The Rich Roll Podcast - Your Brain On Sleep: A Compilation On Brain States, Biological Rhythms & Why Sleep Deprivation Is Sabotaging Your Life
Episode Date: July 17, 2025This is the ultimate sleep compilation featuring Bryan Johnson, Andrew Huberman, Matthew Walker, and Simon Hill. These conversations explore the mythology of sleep deprivation, why hustle culture is ...biologically devastating, and how circadian rhythms govern your brain states. From the paradoxical relationship between exhaustion and productivity to why what you eat before bed can wreak havoc on your sleep quality. I reveal my own Mount Everest—the arithmetic of nighttime eating that's been leading me astray for years. Sleep isn't lost time. It's the highest return on time you'll ever get. Enjoy! Show notes + MORE Watch on YouTube Newsletter Sign-Up Today’s Sponsors: Whoop: The all-new WHOOP 5.0 is here! Get your first month FREE👉https://www.join.whoop.com/Roll BetterHelp: Get 10% OFF the first month👉 https://www.betterhelp.com/richroll AG1: Get a FREE AG1 "Morning Person" hat, welcome kit, and more! 👉https://www.drinkag1.com/richroll Roka: Unlock 20% OFF your order with code RICHROLL👉https://www.ROKA.com/RICHROLL ProLon: Get 15% OFF plus a FREE bonus gift 👉 https://www.prolonlife.com/richroll Rivian: Electric vehicles that keep the world adventurous forever👉https://www.rivian.com Check out all of the amazing discounts from our Sponsors 👉 https://www.richroll.com/sponsors Find out more about Voicing Change Media at https://www.voicingchange.media and follow us @voicingchange
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When sleep is abundant, minds flourish. When it's not, they don't.
We should be accessing as much uninterrupted deep sleep as we can.
Everything revolves around sleep. Nothing changes existence more than sleep.
It is never too late to start sleeping better.
We know that this chronic circadian disruption significantly increases risk of metabolic diseases.
The leading cause of death in late-stage adolescent teens is road traffic accidents.
And here sleep matters enormously.
The thing that we are all a slave to, all of us, is the 24-hour circadian cycle.
I love the slave data.
I started to look at the data.
The data was immensely powerful. Everything falls apart without sleep.
I don't know how to communicate any better.
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This show is sponsored by BetterHelp.
And today I want to help you better
by talking about workplace stress,
which is something that is real
and also something that's getting worse.
In fact, 61% of people globally are dealing with higher
than normal stress levels,
which when you understand the very real connection
between chronically elevated stress levels
and chronic lifestyle disease is concerning.
While we can't walk away from our jobs this summer,
we can change our relationship with what we do
because while a vacation is great,
that is not a long-term solution.
A long-term solution requires we take steps
towards reducing the negative emotions
that we associate with our occupation.
And those steps include learning how to navigate
daily challenges, set boundaries, develop coping skills,
all of which are very difficult,
I say this from personal experience, to do alone, all of which are very difficult. I say this from personal experience to do alone,
which is where therapy comes in.
I'm a huge advocate for therapy.
I have been for years.
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That's betterhelp, H-E-L-P, dot com slash richroll. There was this reporter that wrote an article recently for GQ.
I was at this anti-aging conference and this person who interviewed me said, you know,
like, what is the number one thing you do for, you know, anti-aging?
And this reporter, like, she told the story, like, so people are there, like, listening,
like, what's Brian Johnson going to say about this thing?
Is he going to say, like, some peptide oride or you know, sauna or you know, whatever protocol and then he says sleep
And she said then like the crowd just has this collective like side of disappointment
Right because it's much sexier to talk about rapamycin. Yeah, whether that was true or not
But she was like everyone is so disappointed with my response
But you know, like I don't know how to communicate more
that everything revolves around sleep.
Nothing changes existence more than the sleep.
You have more willpower, you have more zest for life,
you have more energy.
Yeah, I just, everything falls apart without sleep.
I don't know how to communicate any better.
Yeah, and when people wanna hear you elaborate on that,
the focus tends to be on the blackout curtains
and the type of sheets and the air purifier
that you have in the room and the temperature of the room.
And those are all fine and well
and important and play their part.
But to really appreciate it,
you have to actually embrace the entirety of the program.
Yeah, exactly right.
I mean, I think we're all competing for status
and power in society, you know,
like in all of our own little circles and places.
And there's so much mythology caught up
in the hero being sleep deprived
and sleeping under the desk and going days without sleeping.
It's so built into the psychology
that people are trying to signal to others,
I'm worthy of being respected. I'm worthy of this status. I'm worthy of being admired. I'm worthy of
this mythology. So they're doing things to play this script because they think it generates the
respect of others. And in their mind, they may believe it too, like this is how genius is achieved.
I can think of so many examples of people who've done this. And so it's so deep in our psychology
that sleep deprivation is somehow positive,
that that's what stops most people from adopting it.
That hustle porn culture and notion of sleep
is in its twilight.
Like I feel like we've really gone a long way
towards raising awareness around that.
Like that's shifted a lot,
even in the last couple of years, I think.
I concur.
Yeah, just even, when I talk to my friends,
they'll come to me and say,
I want this so badly.
We have to engage in a therapy session
where I'm like, what's up?
How's it going?
And then we dig deep into their psychology
and they uncover and unravel
that they really are trying to be on mythology level
with their levels of accomplishment.
Now it takes a lot of vulnerability for the person to be that honest.
But like once we do that in private and they're like, oh my god, this is totally unnecessary.
I can achieve my objectives of ambition and status and power and wealth and success.
And I don't have to do this sleep deprivation thing.
And it's so liberating for them. They actually become better at their craft.
These circadian rhythms are primarily affected by two external cues
in our environment.
There's two things that can really throw them out of whack.
One is light exposure.
So if we're sitting up late at night
in very, very, very bright lights,
it's let's say it's 9 p.m., our body and it's dark outside,
our body, we might be sitting in LA,
but our body thinks we're in Sydney.
So we can cause some dysregulation of our circadian rhythms
and then that affects the release of melatonin,
which has an effect on your sleep, for example.
We can also dramatically affect these circadian rhythms
through the timing in which we eat.
That's the other really important signal here.
So within this challenge, we have two different habits
that speak to nurturing our circadian rhythms.
One is light exposure.
We want people in the morning to get outside,
get at least 10 minutes of natural light exposure
in the first couple of hours of waking up.
That's important.
That sets your clock.
This is the Huberman protocol around morning sunlight.
And then at nighttime, as the sun's going down,
ideally you don't have to turn all the lights off
in the house, but it will be helpful
if you dim the lights down.
And if you're using screens,
you can adjust the brightness on those
and put them into night mode.
And then with regards to the timing of our food,
there's some really interesting research
that has come out of Courtney Peterson's lab.
I interviewed her, looking at how efficiently is our body utilizing nutrients
at different times of the day?
And it seems that particularly at nighttime,
a couple of hours before we go to bed,
we have changes in hormones
that make things like glucose metabolism
much less effective.
How it makes sense,
our body is getting ready to go to sleep,
not to digest food and convert it into energy.
The ideal kind of eating window,
and some people have described this as a circadian
biology eating window, or circadian fasting,
I don't think it's really a crazy fast,
is you're in bed for eight hours a night.
That's what we said just before.
And when you wake up, not eating for one or two hours
upon waking, and before you go to bed, not eating for one or two hours upon waking and before you go to bed,
not eating for one or two hours.
Before you go to bed.
Before you go to bed.
Now, let's say you do that as two hours.
So you're in bed for eight,
you don't eat for the first two hours of waking up.
And then before you go to bed,
you're not eating in the two hours leading up to bed.
Automatically, that means your eating window is at 12 hours.
The average person's eating window in America
is 15 to 16 hours.
So pretty much rolling out of bed,
having a bite of a donut and eating all the way up
to going to sleep again.
The reason why all of this is important
is that we know that this chronic circadian disruption
significantly increases risk of metabolic diseases,
significantly increases risk of obesity,
of cardiovascular disease.
So there are repercussions if we're living in a way
where our circadian rhythms are disrupted.
And it's not just the long-term.
If you're experiencing chronic circadian disruption,
you're likely to feel more brain fog,
more fatigue, less lower energy or lethargy on a daily basis.
So just getting some routine in place
where we're in bed for eight hours,
which thinking about light exposure,
and then we're eating at a regular time,
trying to avoid eating too close to waking up
or going to bed, can make a very big difference.
This is like my Mount Everest
because I get so hungry at night, man.
It's very difficult for me to not eat
in the two hours before I go to sleep.
Like that is my Achilles heel.
So if I accomplish nothing other
than figuring out how to master that
as a result of doing this challenge,
that would be a huge win for me.
Have you played around with the types of food
that you're eating?
Yeah.
And, you know, when I was wearing a continuous
glucose monitor, it was very evident,
like when I would eat, like right before going to bed,
how it would wreak havoc on me.
And, you know, I wake up in the middle of the night
and stuff like that.
And my blood glucose regulation is, you know,
super dysregulated as a result of that.
Like I know I shouldn't do it.
And it's just, this is a habit
that's been very difficult for me to break.
I haven't seen this formally studied.
So I can't speak to an intervention,
but I have a hypothesis here
and I'm not sure whether you've tried this,
but I'd be interested to see what happens
if you have a slightly lower carbohydrate dinner
and a higher fat.
And I suspect because that will be slower to digest
and metabolize that you might feel fuller for longer.
It's a weird satiety thing.
And I don't know if it's just mental or emotional,
but if I don't feel full when I get into bed,
like I feel like agitated, you know,
I feel like I need to,
there's something emotional or physiological about how you kind of relax
when you've just eaten, like your anxiety
and your stress level lowers.
And for some reason, if I'm going to bed and I'm hungry,
like it becomes very difficult for me to fall asleep.
I get that.
You might need a bigger plate at dinner.
I eat plenty, trust me, dude.
Anyway, I don't wanna get too sidetracked on that,
but I think that's really important and that's great.
And if you wanna be more rigorous about your sleep tracking,
there's always like a whoop or something like that
that you can get that,
you know, listen, I never take this thing off
and it's really been helpful in keeping me on track,
not so much for the day to day, but more for the trends
and just understanding the types of behaviors
and habits that influence things like HRV
and the amount of ram or deep sleep
that I'm getting every night
and how that impacts resting heart rate, stress,
like all those sorts of things.
Like just, it's just information that arms you
with the data points to kind of solve the arithmetic
of what works for you and what's leading you astray.
Yeah, I love the sleep data.
And, you know, I agree.
I've been able to identify a few different kind of patterns.
I've noticed if I'm working really late,
then my restorative deep sleep is much lower.
Probably going to bed thinking about all the things
I need to do. Right, and then if you correlated that
with where your stress levels are
and how long it takes them to go down as you go to sleep.
Because if you haven't reduced those before going to bed,
you're gonna have a less restful evening of sleep.
Yeah, my recovery today was 86%.
That's pretty good.
I was happy with that.
Yeah, right on.
One thing that's clear from the work on sleep
that's now working its way into the naming
and understanding of brain states and wakefulness
is that one state precedes another.
Now your bike ride where you're listening to the audio book
is a way in which you're coordinating
your respiration physiology, your breathing
and your motor output, your bike riding
with the ability to access auditory information
and remember it well.
So you figured out something about that state.
But the neuroscientist in me says,
okay, but what follows that state when you get back?
What state are you in then?
Is it a state of exhaustion that allows you to go
into deep rest to access neuroplasticity?
Or is it a state of where you've essentially
moved all that excess autonomic arousal out of your body
and now finally you can sit down
and just focus your cone of attention on your work.
So one state precedes another.
And one thing that I think can be incredibly useful
to people would be to think about two hallmarks
of brain states in order to access them more readily.
One is that the thing that we are all a slave to,
all of us is the 24 hour circadian cycle.
Every cell in our body has a 24 hour clock
that runs at the level of genes
and the level of cellular processes
and every network in our body
whether that's nervous system, spleen, whatever
is governed by this 24 hour clock.
We can fairly crudely but still accurately
subdivide that 24 hour period into three phases.
What I would call phase one
and I'm just naming it phase one
because we don't have a better name for it,
is from about zero until about eight or nine hours
after you wake up.
Phase two is from about nine hours after you wake up
until about 16 hours after you've woken up.
And phase three would be from about 17 hours to 24 hours.
The 17 hour to 24 hour period
that we're calling phase three is sleep.
And we know what we should be doing in that state.
We should be accessing as much uninterrupted deep sleep
as we can.
And the beautiful work that Matt's done
and others have done says,
okay, lower the temperature in the room,
elevate your feet a little bit, et cetera, et cetera.
Keep it dark.
I mean, there's a lot of things
that we could talk about there.
Phase one and phase two,
we know based on really good neuroscience,
have certain signature patterns of neurotransmitter release
and autonomic arousal that lend themselves better
to certain activities,
both mental and physical and not others.
So phase one, for instance,
is always accompanied by an increase in cortisol.
This is a healthy release of cortisol,
a stress hormone that wakes us up.
It's part of the wake up system.
And the release of epinephrine,
which is also called adrenaline,
and the molecule dopamine.
It turns out epinephrine and dopamine,
dopamine actually manufactures epinephrine,
they're biochemically.
So that phase one of the day, in many ways,
is ideal for any kind of linear action oriented
items.
If you had, and people will differ.
Some people say I do creative work best early in the day, but most people are going to do
best at kind of correct answer type work, meaning where there is a correct linear output,
it's going to be accounting type work, or it's going to be exercise where you might
not know exactly what you're going to do,
but there is a process that you can follow.
It's going to be punching out a certain amount of words
on a page, because you're just trying to get the page,
the words down on the page for the book or doing math
or doing any kind of linear operations
during that first phase one.
Phase two has a signature pattern of neurotransmitter release
in the brain and body that are more closely associated, not exclusively,
but more closely associated
with the release of things like serotonin.
These are neuromodulators that tend to make us feel
a little bit calmer and they disrupt,
or I should say they alter,
because it's not a pathological shift,
but they alter our perception of space and time
in a way that allows us to make mental associations
that are a little bit looser, they can be nonlinear.
So that's a time that's excellent for creative work
or for brainstorming.
And you might notice that when you're a little bit fatigued,
your mind is a little freer.
And if you're very fatigued,
your mind is all over the place.
So one thing that I think has been missing
from the brain state work
has been a kind of cohesive framework.
And yet everyone, I think every neuroscientist would agree
that the 24 hour cycle really governs
not just digestion and bodily temperature,
because it does, temperature is higher in the morning,
rising, rising, rising to the afternoon,
then starts coming down and then you go into sleep
in phase three, because your body temperature is lowered.
So those three phases really drive our brain states
and one precedes the other.
This is the key thing.
We can never look at a state in isolation.
But if you wanted to understand, for instance,
how to access a state of heightened creativity,
you might try placing it in phase two of the day.
So 10 to 16 hours after you've been awake
and see how that works for you.
And pay attention to your state of mind
before you attempt to go into that state
and as you exit that state.
And so I think that if we've learned anything
from the sleep science,
it's that we can't look at one state of mind in isolation. We need to ask what preceded it and what follows
it in order to understand its structure and how to access it better.
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The rates of suicide are far higher in young residents.
And what we've discovered over the past maybe 10 years, and we've been doing a lot of this work too,
is the intimate relationship between sleep
and your mental health.
And what we know is that when you are not getting
sufficient sleep, your suicidal thoughts increase,
suicidal planning increases, suicide attempts increase
and tragically suicide completion also increases as well.
And more generally what we've discovered
and I've been doing this for about 20 years now,
we have not been able to discover
a single psychiatric condition in which sleep is normal.
And so I think sleep is a profound story to tell
in our understanding, our treatment,
maybe even our prevention of grave mental illness.
Well, certainly in saying that,
it should be the first stop
on the kind of treatment protocol, right?
Like how is your sleep?
Let's deal with that first
before we look at pharmaceutical interventions.
Yeah, it's a stabilizing force.
And we know it's a stabilizing force,
both in terms of your psychology,
as we mentioned, impulsivity,
but also just from a basic reward brain sensitivity
that your addiction potential from a brain perspective
is higher with insufficient sleep, same individual,
two different sleep conditions,
two different addictive profiles.
Right, right, right, wow.
Wow, I have to reassess my whole life now.
Oh, I'm so sorry.
I'm there.
No, no, it's fine. Terribly bad.
No, it's good.
I wanna talk about sleep in adolescents and in teens,
cause I think the work that you're doing here
and the issues that you're trying to raise awareness around
are super important.
The implications of chronic sleep deprivation
in young people, the relationship to early school hours
and how this plays out in terms of academic potential
and the mental health implications that you just mentioned.
Yeah, so there's been a remarkable amount of work
looking at this issue of early school start times,
this incessant model of marching back
the school clock hours.
And the summary of the evidence really,
I think it goes the following.
Firstly, we see that academic, when you shift schools
to a later school start time,
so when you do a causal intervention, what happens?
Firstly, academic grades increase,
attruency rates decrease,
psychological and psychiatric referrals also decrease.
But what we also discovered is that the life expectancy of those students increased.
And you may think, well, hang on a second, how does that work? Well, the leading cause
of death in late stage adolescent teens is actually not suicide, it's road traffic accidents.
And here sleep matters enormously. And there was one good example, I think it came from Tetton County in Wyoming.
They shifted their school start times
from around 7.30 in the morning
to just before nine o'clock in the morning.
The only thing more remarkable
than the extra hour of sleep
that those kids reported getting
was the drop in road traffic accidents.
That following year after the time switch,
there was a 70%, seven zero reduction in car crashes
in students 16 to 18.
Statistically unbelievable.
It blows my mind.
Now, statistically you can give a relevance to that.
Think of the advent of ABS systems in cars,
anti-lock brake systems that stop your wheels
from locking up under hard braking.
That dropped accident rates by around 20 to 25%.
And it was deemed a revolution.
Yet here is a simple biological factor,
giving our kids the sleep that they need
that will drop accident rates by up to 70%.
So if our goal as educators truly is to educate
and not risk lives in the process,
then we are failing our children
in a most spectacular manner with this incessant model
of early school start times.
When sleep is abundant, minds flourish.
When it's not, they don't.
Right.
There's so much education, I think,
that needs to be done in this area.
As a parent of two teens, I've got four kids,
two older boys.
Any parent knows how difficult it is to wake up
a young adolescent in the morning
and the frustration that comes with that.
But what I've come to better understand by Dinta
of your work is how crucial sleep is for that developing brain.
And during COVID, we have one child,
our younger child who's being homeschooled right now,
we've let her sleep in as long as she wants.
And we don't start her first class until noon.
And so she's getting a ton of sleep.
But if you even tried to wake her up at nine o'clock,
I mean, just forget it.
You're gonna spend the next hour and a half
trying to get this kid up.
So clearly there's a reason why that state of sleep
is so deep, right?
Like that it is crucial in this developing mind.
Yeah, and we often have that classic idea
of a parent at the weekend,
pulling the sheets off the teenager,
ripping open the curtains and saying,
you're wasting the day.
But firstly, what we know is that it's not their fault
because during that adolescent transition,
there is a biological shift in their 24 hour rhythm
that they now want to go to bed later
and wake up later.
So asking a teenager to wake up at seven o'clock
in the morning and operate and conduct themselves
with good grace and be able to learn effectively
is like asking an adult to wake up at 3.30 or 4
in the morning and be the best version of yourself.
If I was to wake up at three o'clock in the morning
and come through to the kitchen and we both wake,
I'd have to say to my partner,
I would say to look darling,
and she would say like, why are you so moody?
I'm just not the best version of myself
because I've woken up too early.
And she will definitely tell you that.
But I think it's the same, you know,
misgiving because we don't understand how sleep works
with our teenagers.
And so putting them in the school at that time,
seven or eight in the morning,
essentially is, you know, educating them amnesic.
Right.
They are at that stage, they are leaky civs.
And what will go in will just come out the other side.
So that's the first thing that's happening.
It's not their fault, it's just their biology.
And then second at the weekend,
they're trying to sleep off a debt
that we've lumbered them with during the week
because of these early school start times.
And if you ask parents,
if you sort of question parents
of teenagers, what proportion of parents think that their teen is getting sufficient sleep?
And more than 70% of them say,
I think my teen is doing fine.
I think they're getting the sleep that they need.
When in reality, less than 15% of those teens
are actually getting the sleep that they need.
So there is a parent to child mismatch
in sleep understanding.
And as a consequence, there is a parent to child
transmission of sleep neglect.
Parents don't see it, they don't understand it.
And so, in 15 or 10 or 20 years time,
that teenager, lo and behold, seems to have amnesia.
And they, with their own kids, will do the same thing.
They'll pull the sheets off and say,
you're wasting the day,
because it was taught to them by their parents
that sleep and getting the right timing of sleep
and the right amount of sleep is something shameful.
So for that young person, do they need more hours?
They do.
So the eight hour rule doesn't really apply.
No, that's for adults.
And in fact, the brain doesn't stop developing
until it's about 25 years old.
And sleep plays a critical role
in what we call brain plasticity,
which is modeling the brain.
It plays a role early in life,
in the first couple of years,
sleep seems to actually help wire up the brain.
So it's almost like sleep at that time of life
comes in to a new neighborhood.
And like an internet service provider,
it wires all of those homes
with high-speed fiber optic cables.
But then later in life,
that's when during the teenage years,
we've actually realized which homes
are using the high bandwidth
and which homes aren't really sort of drawing
on that sort of, you know, that broadband speed.
And so then the role of the brain,
it goes from expanding and creating lots of connections,
which is called neurogenesis,
to then actually synaptic pruning,
which is where we now have to make the brain efficient
for adulthood.
Should we be sleeping though differently
than the way that we are in modernity?
And I actually think there is an argument for this,
because if you look at hunter gatherer tribes
whose way of life hasn't changed for thousands of years,
they don't sleep the way that we do.
They don't sleep in what we call a monophasic pattern,
which is trying to get one long single bout at night
and then we're awake for 16 hours.
They sleep biphasically.
So typically, depending on what season,
be it winter versus summer,
they will sleep for anywhere between
sort of six to seven hours at night.
And then they will have the siesta-like behavior
in the afternoon where they have a nap,
getting this sort of fuller opportunity.
So I think modernity, you could argue,
has actually dislocated us
from how our natural edict of sleep schedule.
Is there any other evidence to support that?
There actually is.
Most people will know this.
Somewhere between about two to four PM every day, you will have a drop, a pre-programmed
and it's genetically hardwired drop in your alertness. It's sort of, you know, that you're around the boardroom
table after lunch, and all of a sudden you start
to see these head bobs going on, you know,
it's not people listening to good music.
They're just giving way to what we call
the post-prandial dip in alertness.
And it is decoupled on some level from the food coma, right?
Like part of it is, oh, I ate a big lunch,
but this is independent of that.
You can prevent people from having lunch
and they still have, and I put electrodes on their head,
we can still measure this alertness drop.
So it is independent of food.
Right, so siesta.
So siesta, and you can ask,
well, if that is how we were designed to sleep,
is there any evidence that something goes wrong
when you change that natural behavior?
And that actually happened as a natural, well,
an unfortunate natural experiment in Greece
a couple of decades ago.
They decided that they were going to do away
with the siesta policy.
So if you went to Greece in the 1980s
and you walked around the towns,
you would see on the shop windows,
it would say open from 10 to 2 p.m.,
close from two to 5 p.m.,
and then open from five to 10 p.m.
because there was a standardized siesta practice.
They decided to do away with that.
And so Harvard researchers said,
okay, we're going to see what happens.
What are the consequences?
And they focused on cardiovascular disease.
So they tracked the sleep and the help
of cardiovascular health of well over 23,000 Greeks.
And what they found is that across that five year period,
there was a 37% increased likelihood
of having a heart attack.
In fact, it was worse in males.
In males, there was a 60% increase
in likelihood of having a heart attack.
And what was happening, it seemed,
if you looked at the data,
is that they were still sleeping the same,
maybe just six hours a night, and they were doing away with the still sleeping the same, maybe just six hours a night.
And they were doing away with the nap during the day
and they weren't replacing that sleep time
back into their night phase.
They were staying true to what they'd been doing before
at night and they'd just been short changed
of their sleep during the day.
And that led to cardiovascular health consequences.
So if no siesta, you gotta make sure you get the eight hours.
But if you're doing, if you're engaging
in that hunter gatherer practice,
you can go six and two or whatever.
And that seems to be fine.
I would say that there's probably a couple
of caveats with naps though.
Naps are a double-edged sword.
If you are struggling with sleep at night,
the recommendation is do not nap during the day,
because what you want to do is build up
all of that healthy sleepiness,
and it's a chemical called adenosine,
it's sleep pressure essentially.
And the longer that you've been awake,
the more of that adenosine,
the more of that sleep pressure builds up.
And it's not a mechanical pressure in your brain,
don't worry, it's a chemical pressure to sleep.
And then after about 16 hours of being awake,
there seems to be enough adenosine,
enough sort of sleepiness to be weighing down
on your shoulders that now you can fall asleep
and then stay asleep.
So if you're someone who has fragile sleep or insomnia,
you shouldn't nap during the day
because taking a nap during the day will actually just,
it's almost like a pressure valve on a steam cooker.
You just release some of that healthy sleep pressure
that's building up.
And now when it comes time to fall asleep
or stay asleep at night, it's that much harder.
So the advice would be if you don't have sleep problems and you can nap
regularly, then I would say naps are just fine. But if you can't do it regularly, and especially
if you suffer from sleep problems, try to stay away from naps. If you are going to nap,
nap before 2 PM in the afternoon. Going later than that can be problematic for your sleep.
You know, it's a little bit like snacking before your main meal.
It just takes the edge off your appetite.
It's the same way with naps.
I want to talk about fasting,
something I used to think about in binary terms,
like you're either eating or you're not, right?
Well, if you're a long time listener of this show,
then you'll probably recall my conversations with Dr. Volter Longo, Well, if you're a long time listener of this show, then you'll probably recall my conversations
with Dr. Volter Longo, who, if you don't know,
is one of the world's preeminent research scientists
on nutrition and longevity.
And this is the guy who pioneered
a very novel middle ground approach to fasting,
where you can actually nourish your body
while also triggering cellular repair processes
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autophagy, a Nobel Prize winning cellular repair process that cleans house in your body.
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I want you to pause for a moment
because I want to tell you about my friend, RJ.
Now you might know this guy as the founder
and CEO of Rivian.
He is certainly that, but he's really so much more.
He's one of those rare people who actually walks the walk.
I've watched him over many years and I know him to be this incredibly deeply committed
person, committed to preserving wild spaces while also inspiring people to explore responsibly.
And that's basically Rivian in a nutshell. Their mission, keep the
world adventurous forever, comes from this understanding that adventure and a
healthy planet, these are not separate things. They're the same thing. Here's
what gets me. Every generation deserves wild places to roam, to climb higher, to
run farther, to be changed by the journey. But obviously that's only possible if we're
not destroying those places in the process of getting there. So yeah, Rivian
builds electric vehicles, but really they're building something bigger.
Momentum toward a future where exploration does not come at the
expense of nature, but actually inspires us to protect it. It's like why create
the ultimate adventure vehicle
if we're not protecting the adventures themselves?
And that's why I'm so proud to align forces
in partnership with Rivian.
This isn't just about transportation.
It's about building a world worth exploring
for our kids, for their kids, and for generations to come.
I'm sure you or somebody has studied what happens
if you take exogenous adenosine, right?
Like, wouldn't that seem to be the way in
to resolving this problem for people that have insomnia?
Hard to get it across the brain barrier,
which is a protective layer around the brain.
And, you know, there's some issues around toxicity as well.
So yeah, that certainly would have been the idea.
But what's lovely is that,
you can increase sort of sleep pressure
in a number of non-pharmacological ways
and exercise is a great demonstration of that.
And I think, we can speak about all of these different
over the counter medications that people try to invest in and think that that's going to give them a good night of
sleep.
But there are probably two really simple things that you can do non medication that are, if
you look at the data are almost guaranteed to improve your sleep, which is some form
of physical activity most days or at least several days a week.
And the second is deal with your anxiety.
Anxiety is the principle cause of insomnia.
It's not the only cause,
but it's our current working model of insomnia
that people who have a high fight or flight activation
of their nervous system, branch of the nervous system,
they also have high levels of stress chemicals
such as cortisol.
And that seems to be very predictive of their insomnia.
And if you can start to manage your anxiety,
for example, meditation is a fantastic practice.
And before I was writing the book
and I was sort of starting to research,
I was a bit of a stupid hard-nosed scientist.
I just thought this meditation stuff
was maybe a little bit woo woo and sort of come by R
and we all hold hands.
And I started to look at the data.
The data was immensely powerful and very robust
that people, when they are suffering from insomnia,
if you put them into a meditation, a mindful practice, you can actually drop the severity of from insomnia, if you put them into a meditation of mindful practice,
you can actually drop the severity of the insomnia
in a way that medications,
such even prescription medications,
can't come close to.
Yeah, I mean, I just know, well, first of all,
if I don't exercise, forget about it.
I know I'm gonna struggle with sleep at night.
And if and when I have difficulty falling asleep
or I wake up in the middle of the night,
I've become very attuned to what my mind is doing.
And it will generally default to some problem
that I'm having or conflict that I'm trying to resolve.
And I'll just loop some narrative.
And that produces a tremendous amount of anxiety
which obviously prevents me from falling asleep.
So I noticed that.
And then I course correct through either
some kind of mindfulness practice to kind of create space
and push that narrative aside
or overcome it with a different narrative.
And sometimes I'll just think about a book that I'm reading
or a movie that I saw,
and I'll just immerse myself in that narrative.
And that's like a distraction. Exactly.
Literally short circuits that other anxiety producing
narrative and I fall asleep.
You're so right.
So I think in this modern day and age,
sort of, you know, the empty fee fast food 24 seven society,
we're constantly on sort of reception,
particularly with now all of this digital technology
and rarely do we do reflection.
Unfortunately, the one time when we do reflection
is when a head hits the pillow.
And that's the last time that you want to go into rumination.
You don't want the rolodex of anxiety spinning up, which is what you were sort of describing,
because that leads to something that we call catastrophization, that you start thinking,
oh, what didn't I do today?
And what do I need to do more of tomorrow?
And then I forgot this.
And at that point, good sleep is not going to be invited into the brain.
By the way, counting sheep does not work.
There was a scientific study done by a colleague of mine
at UC Berkeley that demonstrated, in fact, if anything,
it hurts your sleep.
And what-
But if you're catastrophizing,
it would probably be better to start counting sheep.
It could be, but what you described
was actually what she found.
Far better was to engage in some kind of a mental aspect.
And what they found was take yourself on a walk.
Think about a walk that you know in the forest
or in nature or down on the beach
and just start to try to walk yourself through that
or think about a book that you're reading
or think about sort of a podcast
and anything to get the mind off itself.
So for example, I feel embarrassed to say this,
but I love racing cars.
And so if I'm struggling with sleep, which I do too,
I am not immune to bad nights of sleep
and I've had bouts of insomnia.
So comforting to hear that.
You know, I'm just as fragile.
And so what I'll do is, you know,
I'll put myself and I'll think about the track
and I'll, you know, drive myself around the track.
I know when I need to, which gear I need to be in,
where my breaking zones are.
And then the next thing I know
is I'm waking up in the morning and I just drifted off.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Because I've taken my mind off that.
That's great.
That's sort of a different version of what I do.
What kind of cars do you race?
Oh gosh, I've raced all sorts of BMWs, Porsches,
but my real love and the car that I own
is a little Mazda Miata.
When you're a professor,
you can't really go racing in half million dollar cars.
And I love it to pieces.
It is a car unlike a Ferrari or a Porsche.
When you're going 40 miles an hour,
it feels like you're doing 100.
Whereas in a Porsche, when you're doing 100,
it feels like 40 miles an hour.
So I'm usually the slowest guy on track,
but it brings me a lot of joy and satisfaction.
That's cool.
Well, let's talk a little bit about best practices then.
I feel like we're at that juncture.
And I wanna do this by walking you through
the extreme lengths that I've gone through.
I know a little of your sleep history.
So, tent included.
Yeah, I sleep in a tent,
causes a lot of consternation and confusion
from people that listen to this show,
but I'll just provide a little background of that.
Like historically I've had issues falling asleep.
Part of it, and I'm interested in your take on this,
is I think my sense is that it germinates somewhat
from being like an extreme ultra endurance athlete.
I've gone through periods of my life
where I've put my body through just unbelievable rigor,
like 25 hour training weeks
where you're just so exhausted.
Sleep is a non-issue.
Sleep is not a problem
when you're pushing yourself that hard.
But it's been many years since I've been kind of
habiting that space.
And now, but I've acclimated,
my physical body is acclimated to doing that, right?
So now if I go out for a one hour run,
or I go on a casual bike ride, it's not enough.
Like I'm not getting enough of the fatigue
to create the restful state that I aspire to be in.
Like I really, I have to exercise
more than the average person, which is challenging
when you're a busy person.
So there's that.
On top of that, my body's like a furnace.
Like I literally burn hot.
And my wife likes the bedroom a lot warmer than I do.
And we would have these, this back and forth
over many years where it's too cold for her, it's too hot.
I'm on top of all the covers,
she's underneath them shivering, it wasn't working.
And as kind of a joke, I went,
we have a flat roof off of our bedroom and I went
and I just pulled a twin mattress up there
and slept there one night,
had an unbelievable night of sleep.
I thought this is fantastic.
It's nice and cold out, the desert air, even in the summer.
And that, I graduated from that into getting a tent.
And I've been sleeping in a tent ever since.
I absolutely love it.
The cold air, being under the stars
and being under a bunch of blankets,
including a gravity blanket,
which I'd love your thoughts on,
which I found to be really helpful
speaking about the sympathetic nervous system
and trying to calm myself down.
And eye mask and nature sounds and magnesium,
like all kinds of stuff.
And the idea being of course,
to create the optimal situation for the best opportunity
for eight hours of sleep every night.
And like yourself, I don't always,
despite all of that, sleep still alludes me any nights,
but more often than not,
I'm getting more high quality sleep than I used to.
But I'm interested in how this kind of measures up
with what you found through your studies
about best practices, specifically temperature,
air quality, all these kinds of things.
Yeah, and so I think there are probably maybe five tips
for better sleep tonight, if you could suggest that,
or trying to optimize your sleep.
And temperature, regularity, darkness, walk it out,
and then alcohol and caffeine.
And I'll say the last one,
because usually if you don't find me deeply unappealing
right now, you will after that fifth one.
Temperature is a fascinating one.
We know that your brain and your body
need to drop their core temperature
by about one degree Celsius
or about two to three degrees Fahrenheit
for you to fall asleep and then stay asleep across the night.
And that's the reason that you'll always find it easier
to fall asleep in a room that's too cold than too hot
because too cold is taking you
in the right thermal direction for good sleep.
And that's why sleeping in a tent,
now we understand we're in Southern California,
but nevertheless, it gets cooler at night
than it is during the day.
Yeah, I wouldn't be doing this in Boston.
Right, yeah.
It's still, I mean, typically it's low 40s
and it goes down into the high 30s
and I've never not slept in the tent
because it was too cold.
I know that in your research,
you found there is an inflection point
at which point perhaps too cold is not so good.
Yeah, once you get into an extreme it-
But I have to tell you, like, you know,
when it's 38 degrees, I'm happy.
Like, I sleep pretty dang well.
Yeah, and that-
I mean, I got a lot of blankets on, but-
And so it's sort of, you know,
the local temperature may not quite be that-
And here's the other thing.
I always have my feet sticking out.
I cannot have my feet under the covers.
Yeah, do you know why?
Yeah, I think I know, but go ahead.
Because it's your hands and your feet
that are these incredible radiators of heat.
Your hands and your feet are highly vascular.
In other words, there is this crisscross of vessels
very close to the surface and it's very rich
in its vascular nature, both your hands and your feet.
And so at night, what the body wants to do
is almost like a snake charmer,
draw the heat out of the core of the body
and evacuate it through the extremities.
And the extremities in this case for us human beings are hands and feet as well as head.
And that's why you will sometimes see rebellious,
when you see kids and you kind of tuck them in all nicely
and you look at your wife and you smile
and it's all beautiful.
And then you go back in two hours later,
just before you go to bed
and these rebellious legs are dangling out, sticking out.
It's because you're trying
to evacuate the heat.
So you're wise in doing that
because they are wonderful thermal discharges.
So that's temperature.
And we do need to drop that temperature.
It's different for different people,
but I think the recommendation would probably be about
65 degrees or so for most people.
Now that's obviously averaging across men and women
and it's different there too, as you mentioned,
which is around about, if I do my math correctly,
it's probably around about 18, 18.3 degrees Celsius.
So that's temperature and that's why I think
you definitely will start to sleep better than you
at least would do otherwise
on a constant temperature.
Because there's another way that modernity has dislocated us
from our natural edict of sleep,
which is we set a thermostat of maybe 70 or 72 degrees
throughout the day and the night.
And that's not how we were sleeping.
Now, if you go back to those hunter gatherers, by the way,
for whom you are in some ways
mimicking their sleeping existence,
they don't go to bed really on the basis of light,
which is what we thought.
They usually will go to bed about an hour and a half
to two hours after sundown.
And then when they wake up and they don't have alarms,
if you ask them about this idea of,
artificially terminating sleep with an alarm,
they're perplexed.
Also, rates of insomnia in the general first world
population is somewhere between 10 to 15%.
In those hunt together tribes, it's less than 5%.
So some things-
They're also moving all day long.
They're moving all day long.
And we can look at diet as well.
But so what is determining their sleep onset
and their sleep offset is not light, it's temperature.
So when that, and if you ask people,
if you just bring them into the laboratory and you say,
at what point do you feel sleepy at night?
It's at the point where their core body temperature
is on the steepest decline.
Now they don't know that,
even though unfortunately we've placed a rectal probe
inside of them, which is no fun for either the experimenter
to insert or for the participant to receive,
but they are on the awesome down slope
of the thermal evacuation.
And that's when they feel sleepy.
And when those hunter gatherer tribes wish to wake up
is before dawn, just before dawn,
but it's as the temperature starts to rise back up.
So it turns out that we actually need to warm up
a little bit to get cold.
We need to bring the blood to the surface of the skin.
That's why cold, it must be in the blood to the surface of the skin. That's why cold
it must be in the bedroom, but you can wear socks if you want, or you can have a hot water
bottle, but keep it cold because warming the feet or sticking them out of the mattress
will help your body evacuate the heat and plummet your core body temperature. And it's
the reason, by the way, that hot baths and showers work for good sleep as well.
I think many of us, even if we've got blackout curtains
and sort of, you know, we're wearing an eye mask,
we will wake up.
And I think we have some general sense,
but maybe plus or minus an hour in terms of accuracy,
that, okay, it's still probably the middle of the night
or it kind of feels like late in the morning.
And in part, that's because you do have
an internal 24 hour clock.
But I also think that there's something that we've lost
in terms of our light exposure that you have gained back,
which is that it's not just that your internal clock,
which may get you within one hour plus or minus,
it's not bad at doing that,
but when you open up your eyes
and you get additional exogenous information,
which is from the outside world,
rather than the endogenous clock time
that your 24 hour clock is giving you,
then you shift from plus or minus an hour of accuracy
to maybe plus or minus five minutes.
And so- Yeah, it's fascinating.
I love this.
When I retire, maybe I'll look at this
because there's something very strange
about sleep and time that is utterly paradoxical.
And what I mean by this is you can say,
okay, I've got to wake up because I'm going to,
I'm gonna fly out and meet Matt Walker in Berkeley
and we're gonna grab coffee
and I've got to get this early morning flight from LAX.
And you set your alarm for five o'clock in the morning
and guaranteed you will wake up at 4.58.
100%.
How is that possible?
It happens too frequently for it to be,
just by chance.
So somewhere your brain has this quartz-like precision
of clock counting.
However, there is an absence of time,
particularly in dreaming
because all of us have probably had that experience
that our alarm goes off and we were in this strange dream.
And then we hit the snooze button
and our snooze button is just two minutes.
And we go back, we go right back into the dream again.
And then the snooze button goes off.
And you think, now hang on a second.
I was, that felt like almost an hour of an experience.
So there is this temporal mismatch
where when we go into the dream state,
we can almost fold and compress time like a concertina.
It's like inception.
Yeah, and I think it's no big surprise
that Nolan picked up on that,
with the help of maybe some sleep specialists offering that advice. We know that, you know, with the help of maybe some, you know, sleep specialists offering that advice.
We know that you get this, you know, this dilation,
I've called it sort of dream dilation
or dream time dilation, where time is no longer time.
Right, like, so what do you make of that?
Like, what would be the evolutionary advantage of that?
Well, it may be that there is no
necessarily evolutionary advantage, but there may be a brain mechanism that? Well, it may be that there is no necessarily evolutionary advantage,
but there may be a brain mechanism that explains it,
because what we know is that memories are replayed
during both deep sleep and REM sleep.
Now, when we are in deep sleep,
memories are actually sped up.
The brain will actually be replaying those memories
anywhere between five to 20 times faster.
But when we go into dream sleep,
the replay is actually much slower.
Is there a potential long-term organic atrophy consequence
of insufficient sleep on the brain?
We seem to think that there is, yes.
But again, I think I want to be really careful here
and I don't want to be causing people alarm.
And what I would say is that it is never too late
to start sleeping better.
And that's not just me sort of pulling out the pom poms
and trying to be positive, we've got data.
So in a series of studies, and we've done a lot of work
in, as I mentioned in, in older adults,
but if you take a group of midlife adults who are suffering from untreated sleep apnea, heavy snoring,
and then you put them on treatment, which is called a CPAP machine, C-P-A-P, the continuous
positive airway pressure.
By the way, if anyone's listening to this and they think that they suffer from sleep
apnea or they have a partner who does, please go and get diagnosed.
It is a deathly disease untreated.
And what they found is that about half of those participants
complied to the treatment and about half didn't.
And they track them over a 10 year period.
And what they found is that those individuals
who complied to the treatment
and whose sleep was improved as a consequence,
they staved off the onslaught of Alzheimer's disease
and cognitive decline by anywhere between 10 to 15 years
relative to those who remained untreated
or uncompliant with their treatment.
In other words, even in mid-life,
there is evidence to say it's never too late
to start sleeping better.
But can those brain centers that have atrophy
be regenerated or is that a permanent thing?
We don't know.
It depends on what extent of atrophy.
We used to think maybe 30 years ago
that the brain didn't produce new brain cells.
Once it had matured and once you are an adult,
that was your sort of smorgasbord of brain cells.
And as you lost them through time,
you never got them back.
When you drink, you kill brain cells,
they never come back.
They never come back.
Well, that's not true.
There are in many regions of the brain that is true,
but there are a couple of regions that it's not true.
And in fact, these memory centers, the hippocampus,
that's one of the centers that does actually seem
to have some degree of regenerative capacity.
How capable of meeting the demand of brain atrophy
and damage that that system is of regeneration is unclear.
What I should note, by the way,
is that that system of the creation of new brain cells,
it's what we call neurogenesis,
which I think is a great alternative name for a band
rather than just Genesis, Phil.
If you deprive a rat of sleep,
it fails to have the regulation of that neurogenesis.
You lose the capacity for neurogenesis
when you are under slept.
So it becomes this self-fulfilling negative
vicious cycle of prophecy
that if you are not getting sufficient sleep,
those brain cells start to deteriorate in atrophy.
And then the one thing that could help you get them back
is the one thing that you keep depriving yourself of.
So you lose even the salvaging of that. That's it for today.
Thank you for listening.
I truly hope you enjoyed the conversation.
To learn more about today's guests,
including links and resources related to everything discussed today,
visit the episode page at richroll.com,
where you can find the entire podcast archive,
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Today's show was produced and engineered by Jason Camiolo.
The video edition of the podcast was created by Blake Curtis and Morgan McRae with assistance
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Content management by Shana Savoy, copywriting by Ben Pryor.
And of course, our theme music was created all the way back in 2012 by Tyler Pyatt, Trapper
Pyatt, and Harry Mathis.
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See you back here soon.
Peace.
Plants.
Namaste.