How to Be a Better Human

Why you need to get up and move—right now! (w/ Manoush Zomorodi)

43 min
Jun 8, 2026about 1 month ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Host Chris Duffy interviews Manoush Zomorodi about her book 'Body Electric,' which explores how sedentary screen-based lifestyles damage health and presents research-backed solutions. The episode discusses a clinical trial of 20,000+ people testing five-minute movement breaks every 30 minutes, which reduced fatigue by 28% and improved focus, productivity, and overall well-being without requiring gym memberships or extreme fitness routines.

Insights
  • Movement breaks every 30 minutes are more effective than single daily workouts; the human body requires constant stimulation, not periodic intense exercise
  • Screen time disrupts interoception (body's ability to sense its own needs), but this can be restored within two weeks of consistent movement breaks
  • Sedentary work culture is a design choice, not an inevitability; simple interventions like walking meetings and calendar adjustments can normalize movement
  • Physical positioning directly affects mental health and stress levels; hunched posture increases CO2 buildup in the brain, causing fatigue and reduced focus
  • Young people need practical tools and positive framing around movement, not lectures about screen time; parental and workplace modeling is more influential than restrictions
Trends
Workplace wellness shifting from gym-centric to movement-integrated culture with walking meetings and flexible camera policiesGrowing recognition that mental health interventions must address physical positioning and sedentary design of digital workInteroception research emerging as key to understanding how screens disrupt body awareness and self-regulation in both adults and childrenCorporate calendar optimization becoming wellness strategy (25-minute vs. 60-minute meetings to create movement windows)Reframing interruptions as positive rather than productivity-killing, with research showing movement breaks improve decision-making and reduce cognitive switching costsAccessibility-focused movement science expanding beyond walking to include arm movements and seated exercises for mobility-limited populationsGenerational shift in understanding youth mental health: recognizing that reduced movement (not just screen time) contributes to ADHD-like symptoms and anxietyNeuroscience validating mind-body integration; pathways between physical movement and emotional regulation being mapped at biological level
Topics
Sedentary lifestyle health costsMovement break protocols and frequencyInteroception and body awarenessScreen time and cognitive fatigueWorkplace wellness culture changeDigital age health researchYouth mental health and physical activityProductivity paradox of interruptionsPosture and stress physiologyAccessibility in fitness recommendationsCalendar design for wellnessGlucose and blood sugar managementDecision-making and brain oxygenationHabit formation and behavior changeSleep debt and recovery myths
Companies
Columbia University Medical Center
Keith Diaz, physiologist, conducted foundational research on minimum movement requirements to offset sedentary screen...
NPR
Partnered with Columbia on global clinical trial of 20,000+ participants testing movement break interventions
Johns Hopkins University
Research cited showing average 19-year-old moves as much as average 60-year-old
University of Bern
2023 study examining how screens disrupt interoception (body's ability to sense its needs)
University of Pittsburgh
Peter Strick's research on pathways between physical movement and emotional regulation
People
Manoush Zomorodi
Guest discussing her book 'Body Electric' and research on movement breaks and digital age health
Chris Duffy
Podcast host conducting interview with Manoush Zomorodi
Keith Diaz
Researcher who discovered five-minute movement breaks every 30 minutes provide outsized health benefits
Peter Strick
Researcher studying biological links between body positioning, movement, and emotional regulation
Candace Odgers
Teens and screens researcher; noted parental well-being is primary factor affecting teen mental health
Poppy Delbridge
Author of 'Unlock Your Power' combining neuroscience and emotional intelligence (mentioned in ad read)
Quotes
"If productivity books have stopped working for you, you're not doing anything wrong. You've just reached the edge of what optimization can do. Because your body is part of a bigger energy system and ignoring it was never the answer."
Manoush Zomorodi
"The human body needs constant stimulation. Those leg muscles need stimulation in order to suck blood sugar and fats out of our bloodstream and to push oxygen up to our brain."
Manoush Zomorodi
"It was like breaking out of the matrix. People felt like they could find their focus again. They had more energy at the end of the day, like to come home and play with their kids as opposed to feeling like, oh my God, all they wanted to do was lie down on the couch."
Manoush Zomorodi
"We're not going for perfection or ultra optimization. We're going for the rest of your life and that means showing yourself some grace, doing what you can on days that are crazy."
Manoush Zomorodi
"When we stop noticing how our bodies feel we lose access to small daily joys—feeling strong, steady, present—and we model that disconnection for the next generation. Our sense of self, not just our health, is at stake."
Manoush Zomorodi
Full Transcript
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Spot the pattern, shift the power. Unlock your power. By me, Poppy Delbridge, is out now. This is How to Be a Better Human. I'm your host, Chris Duffy, and I am currently sitting at a desk. Some days I realize that I have spent the entire day sitting at a desk. I've spent hours not moving anything other than my mouth and hands. I have a sense that that's probably not the healthiest. I mean, we've all heard how important it is to exercise and to get in your steps and yada, yada, yada. But what if you don't have a schedule that allows you to go to the gym every day? Or you have a job that requires you to sit in a cubicle for hours at a time, or you're just exhausted all the time. How do you actually make those changes then? Well, today's guest, Manush Samarodi, has not only spent a lot of time thinking about the answers to those questions and writing a whole book about it, which is called Body Electric, the Hidden Health Costs of the Digital Age and New Science to Reclaim Your Well-Being. But Manush has also helped to organize a research study, which was looking at this in a clinical and academic context. And what she and her co-collaborators found is not only important for our health. It is also very practical. Manush is not some scold who is just telling you to get up out of your chair and onto a treadmill. Instead, she's a person with practical, useful. Dare I say it, even fun ways to be healthier, feel better and end the day with more energy. So to get us started, here is a clip from Manush's TED Talk about why we often end up sitting for such a long stretch, even though we know we should be moving more. Do you ever close your laptop at the end of a long day and feel like you have just enough energy to crawl over to the couch, to scroll on your phone, or watch a show, or maybe both at the same time? Yeah. During the pandemic, that was all I wanted to do, and I couldn't understand why. I was safe, I was healthy. Why didn't I want to close my laptop and go dance around the living room? Where did all my energy go? I'm a journalist. Manush's TED Talk special clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy clergy at Johns Hopkins, every day the average 19-year-old moves about as much as the average 60-year-old. Over the last 20 years, rates of type 2 diabetes in young people have doubled. Three in four American adults has a chronic illness. Many of those are preventable, at least one chronic illness. And the WHO says that this is a global problem. They predict that by the end of the decade, which is not that far away, this lifestyle will likely lead to 500 million new cases of preventable conditions, like heart disease, obesity, and diabetes, costing governments $27 billion a year. Typing, swiping, scrolling, sitting. This is the rhythm of our modern life. But I don't know about you. I can't throw away my phone, right? Like, I can't go off the grid. So how can we stay connected without slowly destroying our health? I'll be honest with you, I am not there yet. I still need reminders. I am still sitting right now. But I think, I hope, I suspect that by the end of this episode, I may be in a different spot, and you might be too. So don't go anywhere. We will be right back after these quick ads. 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Not sure if you've seen my emails from last month but could you please pay my invoice? Thank you so much. Bye. Hi, it's Tara, Flash Designs. Did you get my last voicemail? I know you're busy but please pay my invoice today if possible. Hello again. It's Tara again. Politely nudging. Still chasing unpaid invoices? Let Sage Co-pilot help do the chasing so you can get paid up to seven days faster. Search Sage Accountant today. And we are back with Manuse Samarodi talking about why it is so important to move our bodies more and how we can actually, genuinely, really do it. Hi, I'm Manuse Samarodi. I'm host of NPR's Ted Radio Hour. I'm also the author of Body Electric, the Hidden Health Costs of the Digital Age and New Science to Reclaim Your Well-Being. Okay, so Manuse, why is it called Body Electric and what is the Body Electric experiment that you had some people do? Well, okay, so Body Electric is a couple things. I sing the Body Electric while Whitman. It's a poem. It's also like a song from fame which I found very inspiring. I'm switching from my reading glasses to my screen glasses now because that's how I roll. And the reason I called it that is because I, well, on multiple levels, one is electricity is what powers the body and the brain. It's like all those circuitry that keeps us going. It's why we're not like a pile of flesh and bones. But also, I think a lot about the electricity that comes from our devices that should, that powers our lives but often drains us and how much I want to feel as though I've gotten a like zap and I can do anything I want to have be the Body Electric. So that was the title that we gave a study that I did a couple years ago. So I was feeling like crap, Chris. I couldn't understand like why at the end of a long day on all my devices. I was so freaking tired. Like it didn't make any sense to me. I hadn't moved. So like why was I so tired? So I really wanted to find the answer to that. And kind of at that moment, I came across the research of a guy named Keith Diaz who's a physiologist at Columbia University Medical Center. And so Keith's mission in life is to figure out the minimum amount of movement that the human body needs so that all our sedentary screen time doesn't send us to an early grave. And Keith had found the answer. He had found that five minutes of gentle movement every half hour did amazing things. It had outsized benefits. It slashed people's blood sugar. It lowered their blood pressure. It made them able to focus. It brought back their positivity. It was like this magic solution. So I called him and I was like, well, why aren't we all doing this? And he's like, do you think people actually can? Because I don't think people can actually do this. And so I'm like going back to my lab and starting all over again because I don't think people can even move this much. I was like, but come on, it can't be that hard. So I actually went to his lab and joined his study. And the results that I felt made me convinced that we had to at least try. So our teams at NPR and Columbia joined forces and we did a global clinical trial with over 20,000 people enrolled to try to get these movement breaks into their lives to disrupt their sedentary, screen filled days and see what happened. And we called it body electric. And Keith actually described it. He's like, it was like breaking out of the matrix. I was like, it kind of was like breaking out of the matrix. Like people felt like they could find their focus again. They had more energy at the end of the day, like to come home and play with their kids as opposed to feeling like, oh my God, all they wanted to do was lie down on the couch. They actually increased their productivity despite all of the interruptions, which was a big surprise. 80% of them who decided to commit to doing it were able to stick with it. And 82% actually really liked taking the movement breaks. And most importantly, I think we saw up to 28% less fatigue. So people were less tired. They felt electrified. You know, the like self-help wellness nonfiction book space. Has these ideas that are really counterintuitive, right? Like what you need to do is elevate one arm for 13 minutes, just as the sun rises and that will fix everything in your life. And you're like, wow, I never thought about that. But it's, it's appealing because it's really like easy, right? Like I just do this one, I raise my elbow up right as the sun rises and all of a sudden my problems are fixed. And your book is so the opposite, right? It's instead of it being something that is like unusual and confusing, but really easy. It's something that is really simple, but really hard to do. Yeah, yeah. How do we actually do the simple thing? Right? I always think about this as like a flossing problem. It's like obvious that you should floss, but few people actually floss as much as they should. Okay. Let me include it. First of all, my fantasy is that I could do one mega flossing session. Yes. And then be done with it for the rest of my life. Wouldn't that be amazing? Oh yeah. Or even for the year. Like you just give me like a January 2nd, I floss for 12 hours and then I'm done for the year. Exactly. And then boom, check it off my list. Okay. So that is actually very similar to I think how we have started treating movement and exercise in our lives, right? Like we go to the gym three times a week and we check it off our list. But unfortunately, the human body needs constant stimulation. So checking it off your list, if you work out in the morning, even if you like go to town at CrossFit, if you sit and work on a screen for the rest of the day, it doesn't matter. Okay. So maybe you're like, well, I have a standing desk. Unfortunately, that also doesn't matter. The human body needs constant stimulation. Those leg muscles need stimulation in order to suck blood sugar and fats out of our bloodstream and to push oxygen up to our brain. And so this idea of like constantly interrupting yourself sounds like counterintuitive because from the moment we enter kindergarten, we are told to sit our butts in a chair and that that's what productivity looks like, right? That this is what working hard is. It's getting into flow. It's grinding through, push through. And now we even have like software surveillance technology to make sure that people never leave their documents and like that their keystrokes continue to move. Like that is what we've decided like working hard is. But actually, it is detrimental to our ability to focus. And I think we have all sensed that, right? I mean, you can't go anywhere now without someone being like, oh my God, we all have ADHD. So we don't all have ADHD, but we do have symptoms similar to ADHD. And in part, what I learned was that when you focus, right? If you focus for a long time, you're doing a lot of cognitive switching and you're burning through glucose, like switch, switch, switch, you're using glucose, glucose, glucose, and you need oxygen to get the fires going to burn the glucose. But if you run out of oxygen, CO2 starts to build up in your brain. If you keep going, you keep going, you push through against your cognitive limits. And when you have CO2 build up in your brain, that's when that foggy feeling comes in, the feeling like you can't focus, that you're mentally tired. So there is a whole biological system that needs movement breaks in order for it to run smoothly, just like you need to reboot your computer once in a while, you got to reboot your brain and your body. And somebody said to me the other day, they're like, Oh, well, did you know that nobody talked about going into nature until the middle of the 1800s? Because nature was just like everywhere. So you would never say I'm going into nature because that's where you lived. Or like, you know, the fish, like, Oh, how's the water? Like, what's water? Yeah. Yeah. So I think that's kind of like where we are with movement that we have to talk about movement, not just like, you know, exercise, but just moving our bodies because we have created a world that is so built around screens and sitting. You know, one of the things that I was really struck by a quote in your book on page 109, you say, feeling stressed out and exhausted isn't in your head. Scientists, including the researcher Peter Strick, have shown clear biological links between how we position our bodies, move, think and feel hunched shoulders and a compressed torso can force shallow upper chest breathing. In addition to contributing to pain and soreness over time, that can increase stress levels and fatigue. It's not like you're saying, Oh, the only thing that is stressing us out in our lives is the way we sit, the way we stand, the fact that we don't move. But that a lot of how we feel is actually being influenced by these kind of physical design choices of how we spend our day and where we spend our day. And that's for me, at least something that I think of is that's my water, right? Like, well, yeah, just sit in a chair. That's where the chair is, right? Like, what else would I do? I don't know that we've necessarily factored that into our conversation about the mental health aspects of spending time like too much time online is like bad for you or social media is, you know, making our kids more depressed and anxious. But also our kids are moving less, like the average 19 year old moves about as much as the average 60 year old right now. But like, that's not because they're lazy or because like, they're like, I don't want to, you know, move my body. No, like, what do they do? They go to class and they're on a laptop and they come back and like, I'm talking about my own 19 year old. Actually, I have one at home. Well, he's not home. He's at college, but you know, he's on his laptop in his room studying. He's checking his phone for things. They're watching, you know, Netflix, they're it's like life revolves around screens. It takes intention and sometimes like a little rebellion to get movement into your life, especially if you're a kid who's not like athletic or sporty. I was not particularly those things. Me either, no, for sure. Yeah. Okay. Theater kids. Yeah. Well, how do you think you end up behind a microphone right now talking? That's why we're here. Totally, totally. But I think to me, this is like, what a relief. Like, I'm not talking about like that you have to join a gym or like, you know, if you didn't make it to the travel team as a teenager, like, that's fine. Like, just move your body and you can get some of the benefits. I want to stop thinking about it as like all or nothing. Like you're either boot camp, CrossFit or yoga guru or you're a sloth. No, there has to be this in between. Wherever it is that you sit on the boot camp to sloth spectrum, we are going to have a lot more practical tips for you in just a moment. But first, a quick ad break. Support comes from wise, the smart way to manage the currencies you need around the globe. Fed up with losing out to hidden fees when you send money abroad with your everyday bank, choose the smart way wise. You can count on the exchange rate you'd usually find on Google. No unwelcome surprises. Plus ditch that where's my money feeling. Most transfers arrive in under 20 seconds. Join millions saving billions on hidden fees. Be smart. Get wise. Download the wise app today. Tee's and see's apply. If productivity books have stopped working for you, you're not doing anything wrong. 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So a couple of the things that you say about kids are tech use is impacting kids mental health but also their movement, rest and self-awareness. You also say that simply telling kids to get off their screens is not a long-term solution. And then this is the one that I thought was the most important and you don't hear from a lot of people is young people do not need lectures. They need tools. So let's talk about what some of those tools that young people and probably the rest of us as well can actually use to increase our health and start moving more like you're talking about. I think that we and I hear this from a lot of people have taken on board this idea that this generation is screwed. They have been damaged irreparably by their screen use and that social media has destroyed their resilience and ability to cope. And I'm just sort of tired of that because I've gotten to know a lot of young people and they are pretty cool and they're doing amazing things and oh wait, like the world is on fire so they do have a lot of reasons to be stressed and also a lot of adults around them are stressed. Candace Ogers who's a teens and screens researcher who I brought to Ted to give a Ted talk, you know, she pointed out to me the number one thing that affects a teenager's mental health and well-being is how well their parents are doing, the grown-ups in their lives are doing. Her whole thing is like let's not just look at the phones and say oh my gosh, this is the problem for kids. Let's look at the kids and figure out what is it that they need. Now I don't want to minimize mental health issues that a lot of teenagers certainly have and we're more aware of those things than ever and what's treatment there is and what can be done from them for them. But as she pointed out, the kids that are struggling are the ones who are most likely to go online and struggle with social media. Like the problems don't necessarily start because they're online. It's often because they've been struggling with those things to begin with. So my framing is let's stop saying like get off your phone, that's enough screen time and start to just be more positive and talk about the things that they're doing instead. Let's like instead of the negative, let's talk about like what the other options are like. Have you, did you go for a walk today? Have you gotten enough stroll time in because these movement breaks that we're talking about to clarify they are five minutes walking at two miles per hour. That was found in the lab that had the biggest benefit if you did that regularly. I think what we see is also this conversation needs to bring in something called interoception. So I had never heard of this before but interoception is the body's way of sensing and then telling you what it needs. So that could be like things you don't even hear like breathe again, breathe again, breathe again like yeah okay don't need to hear that one but like ooh it's getting hot in here take off your sweater or right. Kind of the Nelly of interoception. Yes the Nelly. Exactly. Or you know I need a snack or whatever else right. So actually I was talking to a friend whose son has autism and he needs help with his interoceptive abilities. He doesn't even hear when he needs to go to the bathroom or he will totally forget to eat if he doesn't. So kids with autism that is often brought up that their interoception is off. But there is some new thinking that perhaps spending time in front of screens also messes with our interoception. There was a study done at the University of Bernd in Switzerland in 2023 where they tried to figure out like how screens mess with our interoception. This is you know relatively new research but they found that obviously if you moved for 10 minutes your interoception turned back on as compared to if you were staring at a screen for half an hour. Because what happens when we stare at a screen we get so sucked into it that we I'll speak for myself forget to go to the bathroom find out that your left foot has fallen asleep because you've been sitting in the same position and oh also you haven't been blinking properly. That's the biggest thing. Your eyes are filling you right and your shoulders are like this. So this interoceptive ability to think like not like oh my god I've been on my screen for so long I'm a terrible person but like oh hang on have I given my body what it needs. Yikes it's been an hour. I need to shake it off. Walk up take some deep breaths get some water you know look outside right. Like instead of feeling like bad people because we've been on our screens let's just ask ourselves have we been giving ourselves what we need biologically. How do we feel inside. Did screen time make us feel worse or actually are we perfectly fine and it's not that big a deal instead of this guilt that we are laying on kids. But I think that so much of your book is about like the positive interruption. The idea of we think of interruptions and interrupting our work and our flow as only bad things and so much of your book is about positively interrupting yourself. So like stopping yourself from going 12 hours with your shoulders tight and hunched and up by ears and inside. That's really good actually. I really like that the positive interruption. Yeah I do think it would sell far fewer copies but I would like to just like posit that as one of the overall messages is that if we can use these interruptions if we can actually harness them and build them in that's how we actually do this. That's how we get to that five minutes every 30 minutes. And I think some of the instructions that I include in order to highlight that without it being on the cover is like making a plan right deciding that you are going to be open to interruptions throughout your day instead of being like totally irritated when somebody calls you out of the blue. You can be like great can we turn off cameras so I can put my earbuds in and I can walk while I talk to you. Like that's simple or like somebody comes by your desk if you work in an office and you're like great can we just walk and talk like just turning them into movement opportunities. What I find so fascinating is the it sounds so minimal and yet the benefits are so profound. I mean we have people who are saying that just those interruptions which we've been told are annoying and break flow and look sometimes they do if you are in like in it like don't enter like go for it you know God bless everybody loves a good flow but I think sometimes we think we're killing it at work and actually we're spinning our wheels like how many times have you come back to like a page and you're like wow I wrote a lot of BS on that page. I would say 100% of the time. Whereas if we take a break and actually think about oh you know what the answer to that problem I could actually start this a completely different way right like you just give yourself a minute to process like the other thing people are like whoa taking a break after a meeting that's so profound I'm like really is it they're like oh yeah because I thought about what we talked about I made a plan as to how I'm actually going to implement it and I know how to follow up because I think a lot of people are going to meetings and they're having the exact same meeting that they had last week because everybody's rushing from meeting to meeting nobody's actually moving the goalpost forward. One that I was thinking that is interesting to me because it's something where I'm not very good at doing these but I was thinking I like if I finish sending an email that I've been that's my big email that I need to send sometimes I will reward myself as like a little treat and I will go on tiktok or Instagram I'm like oh my little treat is I get to watch a fun video this made me think it would probably not like I want to take that away entirely because even though I know it's not to help you it's fun but like maybe sometimes my little treat after I finish an email or do a task before I switch into the next one is like I should get up and like jump right like literally just get up jump or get up and walk to the kitchen and walk back or whatever just like do some sort of I'm out of my chair as the treat rather than I'm in the chair looking at a different smaller screen. In the study we purposefully did not tell people like get off your screens because we wanted to see how they what they decided to do right and it was really interesting because for some people it was like permission to get off my screen yes please so that was totally delightful to them other people were like I liked that I could you know I have to be on all these calls but you gave me permission to say like either A my head's gonna be bobbing up and down in the zoom call deal with it or to say like we turn our screens off and people would do it and and walk so I I'm a fan of the zoom and shuffle which is literally we can do it right now okay where you just stand up and you literally go back side to side I've been known to do that I think bosses it's on you to set the like cultural norms you can say like if you are just listening feel free to turn off your cameras and move if you want to or like we can all be moving and that's if it's distracting just you know you don't have to look at everybody a lot of bosses also set other rules like if we're in a meeting together you can move whenever you want but if we're with clients actually I'd rather yeah yeah yeah don't shuffle with the clients exactly other bosses like said like I'm trying this experiment please give it a you know if you want to join me you can and of course found that people were like tell you I'll do walking meetings with you instead of sitting I mean we did find that people at first at least set timers for themselves like so in our study you could choose to move for five minutes every half hour every hour or every two hours and hands down setting a timer was the way people started but what was really interesting was that by the end of the study two weeks many people found that they did not need to use timers anymore their inter-acceptive ability just kind of came back online and their body started to be like hello I need you to get up please get up now so they started to notice when they felt uncomfortable when their shoulders were tight when their back didn't feel quite right that also feels so much more doable to me right to think like I'm gonna do this for two weeks and at the end of two weeks I won't need to like have a timer going off forever for the rest of my life totally and I actually believe that because it has turned me into a squirmy eight-year-old boy I like at Ted I could not sit through the sessions like I had to get up and move and I would notice mine is 45 minutes that's my sweet spot 45 minutes and I have like something happens I start squirming I'm like the little kid who needs to go around run around in the playground and then I'm fine which makes sense because actually we know that movement helps kids with learning because you're oxygenating the brain it is preparing for you to learn to process information to take it in and then actually remember it so you know sitting at a conference listening to people explain their life's mission to you like back to back to back to back that's a lot of information so no wonder we need to actually get some movement some oxygenation like it makes total sense other things people did you can change the settings on google calendars for example so that a half hour meetings are actually 25 minute meetings or 55 minute meetings instead of an hour and really use that five minutes to just walk around get some water until you come to the next time so like teeny little hacks a question that I had and that I think a lot of people have is the question of like accessibility right like for different jobs but also if you're if you have an injury or you are limited in your mobility walking is not an option yeah walking isn't an option or you know even walking for five minutes every 30 minutes is actually like that's going to be quite a challenge not because just of the structural parts of your life but because of your physical health or your your situation so when that comes up how do you how do you respond to that okay so if walking is not an option using your arms is absolutely has been shown in studies to have a similar effect so just making sure that you're stimulating the muscles getting your circulation going like the gold standard is five minutes per every half hour during long periods of sitting if I had serious health issues I think I would want to go for the gold sort of as it were but if you haven't been moving at all start with one minute every two hours the good news is that every single movement break counts 16 breaks a day that's a lot people didn't make it to that they made it to four to five breaks on average and they saw that better positivity mood fatigue ability to concentrate did they necessarily get the full benefits of glucose reduction or blood pressure no but it's going to help towards it right I think the key thing here is like we're not going for perfection or ultra optimization we're going for the rest of your life and that means showing yourself some grace doing what you can on days that are crazy impact and accepting that like even if that day sucked whatever start again tomorrow it's fine when I think about interoception which I think is such a cool concept that we can all relate to and the idea of building your own interception and practicing that of like listening to what you actually need and when do you need it one idea that comes to mind for me is that often around like 8 8 30 p.m. yes especially if I had a really like big day and I have young kids so I wake up really early sometimes yeah I will find like wow I am so tired I'll have this like awareness in my body I'm so tired I could go to sleep right now but then I think it's 8 30 I should do something else right and then I like look at my phone or I eat some sort of snack or I watch a show you had a hard day totally and so I I find a way to distract myself from the interception I say like rather than acknowledge that my body is saying hey we could use some sleep right now I do something else and then weirdly right it gets to like 10 30 and I go oh no I am not gonna get enough sleep and I'm also not that tired all of a sudden so now I have trouble going to sleep right so the thing that I'm realizing in myself is that like ignoring the interoception versus listening to it is part of the issue of like how we actually get in tune with our own bodies is actually to just pay attention to the the message that is already coming through one of the stories I tell in the book is when I got this neuroscientist god bless her to put me in an fmri to try and see what was happening in my brain with information overload this was a study of one but you know other studies have found something similar which is that like so she scanned my brain first thing in the morning before like I had you know squalled on my phone and answered emails and whatever Instagram blah blah blah blah all the craziness that happens in a day and I played this game I didn't really know what she was measuring but what she was measuring was my ability to process information to make good decisions and then I had my day of being on my phone and nuts nuts nuts all the rest of it as it usually is switching switching switching and then she I played the same game back in the fmri and what she saw kind of explains what you are saying is like oh my weak personality it's really not it's actually your brain so during the day like the first thing when you're bright and fresh and you've got all this oxygen and glucose in the morning you are using the part of your brain that's good at decision making it stops it thinks it rationalizes okay whereas after you've done all that switching all day long you switch over and start using the area of your brain called the striatum and the striatum is the habit part of your brain so it's the one that's like oh I'll just scroll right now because that's relaxing but you know it's not all bad that we switch over like ever do that where you drive home and you're like wait a minute how the hell did I just get here that's your striatum right like it knows it can do things for you so it's not always bad that we switch over to the habit thing but we need to be aware that part of the problem of exhausting our brain and our our body by the end of the day is that we will default to the easiest thing to do that sort of feels good right it's just gonna happen one of the big messages that I took away for myself from body electric was that I might think like I have these habits that let me you know stay up too late and not move enough but I'll make up for it by you know three times a week like you said I'll like or even let's be honest not three times a week one time a week I'll go and do like a three hours of exercise I'll I'll go do some big swimming or wake exactly I'll be like this is my time and then I'll go that made up for it or especially with sleep I'll think like okay my kid is gonna wake up at five and I'm gonna have to be out till 11 and that is not gonna leave me enough sleep but I will get a nap on the weekend and you know you talk really compellingly about the research that shows that it's it's definitely not clear that we can make up for lost sleep and it's certainly not obvious that getting a little extra sleep on the weekend makes up for cutting yourself short all through the week so that habit versus the like cheating myself yeah not actually that's a much more destructive habit than I had thought of well first of all having little kids is really really hard Chris so I totally get that feeling you're like I didn't have any time to myself today I'm not gonna go to sleep I'm gonna look at Pinterest you know what I mean or whatever like I totally get that and I think part of it is moderation is not terribly sexy we don't know how to be moderate in this world I feel like we're all like grinding it out for 16 hours with my eight AI agents running five companies you know or the opposite which is brain rotting or but bed rotting I think is what my daughter calls it right 15 16 year olds bed rotting I'm just gonna rot in bed like doing absolutely nothing to the point that your body is disintegrating like okay can we just get back in the middle here folks like a little bit like we are animals and our animals have evolved to need very basic things no matter what we do to them and when it comes to sleep unfortunately you cannot like bank sleep you can't like run a deficit for the week and then like make up for it on the weekend I think we have to come back to just checking in with ourselves to moderation to also finding the joy that comes with that like I maybe I'm not sweating buckets and having a dopamine high but I feel pretty good on a daily basis when I keep up this like habit and that's I'll take it you know from the outside I'm like what you're doing is working it seems clear that it's working you're a professionally I only had to build an entire career on figuring that out yeah but I will say like you know I wrote a book nearly 10 years ago now about the importance of boredom and this is because I am a person who used to run towards extremes like type A let's go right and I would I burned out like 20 years ago like I just couldn't keep it up and as you get older it gets it gets harder and also the lows are pretty low and so this has been like for me I need to understand the why behind it so understanding the science the biology and then experimenting with it not blindly being like well some guru says I have to do this but no like getting communities of people to try out different habits and seeing like the benefits of it and the effects like it's a daily struggle I do love to push through because it feels so good but I also know what it feels like to be on the other side when you're paying the price and you're so tired and as I get older I just I can't do it anymore so like I mean with this whole book roll out I don't know how you did it but I'm thinking like I'm like rest is a strategy pace yourself you get to talk to people about your book but the other thing I made me think about for my own life is when I was teaching in the classroom I had a really structured day and so I had very little control over for example like when I went to the bathroom because it was like right this is this period then there's a transition then you are on lunch duty then you're on snack duty then there's another thing and so it's like you can go to the bathroom in these very structured times but you're on your feet you are engaging with students you are teaching you're doing these things and then I switched to comedy and to being a writer and it's like incredibly unstructured and incredibly flexible and you might think that that would be easier to like get things done or to be more physically active and I found that it was actually the opposite yeah like it was having all the freedom in the world made it really hard to actually do anything in my day and it made it really hard to actually you know move or exercise or any of that yeah I can totally see that and I see that in how as an adult I've created my own life that is pretty structured actually just because it cuts out the decision making right like not having to decide like it's two o'clock where am I supposed to be like I am a person who very much likes to sit down on Sunday and figure out what the week looks like because I just think it's lets you relax and be more present if you're not like wait am I supposed to be somewhere should I be doing something what wait did I forget something like because that's who I was before and I I can't stand it so for me being my type A person planning it out so I've just tried to sort of construct a life that includes movement and moments and I feel very lucky to have been able to do that and I know not everybody can do that but it is something to strive for yeah works for me I want to just read one paragraph from the conclusion of your book because I think we've talked a lot about the practical and the day-to-day and I think that is really important that's a big part of movement but you also have changed the way that I think about it in kind of a broader sense a bigger philosophical sense and so I just want to read this because I thought this was really beautifully put beyond the science and statistics lies a subtler more personal cost the slow disconnection from our physical selves when we stop noticing how our bodies feel we lose access to small daily joys feeling strong steady present and we model that disconnection for the next generation our sense of self not just our health is at stake yeah so like I said 10 years ago I wrote a book called Bored and Brilliant and it was about the sense I had that my devices had taken all the cracks in my day and filled them like times when I used to be staring at people's shoes on the subway or just like looking at the clouds while I was waiting to get my coffee I now could check the headlines I could text someone I could answer an email and I really missed those cracks in the day and I wanted to understand what was happening in those cracks in the day and I learned more about what happens when we get bored and we allow our minds to wander and one of the things we do when we allow our minds to wander is something called autobiographical planning so this is literally picturing what you want your life to be looking back at what you've experienced telling yourself a narrative of who you are and then figuring out who you want to become and thinking through the steps to get there and what I also realized was I did my best mind wandering I got really bored during long walks where I didn't listen to anything despite being a podcaster as I went forward and researched more recently the effect of screens and sitting still on our physical health the more I realized how much scientists are really feeling like it's not the mind and the body we are one whole thing and there's a reason why movement can make us feel things you mentioned Peter Strick earlier he's a researcher at University of Pittsburgh and he wanted to understand why yoga makes people feel so calm and it turns out there there are pathways like from our adrenal glands and our abdominal muscles up to the brain that are going back and forth and back and forth there is so much we don't know so I really started to feel like my sense of self is not just dependent on like ideas I have or self-image or who I present to the world but it's quite literally how I feel in my body that sense of calm or excitement or anxiousness or franticness like that affects how I present myself to the world those things are one and of the same and when I have screens in my life I get a lot of great things out of them but I also sometimes can overdo it and so finding that moment where I get the most out of it that I can connect with people that I get good information that it gives me an opportunity to you know do my work do it well and express myself like that's great and I want to feel that more than ever but that also means setting boundaries and setting limits because let's face it the tech companies aren't going to do it for us and I think it's something we have to teach ourselves and our kids and model for the people we live with and work with and you know it's a rough world out there these days Chris so if each of us just feels a little bit better in ourselves it can only be good for everyone else around us I couldn't agree more well Menish it's been such a pleasure talking to you I would love to keep talking but I have to get up and take a five minute walk so it is kind of time isn't it we've done our job here thank you so much the body electric is such a fantastic book and you are such a fantastic person thank you for being on the show Chris thank you for having me it was a delight to be invited that is it for today's episode of how to be a better human thank you so much to our guest Manush Zamorodi you can, should and must get her new book body electric and listen to her hosting npr's Ted radio hour she's a fantastic host and a fantastic writer I am your host Chris Duffy and my new book humor me how laughing more can make you present creative connected and happy is out now too you can find out more about my live show dates and other projects at chrisduffycomedy.com how to be a better human is put together by a constantly in motion team of extremely electric individuals on the ted side currently hiking through mountains while also meeting on zoom we've got daniella balleroso ban ban chang michelle quint chloe shasha brooks valentina bohanini lani lat tansika sungman evong antonia lay and joseph de brian ryan lash put this video together and then lept straight up into the air and matthias salas who checks our facts wants you to know that what i said about ryan is not entirely accurate on the prx side they are feeling healthy energized and ready for their regularly scheduled movement break morgan flannery norgill patrick grant and jocelyn gonzalez thanks to you for listening now go wiggle and waggle and move your body please send this episode to someone who you think would enjoy it or who you would like to move with we will be back next week with even more how to be a better human until then take care support comes from wise the smart way to manage the currencies you need around the globe fed up with losing out to hidden fees when you send money abroad with your everyday bank choose the smart way wise you can count on the exchange rate you'd usually find on google no unwelcome surprises plus ditch that where's my money feeling most transfers arrive in under 20 seconds join millions saving billions on hidden fees be smart get wise download the wise app today tzensea supply everyone needs more compliments m&s makes it easy the dress that turns heads the bag that makes the outfit the jeans that three people comment on before lunch compliments on repeat the summer of love that explore the 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