The School of Greatness - How Nutrition, Exercise, Tech & Sex Affect Your Sleep w/Andrew Huberman EP 1219
Episode Date: January 24, 2022My guest today is Neuroscientist Andrew Huberman. Andrew is a Professor of Neurobiology and Ophthalmology at Stanford. Andrew runs Stanford's lab that primarily studies brain states - such as fear, co...urage, anxiety, calm - and how we can better move into and out of them through practices like visual cues, breathwork, movement, and supplementation. We just had Andrew on for episode 1204 where we talked about having the perfect morning routine, eliminating brain fog and managing your dopamine levels.. so make sure to go to lewishowes.com/1204 so you can check that out if you missed it.In this episode we discuss how sleeping poorly negatively affects you, the main things that prevent you from sleeping well and how to fix them, how nutrition and exercise affect sleep, what is happening in the brain when we sleep and so much more!For more go to: www.lewishowes.com/1219Check out the last episode with Andrew Huberman: www.lewishowes.com/1204The Wim Hof Experience: Mindset Training, Power Breathing, and Brotherhood: https://link.chtbl.com/910-podA Scientific Guide to Living Longer, Feeling Happier & Eating Healthier with Dr. Rhonda Patrick: https://link.chtbl.com/967-podÂ
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This is episode number 1219 with neuroscientist Andrew Huberman.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week we bring you an inspiring person or message
to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, my friend. Today's guest is Andrew Huberman. And Andrew is a professor of neuro
biology and ophthalmology at Stanford. And Andrew also runs Stanford's lab that primarily studies
brain states such as fear, courage, anxiety, calm,
and how we can better move into and out of them through practices like visual cues, breath work,
movement, and supplementation. We just had Andrew on for episode 1204, where we talked about having
the perfect morning routine, eliminating brain fog, and managing your dopamine levels. So make sure you go check that out at lewishouse.com slash 1204 after this
and check out what you missed there.
In this episode, we break down how sleeping poorly negatively affects every aspect of your life.
The main thing that prevents you from sleeping well and how to fix it.
How nutrition and exercise also impacts the quality of your sleep or the lack
of sleep that you can get. What is happening in the brain when we sleep? What's actually happening
in the neurons and in the mind when we're sleeping and so much more. I find this information
fascinating to me. Anything I can learn about the brain, the mind, and how the body connects with
these systems that we have throughout our brain and our mind is just fascinating to me.
And if we can improve these areas, then we can improve the quality of our life.
So if you're enjoying this at any moment, if you're enjoying what Andrew has to say,
make sure to message him over on social media by linking this episode.
You can just copy and paste the link wherever you're listening to this, post it on social
media, tag Andrew and myself so we can stay up to date on who is listening and who this is impacting. And I'll give a big shout out
to the fan of the week from Sophie, who left a review over on Apple podcast. And they said,
I loved hearing the positive ideas from Marissa Peer, a previous guest we had on. Thank you for
inviting her as a guest. More of this, please. In these dark days, we need all the positivity we can get.
Well, Sophie, thank you for leaving a review
over on Apple Podcast.
Thank you for being a subscriber
and a consistent listener.
Our whole intention and mission
is to be of service to help people improve.
Just like what I'm trying to do
when I interview these guests,
I'm trying to learn how to improve my life as well
in all different areas.
So I'm so glad to hear
that it's supporting you as well in yours.
And thank you for being the fan of the week.
Okay, in just a moment, the one and only Andrew Huberman.
As you can tell by this episode, we can always count on Andrew for science-backed tips and
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Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greatness.
We've got the iconic, inspirational Andrew Huberman in the house.
My man.
Good to see you.
Sleep is something that I feel like when I grew up, I was told, sleep when you're dead.
You know, the athlete, the business mentality was like, broke people, you know, sleep a lot.
You know, those who are making money are going out and working, burning the midnight oil.
But then later in my 30s, I realized how important sleep was for me. a lot you know those who are making money are going out and working burning the midnight oil
but then later in my 30s i realized how important sleep was for me to recover to remember
to have emotional regulation throughout the day and not be reactive and defensive
so can we break this down and your thoughts about sleep and how you frame this, some of the research and the science
that you've studied around this
and what we should be thinking about around sleep.
Sure.
So sleep is the fundamental layer
of mental and physical health.
If there's one thing that we should all be doing
is working toward sleeping long enough
and deeply enough 80% of the time.
I think that 80% is a good goal because things happen.
Travel happens, kids happen, illnesses happen.
The weekend, you're going out or whatever, yeah.
Until you are sleeping long enough and deeply enough,
80% of the nights of your life,
you are functioning suboptimally.
And what's the biggest risk then if we're not getting enough sleep?
Okay.
So there are a number of risks to not getting enough sleep.
Deficits in learning, deficits in the immune system, reduction in testosterone and estrogen
in both men and women.
So disruption of hormones, disruption of gut microbiome, increased cancer risk.
There are a bunch of things.
The severity of those things depends on a lot of other things too.
Prior health, other health conditions, context, age, occupation.
If you're not getting enough sleep and you're a high-rise construction worker,
it's different than if you're an office worker.
So we need to sleep enough.
Now what's enough sleep? This is an interesting question. Enough
sleep has been argued. It's six hours. Other people, it's seven hours. Other people, it's
eight hours. It's basically waking up without an alarm clock and feeling rested. Insomnia
is actually a medical term nowadays. And insomnia is essentially diagnosed as falling asleep during the middle of the day
due to lack of sleep at nighttime. But many people who are having trouble sleeping at night
are not falling asleep during the middle of the day. They're dealing with grogginess or crankiness
or other effects of having fragmented sleep. What are the main causes of not being able to fall asleep?
Is it rumination?
Is it traumas that you're holding onto?
Is it arguments?
Is it self-doubt or insecurities?
Is it your nap too much?
Is it the foods you ate too late?
Like what would you say are the main causes
of not being able to fall asleep?
All of the above.
But the primary one is a failure to turn off your thoughts.
Okay.
And I think that might provide a good anchor point
for us to talk about some protocols.
Really a excellent night's sleep begins in the morning.
I talked about this on the previous episode,
so I won't go into detail, but everyone should get as much bright light in their eyes, ideally from sunlight first thing in the morning. I talked about this on the previous episode, so I won't go into detail,
but everyone should get as much bright light in their eyes,
ideally from sunlight first thing in the morning,
10 to 30 minutes outside, depending on how bright it is.
Eyeglasses or contact lenses are fine.
Don't wear sunglasses if you can do it safely.
If you wake up before the sun rises, turn on bright lights,
then go outside once the sun rises.
If you have no access to sunlight use
a daytime simulator or similar like a ring light and get that light in your eyes okay so that's
all of that in a compact form caffeine you can inhibit falling asleep with caffeine you have
to figure out when your threshold is for me i can drink caffeine up until about three even four
o'clock in the afternoon and sleep like a baby. And still sleep well. Yes, and Matt Walker, our good friend Matt Walker,
would say that my sleep isn't as good as it would be
had I cut caffeine out earlier.
By like 11 or 12 a.m.
Right, and I want to acknowledge, you know,
Matt is the Michael Jordan of sleep science,
and so I'm not gonna-
You're the LeBron James.
Well, no, no, and in fair,
thank you for the compliment, But no, I'm not. I know a lot
of the science and the protocols, but that's Matt's wheelhouse. And so if he says something,
it's true. And if I say something and our opinions conflict, it's likely to be something that the
data are still emerging or in that case, default to Matt.
Being correct, because I just out of due respect
for his expertise.
So caffeine, you know, for some people
they can have a two o'clock espresso,
two p.m. espresso, some people it's four p.m.
Some people can drink caffeine at eight p.m.
and fall asleep, but there I would say
it's problematic because you're disrupting
the architecture of sleep
and the brain waves associated with sleep,
the chemicals and so forth.
So get that morning light,
cut your caffeine off at the time
that allows you to fall asleep.
That morning light also sets the timer
on your melatonin rhythm.
So you have this gland in your brain
called the pineal gland.
That pineal is the source of melatonin.
Melatonin makes you sleepy,
but it does not keep
you asleep. Melatonin starts to rise in the late evening and continues into the night and then
eventually tapers off. This is naturally occurring melatonin release, not supplemented melatonin
release. The fastest way to slam melatonin to the pavement and eliminate it in your system
is to look at bright light for,
I hate to tell you this,
even a few seconds.
You mean at night?
At night is typically when melatonin rises.
It's when it's released in the bloodstream
and when it has this effect of making us sleepy.
It does a number of other things too.
You want more melatonin at night,
is that right?
You do.
And if you wake up in the middle of the night
or it's eight o'clock and you decide you want to go to bed at nine or it's 9 o'clock, you want to go to bed at 10 and you go into the bathroom and you flip on the bright lights, your melatonin levels just got crushed down to zero.
So having lights on is the worst thing you can do.
Yes.
And it doesn't matter if it's blue light, red light, purple light, green light.
Bright lights inhibit melatonin very acutely.
green light, bright lights inhibit melatonin very acutely. And therefore you want to avoid exposure to bright lights at night if your goal is to be asleep. So the simple rule that governs
all this stuff is when you want to be alert, get bright light in your eyes, ideally from sunlight.
So that's true in the morning and throughout the day. And when you want to be sleepy or asleep,
avoid bright light in your eyes. Now, many home environments don't allow you to have zero lights and that's not
actually necessary. You can just dim the lights in the evening. Ideally, you also avoid overhead
lights because the neurons in the eye that trigger this melatonin suppression and so forth, they
reside in an area of the eye that views upper visual space. So you could have desk lamps and just dim those down.
If you're going to work on a screen, dim it way down.
Will blue blockers help?
Yes, but if the light is bright enough, you're still going to inhibit melatonin release.
So how bad is watching TV at night?
If the TV isn't too bright.
If it's farther away.
Farther away.
And maybe you wear blue blockers and, or, or, I mean, some people are go take this to the extreme.
They wear sunglasses.
I think that's a little extreme. Now, candlelight and moonlight, surprisingly, doesn't seem to block melatonin.
Now, maybe a really bright moonlit night, full moon can, you know, the lunacy associated with the full moon might actually be
due to a suppression of melatonin and an increase in alertness. So those are the things as it
relates to light. Then there's this issue of people who have trouble staying asleep. So they
can fall asleep fine, but they wake up at two or three in the morning. I happen to do this. If I
go to bed around 1030, I tend to wake up around three and I use the restroom. Yeah. I tend to drink a lot
of fluids and I have to use the restroom. This was true at every age. This is not just some aging
related thing. That's fine. I just keep the lights dim and use the bathroom and then you go back to
sleep. Very normal, very healthy. One of the best things I ever did for my sleep was to keep my
phone out of the room so that when I woke up at 3 in the morning, I just didn't start scrolling the newspapers is typically what I would do online.
Gotcha.
And then you're just waking up your brain, not just by the light, but by the content.
Activating it again as opposed to coming back to sleep.
Exactly.
And sometimes there's a comment and they're like, why is this?
Your thinking is not very good in the middle of the night.
The other thing is you want to keep the room cool. So in order to fall asleep, your body
has to undergo a drop of in temperature of one to three degrees. There are a couple of ways to
accomplish this. One is keeping the room cool. The other is to, and that's ideal actually,
because you can put a hand or a foot out. We actually lose a lot of our heat through what's
called our glabrous skin,
so the palms of our hands, the bottoms of the feet. I always put my feet out of the sheets
and just let them feel the cool air. That's right. And that's a great way to cool off your
core body temperature. You're probably doing that unconsciously in your sleep as well.
If the room were too warm, the only way for you to cool off would be for you to put your hand in
a bucket of cold water. And generally people don't have that accessible right you're gonna go pee if you're doing that too right exactly and then of course
there are all these products nowadays of you know things that cover yeah that cover that cool the
bed um i'm supposed to try one of these soon i haven't tried one yet i tend to just keep the room
cool yeah and what do you keep it out i keep it around 67 65 uh that's a little cooler than what
i do i put it at about 67 68 okay um but i tend to wake up hot in the middle of the night like throw the comforter off
um and go put some cold water on my face um so don't obsess over waking up too much and if you
do try and stay away from screens or if um you you know, some people will read a book, dim light again,
and then falling back asleep. Some people are waking up at two or three because they are going
to bed too late. Their melatonin has run out. So imagine that you're naturally somebody who
should go to bed early, around nine. But we all have this ability to push forward and stay awake if we have to. Much easier to stay awake than to force yourself to go to
sleep early. Very hard to force yourself to go to sleep. So let's say your system,
you start releasing melatonin around 9 p.m., but you stay up until 11. Then you get into bed,
you fall asleep around 11.30, and at three in the morning, you suddenly wake up. Well,
that's because your melatonin tapered off and there's a wakefulness that's occurring. And so
ideally you would start going to bed earlier. Now there's a lot of discussion out there about
so-called chronotypes. So night owls, morning people, people that follow a more typical
schedule, typical would be going to sleep somewhere between 1030 and 1130, waking up
somewhere between 630 and eight. Then there waking up somewhere between 6.30 and 8.
Then there are the people that like to go to bed at 2 a.m., sleep till 10.
And then there are people that like to go to bed at 8 and wake up at 4.
Huge variation out there.
It tends to change across the lifetime.
Yeah, you're a season of life for years.
That's right.
And adolescents and teenagers tend to stay up later and want to sleep in.
And there's actually some evidence that they can learn better if they are allowed to use that schedule. But most schools won't adhere to that schedule.
You've got to wake up at six and naps, you should feel comfortable. The data say naps, you should feel
comfortable napping for 90 minutes or less at any point throughout the day, as long as it doesn't
interfere with your nighttime sleep. So some people like me, I love naps, but it doesn't
interfere with my nighttime sleep. It doesn't. It does not. So you can take a 60 minute nap.
Generally 20 to 45 minutes and then you you fully fall
asleep or you're kind of like awake and just resting yeah i can fall asleep anywhere anytime
and i can fall asleep at a gun range yeah it's um what it's in it's in can you sleep sitting up too
like this oh yeah playing anywhere that's it is although it it could reflect that i'm pushing my
system a little too hard. Oh.
But it is useful at times.
It's incredible.
It is useful.
So you can fall asleep right on a plane or?
Anywhere.
Leaning against a, you know. Oh my gosh.
Yeah, in a subway station and anywhere.
Yeah.
If I need sleep, I'm going down.
That's incredible.
Yeah.
So the other thing is that during sleep, a number of things happen.
And we can talk about slow wave sleep and REM sleep.
The other thing is that during sleep, a number of things happen.
And we can talk about slow-wave sleep and REM sleep.
But one of the most important physiological functions of sleep is to clear out some of the cellular debris that accumulates throughout the day.
The cellular debris creates cognitive deficits. It actually may be related to the aggregation of proteins and things that relate to dementia and Alzheimer's.
It's the so-called glymphatic system.
The lymphatic system is a system of moving through immune cells and clearing out of debris from the
body. The glymphatic system is a kind of a equivalent system that exists in the brain that
involves so-called glial cells, which are support cells, but also do many things actively. They're
not just doing support.
The glymphatic system is like a washout of the brain's debris. And that system seems to function
best when feet are slightly elevated above the brain. There's some interesting data from
University of South Carolina coming out now that show that if you can get your ankles elevated a
little bit higher than your chin,
that's great.
When you're sleeping?
While you're sleeping.
What's it do for you?
It increases the glymphatic clearance.
And there's some data that it can improve function of the brain.
The studies that are happening now that I'm aware of, I'm in touch with that group,
are mainly geared towards people that have had head injuries.
So concussion and TBI of various kinds.
But they also are seeing interesting effects in typical folks that don't have any traumatic brain injury. So I put a pillow underneath my ankles
when I fall asleep and to get a little bit of that elevation. And then during the day, if ever you
can't get a nap or you are going to get a nap, put your ankles up on the couch and lie down on the
floor. That itself can get some of the clearance of the glymphatic system.
And that helps you sleep better or it helps you just clean out the system?
It helps your brain function better when you wake up from sleep.
Interesting.
That's what the data are starting to show.
That's cool.
Some of the things I described, like the light viewing,
is baked into the neuroscience literature.
Hundreds of papers, published papers.
Some of the things like the glymphatic system is kind of cutting edge. It's on the way, but because the safety margins of
raising your ankles are so large, I mean, there's nothing dangerous about that.
How long do you need to do it for to get the benefits?
Oh, I think these are immediate benefits.
Two minutes or 10 minutes?
Oh, no, you're doing this the whole night that you're asleep, your ankles are elevated. If you
wake up and you happen to kick the pillow out, it's not the end of the world.
But the idea is that you don't want to be sleeping with your head above your ankles
either.
There is some evidence that when people travel on planes and they're sleeping in chairs,
that that's not equivalent to the kind of sleep they'd get when they're lying flat.
That's interesting.
Independent of all the other things that are happening.
And we know this because there are great sleep labs at Stanford School of Medicine, at UPenn, back east and elsewhere, where people actually go into a
clinic and sleep either upright or at different angles. And they're looking at all this at the
level of data. Okay. So here's one for you. What's the best position to sleep on your back,
on your side, on your stomach? Great question. And it really truly
depends. And it probably depends on how hot you run. So I tend to run really warm. A lot of the
cooling of the body occurs from the palms and bottoms of the feet, but also from the upper
back and scapulae because we accumulate what's called brown fat there. It's not the blubbery
fat that's under the skin. It's like a furnace.
Actually, you can increase the density of brown fat by going into cold water repeatedly
for one to three minutes several times each week.
It means your furnace actually burns hotter.
It allows you to be in cold temperatures more comfortably.
Some really beautiful data just published on this.
So I don't like to sleep on my back because I start heating up.
I start sweating.
That's right. So I tend to sleep on my side.
I sleep in that, what is that?
It's like soldier position.
But then again, there are some people
that have shoulder issues and then they can't do that.
I'm relatively flexible through my shoulders,
not super flexible, so I can do that.
It really depends.
Now, of course, if you're sleeping on your stomach,
how do you elevate your ankles?
This starts becoming a little bit, we are not just science experiments.
And so you have to assume that you're not going to get everything exactly right.
But keeping the room cool, keeping the cool being under a warm enough blanket, but then extending a hand or an ankle out so that you could cool off during the middle of the night, that's going to be good.
or an ankle out so that you could cool off during the middle of the night, that's going to be good.
Keep the room dark, although complete pitch black
doesn't seem to be as good as having a little bit
of light somewhere in the room.
But you don't want a bright blue light
or red light anywhere in the room
that's going to wake you up.
Some people like me have very thin eyelids,
exceedingly thin eyelids.
Some people have very thick eyelids.
So some people are more bothered
by a light in the room than others.
It really varies.
So you have to just tune things to your particular environment. I'm curious about the neuroscience
before you go to sleep. How do we set our minds up to, you were saying before about
a lot of people, it's hard for them to sleep because they can't shut their mind off. Right.
Is there something we should be thinking before we shut it off to set our sleep up for success mentally,
and then to really build into the next day
where we wake up feeling like clear-minded
and without this brain fog,
where we have more motivation,
where we have more energy and excitement
towards the next day,
and then doing that in a pattern every night.
Is there any science around that?
Is it like listening to a hypnosis?
That could be very helpful.
Which will help you clean out whatever's going on through the day and get clear and ready for the next day, but also fall asleep so you're not thinking about it. Is there anything that
can help you have better dreams so that you sleep better? What have you found there in the
neuroscience?
Yeah. So glad you asked this question. There's some really interesting data from a guy named Chuck Charles Zeisler, who is at Harvard Med. He's done beautiful studies on
sleep in humans for many decades and a really fantastic physician and researcher. They observed
something interesting, which is that about 90 minutes or so before your natural bedtime,
about 90 minutes or so before your natural bedtime,
there's a spike in alertness, planning,
and almost anxiety that all people undergo,
and it's a normal, healthy pattern.
The idea, and it's a just-so story because we don't really know,
I nor Chuck Zeisler nor anyone else
was consulted at the design phase, as we say,
but we assume this came about
because prior to going
to sleep, we need to shore up everything for safety. We need to lock things down, make sure
everything's in its place because we are very vulnerable in sleep. Nowadays, this might manifest
as you need to go to bed at 10.30 because you have to get up at six, et cetera. And then right
around 8.30 or nine, you start finding yourself running around doing various
things. Many people worry about that and they think, oh, I'm really stressed because I actually
need to go to sleep and here I am wide awake. It tends to subside very quickly. So just the
knowledge that that's a normal, healthy spike in alertness and activity, I think can help a number
of people. I want to make sure I mentioned that. The other thing is preparing the mind, as you
said, turning thoughts off. Turning thoughts off is a skill. We've talked before, gosh, almost a
year or more ago about Yoga Nidra, which is, there are many, many Yoga Nidra scripts available on
YouTube free of cost. The ones I particularly like are the ones by Kamini Desai, K-A-M-I-N-I-D-E-S-A-I.
Kamini Desai.
I just really like her voice.
I don't know Kamini, never met her.
These are free scripts.
They're yoga nidra scripts that last about 20 minutes.
They involve some breathing, some meditation type stuff.
But they teach you to turn your thoughts off, which is really wonderful
because a lot of people, they just get stuck in this rumination.
Now, is there an ideal protocol prior to sleep? It depends because some people find they have
their greatest clarity after the kids are asleep and they're sitting there. So I wouldn't say
don't work or do work. You do want to avoid strong stimuli before sleep. So do you really want to watch, you know, a politically
charged or a violent movie right before sleep? Well, that depends on how triggered you tend to
be by politics or violence. Some people aren't triggered, other people are. But, you know, that aside, you don't want to go to bed
either too hungry or too full because that can inhibit your sleep. So for most people,
that's going to be finishing your last bite of food about two hours before bedtime.
But I confess there are days when I work or work, work and, you know, arrive at a place,
a hotel, order some food and just, you and just eat a massive meal and then pass out.
Again, 80-20.
Try and get it right 80% of the time.
What's harmful of being too hungry or being too full before you go to bed?
You'll have trouble falling asleep and you'll wake up in the middle of the night.
Both extremes.
Both extremes.
And I'm not a nutritionist or nutrition expert, but what I've found works for me personally is I tend to, I fast until about noon-ish each day.
And then my lunch is low carb.
So I tend to eat some grass-fed meat, some veggies, maybe some starches if I trained and a piece of fruit.
If I didn't, I don't.
And then I also have an afternoon snack but then in the evening my meals tend to be relatively low in meat and protein because and higher in starches which activate the tryptophan system and the
serotonin system which makes it easier to fall asleep you can repack glycogen during the night
so you can do muscular work the next day training of any kind but also thinking your brain uses
glucose so at night i tend to eat pastas and vegetables and rice and um risottos and things
like that not in huge volumes but i tend to eat less protein it's and rice and risottos and things like that.
Not in huge volumes, but I tend to eat less protein.
It's not that I don't eat any, but I don't tend to eat big steaks right before going to sleep.
Again, 80-20, 80% of the time.
So certain foods stimulate the neurotransmitter pathways like serotonin that facilitate the transition to sleep.
Now, what could you take?
Well, some people will drink chamomile tea. that facilitate the transition to sleep. Now, what could you take?
Well, some people will drink chamomile tea.
Chamomile tea is enriched in something called apigenin.
Apigenin is, I take it in supplement form,
50 milligrams of apigenin,
but it's really just chamomile extract.
And it tends to make you a little drowsy.
And many people experience excellent sleep when they take apigenin,
and normally they struggle with it.
Again, with supplements, I don't have a relationship to an apigenin and normally they struggle with it again with
supplements i don't have a relationship to an epigenin company or anything like that i want
to be clear and also supplements check with your doctor of course all that but the one thing i
don't recommend is that people take melatonin don't take melatonin i am not a fan of melatonin
for the following reasons first of all melatonin does many more things besides just cause the transition to sleep. It also is involved in regulating some of the other hormones like
testosterone, estrogen, and so on. Most of those studies are animal studies, but some of the data
on humans indicate that as well. In kids, melatonin is one of the hormones responsible
for suppressing puberty, and then melatonin rhythms change, and then puberty happens.
and then melatonin rhythms change and then puberty happens.
So if your kid has already been taking melatonin,
I wouldn't be alarmed, but just be aware.
And if you talk to your physician,
most physicians aren't really aware of this.
I would talk to an endocrinologist, frankly.
Also, Matt Walker would also support this statement because I'm lifting it from him,
which is that most melatonin supplements contain anywhere from 15% of what's listed on the bottle to 300% of what's listed
on the bottle. The regulation of supplements is an issue. Even from a trusted brand,
if you were to take say three milligrams or six milligrams of melatonin, it's a pretty
standard dose out there. You are taking super physiological levels of melatonin. Your system
does not see those levels of melatonin. Chamomile tea is okay.
Chamomile tea or apigenin, it's a little hard to find, but apigenin is a great,
it's chamomile extract essentially. There are a few other things. Again, margins for safety will depend. Magnesium threonate, which is T-H-R-E-O-N-A-T-E, threonate.
You know, 142 milligrams or so of magnesium threonate.
Again, you could just shop for cost.
I don't want to name brands, even though my podcast is associated with one.
I don't want this to become about that.
The magnesium threonate, many people take in 30 to 60 minutes before sleep
with apigenin, many people find great benefit.
I am not a fan of taking serotonin or serotonin precursors,
5-HTP, L-tryptophan prior to sleep for the following reason.
The architecture of sleep as Matt probably discussed here,
I need to watch that episode. He's so good.
Includes a lot of slow wave sleep early in the night,
repair and recovery of motor circuits in the brain and muscular tissue and connective tissue
that might've been worked with or damaged during the day.
And the second half of sleep tends to be enriched
in so-called REM sleep, rapid eye movement sleep,
more dreams that are very intense, et cetera. That architecture is exquisitely controlled by
levels of serotonin at one point and not having serotonin at others, having acetylcholine release
being very tuned to particular times in the night. When you start messing with the serotonin system,
you disrupt that. So my experience with 5-HTP, I took it to go to sleep.
Or L-tryptophan is I fall asleep like I got clubbed over the head by a grizzly bear.
But then I wake up an hour and a half later and I cannot fall asleep for me for two days.
Wow.
Very intense.
Now, I'm pretty sensitive to these things.
But that's why I'm not a fan of those.
And I rely on magnesium-3-A, apigenin.
And some people also take theanine,
but for the time being, I think magnesium threonate
and apigenin or chamomile are great.
If people don't want to take supplements,
chamomile tea is a terrific mild sedative
to just kind of turn off some of that thinking.
Relax, okay.
And what about working out and sleep?
Okay, yeah.
Should we work out in the morning, afternoon, night?
How does that affect the sleep when you work out
and how you work out?
Yeah, well, I wanna be fair to the fact
that people have different schedules
and different constraints and that work,
getting that 150 to 180 minutes
of zone two cardio per week is essential.
People should be doing some resistance training regardless of goals or in order to maintain muscle
because it's so important to avoid injury
and maintain metabolism, et cetera.
So you need to get it in somehow,
but you then have to ask yourself
what's happening around that workout.
So are you going into a brightly lit gym
at 11 o'clock at night and blasting music?
And are you drinking three espresso
or an energy drink before you go?
You're going to be awake.
You're going to have a hard time going to sleep.
It's not just the workout.
It's the context around the workout.
My preference is always to work out
as early in the day as possible.
That's my preference.
I don't always accomplish that.
People should also know that if you work out
at the same time for three or four days, your body builds in an anticipatory circuit. You will
feel an energy increase a few minutes before that workout. So if you are working out at 10 PM at
night and you're finding it hard to go to sleep, if you can shift that workout earlier in the day, you will soon become a morning person.
You won't, it might not be this as natural as somebody who naturally wakes up at four 30 or
five in the morning, but let's say you're a, you want to get on an earlier schedule. You want to
get that morning light, but also force yourself to work out in the morning. And then by the second
or third day of doing that, you will start to feel
more alert as you arrive to the workout because there are these anticipatory circuits. That's
cool. Working out late at night. Some people say cardio, okay, but not weight. Some people say,
I think it's highly individual. And I don't think there's ever been a really good study
addressing that. Regularity is key. I think for me, the best times to work out are three hours after waking up,
11 hours after waking up, just based on body temperature rhythms, or immediately like get up
and just put the shoes on and just go. And I don't tend to do that last thing very often these days.
I tend to wake up and move through the morning a little bit like a lazy bear,
sunlight and then you wait for my caffeine caffeine. But every time I do that early morning workout, I feel much better and more alert all day.
You fall asleep probably.
And I fall asleep much more easily. And the other thing you can do to fall asleep is this
might seem a little counterintuitive. I said that you need to lower your body temperature
by one to three degrees. You can take a hot shower or do a sauna, which you would think, well, it heats you up. But when you actually heat the surface of the body, your brain cools off your
core body temperature, unless you stay in that heat for a very long time. So you take a brief,
you know, I don't want to say how long people should shower, get in the sauna or whatnot,
and then, or a hot shower, and then, you know, maybe rinse off with some cool water for,
not cold, but cool water, lukewarm water for 10 seconds and dry off and get into bed,
your body temperature will drop. If you get into an ice bath or a cold shower-
You'll stay awake.
It's very jolting. So I don't recommend people do that late in the day unless they want to be
awake for some reason at night. But the other thing is when, this is a little counterintuitive,
but my colleague at Stanford, Craig Heller, on thermal regulation. If you are want to cool down and you put a cold
towel or ice around your neck, you're cooling the surface of the body, just like you would put a
cold pack on a thermostat. What's going to happen? Your brain's going to start to heat you up.
So I would avoid cold exposure right before sleep, especially if it's very stimulating,
like to the point cold enough
that you get that adrenaline bump.
So cold air is key to drop the temperature down.
Keeping the room cool.
Cool.
Yeah, but you don't want that really-
Not like an icebox where you're shivering.
Exactly, the acute cold exposure, as we call it,
of an ice bath or something.
Rather a sauna, or a lot of people don't have access
to sauna, maybe a warm or hot shower before sleep.
But people tend to be very specific about this too.
Some people like to shower in the morning,
some people in the evening.
I like to shower whenever I have an opportunity to shower.
Generally I try and shower after I work out
because if I don't, everyone suffers.
But I think that if people don't have access to a sauna that
that hot shower or warm shower before sleep can be very beneficial because the body won't actually
start to dump heat and cool off as you get into bed gotcha and then in terms of the actual
architecture of sleep and dreams with with dreams you, that dreams in the beginning of the night tend to be
kind of mundane and seem kind of ordinary. And the dreams toward morning tend to be more intense.
This is the- You wake up and you remember like what just happened.
That's right. Not what happened in hours before.
Right. And the early part of the night, in very broad strokes, the early part of the night tends
to be when we release growth hormone, when we tend to repair motor circuits and damaged tissues.
And there's a real lack of emotional context to those dreams.
Now, the dreams toward morning tend to have much more emotional enrichment and be very intense.
Often if people see visual hallucinations, that's in the so-called REM sleep dreams.
Why is that?
It's interesting.
Great question.
Well, two things.
You're also paralyzed during REM sleep.
You can breathe, but you cannot move.
And there's this interesting thing that happens in sleep
where when we are in REM, rapid eye movement sleep,
we have high degree of emotionality of dreams,
but we are unable to
release adrenaline. This is very much like trauma treatment where there's a desensitization. You're
coupling an intense experience to an inability for your body to move or to have a reaction to that.
Now, if you suddenly wake up, which I often do, you'll notice that the adrenaline kicks in.
But this is kind of like therapy in your sleep or trauma release in your sleep.
And if you deprive people selectively of this rapid eye movement sleep, a number of bad things
happen. But one of the primary things that happens that's bad is that when you don't get enough REM
sleep, you are more emotionally labile during the day.
Little things bother you more.
You feel more irritable.
Yeah, anytime I see a comment on Instagram
to me or anyone else
and someone seems kind of prickly,
like, well, I always just think to myself,
I'm not getting enough REM sleep.
Wow.
Yeah, or I tell myself that
because I want to have some empathy for them.
They're just not neurologically up to snuff,
meaning they're not working as well as they could. Now, there are other reasons why people can be combative, but I think lack of
REM sleep is one of the main reasons that we feel irritable, easily set off. There are a number of
very powerful things that happen in REM sleep that we should all be seeking. So if you wake up in the
middle of the night, you really do want to try and get back to sleep.
And then as the night goes on,
you're spending more, a greater proportion, excuse me,
of your sleep in that rapid eye movement sleep.
And those are when you have your very rich dreams.
And when you wake up,
oftentimes spending some time with a pad and paper,
maybe while you're getting your afternoon,
your outdoor sunlight is a great thing because you'll remember components of your dreams. The meaning
of dreams has had, uh, you know, has been debated for thousands of years. I would say, and I think
you, I think Matt would agree, Matt Walker would agree that some dreams do have tremendous
significance. Others do not.
There seems to be a very powerful effect of having a dream that makes people want to tell someone else their dream.
Like we have this, I think we just have this need to want to put structure on something that seems very unstructured.
It is a way, in a sense, when we're dreaming, we're crazy.
Like space and time are completely fluid.
Everything's, anything could happen.
And when we have a dream that feels powerful to us, I think we understandably want to put
some sort of interpretation on it.
Meaning behind it.
Yeah.
I've had great insights through dreams.
I've also had a lot of dreams that got me nothing.
I wake up in the middle of the night
and I tend to write things down that come to mind.
I achieve my greatest clarity for kind of psychological and relational things.
When I wake up first, you know, immediately I'll have a solution in my head or I'll think,
I'm, you know, the other day this happened.
As we were talking about before the recording, I've been working through a very complex set
of personal interactions.
And these are not traumatic or anything like that.
But I've been working with somebody to try and resolve a really hard problem that we have.
And we are both committed to solving this problem.
And I'll chip away at this and chip away at this.
And they are much smarter than I am.
So I'm struggling.
And then I will go to sleep and I'll wake up at 3 in the morning and boom,
the answer, at least to whatever it is that I'm trying to resolve is right there. And I think
it's because in sleep, you're trying, you're getting those repeats of the different circuits.
They're practicing, you're rehearsing things you learned during the day. You're dumping the
emotional load through this trauma release type mechanism of REM sleep. And then answers just
kind of geyser up to the top.
But again, I'm speculating.
What we do know at the neural level
is that there's a replay of the neurons
that were active during the day in sleep,
but at much more rapid rates.
Stuff, a lot of stuff we won't remember.
That's what you're saying.
Much of sleep is there,
much of the dreaming and sleep is designed
to get you to forget things that are
meaningless. What is happening to the brain as you're sleeping? Is it just connecting neurons?
Is it flushing? Is it, you know, creating these images for you to remember? What's like the,
what's the actual mechanics of it? Yeah. So several things are happening. One is this
glymphatic washout. There's this literally like a spin cycle on the brain of dumping all the
junk. That's why you want your feet elevated, right? That's why you want your sleep. That's
why you want your feet elevated. The glymphatic washout is one. The other is adenosine, this
molecule that accumulates the longer that we are awake. That actually gets reduced during sleep so
that we can wake up feeling rested. In other words, if you've been up for a day and a half,
you've got tons of adenosine in your system. Caffeine of any kind blocks adenosine function. I want to be careful because it's not
actually an antagonist. It's a competitive agonist for the aficionados. But you're basically
reducing adenosine function with caffeine. When you sleep, you reduce adenosine, which is why I
delay my caffeine 90 to 120 minutes after waking up. So you've got adenosine getting pushed back down.
You've got the glymphatic system washout.
You have reordering of neurons
and creation of new connections
so that what you couldn't do previously,
you can do the next day and the next day.
You're learning.
The trigger for learning occurs during wakefulness
through focused, alert, motivated states.
The actual rewiring of neurons, meaning the changes in the connections, occurs during sleep, in particular deep sleep.
So a lot's happening in there.
And during rapid eye movement sleep, the brain is incredibly metabolically active.
It's just that the body is paralyzed.
And some people experience this invasion of that sleep paralysis into the wakeful period.
It's really scary.
I've had this happen.
You wake up and you're still totally paralyzed and you jolt out.
It's terrifying.
You can't move.
I feel like I'm screaming, but nothing's coming out.
It's really terrifying.
Terrifying.
Terrifying.
That's called what?
Sleep paralysis?
Yes, essentially.
But that's an invasion of sleep paralysis into the waking period.
It's like wake paralysis.
And I know you're not a pot smoker, but many pot smokers experience that more often than non-pot smokers for reasons that probably relate to the serotonin system and the so-called atonia, the inability to move during sleep.
So there's that. What else happens during sleep?
Well, there's all sorts of interesting resetting of the digestive system, the microbiome.
Are your muscles growing?
Muscle growth probably occurs throughout the 24-hour cycle, but a lot of repair of muscles
and triggering of muscle growth probably occur during sleep.
He's passed now.
He was 11 years old when I had to put him down, but I had this bulldog, Costello.
He was a 90-pound English bulldog mastiff.
When he was a puppy, I would take a picture of him.
And then the next day, I'd take a picture of him.
And he was larger the next day after sleep.
Well, they're just growing at such a tremendous rate, right?
And that's growth hormone.
And during puberty, sometimes kids will be kind of locked up during sleep.
You'll go in and see a kid sleeping.
They'll be in some weird position.
They'll get growing pains because actually the bones,
you know, it's a lot to orchestrate,
the growth of the bones and the connective tissue
and the brain and all that.
It's not always perfect.
And so sometimes there's a few days
where things are a little out of whack.
I remember for months, my knees would hurt
when I was a teenager.
Yeah, and kids, my dad used to come in
and push my knees down
because he was worried that something was going on.
That's the growing, you're growing.
You're growing.
Your bones are like spreading, right?
That's right.
They're psychological growing pains
and they're physical growing pains.
And in your case, there was a lot of growing.
A lot of physical growing.
I'm not short, I'm 6'1", but you're-
6'4".
Yeah, you're a tower.
Maybe 6'5", maybe, yeah.
Wow.
So there's a lot of stuff going on in sleep. And are you burning a lot of fat too during sleep? Yeah, a lot of stuff going on in sleep.
And are you burning a lot of fat too during sleep?
Yeah, a lot of metabolism is happening during sleep.
There's a beautiful paper that just came out.
Gosh, I forget all the micro details.
So I'm only going to say a little bit about it.
But a lot of the removal of fat from the body from when we burn fat is actually done through the breath.
We exhale.
There's a carbon dioxide component. Isn't that interesting? It's actually done through the breath. We exhale, there's a carbon
dioxide component. Isn't that interesting? It's a sweat and the breath, right? And then what?
Not so much fecal elimination, but more that you're breathing out. Breathing burns more fat
than... Well, no, no, sorry. Elimination of fat from the body, if it's going to occur,
because I have to be careful because the nutrition crowd online, they have claws, pitchforks, and they're ready-fire-aim type trigger.
You said this.
Exactly.
So I want to be very clear.
I believe in calories in, calories out as a basic principle.
There are people out there arguing different, but basically if you ingest more calories
than you burn, you're going to gain weight.
If you keep them more or less equal, you're going to maintain. And if you burn more than you ingest, you're going to gain weight. If you keep them more or less equal,
you're going to maintain. And if you burn more than you ingest, you're going to lose weight.
Okay. Whether or not you lose from muscle fat or other body compartments is a different story,
but the utilization of fat as an energy source and the elimination of adipose tissue of body fat
eventually boils down to something where yes,, you are exhaling the eventual molecules.
Okay, but among other, there are some other routes as well.
How much fat are we exhaling a week?
Well, it depends on whether or not
you're in a caloric deficit or not.
If we're in a deficit, then we're exhaling that fat?
Essentially, but it's been broken down
into a number of different metabolic components.
That's crazy. It's really wild to think about. Well, if you think, yeah,
and you might think, well, why not just remove it through the digestive tract? But it's part of a
whole lipolysis, meaning the utilization of fat for energy, the lipolysis cycle and an energy
cycle. You know, if those of you that enjoyed or suffered through college or high school,
you know, the Krebs cycle and ATP and ATP production
and the mitochondrion cells and so forth.
That was a whole business there.
But so in sleep, this paper shows that, you know,
each stage of sleep is actually associated
with a different mode of energy utilization
and carbon dioxide offloading and so forth.
Or in the last episode, we talked about,
ideally, you are nose breathing during sleep,
you are not mouth breathing.
So some people actually will tape shut their mouth
with a little bit of medical tape.
Huge benefits to that for getting enhanced oxygenation
of the brain and body.
You do not want to have sleep apnea.
Sleep apnea is associated with sexual side effects
in men and women.
It's associated with cardiac arrest.
It's associated with a number of bad
things. A lot of people who are carrying a lot of extra weight who sleep on their back or even
just who are carrying a lot of extra weight, unfortunately, they have a buildup of carbon
dioxide in their system at night, especially if they're mouth breathing and they wake up not
feeling rested. In all individuals, regardless of phenotype, as we say.
There are genotypes and there are phenotypes.
Regardless of phenotype, the kind of droopiness and the bagging of the eyes that can occur
from sleep apnea and the effects on...
So become a nose breather.
We talked about that in the last episode, how to become a nose breather.
But you want to nose breathe during sleep if you can.
And your partner will thank you too, because you're not snoring as much. Do you nose breathe during sleep if you can. And your partner will thank you too because you're not snoring as much.
Do you nose breathe in sleep?
I think I do.
I think I do.
I'm told I snore a little bit from time to time.
And a lot of people,
even people who aren't carrying a lot of fat,
but people who are carrying a lot of muscle
who sleep on their back,
oftentimes they are kind of suffocating during sleep.
Every time I hear about a bodybuilder or a very large athlete dying, it's almost always
a heart attack during sleep.
They're on their back.
Or their side, but they're asphyxiating.
And there's a beautiful relationship between breathing and heart rate.
Simply, when you inhale, your heart rate goes up.
And when you exhale, your heart rate goes up and when you exhale
your heart rate goes down and this has to do with the movement of the diaphragm
and the change of the shape of the heart and signals from the brain I won't go
into all that but when you inhale your heart rate speeds up and when you exhale
it slows down and that's respiratory sinus arrhythmia for the for the
aficionados so you know you want to create an environment around your sleep where it's dim lights in the evening,
you've had your meal,
maybe a cup of chamomile tea towards sleep,
maybe you use supplements, maybe you don't.
You wake up, get sunlight in your eyes.
This is the kind of landscape you want to create.
Sure.
Cool room.
You want to avoid very stimulating stuff,
conversations and activity, you know know right before sleep yeah now some
stimulating activities before sleep we won't go into details have a rebound effect afterwards
matthew walker's actually talked about this how certain types of activities cause a rebound and
relax you know they're very sexual activities yes i'm not i'm not i'm not trying to be vague here
yes i'm just what does that do for sleep if you have sexual activities before sleep?
So sexual activity includes, it's really remarkable at the level of autonomic nervous system.
So sexual activity involves an increase at first in the so-called parasympathetic arm of the autonomic nervous system, the relaxation system.
But then it involves increases in the sympathetic arm of the autonomic nervous system, the relaxation system. But then it involves increases in the sympathetic arm of the autonomic nervous system.
And orgasm in men and women is actually purely driven by the sympathetic nervous system,
the stress system.
And then the post-coital period is when the parasympathetic nervous system kicks back
on and there's a deep relaxation.
So is it good to have sexual activity before bed or not that good?
According to the architecture of what I just described, yes.
Yes, it's good?
Yes, it's good. Yes, it's good. Yes, it's good. It helps people sleep. And actually,
when Matt Walker came on my podcast, we talked a little bit about some of the data on this.
people sleep. And Matt, actually, when Matt Walker came on my podcast, we talked a little bit about some of the data on this. Now, even then, you know, so there are all sorts of questions about
this that are now coming out. Now, the interesting thing about studying sex in the laboratory is very
hard to do, right? I mean, there are ethical reasons, there are complicated reasons, and
good studies have to be done in laboratories or by self-report. And with self-report, people lie,
right? And make
up stories in one direction or the other. They're doing more of what they would like to be. They're
either reporting more of what they'd like to be reporting of or less of what they would like to
be reporting less of. But doing those sorts of studies in the laboratory is very difficult.
There are sleep laboratories, but it's not often that couples are coming in and staying in those
sleep laboratories together, although that does happen from time to time.
But yes, after sex, there's a rebound in the parasympathetic nervous system, which is a deeply relaxing component of the nervous system.
And the reasons for that aren't clear.
I mean, one idea is that it's designed to put people in close proximity, not just run off and look for another mate immediately, and to smell each other and pair bond through some of the pheromonal systems.
Yeah.
Powerful.
Yeah.
Yes, very powerful.
An interesting form of a pre-sleep biology for sure.
And one that, let's be fair, as we were talking about during the break, every species has
two main goals, to protect its young and to make more of itself.
And while not all sex is designed for
reproduction or used for reproduction, I mean, the whole architecture of the reproductive axis,
as we say, from brain down to genitals is designed for that arc of parasympathetic,
sympathetic, and then parasympathetic. That's interesting.
Yeah. Oh, and the duration of that varies between individuals.
Okay. That was a joke. You got to go at least 10 minutes to get the full effects. I'm not
setting the parameters that people should or should not follow. That is not my domain.
This is powerful stuff, man. I'm so, I'm so grateful for your wisdom as always.
Huberman Lab, make sure you guys check out the podcast. One of the top
podcasts in the world right now. It's incredible. People love the science. They love the neuroscience,
what you're teaching over there. You got a lot of great stuff about brain states around fear,
courage, anxiety, calm, how we can better move into and out of them through visual cues,
breathwork, movement, supplementation, and all sorts of great stuff. Amazing research.
Hubermanlab.com, Huberman Lab, everywhere on social media.
You go live on Instagram, you post on the podcast every week,
YouTube, lots of great stuff.
We were talking about this before,
and I think this could be a good segue about sex at night.
I want to do a whole nother episode on relationships
and neuroscience around relationships and intimacy.
I think it'd be a fascinating conversation,
marriage, relationships, dating, all that.
So if you guys want that conversation from Andrew,
then leave a hashtag in the comments below, relationships,
and we'll see on YouTube if how many people want to really
see that information. And if you're on the podcast, just DM us or post us over on Instagram and tag us
both. If you want to learn more about the science and neuroscience behind relationships, intimacy,
all that stuff. I think it'd be fascinating. Have you done an episode on this yet? I have not. And
I think that there's a lot of really great biology both about sex and reproduction
and about relationships um parent-child couple relationships um the biology of breakups is really
interesting huge um and there's some really interesting data on uh you know how relationships
change over time according to changes in biology in individuals because we all change over time and not necessarily for the worse.
The data, just to throw out a little teaser, you know, there's this idea that testosterone levels drop with age.
The data on this say that there are people in their 70s who maintain testosterone levels.
And men and women both have testosterone.
It serves similar roles in both, although different at the level of the body,
but at the level of the brain is what I'm referring to,
that mimic the levels that were present in their 20s.
And so, yeah.
So it has a lot to do with how people
sleep, how they certainly stress their behavior,
but also there's a strong psychological component related to self-image that's super interesting.
So we can talk about that as well.
Dude, this is fascinating.
I'm so pumped for this.
Yeah, keep this information for the next time.
Oh, yeah.
I won't put it out there.
My man.
Thanks so much.
Thanks, brother.
I really appreciate you, Lewis.
Thank you so much for listening.
I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey
towards greatness make sure to check out the show notes in the description for a full rundown of
today's show with all the important links and also make sure to share this with a friend and subscribe
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one's told you lately, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy, and you matter.
And now it's time to go out there and do something great.