Huberman Lab - Essentials: The Science & Practice of Perfecting Your Sleep
Episode Date: June 12, 2025In this Huberman Lab Essentials episode my guest is Dr. Matt Walker, PhD, Professor of Neuroscience and Psychology at the University of California, Berkeley and host of The Matt Walker Podcast, which ...focuses on the science and impact of sleep. We explore the importance of sleep and how its nightly structure, including REM and non-REM stages, helps rejuvenate the mind and body. We also discuss how caffeine, alcohol, cannabis and melatonin supplements affect your ability to fall asleep and overall sleep quality. Additionally, Matt highlights the benefits of naps and shares a variety of unconventional tips to promote healthier, more restorative sleep. Read the episode show notes at hubermanlab.com. Thank you to our sponsors AG1: https://drinkag1.com/huberman Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/huberman ROKA: https://roka.com/huberman Timestamps 00:00:00 Matt Walker, Sleep 00:00:25 Rapid Eye Movement (REM) & Non-REM Sleep, Paralysis 00:02:05 Sleep Cycles, Nighttime Sleep Structure, Hormones 00:07:08 Sponsor: Eight Sleep 00:08:54 Nighttime Waking Up, Fragmented Sleep 00:11:05 Sunlight Exposure & Sleep 00:12:28 Caffeine & Sleep Effects, Tool: Timing Caffeine 00:15:27 Alcohol & Sleep Effects 00:18:08 Cannabis; THC, Alcohol, REM Sleep & Dreams 00:20:24 Sponsor: ROKA 00:22:12 Melatonin, Supplementation?, Dose 00:28:18 Prescription Sleep Aids, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) & Sleep 00:30:36 Naps, Benefits, Insomnia, Tool: Nap Length 00:34:07 Sponsor: AG1 00:35:44 Sleep Tips, Tools: “Do Nothing”; Winddown Routine; Worry Journal; Clocks 00:39:56 Acknowledgments Disclaimer & Disclosures Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to Huberman Lab Essentials,
where we revisit past episodes
for the most potent and actionable science-based tools
for mental health, physical health, and performance.
And now my discussion with Dr. Matt Walker.
Let's start off very basic.
What is sleep?
Sleep is probably the single most effective thing
you can do to reset your brain and body health.
Sleep as a process though is an incredibly complex physiological ballet. Sleep is broadly
separated into these two main types and we've got non rapid eye movement sleep on the one
hand and then we've got rapid eye movement sleep on the other. When you go into REM sleep,
you are completely paralyzed. You are locked into a physical incarceration of your own body.
Amazing.
The brain paralyzes the body so that the mind can dream safely.
Because think about how quickly we would have all been popped out of the gene pool.
You know, if I think I'm, you know, one of the best skydivers who can just simply fly and I get up on my
apartment window and I leap out.
You're done.
You're done.
Now, of course, the involuntary muscles thankfully aren't paralyzed.
So you keep breathing, your heart keeps beating.
You go through these bizarre, what we call autonomic storms.
There are only two voluntary muscle groups that are spurred from the paralysis.
Bizarre. One, your extraocular muscles, because if they were paralyzed, you wouldn't be able
to have rapid eye movements. And the other that we later discovered was the inner ear
muscle. Some people have argued that the reason the eyeballs are spurred from the paralysis
is because if your eyeballs are left for long periods of time inactive,
you may get things such as oxygen sort of issues
in the aqueous or vitreous humor.
And so the eyeballs have to keep moving in some way.
The drainage systems of the anterior eye
are made to require movement.
Exactly.
People with glaucoma have deficits
in drainage through the anterior chamber.
So maybe take me through the arc of a night.
When I first fall asleep,
I'll go into the light stages of non-REM sleep,
stages one and two of non-REM.
And then I'll start to descend down
into the deeper stages of non-REM sleep.
So after about maybe 20 minutes,
I'm starting to head down into stage three non-REM
and then into stage four non-REM sleep.
And as I'm starting to fall asleep, as I've cast off from the usually with me
murky waters of wakefulness and I'm in the shallows of sleep stages one and two,
my heart rate starts to drop a little bit and then my brainwave pattern activity
starts to slow down.
Normally when I'm awake, it's going up and down maybe 20, 30, 40, 50 times a second.
As I'm going into light non-REM sleep, it will slow down to maybe 15, 20, and then really
starts to slow down, down to about sort of 10 or 8 cycles per second, 8 cycle waves per
second. Then as I'm starting to move into stages three and four,
non-REM sleep, several remarkable things happen.
All of a sudden, my heart rate really does start to drop.
Hundreds of thousands of cells in my cortex all decide to fire
together and then they all go silent together.
And it's this remarkable physiological coordination
of the likes that we just don't see during any other brain state.
I will then stay there for about another 20 or 30 minutes.
So now I'm maybe 60 or 70 minutes into my first sleep cycle.
And then I'll start to rise back up, back up into stage two
non-REM sleep, and then after about 80 or so minutes I'll pop up and I'll have a
short REM sleep period. And then back down I go again, down into non-REM, up
into REM. And you do that reliably, repeatedly, and I will be doing that
every 90 minutes. At least that's the average for most adults.
In the first half of the night, the majority of those 90 minute cycles are comprised of
lots of deep non-REM sleep.
That's when I get my stage three and four of deep non-REM sleep.
Once I push through to the second half of the night, now that seesaw balance changes
and instead the majority of those 90 minute cycles are comprised either of this lighter form of non REM sleep, stage two non REM sleep, and much more and increasingly more rapid eye movement sleep.
And who suffers more? Those that lack the early phase and were those that lack the later phase of the night. Depends on what the outcome measure is. For example, during deep non-REM sleep,
that's where we get this,
it's almost a form of natural blood pressure medication.
And so when I take that away from you the next day,
we're usually going to see autonomic dysfunction,
we're usually going to see abnormalities in heart rate,
blood pressure.
We also know that during deep non-REM sleep,
that there is a certain control of specific hormones.
For example, we know that the insulin regulation of sort of metabolism, meaning how will you
look from a regulated blood sugar perspective versus dysregulated pre-diabetic look of profile,
that's where deep sleep seems to matter.
If we selectively deprive you of that, we can see- Growth hormone?
Growth hormone is different actually.
So that's a beautiful demonstration where growth hormone seems to be more REM sleep
dependent and that's why we can come on to the effects of alcohol.
And there's some really impressive frightening data on alcohol and its disruption of sleep.
But then we also know testosterone. Peak levels of testosterone happen during of sleep. But then we also know testosterone,
peak levels of testosterone happen during REM sleep.
So the second half of the night.
It was just the second half of the night.
So it really just means that your profile of mental
and physical dysfunction will be different
under both of those conditions.
Which one would you prefer?
I would prefer neither of them.
And it really depends on what you're trying to optimize for.
So it's just so complex.
Sleep is just so profoundly detrimental to us.
If you were to take it at face value, you know, you're not finding a mate, you're not
reproducing, you're not foraging for food, you're not caring for your young, and worst of all, you're vulnerable to predation. On any one of those grounds,
sleep probably should have been selected against. But it wasn't. Sleep has fought its way through
heroically every step along the evolutionary path. And therefore, every sleep stage has also survived, as best we can tell.
What that means is that those are non-negotiable. If Mother Nature had found a way to even just sort
of, you know, thin slice some of that sleep from us, there would have been vast, I'm sure,
evolutionary benefits. But it looks as though she hasn't. And I'm usually in favor of her wisdom
after 3.6 million years.
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So in this arc of the night,
slow wave sleep predominates early in the night
and then REM sleep.
There's a scenario that many people,
including myself, experience on a regular basis,
which is they go to sleep, sleeping just fine,
three, four hours into it, they wake up.
They wake up for whatever reason.
Maybe there was a noise, maybe the temperature isn't right.
We will certainly talk about sleep hygiene, et cetera.
They get up, they go to the restroom.
They might flip on the lights, they might not.
They go back to sleep.
Let's say after about 10, 15 minutes, they're able to fall back asleep.
How detrimental is that wake up episode or event
in terms of longevity, learning, et cetera?
It is perfectly natural and normal,
particularly as we progress with age.
At the end of our REM sleep period of the 90 minute cycle,
almost everybody wakes up and we make a postural movement.
We turn over because we've been paralyzed for so long
and the body will also like to shift.
For the most part, I think we can be more relaxed
about that where we have to be a bit more attentive though,
is if you are spending long periods of time not being able to get back to sleep and usually we
define that by saying if it's been 20-25 minutes. The other thing is if it's
happening very frequently. So even if you're you know not awake for 25 minute
stretches but you're finding yourself waking up and being consciously
aware that you've woken up for maybe six, seven or eight times throughout the night,
and your sleep is very what we call fragmented.
The great science of sleep in the past five or ten years has been, yes, quantity is important,
but quality is just as important. And you can't have one without the other in terms of a good, beneficial next day outcome.
You can't just get four hours of sleep, but brilliant quality of sleep and be unimpaired.
Nor can you get eight hours of sleep, but have very poor quality of sleep and be unimpaired
the next day.
I'm a big proponent of people getting some sunlight,
ideally sunlight, but other forms of bright light
into their eyes early in the day
and when they want to be awake.
Essentially during the phase of their 24 hour circadian cycle
when temperature is rising
and then starting to get less light in their eyes
as our temperature is going down in terms of later
in the day and in the evening.
I think that's exactly what we recommend right now,
which is try to get at least 30 to 40 minutes of exposure
to some kind of natural daylight.
There was some great work recently coming out
in the occupational health domain where they moved workers
from offices that were just facing walls and didn't have any exposure to natural daylight.
And then they did a time period during that study where they actually were in front of
a window and working.
And they measured their sleep.
And their sleep time and their sleep efficiency increased quite dramatically.
I think the increase in total sleep time was well over 30 minutes.
And the improvement in sleep efficiency was five to 10%.
And if you're batting an 80% sleep efficiency average,
we're a bit concerned about that.
But add 10% to that, now you're in a great echelon
of healthy sleepers.
These portals are the only way to convey
to the rest of the brain and body about the time
of day and wakefulness.
I have a number of questions about caffeine.
Does the timing in which we ingest caffeine play an important role in whether or not it
works for us or against us?
The dose and the timing makes the poison.
Caffeine has a half- life and it's metabolized.
The half life is somewhere between five to six hours
and the quarter life therefore is somewhere
between 10 to 12 hours.
It's variable, different people have different durations
of its action, but for the average adult, five to six hours.
So let's say that I've been awake for 12 hours now
and it's 8 p.m.
and I'm feeling a bit tired but I want to push through and I want to keep working for another couple of hours.
So I have a cup of coffee. All of a sudden I was feeling tired but I don't feel like I've been awake for 12 hours anymore.
Then after a few hours and the caffeine is starting to come out of my system, not only am I hit with the same levels of adenosine
that I had before I'd had the cup of coffee
several hours ago, it's that plus all of the adenosine
that's been building up during the time
that the caffeine has been in my system.
It's sort of an avalanche of-
It is a tsunami wave, yeah.
And that's the caffeine crash.
Given somebody who typically gets into bed around 10, 10,
30 and falls asleep around 11, 11, 30.
Yeah.
When would you recommend they halt caffeine intake?
And these are not strict prescriptives,
but I think people do benefit from having some
fairly clear guidelines of what might work for them.
Would you say cut off caffeine by what time of the day?
I would usually say take your typical bedtime
and count back 10 hours or eight hours of time.
That's the time when you should really stop,
you know, using caffeine is the suggestion.
And the reason is because for those people
who even just keep drinking up until,
you know, into the evening
You're right that they can fall asleep fine
Maybe they stay asleep, but the depth of their deep sleep is not as deep anymore
And so there are two consequences
The first is that for me and it can be up to by 30% and for me to drop your deep sleep by 30%
I'd have to age you by between 10 to 12 years,
or you can just do it every night to yourself
with a couple of espressos.
The second is that you then wake up the next morning
and you think, well, I didn't have problems falling asleep
and I didn't have problems staying asleep,
but I don't feel particularly restored by my sleep.
So now I'm reaching for three or four cups of coffee the next morning rather than just
two or three cups of coffee.
And so goes this dependency cycle that you then need your uppers to wake you up in the
morning.
And then sometimes people will use alcohol in the evening to bring them down because
they're overly caffeinated and alcohol.
And we can speak about that too, also has very deleterious impacts on your sleep as well.
Caffeine and alcohol represent the kind of two opposite ends
of the spectrum.
What happens when somebody has a glass,
we always hear a glass or two of wine in the evening
or a cocktail after dinner.
How does that impact their sleep?
So alcohol, if we're thinking about classes of drugs,
they're in a class of drugs that we call the sedatives.
It's sedating your cortex.
And sedation is not sleep.
But when we have a couple of drinks in the evening,
when we have a couple of night caps,
we mistake sedation for sleep, saying,
well, I always, when I have a couple of whiskies
or a couple of cocktails,
it always helps me fall asleep faster.
In truth, what's happening is that you're losing consciousness quicker, but you're not
necessarily falling naturalistically asleep any quicker.
So that's one of the first sort of things just to keep in mind.
The second thing with alcohol is that it fragments your sleep.
And we spoke about the quality of your sleep being just as important as the quantity.
And alcohol through a variety of mechanisms, some of which are activation of that autonomic nervous system,
that fight or flight branch of the nervous system.
Alcohol will actually have you waking up many more times throughout the night.
So your sleep is far less continuous.
Now some of those awakenings will be of conscious recollection the next day.
You'll just remember waking up.
Many of them won't be.
And so, but yet your sleep will be littered with these sort of punctured awakenings throughout
the night.
And again, when you wake up the next morning, you don't feel restored by your sleep.
The third part of alcohol in terms of an equation is that it's quite potent at blocking your
REM sleep, your rapid eye movement sleep.
And REM sleep is critical for a variety of cognitive functions, some aspects of learning
and memory.
It seems to be critical for aspects of emotional and mental health.
It's overnight therapy. What we've discovered over the past 20 years here at the Sleep Center
is that there is no major psychiatric disorder that we can find in which sleep is normal.
And so I think that firstly told us there is a very intimate association between your
emotional mental health and your sleep health. I don't want to be puritanical here.
You know, I'm just a scientist and I'm not here to tell anyone how to live.
All I'm trying to do is empower people with some of the scientific literature regarding sleep.
And then you can make whatever informed choices that you want.
My job is not to tell people a prescription for life.
It's just to offer some scientific information.
I would like to ask about marijuana in many places,
not all medical marijuana is approved or is legal.
Does marijuana disrupt sleep?
THC seems to speed up the time with which you fall asleep.
But again, if you look at the electrical brainwave signature seems to speed up the time with which you fall asleep.
But again, if you look at the electrical brainwave signature of your falling asleep with and without that THC,
it's not going to be an ideal fit.
So you could argue it's non-natural.
It too, but through different mechanisms
seems to block REM sleep.
And that's why a lot of people when they're using
will tell me, look, you know, I definitely,
I was dreaming, I don't remember, you know,
many of my dreams.
And then when they stop using THC,
let's say I was having, you know, just crazy, crazy dreams.
And the reason is because there is a rebound mechanism.
REM sleep is very clever and alcohol is the same way
in this sense, it's the same homeostatic mechanism.
Some people will tell me, look, if I have a bit of a wild Friday night with some
alcohol, you know, maybe I'll sleep late into the next morning and I'll just have
these really intense dreams.
So, and I thought I wasn't having any REM sleep.
Well, the way it works is that it's during in the middle of the night, really,
when alcohol blocks your REM sleep and your brain is smart.
It understands how much REM sleep you should have had,
how much REM sleep you have not because the alcohol has been in the system.
And finally, in those early morning hours, when you're getting through to sort of,
you know, six, seven, eight AM, all of a sudden,
your brain not only goes back to having the same amount of REM it would
have had, it does that, plus it tries to get back all of the REM sleep that it's lost.
Does it get back all of the REM sleep?
No, it doesn't.
It never gets back all of the REM sleep, but it tries.
And so you have these really intense periods of REM sleep.
Hence, you have really intense, bizarre dreams.
And that's what happens also with THC.
You build up this pressure for REM sleep,
this debt for REM sleep.
Will you ever pay it back?
It doesn't seem as though you get back everything that you lost,
but will you get back some of it?
Yes, the brain will start to devour more
because it's been starved of REM sleep for so long.
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So I'd love to chat for a moment about the kind of grant,
the original, I should say that not the granddaddy,
but the OG of sleep supplementation, which is melatonin.
Yeah.
I was always taught and I'm assuming it's still true
that the only source of melatonin in the brain and body
is the pineal gland.
Is that still true?
Yeah, it seems to be from best that we can tell.
I have to imagine we have melatonin receptors
in the brain and body.
It's correct.
Essentially your brain has a central master 24 hour clock
called the suprachiasmatic nucleus
that keeps internal time.
Now it knows 24-hour time, but it needs to tell the rest of the brain and the body the
24-hour time as well.
And one of the ways that it does this is by communicating a chemical signal of 24-hour nurse of light and day using this hormone melatonin.
And when it is at low levels or it's non-existent, it's communicating the message.
It's daytime.
And for us, dienyl species, it says it's time to be awake.
Yet at nighttime when dusk approaches and the break comes off melatonin and we start
to release it, then it signals to the rest of the brain and the body, look, it's dusk and
it's night time and for us, the dienal species, it's time to think about sleep.
So melatonin essentially tells the brain and the body when it's day and when it's night
and with that, when it's time to sleep, when it's time to wake, but it doesn't really help with the generation of sleep itself.
And this is where we'll come on to what those studies
of supplementation have taught us.
So it tells the rest of my brain and body,
it's time to go to sleep.
It perhaps even aids with the transition to sleep,
but it's not going to, for instance,
ensure the overall structure of sleep,
or it's not the conductor that's guiding the sleep orchestra,
so to speak, throughout the entire night.
You know, Melatonin is like the starting official
at the hundred meter race in the Olympics.
That's a better analogy.
It calls all of the sleep races to the line,
and it begins the great sleep race,
but it doesn't participate in the race itself.
That's a whole different set of brain chemicals
and brain regions.
Which then brings us on to perhaps the question of
supplementation, which is,
is it helpful for my sleep? Will I sleep longer? Will I sleep better?
Sadly, the evidence in healthy adults who are not older age
suggests that melatonin
is not really particularly helpful as a sleep aid.
I think there was a recent meta-analysis and what that meta-analysis told us is that melatonin
will only increase total amount of sleep by 3.9 minutes on average.
Minutes?
Minutes.
Not even percent.
No, and it will only increase your sleep efficiency by 2.2%.
So the source is not strong, the force is not strong in this one.
When it comes to a tool that in healthy people who are not of older age, it doesn't seem
to be especially beneficial.
Now, you know, results can vary. Everyone is different, of course.
So we're talking about the average,
the so-called average human adult here.
Well, melatonin in defense of what you're saying,
and also I should mention,
I have a colleague at Stanford, Jamie Zeitzer,
who we know- Oh, wonderful.
Chuck Zeitzer's lab at Harvard Med,
where he also trained a terrific sleep researcher.
And I asked him about melatonin,
and he essentially said the same thing that you just said,
which is very little, if any evidence,
that it can improve sleep.
And yet it's probably the most commonly consumed
so-called sleep aid.
Hundreds of million dollars industry.
The only population where we typically see some benefit
and it often is prescribed is in older adults.
Because as- Older meaning 60 and older?
Yeah, 60, 65 and older, because as we get older,
you can typically have what's called calcification
of the pineal gland, which means that that gland
that's releasing melatonin doesn't work as well anymore.
That's why older adults can have problems falling asleep
or staying asleep.
It's not the only reason by any stretch of the imagination,
but it's one of the reasons,
and it's why melatonin supplementation in those cohorts,
older adults, especially older adults with insomnia,
people have thought about that
as maybe an appropriate use case.
Do we know how much melatonin is typically released
into the bloodstream per night?
And can we use that as a kind of a rule of thumb
by which to compare the typical amount
that someone would supplement?
I mean, typically the supplements for melatonin that I see
in the pharmacy and elsewhere and online
range anywhere from one milligram to 12
or even 20 milligrams.
My guess is that a normal night's release of melatonin,
typical for somebody in their 20s, 30s, 40s
would be far lower than that.
Am I correct or wrong?
Yeah, it's at many magnitudes lower.
And this is one of the problems is that I see that too.
I see, you know, typical doses are, you know,
five milligrams or 10 milligrams.
And of course, you know, if you're a supplement company,
you know, putting 10 milligrams versus five milligrams,
if that's what you're actually doing, you know,
it's kind of like the super gulp size.
You know, nobody wants to lower price.
They just want you to, you know,
we'll just give you more for the same price
and that's how we'll compete.
So it's been this escalating arms race
of melatonin concentration.
And it really does not look meaningful
for, you know, for sleep in any way.
What we've actually found is that the optimal doses
for where you do get sleep benefits in the populations
that we've looked at are somewhere between 0.1
and 0.3 milligrams of melatonin.
In other words, the typical doses are usually 10 times,
20 times, maybe more than what your body
would naturally expect.
And this is what we call a supra physiological dose.
In other words, it's far above
what is physiologically normal.
I like to think in terms of manipulating any aspect
of our biology, that behavioral tools
always are the first line of entry.
Then nutrition, everyone has to eat sooner or later,
even if you're fasting.
Then perhaps supplementation, then prescription drugs,
and then perhaps brain machine interface,
devices that you use to induce something.
And those could be done in combination.
But what concerns me is when I hear people say,
well, what should I take
without thinking about their behavior, their light viewing behavior, et cetera.
But of course these things work in combination.
When it comes to sleep, there are many low hanging fruits that don't necessarily require
you to, you know, put sort of exogenous molecules.
In other words, things like supplements into your body or, you know, use different types of drugs
to help you get there.
Now, when it comes to prescription sleep aids,
I think I've been, again, a little bit too forthright.
We know in clinical practice that there may be a time
and a place for things like sleeping pills.
They are a short-term solution to certain forms of insomnia,
but they are not recommended for the long term.
And we also know that there are lots of other ways
that you can get a sleep help
or you can get a sleep curative profile
from things like cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia,
which is a non-drug approach, a psychological.
And quite effective from what I understand.
Very, just as effective as sleeping pills, great data.
More effective in the long term.
There was a recent study published that after working with that therapist, some of the benefits
lasted almost a decade.
You know, now if you stop sleeping pills, usually you have rebound insomnia where your
sleep goes back to being just as bad, if not worse.
And I think the same is true when we think about supplementation.
There are so many things that are easy to implement
when it comes to sleep,
that don't require venturing out into those waters.
And again, we're not here to tell anyone
about whether they should venture or not.
That's completely your choice.
All I'm saying is that
if you want to think about optimizing your sleep,
there are a number of ways that you can do it that don't necessarily require you to swallow anything or inject
anything or smoke anything.
Right.
And for which the margins of safety are quite, quite wide.
Let's talk about naps.
I love naps.
I come from a long history of nappers.
What are the data on naps and what are your thoughts about keeping naps short,
meaning 20 to 30 minutes versus getting out past 90 minutes,
two hours, yay, nay, or meh?
Naps can have some really great benefits.
We found benefits for cardiovascular health,
blood pressure, for example,
we found benefits for levels of cortisol,
we found benefits for learning and memory, and also emotional regulation.
How long are the naps typically in those studies?
Anywhere between 20 minutes to 90 minutes.
Sometimes we like to use a 90 minute window so that the participant can have a full cycle
of sleep and therefore they get both non-REM and REM sleep within that time period.
And then we correlate how much benefit did you get from the nap
and how much of that benefit was explained by what REM sleep you got,
what deep sleep you got, what light sleep you got.
What we've also found is that naps of as little as 17 minutes
can have some quite potent effects on, for example, learning.
None of this is novel.
NASA pioneered this back in the 1990s.
And during the missions, they were experimenting with NAPs
for their astronauts.
And what they found was that NAPs of little as 26 minutes
improved mission performance by 34% and improved daytime
alertness by 50%.
And it birthed what was then called the NASA NAP culture 34% and improved daytime alertness by 50%.
And it birthed what was then called the NASA nap culture
throughout all terrestrial NASA staff
during that time period.
So it's long been known that naps can have a benefit.
Naps, however, can have a double-edged sword.
There is a dark side to naps.
When you nap, you are essentially opening the valve on the pressure cooker of
sleep pressure and some of that sleepiness is lost by way of the nap. Some people, however,
if they are struggling with sleep at night and they nap during the day, it makes their
sleep problems even worse. So for people with insomnia, we typically advise against napping.
And the advice is if you can nap regularly and you don't struggle with
sleep at night, then naps are just fine.
But if you do struggle with sleep, stay away from naps.
If you are going to nap, try to limit your naps, try to cut them off a
bit like sort of caffeine, maybe, you know, 8 to sort of 12 hours, maybe
not that, you know, far off, maybe sort of 7 to 6 hours is a good rule of thumb.
Try not to nap essentially late in the afternoon.
And if you do take a nap and you want to maintain your, you don't want to have that grogginess
hangover that can happen after a full night of sleep for the first hour, try to limit it to about 20, 25 minutes.
And that way you don't go down into the very deepest stages of sleep, which I, if I wrench
you out of with an alarm, you almost feel worse.
No one should feel guilty about getting the sleep that they need.
And I think that's been one of the big problems in society.
Society has stigmatized sleep with these labels of being slothful or lazy.
And we're almost embarrassed to tell colleagues that we take a nap.
I think sleep is a right of human beings.
And I therefore think that sleep is a civil right of all human beings.
And no one should make you feel unproud
of getting the sleep that you need.
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Are there any unconventional sleep tips?
The what if kind of things that,
yeah, what if it turns out that,
and I hear I just, I've got a blank there for you to fill in.
The first one, which is unconventional
along the lines of naps,
if you've had a bad night of sleep, do nothing.
What I mean by that is don't wake up any later, don't sleep in the following day to try and
make up for it.
Don't nap during the day.
Don't consume extra caffeine to wake you up, to try to get you through the day.
And don't go to bed any earlier to think that you're going to compensate.
If you wake up later, you're not going to be
sleepy until later the evening. So you're going to go to bed at your normal time and you won't be
sleeping. You'll think, well, I just came off a bad night of sleep and now I still, I can't even
get to sleep and it's my normal time. It's because you slept in later than you would otherwise.
And you reduce the window of adenosine accumulation before your normal bedtime.
So don't wake up any later.
Don't use more caffeine for the reasons that are obvious because that's only going to
crank you and keep you awake the following night or decrease the probability of a good
following night of recovery sleep.
And then finally, don't go to bed any earlier.
Resist and resist and go to bed at your normal time.
What I want to try and do is prevent you from thinking,
I had such a bad night last night
and I normally go to bed at 10.30.
I'm just gonna get into bed at nine o'clock.
My body is not ready to sleep at nine o'clock,
but I'm worried because I had a bad night of sleep last night.
So I get into bed and now I'm tossing and turning
for the first hour and a half
because it's not my natural sleep window
But I just thought it was a good idea
I think the second tip I would offer in terms of unconventional is have a wind down routine
Many of us think of sleep as if it's like a light switch that we just jump into bed
And when we turn the light out sleep should arrive in that same way. Sleep is a physiological process.
It's much more like landing a plane.
It takes time to gradually descend down
onto the terra firma of what we call
good solid sleep at night.
Find out whatever works for you
and it could be light stretching.
I usually meditate for about 10 or 15 minutes before bed.
Some people like reading. Try not or 15 minutes before bed.
Some people like reading, try not to watch television in bed.
That's usually advised against-
Something that doesn't emit too much light to your eyes.
Too much light, too activating.
You know, you wouldn't race into your garage
and come to a screeching halt from 60 miles an hour.
You typically downshift your gears
and you slow down as you come into the garage.
This is the same thing with sleep too.
The other thing about sort of that idea of shifting focus away from your mind
itself, get your mind off itself is a good piece of advice.
Catharsis.
You can try to write down all of the concerns that you have and do this not right before
bed but usually an hour or two before bed.
Some people call it a worry journal.
And to me it's a little bit like closing down all of the emotional tabs on my browser because
if I shut the computer down and all of those tabs are still open, I'm going to come back
in the morning and the computer's red hot, the fan's going because it didn't go to sleep because it couldn't because there were too many tabs active still open, I'm going to come back in the morning and the computer's red heart the fan's going because it didn't go to sleep, because it couldn't, because there
were too many tabs active and open.
I at first thought, this just sounds like Whoey, it sounds very Berkeley, it's kind
of come by, we all hold hands and walk home at the end of the day.
But then the data started coming out, really good studies from good people, and they found
that keeping one of those journals decreased the time it takes you to fall asleep by 50%, five zero.
It's well on par with any pharmaceutical agent.
I think the fourth sort of little tip I would give that's unconventional is remove all clock
faces from your bedroom.
Including your phone.
Including your phone because if you are having a tough night, knowing that it's 322 in the morning
or it's 448 in the morning does not help you
in the slightest.
And it's only going to make matters worse than better.
Matt, this has been an amazing deep dive on sleep.
It is chock-a-block full of valuable takeaways.
It's been tremendously fun for me to dissect out
this incredible aspect of our lives
that we call sleep with a fellow scientist
and a fellow public educator.
And we don't just want to hear more from Matt Walker.
I speak for many people.
We need to, the work you're doing is both influential,
but more importantly, it is important work. It has the impact that's needed,
especially in this day and age
where science and medicine, public health,
and the issues of the world, et cetera,
are really converging.
So I know I speak on behalf of a tremendous number of people
and I just say, thank you for doing the work you do
and for being you.