Digital Social Hour - 5 Sleep Hacks to Boost Your Productivity Overnight | Dr. Peter Martone DSH #975
Episode Date: December 13, 2024🌙 Unlock the secrets to better sleep and skyrocket your productivity! 🚀 In this eye-opening episode, we dive into 5 game-changing sleep hacks that will transform your nights and supercharge your... days. 💪 Discover why your sleep posture matters more than you think, and learn how to hack your nervous system for deeper, more restorative rest. 🧠💤 Our sleep expert reveals surprising truths about melatonin, napping, and the hidden dangers of common sleep habits. Ready to revolutionize your sleep and wake up feeling refreshed and energized? 🌟 This episode is packed with practical tips you can start using tonight! From optimizing your sleep position to understanding your unique "sleep avatar," we've got you covered. Don't miss out on these game-changing insights that could boost your productivity overnight! 📈 Hit play now and join the conversation on better sleep for a better life. 🎯 Subscribe for more life-changing tips and tricks on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🔔 Your journey to peak performance starts here. Sweet dreams and even sweeter productivity await! 😴💼 #productivity #daveaspreysleeppodcast #howtosleepbetter #insomnia #nightroutine CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:23 - How Dr. Martone Got Into Sleep 04:19 - Sleeping Position and Health 07:53 - Proper Sleep Techniques 14:52 - Understanding Melatonin 18:47 - Benefits of Naps 22:02 - Making Up for Lost Sleep 24:55 - Sleep Posture Impact 29:19 - Best Sleeping Practices 31:12 - Cann*bis and Sleep 32:14 - Newtonian vs. Quantum Physics 34:22 - Pregnancy and Sleep 35:38 - Tips for Better Sleep 35:53 - Finding Dr. Martone APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: jenna@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: Dr. Peter Martone https://www.instagram.com/drsleepright/ https://drsleepright.com/ LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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When sleep experts talk about sleep, they talk about the vertical of sleep where oh it is you know
You know well keep your airway closed or it's about breathing
Yeah, maybe they help people fall asleep, but they miss a huge vertical
Which is the structure your structure affects your function?
All right guys dr. Peter Martone here today
We're talking sleep one of the top sleep experts in the world coming on man. Thanks, Dr. Peter Martone here today. We're talking sleep.
One of the top sleep experts in the world.
Thanks for coming on man.
Thanks man, I appreciate it.
And you're from New York.
From Boston.
Oh from Boston, okay.
East coast.
Same here, Jersey.
Whoa, I could tell.
I love East coast.
Nice, it's good.
It's hard to beat.
Totally different gig.
There are two lax out here man.
We hustle.
Yeah, you're not lying.
It's definitely a hustle.
How'd you get into the sleep stuff?
Well, it's interesting.
I'm a kinesiologist and chiropractor.
That's kind of my background.
I was working with patients at the time, 15 years.
Always had back pain.
I'm a competitive mountain biker, so I had herniated my disc
in a little mountain biking injury and I reviewed about 3000 x-rays and found that the problem
with my back wasn't my, it wasn't really my back at all, it was my neck.
And it was because I lost the cervical curve in my neck and picked up rotation in my lower back,
which I was helping my patients with for years.
And I'm like, if it's my neck, I should be able to fix this.
Why is it?
When can I fix it?
I've been getting it adjusted.
And I'm like, well, due to Davis's law,
the only way to really stretch a curve back into the neck
is with long.
Like, when you stretch, you wanna stretch
like for a long period of time, right?
To get the maximum benefit.
So you have short stretching, you know,
where people will bounce,
but the most beneficial stretching is slow stretching
over a long period of time.
And I said, you know, best time to do it
is to force myself to sleep on my back
and get my neck into extension.
And I created
a pillow that does that and I started to sleep on my back and after about a month of like
sleepless nights but really focusing on my sleeping posture, my back pain went away and
I've never had back pain again since.
Damn, so sleep posture is super important.
So you know when sleep experts talk about sleep,
they talk about the vertical of sleep where,
oh, it will keep your airway closed,
or it's about breathing, or room temperature.
And they talk about all of these things that, yeah,
maybe they help people fall asleep,
but they miss a huge vertical, which is the structure.
Your structure affects your function.
Your neurology is housed within your spinal column.
And when you sleep on your side, and most people sleep curled up in a ball because they
want to feel protected and safe, and when you sleep like that, you're destroying your
structure.
And what you don't realize is you're actually destroying your health. So yeah, man, sleeping position is critically important to being able to not just sleep
better.
Like, I can fall asleep, you can put a glass of water on my chest, and it will be there.
I do not toss and turn because my body is in a neutral position.
And I get such sound sleep because of that.
And then that's really what led me into the industry
is I'm trying to help my patients need me less
because they were always coming in
with the same exact problems.
Neck pain, hip pain, adjust, adjust.
And I felt like an aspirin.
But once I started to address the root cause of the problem,
which is sleeping position, things just changed,
transformed.
People were needing me way less, they were getting better, and then because their structure
was improving, their neurology was improving, they were having less headaches, less digestive
problems, less hormonal imbalances, and it just blew off.
Awesome, good sleep.
Wow.
That's incredible.
Yeah, because the average person tosses and turns 20 to 40 times a day, right?
20 to 40 times a night because their body is in pain.
That's a lot.
You don't even think about that,
but that's like two every hour.
Every 20 to 30 minutes,
somebody will move out of that position.
Damn, yeah, I definitely do it too, to be honest.
And you said you could look at someone
and identify their sleeping issues?
Yeah, because, so if I, like my arm's straight right now, right?
But if I want this arm to be bent, all I have to do is take an arm and hold it like this,
and after a year you'll have a bent arm because tissue remolds based on the stresses applied.
So the spine's like clay.
It can be molded.
The older somebody is, the hotter it is to mold.
But if, think about your pillow, think about how you sleep as a mold for your spine.
So when I look at you, your head shifted. So your head shifted to this side. Well,
body posture adjusts to head position, which is the riding reflex.
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So your hips gonna go that way. So if the head goes this way and the hips go that way
Well, then you're affecting the neurology up in the base of the neck
That's affecting your vagus nerve that vagus nerve is going to affect your ability
to be able to get deep sleep,
because ultimately sleep is a nervous system problem.
So within our culture, we are way too sympathetic dominant.
Right?
So there are two systems in our body.
There's a sympathetic nervous system,
which is fight or flight, and then there's rest
and digest, which is the parasympathetic nervous system.
And during the day when we're awake and surviving or we're stressed, that's the sympathetic
state.
You're not healing when you're in sympathetic dominant state.
At night, the parasympathetic state is supposed to take over. That's when you heal. That's when you're in sympathetic dominant state. At night, the parasympathetic state's supposed to take over,
that's when you heal, that's when you thrive.
So it's survive versus thrive.
A cell cannot be in growth, in defense at the same time.
You're either surviving in lieu of thriving.
So at night, we need to be able to do this,
be able to tap into our parasympathetic nervous system.
But because we are all so anxious in these unsettling times
that we live in, we live in this sympathetic dominant state
and that parasympathetic nervous system is like a weak muscle.
And we've never been taught that sleep is a neurology issue,
so we don't know how to engage it.
And when you can't engage that parasympathetic nervous system,
you get heart palpitations, you get shortness of breath,
you get digestion issues,
you know, women will have hormonal imbalances
and fluctuations in a major way.
So when we started addressing these problems that night
when people sleep it's
Change in the game Wow, yeah change in the game. I had heart palpitations for the past two weeks
The the tilting of your head is giving you vague and you also have digestion issues, too
Yeah, because with the heart palpitations is a is a low vagal tone
So you're also gonna pick that up in your digestion issue
Digestive tract and also your ability to take a nice deep smooth breath.
All of those are affected at the same time.
Damn.
Because it's all neurology.
Yeah, I never connected that to sleep, dude. That's crazy. I thought it was coffee.
No, it's sleep. Well, coffee plays, so coffee does this. So if you drink a lot of coffee, you're suppressing this tone. So it's even more important for you to get your sleeping position down correctly because
if you don't, you're going to always have a weak parasympathetic muscle because it's
like watering a garden, stepping on the garden hose.
When your head's tilted like this, you're stepping on the hose, so you're suppressing
that tone.
And you're never going to get good restorative sleep until we address that so you got to sleep with your head straight
Yeah, we can we can bust it out right here. I'll show you the position you need to see
Yeah, we'll definitely do that. I'll get one of your pillows too. Is it a body pillow? Is it a it's a it's a it's a so
The body works on specific laws, right?
And there's a law that's basically stated, if you don't use it, you lose it.
So which means degeneration and atrophy will occur if you put your arm in a cast, right?
The arm will atrophy, the joint will atrophy.
So the body reacts to lack of movement or lack of stress with atrophy. So if I want to atrophy my cervical spine,
all I have to do at night is support my head.
And then because you're supporting the head
and there's no extra stress,
you're going to deteriorate the muscles in your neck.
Well, what's a pillow?
A pillow defined is a support for your head.
When you support the head and the neck at the same time, you're atrophying
and destroying the cervical curve. Wow. So when you sleep, this is when really it came back about
2000, I think it maybe it was 2001, there was a movie called Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.
And the actors when they came out of the room, there was a block of wood that they slept on in the room.
And I'm like, holy mackerel, that would be so uncomfortable.
But it wasn't for their head, it was to rest their neck
and their head just hangs off the back of it.
Well, so if you, like a slinky, if you support the neck,
but you don't support the head completely,
and the head's about a quarter support the head completely in the heads
about a quarter of an inch off of the bed using the weight of the head to
gently distract a curve back into the neck detensioning the pressure on the
vagus nerve improving vagal tone you're not just improving sleep but you're
improving digestive function you're improving heart function you're
improving respiratory function hormonal're improving heart function, you're improving respiratory function, hormonal function.
Everything balances out if we can get the world to understand that sleeping position.
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Is way more important than, you know, we're currently thought, you know, what thought the
research says, oh sleep on your side, because it's good for glampatic drainage.
The study that was done, that they all reference, was done in 2015.
That study was done on rats.
But there's a significant statement in there saying, although the best position for a rat
is on your side due to glphatic drainage. We understand that
this was done on rats, but we're assuming that it's going to be the same for humans. So we're
applying it to humans. The structure of a rat is way different than the structure of a human's neck.
It's a reverse cervical curve in a rat versus it's the total opposite curve in a rat versus a human.
So you cannot use that study and extrapolate the best sleeping position because it was done on an animal that has a totally different spinal structure.
So when we look at all of this research and people run with these things, they're not looking at the correct
verticals.
So one of my verticals is, one of my number one truths in my anchor is that the nervous
system controls everything in the human body.
I can't argue it.
That's what happens.
And then number two, the nervous system controls everything.
The spine protects the central nervous system.
So the structure of your spine plays a critical role in how the nervous system functions.
So if we're teaching people to sleep in a position that is putting them at risk for
tossing and turning 20 to 30 times a night, 20 to 40 times a night. How can that be good for
somebody's sleep and spine? So as a neuro structural specialist, my focus is to get people to just
fall asleep in the position I want them to. They don't have to stay there all night.
They just need to fall asleep that way. So we came up with this thing, it's called the triune of sleep.
You start with the body and mind, you put the body in alignment.
Then you have the body, and then you have the conscious brain.
The body, all it wants is alignment.
It wants to be in alignment, doesn't want to be in pain.
The subconscious brain, all it wants is safety. And then the conscious
brain screws everything up. So we just need to hand it off because when your conscious
brain puts you to sleep, most people think, oh, this is what I'm comfortable in. You're
not comfortable. You're mistaken comfort for safety. You feel safe. Like when I grew up
in Malden, Massachusetts on a busy street, when I was a kid, people would bang on the window.
I'd be petrified to go to sleep.
So I would put all these stuffed animals around me,
curl up in a ball, and then I would be able to fall asleep.
So you fall asleep when you feel safe.
So what we do is we put people in alignment,
and then they go to DrSleepRight.com
to take a sleep avatar test. we tell them what animal are you.
Are you an ostrich?
Are you a gorilla?
Or are you an amadillo?
And based on what animal sleep avatar you are, then we know how to create safety when
you're in this position and then we teach you how to get the conscious brain out of
its own way.
Interesting.
So what's the difference with the avatars?
So the gorilla is, so what the avatars are really identifying is subconscious, right? So we have the
body, subconscious, and conscious. Body wants alignment, subconscious wants safety. The picture
somebody that's really timid, right, was abused, you know, had a hard life, you know, they have this timid
personality. That's the ostrich, right? They're going to want to stick their head in the ground
to feel safe. They're going to need to sleep in a cocoon. They're going to be the stomach sleepers.
They're going to want pressure all over their bodies. They're going to put their covers over
their head because they need that much safety
to be able to fall asleep. They think it's comfort, but it's safety. Then you have the
armadillo. The armadillo doesn't require as much safety as the ostrich, but it still curls up in
a ball, side sleeper, gonna use pressure on your chest, maybe a sleep
mask, something to really feel protected.
The gorilla, it doesn't have any enemies, it can fall asleep anywhere.
So the gorilla is the easiest avatar for me to put into the position I want.
Armadillo, we have to make some specific considerations.
The toughest is going to be the ostriches.
Interesting. Yeah, I got to take that test.
You have an interesting take on melatonin.
Yes.
So whenever I take it, I get nightmares.
Isn't that crazy?
So melatonin is a, basically it's a hormone, right?
And when you take melatonin, it can knock you out.
And what happens whenever you take anything
like a sleeping supplement or a melatonin
that knocks you out, what you're going to do
is you're going to dive into this deep comatose sleep.
And then at the end, once your body metabolizes
that melatonin and then your system starts
to come back online,
you get this REM rebound.
So you have these crazy dreams, but your body's trying to make up for you being in that comatose
state.
Same thing happens with alcohol.
You drink alcohol, you don't dream all night long, you don't get deep restorative sleep,
and then at the end of your sleep cycles, you get all of this crazy dreaming, shallow dreaming.
It's called REM rebound. So that's why when... So I like being able to look at somebody's neurology
because you're going to have, like me, I got ADD. I can't even shut off my own brain.
So that type of neurology needs to shut off their brain a very specific way.
I can teach anybody how to get to sleep and stay asleep with very specific techniques
to be able to increase their parasympathetic tone.
And if you can increase your parasympathetic tone, you start to see that sleep isn't something that you can't control.
It's something that you need to learn how to master
the art of.
In the more time you can put in because, so picture this, sympathetic is fight, fear,
hate, guilt.
That's the sympathetic emotions. Parasympathetic emotions, love, gratitude, abundance.
These people don't allow, I live in an Italian culture, right?
These words, we don't allow ourselves to live here. So based on how we're brought up, based on a lot of old programs, a lot of old patterns
that are running in the back portion of our brain, it's affecting how we sleep. So if we start to look
at sleep as a balance between the autonomic nervous system, it's a dance between the sympathetics
and the parasympathetics. And then you dive in, instead of focusing on your sleep, you focus on how to live a more
balanced life, then you're going to be able to just get better sleep.
The byproduct needs to be sleep.
See we're designed to sleep.
We just screw it all up with our conscious brain.
So that's why we have the body, subconscious brain, conscious brain.
We've got to teach the conscious brain how to get out of its own way.
One of my biggest tips I give people is you can't think yourself to sleep.
You have to remember yourself to sleep.
So when you're thinking, you're in the conscious portion of your brain.
You can't think.
Never works.
Never works.
But you can think about, you can remember something that happened yesterday, and as long
as your brain has already categorized it, you'll fall asleep.
Wow.
And the further back that memory is that you recall, as long as it's a good memory, doesn't
cause an adrenal response, the quicker you'll fall asleep.
And once you remember yourself to sleep on that memory once,
you can go to sleep on that same memory over and over and over again.
You'll get to sleep quicker and quicker.
Wow, that's a good sleep hack.
It's a hack.
It's awesome hack.
Yeah, I wonder if that works on like an airplane too.
I put myself to sleep on the airplane.
It does.
It did.
What's your opinion on naps?
Because I've heard controversial things.
Yeah, and I was just talking to one of my clients
about napping.
All right, here's the deal.
You need to nap on a schedule, okay?
So I nap on, I nap specific portions of the day
because I know I'm gonna get horrible sleep the night before.
So I'm a competitive mountain biker
and I mountain bike on Tuesday nights.
When you exercise late, what does that do to your heart rate?
Increases.
What does that do to your metabolism?
Increases.
It stays increased for hours.
One of the things that needs to happen for you to get good deep restorative sleep is
your heart rate needs to come down and your core temperature needs to come down.
That doesn't happen if you exercise late.
So I know based on Tuesday nights, I'm not going to get a good night's sleep and I'm
going to wake up Wednesday and I'm going to be beat down.
So I nap on Wednesday afternoon because I know that I'm not getting good sleep the night
before.
And then if I have cocktails on a Friday night In a Saturday, I have Sunday afternoon when I'll nap on those days too because I know that alcohol messes up with your sleep
cycles so napping on a schedule with intention is
Critical if you nap every single day just to nap yeah, it's you know, you're gonna throw off your sleep patterns
But if you you know, just like exercise you build a sleep
Blueprint into your life. That's what we we teach in our programs. It needs to be a
bat
Sleep is a critical
It needs to be a critical portion of your health regime, I guess you can say right you need they say seven hours, right?
Well, I mean it all depends on what you're trying
to accomplish.
So that's seven hours if you don't want a lot of performance
out of your body, right?
I expect a lot of performance.
I mean, I'm, you know, go, go, go.
I have five companies I'm running.
I got multiple things going on.
I need to be, you to be cognitively really sharp
so I get eight and a half hours of sleep.
Yeah, and because think about this,
the more apps you have running on your iPhone
or your phone, whatever it is,
the more you're gonna have to plug it in to recharge it.
So I want my battery plugged in at 100%
so I get the performance I want
out of my body the next day.
If I'm only plugging in six hours, seven hours, my battery plugged in at 100% so I get the performance I want out of my body the next day.
If I'm only plugging in, you know, six hours, seven hours, I'd be a mess the next day, and
I'd internalize that.
And I would need caffeine to stay, you know, stay focused.
And I'd do all of these things to make up with my adrenal glands the energy that I'm
lacking.
And eventually you internalize that.
And I see a majority of my clients now all have chronic fatigue.
They're run down.
They have digestion issues, immune system dysfunction.
They're in brain fogs.
They can't even get out of their own way.
Some of them have lost their jobs because they can't even go to work because they're
so tired.
Damn.
And it all stems back to years of internalizing chronic lack of sleep.
So it's like a bank.
It doesn't go away.
It doesn't go away.
You just keep internalizing it until one of the systems fails.
Damn.
Can you make up for lost time with oversleeping the next day?
You can.
Yeah.
No.
Oh, no?
Mm-mm.
So think about this. You're eating like crap McDonald's every day, and then you eat a salad tomorrow.
Does that make you healthy?
No.
No. It's what you do on a ritualistic basis is what it is.
So now, for me, I don't like to make up sleep the next night.
It doesn't really work well. That's why I build that little nap in.
If I can't, you can run down for a week and then make it up on a weekend or do something like that. But in general,
and especially around time changes, if you're running so tight, you don't change your scheduled
time changes, after three to four weeks after a time change, you're going to see everybody
getting sick.
Damn. Just three to four?
That's it.
Wow. Yeah. Traveling and sleeping is always a difficult thing. Yeah, I know
Sorry you turn cuz you're from Boston so that's three hours ahead, right three hours ahead
Yeah, so are you changing your time here when you sleep tonight? Well, so no I'm gonna because I'm only here for 24 hours
I'm gonna make it up this weekend. Oh got it. I love it, man
Man, yeah people don't connect the dots
on sleep and their health issues ever. I don't ever hear people talking about that.
No, everybody they you know sleep and I'm writing a book right now in the first chapters
don't waste your time sleeping right and really think about it. If you, when you think about sleep, what are you doing?
You're lying down for eight hours, nine hours,
doing nothing, like it's really a waste of time.
People don't want sleep, they want who they're becoming
because they have good sleep, right?
So when we start to understand that,
in order to have a way better life,
see we want better sleep for a better life, we
want better sleep for way better health.
So understand that sleep is critical component to be able to have this, then you now start
to look at improving your performance in the bed.
Like do more with the time that you're potentially doing nothing to improve your health. So if we can look
at sleep like that, it's a game changer for your health moving forward.
Yeah. What do you think about eight sleep, the mattress? Have you heard of them?
Yeah, I've heard of every mattress out there. But one of the things is if you get your positioning
down, what you're sleeping on becomes way less important. So mattresses are becoming
more and more comfortable
for unsustainable positions, right?
It's, you know, the pillows hasn't changed,
and then we're trying to support, like,
these shoulders going into the mattresses
and then support the spine,
where we're keeping people in contorted positions longer,
which is destroying their spines even more.
I mean, I see 10-year-olds with phase one degenerative changes in their spine.
It's horrible.
It's really, really bad.
I have scoliosis, actually.
Well, I can see the head tilt, and that hip goes that way.
So in the middle is the spine.
So your scoliosis is caused from forward head posture.
So you have damage in your neck that damage in your neck is at c5 c6
Which is causing your head to come forward in tilt you're reacting with the psoas major muscle spasm, which is down here
Which I had it's the only muscle in the human body attaches directly to a disc which is shifting your hip
Now that all the way up is affecting the vagus nerve
is shifting your hip. Now that all the way up is affecting the vagus nerve. So you have digestion issues, heart palpitations, and you're too young now, but you will have hormonal
imbalances with low testosterone levels. If you don't address that stuff now, all three
of those is a symptom of low parasympathetic tone.
Damn. Yeah, I've always had a thing where I lean on one hip to be honest, even when
I'm standing.
It's all, so it's a righting reflex.
Body posture adjusts to head position.
Now, you cross dominant ambidextrous?
No.
Make a circle, look at me through that circle.
Real small, much smaller than that.
Like this?
Yeah, real small, bring it back to your eye.
Yep, and then bring it back to your eye.
Oh, like here?
Yeah, real small.
Okay, good.
And then you're right footed? Yeah. And you're right handed? Yeah. All right, good, so you're fully real small. Okay, good. And then you're right-footed? Yeah.
And you're right-handed? Yeah. All right, good. So you're fully lateralized, which is good.
So when you're fully lateralized, what you want to do based on this structure,
you want to work on your balance. Okay. So your balance as far as like on a
wobble board. When you stand up on a wobble board, we can predict when our
kids are gonna have scoliosis because they stand up on a wobble board, we can predict when our kids are going to have scoliosis
because they stand up on two bilateral scales. You put one foot on one side, one foot on the other
side. If they're 100 pounds, they should put 50 pounds on one scale, 50 pounds on the other.
If they're off by more than 10% of their body weight, let's say they put 60-40, then their
spine's going to curve because everything's writing because of the eyes.
So what people think happens is everything
is like building a house.
If you want a house to stand straight
or a skyscraper to be straight,
you need to build a strong foundation and work your way up.
Body work's completely opposite with that neuro structurally.
It's your posture is a battle between neurology and gravity. So it is it works from the top down it's trying to level
your eyes and so when you tilt your head the whole spine is going to curve and
contort to adapt to that. That is why sleeping position is so critically
important because your body posture is adjusting to your head position. So your
head tilting over here like this is because you're, you know, you're sleeping on your side.
Yeah, I sleep on my side.
Yeah, on my left side like this, yeah.
Damn, so I need to fix that immediately.
Yeah.
Yeah, they told me I had it growing up
and I never really thought of it,
but it's probably due to sleep posture, right?
Yeah.
And I slouch a lot.
Yeah, well, yeah, that head comes forward.
Yeah, but a lot of people are on their phone all day
so they probably have that head forward thing, right?
So that's called tech neck, right?
Yeah.
And that's what is causing our children's spines
to be destroyed.
It's first off, sleeping curled up
because they need to feel safe, right?
Our parents, like my father, my parents,
go to sleep, go to sleep, go to sleep.
Never taught me how to sleep because nobody knows.
Just go to sleep. As long as I fell to sleep because nobody knows. Just go to sleep.
As long as I fell asleep, I was fine.
Curled up in a ball to feel safe, stuffed animals all around me.
So when my daughter, she slept in the bed with us, getting her to her own room was a
little bit of a challenge.
So I went in there and this is what I did.
I said, all right, I don't want you sleeping on your back, but we're going to give every
stuffed animal
that you have a superpower.
So a turtle was like a shield,
nothing could get through the turtle.
Then we put the lions on the end of her bed
and anything that came in, the lions would attack.
So we gave all the stuffed animals this imaginary powers,
and what was they doing?
Creating safety. gave all the stuffed animals this imaginary powers and what was they doing?
Creating safety.
And then by creating a safe environment for her to live in, she was able to fall asleep
because she was coming into our bed for safety.
So that's the fundamental thing with sleep.
It's neurological.
It's the subconscious brain wants to feel safe.
The conscious brain, it screws everything up.
I can't, it's my airway, oh my God, I have sleep apnea, I have this, I have that.
All of those we can address because our whole way better sleep system is all about falling
asleep one way.
That's it.
I only want to control the 15 minutes on how you fall asleep.
Even if you think you're a great sleeper, I don't care about how you sleep.
I want to fix your structure in bed.
I want you to do more with your time in bed.
Yeah.
I love how simple you keep it because some people are hooked up to machines, all this
fancy technology.
So I'm a very simple ADD mind, right?
I need analogies.
I need to keep things simple because in the absence of simplicity, you'll just confuse
somebody.
I mean, I can dive into the neurology on how this affects this through the ears and through
the vermis and how it builds the prefrontal cortex, but that makes no difference.
I'm a how guy.
We already have a book on why we sleep.
I'm writing a book on how to sleep.
Two very, very different things.
I'm an expert on real life things to do to get to sleep.
Absolutely.
When's that book coming out?
Writing it right now.
So hopefully by the end of 2025.
Nice.
That's gonna change some lives, man.
It's gonna change an industry
because it's about getting way better sleep.
So our mission is awakening the full potential
of a well-rested, aligned you.
I want people to understand that there's way more to sleep.
That's a well-rested and aligned you. There's way more to sleep right? That's a well rested in a lined you there's way more to sleep
then just closing your eyes and waking up eight hours later and
In there's way more to the positioning that people even know and how it can impact their health
Yeah, you never get taught any of this nothing like people don't even know what dreams are no
That's a whole nother podcast
That's somebody else
What about cannabis before bed some people like to do that? Yeah people like the THC because it
It it does the same thing
Melatonin alcohol a lot of rem rebound with that stuff because it drops you out
It knocks you out in so think about this. If we're not taught good habits, right? Just like I was a soccer coach for my kids.
Go over here and do, like this is what I'll do
with my private clients.
Go do a drill, go do a drill, go do a drill, go do a drill.
And then all those drills come together on the field.
I have my clients work on balance.
Then I'll have them connect their subconscious brain to a sense through meditation.
I have them do all of these things, building that parasympathetic muscle so it's able to
turn on.
We can't use crutches in our culture that have one lateral, one vertical, because there's
an unlimited amount,
that's a very Newtonian way to think about things.
So Newtonian physics defines a circle of
each point is equal distance from the center.
That's medicine, right?
It's a very Newtonian way to think about it.
Now there's something that's called epigenetics,
which comes from quantum physics.
Quantum physics would say, hold on one second. All right, forget it
So what's the purpose of the circle? Well, let's say the purpose of the circle is to make a car drive straight that blue attire
Well the perfect circle
Would need to be shaved down perfectly to align to that car so it can drive straight
Because if you put the Newtonian perfect circle on here,
it will translate to one side.
So you can't treat everybody the same,
is what I'm trying to get at, is everybody's different.
And they're not just this perfect circle
ignoring all the unlimited parallels
that go along with that.
We are different.
We are an epigenetic lifestyle-based being that everything affects everything else.
So to take one thing to get an effect, well, what are the side effects?
Those are also effects.
They might be undesired effects, but they're all effects.
So you can't take something to ignore something we need to look at the science
What is sleep sleep is when we recharge when do we recharge we recharge within our parasympathetic nervous system?
What are things that we can do high heat stimulates the parasympathetic nervous system stimulate the immune system stimulate the reproductive system?
Have sex have sex a lot no because if you stimulate the parasympathetic nervous system, which is reproductive system,
you're going to calm down.
So there are specific things that we can do to hack into the system that allow us to flex
this muscle.
And sleep isn't just about closing your eyes and waking up.
It's about the healing
that happens at night when you sleep.
Right.
I love that.
Yeah, you definitely sleep better after sex though, right?
You do because you're able to, you know, it just calms you down.
It hacks that parasympathetic tone.
And what we're finding, this is something that I just recently started looking into,
is women that are really dysfunctional.
They have dysfunctional hormones, their body is a mess.
When they get pregnant, they feel better during pregnancy
than any other time of their life,
but then when they give birth,
they go into a deep, deep, deep depression
or they have postpartum.
Well, what is it about being pregnant that makes
a lot of the symptomatology go away? Well, it's like a hose. You step in on the garden
hose which is affecting that parasympathetic flow all the time, but what pregnancy does
is it's like turns on the hose full blast. So even though the compressions there
They're still getting that increased tone for nine months
Which makes them feel better and then and then it crashes and then the interest thing
I have heard that a lot of pregnant women are depressed after they give birth
Yeah, and I've been thinking about thinking about it thinking about it in that in that in so now I
It's almost like being pulled out of the matrix.
Now that I have these blinders off and I look at everything neurologically, you start to
see things so much differently.
So a warm shower before bed is probably good too then.
Warm shower, yep, because then as your body cools, your body follows the circadian rhythm.
And as your body cools, it stimulates slumber.
Love it.
Dr. Marton, I've learned a lot, man.
I can't wait to work more with you.
If people watching this are interested in learning from you,
where can they find you?
Yeah, they can go to drsleepright.com, D-R-S-L-E-E-P-R-I-G-H-T.
You can find out more about the neck nest,
take the animal sleep free, animal sleep avatar test,
find out what animal you are,
and then what you can do to transform your sleep.
Boom, we'll link it below.
Thanks for coming on man.
Bye man.
Yup, click the links below guys.
See you next time.