Let's Find Out - (Rain version) The Science of Sleep | ASMR
Episode Date: August 29, 2019These podcasts are just the audio from my Youtube videos. If you'd like to see visuals too, visit my channel, Let's Find Out: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7FOVZ1xTzKav7TVTATIcxQ This version has ...subtle rain sounds. Let's find out what we know about sleep and why we'd die without it. Thanks for watching. #ASMR #sleep #relaxing
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Caught me looking at Wickeb... Funk and Wagnol's Encyclopedia, volume 21 to be specific.
I'm interested in sleep, if you can't tell by my channel.
I'm fascinated by this thing that we do eight hours a day.
Yet we're not really quite there for it.
At least we can't remember much of it.
Even the dreams and the imagery that we associate with sleep.
Often slip away from us like sand through our feet.
fingers in the morning. We spend almost a third of our lives sleeping. You know, if you're
90 years old, that's almost 30 years sleeping. It's a critical function of our human lives.
And, of course, many other animals do as well. But, you know, like maybe sex, eating, drinking,
breathing, working out. It can be enjoyable. We can of course have too much or too little,
but it's interesting that we, well, there's a lot of interesting things about it, but it's
interesting that we can enjoy it, yet it's necessary. And I kind of want to explore that a little
more today. So we're going to be looking at sleep through the lens, of course, of ASMR, but
First, let's find out what we knew, at least in 1979, about sleep.
This short article here opens up with a definition of sleep.
It's a recurrent physiological state of humans and other animals, mostly vertebrates,
characterized by the loss of consciousness
and a very marked slowing of various functions of the mind,
and body. Periods of sleep are necessary for the preservation of all life and
during such periods the body apparently recuperates from the effect of waking
activity and then it goes on to many many theories that have been advanced to
explain the physiological causes of sleep. One theory proposes that sleep is caused by
the accumulation of what are commonly called fatigue toxins in the body it's almost
like poisonous substances like that we expel during respiration while we
breathe we're expelling cellular decay or byproducts I guess and that to our
body are toxic these poisonous substances produce a feeling of great
tiredness in the individual
Experimental evidence from the study of Siamese twins, however, suggests that the explanation cannot be so simple.
Another theory proposes that sleep is regulated by a sleep center.
A particular area of our brain, they propose that it's the hypothalamus, and they even say experimental evidence indicates,
that this center is together with another one that's slightly forward in the brain
may be important regulators of transitions between sleep and wakefulness so
little is known however about the actual process that activates in these centers
several important body changes occur during sleep and this is actually really
interesting to me this um the you know I guess the healing effects of sleep um again like
like nutrition we know it's valuable we know that you need to consume the proper amount
of macros and you know minerals and other things to sustain your body's cell growth and decay
and consuming nutrients and breaking those down to really really
energy. Like nutrition being physically useful but also physically pleasurable, it's
interesting that sleep we all know it can be really pleasurable to find yourself
and arrive at a deep, deep state of relaxation where your muscles are loose, all
tension dissipates, and your mind is at rest as well. We have to imagine and of course
we've, through research, have found out that it's very useful and, in fact, essential.
And it rewards us with a sensation of, if not explicit pleasure,
certainly a sense of comfort and satisfaction,
which is why I think the ASMR experience is so deeply linked with sleep.
Anyways, those are side effects that our body rewards us with.
if we give it the proper amount of rest and time to recuperate.
Let's see several of these body changes
that occur during sleep.
One of the most typical is a diminution of respiration.
The rate of breathing is slow and breathing is shallower
than during wakefulness.
Circulatory activity is lessened
And the heartbeat is markedly slowed as well.
Your body's going into a state of hibernation, essentially a short-term hibernation.
Other changes include the lowering of the body temperature,
relaxation of both the striated involuntary skeletal muscles and the smooth involuntary visceral muscles.
and the alternations of patterns of electrical activity in the brain
although muscles are relaxed during sleep
they are not all relaxed at the same time
and a certain amount of activity in the movement actually occurs
those studies have shown that the average sleeper changes his position
about once every 17 minutes 17 minutes
so none is sedentary
while we sleep is you know we could have mat
we would imagine that the body is you know doing something that's required because
we we just get a general sense very intuitive very impactful effects when we
don't sleep and we lack sleep so one of the things we can definitely point to is
that we notice is a sleep cycle a lot to say about that actually an interesting
I guess these things are called Bresi, they're kind of like a slightly more advanced
PowerPoint presentation. This one's by Maggie Kozlinski. It's called sleep and dreams
PowerPoint. I just like it because hopefully I'll edit it in to the video. It's got a very interesting visual.
So sleep cycles
It's your internal 24-hour sleep cycle or biological clock.
In other words, also known as circadian rhythm.
It regulates processes in the brain that respond to how long you've been awake and regulate the changes between light and dark.
It very synced up with the daylight cycle, Earth's rotation.
Your body responds to the loss of daylight.
by producing melatonin which makes you sleepy which would explain the the effects
and I use one every night when I go to bed the dimming app where it warms the
hue of your screen on your phone because you know I definitely notice my
body stays more alert my mind is a lot more distracted
more just wakeful I guess when I when I leave the regular hue of my screen make it
too blue it definitely keeps me up and so naturally as you might imagine the release
with the release of melatonin at night to make you sleepy there's an inhibitory
structure or circuit I guess in your brain that it's gonna make you stay wakeful
and not feel sleepy during the day during the waking hours for the most part
except when you nap I guess.
Scientific studies on sleep have shown that sleep stage at that the sleep stage at awakening is an important factor
in amplifying sleep inertia.
Alarm clocks are used for sleep stage monitoring in EEGs or electroencephalographs
are used to wake people up from light sleep.
One misspelling there.
So what is?
I want to know what sleep stage inertia is.
Sleep inertia rather.
And there is sleep inertia,
psychological state of impaired cognitive
and sensory motor performance that is present
immediately after waking.
Okay, that makes sense.
It's the continuation of sleep effects,
like drowsiness, disorientation, and decline in motor dexterity. Interesting.
Can give your body time to relax and recover from daily aches and pains. Recently studies
have found that sleep has an effect on our ability to learn even. Studies have also found
that synapses in our brain grow and use up more energy when we learn new things. I love the
the correlation between physical and mental exertion and recovery because I know for a fact that
you know whenever you're physically exhausted after working out or doing some hard labor you always feel
you might feel a little sore I guess if you're out of shape but um in phases in my life where
I've been in shape I notice that you feel you feel really really good you feel like sleep
was well-earned, but also more effective almost,
if you exhausted yourself more thoroughly the day before.
So that's just an interesting...
I guess I'm making a correlation between that
and the mental exertion,
when you're pushing your mental capacity to the limit.
It is noticeable that, you know, I become more familiar with a topic
that I've been reading the day before or even you know multiple days before if I've been
working on it after a good night's sleep I feel more competent more like I've retained more
of the information and I'm able to more readily access the information as well so that's
just an interesting again one of the many helpful very you know useful aspects of sleep
So it's just really cool to know that, you know, sleep is, it's this enjoyable thing,
but it's also a powerful regulator of your growth mentally and physically.
What does sleep provide us with?
Three-dimensional sort of schematic of the brain.
And I believe the hypothalamus is one of these.
Maybe that guy right there.
What does lack of sleep get us?
When you lack sleep, it affects.
your judgment, your coordination, and your reaction time. So your ability to manipulate thoughts in
your head to make proper judgments, obviously manipulate your appendages, to control things
and improve your own body in the world or prevent your body from bumping into things,
and reaction time to align with the correlation, uh, or the coordination rather. So, and if you're
able to see something coming, you're going to have a slower reaction time to be able to avoid
all the things out there in the world trying to kill us. In fact, sleep deprivation can affect
you as much as being drunk. That is true. So here we go into the stages of sleep. Hopefully
here we can learn a little bit more about the brain. We can get a little bit more
explicit information about exactly what's going on during sleep while we're off in our dreamland.
Recorded brain waves, it says, have helped in the study of different stages of sleep.
There are four main stages of sleep that occur, and each stage lasts about 90 to 110 minutes.
Each stage may have a distinct psychological function.
At first, when you fall asleep, your brain waves,
slow down, then they get slower and slower in the second and third stages
as you become more relaxed. So these levels are working down, down, down
into the deepest, most relaxed, most motionless,
unperturbed state of rest. So we're in the third stage. You know, you can imagine that's
Maybe three begins at the onset of it is about three hours after you've
Gone asleep and as you go through it you become even less aware of the world outside
And I know this because I go to sleep usually a couple hours after my girlfriend. She wakes up pretty early
And if I come to bed
Within two to three hours of her going to sleep she usually will
wakes up, she'll wake up and check her, check her phone, make sure it's not 6 a.m.
If I go to bed three to four hours after she's gone to bed, rarely do I actually see her wake
up. She kind of, you know, rustles around when I hop in the bed, but it's just interesting
that, you know, your body does slowly sink into these states of unconsciousness.
the actual muscles and the physical elements of our body trail along and follow that pattern as well as well
the fourth stage is the deepest stage known as rapid eye movement r em sleep most people in this stage dream
most people only remember dreams that occur closely toward the morning when they're about to wake up just
just because you can't remember a dream doesn't mean you've never had one some people believe that they simply don't remember the dream when in reality they just
um or they believe that they don't dream when they just don't remember it and you can imagine that if we did if we were able to retain the dreams vividly enough in memory as a waking memory of an actual event
there might be a little cross-threading going on there there might be some
significant negative mental effects of forgetting forgetting which is dream and which was reality you know
indistinguishing a little meddling a kind of a vague vague intermingling if it they start to be far
enough in your life that might cause some definitely anxiety definitely unrest
and unease and a little bit of uncertainty about what's dream and what's
reality because I know I've definitely woken up and it's definitely when I'm it
seems to correlate with my most vivid dreams that you wake up almost unsure
especially if they're not as much of a character characterization
especially when they're more realistic sometimes you wake up and there's
up to 30 30 seconds where you're genuinely sitting there wondering whether
something just happened or whether it was just a dream so evolutionarily speaking
you know long-term effects I'm sure
it was detrimental to your cognitive mental clarity during your wakeful state to be too inundated and overwhelmed with two vivid memories from your dreams.
You can imagine how that might have gotten in the way of, you know, actually planning and going about your, uh, the struggle of trying to survive in the wild back then.
So to explore rapid eye movement a little more the fourth stage of sleep
It's indicated by the back and forth movement of the eyes rapidly of course
You can know if you have a dog you can often see them do this right before they're
about to move you know their paws or start to whimper depending on what they're dreaming about
After 10 minutes of R.E.m. sleep
The sleep cycle repeats three to four times.
So, I've heard, let's see if they go into dreams.
During REM, not only do your eyes move around quickly under your eyelids,
but your heart rate actually increases.
And all your automatic body processes speed up as well.
That's why.
REM sleep, I keep doing that, leaving the mouse on there.
REM sleep also alternates with non-REM sleep during which your body functions slow down and you get your deepest sleep.
You can see how a person has several dreams in one night if they go through multiple REM cycles.
During the REM phase, we experience something referred to as muscle et tonia, which basically means that our arms and legs,
become paralyzed and this prevents us it prevents us from again evolutionarily if we're
thinking about things that would have been most productively successful getting up
and running off a cliff to your death because you're dreaming it wouldn't be too
productive or successful in life there wouldn't be a
successful pattern to inherit from your parents and of course sleep is not a human
thing exclusively so that would have the paralyization aspect of that would have
developed millions and millions of years back geological time and it's kind of I
remember I actually used to stop or I used to sleep on my stomach all the time and I
stopped doing that for for a while and now I'm really like extra cautious when I do because I remember I was
in that stage one night and I think my head was just maybe I had a congested nose and because my
whole body was paralyzed and I desperately wanted to move but my body was not responding and that was
kind of a it was certainly a lot had a lasting effect on me in the sense that I don't do it
again definitely modified my behavior during sleep REM helps us renew and restore
our energy dreams work on our brains to segregate information so they do
we're talking about dreams here and it's it's a way to analyze and
following the data and we've absorbed during conscious waking hour
And to me that's so interesting. You know, our brain always say this, but it's one of the coolest things I've learned about the human body and really about the universe in general in science.
And it's really a common thread across all domains of human activity that interest me like psychology, you know, hard science like physics.
in chemistry and you know more speculative things religion and philosophy it's the human brain is the most complex thing
and that we know about it's the most complex single entity you know we could take sets of humans i guess
and say it's that's more complex than an individual human but
Nonetheless, um, yeah, our brains are unfathomably complex.
It's just, I don't know, it's one of those things that just, when you take a step back and really consider, you know, we have, if you have, I don't know, collection of cables or books and whatever, just that small number of items that you're trying to uniquely, arrange in a unique order.
as many unique orders as you can, it's gonna be a pretty large number.
And take our brains that have hundreds of billions of neurons
that interconnect ways that we have some idea of,
but we don't know the extent to which
A, they connect and B, the actual pathway
that the electrical activity takes as it's propagating throughout the brain to I guess form our thoughts and deeper things than just instantaneous thoughts you know memories notions intuitions more fundamentally deeper in the brain drives that we have so the brain is
it just really when you step back it it does it just fills me with wonder it really
does it's like and I think it's ridiculously encouraging to think about now
complex we are and that's that's you you know that's you and I that's indicative
of the limits of our abilities and it's impressive to think about you know what
the upper limit of our potentials might actually be.
And so dreams are a very regulatory phenomenon.
They help us make sense of the world that we observe.
They help us organize, like it said, organize our thoughts.
And they, one theory is that dreams are kind of your ways,
your brain's way of exploring the mental landscape with increasingly new additions from your daily conscious
experiences and when you have especially impactful events happen to you of course your brain's
going to hang on and it's going to try to during sleep cross correlate that experience with
previous experiences and that's why you might have you know
you know a childhood memory intermingled with a memory from last week and that's not
to say their superficial significance is it's it's it's I think in insightful
to consider that your dreams are your brain's way of almost like a programming
sandbox where you get to play around with ideas
without actually, you know, it's the way of thinking.
We get to explore thought patterns without actually acting on them.
And it's certainly in my life.
You know, I've had very impactful dreams,
whether they're incredibly, you know, depressing if something bad happens to someone close to me in my dream
or horrific if I find myself in a terrifying situation and a nightmare.
It's impactful in a very useful way, I think, because it, it again, it lets me understand
myself a little bit more, recognizing that, recognizing how I might act, how I might respond mentally,
emotionally, in a given situation, you know, so if I, um, I enjoy taking that, that perspective on my dream.
It's and I have a lot to learn. I don't know much about it, but I really latched on to that that idea. I think it was
Maybe Carl Jung's idea of dreams
At least just one component of his idea about that
That yeah dreams are
Kind of they seem so random, you know, they have this very random element to them and
It's kind of our brains
way of uh and that's it's also kind of weird to think about your brain is both you and something
distinct from you it's like i'm me right now but also my brain kind of does something
autonomously when the conscious me that i'm i think is speaking right now is uh is resting you know so
you're you and you're the person that is within the environment that your brain creates in those dream landscapes so it's
it's kind of wonderful it's magical almost that you know our brain's really on our side it's
just trying to make sense of the world and trying to connect ideas and um yeah occasionally we
wake up with profound senses of meaning and you know significance in our dreams that oh wow that was
really helpful you know that was a really insightful thing that happened to me maybe it points you
towards experiences that might give your life more meaning if you experience the loss of a loved one in the
dream maybe that that's your brain's way of telling you that that person means a
little more than you recognized consciously so yeah dreams are amazing and I'd
definitely be interested in talking about them more in the future and this
person ends with a little a very small dream interpretation says I had a dream
Paula and I got in the trouble for driving from the elementary school to the high school
when we were supposed to walk some authority figure
Mrs. Milan caught us behind boxes, caught us hiding behind boxes, and started screaming at us.
We didn't come out and she called the cops and then we ran away.
And her analysis is that being chased is a cusses
common theme in dreams, you know, it's one of the most primordial things, fight or flight, can relate to things that pertain to anxiety and emotions of inferiority from, you know, experiences in life.
So while we might not have gotten into the deepest scientific research about sleep, we, um, we can come away from this knowing that both the quantity and quality,
of sleep is definitely significant. You need, I would recommend eight hours. I mean some people,
some very successful people, Schwarzenegger, Elon Musk, Trump, I think they all get less than six
hours of sleep in night. I know me personally, I'm cognitively, and maybe it's just because I'm not
adapted to less than eight, but after, when I get eight hours of sleep, I am the,
most cognitively acute and alert I wake up feeling most refreshed after having that
much sleep a night of uninterrupted sleep leaves both our bodies and our
minds rejuvenated for the next day if sleep is cut short we're really doing
our body and our mind the disservice the body won't have time to complete all its
its phases needed for muscle repair, memory consolidation, and the release of hormones that regulate
growth and appetite as well. And you can imagine, I mean, it's not a stretch to assume
the body is a functional, especially working on a circadian rhythm, a 24-hour-ish cycle,
diminishing the quality of activity in one area of that cycle is going to propagate negative
repercussions down the line and so it's going to make you it's going to offset your appetite
it's going to deregulate your your body's um energy levels uh your alertness um your judgment
you're probably going to be more likely to uh do things that are negative
for your health. It's in concentration, decision making, being fully engaged in the moment.
You're certainly not in your optimal consciousness when you don't have sufficient sleep.
So just remember that. Pay attention to your body when it tells you you need to sleep.
and do yourself a favor and get on a regular sleep schedule.
Get on a regular daily routine, actually, for that matter.
That's something I've been working on myself.
I don't want to sound like a hypocrite.
I've noticed the benefits of being more routized
and being more rigid with my schedule.
I love this ex-marine.
He's just a badass.
Jocco Willink.
He has a great podcast,
I think just called the Jocko podcast in,
you know,
blunt,
um,
Spartan,
marine aesthetic,
as you would imagine they would have.
It's,
he,
he has a,
I think he has a book called this too,
but his general philosophy is discipline equals freedom.
And I like it's catchy because it doesn't make sense.
at first but the idea behind it is that you allow yourself more free time by being more disciplined
to efficiently take care of the chores and the daily responsibilities that you have to take care of
and um you know by by adhering to a routine you don't have to waste time or mental effort
Mental energy is deciding what to eat, how to cook it, what to wear, when to be somewhere, when to leave the house, you know, what to do before you leave the house, how to get yourself ready for bed.
All these things add up to, you know, a mental deficit at the end of the day.
And it's really a detriment to yourself.
And you're really, you're fighting against yourself.
You're going against the grain.
when you try to, when you don't have a routine and aren't disciplined, it's, um, I'm slowly,
yeah, too slowly, but eventually I'm getting around to figuring out that it's so beneficial.
It's extremely healthy to, to live the most productive, efficient life that you possibly can,
because your body rewards you with, um, less anxiety.
it knows what you're going to be doing
you can segregate
and allot yourself
a couple hours at the end of the day
we're in the morning whenever
when you're most at most alert to
you know tackle the things that you
have a passion for
and
it's
it's something
certainly I would highly recommend
so sleep is
key to
ending and starting
and starting of course, your waking activities.
A couple facts as I'll let you go and relax and drift off to sleep.
If it takes you less than five minutes to fall asleep at night, you're probably sleep deprived.
I know that doesn't make sense, but you should ideally take 10 to 15 minutes once your head hits that pillow to really wind down
and sink into the state of unconsciousness we call sleep.
Any less than that, you're probably not getting enough sleep then.
It's to be expected that you're going to be tired.
Tiredness happens twice a day, as you would imagine,
on a rhythmic cyclical existence.
2 a.m. and 2 p.m. for people,
the people who rise with the sun, I guess.
are the most are the peak lethargy times of peak lethargy during the day that's why you're
going to be much less alert after lunch I personally just don't eat as big I wait till
evening to eat my big meals because after I eat a big meal I know either way even if I
just woke up I want to sit down and be a little bit um set in terms
for a little bit. Again, going back to not having a good schedule, the Monday morning social
jet lags caused by weekend more your mentality, switching up your schedule just to suck a couple
extra hours out of your weekend. It really kicks you in the ass by disrupting your regulatory
systems like sleep. They're not used to staying up to L.A.
or on Monday morning getting up that early again.
So you don't want to jolt yourself out of a routine.
You want to try as consistently as possible to maintain that routine.
At least if you want to, unless you're willing to pay the price of,
you know, an unregulated cycle,
which might be more anxiety,
perhaps mental,
maybe less emotional stability overall.
Stress, physical or mental illness,
living or sleeping arrangements,
family history, shift work,
working late into the night, long hours,
diet and exercise habits can all cause insomnia.
All right guys, this is probably a really good time for me to let you guys go.
It just started raining outside and maybe I'll let that play out for a little bit
Hope you guys were able to learn something. I know if you guys get plenty of sleep tonight
Thanks for watching and as always thank you guys
Enormously for all the support and kind words you always shower me with
It's an absolute honor to be able to
spread ideas. I think like TED talks I guess worth sharing
I hope you guys got something out of this.
I'll see you next time. Thanks.
