The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - The Secret To A Good Nights Sleep with Stephanie Romiszewski
Episode Date: January 12, 2021My guest this week is Stephanie Romiszewski, an experienced consultant sleep physiologist. Stephanie specialises in complex sleep cases and developing bespoke treatment plans for sleep problems. She i...s a master in diagnosing and treating sleep disorders, disseminating science to the public through television media, medical legal work, and public speaking. She is Channel 4 series sleep expert, an academic researcher and published author. In my chat with Stephanie we covered various topics from common misconceptions about sleep, insomnia, sleeping pills, how to control our dreams, mental health as it pertains to sleep and much more! Follow Stephanie: Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/stephsleepyhead/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/sleepyclinic Facebook: Sleepyhead Clinic LinkedIn: Stephanie Romiszewski https://www.sleepyheadclinic.co.uk https://sleepyheadprogram.com Follow me: https://beacons.ai/diaryofaceo
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Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly.
First people I want to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show.
Never in my wildest dreams is all I can say.
Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen
and that it would expand all over the world as it has done.
And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things.
So thank you to Jack and the team for building out the new American studio.
And thirdly to Amazon Music who, when they heard that we were expanding to the united states and
i'd be recording a lot more over in the states they put a massive billboard in time square um
for the show so thank you so much amazon music um thank you to our team and thank you to all of you
that listen to this show let's continue if you're waking up and you're getting stressed and anxious
do not if you are waking up in the middle of the night and it's been happening to you
over and over again, to resolve the habit, you're going to have to...
Sleep. It's a thing that we all do every day.
But for some reason, in our society, it's still a little bit of a mystery.
How many hours should we be
sleeping? What is sleep debt? Is there a perfect sleep routine? Should I wake up at a certain time?
Why do I get sleep paralysis? Insomnia? Why do I have these dreams? My next guest, Stephanie
Romeshevsky, worked with NASA and Harvard Medical School to understand these questions. Stephanie
currently works as a sleep physiologist, helping
people cure and understand their insomnia and sleep disorders. So without further ado,
my name is Stephen Bartlett, and this is The Diary of a CEO. I hope nobody is listening,
but if you are, then please keep this to yourself. stephanie the first question i wanted to ask you and i've got millions and millions of questions
to ask you because this is a a topic which i as i said before we started chatting on air um has
really piqued an interest over the last three years i've never had so many of my friends in my
sort of closed circle ask me questions about sleep,
send me articles about sleep. And I don't know what's happened, but as a nation and as a species,
I think we've got really, really curious about this idea of sleep and also its importance.
The first question I wanted to ask you was how important sleep is. But I think a better way to understand that and the answer is to actually look at the consequences you've seen in your line of work
for people that have bad sleep or that have insomnia. So could you speak to that a little bit?
I can. That's a big, big question. What I have seen over the last 16 years of my career is not
people coming in dying because they aren't
sleeping or with really really significant illnesses I've seen people very anxious very
stressed very low because their sleep is poor and they are extremely worried about it and I've seen
people who are you know at the top of their game and doing really well in life but are completely
crippled by these sleep problems but it is the fear of bad things worse things happening to them
that is keeping them as stressed and upset as they are so it's quite interesting because i think the
the things that bring people to me to get their sleep treated are exactly that that fear is actually what i'm trying to alleviate
rather than um fixing their sleep because i think they're going to get so sick that something
terrible is going to happen to them um so it's a really interesting question to ask how does sleep
affect us the reality is we actually we or why do we sleep we don't know actually why we sleep we
know what happens when we don't sleep.
But I think we're getting very, very confused between those of us that struggle with sleep
and those that are actively depriving themselves of sleep, like the CEO who says,
I'll sleep when I'm dead, for example. But those of us who are actively trying to sleep when we can't and we will do anything and we make our sleep opportunities larger and we still can't get sleep.
We're not depriving ourselves of sleep.
We're doing anything we can to get sleep.
So I worry about the amounts out there about sleep at the moment and the way that the information is being disseminated because I think that's where we're going a bit wrong and all the tracking of sleep and all the tech that comes out
I'm not saying it's it's a bad thing I'm just saying that it's almost like we haven't quite
caught up with all the information that we have and we can't cope with it quite the way we need to
so you speak about the tech that we have now apple watches all these little you know smart devices
that are telling us how many hours a day we're sleeping and also there's you know books there's
probably a couple books on the shelf behind me about the perfect night's sleep or the perfect
morning routine or the perfect time to wake up where is the bullshit oh my god again another
massive question um there is so much of it. It's so nuanced.
You're going to have to ask me some specifics
because there is so much there that actually is,
I mean, well, the first thing,
the biggest thing I would say is,
you know, going to bed at exactly the same time every night,
dictating your bedtime
is probably the worst piece of advice I've ever heard
and sends people off on all sorts of different tangents,
which does not help. If anything, it makes their insomnia is worse because they go to bed
in the dark, not able to sleep, getting more anxious, heart rate going up.
What should they do instead?
Stay up until they're sleepy. Don't worry about it. Enjoy yourself. Relax. Do the things that
you probably don't get time to do because you're busy doing all the other things during the day is the problem I have with that approach which is the approach that I think
I've adopted maybe a little bit too much or incorrectly is if I stayed up doing the things
that I want to do what happens is I'll stay up till 7am just looking at YouTube videos and learning
about rockets and looking at like stocks to invest in and stuff that's that's me to a tee I at some
point have to put my laptop down and be like steve just you're going to feel awful tomorrow if you can looking at this
investment fund that you think is interesting yeah absolutely to to a degree you can i mean we can
manipulate our bodies to do anything in a lab i could manipulate your body to sleep when i wanted
it to sleep um but that's taking away all the environmental factors all the behavioral factors
of your life um and what you're doing now you know know what, it's not the end of the world. You know,
you're obviously coping with it and you're healthy. The problem is you probably won't
be able to sustain that. And unfortunately, we are built in such a way that kind of goes with
the light dark cycles on this planet. And so to a degree, you are sort of going against that.
Unfortunately, we've got lots of other, we've got lots of research showing that after a while you just can't do that forever without implication
um so it's not i mean if you think about it insomnia is just a different pattern of sleep
you've just trained your brain to sleep differently and you're still surviving with it it's just that
most of us don't like that because it's not the rest of society in the way that they're sleeping
um and our friends are sleeping and and it feels like we're the only ones awake in the night.
I bet if you didn't have all those things to do and you weren't the way you were and you were up
at night and everybody else around you is asleep, it would start to feel like a very lonely,
anxious place. We're not very rational at night. We're not really made to think in the middle of
the night. So we're not incredibly rational. So i don't think it's the end of the world what you're doing but at the same time
put it this way i treat a lot of entrepreneurs when they've retired and they're still fairly
young but not in a good place because they have not followed anything that was fairly
going along with what our physiological processes want to do our bodies are all about
regulation we have clocks in every cell in every part of our body and they like regulation they
like time they like the timing of things to be ready and and regular and when we keep changing
those goalposts it might seem like we're being uber flexible but actually the reality the reality
is is that later on down the line you'll probably find that
you won't be able to cope with it as much and how does that manifest itself for me so so for you if
you just carried on the way you were then unfortunately yeah we probably would see that
maybe you were getting less sleep than you needed it probably would be harder for you
maybe when you settled into a routine where you were working around the same
hours every day say you got a certain kind of role that you had to do which made you know you
had to have a certain schedule you might find it quite difficult after a while to stick to that
schedule and you might find that you aren't able to sleep as much as you want the duration and the
quality will be impaired and so you might
start all the research around sleep and how important it is for you you might start noticing
things like your cognitive abilities are less so your memory things like that your ability to
produce cytokines so the proteins that help us with keeping ourselves healthy and keeping
inflammation at bay and things like that
all those kind of things will be reduced your healing so when you go and weight training or
something like that you go to the gym and you want your muscles to repair they're not going to be
able to do that so well and of course that over time short term it's not a problem over time
long term that's when we start worrying about more significant illnesses and
disorders that are happening as we get older. And so that's why we see lots of research showing that
as we get older, maybe some of these things like Alzheimer's might be related to how we treated
our sleep when we were younger. However, I hate it. I hate mentioning things like that, because I
think it frightens people and the
problem is with frightening people is that they go into what they think is most logical things to do
so they might go away after this podcast and think oh my god I've just got to go away and get my
eight hours because the rest of the information is telling them out there that they've got to get
this eight hours of sleep every night and of course they can't just get that you can't dictate to your
body how it sleeps there is a process it follows it and so unfortunately they can't just get that you can't dictate to your body how it sleeps
there is a process it follows it and so unfortunately you can never force yourself
to sleep you can force yourself not to sleep and that is partly how you fix a sleep problem
but you can never force yourself to sleep but you can induce anxiety and stress and depression
through that and lack of sleep so yeah in um well if you're an expert in this field so you must as you kind of
spoke to there you must get pretty i can feel it when you're speaking get pretty pissed off when
you see unhelpful information um being pushed on i don't know social media or online or through
books these sort of simplified narratives what are some of the most um common misconceptions
that you speak to your patients about?
You mentioned one there about this, like eight hours of sleep being the optimal.
Yeah.
And even when I put out on my Instagram earlier, what are the key questions you want to ask?
I'm speaking to a sleep therapist expert today.
I'd say the vast majority, or at least the medium question was, do I need to get exactly seven or eight hours sleep?
Every single night.
Yeah. Yeah. So that is definitely the biggest one we get um you do not that perfection is the enemy of the good
have you ever heard that term because at the end of the day it's true yes your body loves consistency
and regulation but that does not mean you have to get eight hours of sleep every night think about
it differently think about it over a month for example example. We love this idea of the way we look at time is slightly different to the way your body looks at
time. And over a month, you might actually be all right. So maybe one night you get six and a half
hours, the next night you get seven and a half, and then the next night you might get slightly
different. As long as it's fairly consistent and maybe 80% of the time you're doing fairly well
and you're giving yourself the right opportunity to sleep, that's okay. Your body's going to do, you know, it will do what
it needs to do. And with that, a caveat to that is this understanding of sleep debt. So we don't
understand sleep debt properly. People think it's an eye for an eye. I lose four hours, I must gain
four hours. Well, what happens when your body, being as efficient as it is, doesn't actually
need you to gain an extra four hours of sleep to recover you?
Your expectation is that it should.
And when your expectation doesn't get met, you get upset about it and you change your behavior.
And that's when you start getting sleep problems, when the reality is your brain is so smart that even in the certain amount of hours that you get normally at night,
it can recover you from that sleep deprivation by just improving or increasing the sleep stage that it thinks you
miss the most, for example. But because we have a lack of education, we believe we don't get some
sleep. We need to regain that sleep. And when we don't regain that sleep, that's when the anxieties
and the stress is over, not sleeping starts. So that's a big one, the sleep debt one. The other
one is this idea that fatigue and sleepiness are the same things so yes when we don't sleep well we get a lot of fatigue so fatigue is
anything from feeling like your body needs to rest to needing to shut your eyes to pain to
your brain buzzing because you've been working so hard for like 48 hours straight and you don't know
what to do with yourself but the only definition of sleepiness is the ability to shut your eyes and within a few minutes
you're falling asleep so if you were saying to me right now steph i'm so so sleepy i'd probably say
to you well you don't look it because right now you don't look tired in the way that i would expect
you to be falling asleep i mean you wouldn't be able to sit still you you would be sort of probably
your eyes would be shutting all the time,
dozing off, having little micro sleeps.
That's sleepiness.
And that's what we should really be understanding
as a cue to sleep.
So in the evenings, if you're not feeling that,
then don't be worried.
Give yourself permission to stay up later
because you can't dictate what happens to you during the day.
And there are so many variables that affect your sleep you are never going to be able to control of them having
good sleep hygiene how many good sleepers do you know have it so good sleep hygiene is all these
things that we get told we should do so the 10 top things that you should do have a warm bath
never drink coffee ever again um never have alcohol you know all these things that you're
supposed to do but if you look at good sleepers are they know all these things that you're supposed to do but if you look
at good sleepers are they following all those things no they're not and they're still sleeping
really well and that's to show that most of the time sleeping poorly comes down to brain training
and the patterns we get ourselves into you start going to bed early you might be able to get to
sleep earlier but you're probably not going to be able to uh have that sleep all the way through the night because at some point or another, your body's going to be like, well, you've had enough now.
But your expectation is you should be able to sleep till seven.
And why didn't I sleep till seven?
Or if you lie in, you keep changing the goalposts of your wake up time, which is the most important thing that you should be looking at, not your bedtime.
If you keep changing that goalpost, your body doesn't know when to feed feed you it doesn't know when to make you feel alert because you've changed everything
and so of course you're not going to be sleepy at the right time in the evening the time you wake
up is the a much more important time to be focused on yes the things your morning routine is going to
be way more important than your evening routine when it comes to your sleep at night but because people see that as a far away time compared to when you go to sleep they don't
really focus on it in fact haven't we been taught in this society that lying in is a luxury i can't
believe that we have made it okay at the weekend to lie in so much but during the week one of the
only things that gets us up is work it makes absolutely no
sense to me i'm not saying it's the worst thing in the world i'm not saying i never lie in but i
don't use it as a compensatory method for a bad night's sleep because that's when you're going to
get into trouble because that's kind of throwing your your your schedule off is that what you're
saying yeah yeah if you line on the weekends and you're going to pay for it at some other point
yeah why are we not looking you know if you have to the weekends and you're going to pay for it at some point yeah why are we
not looking you know if you have to lie in so significantly every single weekend why are we
not looking at during the week and thinking why am i doing this to myself at the time when i need it
the most i will choose to get less sleep and then at the weekend i'll just compensate and people and
much of the conversation around sleep in society talks about the amount of hours.
And it's almost like the amount of hours that I was in the bed.
What's your sort of rebuttal to that?
Quality over quantity every single time.
Every single time.
And if you have good quality and you need longer, your body will tell you and you will get more sleep.
But people are so obsessed with
duration. And I think people don't understand what I mean by sleep opportunity. I mean,
every single night, most of the time, so about 80% of the time, I will give myself a seven to
eight hour sleep opportunity, sleep window. But I do not mean that if I'm not sleepy,
I take myself into a dark room and shut
myself down I just know that it's there I've got a bedroom a place I really want to be to sleep
that is available to me during those hours and I will not sleep outside those hours and that's the
that is the big thing is you can dictate to your body when you don't sleep, but you cannot dictate when you do. And by doing that, you will force your body to be in a nice regular cycle.
It's actually really, really simple once you know how to do it.
And every time I fix someone of their insomnia, and honestly, 50, 60 years of insomnia, they often turn around to me.
They're like, I don't know why I wasn't taught this when I was younger.
And I do believe if we taught everyone how to sleep properly, give them a proper sleep education when they're little, I wouldn't know why I wasn't taught this when I was younger. And I do believe if we taught everyone how to sleep properly,
give them a proper sleep education when they're little,
I wouldn't exist.
Insomnia wouldn't exist.
You talked there when you referenced your own bedroom.
I think you spoke about it quite lovingly.
So I have this place I like to sleep.
How important is that?
How important is it to sleep in the same place
and for that space to be,
is there a certain way i should be designing
my bedroom is there like a bed that's good or like a pillow because there's lots of fads around
yeah yeah there's a lot of fads around i think your environment is important but i can't dictate
to you what that is because we're all so different um yes it's true you don't need loads of technology
in your bedroom to sleep i'm not saying technology can't aid our sleep because i think in the future we're going to come up with some crazy cool things that are going to really
help us i just think right now we're not quite there i think the least you have in your bedroom
that reminds you of the day is really important so obviously screens and light is very important
when it comes to sleep but i think people miss are missing a trick when when we say don't look
at your phones we're not just saying don't look at your phones we're
not just saying don't look at your phones because of the light exposure we're saying it because it's
reminding your brain of something that you did during the day and so your brain being the smart
thing that it is is thinking okay well I'll um I'll I'll increase your cortisol and I'll reduce
your melatonin which is your stress and your sleepy hormone uh hormones um and I'm
gonna help you be more alert because you clearly want to be alert right now as your brain thinks
it's helping you and then you're thinking hang on a minute I just looked at my phone for like
three seconds and now I'm buzzing why and it's just because your brain is your your behavior is
so much more influential on your physiology than you realize what do you think about the snooze button um i think if you have to use it on a regular basis
you need to start questioning why you always need to snooze unfortunately the research shows that
snoozing does not benefit us at all and actually if you think about it if if if you are a snoozer
you know how many times does that actually make us feel better?
Doesn't.
Exactly.
Delays.
Sorry.
No, I think it's nonsense as well.
I did, one of my modules when I was doing psychology in school was about sleep
and understanding the different phases of sleep made me realize that the snooze button is,
I think, totally pointless because you have to be in a certain phase of sleep for you to get real benefits.
And within 15 minutes, it's impossible to get real benefits and within 15 minutes
it's impossible to get to that phase right absolutely um a lot of people when they you know
when they knew that i was speaking to you today um they want to know how they can sleep better
in the short term tonight they're looking for some kind of quick fix to the to a problem they've had
for a long time what would you say to those people okay so the first thing i'd say is that you're never going to find that reactive very quick method it's never going to
happen and even if you find it i promise you it won't work in the long term it might control your
condition in the short term but not in the long term i can teach you how to read to sleep but
it's going to take you a few weeks not a night um but in the meantime don't worry it's okay like part of this is i just
there is a solution so what i do is called cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia it
is not the same as cbt for depression or anxiety or anything else um and it is just about retraining
yourself to sleep and building up that strong sleep drive you have to do that over time
um but in the short term i usually tell people
that they do not need to worry nothing bad is going to happen to you and the reality is that
it's more your mood that will affect your day when you wake up in the morning than the bad night
sleep you just had so i know we've got evidence to show that when you have a bad night's sleep
your cognitive abilities etc are going to be reduced however if you think about how you
generalize that you're not you're not going to lose your job you're not going to perform
horrifically in that meeting because you didn't get a good night's sleep it would be far better
for you to go to bed later and make sure you're lovely and sleepy and only get four hours than to
go to bed eight hours before that meeting and toss and turn and be fidgety and stressed and
anxious all night. That's what I do. I still get nervous when I have to do like a lecture in front
of 500 people. Of course I get nervous. But instead of, you know, focusing on my notes just before I
go to bed, I'll put everything aside. I'll go and enjoy myself, do something I really love to do.
I'll get ready for bed a bit earlier than usual just so that I do not have to think about anything when I get sleepy. And when I am sleepy, even if it's two, three, four hours later than
usual, I know that I'll go and have a really lovely three or four hours sleep. And then I'll
wake up and I'll be like, great. I know I'm going to be a bit sleepy today, but that's only going
to help me sleep tonight. And I'm going to have an epic day. I don't care that I'm a bit sleepy.
Sleepiness is amazing. Sleepiness is such a good thing for you.
Why are we teaching people that sleepiness is a bad thing?
You need sleepiness to sleep.
I've got two questions there.
The first, I'm sure, it feels like a very related sort of question
to what you've just been talking about there,
which is, do you sleep well?
I'm sure you get asked this all the time,
at every party, every time you're in.
It's like asking a comedian to tell a joke, right?
It's like, how is your sleep?
Okay, so most of the time my sleep is fairly good
because I've been lucky enough to be educating myself
through this for the last 16 years.
But it's not good all the time because it's totally normal
after some kind of life stressor, new illness,
some dramatic change in our society like we're seeing
right now for your sleep to change and for it to be poor okay it is totally normal to have sleep
problems we will all get them you will never find someone who does not have a sleep problem at some
point in their lives but there is a difference between somebody who has a short-term sleep
problem and when the initial issue resolves itself the sleep problem goes away and the person
who has now unfortunately got a long-term sleep problem the difference is the behavior it is not
the person it is not some trait that you have over someone it's not something genetic there are there
are all of those things that do feed into for example insomnia but the
reality is the thing that seems to perpetuate sleep problems is not usually the original trigger
so we cannot blame the divorce for example 20 years ago i'm not divorced but i'm just making
example so 20 years ago we get divorced and it's a really stressful situation and it stops you
sleeping for a month okay but now you're
remarried and you're perfectly happy but you've got a 20-year insomnia problem we cannot blame
the divorce for that anymore and also somebody else who's gone through the same situation same
illness or divorce or new medication would not have had that sleep problem 20 years later so
what is it and i believe and we know that most of it is your behavior after a few
weeks of a sleep problem most people will freak out and they'll start changing their behavior
so they might start lying in they might start going to bed early they're trying desperately to
improve their sleep opportunity because they believe the mere act of lying in a bed for longer
is going to miraculously give them a stronger sleep drive and make them get through whatever it is they need to get through when the reality is and this is usually how we
treat insomnia or one of the ways we actually deprive you of your sleep opportunity so we don't
deprive you of sleep but we do deprive you of your sleep opportunity so we only allow you to be in
bed for a certain amount of time and that fixes it but that's frightening because we're teaching
people that sleep is so bad or not,
sorry, not sleep is so bad, but sleepiness is so bad that they don't feel that they can build up
that strong sleep drive without something terrible happening to them. So the way we are disseminating
knowledge right now is not working and we have got to find a way to change that.
You talked about the type of therapy you offer, cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia.
One of the elements you've described is this sleep deprivation, which is in essence,
you're stopping people sleeping, I'm guessing, throughout the day to focus them on their sleep
opportunity. Yeah, so it's less about restricting their sleep and more about restricting their
bedtime. So often when you come across somebody who's had a sleep problem for a fair while,
enough to come to see me, they're usually spending more time in bed than they are
sleeping so for example they might be in bed for around 10 hours but they're only sleeping for say
six hours and so what i would do is i would restrict them in the first instance only so it's
only mildly to six hours in bed because or five hours in bed whatever they're sleeping for i would
we would we would never really go lower than five hours because at five hours in bed whatever they're sleeping for i would we would we
would never really go lower than five hours because at the end of the day we're only um uh sort of
guess it's a little bit of guesswork here um and that's important that it's like that and we're not
over tracking sleep because that has its own issues um and then for a week or so i'll keep
them on that schedule and try and get them to strictly stick to it which is quite scary for
somebody who thinks the total opposite way is going to fix them even though they've got no
evidence that it works it doesn't matter they've been doing it for a long time so it's quite hard
to get someone to do this and then once we can get them to sleep for around 90 percent of that
five or six hours whatever they spend in bed then we can start increasing their sleep time out very
very slowly
but people sort of get very over eager about this it's called sleep restriction therapy um
or yeah there's lots of different ways of calling it um people get over excited about it and they're
obsessed with reaching that 90 efficiency so they can move on and add time but i try to always
explain to people and indeed i do online courses in sleep that they can
do themselves and I'm always trying to explain to them it's not about adding more time imagine if
you are getting to five or six hours sleep efficient every every night for seven days
as an average that's really good that's so much better than the broken sleep you were getting
before think about the new quality that you have built how amazing is that when's the last time you went for a week and you had that consistent sleep
and when they start thinking about it that way they're like oh my god yes this is so much better
and i'm even able to add more time now and we slowly incrementally start adding sleep out and
that's how you fix it i mean it's not everything because you've got to work on the mindset you've
got to work on the re-educating people what are those other pieces of the therapy so yeah you've got it so first of all is the the
sort of sleep restriction as you called it yeah one area is you we need to you've got to be
re-educated on sleep much like we've been chit-chatting away today that's how i will talk
to someone and i will try to help them understand um i'll try and pick out a lot of the things that
they talk to me about um but it's trying to help them understand. I'll try and pick out a lot of the things that they talk to me about,
but it's trying to help them understand
where the myths are and where the facts are with sleep
because a lot of their ideologies around sleep
will be directly influencing their behavior.
And so as soon as you can change that,
and it's not as simple as just saying
that's right and that's wrong.
You've got to keep doing it and they need to trust you
and you've got to find a way
and the right language to speak to that person. Once you done that you can start with the sleep restriction and then of
course whilst there is no evidence that relaxation or anxiety reduction is going to directly and
reactively fix a long-term sleep disorder after you've started improving your sleep drive and
using the sleep restriction therapy to do that then yes we do need to start looking at how do you bring yourself back to balance during the day
is it stress and anxiety that got you here in the first place because you're working too much and
you got yourself into the wrong patterns how are you going to process more during the day how are
you going to balance more during the day we need to look at those things but we need to look at
them with the right expectations which is that they are not going to make you sleep because once that expectation is not met you
feel really inadequate and then you feel like nothing can help you and then you get hopeless
and out of control and lonely about your problem so all this lots of different sort of elements
like a pyramid to try and help someone with their sleep and you know people um caffeine has become
a huge part of our you know we live in a
society where people take caffeine to wake them up and then quite often they'll take certain
supplements to shut them down again like sleep new supplements or um various nitol i think is
one of them right i don't know yeah yeah um what's your take on all of all of these chemicals we're
using to kind of regulate our alertness and then our tiredness they just they can't work over time so
all the research shows that eventually you either get used to them they stop working they make you
feel really uncomfortable i don't think there's anything wrong with for example sleeping pills
or using caffeine in the short term things like that um but starting to use them long term they
have their own all of them have their own side effects and over a long time of use aren't very good for the body but in general they're just not going to they're not
going to suddenly miraculously reset your sleep button or anything that people seem to think
they're going to do so I don't think relying on these things in the short term is a bad thing
every now and again but if you're relying on them every single time you have a sleep problem
you're effectively making
it worse because your brain isn't learning anything it is literally just being given a
cheat method like a fake sleep almost and that is what you get from a lot of sedatives is sedative
sleep which is not the same as the cycles that you go through usually to sleep well so you're
not getting but psychologically we believe that sleep is better than no sleep and actually i don't necessarily agree with that in a way i'd rather
get no sleep than a really rubbish sleep knowing that my body will like build up a really strong
sleep drive and help me later but people are so terrified of that that they that psychologically
they just need to feel like they've slept but if they had a bit of better education around sleep
and they understood how it worked more then i don't think people would be trying to grab all these things
all the time but we live in a reactive society we're not very proactive as creatures we want
we want it now and we want it done yesterday what about caffeine that's such a huge part of
everybody's well pretty much everybody's daily routine people they you know they'll say i have
to have this coffee to
wake myself up and i have three or four of them a day and then what impact does that end up having
on sleep so caffeine is very interesting because genetically we are all either sensitive or not
sensitive or somewhere in between with caffeine so it's very hard to say nobody should be drinking
caffeine after this time yes it does have a very sort of
it has a big afterlife so it definitely or half-life so what we mean by that is that um you
know it's going to have an effect on you hours and hours after you've had it but depending on how
sensitive you're to it you are you know but at the same time there's so much more you can do if you
started waking up at the same time every day, you would start to feel refreshed.
You would be one of those people who wakes up and is like, yeah, I'm ready to start the
day.
Imagine if you just used your body the way it was designed to be used.
I'm not saying caffeine is bad.
I definitely wouldn't say you can't drink caffeine.
But if you're starting to use it, anything in life, anything chemical in a compensatory
method because something is wrong
that's when you need to start questioning it but in general having caffeine in the morning i don't
think there's anything wrong with that if you enjoy it great but then there's lots of research
that shows that even your performance isn't significantly improved by having caffeine you
might feel like you're able to buzz around everything more but your actual efficiency
isn't necessarily
improved i i wonder you know because i think i was looking at some stats around insomnia and
sleep sleep disorders and the stats are pretty staggering and i don't know how to say this but
i just don't tend to believe that humans after all these thousands of years of evolution have been born with quite an apparent
or seemingly apparent um problem with sleep so it makes me think okay so what is it in our social
environment and society that's making us struggle with sleep is it our over obsession with the
perfect sleep that might be one element and this you know and
all the fear and anxiety around not sleeping perfectly as you've described and we're actually
doing pretty good yeah right and labeling ourselves as insomnia you know because that
word i'm an insomniac or i've got insomnia is thrown around pretty loosely or is it the you
know the tech in our lives is it the the overstimulation of the you know the technology
we have is it overworking what's your take on that because i feel the same about depression
and anxiety as well i look at the stats growing over time um in very with various sort of mental
um illnesses and i think surely we weren't born um with chemical imbalances, as is said in, yeah, I love them.
Yeah, so it's a hard question to answer.
I think that there is element, there's lots of different elements.
I don't believe that the stats are as accurate as they probably seem.
For example, I believe that before, you know, the industrial revolution,
for example, we had sleep problems.
I mean, I know I do.
I believe we did.
It's just that I believe we're recording things now more.
So there's that aspect of it.
There is this aspect of we over worry about things.
And, you know, at the end of the day, while someone keep, you know, lots of people out
there keep telling us that actually, you know, if you sleep than six hours you will die early but actually we're not actually
seeing that to me that today they said yeah how much am i reducing my life expectancy with my
poor sleep the thing is okay so if you know you've got poor sleep you need to improve it but hopefully
it's not going to be long term you can actually get some support for that and get it sorted if
you're actively keeping yourself at five hours when you know you're a seven hour sleeper,
then yeah, you're going to reduce your life expectancy. But if you're naturally a five
hour sleeper, and they do exist, then that does not mean the same thing that you're going to be
reducing your life expectancy when they genetically you can't, you know, that's for you.
It's really difficult to understand, I think, you know, electricity has you um it's really difficult to understand i think um you know electricity has
a big part to play so again i talked a little bit briefly at the beginning about the light
dark cycles of this planet and the way that we are designed or not designed but you know we're built
on this planet we we seem to have evolved that way um and so we we we definitely do need to be in general not working and resting more at night.
And we work better, our metabolisms, our brains function, we're more rational during the day.
And so with electricity has become many problems.
I definitely think the scaremongering and the fear and the tracking of sleep has definitely caused in the last few years a boom
in sleep problems or at least how many people are coming to us for help and with the the pandemic
what impact has that had on people's sleep it's had a huge impact so um in various different ways
so the first way is that everybody's routine changed and because we couldn't go outside and
move as much as we once did we couldn't get as much light exposure as we once did we didn't get as much stimulation social stimulation so our brains weren't being used in
the same way plus we all had this sort of thing to look at on the news all the time so we're
actively sort of looking at something that is stressing us out and making us anxious so various
different components no wonder sleep changed but it would have been totally normal for that to happen.
Your sleep is adapting to your new environment.
And so when people start worrying about this, I try to get them to calm down about it because
actually if your sleep wasn't working properly, you just wouldn't be here.
Okay.
So to a degree, our sleep is doing a bloody good job for us and we need to be better about
it.
We blame sleep for us. And we need to be better about it. We blame sleep for everything.
And actually, there's so many other variables that we can control in our lives that will have
an effect on us. But yes, during the pandemic, we saw, or we still see, there's plenty more
problems with people struggling to get to sleep. Maybe they're feeling really buzzy and they can't
get to sleep. Maintaining that sleep, so people waking up in the middle of the night and they're just like, oh, why am I waking up? Sometimes they've got a million thoughts
a minute or sometimes they're just thinking of nothing and they don't know why that's
happening. We've seen more dream recall, very graphic dreams. And we believe that's because
obviously when your routine changes and you don't have to work, and ironically, I always
say to insomniacs that actually when they're working and when
they've got busy lives it's a lot easier to treat them than when they don't have a routine
because routine is everything to our bodies.
I wish we understood more how much our bodies love to be regulated and going to work and
doing exercise and going to see our friends and going to the gym and eating at regular
intervals is telling your brain so many signals. The light exposure you get is telling your brain about how
much melatonin to release for you. It's fascinating, but we do need regulation. And the biggest thing
that changed during this pandemic was our routines. People have a real desire as well.
You mentioned the fact that the pandemic had
caused very like vivid dreams people have asked me so many times if they can control their dreams
or how do they stop themselves dreaming so vividly or um and some people having you know recurring
nightmares and things like that what what is your answer to that what control do we have on our
dreams so you can you can learn to that's what we call lucid dreaming so you can learn to lucid dream the problem is it's probably not very good for your sleep in general um so
effectively when we remember our dreams it's because we have been woken out of REM sleep so
REM is actually a very active stage of sleep it's not your deep sleep it's actually quite a light
stage of sleep some might argue that's even a different state of consciousness and not sleep at all so REM is a really strange time it's when we believe that more of our memory and our psychological
restoration is happening in consolidation and things like that and part of REM we tend to have
more graphic dreams but it's it's you being interrupted from that state which you may not
remember in the night it could just be a van driving past in your REM sleep and it wakes you into a lighter stage of sleep, like stage one or two sleep.
And so in the morning you think, oh my God, I really remember my dreams. Or maybe your alarm
woke you up in the middle of REM sleep and you're like, oh my God, I can really remember my dreams.
As opposed to the times when you're like, I didn't dream at all last night. Well, of course you did
dream. It's just that your REM wasn't interrupted interrupted so that's why you're remembering your dreams when we try to control our dreams usually you have to kind of control that
interruption a bit and so I haven't looked into it properly in terms of lucid dreaming because
it doesn't really help me do my job I don't really want people to learn to lucid dream because then
one they're going to be remembering their dreams more and if they're remembering their dreams more
then their sleep is more interrupted and that's not good for your sleep we want you to go through the cycles of sleep as
as you know as comfortably as we can and so that you get all the right percentages and all the
right restoration and and healing and everything that you need from your sleep and so yeah it's
an interesting concept I don't think it's very helpful to healthy sleep but every now and again
especially kids I find when i'm
talking to children they seem to be able to control their dreams a little bit better like
flying for example they concentrate more on it that's why so they have more time and they
concentrate on it uh which is quite a fun thing maybe we should all be doing more of that day
dreaming and stuff it's actually really good for problem solving um so yeah it's fascinating and and and
there's a lot of famous people i think einstein though don't oh i mean i don't know if i'm right
about this but einstein and various other geniuses would do things like hold a um egg or or a spoon
or something um so that if and when they fell asleep that spoon would drop and then they would
wake up because they felt they had all their best ideas i can see you looking at me and thinking about doing this
but it's not very good for sleep to keep interrupting it like that um so you can yes
you've got the power to manipulate sleep however you want but at the end of the day if the goal
here is to keep you alive for longer and to feel refreshed in the day and to have your best
ideas consistently and to be healthy consistently then you probably want to do sleep right the way
it was designed and what about what i eat before i go to bed a lot of people talk about that that's
another uh thing you know if i order food really late someone will turn to me in the room and go
oh you shouldn't be eating at this time you know what i mean what do i say okay you like i've said it before a good sleeper does all the wrong things and they seem to
be okay but they're probably not doing all the wrong things all the time so yes the the later
you eat you're basically asking your body to metabolize and asking it to sleep and it does
not like doing both and so one of them will be compromised in terms of anything that you can eat that will
have a significant effect on your sleep there's no real research there is research to show things
like you know if you if you eat enough cherries or you have enough milk or enough turkey it's
going to give you some kind of sedatory effect but at the end of the day it's you'd have to have a stupid amount of those kind
of foods to have any kind of effect it's not going to help you sleep healthily from day to day that's
not going to suddenly boost the quality of your sleep um significantly um so i would argue that
unless you have some kind of deficiency in a vitamin or mineral that is affecting your sleep
then you probably don't need to be looking
at the food you eat in general as i'm sure a lot of people will say but in general eating a healthy
balanced diet where you have what you would call naughty foods and good foods and in balance all
that stuff is really good for you and probably the only piece of advice i'd give around eating is
again regulating how you eat so if it's breakfast lunch
and dinner you like to do trying to do that at consistent times every single day is going to
help your body understand when you want to be awake and metabolizing and when you want to be
sleeping and then not sleeping too late at night just so that you can make sure that your body
metabolizes well and sleeps well and can I sleep too much is that such a people people there's this myth again in society where people think that they overslept and now they're knackered right so yeah so you can
it usually when people say they've overslept if we actually looked at them in a sleep study and
they've overslept for the amount that they usually sleep and they didn't need it probably the quality
of their entire sleep wouldn't be amazing um and that's why they were able to have
this dribble drabbly longer sleep and and and it's not it's not going to be very helpful but usually
when we're talking about that research that shows that longer sleepers actually can get
sicker um is because the quality of their sleep is impaired by something like sleep apnea or
another sleep disorder which is impairing the quality of their sleep. So poor quality. Yeah, so poor quality sleep,
you're going to sleep longer.
It's kind of the same as having insomnia
because you're not really sleeping.
And so therefore you feel you need to sleep longer
and you wake up and you still don't feel
like you've slept as much as you needed to.
If you're sleeping really well from night to night,
you don't need to sleep more.
So your body won't really let you.
So if the
quality is good and you've reached that optimal time you'll notice that if you do try to sleep
longer it's quite if i looked at that sleep for you in a polysomnography study so i looked at
your brain activity the quality of it is just like a snooze is probably not going to be the
same it's not going to be but it's very rare you find someone like usually they're deprived of
something or other or they haven't been sleeping properly and then they sleep a bit longer you hear
a lot of them a lot of successful people i think it's it's part of bragging you know bragging about
how little they sleep those are and they sleep three four hours a day and and i think it's pushed
this idea into society that in order to be successful you've got to sleep for you know just
two or three hours or
four hours whatever but then on the other side you have this total contradiction which is in order to
be successful you need to wake up at 6 a.m and drink green juice and do yoga and like sleep for
exactly seven hours um and it i guess this kind of speaks to the original point which was um that
there's so much over generalization and uh through an attempt to
sell you something whether it's a book or um my authority or to get you to follow me i kind of
preach this secret which can be quite easily replicated for all of you right yeah that's
causing us to to be uh like uh be smacked like smacked with these contradicting narratives
around sleep um which is making everyone a little bit confused um what's your sort of take on all
of that because you know as when i was growing up i thought you know if i want to be successful
i've got to just sleep less and i i think if i'm being completely honest with myself i think i used
to be proud of how little i slept i thought
it was like a more like a badge of honor you know yeah yeah yeah absolutely yeah but now i think i'm
getting a little bit older and i'm i don't really give a fuck what people think yeah good good for
you um uh so yeah i i definitely have seen a change around in this recently but yeah there
has been this thing about like clean sleeping it's a bit like the whole clean eating thing
it's a consent it's a it's everything that you've effectively just said um but people trying to say
you need to do this that and that to have the perfect night's sleep actually that doesn't
really exist once you know how much sleep you need around make sure you have that opportunity
most nights that you're doing this um so i guess you reference genetics you said there are five
hours yeah yeah yeah yeah so i guess um a more relaxed way of looking at it is when you go on
holiday after the three four days of recovery from you know work life um what happens you know
left your own devices what happens and that's a pretty good way of looking at it if you're looking
at a really scientific way then sleep restriction therapy so what we would put a insomniac through also will show you how much
of a duration that you need right now because there'll be a point where you can't keep adding
time your body won't get you to 90 efficient and that's where you know okay maybe this is around
the right time for me and sleep and mental health i feel like it's i don't know my guess would be
that it's somewhat kind of a a cycle right i think poor sleep might lead to poor mental health and
then poor mental health might lead to poor sleep is that accurate you're absolutely right but it
doesn't matter what came first the chicken or the egg the main issue is especially in medicine and
i've just done a piece of research um that shows that undergraduate medical degrees only teach a median of an hour and a half
of sleep so this is why this next thing happens a lot because they just don't have the education
so our own doctors do not have enough education in something that we do a third of our lives
so historically or traditionally when you go to your gp and you say i've got a sleep problem
they'll tell you've got depression and insomniacs will be able to relate to this and it is because in general we look at sleep or poor sleep as a symptom of another condition now even
if it is even if you do have a significant mental health problem and it is causing you to have sleep
issues if it's been longer than three months you now have a entrained sleep disorder and you need
to be treating the sleep problem as a primary condition
in itself. And the one that I would treat first is whichever one is most prevalent.
So whichever symptoms seem to be more distressing for you at the time is where I would start. But
I would be fixing, for example, the depression and the insomnia separately. And the results show
that when you treat insomnia, you have less relapse of depression
because you have actually resolved one of these things that unfortunately was perpetuating
everything so it doesn't really matter where sleep comes into it but you've got to give it its own
podium it needs to be it is a pillar of health and you need to treat it that way you reference
a good sleeper and bad sleeper what's the what
are the characteristics of each so everyone always thinks i'm going to say well a good sleeper does
this and a good sleeper does that but actually the only difference i have seen over however long
doing this is that a good sleeper is somebody who just doesn't worry that much about their sleep
they are very grateful for their sleep and they're very you know you know they they give themselves a fair opportunity they don't always sleep well they don't you know sometimes
they have sleep problems but they don't get overly bothered by it and they notice that their sleep
when left to its own devices will go back to whatever it needs to be about 10 of insomniacs
we never see because they don't perceive themselves to be having a problem and they're not sick and dying isn't this somewhat uh i guess a metaphor for the for
the rest of our lives as well where typically much of the problem is people thinking that they
have a problem or their own perception of their reality because i'll be honest um everyone around
me doesn't think i sleep very well but i've've always thought that I slept really, really well.
And I've just, I think, refused to buy into the idea
that I'm a bad sleeper.
They think that because I'm up at strange times.
Sometimes I'm traveling at strange times.
But I've never worried about my sleep.
When I go into my room, eventually I'll fall asleep
and at some point I'll wake up.
But I guess the point I'm trying to make there is as well,
if you look at what's happening in the world
with the pandemic and, know people feeling certain um
feeling like they should be a certain way is actually making them that way people feeling
like they should feel self-pity is making them feel self-pity and um as someone that's been to
rio de janeiro and seen the um the favelas there and spent time in the favelas but also i've been
to india and spent some time in the Dahavir,
I think they call it, which is known as the slums,
which I think is a derogatory term.
I've seen people in the slums in India who were significantly happier
than people that I know that are very relatively cushy.
And I know it's all subjective
living in the UK and it just but people hate when we talk about these these these things because
it gets the mirror of blame and responsibility and it just turns it back on themselves and says
maybe you're the problem yeah maybe the way you're thinking is the problem and maybe you can do
something about it yeah absolutely you've hit the nail on
the head um i like i said about 10 of insomniacs we we never see and actually if you think about
it insomnia is just another pattern of sleep and you have a certain pattern of sleep right now and
if it's not broken do not fix it i firmly believe that and if you ever have a problem well you know
where i am um but hopefully you never will because you'll follow your gut, follow what you feel is right.
If that turns you awry, then fair enough, get some support.
But actually, you really have hit the nail on the head.
And I really do believe with a bit more understanding and education around sleep and that it's not night to night.
Your sleep doesn't work like that.
I get, yes, we do need to most of the time sleep night to night but it can survive without doing that
um it is it's incredible if we spent more time understanding how amazing sleep was rather than
fearing when it doesn't happen and then blaming it for absolutely everything we would be in a much
better position we would cherish it more
and we would um you know love it more but not overly put pressure on it which is ridiculous
sleep cannot force you to lose your job sleep can't do though or lack of it it just can't um
but our belief that it does is making this problem worse so yes it is 100% a mindset i spend most of
my time not training people to sleep
again but actually trying to help resolve that mindset one of the last things I do when I finished
with a client is I have to go through and help them understand that sleep is not the be-all and
end-all because actually even to treat their sleep I have to get them to focus on it and actually I
need to take the focus away now and one of the exercises i do is i tell them look i now want you to think that we're in a world where sleep doesn't exist
and when i do that people are oh my god that would be awful because it would just be one long
perpetual day we'd never finish our day just philosophically and psychologically how would
we deal with that and actually i'm like yes that's how you should be thinking about it because that
time even when you're not sleeping is beautiful and, and we should cherish it. And also, if you didn't sleep, what
would be all the other variables that would affect you? And I start getting them to think about the
rest of their lives and all these other things like exercise and eating right. And they're just
the basics, who you interact with, when you watch the news, the bills you paid that day, whether you
walked the dog, all sorts of things, pain, noisy neighbors, your commute to work. How many of those things actually have a properly
significant impact on you, but you'll still blame it on your sleep. And then it's a perpetual cycle
because then you start compensating. Well, I'm not going to do this anymore. I'm not going to
go to the gym. I'm not going to see my friends. I'm terrified that's going to do something that
affects my sleep. And then your sleep is worse because your body's now thinking, oh, so she doesn't need to get good
sleep at night because she's not doing anything in the day anymore. And so you make it worse and
worse and worse. And that is one of the biggest things I see in a long-term insomniac is somebody
who's literally stopped living in order to fix the problem. Why do we think that's going to fix
the problem? It doesn't. What about a bad sleeper then?
So we talked a little bit about the profile
of the characteristics of a good sleeper.
What's a bad sleeper?
So a bad sleeper is somebody who really does,
they get bad sleep and suddenly they start worrying
about the lack of sleep.
And then what they'll do is they'll look up,
how do I fix my sleep?
They'll come up with 10 regimented rules
and they'll start becoming obsessive
and ritualistic about those rules.
They'll stop going out in the evening and they'll start having the hot warm bath
the the herbal tea and every single thing that they have um they think and they know it doesn't
work but they're so terrified of not doing them because that's all they've got to hold on to now
that they are um you know they they they can't go away from it and actually trying to take teach those people to
sleep better is is harder than somebody who's a bit more relaxed around their routine because
they've built these things up so hard you know what's really funny is um what you've described
there is a person who is so keen to solve a problem that probably isn't that much of a problem
that they've they're in search of these techniques and tips and secrets and shortcuts and whatever probably a lot of the people that felt compelled
to click on this podcast today to listen to it and you see the same within uh success and ambition
you see this like a certain group of people that i'm gonna be honest okay are almost never really
successful but spend the most time trying to be and when i when i think
about my success so when i read these books about oh the the perfect way to be successful here's
13 tips that all successful people share i think this is total fucking nonsense because my sleep is
i sleep whenever i feel tired as you say i eat blah blah blah you know i don't do yoga i don't
like meditate every day i don't i
don't follow any script or blueprint i just kind of go with the flow and do my best every single
day and show up and try and be better tomorrow like if that that's as far as it goes for me
there's no looking in the mirror and saying steve you're going to be a millionaire steve you're
going to you know i mean all of that feels like nonsense to me but the people that seem to um do
those things the visualizations in the mirror the
mood boarding my future like they're not they are never those successful ones all of my successful
friends don't do that yeah yeah and um and i i maybe i think what i'm saying is it sounds like
the same applies to sleep yeah well like the the people that get addicted on techniques and tips
and tricks end up having the worst sleep overall yeah what have we missed i'm
asking you this question because there's so many unknown unknowns i don't i don't know a ton about
sleep again because i've never really cared that much about it right so is there anything that you
think we've missed any specific topics or i think i would love it if people came away from this
podcast and gave their sleep a little bit of a break and in the same sort of
with the same idea I'm sure there'll be people out there thinking yes but when I wake up tonight in
the middle of the night what do I do about it so I guess this is one thing we haven't covered
to understand that if you are waking up in the middle of the night and it's been happening to
you over and over again this has become a habit and therefore to resolve the habit you're going
to have to do something consistently you're not going to be able to solve it in one night it's just not
going to happen however if you're waking up and you're getting stressed and anxious do not lie in
bed it's not going to help you you've got a different problem now you've made yourself anxious
and stressed and you need to alleviate it leave the bedroom go and enjoy yourself it is not going
to wake you up you are already awake
your sleep drive clearly isn't there to take you back to sleep so go do something else make sure
you get up in the morning do not lie in go and have the epic day enjoy yourself go and see your
friends or talk to them over zoom or go and do some exercise get outside get some light exposure
be happy and content in your life focus on other things and go to bed
when you're really really sleepy and when it happens again the next night do the same thing
and i promise you eventually you will be able to get out of it but if you lie there and you get
anxious and stressed and you try and force yourself to sleep you already know this doesn't
work you're trying it over and over again so don't do it so that's the thing that i would say i hope
that when people listen to this they come away and they're like you know what i'm not as worried as i
was about my sleep i'm actually going to chill out and i'm going to be all right about it but if i do
want to improve the quality i've listened to what she said there's some key things there i'm gonna
i'm gonna try do those few things but it's about the little things so it's not about doing 20
different things it is just about literally get up at the same time every morning.
Stop overcompensating.
Stop diluting your sleep opportunity when you don't get good sleep.
Make it smaller.
Build that sleepiness.
It's actually good for you.
Don't freak out.
Nothing bad's going to happen.
And you talked to one particular point I wanted to come back on there
because when I asked my audience about the questions I had for you,
again, about I say 15, 20% of them were all about,
I keep waking up in the middle of the night, what to do.
So you're saying get out of bed.
Get out of bed and go and do something that you love.
Do not, yeah, do not go and do something like clean the bathroom
or do something boring.
Go and do something that is going to be distracting.
For God's sake, we're always going on about how little time we have.
You've got more time now. So go and use it. Go go and do something fun i'm not saying get up and go to
work i'm not saying that because i still think this is your sleep opportunity and if you want
to retrain your brain to sleep during this time then you've got to sort of do things that are
i'm not saying you need to relax relax relax because i think people get stressed at that
term and they're like i can't relax i don't know how to relax don Don't make me do this. So I think what makes you happy? Do some things
that just make you happy, whether that's looking at old photos or just doing something that you
love. It is okay. Okay. It's not going to be forever. Like I said, you cannot force yourself
to sleep, but you can dictate when you don't sleep. So as long as you're not overcompensating
by lying in or going to bed early, because you're so worried about the sleep that you've lost forget it it's gone there's nothing you can do about it
so just move on and do the right things and i promise you you will start sleeping better but
the more you freak out and you're worried about what is going to happen to you if you don't sleep
another night in a row the more you won't be able to fix the problem great where can people find you uh so i'm at
sleepyheadclinic.co.uk it's gone pretty international now because of the covid is literally i'm online
now um and sleepyheadprogram.com if you have no time to speak to me or you just want to do it
yourself um i have set up this online course that you can do, which I'm very excited about with two awesome business partners
who are just as crazy and passionate about sleep as I am.
And hopefully we can start seeing more people
and build on it and make it an even better experience.
So, yeah.
Listen, thank you so much for your time today.
Sleep is a thing that I think is,
as I said at the start of the podcast,
has been increased in relevance in our society and in my personal conversations online, through Instagram, through books that aren't, as you say, necessarily very helpful. counter narrative to the kind of very binary specific um quick um secret orientated like
hacks that people push online and that's uh i think will do a ton of people a lot of good so
thank you so much for coming thank you so much for having me thank you thanks uh
you