A Holistic Approach to Wellness and Performance Training with Laird Hamilton [Episode 929]
Episode Summary:
I am so excited for our guest today, the one and only amazing Laird Hamilton. He is best known as an American big wave surfer, but he is also an international fitness icon. Heās a New York Times bestselling author. Heās just an amazing, amazing person. In todayās interview, we talk about everything, connecting with nature, getting past fear so you do no want to miss this episode because Laird revealsā¦
About Laird Hamilton
Laird Hamilton is best known as an American big-wave surfer and pioneer in the world of action water sports. In addition to his affinity for the water, Laird is labeled as an inventor, author, stunt man, model, producer, TV host, fitness and nutrition expert, husband, father, and adrenaline junkie.
At 6ā3ā and 215 pounds, Laird is unique in the way that he balances flexibility and strength. A renowned innovator and guiding genius of crossover board sports including tow-in-surfing, stand-up paddle boarding, and hydrofoil boarding, Laird is the essential Water Man, continuously pushing the limits and expanding all possibilities.
Over the last decade, Laird has transcended from surfing to becoming an international fitness icon and nutrition expert. Many of todayās top professional athletes and celebrities look to Laird for training guidance, including instruction in his unique underwater resistance workouts. Partnering with his wife, professional volleyball player, and TV personality, Gabrielle Reece, Laird created Extreme Performance Training (XPT). XPT is a unique and powerful fitness training and lifestyle program featuring their unique water workouts, performance breathing, recovery methods, high-intensity and endurance training for people of all fitness levels and backgrounds.
In addition to the hands-on fitness teachings Laird offers, he released his first book in 2008, Force of Nature: Mind, Body, Soul, and, Of Course, Surfing (Rodale Books), which has become the go-to manual for those seeking inspiration for leading a healthy lifestyle; the book hit the New York Times Bestseller list within two weeks of publication. Laird is also a contributing editor for Menās Journal, where he writes about his own fitness, health, and nutrition philosophies.
The entertainment industry has also called on Laird, appearing in a number of feature films and surfing documentaries including Radical Attitude (1992), Wake Up Call (1996), Step into Liquid, (2003), and Riding Giants (2004) where he also served as executive producer. He also performed as a stuntman and surfer in The Descendants (2014), Water World (1995), Die Another Day (2002), and Point Break (2015). In addition to his film work, Laird has appeared on numerous television shows such as Oprahās Master Class, Charlie Rose, 60 Minutes, Chelsea Handler, Conan OāBrien, Steven Colbert, and The Ellen DeGeneres Show.
When Laird is not busy surfing the biggest waves in the world, inventing new water toys, and appearing in Hollywood features, Laird is a philanthropist. He has always had a great passion for helping others live a happy, healthy life, as exhibited through his work with non-profit organizations such as the Surfrider Foundation, Race Across America, Pipeline for a Cure for Cystic Fibrosis, Rain Catcher, Muscular Dystrophy and City of Hope.
As for his personal life, Laird, his wife Gabrielle Reece and their daughters split time living in residences in Hawaii and Malibu, California, chasing waves, staying in top shape, and continuing everyday adventures.
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Episode Chapters
00:00 Introduction to the Feel Good Podcast
01:28 Guest Introduction: Laird Hamilton
04:45 Fearlessness and Connection with Nature
09:31 The Importance of Sleep and Morning Routines
12:51 Breathwork and Extreme Performance Training
17:30 Exploring New Sports: Stand Up Paddleboarding
20:42 Overcoming Fear and Injury in Sports
25:17 The Role of Sleep in Holistic Health
38:32 Laird Superfood: A Journey of Nutrition
48:41 The Connection Between Food and Wellness
SOLLUNA PRODUCT LINKS
- Glowing Greens Powderā¢
- Feel Good SBO Probiotics
- Feel Good Detoxy
- Feel Good Digestive Enzymes
- Feel Good Starter Kit
- Feel Good Skincare
KIMBERLYāS BOOKS
- The Hidden Power of the Five Heats
- Chilla Gorilla & Lanky Lemur Journey to the Heart
- The Beauty Detox Solution
- Beauty Detox Foods
- Beauty Detox Power
- Radical Beauty
- Recipes For Your Perfectly Imperfect Life
- You Are More Than You Think You Are
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Transcript:
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (00:00.238)
Welcome to the Feel Good Podcast. Our goal is to empower you to live your most healthy, joyful, and abundant, highest potential of your unique life through our four cornerstone lifestyle, food, body, emotional well-being, and spiritual growth. My name is Kimberly Snyder, and Iām your host and friend who is so excited and honored to be here with you on your journey. Iām a New York Times bestselling author,
founder of Saluna, holistic wellness expert, nutritionist, and meditation teacher. And just like you, Iām also in the process of learning and have overcome great challenges. I cannot wait to share more with you and through the wisdom of our carefully curated guests right here on our show. Letās get started.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (00:59.086)
So excited for our guest today, the one and only amazing Laird Hamilton. He is best known as an American big wave surfer, but he is also an international fitness icon. Heās a New York Times bestselling author. Heās just an amazing, amazing person. In todayās interview, we talk about everything, connecting with nature, getting past fear. You definitely do not want to miss this interview.
But before we get started, I just wanna take a moment to call out our fan of the week. And our fan is Carrie Pez with two Zs. And she writes, I have never listened to a podcast regularly, but I truly cannot get enough of Beauty Inside Out. I read the Beauty Detox Solution three years ago and it completely changed my outlook on food and wellness. And after reading Radical Beauty a few months ago,
I have recommitted to the beauty detox solution in a way that inspires me every single day. Thank you, Kimberly, for all of the proven and relevant health and wellness information you provide every week. And Iām so excited to hear you speak live at the Well and Good event in New York City this October. So, Carrie, thank you so much for being in our community, sending you so much love. Iām excited to meet you in person as well.
And yeah, just huge hugs. Thank you so much for being our fan of the week. And so YouTube Beauty, for your chance to be a fan of the week, just take two minutes out of your day and leave us a review on iTunes. Super quick to do, and itās an amazing way to spread the light and the love, the information on the podcast. You can also just take a screenshot of the podcast right now on your phone and maybe text it to a friend or family member you think would benefit or post it on your Instagram stories.
or your Facebook, wherever you hang out. And thatās another great way to spread the love as well. All right, that being said, letās get going with our interview today with Laird Hamilton. Hey, beauties, welcome back. I am so excited for our interview today. We have Laird Hamilton, who is a world renowned big wave surfer and pioneer of action water sports, such as toe and surfing, stand up paddle boarding and hydrofoil boarding.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (03:21.558)
Over the last decade, Laird has transcended from surfing and has created Extreme Performance Training, XBT, a unique and powerful fitness training and lifestyle program. He also has a line called Laird Superfood, which are premium convenient products, which are, I might add, very excited to say theyāre all vegan and non-GMO. His book, Force of Nature, has become a go-to manual for those seeking inspiration for leading a healthy lifestyle.
Wow, I could go on and on, but Laird, thank you so much for being here with us today. Thank you for having me. I appreciate it. So Laird, I was just reading about you before we came on. I was watching some of your surf clips. And I have to say, thereās all these amazing businesses youāre going into. But first, I have to ask you about riding waves up to 70 feet. And here, I wrote it down.
Moving at speeds in excess of 30 miles an hour. I mean when you see these videos it just looks insane Have you always just been totally fearless? Where does this come from? I? Think I had the unique opportunity to be kind of both you know in the right place in the right time and then have the right personality you know I I from what I hear from parents and friends. I think I always had a little recklessness about me and I try to
I know, try to streamline that a little bit more these days just because, you know, kids and responsibility and all those things. But no, I think that Iām kind of predisposed to be a little bit kind of a risk taker. I think I passed one of those genes down to one of my daughters. She has it. And then the right place, being raised in Hawaii andā¦
and being raised in a real aggressive ocean. think the combination of both those really helped lead me to want to be in those extreme environments. When did you start surfing? When did you actually paddle out? I mean, could surf before I could even remember. think they were pushing me on waves when I was probably two or three years old. And I had my first surfboard when I was about five.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (05:40.75)
could swim at a very, very young age, could swim at three. so I just, before I can really, really have good recollection, but I surf, Iāve been surfing for as long as my memory. Wow. Iām working. Well, Elise on our team who lives in San Diego is a huge fan and she was like, you have to ask him what he thinks about when he drops into a big wave. And I said, heās probably not thinking,
he was thinking heād probably get the hell out of there. Do you think, do you feel like youāre in flow, youāre one of the ocean? How does it feel to you? Itās something hardly any of us are ever going to experience. Words to describe it are definitely flow, definitely living in the moment, being present. It has such demand on your focus that itās all-consuming. Thereās an all-consuming aspect of it that
It has a kind of an addiction aspect to it. Like you want to go and experience that again. There is an interesting phenomenon that I just kind of, you know, started to learn scientifically about how when youāre in fight or flight or when youāre in those extreme focus moments, you really donāt have a lot of recollection. The memory memory kind of gets turned off because itās a little bit. Itās almost like a handicap. So memory really impairs your ability to do the right thing.
because itās not important for you succeeding. Sometimes your recollection isnāt a lot, but I feel like I just get consumed by it and I become part of it. You donāt really have a separation of self. You kind of lose self and become selfless. You kind of just become part of this bigger thing. And then itās like an improv game. itās understanding what to do to survive. And it pops up and you have to, itās a very,
a very intense game of improv because obviously when you do when you make mistakes and you pay severely Yeah, to say the least yeah, anyway beauties you guys listening to you have to just google layered serve video and you will You will lose your mind if youāve never seen some of the ways you served I was just my heart was starting to be like So anyways, god god bless you for doing it so we can live vicariously through you but
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (08:08.61)
You know, talking about wellness and youāre in all these different aspects of wellness, being such an adrenaline junkie and having these huge waves and all these parts of your life, do you, how is your sleep? Iām just curious. Are you able to come down and rest? I mean, listen, I, Iām, first of all, I am a very good sleeper and have been, have been for forever and really cherish, cherish sleep and,
You know, I have a, I want to make it sure that but lately, you know, my, latest kind of mantra has been, you know, nine to five, like nine to five and not 9am to 5pm, but 9pm to 5am. Wow. You go to bed at nine? Absolutely. Absolutely. you want, well, because Iām going to wake up at five anyway. So if you keep me up to midnight, Iām still waking up at five. Yeah, I get that too.
So yeah, so I kind of get, that being said, think since, you know, I have three daughters and since kind of Iāve had the little girls around, thatās definitely put a little hampering on my sleep because, you know, they want attention. I get it. I have a two year old, Laird, and I know all about sleep getting altered when you start having kids. Itās a different sleep deprivation than when you do.
when you really are, when youāre doing something stupid and staying up late. And you know, I just really like feeling good. I really cherish feeling rested. I understand how important sleep is for your recovery. itās thatās, I mean, you donāt do it a third of your life because itās not something important. mean, and if you, you know, if you stay up at all, like in the last two years, Iāve done some pretty long endurance. did the Baja 1000 last year. What is that? Is that an Ironman?
You know, itās itās itās I mean, Iāve been Iāve paddled for 22 hours and and Iāve done a bunch of those kind of things, but I stayed up for almost 52 hours in this like doombuggy race. And that was bad. Like thatās bad. Like when you stay up for like that long a time, you hallucinate. I mean, you realize that like that. How do you how does your body keep moving? Well, if you want to torture somebody, you just keep, know, keep them up and theyāll theyāll theyāll admit to anything. So but sleep is, you know, canāt do without it.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (10:29.24)
So I find that a lot of successful people in athletics and otherwise have a really strong morning routine. And so you mentioned you get up at five. Can you share with us a little bit about how your morning routine looks when you get up, things you eat, things you do? Yeah, well, itās kind of funny. But I like, I usually organize the kitchen when I get up. You mean like you clean it up? I mean, I put everything away and make it tight.
And so, and I like it tight. And I think that that makes that also, I heard an interesting, I heard a general speaking at a graduation, a military general, and he said, the reason why we make people make their beds is so that itās called task completion. So you started- Yes. I really get like, if I can have dishwashers full of dishes and dishes out and stuff to do, put, definitely am ritualistic in, okay, the tidy the kitchen.
You know, I always drink a couple big glasses of water with some salt in them and some lemon or something like that and some minerals just because dehydration at night. Yes. You know, and then I have, of course, Iām a big coffee fan, so I usually get, even though Iām an amped and very revved up person, I like to get revved up more already, I guess. Itās almost, I think it has a lot to do with the ritual of it. And then the training starts, but.
But Iām always, know, that initial stage sets the tone of the day. But the first thing in the morning is going to be an activity. Iām awake and Iāve done a task and Iāve hydrated and maybe caffeinated, then Iām going to do something. Then Iām going to either go in the ocean if the conditions are good, or Iām going to go train, pool in the gym, do something. But that sets the day. But the mornings usually when I do things,
stressful. Like I usually itās the best time to do anything stressful actually. So why is that? Because the your cortisol level just the your hormonal levels are much better suited for doing stressful things in the morning. Like youāre really your bodyās your bodyās designed to do stressful things. And so I mean, thatās the thatās the you know, thatās the optimum time to put stress on your system, no matter what that looks like, you know.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (12:51.282)
or some sort of, you your taxes or whatever, you know, whatever you want to consider stressful to the system. I noticed in your extreme performance training, thereās an aspect of breathwork. Are you, is that like yogic pranayama or what kind of breathwork is it and how did you happen upon including that? You know, I have a tendency to kind of make things my own. When I, in all of my training, I really like hybrids. I really, I really kind of variation because I really,
As much as Iām, as I like routine, I hate monotony. You know, itās between routine and monotony. And so I donāt like it. This is the same training and the same food and the thatāll do kill me. If youāre going to do it, just put me down at that point. Iām also the breathwork stuff that I do ultimately has a lot of variation. Iāll incorporate it within training. Iāll do hypoxia training. Iāll do, you know, Iāll do, Iāll do, you know, apnea, pranayama.
variations of TUMO, Iāll do Wim Hof, Iāll do Hypoxia, Iāll do Allotropic, Iāll do comedy, all of those. Iāll dance. I always like to say Iām jack of all trades, master of none, right? Or trying to master some or however you want to describe that. But I like breath work a lot. I respect breath work to the point where I give it the time and the effort that I think it deserves. Itās a little bit like sleep.
You know, these are important things. Breathing is, you know, without breath, youāre, you donāt exist and, and you canāt survive very long without air. And so air, I give air a lot of, a lot of respect and a lot of work, you know, know, we, most of our, you know, the focus of our breath work really has been based on all the research done on nose breathing and just how important nose breathing is. And, you know, and, using that as kind of the foundation of anything we do, we are always incorporating that and the combination of, of trying to.
become more CO2 tolerant, which is your ability to handle high levels of CO2, which is the result of, you know, if youāre working out or, and one of the big issues I think most people, have, or just people in general is chronic mouth breathing, which shrubs their CO2 and keeps their CO2 levels down and which ultimately results in less oxygen absorption. And itās a little bit like water that doesnāt have the right.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (15:15.63)
You know, you drink the water that doesnāt have salt minerals in it, then you donāt really absorb it. You just drink it and you pee it out. Well, lot of the air weāre breathing, weāre just breathing, but weāre not absorbing. So, Is there ever a time to breathe through your mouth or do you think anytime we should be breathing through the nose? Talking. Talking. talking. then when youāre at such high levels of CO2 that you have to, you know, youāre on it, youāre in a sprint and youāre starting to get a buildup, then you can use that way to exhale the bad air.
or if youāre going to do some kind of breathing pattern where weāre going to use our mouth to create high volume. But usually, mouth breathing, if you look at a dog, youāll only see a dog open his mouth and breathe when heās exasperated. At the end of a run, heāll go, Yeah, or if itās like 100 degrees now. Yeah, but for a minute only. They only do it for a second, and then theyāll go back to nose breathing.
So I think itās, you you use it as a tool like that. So, but the more you can do everything with nose breath, the more efficient your cardiovascular system is. And so we just do a bunch of stuff to try to support that. Well, you know, when I was listing that, and itās out by the way, you could, we could spend hours on breath work. But yeah, I love that. Itās part of your, your work, which is so,
thereās such a range to it. Youāre incorporating so much into your lifestyle. And along the same lines, when I was talking about youāve pioneered all these different sports like toe and surfing, which is crazy to me like youāre going into these big waves, but also stand up paddleboarding, which seems kind of chill. Like Iāve done it. And I know you are a huge pioneer in that seems very peaceful. Did you start getting into that because it was sort of the balance to your adrenaline huge waves? Or where did that
How did that fit in? Because it seems a little different than your other sports. Yeah. Well, I mean, Iāve taken stand up to extremes. So itās not like I havenāt. right. Thatās true. I saw that. Yeah. Iāve giant waves and weāve Iāve paddled a bunch of channels. I mean, weāve weāve done a bunch of really long paddle like endurance stuff. And Iāve always liked endurance. And youāve youāve punched a punch if Iām using the right term, a peer, right? Of sorts. I went through the peer on my on my board. Yeah.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (17:30.19)
Yeah, okay. I served between during a big swell that people found that rather, I donāt know, entertaining, I would describe that. But stand up really, know, stand up came from a real organic, when I had my first daughter, I started wanting to put her on a board. And so I was writing these bigger boards to accommodate. I see. I want to put her and then I started standing up and kind of wanting to not lay down. And then before you know it, I started using it as really a training mechanism.
to create leg strength. And in the summer when the surf was flat, Iād be in California. And so I could go for these paddles and really build my leg strength, which normal conventional surf paddling, which is if you understand youāre on your stomach and you lay down and you paddle with your arms. And so I was able to use that as training. then I started, know, kind of, okay, Iām going to paddle the English Channel stand up. Iām going to paddle the Molokai. Iām going to paddle from Catalina to, you know, Iām just, you know, itās a little bit my nature to just
take things and then kind of see where I can go with them. But stand up is it there is I mean, Iāve been down the Colorado River on them. Iāve done I mean, thereās a bunch of things you can do. But it is kind of, you know, and weāve written giant waves with him too. But itās just another discipline. think I think I kind of continue continually look for ways to kind of reinvent not myself, but the things I do to make it interesting. Because it you know, if youāve been Iāve been surfing since I was three years old. So
You youāre looking at 50 something years, itās kind of like, if I served on the same board in the same way, Iād be a little tired of it right now. And maybe I wouldnāt, you know, and maybe I wouldnāt serve and Iād be like, well, that would be really a bummer if I wasnāt in, if I still didnāt love to serve, Iād be like, that would be the worst thing that I could do, this thing I love, that I could do in life. And so Iāve been real conscious about trying to, know, continually make it new and interesting.
and itās led me down all kinds of interesting path. And I can always circle back to the aspect of it that Iām proficient at, but there is something fun about being a student. I really like being a beginner. I really like that arc, that really steep curve, the learning curve where you just increase so quickly and gain these skills. then once you become kind of, once you get something somewhat mastered, then the increments of learning are very small. And thatās sometimes.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (19:52.174)
Thereās a monotonous in that. I told somebody, youāll become a better surfer by becoming more flexible than surfing more if youāve surfed for 10,000 hours. Another hour on 10,000 hours, whatās that going to do? Thatās 10,001? Itās like where if you became stronger or more flexible, then youād have a chance of really improving much more. I think I like that aspect. I like the creative.
aspect of all of this stuff, know, whether itās in nutrition, whether itās in in in training, whether itās in, you know, all of these different things. I like I like the creative aspect. I like the you know, thatās an interesting, you know, the interesting part of the process for you. Yeah. Yeah, itās fun.
Well, know, one thing is not everybodyās going to ride these like enormous jaws in Hawaii and do some of the things youāve done. But can you tell us about you? Everybody has experienced fear or trying something and then you mess up or you get hurt. And has there ever been a time where you got hurt from a big wave or something you tried? And how did you get past that to continue? Well, thatās a thatās a subject in itself. I think thereās a real.
Skill at that. I think thatās part of your book. I actually have another book of life writer coming out next year Iām working on a show right now that speaks on this subject and And and you know, I speak on it I think in in force of nature. I actually have a cookbook out to go fuel up it but But the new force, know force of nature is a few years old already. So we have the new one called life writer, but
This subject that you talk about, know, when youāve been hurt or youāve had failure, how do you, you know, theyāll get back on the horse. think that getting back on the horse, I think is very important in that process. I think if youāre able to, like Iāve been, you know, the physical representation of that is, you know, Iāve been severely hurt in the water and Iāll go ride another way, even with a, you know, broken collar bone or, you know, some hole in my face or some cut.
Solluna By Kimberly Snyder (22:06.934)
Iāll go back and catch another wave just to kind of end on a positive note and not finish kind of in failure and then have to recover and then go back against because the longer you wait, know, and I have friends, I mean, you think about this as a great example, know, something traumatic happens to you when youāre really young. Scary traumatic thing. You fall off a horse, you almost drown in a swimming pool and then you donāt go back, you donāt go and you donāt do it again.
Well, when youāre like 30 and 40 years old or four years old or 20 years old, youāre scared of horses or you donāt want to go near the water. Right. Because itās grown, right? This whole thing, this fear has grown. And I think the sooner you can, you can kind of embrace it and come to it, the better. And, you know, thatās a process that you, start getting good at, good at it. And Iāve been hurt so many times where I wondered if I would be able to do what I do at the level I do it.
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