Huberman explains how your nervous system can switch your immune system on, using breathing, sleep position, mindset, and spirulina.

Andrew Huberman — Andrew Huberman, professor of neurobiology and ophthalmology at Stanford School of Medicine, hosting a Huberman Lab Essentials episode that revisits past science-based tools.
This Essentials episode gives an immune-system primer (skin/mucus barrier, the fast innate response, and the antibody-making adaptive system) and then explains how the nervous system can deliberately tune immunity. Huberman details 'sickness behavior' (lethargy, lost appetite, photophobia, sleepiness) as a motivated state driven from the body to the brain via the vagus nerve and inflammatory cytokines. He then flips the equation, covering zero-cost tools to fight infection: elevating the feet during sleep to boost glymphatic clearance, cyclic hyperventilation (Wim Hof-style) breathing shown in a PNAS study to raise adrenaline and lower inflammation, positive mindset/hope acting through dopamine, and electroacupuncture of fascia driving a vagal-adrenal anti-inflammatory reflex. He closes with spirulina as an alternative to decongestants for nasal congestion.