The healthiest brains on Earth belong to people who can't read.
USC scientists spent 15 years proving it.
They found modern "brain optimization" ages your brain 70% faster.
Once you see it, you can't unsee it.
And you'll question every supplement, app, "hack" you've tried:🧵
Meet the Tsimane people of Bolivia:
• Population of 16,000
• Live in Amazon rainforest
• Hunt, fish, farm for survival
• No electricity, no smartphones
• Average 6-7 miles walking daily
And their brains? Youngest ever studied by modern science.
In 2017, Dr. Hillard Kaplan's team did something unprecedented:
They hauled CT scan machines through the Amazon jungle.
Scanned 750 Tsimane brains.
Compared them to 3,000+ industrialized brains.
The results shocked the scientific community...
The data was staggering:
• A 70-year-old Tsimane = 50-year-old American brain
• Brain atrophy rate: 1/5th of Western populations
• 70% less brain volume loss vs Americans
• Almost ZERO dementia cases
But here's where it gets interesting...
It wasn't what the Tsimane DID.
It was what they DIDN'T do.
No crossword puzzles. No Sudoku. No "brain training" apps.
Yet their cognitive decline was nearly non-existent.
The researchers discovered 6 key differences: 👇
[1/6] PHYSICAL ACTIVITY
Tsimane don't "exercise." They live.
Walking 16,000+ steps isn't for fitness—it's for food.
• Hunting = 8-10 hours
• Farming = constant movement
• Zero gym memberships
Every movement has purpose. Their bodies never learned to be sedentary.
❌ Social isolation
❌ Sedentary living
❌ Processed foods
❌ Digital overwhelm
❌ Metabolic disease
Their advantage? They never broke what evolution built.
Your brain-protection protocol:
1) Move throughout the day (not just gym hour) 2) Eat food your grandmother would recognize 3) Protect your heart to protect your brain 4) Prevent metabolic disease at all costs 5) Learn from and teach real humans 6) Limit digital stress bombs
Thanks for reading!!
We have 1000x more brain "optimization" tools.
They have healthier brains by doing what humans always did:
Move. Eat real food. Connect. Teach. Learn.
Sometimes progress means going backwards.
Share your thoughts below 👇
Are you a founder who wants to drive 1M+ views and qualified eyes to your offer in the next 30 days?
Without you having to write, post, or even log in?
DM me or book a call below. (Serious founders only)
Instagram, YouTube, and Netflix exploit it to trigger anxiety, depression, and ADHD-like symptoms.
But this "digital disease" has a cure.
A Soviet woman discovered it in a 1920s Berlin café (and her findings explain why you can't stop using your phone) 🧵
⚠️ WARNING ⚠️
Once you understand this, you'll see manipulation everywhere... work, apps, even relationships.
Use this knowledge to build better relationships and protect others, not to exploit them.
Meet Bluma Zeigarnik:
• Soviet psychologist, University of Berlin (1927)
• Student of Kurt Lewin (father of social psychology)
• Revolutionized our understanding of memory and motivation
Today, it sits on the desks of Jeff Bezos, Mark Cuban, and every Fortune 500 CEO.
But most people think it's just an ancient military manual.
Here are the 10 secret tactics Silicon Valley uses to destroy competition: 🧵
Why does ancient warfare matter in the digital age?
Because business IS warfare.
• Market battles instead of physical ones
• Customer acquisition instead of territory
• Competitive advantage instead of tactical superiority
The fundamentals never change.
Meet Sun Tzu:
• Chinese military strategist (544-496 BC)
• Never defeated in battle (undefeated record)
• His strategies unified China and toppled dynasties
• The Art of War: Most influential strategy book in history
For 25 centuries, winners have studied his principles.
Richard Feynman could explain quantum physics to a 5-year-old.
He won the Nobel Prize, cracked safes at Los Alamos, and learned to draw at age 44.
His secret? A 4-step learning method so powerful, it's used by Bill Gates and Elon Musk.
Here's how to master anything: 🧵
Meet Richard Feynman:
• Manhattan Project scientist
• Nobel Prize in Physics (1965)
• IQ of 125 (surprisingly "low" for a genius)
• "The Great Explainer" - legendary teacher
His superpower wasn't raw intelligence—it was learning HOW to learn.
Feynman noticed something disturbing in his physics classes:
Students could recite complex formulas but couldn't explain what they actually meant.