Sex With Emily - Better Sleep for Better Sex w/ Dr Breus
Episode Date: January 13, 2021Today, we’re talking about my second-favorite bedroom activity: sleep. I’m putting on my PJs, setting my phone to ‘Do Not Disturb’, and sitting down with sleep expert Dr. Michael Breus. He tel...ls me how to figure out what kind of sleeper you are, what that says about your sex drive, and how you can take advantage of your body’s natural rhythm to optimize your day.We also take calls helping people figure out their sleep schedule, what medications work best for sleep, and best practices to deal with sleep apnea. After all, better sleep=better sex, so it’s something we should ALL prioritize.For more information about Dr. Michael Breus, visit: thesleepdoctor.comFor even more sex advice, tips, and tricks visit sexwithemily.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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What a most men wake up with.
Unreaction.
Right.
If that is not mother nature telling you when to use that thing, I don't know what is,
right?
Look into his eyes.
They're the eyes of a male obsessed by sex.
Eyes that mock our sacred institutions.
Betrubize they call them in a fight on days.
You're listening to Sex with Emily.
I'm Dr. Emily and I'm here to help you prioritize your pleasure and liberate the conversation around sex.
All right, today we're talking about my second favorite bedroom activity,
sleep. So I'm putting my pajamas, setting my phone to do not disturb and sitting
down with sleep expert, Dr. Michael Bruce.
Michael Bruce is a PhD clinical psychologist.
He was one of the youngest people to pass the board at age 31.
And with a specialty in sleep disorders, one of only 168 psychologists in the world with
his credentials and distinction.
His two books, The Sleep Doctors, Diet Plan, and The Power of When are excellent.
So in this show, he tells me how to figure out what kind of sleeper you are, what that
says about your sex drive, and how you could take advantage of your body's natural rhythm to optimize your day. We also take
calls helping people figure out their sleep schedule, like what medications work best for
sleep, the best practices to deal with sleep apnea, you know, come on, better sleep equals
better sex. So I believe it's something we should all prioritize.
All right, intentions with Emily, for each episode, join me in setting an intention for equals better sex. So I believe it's something we should all prioritize.
All right, intentions with them,
like for each episode,
join me in setting an intention for the show.
I do it.
I encourage you to do the same.
So when you're listening,
what do you want to get out of this episode?
How could it help you?
It could be, finally,
I just want to get better sleep.
Tell me how.
Well, my intention is to show you how with just a little bit
of effort you can improve your sleep,
which is going to help in every area of your life. All right, enjoy the show.
Welcome to the show, Dr. Michael Bruce. So excited to have you.
My name is Dr. Emily. It's my super duper pleasure to be here.
Yeah, I mean, we've been thinking for a while. I was like, gosh, it means sleep.
I think sleep is having a moment. The last few years. I mean, we've been thinking for a while. I was like, gosh, I mean, sleep.
And I think sleep is having a moment.
The last few years, I feel like everyone's been
sh- right?
Everyone's been ha- not even to mention what's been going on during COVID.
I think everyone is, is, is, their sleep is impacted.
You know, we have never been under this much stress in our lives, but we're also, you
know, we're not sleeping.
We don't know why.
But really, this time, I'm excited, it is having a moment. So what, what's going on? Tell me're not sleeping. We don't know why. But really, this time, this time is having a moment.
So what's going on telling me why?
Go tell me Dr. Bruce.
So, I mean, this moment in particular,
I would argue that stress is having a very unique impact.
So it's not the normal kind of stress.
So like I live just outside of Los Angeles.
And so stress is traffic here.
That is nothing compared to the
stress, right? That everybody is feeling right now. We're feeling a unique type of stress
about our vitality, about our health, about our families health, about our extended families
health, our friends health. We're worried about careers, people's jobs may be working, may not
be working. So that level of stress is absolutely playing a havoc on us now. But the other thing
that's really unfortunate is people aren't moving. So people don't really think about it, but you
know, something that sleep is recovery. So you have to have something to recover from in order to
have good recovery. And so I had one of my clients, who's a celebrity tweeted the other day, they said,
I've taken 200 steps and it's 2 p.m. And I'm like, oh my God, I'm like,
I'm a good 8,000 steps into my day by 2 p.m.
And it just kind of shows you that this lack of movement
being thrown off schedule is another one
that really seems to be playing havoc
on people specific to COVID.
Nobody has to commute anymore.
So everybody can kind of fall out of bed,
throw on a ball cap, switch on their zoom background of choice. And voila, you're in a meeting, right?
And so once again, we're not seeing the consistency that we used to see in the patterns of our sleep.
And that consistency really was incredibly helpful. And I don't think many people realize
it.
Right. Everything's been disrupted. Everything's been thrown out of whack. And then to try
to find order in this or of disorder and trauma fo
sleep is one of the first
go right? Well then befor
sleep become the little b
right. And so here's what
all of a sudden, a several
of collided number one, we
lot better. So now we've g bands, we've got wristbands, we've got things under our mattresses that can start to give us a little bit
more feedback so we can start to understand more about our sleep. So that's certainly helpful.
The other thing that we started to realize is that performance is really directly tied to sleep.
All kinds of performance. So like financial performance, like how well you do at work, relationship performance, sexual performance,
certainly has got its roots in sleep.
So, you know, when you start to think about
all things performance related,
we as a species seem to be kind of evolving
towards this sort of high performance,
high tech sort of universe,
guess what, sleep's going there too.
And we're all trying to figure it out as fast as we can.
Yeah, we really, really are right in all the impact of the lights. And I'm going to talk about
the blue light blockers. Right. And maybe we're just, if that's all going to be in our phones,
right? We're staring at our phones all day. Now, even more so we're on our computers because there's
no break. You know, you don't have to commute anymore. So you can have more meetings, but you're
staring at your computer screen. That's gonna impact our sleep.
Yeah, which is not so great,
not only for eye strain,
but also exposure to the blue light
that's in the computer screen.
I'm oftentimes recommending to people,
there's a free software out there.
It's called Flux, FLUX.
You download it, put it on your laptop,
and it will automatically change
what's called the color temperature of the screen, the
monitor.
So that way you're not getting the blue light in the evenings.
I mean, you know, if you're in a studio, obviously, there's lighting.
So that's a different story.
But then like I also tell a lot of my, my female patients, they said to them, you know, look,
like if you wear makeup, don't take your makeup off as the last thing that you do at night
because you're in front of this huge brightly lit mirror usually, right?
You know, because you're really trying to get it out from the pores and,
you know, under the eyeballs and all that kind of good stuff, right?
And so I'm like, dude, don't do that in front of a brightly lit.
Like you're telling your brain, it's basically sunshine morning time, right?
So take your makeup off at six o'clock or, you know, seven o'clock,
you know, earlier in the evening, then, you know,
chill out, throw on a ponytail or whatever you do, and then you're off to the races, right?
And then you're not getting this massive dose of blue light in the evening.
I never even thought about that.
My show's over at seven.
I'm just trying to take it off.
It's a great hack.
Yes.
I'm going to take it.
I usually take it off at seven.
Now I'll just take it off at seven o' two.
I probably, yeah, it's the last thing I do.
It is the last thing I do.
Right. Oh gosh, yeah, it's the last thing I do. It is the last thing I do. Right. Right.
Oh gosh, this is amazing. Okay, well before you enter this, I do want to talk about how
sleep impacts our sex life. But the first thing off the top of my head is that one of the
most common questions I get asked over the last 15 years is, I want sex more often than
my partner. What do we do? And then a lot of times it comes to you, well, I'm a morning
person. My partner's a night person. Right. How do we make that work?
We're not home in the middle of the day, even now, maybe we are, but still then, how does
it impact our sex life?
All right.
So this is the $64,000 question, as they say.
So in my book called The Power of When, I actually took a look at this question, because this
is a question that I actually get asked on a very regular basis is what's going on here.
So first of all, what we're talking about
is a basic idea that I call chronotypes.
So people may have not heard the word chronotype before,
but you have heard of the concept,
if you've ever heard of somebody being called an early bird
or somebody being called a night owl, right?
Those are chronotypes.
So originally we thought that there were three.
There were early birds, what we called in the middle
or humming birds, not the best of names,
and then night owls, right?
So I added a fourth chronotype to the literature.
And so by the way, these are genetic.
So it's not like you can happen to choose,
hey, I wanna be a morning person,
or I wanna, this is actually something where we see
a single nucleotide polymorphism,
or what we call a SNIP, on a particular gene,
the PER3 gene. This is what actually has a lot to do
with scheduling within your circadian system.
So when you see the polymorphism there,
it makes you an early bird or it makes you a night owl.
So this is where it gets interesting.
By the way, if this is one of these genetic things,
and it's kind of in bread in us,
we wanna figure out what that is,
we probably, probably wanna be dating somebody that's the same chronotype as us, you know, we want to figure out what that is. We probably, probably want to be dating
somebody that's the same chronotype as us, right? Like, wouldn't you want to?
Well, that should be, yes. I mean, I always say, so here's my question.
Yeah. So here's my question. And why doesn't like match.com or like e harmony? Like, why
don't they ask these questions? Like, wouldn't, like, Wouldn't there be a ton of sleep-related questions
that you'd want to know about your partner before they became your partner? I want to know
do they snore? Do they get warm or cold? What side of the bed do they sleep on? Firm
bed, soft bed. There's a bunch of factors here, right?
Yeah, snore and a soft mattress were done Like let's not even go out for drinks.
Let's just call it there, right? I mean, you see what I'm saying? Yeah, see, I already do
we just sleep. It's critical. It's part of the human condition. It's all about the relationship,
the core is sleep, for sure. And you can't change that. So I always thought there should be a dating
app for sex. Like why don't we just lead with what we like? It's sex important to me. And by
someone who wants to prioritize pleasure, we should just do an app together.
But you're right.
So let me answer the question.
Go, yeah.
How does it work?
What do we know?
So here's the basic answer to the question.
When we look across chronotypes, right?
You need five hormones to have successful sex to be elevated.
You need estrogen, progesterone, testosterone.
You need cortisol and adrenaline all to be high, right?
You want all of those to be high. You want melatonin, the sleep hormone, you want that to be left, right?
So we did a survey, 74% of people like to have sex between 10, 30 and 11, 30 at night.
What do you think their hormone profile looks like?
The opposite, right?
Right.
The melatonin is high and all the things that are supposed to be high.
I love, right?
Right.
So that's that's clue number one as to what might be going on here.
And if you're in a heterosexual relationship,
what a most men wake up with.
Unreaction.
Right.
If that is not mother nature telling you when to use that thing,
I don't know what is, right?
Right.
Yes, I agree with you.
You already got to go and you got to have the problem there, right?
I have to have the problem sort answered. Yeah, because you've got that you've got the elevation and testosterone there
So it makes a lot more sense. So a lot of times, you know, I have a lot of patients who say to me, you know
I like having you know intercourse with my partner, but he falls asleep afterwards all the time
And I want to like spend more time or whatever and so I'm like, well, okay
Well, what about morning sex and I'm like I'm being a sex doctor, not a sleep doctor here,
but what I'm talking to them about is when they want to do that.
And so that's really what we talk about.
So I actually created a matrix in the book.
So what do we do?
And an early bird is already married to a night owl, right?
That's a big question.
I had to create a matrix in the book.
And in the book, I also have a matrix
for lesbian couples
and gay couples because the hormone profiles would go.
Wow.
This is amazing.
It's awesome, right?
It's great.
Hack.
Yes.
The science is incredible.
I love the science of it.
And I love, because I actually want to talk about two, the chronotypes, go back to that.
Your chrono quiz, you can find it at chronoquiz.com, that's CHRR-O-N-O quiz.com,
because you're saying that these chronotypes
are set at birth.
It's about our hormones.
So you can't really change it,
but my question is,
I feel like I used to be when I was younger,
when my mom was always like,
you're a night owl, you're a night owl, you're up so late.
And then over the years,
I used to run marathons and stuff,
like 20, I used to get up really early.
But now I feel like I'm seriously like a night owl. I go back to that, but I think I want to be marathons and stuff like 20, I used to get up really early, but now I feel like I'm seriously like a night
I'll go back to that,
but I think I want to be a morning person
because that seems like the right way to be.
So are you saying it's set?
And let's talk more about that.
Let's talk about what we call crono longevity.
Okay, across the lifetime.
So guess what?
Everybody is a chronotype at certain points of their lives.
So think about it.
If you have a baby, right?
Babies are lions, they're early birds, right?
They go to bed super early,
they wake up super early, right?
That's the earliest chronotype.
My, what I call my lion chronotype.
Then you got a toddler,
toddler through middle school.
When do they go to bed?
They go to bed when the sun kind of goes down,
they kind of get up when the sun kind of comes up.
They're kind of in the middle,
like what a hummingbird would be
or what I call a bear, right?
Then you got teenagers, right?
I got two teenagers.
I've got an 18-year-old son, 17-year-old daughter, okay?
It's hell, all right?
I'm just letting you know.
There's nothing fun about having teenagers.
But what do they want to do?
They want to stay up until two o'clock in the morning.
They want to sleep until two o'clock in the afternoon, right?
Those are wolves.
Those are the night owls, right?
So everybody goes through, by the time you reach about 18, 19, 20 years old,
it kind of sets in, then it kind of stays with you,
assuming no major circumstance kind of juts in and changes things,
like you have to take a shift work job and you become like a night shift worker,
something like that, you know, or,
and in some cases, motherhood can be one of those jobs that go right in
and mess up your sleep schedule pretty bad.
So, and that's a whole other line of.
Yeah, that's a no sleep chronotype, right?
That's just exactly that.
Exactly, that's a mess chronotype.
But yeah, so, you know, the whole thing kind of works itself up, but then when you get
older, so I'm 52 years old, so right around 55-ish, my melatonin is going to start to slow down,
which means I'm going to start backing up because I'm more of a night owl. I don't go to bed
before midnight, ever. I just don't. Okay, never have. Okay, you don't go bed. And then do you wake up?
So at the same time, or do you, I know how important that is. Yeah, so it turns out that your wake-up
time is more important than your bedtime. And so when I started an experiment on myself about three or four years ago,
where I was like, I'm going to wake up at the exact same time every single day,
no matter what.
And so 730 was the time that my body naturally woke up because I'm kind of a
night owl.
I'm not kind of that early person.
So I wake up 730, 730, then also I didn't need an alarm to wake up.
And then all of a sudden, I was waking up 715.
And then it was 7 o'clock.
I wake up at 613 every single morning now. I still go to bed at midnight. That has
not changed at all. So how do you explain that?
My entire sleep schedule has begun to consolidate based on how strictly I'm following my circadian
rhythm. Yeah. Right. So that's kind of the super hack here. So so I'm a high
performance sleep coach now. So I work with CEOs athletes like you know
celebrities who say to me Michael, I need my sleep but I don't have the time to
do that. Can you help me get there in a healthy way? And the answer is
absolutely. I can. Oh, so okay okay. So then we're talking about following
your unique circadian rhythms.
They're so quick.
So you can hack your sleep,
but there must be so many factors,
diet, exercise, right?
Oh, of course there are.
Yeah.
So we layer all that in.
And that's the cool part about
this whole circadian rhythm thing.
It's not just sleep.
All of your rhythms flow based on
when you go to bubbed and when you wake up
based on your melatonin rhythm.
So like your cortisol doesn't kick off on your melatonin rhythm. So like your cortisol doesn't
kick off until your melatonin
is going down.
So everything goes and it's
very, very predictable.
So the rest of the book is
where it tells you all the
different cool things.
Like I told you how I can tell
you the exact time to have sex,
eat a cheeseburger,
ask your boss for a raise.
Like literally you name it.
It's all based on the hormone flow.
So if you can predict where somebody serotonin is
at a particular time of day, you know that you can say
certain things to them how they'll take it.
It's very predictable.
But if it's different for everybody,
then how would I know would not have to get it?
It's not, there's only four types.
So, but how would you know your boss's type, for example?
Of course, I could, that's easy to figure out.
If your boss emails you at four o'clock in the morning,
guess what, they're alliant, right?
Right.
This isn't hard to figure out.
You can hack that right with your employee, I guess, with your stuff.
Yeah, you're right.
If your boss shows up right and never has a meeting before, like nine o'clock,
they're probably a bear, right?
If your boss never makes it into early morning meetings
and is usually later in the day person,
they're probably a wolf.
And if their boss is emailing you 24-7,
they're probably a dolphin.
Oh my God, you guys, well, they know that I'm a wolf.
Because I do a show late, so I am a night person.
We're gonna take a quick break, but we come back.
We're gonna find out what couples should do
if they have different coronetimes.
Okay, so this is something Dr. Michael Bruce.
I'm curious about how couples, typically their sleep can be a thing like if I was with a snorer or
somebody who was, you know, woke up super early and I'm a night owl. All these things aren't
going to, aren't going to work together. But how do we, how do we do with that? Like someone
is an insomniac, you're saying usually there's not two in every relationship of somebody who's
got sleep problems and someone doesn't. So what do you, we don't get matched on that,
unfortunately. Dude, let me just tell you,
let me just tell you that I've saved more marriages
as a sleep specialist than I ever would have
as a marital therapist just by getting people back
into the bedroom together, you'd be shocked.
So snoring is the number one usually problem
that I'm dealing with from a relationship couple standpoint,
right?
And so what's that all about? So usually the snore is the guy, and it's usually because he has
gotten pretty comfortable and started to gain some weight. And so as men gain weight, we gain
weight through our necks and around our spare tire bellies, okay? Women gain weight in different
places. And so what we know is when men gain weight in their throat, it begins to crush their throat. So if you've ever been in the garden and you
stick your thumb over the hose, the water squirts out a lot faster, right? Same holds true
with their... Here, the nose is the hose. So as you gain weight, the hose is getting crushed,
which means the air has to move faster, which causes a vibration, which causes the
snore. So all of the sudden, somebody's in their relationship for a little while, they've gained a couple pounds and all of a sudden boom, they start to snore.
Now, some people were snores beforehand or some people only snore when they drink alcohol, right?
So all of these can play into whether or not somebody can get a good night's sleep. And there's
a fourth kind of snoring. And that is the pet that snores. So Emily, you know that I have a French bulldog.
And that's all they do. You go. Right. It's because he's a heroic snorer, as we like to call him.
And he sleeps in my bed. So that's a whole nother story. And that's another question that you
would have between couples, right? And here's the thing, like, why is it like, why don't we figure
that out early, you know,
in a relationship?
Because I think some of those are some pretty
interesting questions to have,
but snoring is a big one,
and there's actually real data behind it.
And so one of the things we now know,
number one, snoring is not just a social nuisance.
People who snore do have a significant increase in mortality.
We do know that they have a significant increase
in the ability to gain weight. So there's all calls, I mean, it's all calls mortality, like it know that they have a significant increase in the ability to gain weight.
So there's all calls mortality, like it's no messing around, like the real deal is there
and it is a precursor to sleep apnea.
So we don't have to say, you know, sleep apnea is a big deal, all that kind of stuff, but
not only is it not good for the person who snores, but it's actually not good for the
person who's lying next to them.
The data now suggests that the person lying next to a snorer
loses approximately one hour of sleep themselves
from listening to that snorer.
So it is their problem, it is your problem,
it is your problem, it is their problem
when we talk about stuff like snoring.
And look, let's be fair.
If all we're talking about here
is a little bit of weight loss in many of the cases, we're not, I'm not saying you got to drop 50 pounds.
I'm saying a five pound weight difference, right? So a five pound weight difference for
a 200 pound guy is 10 pounds. Like, it's not that much. That would lower probably about
20 to 25 decibels, which would probably change everything and allow everybody to be able
to fall back asleep. I am however saying, if you're thinking of sleep apnea or your bed partner says,
do they hear just stop breathing? Just sleep, please get a check.
Well, that makes I feel like so snoring in most cases is something that you could correct by
perhaps going on a reading one of your books, going out of sleep cycle, losing weight.
So there's also some other things that going on right?
Yeah, so there's losing weight, but there's also devices out there. There are
mouth guards that can be actually very, very helpful. And to be clear, you
don't want to just go get a boiling bite, you know, mouth guard that you get off
the TV, because you can get up with job problems. Also, if you have TMJ, it can
make TMJ significantly worse. So this is something you want to get from a dentist.
They're dentists now that are actually
Board certified in dental sleep medicine.
And so it's great because they put, you know,
They can move your jaw forward.
Then they're commercially available things that you can go to get it
CVS or whatever.
One is called mute MUTE, which is a nasal stent.
It goes inside the nostrils.
So this is like a miracle cure for snoring for a lot of people because what it does is it literally just kind of opens up
The nut so think of a breathe-right strip, but on the inside. It's not uncomfortable
You're thinking oh my god who's gonna shove that thing up their nose right trust me. They will
30 seconds after you put it in you really don't feel it and so it actually works out really really well
I work out with one on and it's great because I get more oxygen. And if I drink bourbon, my wife's like,
go put your nose thingy and I want to hear you tonight.
So these are great hacks where I use the breathe right chips because I realize,
as I've gotten older, I feel like it's harder for me to breathe some time.
So is it the same?
But then sometimes I like, my mom called me that I was wearing it.
She like, face time with me and she's like, what's on her nose?
Cause I don't wear it like on the show here, because we're on video.
But is this the same thing?
This one you could, nobody would even see it.
And you'd breathe a lot better.
It's called mute.
M-U-T-E, like hit the mute button.
And I can get it at CVS.
I think it's 14 bucks.
Okay, I'm going to buy one of those.
This is super happy.
We have some calls coming in.
I'm talking to Dr. Michael Buss.
I hear it out.
And we have Marie 23 in Texas has a snoring challenge
in her relationship.
Hi Marie, you're out with Emily, Dr. Bruce.
Hi.
Hi.
Thanks for coming.
I'll take a look.
OK, so it's kind of typical basics.
But so my boyfriend and I, we've been together
for a couple of years now.
He has a really big, no one problem.
I mean, really big, okay?
She sounds like a bear when he sleeps.
It wakes up the whole house.
So it just makes me really tired in the morning.
I go to bed early, I work really early
and it just keeps me up all night.
I've tried earplugs, he's tried nose strips,
he's tried allergy medication, all the things you could try.
And it just really, it makes me tired,
it makes me irritable towards him.
And I don't know, sometimes I feel like it affects
our sex life too, and I don't know.
Yeah, what do we do after brewed with the snoring,
such?
This is exactly the situation that I hear about all the time.
So number one is one of the things
that you should consider doing is going to see a sleep doctor
to evaluate the snoring.
Because if somebody's snoring is waking up the whole house,
there's a very high likelihood
that they have sleep apnea.
It's highly unlikely that that level of volume
and frequency of snoring wouldn't have
some sort of apnic characteristics to it.
So I would say, I have the person evaluated
by a sleep specialist, and that'll set you down the path
of ways to actually correct the problem.
And I think that would probably be the first thing
that I would consider doing.
The second thing I would consider doing
is putting him in another room.
There's really no reason for you to continue
to be disrupted by his, you've got to go to,
I mean, if he's got the issue,
why is it disruptive to you and your life?
He can go into a guest room or he can go to the couch.
At the end of the day, I mean,
I'm not trying to be a not so nice guy about it,
but if you continue to make the problem easy for him
to not fix, then he's not going to fix it, right?
Yeah.
So I would say, you know, I mean,
I'm not saying do it in a mean way,
I'm saying doing it a loving way like, hey babe, I can't sleep. I need to go to work and it's a problem.
So I'm going to need you to sleep, you know, kind of on the couch until we can kind of figure this
thing out. I mean, trust me, it doesn't, it doesn't feel good to be told that, but at the end of the
day, it's pretty motivating. Right. Possibly get something done. And if it's something really going on with his health,
like there might be a suspicion of,
then maybe you're doing him a favor.
Yeah.
Yeah, Marie.
I have a thought about it.
Yeah.
Marie, you know, we've got these tough conversations,
you know, you're acquiescing,
but it's also impacting your, you know,
your ability to show up the day.
So thanks, Marie.
Let's know how it goes. Okay?
Thanks for calling. Yeah, absolutely. Good luck. Yeah, don't go anywhere. We come back. We'll take a call about
CBD and sleep.
We have Jane 15 Illinois has a question for us.
Hi Jane, thanks for calling.
Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
How can we help?
Thank you both for taking my call.
You bet.
My question is, with the COVID stuff and dealing with the junk that I'm not really healthy
in, I've got quite a bit of stress and anxiety.
Been affecting my sleep to the point where I wake up with my job
plant.
I had to stay in what's the dentist, he's like,
God, it looks like that tooth is that trauma.
And I'm pretty sure it's from watching my job when I sleep.
I recently started taking CBB oil, hoping that that would help with my
stress and anxiety and I'm not even a week in, but I definitely feel calmer. But I don't
know that it's necessarily helping my sleep. And so I'm wondering if you might have any insight on CBD oil and how that might help or any other
tips to sleep and stay asleep and turn my brain off.
That is the question.
How do we turn our brains off?
Thanks, James.
It's a great question.
What about CBD oil and sleep?
So, if you look at the data and unfortunately, there's not a tremendous amount of data on CBD
and sleep as of yet.
You would need probably north of 160 to 180 milligrams a night of CBD for it to actually have an
effect on sleep itself. So you'd need to have a quite a bit of CBD. Now, if you had a little bit of THC in there, then it would act more as an
accelerant, and you wouldn't need as much CBD. Now, off the top of my head, I can't remember
if Illinois is of one of the city or states, rather, that is got medical marijuana as legal
or cannabis or recreational or what have you. If it isn't yet, it probably will be soon.
I think there's some great options looking at cannabis for possibilities for sleep.
When we're talking about stress and we're talking about turning off our brain, that's
one of the things that cannabis actually does pretty well. But to be clear, I'm not talking
about getting stoned, I'm talking about getting to sleep. So there are products on the market now
that are being created that you can find in dispensaries
that are specifically targeted to sleep.
Again, it's not there to get you all psychedelic and high.
I mean, that's fine if you want to be recreational,
but that's not what this is for.
This is specifically to help lower that anxiety
that you would be having before bed,
to help you kind of coast off
and be able to follow sleep.
Now, to be fair, if cannabis isn't your thing, which for a lot of people it's not, or can't be yet,
there's actually a couple of other options on the marketplace that people should be aware of.
My absolute favorite thing to tell people about is magnesium.
Most people are magnesium deficient. So if you really want to go with the best starting route,
what you really want to do is you want to look at your magnesium, your vitamin D, your iron. If you're deficient
in any one of those three, get that fixed first. If you can get that fixed first, then you
at least know what's going on because sometimes you're correcting for a problem that you don't
really need to correct for. So make sure that you've got magnesium, vitamin D, and iron
up to par first.
I think somebody put in the chat that it's recreationally
legal in Illinois.
Thanks.
Yeah.
Thank you for that, by the way.
So thanks, Blaze.
Thanks, Blaze.
Huh, Blaze, that's funny.
So, Blaze knows all about it.
Blaze knows all about the weed, dude.
I love it, Blaze.
You're awesome.
So when you're looking at cannabis as a potential option,
that can certainly be one.
But there's also a couple of other things out there
that are pretty interesting in the marketplace.
So I work with this company called EBE.
Now this is gonna sound crazy, first of all.
I'm just warning you ahead of time,
but this is really cool technology.
So I work with this company,
and what they do is they have this thing that they put.
It's a cold press that goes across to your head and you follow sleep wearing it and it
stays on your head all night long and it slows down the cerebral spinal fluid.
It slows down everything and slows down your thinking.
Not to the point of like you can't think, but it actually turns off your brain in a sense.
It's very unique. it's very cutting edge.
It literally was released on the market four months ago.
It's got so much science behind it
and the science is pristine.
The science is by one of the top sleep researchers
in the world, Dr. Eric Knoff Singer.
So he looked at the neuro protective effect of cold.
So when somebody cracks their head open
and they end up in the emergency room,
we wrapped their head in ice to keep everything there, but also to slow everything
down. Take that idea, and I'll put it into a headband that you put on somebody as they're
trying to fall asleep, and it just slows that thinking down and makes things so much easier.
So there's lots of different things. I think people need to be considering when they're
looking at difficulty falling asleep, not being able to turn off their brain, but to be clear, stress is certainly a big one.
And it's definitely clearly telling you
that you need to do something about it.
So thanks for calling in.
I really do the best.
Yeah, thanks, Jane.
I mean, so I think to answer your question,
see, it can work CBD, but also I look what you're saying
is if it is a little more.
You need a lot of CBD.
You need a whole lot of CBD.
So THC, it's a little bit of THC,
and if you go into a dispensary, they can help you
with this.
It helps to activate the CBD so it'd be more effective.
Yeah, it just makes it, it just pushes it through a little bit quicker.
And also helps lower the anxiety, right?
That's what THC kind of does.
Exactly.
All right, Jane.
Great, thank you.
Thank you, Jane.
Thanks for calling.
Yeah, appreciate you.
That is so interesting, too.
The thing about cold, though, I would think it's called
the Ebb.
I would think that, you know, if you put splash
cold water on your face when you want to wake up,
so to have a cold band around your head.
It is.
Well, remember that your core body temperature
has to drop in order for melatonin production to begin.
So it actually follows your core body temperature.
That's why things like the oro ring and the straps
on the arm can be able to measure your sleep.
Now what about, where is one place to start
to get your sleep regulated
to feel like you have a control of your sleep
rather than it's controlling you?
Okay, so I'm gonna give all of your listeners
a five step plan.
Okay.
Everybody can do and it's not gonna cost you a dime.
And your sleep will be significantly better. Okay. Okay. So step number one is to pick one wake up time and stick to it. I would tell you go to
Chrono quiz figure out what your wake up time should be and do it that way. If you don't want to do it that way, that's fine. But figure out what your wake up time is seven days a week, including the weekends.
seven days a week, including the weekends. Including weekends.
I thought you were gonna say that.
No, don't mess around.
Circadian consistency.
Number one.
Okay, step number two, caffeine.
Stop caffeine by 2 p.m. Why 2 p.m.?
So most people don't know caffeine
has a half life of between six and eight hours, right?
And so if you stop it too, and it's eight hours,
because maybe you're a slow metabolizer,
half of it's out by 10.
It's a round when most people are gonna be going to sleep.
So you wanna have your coffee, have it in the morning, but stop by 2. Step number 2, stop
caffeine by 2pm. Step number 3, alcohol. All right? Look, there's a really big difference between
going to sleep and passing out, okay? Right? We don't like the passing out. We like the going to
sleep. It turns out that there's a very important relationship to understand here. It's all about
the time in which you have your last sip
to lights out.
Whatever that time frame in is going to have the greatest
effect on your sleep.
So if that time is very short, it will have a very large effect.
If that time is longer, it will have a smaller effect.
So step number three is to stop alcohol three hours
before bed.
It takes the average human approximately one hour
to digest one alcoholic beverage.
So I figure you go to two glasses of wine,
I'm gonna give you a little bit of room
for maybe a half a glass more, but to be fair,
you don't wanna go over to.
For most people, it gives them energy,
it doesn't make them relaxed,
and for men it can make them aggressive.
Step number four is exercise, exercise daily.
But don't exercise too close to bedtime because like we were talking about
We don't you buy to cool down not warm up. So stop exercise for hours before bed. Step number five
This is going to help with brain fog in the morning when you wake up in the morning
You should have a 15 ounce throttle or glass of room temperature water
You should grab it and you should drink it, walk over to the window
and get 15 minutes of direct sunlight. Most people don't know, but in fact, sleep in and of
itself is a dehydrated event. So you actually lose a full liter of water as you drink your water.
You lose a full liter of water every night just from the humidity in your breath. So you need to
get that back in there. And then number two, light that comes from sunlight.
When it hits your eye, you have specific cell
in your eye called melanopsin cells.
These cells will turn off the melatonin faucet
in your brain, which will help you remove brain fog.
Do me a favor though, after you grab that bottle of water
and you walk over to the window to get your sunlight,
put on a robe.
I'm just saying, put on a robe. I'm just saying put on a robe.
Rob, okay, this is great.
That's my best joke.
Come on, that's my best joke.
Even if it is a great joke.
We have a time for one more call.
JJ57 in Texas has a question for the sleep doctor.
What's up JJ?
Hi, I'm a truck driver.
And I've been tested for sleep apnea.
And I have been diagnosed with it.
Yeah.
So I have to use the machine.
Mm-hmm.
Is there any way that I'm ever going to be able to get off
of this machine or is it permanent forever?
It's a great question.
And so there's a lot of things that depend upon my answer,
but I'll give you a general answer
and then one that's a little bit more specific.
So it all depends upon your anatomy.
So for some people, if they've just got big tonsils, if you can remove those tonsils,
then in many cases we can remove the CPAP machine.
There are some very advanced surgeries that have been we've found.
Now, I work with a group out of UCLA and they do some amazing work in looking at ENT
surgery.
So it used to be very barbaric.
We would just cut out everything, throw it in the back
and not worry about it.
Now, it's very target picking.
So yes, you can get off of a CPAP.
Some people can get off a CPAP with weight loss.
And then also some people can get off a CPAP
by using a dental appliance that can work as well as a CPAP.
And then you don't have to lug the machine around with you.
Also, don't forget there are travel CPAPs.
So you might be able to get that
and that might make you like a little bit easier. Yeah, cool. All right, JJ, we got it in. Okay, don't seepaps. So you might be that and that might make
Yeah. Cool. All right,
Okay. Thanks, JJ. Thanks
We will not go anywhere.
You think we're calling.
you the seep doctor dot com
sex tip, sex and sleep.
is have sex in the morning
the lights on the lights on. That's really nice.
Sex, too.
The lights on, or this the sun coming in, right?
Open the curse.
Yeah, open the curse.
Thank you so much for joining us, Dr. Bruce.
You can find more about Dr. Bruce at thesleepdoctor.com,
Instagram and Twitter, thesleepdoctor,
and take his quiz to find out your chronotype
at chronoquiz.com.
That's it for today's episode.
See you on Friday.
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