't know that. And that's, that's the delta. That's the difference between where you're at and where you want to be as opposed to just reciting things or highlighting things or writing them down. Although I do that also. But I know a lot of people are going to the Internet for answers and on the one hand we could say, well, those answers are the synthesis of a lot of wise people, people potentially. But you could say like, yeah, I would like the integrated advice of Mahatma Gandhi, Jane Goodall and you know, whoever and for this particular situation, you know, and make it wise. I don't know what it would say. So I want you to do that.
Dr. Alan Castell
It's a great question. I've tried. You know, I'm not of the era that my children are in terms of using AI, but I'd love to be like, answer this like a, an 80 year old would. How would you present it differently if you were older versus younger? Because a lot of it is just so much more information than I'M like, wow, that's great. Can you summarize? I've. I don't use it often, but sometimes I'm like, can you summarize this? Can you. Sometimes it misses things and sometimes it's good. But, but yeah, it's really fascinating how, how that sort of synthesis can be so transforming. And, you know, even my son's like, why do I have to learn this when I can just ask AI now? And it used be, to. Used to be when I was a kid. Why do I have to learn this when I can just look it up in an encyclopedia? It's like the information is always going to be there, but it's how you're going to use it kind of in an informed way. And I always say, could you imagine if the next president said, I don't know our foreign policy with Mexico, but I could look it up? I was like, well, you want to know a little bit about the foreign policy, friend or foe or something? You have to have some basic level. And where would you look it up? Like, are you. Do you have aids that you trust? Do you have sources that you trust? I don't think you need to know all of these details, but you need to know kind of some general knowledge. And usually that comes from learning all the details. Like you've learned all these details in neuroscience 20 years ago that you've probably forgotten, but it informs how you interpret neuroscience findings today.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, I'm admittedly, like such a nerd. I have this textbook. There's a really great new textbook. I didn't, didn't plan to plug this, but my colleague Leechen Lo wrote a Principles of Neurobiology textbook that. Not as beefy as the Principles of Neuroscience one that is out of Columbia, but I'm a West coast guy, so I like Leechen's book. And recently I just started reading it. I started flipping through it, reading it front to back, and of course I recognize every line, right? Because this is the area I've spent all these years in. But I had not thought about a lot of it while I'm thinking about it a little differently. And maybe I'm lying to myself, but I tell myself, like, there's some enrichment in this. I don't know what it is. I'm not just brushing out. There's something that's going to come of this. Yeah, I know it, but maybe I'm just defaulting to the thing that's easiest. And maybe I should be, you know, looking. Maybe I should be learning Latin or something like that instead it's almost like
Dr. Alan Castell
nostalgia you're going back to. You remember learning this. It's also beautiful. It's more fun because now you're like, I haven't thought about this in a while, but now I can connect it to the other things I've been thinking about. So it's like going back to a language you're familiar with or a city you're familiar with.
Andrew Huberman
The big question is, are we diluting ourselves into thinking that the brain somehow gets better as we age? Like, is this a story we are telling ourselves so that we can, you know, hold on to more obviously if we do the right things, which you described in your book and today, you know, get a bit more, maybe a lot more meaning and experience, or in keeping with the Erickson, you know, stages of development where there's a, you know, core conflict at every stage of life. You know, development doesn't stop when we become young adults. Neuroplasticity continues throughout the lifespan. Maybe, and I certainly prefer this answer, maybe our brains get better in certain ways that afford us access to life experience, internal feelings of well being and peace and things that are outsized in comparison to what we can experience when we're young. I like, I like that. And like, maybe we do get better in certain ways as we age.
Dr. Alan Castell
I like that perspective too, of course, but maybe it's hard to say, like, what's better or what's worse. It's like this is a qualitative difference. And if your expectation of old age is quite low and you realize, wait, it doesn't have to be like that, or, you know, I'm not going to run as fast as I used to, or I'm, maybe I won't be scuba diving, but hey, it can actually be very meaningful. It might encourage you to engage in behaviors that'll allow you to get there and be there in a, you know, mobile way, a way that you'll enjoy it.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah. So maybe instead of striving to be a super ager, we should strive to be super content. Something like that. I don't know.
Dr. Alan Castell
I think there's a quote people say, like, you know, aging is better than.
Andrew Huberman
The alternative is youth lost on the young. Though we're going to fire back and forth.
Dr. Alan Castell
I definitely feel like there's times where I'm like, wow, maybe I shouldn't call the book Better with Age because let's revise that.
Andrew Huberman
Because of your son's shoulder.
Dr. Alan Castell
Well, you know, just all sorts of things you can do when you're younger and you don't even appreciate it. You don't even think twice, like, wow, it hurt yesterday, but it doesn't hurt today. It's like, oh, that's months for me.
Andrew Huberman
Yeah, but the social stuff is so stressful.
Dr. Alan Castell
It can be, but I'm not sure at that time it's relative to what. And I think there's a lot of challenges with younger people today and going through Covid and so on. But I've also seen kind of a more focus on mental health. Like I've seen, you know, with my daughters. They're like, I'm going to go for a walk. When I was 17, I wasn't just going for a walk. I was, like, walking to get somewhere or, you know, running to get something. But now there's this awareness of, like, maybe I'll take care of myself or maybe I'll listen to that podcast while I'm walking. It's like, wow, wow, that seems like very wise. And so I'm impressed. And I hope that those sorts of habits, as you develop them earlier, can stay with you and maybe buffer in this midlife where it's like, I always have to be busy. I can't stop and think about things. And I think maybe that's why my interest or even obsession with aging is to be like, wow, there's this group of people that seem to be doing pretty well, and I really enjoy being around them. How can I be like them? And, oh, it's so happens they're older adults. But, you know, if you went to a country and you're like this, this group of people are really cool and interesting and kind of quirky, maybe I'll live here. And to me, that might be what older age can be. And sure, they're sometimes frail and have to rely on other people, but that's not always such a bad thing. If you have the right structure in
Andrew Huberman
place, you're doing important work. And I'm grateful that you would come here today and share your knowledge, your wisdom with us. Your book. I didn't know you were going to give me a book today. Better with Age. I'm going to read it. The Psychology of Successful Aging. I'm going to encourage you to write more books because clearly you've gathered more knowledge since then. But it's a rare find that somebody is doing really interesting science and their work is immediately applicable and that it taps into a segment of our population that exists everywhere in the world, but that, frankly, doesn't get quite as much attention, research attention, as other areas. I know there's a big interest in longevity. There's a big interest in aging and preserving what we have. But in addition to studying all those things, you clearly study other aspects of what's unique and great about people 50, dare I say, and above and what we can all learn. Because if we're lucky enough to to live into those decades, we're all going to be benefiting from this knowledge. So thanks for coming here today. Let's do it again as more comes off the mill from your lab.
Dr. Alan Castell
Thank you. Thanks for getting the word out. It's really wonderful to hear kind of how to digest this and gives me new ideas of what we can pursue as we think about this.
Andrew Huberman
Great. Well, it's been a pleasure. Thank you.
Dr. Alan Castell
Thank you. Thanks.
Andrew Huberman
Thank you for joining me for Today's discussion with Dr. Alan Castell to learn more about his research and to find a little link to his book Better with Age the Psychology of Successful Aging. Please see the links in the show. Note Caption if you're learning from and or enjoying this podcast, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. That's a terrific zero cost way to support us. In addition, please follow the podcast by clicking the follow button on both Spotify and Apple. And on both Spotify and Apple you can leave us up to a five star review and you can now leave us comments at both Spotify and Apple. Please also check out the sponsors mentioned at the beginning and throughout today's episode. Episode. That's the best way to support this podcast. If you have questions for me or comments about the podcast or guests or topics that you'd like me to consider for the Huberman Lab podcast, please put those in the comments section on YouTube. I do read all the comments. For those of you that haven't heard, I have a new book coming out. It's my very first book. It's entitled Protocols An Operating Manual for the Human Body. This is a book that I've been working on for more than five years and that's based on more than 30 years of research and experts experience and it covers protocols for everything from sleep to exercise to stress control, protocols related to focus and motivation and of course I provide the scientific substantiation for the protocols that are included. The book is now available by pre sale@protographsbook.com there you can find links to various vendors. You can pick the one that you like best. Again, the book is called Protocols An Operating Manual for the Human. And if you're not already following me on social media, I am Huberman Lab on all social media platforms. So that's Instagram X threads, Facebook and LinkedIn, and on all those platforms I discuss science and science related tools, some of which overlaps with the content of the Huberman Lab podcast, but much of which is distinct from the information on the Huberman Lab podcast. Again, it's Huberman Lab on all social media platforms and if you haven't already, subscribe to our Neural Network News newsletter. The Neural Network Newsletter is a zero cost monthly newsletter that includes podcast summaries as well as what we call protocols in the form of one to three page PDFs that cover everything from how to optimize your sleep, how to optimize dopamine, deliberate cold exposure. We have a foundational fitness protocol that covers cardiovascular training and resistance training. All of that is available completely zero cost. You Simply go to hubermanlab.com, go to the menu tab in the top right corner, scroll down down to newsletter and enter your email. And I should emphasize that we do not share your email with anybody. Thank you once again for joining me for Today's discussion with Dr. Alan Castell. And last but certainly not least, thank you for your interest in science.
Guest: Dr. Alan Castel, Professor of Psychology at UCLA
Host: Dr. Andrew Huberman
Release Date: July 13, 2026
This episode delves into the mechanisms of human memory, how memory and cognitive function evolve with age, and actionable strategies for better memory at any stage of life. Dr. Alan Castel, a leading expert on memory and cognitive aging, explores why we remember some things and forget others, the role of habits and novelty in memory retention, the science of “superagers,” and how our beliefs about aging dramatically impact cognitive health.
Active vs. Passive Memory: Repetition alone is not enough for lasting memory; active engagement and making errors (followed by correction) strengthens recall.
Habituation: Familiarity breeds inattention; we stop noticing things we see often unless we make a deliberate effort, like hunting for the fire extinguisher you've walked past hundreds of times.
“There's a difference between seeing something and noticing it.” — Dr. Castel [09:28]
Desirable Difficulties: Making learning “challenging but not overwhelming” enhances memory. Retrieval failures, followed by feedback, are powerful tools.
Growth Mindset: Willingness to embrace frustration and agitation (the “gap” between current and desired skill) signals the brain that change (plasticity) is needed.
“The frustration and agitation... all the things we want to avoid, are actually what allow us to learn.” — Dr. Huberman [14:51]
Curiosity as Fuel: As we age, we're more selective about where we invest our learning efforts, focusing on what matters most.
Balancing Novelty and Routine: Maintaining strengths through practice is valuable, but exposing oneself to novelty is essential for brain health and neurogenesis.
“A lot of this is going to be observational learning... I think it comes down to curiosity, which is almost closing this knowledge gap, where here I am, but I want to be here. How can I get from here to here?” — Dr. Castel [16:08]
Habits Can Be Healthy… or Limiting: Routines provide comfort and efficiency, but disrupting them (e.g., changing classroom seats) can provide a cognitive boost by forcing new perspectives.
Emotionally charged memories (especially those tagged by embarrassment or trauma) are especially sticky—our amygdala ensures this.
Memory is inherently colored by emotional “tags”—these can be positive, negative, or even reconstructed through time.
“There can be an emotional attachment to a lot of our memories. Some of them are bittersweet. Some of them are things we go back to for comfort.” — Dr. Castel [21:59]
Not remembering every trivial detail is a feature, not a bug. We must “prune” memories to avoid overload.
Everyday memory (like hotel exits, room numbers) serves survival needs and should be effortlessly forgotten and updated.
“There are benefits of forgetting. I think that's an interesting insight.” — Dr. Castel [37:14]
Under high stress/arousal, we revert to habitual patterns—even experienced pros default to trained reflexes in crisis (scuba anecdote, BASE jumping fatality).
Prospective memory—remembering to do something in the future—is fragile and easily disrupted by routines.
“Under conditions of very high arousal... we just default to what we’re used to doing.” — Dr. Huberman [43:55]
Real-world examples: infants accidentally left in cars, hotel and airplane fire exits, and why high-stake situations often yield memory failures.
Declines in source memory mean older adults may forget to whom they told a particular story/joke, but emotion and enjoyment often drive repetition.
Storytelling is key to cultural transmission and personal connection.
“Sometimes it's just such a good joke or such a good memory. I'm like, I don't really care because I'm going to tell it to you again because I'm enjoying this.” — Dr. Castel [49:01]
Memory decline is not inevitable. Some memory faculties (like vocabulary and knowledge) are retained or improve.
Superagers: Some older individuals maintain cognitive abilities resembling much younger peers. Key factors: physical exercise, positive beliefs about aging, staying socially connected.
“Knowing you have a little bit of control over the process is important.” — Dr. Castel [53:54]
Attitudes Matter: Subjective age (how old you feel) predicts health and longevity better than biological age.
Physical balance and mobility are strongly linked to cognitive health; social connection and purpose are just as critical.
Active practices such as yoga or tai chi, daily walking, and doing new activities are emphasized.
“Exercise... is really like a controlled form of losing your balance and regaining it.” — Dr. Castel [59:46]
Satisfaction and happiness can increase later in life—a “U-curve”—with the lowest point in midlife, followed by a steady rise.
Dr. Castel’s ABCs: Attitude, Balance, and Connection
“Social connection... as we get older, our social circle tends to shrink... quality of those fewer relationships can actually be improved.” — Dr. Castel [109:23]
On Errorful Learning:
"The best way to remember something is to... have you draw it without looking at it and you struggle... Then when you look at the logo again, you're going to engage in better learning than if you hadn't done that errorful kind of trial beforehand."
— Dr. Castel [00:00], [09:07]
On Embracing Frustration:
"The frustration and agitation... all the things we want to avoid are actually what allow us to learn."
— Dr. Huberman [14:51]
On Emotional Tagging:
"There can be an emotional attachment to a lot of our memories... Sometimes we even change them a little bit so they fit the way we might have thought they happened."
— Dr. Castel [21:59]
On Novelty and Changing Perspective:
"I'll sometimes halfway through the quarter say, 'Okay, I want everyone to get up and switch sides and sit somewhere else.'... there's some benefits to having a different perspective, both physically and possibly mentally."
— Dr. Castel [19:29]
On Subjective Age:
"After the age of 40, most people feel about 20% younger than their actual age... subjective age is a better predictor of how long you'll live than your biological age."
— Dr. Castel [77:16]
On Longevity and Control:
"Knowing you have a little bit of control over the process is important."
— Dr. Castel [53:54]
On the ABCs of Successful Aging:
"Attitude, Balance, Connection. Attitude is having a positive attitude about what can happen as you get older... balance is both physical and psychological, and connection is about being around the people you love."
— Dr. Castel [109:25]
Dr. Alan Castel reframes aging as a stage of life rich with opportunity, agency, and continued growth—provided we nurture curiosity, novelty, social connection, physical fitness, and a positive mindset toward our own aging. The science suggests superaging is within reach for many, not just a genetic fluke.
This episode is both practical and inspiring—a guide for anyone who wants not just to “keep their memory,” but to thrive cognitively and emotionally at any age.