The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 234. How To Improve Your Sleep With These Sleep Hygiene Tips
Episode Date: January 8, 2026SNOOZE - Let's Get to Sleep!: https://bit.ly/4pt1T6V You can’t supplement or exercise your way around poor sleep, and the damage accumulates faster than most people realise. A landmark Harv...ard study showed healthy young men developed pre-diabetic metabolic markers after just one week of restricted sleep, while a 25-year investigation of nearly 8,000 people linked chronic short sleep in midlife to a 30% increased dementia risk decades later. What would change if you treated sleep as the foundation of optimisation rather than the obstacle to productivity? CLICK HERE TO BECOME GARYS VIP!: https://bit.ly/4ai0Xwg Thank you to our partners H2TABS: “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4hMNdgg BODYHEALTH: “ULTIMATE20” FOR 20% OFF: http://bit.ly/4e5IjsV BAJA GOLD: "ULTIMATE10" FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3WSBqUa COLD LIFE: THE ULTIMATE HUMAN PLUNGE: https://bit.ly/4eULUKp WHOOP: JOIN AND GET 1 FREE MONTH!: https://bit.ly/3VQ0nzW AION: “ULTIMATE10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4h6KHAD A-GAME: “ULTIMATE15” FOR 15% OFF: http://bit.ly/4kek1ij PEPTUAL: “TUH10” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/4mKxgcn CARAWAY: “ULTIMATE” FOR 10% OFF: https://bit.ly/3Q1VmkC HEALF: 10% OFF YOUR ORDER: https://bit.ly/41HJg6S RHO NUTRITION: “ULTIMATE15” FOR 15% OFF: https://bit.ly/44fFza0 GOPUFF: GET YOUR FAVORITE SNACKS!: https://bit.ly/4obIFDC GENETIC METHYLATION TEST (UK ONLY): https://bit.ly/48QJJrk GENETIC TEST (USA ONLY): https://bit.ly/3Yg1Uk9 Watch the “Ultimate Human Podcast” every Tuesday & Thursday at 9AM EST: YouTube: https://bit.ly/3RPQYX8 Podcasts: https://bit.ly/3RQftU0 Connect with Gary Brecka Instagram: https://bit.ly/3RPpnFs TikTok: https://bit.ly/4coJ8fo X: https://bit.ly/3Opc8tf Facebook: https://bit.ly/464VA1H LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/4hH7Ri2 Website: https://bit.ly/4eLDbdU Merch: https://bit.ly/4aBpOM1 Newsletter: https://bit.ly/47ejrws Ask Gary: https://bit.ly/3PEAJuG Timestamps 00:00 Intro of Show 02:08 What Happens to Your Body When You’re Sleep-Deprived? 04:01 Sleep’s Impact on Brain 05:13 Dementia Risks from Sleep Deprivation 07:09 Modern Life vs. Quality Sleep 08:19 Consistency over Duration 09:01 4 Steps to Improve Sleep Quality 12:20 Becoming the Ultimate Human The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka Podcast is for general informational purposes only and does not constitute the practice of medicine, nursing or other professional health care services, including the giving of medical advice, and no doctor/patient relationship is formed. The use of information on this podcast or materials linked from this podcast is at the user’s own risk. The Content of this podcast is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Users should not disregard or delay in obtaining medical advice for any medical condition they may have and should seek the assistance of their health care professionals for any such conditions. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The sleep choices you're making right now will determine your brain's health in your 70s and
your 80s. Today, we're talking about something that affects every single person listening, sleep.
Sleep is so fundamental to life that it's built into every creature with a nervous system.
So why is it that modern humans are the only species that are voluntarily cutting sleep short?
The obsession with productivity in our culture tells us that sleeping less means getting more done.
Just disrupted sleep reduces attention span capacity by 30%. That's nearly a
third of your ability to focus gone after just one night. You're not going to have a perfect night
sleep every single night. Life happens. Even if you can't control exactly how much sleep you get every
night, controlling when you sleep has massive benefits. This goes all the way down to what you're
sleeping on. When I realized that we spend a third of our life asleep on our mattress, I started to
understand just how much it actually matters. And that's why I'm launching the ultimate snooze
mattress. It's completely free of harmful petroleums, foams, glues, and chemical fire barriers.
A hundred percent got certified, organic cotton, and wool from New Zealand as a fire barrier.
This is a much safer, healthier, and more natural way to satisfy the federal regulations than
using chemical fire retardants. Let's get to sleep.
You spend an entire one-third of your life asleep on a mattress, but one and three people
around the world are not getting enough of it. And a lot of people treat sleep deprivation
like a badge of honor. Sleep is so fundamental to life that it's built into every creature with
a nervous system. So why is it that modern humans are the only species that are voluntarily
cutting sleep short? And what is it actually costing us? I'm a biohacker and human biologist, Gary Breka,
and you're listening to the Ultimate Human Podcast, where we dig into the real,
science behind longevity and disease prevention. Today, we're talking about something that affects
every single person listening, sleep. But this isn't going to be another episode telling you that
sleep is important. You already know that. Instead, I'm going to show you what happens to your body
when you don't get enough sleep, how fast those changes happen. Researchers at Harvard Medical School
wanted to answer a simple question, what happens to your body's ability to process sugar when you
don't sleep eight hours? They brought in healthy young men into a clinical research center, and these
were guys with no health problems, normal weight, no history of diabetes in any of their
families. The researchers restricted the participants' sleep to just five hours per night for one
week, just seven nights of sleep deprivation for five hours. They controlled everything else,
the same food, same activity levels, even the same environment. The only variable that changed
was sleep. At the end of that week, they measured insulin sensitivity using two different tests.
After just one week of sleep restriction, insulin sensitivity dropped by 20%.
Now remember, insulin sensitivity is a good thing that keeps the blood sugar level stable.
When insulin sensitivity drops, more glucose stays in the bloodstream, raising your blood sugar
levels. They also measured free fatty acids in the blood. These are fats that circulate in
your bloodstream and can directly cause insulin resistance. After sleep restriction, free fatty
acid levels increased by up to 30%. When they looked at who developed these changes,
is the fastest, they found that it didn't matter if you were fit, young, or had perfect health
markers going in. Sleep restriction created pre-diabetic metabolic conditions in everyone within
just one week. Think about what this means. We're not talking about months or even years of bad
sleep. We're talking about the kind of week that millions of people have regularly. Late nights
working, early mornings at the gym, trying to maximize productivity, and cutting into sleep. And in
that one week, your body starts displaying the metabolic markers of someone heading to
diabetes, even if you've been careful with what you eat. This is such solid proof of what we know
that's already true. You can't supplement or exercise your way around poor sleep. Let's talk
about the effects poor sleep has on your brain. In recent years, research has pointed to the
existence of a waste clearance system in the brain called the glymphatic system. I talk about
this all the time. We have lymphatic system in the body to eliminate waste. We have a glimphatic
system in the brain. It gets its name from a combination of glial cells, which control
a flow of fluid in the brain called the lymphatic system that moves lymph fluid throughout the
body to clear waste. Here's how it works. During sleep, the spaces between your brain cells
actually expand by about 20 percent, and cerebral spinal fluid flushes through these spaces,
washing away all the waste that builds up. By waste, we don't mean stool or urine. We mean cellular
waste. One of the most important things it clears out is a protein called beta amyloid. This is the
exact same protein that forms the plaques found in Alzheimer's disease. It should
come as no surprise that when you don't get enough sleep, you won't clear this waste out as well
as you should. In fact, researchers have shown that just one night of sleep deprivation
increases beta amyloid levels in the brain. One night. And now that they have demonstrated the
biological mechanism, the evidence is becoming more and more concrete that poor sleep habits
over time are a cause of these chronic diseases later in life. Now let's talk about one of the
biggest, longest, and most important sleep studies ever conducted. This was published in the
high-impact journal Nature in 2021, and it followed nearly 8,000 people for 25 years.
That is a ton of data collected on tracking real people's real sleep patterns and then their
health outcomes. These researchers wanted to find out if how much you sleep earlier in life can
predict whether you'll develop dementia later. They measured sleep duration at age 50 and then again
at age 60 and again at age 70. They tracked who developed dementia over the following decades.
Here's what they found. People who consistently sleep.
slept six hours or less per night during their 50s had a 30% higher risk of developing dementia
compared to those who slept at least seven hours. And this wasn't explained by depression,
cardiovascular disease, or other health factors. It was entirely attributed to sleep. This study
is super important because they also track people who change their sleep duration over time. People
who went from normal sleep hours, let's say seven hours, to short sleep, six hours or less,
also showed even higher risk for dementia.
This shows us that these chronic diseases aren't just attributed to having bad genes.
Cutting your sleep short in midlife directly increased your risk decades later.
Think about the timeline here.
The sleep choices you're making right now will determine your brain's health in your 70s and your 80s.
I know it may seem hard to think about the effects decades from now, but we can even bring these effects into the present.
Research on college students shows that even young healthy brains are immediately impacted by sleep
disruption. I'm sure everyone listening remember staying up late, studying the night before a test in
high school or college, and then just not doing as well in the test as you had hoped. Research shows
that this is a real thing. Students with poor sleep quality showed 15% lower performance on
memory tests compared to those who slept well. But attention takes an even bigger hit. Just one night
of fragmented sleep, not even total sleep deprivation, just disrupted sleep, reduces attention span
capacity by 30%. That's nearly a third of your ability to
focus gone after just one night. Here's where we run into a problem. Modern life has hijacked
almost every factor that supports quality sleep. We've got artificial light flooding our homes
until late at night, disrupting the natural circadian signals that tell our bodies it's time
to wind down. We've got screens emitting blue light directly into our eyes right before bed,
suppressing melatonin production. We've got caffeine consumption extending later and later into the
day. We've got work emails and stress following us into the bedroom. And we've got cultural narrative
that treats sleep like a luxury rather than a necessity.
The obsession with productivity in our culture tells us that sleeping less means getting more done.
Sleep when you're dead, right?
But the research shows the exact opposite is true.
It's not surprising at all that sleep restriction makes you less productive, not more.
Plus, as we age, sleep naturally becomes more fragmented and less deep,
the very restorative stages of sleep that we need most decline with age.
So just when we need high-quality sleep the most to protect us against cognitive,
of decline, our bodies start getting worse at achieving it. Most people think sleep is purely about
achieving a certain number of hours, but here's what the actual research shows. Consistency matters as
much as duration. The nature study that I mentioned earlier found that irregular sleep patterns
going to bed and waking up at different times each day were associated with worse outcomes,
even when total sleep time was adequate. Your body thrives on routine. Your circadian rhythm
is designed to anticipate when sleep is coming and prepare your physiology accordingly.
The people who live the longest and maintain the best cognitive function aren't sleeping
nine or ten hours every night. They're sleeping seven to eight hours on a consistent schedule.
That means the same bedtime and the same wake time even on weekends.
So rather than me giving you a long list of sleep hygiene tips that you've heard thousands
of times, let's focus on four things that actually move the needle.
Lock in your sleep schedule first. Before you worry about supplements,
establish a consistent bedtime and wake time.
This is the foundation everything else is built on.
Even if you can't control exactly how much sleep you get every night,
controlling when you sleep has massive benefits.
The second thing you should do is build your environment the right way.
While most people hear this and think about eliminating bright light
and cooling the room at night,
this goes all the way down to what you're sleeping on.
When I realized that we spend a third of our life asleep on our mattress,
I started to understand just how much it actually matters.
This is such an overlooked area right now,
and that's why I'm launching the ultimate snooze mattress.
It's completely free of harmful petroleums, foams,
foams, glues, and chemical fire barriers.
These outgass all night while you're sleeping.
Many mattresses on the market right now,
about 98% use chemical fire retardants to meet federal regulations.
Some chemicals used are chlorinated tries and antimony trioxide,
which have been directly linked to hormone,
and neurological issues and might even be carcinogenic. While basic materials must be listed by law
on the label, companies are not required to disclose specific chemical additives, flame retardants,
volatile organic compound levels, or the adhesive glues that they're using, leaving consumers in the
dark about what they're actually sleeping on. Now think about it. As you lay on that mattress and it
compresses, that outgassing is going right into your lungs. Furniture, mattresses included, go through
something called off-gassing, where many of the harmful chemicals are released right into the air.
You might recognize this as that new mattress smell, but what you're actually smelling are
these VOCs being released into the air. This can drag on for months, even years with some of
these mattresses. The actual memory foams are the worst. This is dangerous, since many of these
VOCs are known carcinogens, and they're used as adhesives or solvents in the manufacturing
process. The good news is that you can have a better, more organic sleeping environment with a
mattress that uses 100% got certified organic cotton and wool from New Zealand as a fire barrier.
This is a much safer, healthier, and more natural way to satisfy the federal regulations than
using chemical fire retardants. Combine this with a cool, dark room, and you have the perfect
environment for a perfect night's sleep. You know, so many times we get questions coming into
our VIP group about asthma and children or respiratory issues.
or skin conditions, and people eliminate everything from their homes, but they don't think about
the mattress they're sleeping on. Remember, guys, a third of your life is going to be spent on your
mattress. Don't spend it breathing these fine retardants. The third thing to do is to get bright light
exposure in the morning. This is one of the most powerful circadian regulators. Within an hour of waking,
getting outside to expose yourself to bright light and allowing light to enter right into your
eyes. This helps set your internal clock and makes it easier to fall asleep at night and there
is lots of evidence to support this. Lastly, create a wind down routine. Your body needs time to
transition from wakefulness to sleep. An hour before bed, start dimming your lights, put away screens
and do something relaxing. This signals to your body that sleep is approaching. If you want to go
deeper on sleep optimization and I mean really dial it in, I want you to know about something I've built
for our VIP community. It's called Becoming the Ultimate Human. It's a 10-month course,
and I dive deep into every aspect of how to get the perfect habits of the ultimate human
that's inside of every single one of you. I dedicated an entire month exclusively to perfecting
your sleep with protocols, troubleshooting, the science behind sleep architecture, everything
you need to master this. VIPs get full access to this course for free. Plus, they get monthly
live Q&As with me where you can ask me anything about what you're learning and how to apply
apply it to your specific situation.
Click the link in the show notes.
If you're serious about optimizing your health based on real data, not trends,
this is where you belong.
You're not going to have a perfect night's sleep every single night.
Life happens.
Sometimes you'll have a late night.
Sometimes stress will keep you up.
That's normal.
And your body can handle occasional poor sleep.
What your body can handle is chronic, consistent poor sleep.
Those studies we talked about today weren't one bad night or even one bad week.
They were about patterns.
So if you miss sleep one night,
don't panic, just get back to your normal schedule the next night. Consistency beats perfection
every single time. The research is crystal clear. Sleep is not optional. It's not something you can
hack your way around with supplements or willpower. Your body needs it to clear waste from your
brain. Regulate your metabolism and consolidate memories. The choices you make about sleep today
are determining your health next week and decades from now. You don't need to be perfect,
but you do need to be consistent. Let's get to sleep. And that's just science.
Thanks.
