The Longevity Podcast: Optimizing HealthSpan & MindSpan

Creatine For The Brain

Dung Trinh

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Your brain is an energy hog running on an ATP battery that lasts only seconds, and that one fact changes how you should think about “brain supplements.” We dig into why creatine is more than a weightlifting staple, how phosphocreatine works like a built-in power bank, and why the blood brain barrier makes brain saturation slow, picky, and easy to study the wrong way. If you’ve ever tried to boost focus and felt buried under wellness noise, this is the signal. 

We walk through the groups most likely to feel a real cognitive effect: vegans and vegetarians with lower dietary creatine exposure, older adults facing slower creatine synthesis and mitochondrial decline, and anyone under acute metabolic stress. The sleep deprivation trials are especially wild, showing that a high single dose during severe sleep loss can preserve ATP and reduce the cognitive crash, while still not replacing the deeper restorative work that sleep does. 

We also get honest about the clinical landscape: a small Alzheimer’s pilot shows a measurable brain-creatine increase and improved scores, while massive Parkinson’s and Huntington’s trials show no slowing of progression, pointing to the difference between metabolic failure and structural damage. Then we bring it back to practical guidance: why “creatinine” on a standard blood panel can mislead, why serum levels do not equal brain uptake, what dosing looks like in studies, how to pick creatine monohydrate with third-party testing, and which internet myths don’t hold up. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend who’s running on fumes, and leave a review with your biggest creatine question.

This podcast is created by Ai for educational and entertainment purposes only and does not constitute professional medical or health advice. Please talk to your healthcare team for medical advice. 

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Raw Food Math Meets Creatine

SPEAKER_01

So to get the actual brain boosting benefits of the supplement we're talking about today, you would basically have to eat two and a half pounds of raw beef before your morning meeting.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Which sounds uh less than ideal.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Or I mean, if you prefer seafood, you could go with about a pound and a half of raw herring.

SPEAKER_00

Also raw.

SPEAKER_01

Also raw, exactly. Because apparently cooking it at high heat destroys like up to half of the active compound.

SPEAKER_00

It does, yeah.

SPEAKER_01

And since literally nobody wants to eat a mountain of raw herring at eight in the morning, we are looking at the shortcut.

SPEAKER_00

Thank goodness for shortcuts.

SPEAKER_01

You might know it is. Well, the undisputed king of the gym. The white powder in basically every weightlifter's shaker bottle, right? Creatine.

SPEAKER_00

That's the one.

SPEAKER_01

But over the last couple of years, the conversation has completely shifted away from the biceps and uh toward the brain. So we are welcoming you, the learner, to today's deep dive.

SPEAKER_00

Glad to have you with us.

SPEAKER_01

You might be prepping for a massive project at work, maybe navigating the absolute chaos of raising a newborn, or you're just insanely curious about optimizing your focus without getting overwhelmed by, you know, another wellness fad.

SPEAKER_00

Because there are plenty of those out there.

SPEAKER_01

So many. Our mission today is to cut through that noise and give you the signal. We're looking at the actual clinical biology.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, and we are pulling from a really comprehensive 2026 report by Dr. Kristen Glorioso. She's an MD and PhD. Plus, we've got some brilliant insights from community comments, neurophysiologists, patient advocates, and researchers who are currently debating this exact topic.

SPEAKER_01

It's a huge discussion right now.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. It's just a fascinating look at how this classic muscle supplement interacts with the most complex organ in the body.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, let's unpack

Why The Brain Burns So Much

SPEAKER_01

this. Before we talk about who benefits or whether you should even be taking it, we have to understand why the brain would even want a muscle supplement in the first place. Right. The brain obviously doesn't lift weights. So what is this energy crisis inside our heads?

SPEAKER_00

Well, the brain is just an absolute metabolic hog. I mean, it makes up only about 2% of your total body weight, right? But it burns through roughly 20% of your body's entire energy supply.

SPEAKER_01

Wait, 20%? Just sitting there?

SPEAKER_00

Just sitting there. You could just be staring at a wall and your brain is burning 20% of your energy. The cells in your brain, much like your muscle cells, they run on this microscopic molecule called ATP.

SPEAKER_01

ATP. Yeah.

SPEAKER_00

Think of ATP as the uh fundamental currency of cellular energy. The catch is that a neuron only holds a few seconds worth of ATP at any given moment.

SPEAKER_01

Oh wow. Took a few seconds.

SPEAKER_00

Literally seconds. So it has to constantly manufacture it from scratch just to keep the lights on.

SPEAKER_01

So it's like if ATP is like the battery on your smartphone, it's a terrible battery.

SPEAKER_00

Worst battery ever.

SPEAKER_01

It drains to zero in three seconds the moment you open a heavy app.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

So creatine acts as the backup system. From what I understand, inside the cell, it gets stored in this highly charged form called phosphocreatine. Right. And when that ATP battery drains to zero, phosphocreatine operates like a heavy-duty portable power bank. It just plugs in and instantly hands over its stored energy to recharge the ATP right on the spot.

SPEAKER_00

Right on the spot. So your brain doesn't stutter during a demanding task.

SPEAKER_01

That is wild.

SPEAKER_00

But what's fascinating here is that this portable power bank dynamic, it runs into a massive biological

The Blood Brain Barrier Bottleneck

SPEAKER_00

roadblock.

SPEAKER_01

The blood brain barrier.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. The brain does make a small amount of its own creatine and it pulls some from the bloodstream, but the blood brain barrier is notoriously restrictive.

SPEAKER_01

It doesn't just let anything in.

SPEAKER_00

No, it is designed to keep the brain's environment incredibly stable. It protects it from neurotoxins, wild swings, and blood chemistry. So it doesn't just let creatine flood in, it relies on a very specific, slow-moving transport protein to literally ferry the molecules across.

SPEAKER_01

Which is so different from muscles.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. If you take a supplement, your muscles soak it right up. They reach maximum saturation in like a few days.

SPEAKER_01

But the brain.

SPEAKER_00

The brain can take weeks or even months of daily dosing to show any meaningful increase on an MRI.

SPEAKER_01

Which completely explains why so many historical studies on creatine and cognition either failed or showed mixed results.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, totally.

SPEAKER_01

Because researchers were designing clinical trials using muscle dosing timelines. They were giving people the supplement for a week or two, testing their memory, and seeing nothing.

SPEAKER_00

Right. They completely missed the fact that the brain's transport proteins hadn't had enough time to ferry the power banks across the barrier.

SPEAKER_01

That makes so much sense. Now that we

Vegans, Vegetarians, And The Paradox

SPEAKER_01

know how it works, let's look at who actually gets a brain boost from this. Because it's not everybody, right?

SPEAKER_00

Definitely not everybody.

SPEAKER_01

It seems like your diet and your age really dictate your results. Let's look at vegetarians and vegans first.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, this is a big one. Since creatine is found almost entirely in meat and fish, vegetarians and vegans are walking around with roughly 10 to 30% lower baseline stores in their muscles.

SPEAKER_01

That's a huge deficit.

SPEAKER_00

It is. And there was this foundational trial back in 2003 by Dr. Caroline Ray. She took 45 young vegetarians, gave them five grams of creatine a day for six weeks, and documented these massive improvements in their working memory and reasoning tasks.

SPEAKER_01

Massive improvements. But I mean we have to look at the whole picture here.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The scientific nuance is important.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Ross Powell Because a larger 2023 replication of that trial by a researcher named Adrian Sandcooler found a much weaker effect.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus Yeah. The working memory improvements in vegetarians only barely bordered on statistical significance in that one.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell But when you zoom out to the broader meta-analyses, like the 2018 Av Churinos paper, the signal is still consistently stronger for people who don't eat meat.

SPEAKER_00

It is. But I know you have a question about this.

SPEAKER_01

I do. I have to challenge the premise here. Wait, so if you eat a steak, are you automatically walking around with a maximized brain?

SPEAKER_00

You'd think so, right.

SPEAKER_01

Right. Because Dr. Glorioso's article points out this really strange paradox. When researchers put vegetarian brains and meat eater brains into an MRI, their actual brain creatine levels often look pretty identical.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. The blood brain barrier is doing its job maintaining homeostasis.

SPEAKER_01

So why are vegetarian brains reacting so dramatically to the supplement if their baseline brain levels aren't visibly deficient?

SPEAKER_00

That paradox is exactly why researchers are realizing this isn't just about topping up a visibly empty tank in the head. It is about global energy management.

SPEAKER_01

Global energy.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. If your muscles are starved for creatine, your body might be allocating systemic energy resources differently. Louisa Nicola, she's a neurophysiologist who weighed in on the community discussion. She described the effect as highly context dependent.

SPEAKER_01

Context dependent. I like that.

SPEAKER_00

It's a great phrase. It's not a standalone intelligence booster that magically makes you smarter. It acts as an adjunct to energy resilience.

SPEAKER_01

So when a vegetarian takes the supplement, they're suddenly introducing this massive systemic energy buffer that their body just isn't used to having.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. And that frees up metabolic bandwidth everywhere else.

SPEAKER_01

Energy

Aging Brains And Mitochondria Decline

SPEAKER_01

resilience. Yeah. That perfectly frames the second group that sees a massive benefit, which is older adults.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, older adults.

SPEAKER_01

A 2023 meta-analysis by Dr. Constantinos Procopitus found that in general memory trials, the cognitive benefits were driven almost entirely by the 66 to 76-year-old demographic.

SPEAKER_00

Right.

SPEAKER_01

Young, healthy people saw almost nothing.

SPEAKER_00

Trevor Burrus, Because the aging brain faces a perfect storm of energy depletion. First, the body's natural synthesis of creatine just slows down as we age. Second, older adults generally consume less dietary meat. But most importantly, the aging brain suffers from mitochondrial dysfunction.

SPEAKER_01

The actual factories producing the ATP.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. The mitochondria become less efficient. So an older brain that is struggling to maintain its baseline energy metabolism, that is a prime candidate to benefit from an external power bank.

SPEAKER_01

So if the slow grinding metabolic stress of aging creates a window for creatine to help, what happens during acute severe metabolic stress? Like what happens if you push a young, healthy brain to absolute failure by pulling it all-nighter?

SPEAKER_00

Oh, this brings us to some of the most compelling recent clinical data we have.

SPEAKER_01

Sleep deprivation stuff.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. Dr. Ali Gorji Najad ran trials in 2024 and 2025 where they subjected healthy adults to 21 hours of sleep deprivation. Brutal. Very brutal. And during this exhaustive state, they didn't just give them a standard daily dose. They hit them with a massive single dose, 0.35 grams per kilogram of body weight.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, so for the average adult, you're looking at what, 25 to 30 grams of creatine all at once?

SPEAKER_00

All at once.

SPEAKER_01

But wait, we just established that the brain's transport proteins are incredibly

Sleep Deprivation And Mega Dosing

SPEAKER_01

restrictive.

SPEAKER_00

We did.

SPEAKER_01

It takes weeks of consistent dosing to slowly ferry that much across the barrier. How did an all-nighter suddenly bypass this biological rule?

SPEAKER_00

Extreme metabolic starvation literally overrides the gatekeepers. The researchers suspect that combining an unusually high concentration of creatine in the blood with the severe energy deficit of sleep deprivation, it literally forces the transport proteins to upregulate. Wow. The brain senses a critical ATP shortage and just throws the window wide open for rapid uptake.

SPEAKER_01

So within hours, not weeks.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Within hours, the subjects in the creatine arm showed preserved ATP levels, and they significantly outperformed the placebo group on processing speed and working memory.

SPEAKER_01

Here's work it's really interesting for the learner listening to this. If you are a shift worker, a new parent, or someone pulling crunch time at a startup, this is a biological mechanism directly relevant to your Tuesday morning.

SPEAKER_00

It really is. You're essentially force-feeding energy into a starving brain.

SPEAKER_01

But we have to frame the limits of that.

SPEAKER_00

Well, absolutely. The study explicitly notes that this massive dose attenuates the decrement.

SPEAKER_01

Attenuates the decrement. Science speaks for making you less terrible.

SPEAKER_00

Pretty much. It makes the cognitive drop-off less severe, but it does not restore you to a fully rested state. Right. Sleep facilitates essential cellular cleaning and waste removal that simply having more ATP cannot replicate. So it's a biological safety net. It is not a replacement for sleep.

SPEAKER_01

Still, if extreme stress forces the brain to absorb creatine, does that logic hold up against the ultimate metabolic stress?

Alzheimer’s Promise Versus Big Failures

SPEAKER_01

Like neurodegenerative disease?

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, historically, this is where the supplement has shown incredible promise in a petri dish, but heartbreaking failure in humans.

SPEAKER_01

The landscape is super divided here. Let's start with the wins, or at least the glimmer of hope.

SPEAKER_00

Right. The 2025 CABBA pilot trial for Alzheimer's disease. They gave patients with probable Alzheimer's 20 grams of creatine a day for eight weeks.

SPEAKER_01

That's a solid dose.

SPEAKER_00

It is. And despite the blood-brain barrier, they recorded an 11% increase in brain creatine on MRI scans. Plus, they saw improved cognitive scores in memory and attention.

SPEAKER_01

Which is amazing. We should acknowledge the limits, though. It was only 20 people, and there was no placebo group.

SPEAKER_00

True. But it proved the protocol could biologically alter the brain state in humans.

SPEAKER_01

But then we look at the other side, the losses. Huge well-funded trials completely failed to slow disease progression.

SPEAKER_00

Huge failures, unfortunately.

SPEAKER_01

The Creste trial threw 40 grams a day at Huntington's disease patients and had to completely halt the study, and the net PD LS1 trial for Parkinson's disease published in JAMA was even larger.

SPEAKER_00

Over 1700 patients taking 10 grams a day for five years.

SPEAKER_01

Five years. And zero slowing of clinical progression. How can a supplement show a biological signal in Alzheimer's, but completely strike out in Parkinson's and Huntingdons?

SPEAKER_00

If we connect this to the bigger picture, it really comes down to the specific mechanics of how the cellular machinery fails in each disease. Alzheimer's disease is increasingly viewed as a metabolic disorder. Right. Decades before the severe memory loss occurs, Alzheimer's patients show significant glucose hypometabolism in the brain.

SPEAKER_01

Meaning their neurons lose the ability to efficiently extract energy from blood sugar.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. They are starving. Providing an alternative energy buffer, like phosphocreatine, early in that cascade might actually protect the neurons from dying.

SPEAKER_01

Whereas Parkinson's and Huntingtons are driven by entirely different mechanics.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. Parkinson's is driven by the aggregation of misfolded alpha-sinuclain proteins and Huntingtons by mutant Huntington proteins. Highly structural. By the time the massive structural damage and protein aggregation are occurring in those diseases, throwing extra ATP at the cells doesn't stop the physical destruction of the tissue.

SPEAKER_01

A power bank doesn't fix a phone if the motherboard is literally snapping in half.

SPEAKER_00

That's a perfect way to put it. The Alzheimer's trial suggests we might be catching the disease at the energy failure stage before that irreversible structural loss happens. It's still an open empirical question, but it's a fascinating hypothesis.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, stepping away from disease, I want to move back to the broader picture of healthy aging, because Dr. Glorioso's article dives into some wild animal data.

SPEAKER_00

The mice studies.

SPEAKER_01

The mice. In 2008, researchers put aged mice on a diet containing 1% creatine, and they lived 9% longer in good health.

SPEAKER_00

And their memory improved.

SPEAKER_01

And they show less accumulation of a substance called lipofusin. What is that?

SPEAKER_00

Lipofusin is fascinating. It's often referred to as cellular rust.

SPEAKER_01

Rust.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah. Mechanically, it's a clump of oxidized lipids and misfolded proteins that your cells just can't break down. Over time, this garbage physically accumulates inside the neuron and smothers the mitochondria.

SPEAKER_01

Which prevents them from producing energy.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. So the mice on creatine were somehow protecting their cellular machinery from this buildup.

SPEAKER_01

Aaron Powell Okay, I have

Longevity Data And Evolutionary Intake

SPEAKER_01

to be the skeptic here. I'm always highly skeptical of mouse studies. They live in sterile boxes. And I mean, we've cured mice of a thousand diseases that never translate to humans.

SPEAKER_00

Fair point.

SPEAKER_01

A 9% lifespan extension in a mouse doesn't mean I'm going to live to 110.

SPEAKER_00

A very fair pushback. And you're right, we don't have decades-long randomized lifespan trials in humans for creatine. Right. What we do have are observational studies using epigenetic aging clocks. A 2025 analysis used a clock called Grimmagemort. Epigenetic clocks don't look at how many years you've been alive.

SPEAKER_01

They look at the wear and tear.

SPEAKER_00

Yes, the chemical modifications, the methyl groups attached to your DNA. And this analysis found a small but statistically significant correlation between higher dietary creatine and a younger biological age. Plus, a 15% lower risk of long-term mortality.

SPEAKER_01

Which brings us back to the evolutionary angle. And the herring math.

SPEAKER_00

Ah, the herring math.

SPEAKER_01

Evolutionary anthropologists have analyzed Paleolithic diets and modern hunter-gatherer populations, like the Inuit. They consume drastically more creatine than we do today. Way more. The average modern American gets about 0.7 grams of dietary creatine a day.

SPEAKER_00

And the standard dose used in these cognitive trials is 5 grams.

SPEAKER_01

So to get the 5 gram trial dose from food today, you'd have to eat 2.5 pounds of raw beef or 1.5 pounds of raw herring daily.

SPEAKER_00

Which nobody is doing.

SPEAKER_01

Nobody. So what does this all mean? It basically proves why supplementation is practically necessary if you want to reach trial doses.

SPEAKER_00

And this is where we really have to reevaluate the whole concept of a supplement. When you look at the historical range of human creatine intake, modern Western diets are sitting at the absolute lowest end of the range.

SPEAKER_01

So taking five grams a day isn't some futuristic biohack.

SPEAKER_00

No, it's not pushing your brain beyond its natural limits. It's highly likely we are just replacing the baseline physiological fuel that we lost when we stopped eating like

The Creatinine Trap And Better Tracking

SPEAKER_00

our ancestors.

SPEAKER_01

Okay, so if the learner's listening to this and they're convinced to try it, how do they actually navigate the confusing world of blood tests, dosing, and supplement aisles?

SPEAKER_00

It can be a minefield.

SPEAKER_01

Hold on. If I want to see where my baseline levels are at, can I just ask my doctor to run a standard blood test? I know a lot of people try to track it that way.

SPEAKER_00

This raises an important question, and it is honestly the most common point of confusion in this entire space.

SPEAKER_01

The creatinine trap.

SPEAKER_00

Yes. When you get a standard metabolic panel, your doctor is testing for a molecule called creatinine with an INE at the end.

SPEAKER_01

It sounds identical.

SPEAKER_00

It sounds identical, but it is a metabolic waste product. Your muscles constantly break down a little bit of creatine, turn it into creatinine, and your kidneys filter it out into your urine.

SPEAKER_01

So doctors measure it specifically to see if your kidneys are failing.

SPEAKER_00

Precisely. And if you start taking a heavy dose of a creatine supplement, your body naturally produces more of that waste product.

SPEAKER_01

So your blood creatinine levels will rise.

SPEAKER_00

They will. It's a completely harmless byproduct of the supplement, but it frequently triggers panicked phone calls from doctors who see the high number and assume you are in acute renal failure.

SPEAKER_01

Oh man, that's a mess.

SPEAKER_00

Furthermore, even if you order a highly specific direct serum creatine test from an independent lab-like walk-in lab, the science shows that the level in your blood doesn't reliably predict how much is actually making it across the blood-brain barrier anyway.

SPEAKER_01

So Dr. Glorioso's recommendation is to skip the blood test entirely.

SPEAKER_00

Skip it. Focus on functional results.

SPEAKER_01

She suggests using cognitive tracking tools, right? Like NeuroAge. Measure your actual processing speed and working memory before you start, and then again after a couple of months of supplementing.

SPEAKER_00

Functional outcomes are the only metric that matters here. As for the protocol itself, the standard maintenance dose is five grams a day, taken continuously.

SPEAKER_01

And if you're an older adult, the trials comfortably support pushing that up to 10 grams a day to account for the slower metabolism.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly.

SPEAKER_01

And a very practical pro tip from the community comments: mix it into a warm or room temperature liquid. Creatine does not dissolve well in cold water.

SPEAKER_00

Not at all.

SPEAKER_01

If you dump it into ice water, it's just going to sink to the bottom, and you'll end up swallowing a mouthful of gritty sludge.

SPEAKER_00

Nobody wants that.

SPEAKER_01

What about safety?

Safety Myths And Buying Creatine Right

SPEAKER_00

The data is overwhelmingly reassuring. A 2025 review authored by Dr. Richard Kreider analyzed over 12,000 individuals taking the supplement. The rate of adverse side effects was virtually indistinguishable from the placebo groups.

SPEAKER_01

Which means we get to definitively bust two massive internet myths right here. Myth one.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah.

SPEAKER_01

It damages healthy kidneys.

SPEAKER_00

False. We just explained the creatinine waste product confusion.

SPEAKER_01

Myth two. It makes your hair fall out.

SPEAKER_00

Also false. A highly specific 2025 study directly measured DHT, the hormone primarily responsible for male pattern baldness, and found zero difference in DHT levels after 12 weeks of daily creatine supplementation.

SPEAKER_01

So no hair loss. The only mathematically significant side effect is a weight gain of one to two kilograms in the first few weeks.

SPEAKER_00

Which is purely intracellular water retention in the muscles, not fat.

SPEAKER_01

Good to know. So when you go to buy it, what are we looking for?

SPEAKER_00

You want creatine monohydrate. It's the cheapest, most widely available form, and it is the exact compound used in almost all the clinical literature.

SPEAKER_01

Don't fall for the marketing hype.

SPEAKER_00

Right. There's no biological evidence that the expensive variants like creatine ethylester or creatine nitrate are absorbed any better. Look for a third-party testing seal, like NSF certified for sport or informed sport.

SPEAKER_01

To make sure you aren't consuming heavy metals.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. Or simply look for the creepier label, which indicates the German manufactured raw material that serves as the gold standard in research.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, and I have to give a quick comment or shout-out here. Lance Pelletier brought up a brand called SLC Essentials. Their profits actually fund research into creatine transporter deficiency, that ultra-rare genetic disorder where the blood-brain barrier transport protein is broken.

SPEAKER_00

Yeah, it's a great cause. Lance mentioned learning about it from Jeff Allen, who's on the show Beast Games. Jeff's son Lucas has the disorder, and they have really been raising awareness.

SPEAKER_01

It's an awesome real-world application

Who Should Use It And Final Puzzle

SPEAKER_01

of the science. All right, let's bring the entire picture into focus. Creatine is not a magic limitless pill.

SPEAKER_00

Sadly, no.

SPEAKER_01

If you are a young 25-year-old who sleeps eight hours a night and eats a heavy meat diet, supplementing is probably not going to turn you into a genius.

SPEAKER_00

Unlikely.

SPEAKER_01

But if you are an older adult looking to fortify your brain against mitochondrial decline, a vegan missing out on that dietary baseline, or someone navigating the absolute crushing metabolic stress of sleep deprivation, this is an incredibly cheap, safe, and biologically coherent tool to have in your arsenal.

SPEAKER_00

It really is.

SPEAKER_01

Thank you, the learner, for joining us on this deep dive.

SPEAKER_00

Before we sign off, though, I want to leave you with one final puzzle to mull over. Oh, let's hear it. We look back at Dr. Gorgi Naja's sleep deprivation study, which demonstrated that the brain only bypassed its slow transport system and rapidly sucked up creatine when it was subjected to exhaustive, severe metabolic stress. Right. It makes you wonder if human biology evolved to require intense metabolic demand to literally force open the window for enhanced energy uptake. Our modern, comfortable lives and constant snacking actually starving our brains back up batteries by never giving them a reason to charge.

SPEAKER_01

Wow. That is a wild thought to end on. Keep questioning, keep exploring, and we will catch you on the next deep dive.