BDNF is like fertilizer for your brain. It helps you think clearly, feel more stable, and adapt better to stress.
You can increase it naturally by:
If that’s too much to think about, just start here: 6 minutes of fasted movement - right after you wake up.It’s one of the fastest, simplest ways to support your brain.
What if we could provide a fertiliser for our brain? One that helped you think more clearly, remember more vividly, and even bounce back faster from stress, trauma, or burnout?
Say hello to BDNF, or Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor - a tongue-twister that’s quietly shaping the way we think, feel, and function.
BDNF is a type of neurotrophin, which basically means it’s a growth factor for your brain. It helps neurons grow, survive, and connect. Think of it as an extra something for your neural networks - making your brain more adaptable, resilient, and sharp.
But here's the kicker: BDNF isn’t just about memory or mood. It's directly tied to,
When your BDNF is low? You feel foggy, sluggish, distracted. When it’s high? Hello, clarity, focus, and energy.
Before the coffee. Before the chaos.
Give your brain the signal: It’s go time.
Just 6 minutes of fasted, high-intensity movement can spike BDNF - your brain’s “growth fertilizer.”
More BDNF means sharper focus, better memory, brighter mood.
Pick your weapon: jump rope, burpees, stairs, cycling - anything that spikes your heart and your brain.
Short bursts in a fasted state flood your system with lactate → lactate travels to the brain → triggers ketones + growth factors → BDNF goes boom.
One study showed this protocol boosted BDNF 5× more than 90 minutes of moderate, fed-state cardio
You're alert, emotionally stable, and cognitively primed - all before breakfast.
Modern life, basically.
All of these suppress BDNF - making it harder to think clearly, learn new things, or bounce back from emotional lows.
But the good news? You can flip the switch with small, consistent rituals.
Regular movement (especially cardio) is BDNF magic. Even brisk walks or dancing counts.
Spacing meals (e.g., 14:10 or 16:8) taps into brain repair pathways that upregulate BDNF.
Learn something new, take a different route, listen to jazz. The brain thrives on surprise and variation.
Omega-3s (like from flax, walnuts, or fatty fish), turmeric, green tea, dark chocolate - all support BDNF. Sugar? Not so much.
No neurogenesis without good REM. Prioritize a consistent sleep window and wind-down rituals.
Short bursts of cold or controlled breathwork (like box breathing) introduce healthy stress and spike BDNF.
BDNF supports how you think, feel, and adapt. It’s influenced by simple things: movement, sleep, food, light, novelty. Even 6 minutes of fasted exercise in the morning can make a difference.
If you're trying to feel better, think clearer, or stay focused longer - BDNF is a good place to start. You don’t need supplements to support it, you just need to start sending the right signals.
Why not try it tomorrow?