The Ultimate Human with Gary Brecka - 59. Insomnia to Blissful Sleep– The 8 Sleep Journey With Matteo Franceschetti

Episode Date: May 7, 2024

Key takeaways you’ll learn in this episode: What is Sleep Fitness? What is the optimal sleep routine? The most powerful hacks for better sleep. Eight Sleep:  https://www.eightsleep.com/gary/ P...articipants get an exclusive $200 off! Get weekly tips from Gary Brecka on how to optimize your health and lifestyle routines - go to https://www.theultimatehuman.com/ For more info on Gary, please click here: ⁠⁠https://linktr.ee/thegarybrecka ECHO GO PLUS HYDROGEN WATER BOTTLE http://echowater.com BODY HEALTH - USE CODE ULTIMATE10 for 10% OFF YOUR ORDER https://bodyhealth.com/ultimate Are you looking for new ways to optimize your sleep for better health and longevity? Gary Brecka is sitting down with Matteo Franceschetti, the founder of Eight Sleep, to discuss how cutting-edge sleep technology is revolutionizing how we improve our sleep quality. You’ll learn about Franceschetti's journey from athlete to entrepreneur and discover his tips for establishing your best sleep routine. They also dive into how artificial intelligence is helping to analyze millions of hours of sleep data to predict health issues years in advance and why the future of preventative healthcare is through smart beds and sleep technology!  01:00 - Who is the Founder of Eight Sleep™, Matteo Franceschetti? 05:00 - What led him to study sleep optimization? 07:30 - What is Sleep Fitness? 09:00 - How important is a sleep routine and what should it include? 11:15 - What are the stages of the sleep cycle? 15:00 - The optimal sleep routine. 17:30 - How does temperature impact sleep? 20:00 - How does Eight Sleep™ work? 26:00 - What AI tools are used to predict what you need for optimal sleep? 30:30 - The most powerful hacks for better sleep. 37:30 - Are there supplements and tools to slow a racing mind at bedtime? 43:00 - How do alcohol and coffee impact deep rest?  45:00 - How long should you stop eating before you go to bed? 49:00 - What stage of sleep clears the lymphatic system waist? 51:30 - Top tips for traveling. 54:30 - What is the future of Sleep Eight™ and sleep technology? Connect with Matteo Franceschetti on X: @m_franceschetti Learn from Eight Sleep™ on Instagram: @EightSleep  Gary Brecka: @garybrecka The Ultimate Human: @ultimatehumanpod Subscribe on YouTube: @ultimatehumanpodcast 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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Starting point is 00:00:00 I always say sleep deprivation is the new smoking. This is what our generation are facing today. If you go back 10, 20 years ago, a lot of entrepreneurs would say, oh, I work until 4 a.m., I sleep only four hours per night. It was a badge of honor. Yeah, well, instead right now,
Starting point is 00:00:15 it would just look like, okay, so you're not really serious about your health. You need to try to sleep at least seven, eight, even nine hours per day to take care of your body and your longevity. In a few years, your bed will become the most advanced preventative health platform in the world. And I'll tell you how, but I also tell you why. The reason is... Welcome to the Ultimate Human Podcast.
Starting point is 00:00:46 Today we're diving deep into the fascinating world of sleep technology with Matteo Francis Chetty, the founder and CEO of 8Sleep. 8Sleep is actually something I use every day in my life, and Francis Chetty was a former athlete and lawyer turned groundbreaking entrepreneur. Matteo is at the forefront of revolutionizing our sleep through cutting-edge technological innovations. Stay tuned as we explore how technology is unlocking the true potential of our sleep and how artificial intelligence, data, and science can make us a healthier and more energetic version of ourselves.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Hey guys, welcome back to the Ultimate Human Podcast. I'm your host, Gary Brekka, human biologist where we go down the road, everything anti-aging, biohacking, longevity, and everything in between. I am super excited about today's guest. You heard about his background. I am a big fan of the product that he's developed. I'm a huge fan of his mission to improve and correct sleep and to bring technology and artificial intelligence to the table to help
Starting point is 00:01:45 Americans sleep better, get more sleep, get more quality sleep, deeper sleep, and then thrive. I just think that if you don't have the foundation of healthy, good sleep, really much else doesn't matter. So welcome to the podcast. We were actually just talking about the pronunciation of your last name. And I apologize. I've been traveling for 32 hours. I just got back from the Middle East. And there was like a sandstorm over there. And I got really like the worst sore throat from it. I'm actually not sick. I just had the sore throat from breathing in 30 pounds of dust for four days. But Mateo, how do we pronounce your last name? I was telling you before the podcast started, we Googled it and there were all kinds of pronunciations. And one of the pronunciations actually said it was a French pandemic syndrome. So how do we pronounce your last name?
Starting point is 00:02:37 Franceschetti. Franceschetti. Welcome to the podcast, Matteo Franceschetti. Thank you. Thank you for having me. You know, I'm really excited. We're a week away from my sleep challenge. We're going to take tens of thousands of people through tricks to get a better night's sleep. I was actually doing some research for the podcast, and it's astounding to me that almost 35% of Americans are chronically sleep deprived. 30% of the world's populations reports having some kind of sleep condition, an actual sleep anomaly, sleep apnea, narcolepsy, severely interrupted sleep patterns, circadian rhythm
Starting point is 00:03:16 disorder. I mean, this is a much bigger issue than I think that society is even aware. And I know that my listeners are very, very interested in tips and tricks for getting a better night's sleep, but I want to talk about your journey from being a lawyer, from being an athlete into Sleep 8 and your interest in sleep technology. Yeah, of course. And 100% agree with you about the importance of sleep. I always
Starting point is 00:03:46 say sleep deprivation is the new smoking. This is what our generation or the people of our generation are facing today, right? If you go back 10, 20 years ago, a lot of entrepreneurs could say, oh, I work until 4 a.m., I sleep only four hours per night. It was a badge of honor. Yeah, it was a badge of honor. Well, instead, right now, it would just look like, okay, so you're not really serious about your health. You need to try to sleep at least seven, eight, if you can, even nine hours per day to take care of your body and your longevity.
Starting point is 00:04:20 But talking about me, I'm Italian, as you can guess. Clearly. Yes, very clearly. From my last name. When I was a teenager, I was an athlete. I was a tennis player. That is how I was spending 99% of my time outside school. And so I have always been into recovery, physical activity, and I always tried to be, you know, fit.
Starting point is 00:04:46 Right. Then my professional career started, you know, I went to college and I stopped playing tennis. I had two surgeries to my knee. Wow. And then I became a lawyer, a business lawyer. I'm sorry. Yeah, I'm sorry to you, but it's my scene. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:05:04 And so I worked for two very large law firms doing securities and finance at the European level. And then I finally became an entrepreneur. But there is this interesting gap in my life that goes from probably when I was 19 to when I was 30, where I almost stopped doing any physical activity. I always kept thinking, oh, I'm an athlete. I almost stopped doing any physical activity. I always kept thinking, oh, I'm an athlete. I'm in good shape by default. So I didn't need to do that. I can just work. And then I have this realization when I was 30 years old that things were changing in my body, that I was not in a great shape. Actually, I still remember it was my birthday, my 30th, and I decided to go running that day. And after five minutes, I couldn't run anymore.
Starting point is 00:05:50 I was already tired. And that is when I realized, look, if I want to take care of myself, if I want to be the person I always thought I am physically, it's better I start taking care of myself again. And so that is when I started looking into a lot of things to improve my physical fitness, my longevity, and sleep is the foundation of all this, right? If you look at health, I think there are really three pillars. There is nutrition, there is fitness, and there is sleep. And sleep is the foundational part of this pyramid. I think most of the biohacking community would absolutely agree with that. In fact, I was watching a Huberman podcast
Starting point is 00:06:31 and he has Sleep Expert on a few months ago. And he espoused a statistic that was shocking to me. And he talked about the incidences of heart attacks just during the one hour sleep when we set the clocks backwards and we actually lose an hour of sleep. And the fact that there is, it goes in both directions. And I don't want to quote the statistics because I won't get it exactly right. But to paraphrase it, you know, he pointed out that when we set the clocks backwards and we actually lose an hour of sleep, there is a concomitant increase in cardiovascular events. And when we actually get
Starting point is 00:07:10 the additional hour of sleep, there's a corresponding reduction in cardiovascular events. So, and I know that's somewhat anecdotal, but still you see that just a slight alterations in the amount and probably also the quality of sleep that we're getting have demonstrative effects on our health. And I pride myself on being able to hack my sleep. And I actually do use a sleep aid. So I'm a huge fan of what you guys do. But one of the things you talk about is sleep fitness, right? So, and I love that term because I always say that I don't think we have a pandemic of mental illness in this country. I think we have a lack of mental fitness.
Starting point is 00:07:54 And so talk about what is sleep fitness? I mean, how do you become more fit from a sleep perspective? Yeah. So since when we started the company, we wanted to approach sleep from a different perspective from everybody else, right? A lot of companies in sleep are about a lazy Sunday with waffles in bed, relaxing, right? That's not who I am. And so I always thought of sleep as a tool to maximize your productivity and your happiness during the day. And so that is how I shifted the angle and I started thinking of sleep as an action and is an active activity that you can perform at night to then perform during the day.
Starting point is 00:08:37 And that is how we came up with the name. And the reason is if you are intentional and you put the effort into your sleep, you will get the results. It's exactly like going to the gym, right? You have to show up. You have to show up X days per week for a certain number of minutes or hours, and the results will come. The same approach is required in sleep. You need to be consistent. You need to sleep a certain amount of hours.
Starting point is 00:09:01 It's easier and simpler than going to the gym. So it requires less effort, but it still requires the same amount of hours. It's easier and simpler than going to the gym. So it requires less effort, but it still requires the same amount of diligence. And that is why we call it sleep. You know, I think a lot of people, and we're going to talk about this on my sleep challenge, we have a routine for our exercise. We have routines to get our kids to school in the morning. We have routines for our business. We don't actually have good sleep hygiene or good sleep routines. And so we rely on tranquiletics, you know, or we rely on other things to kind of tranquilize us into a sleep state instead of developing a really healthy sleep routine.
Starting point is 00:09:37 So to you, what is what is the optimal sleep fitness routine look like? Like, what does it look like to be in really good sleep shape? Yeah. And let me add something to what you just say, because you really nailed the point. An interesting thing, I don't have kids, right? But I have a lot of friends with kids and babies. And they all realize- I've got four of them, I'll give you one. I've got a couple extras. But parents realize immediately when they have a baby, the importance of a sleep routine, right, for the baby. And so we know how important that is. Then we just forget that we should apply the same methodology to our own sleep. But you have no doubt that the kids should go to bed at the same time, wake up at the same time and be very consistent. We just believe as we become adults that that is not, it doesn't apply to our own bodies.
Starting point is 00:10:31 So the perfect sleep routine, at least for me, I mean, you want to sleep somewhere between seven and nine hours, right? You want to go to sleep at a reasonable time and meaning anywhere I would say between nine and 11 p.m. And then you wake up based on, you know, on the time. Yeah. Um, so somewhere between six and 7 AM, at least that, that is what I do. I usually go to sleep nine 30 to 10 AM and then I wake up somewhere between six and,
Starting point is 00:10:58 and, and seven. Right. Um, you want to try to pay attention to your sleep stages. That is really important. So how much deep sleep you're getting. For me, the magic number is if I get more than 18% deep sleep, I feel like a superhero. 15 to 18, I'm okay. Below 15.
Starting point is 00:11:16 And that's deep sleep. So that REM sleep or separate from REM that is deep sleep. So talk about the different levels of sleep because I think it's confusing when people hear there's delta sleep, there's theta sleep, there's REM sleep, there's deep sleep. So talk about the different levels of sleep, because I think it's confusing when people hear there's delta sleep, there's theta sleep, there's REM sleep, there's deep sleep, there's light sleep, and then there's a waking cycle. And I actually wear a whoop. I also track it on the sleep eight. And they usually seem to be very much in sync with one another. But make a little sense out of the sleep metrics for us. I always try to simplify, like if I was explaining this to my grandma, right? And so I stay away from all the scientific definitions. And so oversimplify, you have your deep sleep, you have REM,
Starting point is 00:11:58 and you have light sleep. And again, oversimplify this, if you talk to a real doctor, they will be way more sophisticated. But I try to keep it very practical. So deep sleep happens mostly in the first part of the night. In the first half of the night, you will have way more deep sleep than REM. And deep sleep is when your physical body is recovering. REM instead is when you're dreaming. And that is usually when your brain is recovering and is reallocating all the information that collected during the day in the library inside your own brain. And that tends to happen more in the second part of the night. So what you will see is that your body tends to give prevalence to the physical recovery. So if you sleep only four hours, you will see you get way more deep sleep than REM because of these allocation. Ah, because deep sleep is coming first. Exactly. And then REM comes later. And REM is not as deep a state as deep sleep.
Starting point is 00:12:56 Correct. And it's more focused on the brain than the physical body. The interesting thing is also that while you are in REM, your body is completely deactivated. So nothing is moving. And the reason is you are dreaming, right? And so if you were dreaming and your body would be moving, you would be actually moving the body and it could be dangerous for yourself. Right.
Starting point is 00:13:18 And so you're in this static position while you are in REM. REM sleep. And if you are sleep deprived, your body will keep trying to give a prevalence or priority to deep sleep versus REM. So what you are really penalizing is your brain functionalities and your brain sharpness. So initially when you get into this deep sleep and you move from the deep sleep, which is the body's time to recover, repair, detoxify, what have you, and then you move from the deep sleep, which is the body's time to recover, repair, detoxify,
Starting point is 00:13:47 what have you, and then you move into the REM stage. This REM stage is the stage where the brain is really the focus of the attention and you want the REM. Well, you want both. You want deep and you want REM. But you're saying that as you become more sleep deprived, your body will prioritize the deep sleep, which seems like a good thing, but then at the detriment of REM sleep, which is compromising brain function. Exactly. Because all the brain function, all your memory, mental sharpness, all that comes from REM. Right. So actually, for example, when I have the board meeting of my company, that day I always try to sleep one hour longer than usual.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Really? Yeah. Okay. And so that extra hour will give me extra REM, and I believe it will make me extra sharp, so sharper than usual. Now, do you find that you can just decide to sleep an hour longer? Because I think most people would be like,
Starting point is 00:14:40 I would love to sleep an hour longer, but I wake up at the same time every day, or I just wake up and I can't get back to sleep. I want to talk about some of the sleep hacks, some of the sleep tricks that we can use to get a better night's sleep. But I think that a lot of people would say, man, I would love to be able to just decide to stay in bed another hour. Some people that aren't even beholden to getting out of bed at a certain time really don't have a choice because their body wakes up and doesn't go back to sleep. So talk a little bit about a good sleep hygiene or a good sleep routine that people could develop in order to get into a good pattern of sleep, a good sleep routine like they would plan their workouts? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:15:25 I think we all underestimate the importance of the routine. And so honestly, the first thing you want to fix if you want to fix your sleep is just consistency. You want to go to bed at the same time and you want to wake up at the same time. And the reason is pretty simple. You have a biological clock, right? And by just training your body to feeling asleep at the same time every day and waking up at the same time every day, at a certain point, it will just
Starting point is 00:15:51 become a biological habit. And so for me, for example, I always struggle to wake up, to wake up early. My body just wants more sleep and more sleep. But as I train myself to wake up at 6 a.m., now my body, it just wakes up at 6, 6.05, 6.10 on its own. And what time are you going to sleep? Somewhere between 9.30 and 10 a.m. Okay. In that rate. 10 p.m., okay.
Starting point is 00:16:17 And 10 p.m., sorry. 9.30 is my sweet spot. I'm there. That's amazing. 10 minutes with my wife, and then I start falling asleep. I'm lucky I can fall asleep very, very fast, quickly. My sleep is not always perfect in terms of quality and performance. And so I try to sleep a little bit more than eight hours because then the real effective sleep will be around seven hours and 45 minutes. So that's like a 10 p.m. till 6.30, 7 a.m.?
Starting point is 00:16:46 Yeah. The 9.30 to the 6, right, is eight hours and a half. But then the high quality sleep, the true sleep, it ends up being somewhere around seven hour and 45. And if you were to partition out your sleep, when do you find that you're getting the most beneficial sleep? So early on, you're getting the deep sleep. Are you trying to extend the time that you spend in REM sleep
Starting point is 00:17:06 so you have more advantages for your brain? Sometimes, yes. Like the morning of the board meeting, I try to not wake up at 6, but to wake up at 7 if I can. That extra hour will make me extra sharp, just more agile mentally. I will feel more rested. But the other thing is our product,
Starting point is 00:17:32 by changing your body temperature, enhances some of these phases, right? And so what we see is we can enhance the percentage of your deep sleep and we can enhance the percentage of your REM. We also reduce toss and turns, which is the other big factor negatively impacting your sleep quality. Right, because those are sort of waking states.
Starting point is 00:17:53 Exactly. Yeah. And so talk a little bit about how that occurs, because now we're bringing technology to the fitness industry, and I really want to talk about that because you have some really exciting technologies even coming out. You even have some new technologies coming out. But what does temperature have to do and bioregulating your temperature have to do with actually extending deep sleep or REM sleep? Yeah. So your body has what is called a circadian rhythm, right? Which is the cycle during the day. And your body temperature already changes during the night. So when you hear people saying, oh, you should sleep at 68 degrees the whole night,
Starting point is 00:18:31 it's not true. It might be true for an hour, but it's not going to be true for eight hours. And the reason is your body temperature follows more or less what happens with the sun and the night, right? And so as soon as you fall asleep, your body temperature should drop. And three, four hours before you wake up, the body temperature should start rising. It literally follows the sun. Imagine if you were in a cave, it gets colder around midnight. And then two, three hours before sunrise, the sun starts coming out and it gets slightly warmer. And then by the time there is the sunrise, everything is warmer, right? And so there is this U-curve
Starting point is 00:19:09 that your body temperature follows. And what our technology does is just helping your body to do what it's supposed to do. So when I set those settings, because I'll do like, my wife has different settings than I do. She says it's too cold on my side of the bed. But so, you know, I set it to about a minus three. Now,
Starting point is 00:19:29 when I set it to minus three, that's where it's starting out, right? When I get into bed. And then as I'm progressing through my night of sleep, is it then warming me up, you know, the next morning and bringing me out yeah because i do notice a considerable difference in my sleep when i use yeah sleep eight in fact i had a hundred percent sleep score two nights ago nice which is awesome for me yeah i woke up and saw the the whoop and i was like oh my god i posted it all over instagram i'm so proud of it um like 97 recovery and and 100 sleep score that's great yeah so um let's let's start for a second from what is our product, and then I go back to your answer. So it's a mattress cover that you can install onto any mattress,
Starting point is 00:20:13 and it will improve your sleep. How? Through thermoregulation. So each side of the bed will have a different temperature that changes hundreds of times per night to maximize your sleep. And what's causing that change? Is it sensing your... Yeah, so there are sensors in the mattress cover that you don't see and you don't feel, but they are able to capture everything about your sleep, your sleep
Starting point is 00:20:38 stages, your heart rate, your HRV, and your respiration. And based on these biometrics, we have developed different algos that keep changing the temperature to maximize your recovery and sleep stages, particularly deep sleep and REM. This was already proven from a clinical standpoint before eight sleep. So again, we are not reinventing the wheel. There was plenty of evidence that by changing your body temperature during the night, you could get better sleep. I think that's well established, yeah. And so what we did is we just created the first consumer product at scale that could just do that
Starting point is 00:21:14 for every human being. And so each side of the bed can have a different temperature. So if you sleep with a partner and the partner has different preferences, different biometrics, different body mass, whatever, everything will be personalized. And so you go to bed and the bed has obviously a temperature and that could be whatever you like. You might like it cold. You might like it a little cool when I get into bed. I actually really like that. Yeah. I'm not surprised. We see a lot of our users preferring, particularly men, they like it really cold. While instead most of the women, they like it slightly warmer. As soon as you fall asleep, you want the temperature to drop even more.
Starting point is 00:21:54 So in deep sleep, you want the coldest possible temperature that you can stand and afford. And for everyone is different, right? Our scale goes down to minus 10. In terms of settings for you, you might like minus 10, I might like minus goes down to minus 10 in terms of settings. For you, you might like minus 10. I might like minus five.
Starting point is 00:22:08 Yeah, minus five is a bit. Yeah, but you want something colder because in deep sleep, the colder, the better to maximize that phase. Wow. Then when you start getting more REM, which is again is in the second half of the night, you want a slightly warmer temperature.
Starting point is 00:22:24 And the reason is this, that when you are in REM, your brain deactivates the temperature control of the body itself. And so if it's too cold, the brain will not let you fall into REM because it fears you could die, right? And so you want a sort of neutral temperature where your brain thinks okay
Starting point is 00:22:45 everything is safe you can get into REM how does the how does the bed know when to make this transition um it's it's it's monitoring your HRV your your respiratory rate and what have you and how does it know that okay they're they're they're sliding now from deep sleep into a REM state so we're going to go ahead and warm this up a little bit. What's going on? Yeah, great question. So we detect REM and oversimplify the gain. One of the easiest ways to detect REM is that first you're not moving, right?
Starting point is 00:23:17 We go back to what we were saying earlier. Your body is standing still in bed, but your heart rate is accelerated because you are likely dreaming. So you are living an experience, but your body is not moving. And so oversimplified, this is a proxy. So this is how it understands that you're going into a room. And then obviously there is more information about HR, HRV, all the different transition
Starting point is 00:23:43 between the different sleep stages. So we have AI algos that now have been trained with, I think we cross millions of hours of sleep. In certain areas, it still blows my mind, like heart rate and HRV. In heart rate, we are 99% as accurate as a medical grade EKG. Wow. Which if you think is pretty impressive that you go to bed as you did for the rest of your life and this device now is as good as a medical grade EKG. Wow. So this is picking up your heart rate?
Starting point is 00:24:14 Yeah, 99% accuracy compared to medical grade EKG. 96, 97% accuracy at HRV and 97% at detecting your respiratory rate. Wow. And so it's a combination of the respiratory rate, your HRV, and these other metrics. HR, movement. Movement, I was going to say, is it also seeing how much you're moving around. And then when things quiet down, heart rate slows down, or heart rate actually increases,
Starting point is 00:24:44 then it starts to help you move into the next phase of sleep. Correct. And when you capture this data, are you then updating the algorithms? Is the technology getting smarter when we do updates to, you know, sleep aid? Is it progressively using more and more and more data? Because I really think, I did a talk this past weekend about how just exciting this timeframe is in our life, because we have the convergence of all of these different diagnostic tools with massive amounts of data, with artificial intelligence that can make sense of the data and actually give us actionable steps. And I think that, you know, depending on who you talk to, some of these futurists will say, if you're alive in
Starting point is 00:25:27 five years, you're going to live to 500. I think if you're alive in five years, you're going to live to between 120 and 140 very easily. If you were born today, who knows? I mean, you could easily reach 200. But I think a lot of it has to do with this intersection between artificial intelligence and massive amounts of real human data and what we can do to put that into actionable steps. So talk a little bit about how this algorithm is working. Is it becoming more intelligent? Is it continuing? If someone was using a Sleep 8, would it progressively continue to get smarter, for lack of better words? It's a great question.
Starting point is 00:26:08 And so the answer is yes. Think of it like the Tesla autopilot, right? And we call it our autopilot. And so it learns every single night from the whole user base. And it becomes more sophisticated and more intelligent. And I think you said something that is spot on about how we use AI to really enhance human performance and human longevity. Because AI, at the end of the day,
Starting point is 00:26:37 everyone is talking about that, but it's just a tool. It's like mobile, right? Mobile apps. But they are not a business per se. They are a tool that can enhance other activities. The way we use AI is exactly to enhance your sleep performance, which means that then you can have better performance during the day, better health, and hopefully a longer and healthier life.
Starting point is 00:27:01 Right. The way it works, usually there is what is called, you know, the AI training, AI, there are different types of training, one based on the data and one based on algos, self-detecting what the next type of learning could be. And so our algos, they keep improving based both on the data that we collect in the field plus what they self-train themselves for.
Starting point is 00:27:27 Wow. And the interesting thing of all this is not just that we give you better sleep, but it's how we personalize sleep. Because to get better sleep is not that one situation or one cooling or one temperature fits all. Your temperature is different from mine. Your temperature is different from mine. Your temperature is different from the one of your partner. Different gender, maybe different age, different body fat percentage. There are all these different factors.
Starting point is 00:27:57 Plus, every day is different, right? Let's say, I don't know if, in my case, I don't have alcohol, but some of my friends, they do. Oh, that's the worst. Correct. So we need to self-correct that true temperature at night. Really? So you can actually offset some of the consequences of alcohol.
Starting point is 00:28:15 Because usually alcohol has an impact on your heart rate, on your HRV, on your body temperature. And so probably you will need a slightly colder temperature. The same if you work out in the night. I play paddle. I have a Thursday. On Thursday, usually I have a paddle tournament at 8 p.m. By the time I go to bed, I try to readjust all my temperature settings because I had adrenaline. Heart rate is accelerated.
Starting point is 00:28:41 Body temperature is accelerated. And you just do that on your app? You just dial it down and make it colder? Correct. And in the near future, there will be tags. So you can just tag alcohol or physical activity. Physical activity, we can also get the data from Apple because you can connect the pod to your Apple Health.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Okay. And then for women, there is pregnancy, which completely changes all their settings and their sleep. There is their period, and there is menopause. And so we see a lot of women buying our product because they are going through menopause, they have hot flashes, and they can't sleep anymore. And also women that are going through their normal menstrual cycle. Correct. Are there different phases of the cycle where actually the temperature matters?
Starting point is 00:29:23 Yes, there are major hormonal changes and they start having some sort of hot flashes or their body temperature changes. So sleep is so dynamic, even within the same person, that because of what you ate, the time you ate, the activity, or if your body, particularly for women, is going through different periods of the month or your lifetime, you will need
Starting point is 00:29:46 different settings. Wow. I didn't realize it was that sophisticated. I mean, I do notice that I'm getting better sleep and my wife does too. But, you know, for menstruating women, I mean, that is a huge deal. I mean, we actually had a big discussion about intermittent fasting and menstrual cycles on females. And I had a renowned physician on the podcast talking about the detriments of always treating menstruating females exactly the same way, meaning like they have the same feeding window every day of the month when their cycle changes. It can be disastrous for their hormones. And sleep seems to be no different. So this is intelligently gathering data and changing the temperature based on where their body temperature might be and what
Starting point is 00:30:31 helps them get into deep sleep versus REM sleep and what have you. Exactly. And there is where you can really leverage the power of AI. Yeah, that's just going to say the same thing. This is the really exciting thing about AI. I mean, millions of people with millions of different biometrics, millions of different genetic makeups, body temperature, you know, metabolisms, metabolic rates, what have you, you know, sleep schedules, and all getting their own data to actually improve the metrics for themselves. So talk a little bit about good sleep hygiene or good sleep routine, other than just, you know, sleep aid in your bed when you go to bed. But what are some of the preparatory things that people can do to, like, enhance getting a good night's sleep? I mean,
Starting point is 00:31:16 I think everyone that I've ever spoken to about sleep that has, you know, any kind of wherewithal on sleep is consistent about how important consistency is. Yeah. Right? Same time going to bed, same time waking. But what are some other things that they can do? Red light, screen time, breath work. What are some other things that you find being in the industry are good sleep routines that people could use to hack their sleep?
Starting point is 00:31:45 Hey, guys. If you've been watching the Ultimate Human Podcast for any length of time, you know that one thing I do not do is push products. I do not just let any advertiser into this space because I believe that the products that appear on the Ultimate Human Podcast should be things that I use every day in my life to improve my own physiology. One of them is something called the Echo Go Plus. The Echo Go Plus is a hydrogen water generator that you can take on the go. You essentially take the top off of this bottle, you pour bottled water in this, and repeatedly it will make high part per million hydrogen water. You press this little button, you'll see these bubbles going up in the water, that's hydrogen being created in the water. There are all kinds of peer-reviewed published clinical studies on the benefits of hydrogen
Starting point is 00:32:29 water including reduced inflammation better absorption of your supplements better absorption of your foods better balance of the stomach acid and it feeds an entire class of bacteria in your gut hydrogen water in my opinion is the most beneficial water that you can drink. And now you can take it wherever you go. You can go to echo, E-C-H-O, H2O.com. That's echo, E-C-H-O, H2O.com. Enter the code ULTIMATE10 for a discount. Echo H2O, enter the code ULTIMATE10 for a discount. Breathwork is probably the one that I would recommend the most. Well, happy to hear you say that. I use it every night.
Starting point is 00:33:14 That is great. It works. You need to find a lot of different types of breathwork. In my case, what I do, I breathe in for four seconds, I hold for four seconds, I breathe out for four seconds. The box breathing. Yeah, exactly. That works really, really well for me. So that is one. The second that I use is thermoregulation even before going to bed.
Starting point is 00:33:39 And so there is an extreme version that is if you have a sauna and an ice bath, that is absolutely perfect. You do a sauna, ice bath, you do two cycles. After that, you're ready to go to bed. You will feel completely— So sauna for how long? 20 to 30 minutes. Then you do your ice bath, let's say five minutes. It could be anywhere between three and five.
Starting point is 00:33:59 And then you could do another round if you can. And end on cold. And then you can end on the ice bath. Yeah. Okay. And after that, you just go in bed, you relax, and you will just feel so, so relaxed and you will likely fall asleep. If you don't have an ice bath or a cold plunge, you can do something similar just with your
Starting point is 00:34:20 shower. You could switch between hot and cold. Or a lot of people, even particularly women, love a warm bath, right? So you could just have a hot and warm bath that really relaxes you. Even there, it's something that we do with babies, right? And now before going to bed, we do their bath, then we change them, and then we put them to bed. Right. So there is plenty of history. So now the warm bath, I mean, so you've warmed the body up, but then you're saying when you get into bed and you're actually cooling the body down, this helps pull you into that deep sleep. Because after being in a hot bath, your body will want to react to cool down the core body temperature.
Starting point is 00:35:02 And so that is what will help you to fall asleep. Because again, to fall asleep, your core body temperature needs to drop. Right. And what is the drop in core body temperature? I've heard two degrees Celsius, two degrees Fahrenheit. What is the necessary drop? I mean, because people that don't have a sleep aid,
Starting point is 00:35:21 you know, I encourage them to sleep in a cold room, 68, 69 degrees Fahrenheit. And that alone does have positive implications, you know, positive impact on their sleep. And we're going to take, like I say, tens of thousands of people through this sleep challenge next week. And we all joined the same group. So we're all part of the same group and we're gonna actually use these sleep hacks, one of which is the Sleep 8, to migrate through and check our sleep in the morning as an entire group.
Starting point is 00:35:54 So what's the importance and what's the physiology behind the body temperature drop? I mean, why is that cooling period so important? Yeah, it goes back to the circadian cycle and what we were saying of the cave, right? So this U-curve. And so as soon as you fall asleep, to maximize your sleep performance, your core body temperature needs to drop. And the amount of degrees is different for everyone, in particular, based on gender, based on age, based on what you ate. But directionally, you want to have this drop.
Starting point is 00:36:34 That is why before I ate sleep, what was recommended was just to sleep in a cold bedroom. Right. Because that is the easiest proxy to try to kind of help your body to achieve that. Obviously, now with technology, we can be way more specific. Yeah. And we can specifically adjust your body in very different ways. But I don't know if you have this problem with your wife, but a lot of couples, they fight around temperature. Oh yeah, we definitely do. Yeah. And the reason is- She's very thin and likes it warm and I'm-
Starting point is 00:37:01 The definition of cold for your body is very different from the definition of cold for your wife, right? And that is why the 68 degree in a bedroom doesn't work for everyone. And maybe then at a certain point, if your wife is going through menopause, 68 degree will not even be enough anymore for her and now she wants 65 and for you it becomes too cold.
Starting point is 00:37:25 Or she wants 60, whatever, right? But the- 60 would be nice and dicey, that's getting better. But the first principle is the same, right? So the body needs to drop, the body temperature, the core body temperature needs to drop. And so you can prepare your body to do that in a couple of different ways, with technology,
Starting point is 00:37:43 with a colder room, or with a bathtub. That is one way. And when you say the bathtub, because the bathtub heats you up first, you're talking about a warm bath, and it's actually this drop in temperature, which helps ease you into that deeper sleep that you're after. Exactly, yeah. Another thing that sometimes for some people like me,
Starting point is 00:38:12 my extremities are always cold, right? Like the feet and the hands. And if your feet and hands are cold, you don't fall asleep. Right. And so a hot, a bathtub or a warm shower could help people like me or a lot of women have this kind of problem to make sure that your extremities are warm so then you can fall asleep. Right. So, and my wife and I both have that same situation. So for people that are, you know, looking to take advantage without, you know, with a sleep aid to maximize their sleep, what about the, you know, waking up at night for frequent urination? What about the people that have a hard time going to sleep because their mind is awake? You know, one of the things that we talk about is the mental aspect of fitness, of sleep fitness, and you're talking a lot about the physical aspect of sleep fitness. What things outside of sleep aid, supplements,
Starting point is 00:39:09 ways to stop or reduce frequent urination at night? And when I was going to have you on the podcast, my members sent me a bunch of questions that they wanted me to ask you. And one was about frequent urination at night. You might not have any data on that, but I figured since you guys are tracking millions of hours of sleep,
Starting point is 00:39:29 do you have any tips or tricks for reducing frequent urination at night or waking up and having a really difficult time getting back to sleep? Yeah. So one of the things we see the most is obviously your mind keeps racing, right? A lot of our users have that problem.
Starting point is 00:39:51 And so that is where breath work can help. And more than anything, I would say 30 to 60 minutes before going to bed. I always call it getting in the zone because I'm an athlete, right? You need to get into the zone to prepare for sleep fitness, right? Because if you just keep working, you just keep emailing with whoever, and you're there fighting or working on a big deal for your company, right? Between the adrenaline and an accelerated heart rate, your brain just keeps thinking about how do I win this ball?
Starting point is 00:40:28 Yeah, and now you're body tired and your mind awake. Exactly. Yeah, which a lot of people suffer from. And so the approach I always have, for example, is I'm not against you using the phone or the screen. I just say pay attention to what you're doing with your phone. If you're chatting with your best friend about the memory of when you were a child and you had a great time,
Starting point is 00:40:48 that is still completely fine, right? Because it's putting you in a relaxing mode and you will fall asleep. If you are there fighting with your boss about the budget for the next year, that will not help. Right, or God forbid looking at the news, which is all just doom and gloom.
Starting point is 00:41:07 Exactly. So it's less about the screen per se, it's more about what you're doing with your phone. And the other big thing is all my lights, for example, switch automatically to orange around 8 p.m. So you want to start developing. And how do you do that? With Philips Hue.
Starting point is 00:41:25 Okay. I use Philips Hue, and so you want to start developing. And how do you do that? With Philips Hue. Okay. I use Philips Hue, and so you can have an automatic setting where they switch to orange. And the reason is you don't want to be exposed to blue light, you want to be exposed to orange light that will help you develop melatonin. I almost never use melatonin unless I'm traveling or for jet lag because it creates some dependency. Right. Right? And I test, I'm testing, we are testing at scale a large amount of supplements right now.
Starting point is 00:41:53 Right. To really help people to ease their mind, to relax, to go to bed. Yeah, this is exciting. And then maximize their deepening. Right. And what, you know, what do those supplements look like? They're metabolites? Are they magnesium, theanine?
Starting point is 00:42:09 Yeah. You don't like melatonin, GABA? Yeah. You know, what kinds of compounds are you testing for, you know, improved sleep? Yeah. What we have noticed is it's never just one. You just want to stay away from melatonin. You don't want to take melatonin every single day because otherwise you just screw all the settings of the melatonin level in your body. But everything
Starting point is 00:42:31 else is fine. The key is to find the right balance between feeling it within 30 to 60 minutes so you can go and fall asleep, getting high quality of sleep and making sure you wake up without feeling groggy. Right. And so we are testing from magnesium to GABA to glycine. Ashwagandha is another one with stress that seems working really well. But the point is there are a lot of supplement company out there, but not all of them, they have the amount of data that we have, right? Right now we collect, I don't know, 20 terabytes of health data per day. Wow. And so-
Starting point is 00:43:06 This is coming through the app. So you're- Millions of sleep hours. Correct. Right. Yeah. And obviously everything is aggregated, anonymized. So it's not about any single user, right?
Starting point is 00:43:17 But it's just this large library of anonymized and aggregated data that tell us what's working and what is not working at scale. Because one of the things I don't like in medicine right now is they publish a new study and this study was run for seven days on 15 people, right? We have hundreds of thousands of people
Starting point is 00:43:40 sleeping on our product every single night. And so we have a beta group and we involve some of our users and we're talking about thousands of them. And in a week, we can have 7,000 to 14,000 nights of sleep for every test that we want to run. And so here is how I really think that medicine and clinical studies will really change.
Starting point is 00:44:03 And we will stop looking at studies of 50 people sleeping in a sleep clinic, which is a foreign environment for three, four, five days, which is not statistically relevant. And we will start having data from hundreds of thousands of people sleeping in their home, in their usual habits for maybe a month. Wow. And giving you feedback in real time.
Starting point is 00:44:23 And giving you feedback. Right. Because you can actually input things into the app that says, oh, I had alcohol or I didn't have alcohol. And that is the one thing that I would say consistently destroys sleep more than anything, with no exceptions. Correct. It is unbelievable.
Starting point is 00:44:46 And it's astounding to me the small amount that it takes to have severe sleep disruption because I think so many people are the glass of wine to go to bed at night kind of person. And my wife and I are that way. Europeans love wine at night. And sometimes Europeans, some of my friends, when I go back to Italy, they still have also coffee after dinner. Oh my God. And I say, man, you can't have a coffee at midnight.
Starting point is 00:45:14 Yeah, they'll have double espresso. Yeah. Yeah. I see it all the time. I mean, I think that's a big European thing. But even a single glass of wine. Yeah, 20%, easily a 20% negative impact on your heart rate, so it accelerates your heart rate. Heart rate variability. And heart rate variability drops
Starting point is 00:45:33 at 20%. Yeah, heart rate variability down, which is essentially a measure of your readiness. And then your heart rate, which is a measure of the state of your nervous system, also increases. So they actually go in opposite directions. And then your recovery, your strain, your sleep score, all of those tend to drop. I mean, I've given it up entirely. And so has my wife, and I just sleep so much better now. But every once in a great, great while,
Starting point is 00:46:00 we were at a birthday party the other night for a very close friend, and he passed around a thing of tequila. And I was like, I haven't had a drink in weeks. I was like, I'm not going to be that guy. So we toasted. I had I don't know how many ounces it was. And that night my sleep was actually destroyed. So was my wife, which is how I knew it wasn't an anomaly.
Starting point is 00:46:22 So yeah, that's a great sleep hack right there. Just get rid of the alcohol. And if you really need to have or you want to have alcohol, limit it. And let some time go by between when you had the last drink and when you go to sleep. So I don't know if you're going to have a couple of hours in between. It will help. That time helps. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:46:46 And what about eating windows as you approximate sleep? Yeah. Some people say two hours. Some people say three hours. Some people say it doesn't matter. I totally take issue with that. But I have had people say it doesn't matter even if you eat and then crawl right in bed. I think that actually destroys your sleep.
Starting point is 00:47:06 But what's the optimal time frame between your last meal and going to bed? And what kind of fluid intake should people be thinking about as they approximate bedtime? Especially for men. I think a lot of my followers have issues with getting up at night repeatedly to go to the restroom. Sometimes they're like, Gary, I don't get it. I mean, it's not like I'm getting up and it's like a fire hose. I'm just getting up and, you know, a couple of squirts and I go back to bed and a few hours later I'm waking up and the same thing is happening.
Starting point is 00:47:33 Yeah. So usually I would recommend at least two hours to stop eating two hours before going to bed. Even this is very personal. There are probably some people that can eat 30 minutes before and they are not going to be heavily impacted. But I would say the rule of time for 90% of people is at least two hours, two to four is perfect. What I have seen in my case, for example, is if I have carbs, so usually I'm on a keto
Starting point is 00:47:56 diet. I cheat only one day a week on Friday night. With my wife, we make pizza. Speaker 1 Okay. Wow. You really go off the deep end there. Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's awesome.
Starting point is 00:48:08 So you're keto all the time. Yeah. And then just break it once a week. Yeah. But what I have seen, if I have carbs, usually I tend to feel sleepy, which is good. But then my sleep quality will definitely- Will suffer. Will suffer. Will suffer.
Starting point is 00:48:27 Particularly, I will toss and turn more. The sleep stages will not be optimal. And so it's not just when you stop eating, but it's also what you eat. If you have a very heavy meal, it could probably also be a lot of meat, red meat, that will have an impact on you. Things that are hard to digest, take longer to digest, use more blood.
Starting point is 00:48:48 Correct. Divert more blood from the brain to the gut. You know, it's an interesting, I was at a biohacking conference about two years ago, and they put participants in front of a thermograph. And they were measuring very sensitively the heat and its dispersion through the body, which is kind of an indication of where the blood is also, and wherever the blood is, the oxygen is. And prior to our lunchtime meal,
Starting point is 00:49:12 the participants that stood in front of this thermograph, their head was glowing bright red, orange, showing that there was a lot of concentration of blood in the head. And then they ate varying levels of glycemic meals. Some ate very, very low glycemic meals like eggs, avocado, and others ate pasta, white bread, white rice, white flour. And I think they gave them an acai bowl. And you could see the higher the carbohydrate level, the more heat went to the gut and the more oxygen went to the gut. And these people were significantly less focused, you know, less sharp, and they had less energy. They would just crash after these meals because of all that blood that gets diverted there. So, I think that certainly not eating
Starting point is 00:50:07 within two hours of bedtime, two or three hours before bedtime is a major sleep hack because you're freeing up all that blood, all that oxygen to go to other places in the body where you want it to be for repair and rejuvenation, especially into the brain. Talk a little bit about the, there's a stage in sleep where the brain begins to eliminate waste through the glymphatic system,
Starting point is 00:50:37 right? Which is we have a lymphatic system, which is throughout our body, a static system. Then we have one in the brain called the glymphatic system. Do you have any data on when the brain gets the major, the most benefit from sleep in terms of eliminating its waste, cleaning itself, repairing, detoxifying, regenerating? You say that this is during the REM sleep, but what's happening there and what, if anything, can we do to enhance that? Yeah, this is another great question. Definitely the most important phase for your brain is the REM, right? There is where, okay, you collected a certain amount of information, your brain collected a certain amount of information during the day. And that is the moment where there is the cleanup phase, right? Okay, what do you want to retain? What do you want to throw away?
Starting point is 00:51:27 And that is also why, if you think, you know, sometimes people wake up and they finally have a solution to a problem they have been working on for months. Yeah, my wife is majorly like that. So is my chief of staff. Or sometimes people like me, I have a lot of ideas while I'm showering in the morning. And again, that is the result of your sleep. So your brain, while you're wearing a REM, is still working on solving some of your problems or readjusting and reconnecting the dots of some of the problems you're working on. And so there is no magic formula to really improve your REMs there are all these different tactics that we discuss so try to to sleep a certain amount of hours because the second part
Starting point is 00:52:12 of the night is when you get more REM try to use and have the proper temperature around you you can play with some supplements I play with supplements a lot there There are certain supplements. We don't have the results yet, but there are certain supplements that give me very positive dreams, for example, and others that give me very active and too intense dreams. Right, right, right. And so I take a lot of melatonin. I get nightmares, actually. And I know a lot of people that say the same thing,
Starting point is 00:52:40 which is why I don't. I'll occasionally take a very small amount of melatonin, one to three milligrams, never more than three milligrams. Usually when I'm traveling, like you said, most of us have a very difficult time meeting our protein needs and certain protein sources like whey protein and others can be as little as 20% absorbable. This is 99% absorbable and it has all of the essential amino acids that the body needs to build lean muscle to recover to improve our exercise performance and most importantly to repair after we have intense exercise so this is called perfect amino by body health it's like i said 99 absorbable it only has two calories eventually the caloric intake has virtually no caloric intake it will
Starting point is 00:53:26 not break a fast it tastes amazing you mix it in water i take this literally every single morning if you're working out in a fasted state you have to take a full spectrum amino acid prior to your workout to preserve your lean muscle and make sure that you're recovering properly and again it will not break your fast so the caloric impact is virtually zero you get all of the full spectrum amino acids it tastes wonderful i use it every single day you can go to bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate that's bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate and look for the perfect aminos they actually come in capsules if you're on the go or it becomes in several flavors that they make in a powder which i love it's flavored with natural
Starting point is 00:54:10 means of flavoring so there's no artificial sweeteners in here so this is one of my absolute favorite products give it a try if you're working out at all you need a full spectrum amino acid go to bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate go to bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate. That's bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate. I love their lab tested products. You can actually see the absorption rate for all of their products. They've got great electrolyte protein combinations. My favorite is the perfect aminos, bodyhealth.com forward slash ultimate. And now back to the ultimate human podcast. But I've, I've taken high dose melatonin before. One of my friends convinced me to do it because he said, you'll get the best night's sleep ever. It was absolutely the most horrifying
Starting point is 00:54:52 night of sleep I'd ever had. And I had very, very vivid, very dark, scary dreams that felt very real. And it was one of the worst nights of sleep that I had. So what are some of the things that you do when you travel? When you're on the road, clearly you're not, you know, bringing all the equipment with you. So how are you hacking your sleep on the road? What are your tricks for? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:55:23 So when I go to the West Coast, and if I usually, let's say, I go for three days, I try to stay on the East Coast time zone. So I wake up really early and I go to bed. I kind of like that out there. I do the same thing. I like it because you get like three extra hours in the morning. It's amazing. Nobody's bothering you. You're working out at 4 a.m.
Starting point is 00:55:36 You feel amazing. Exactly. Yeah, I love it. My son and I talk about it all the time. We love going from Miami to L.A LA because 7.30 we're smoked. Exactly. And we just go to bed at the hotel and then get up at 4 o'clock in the morning. You got half your day done.
Starting point is 00:55:53 I love that too. So I try to stay on that time zone. So once I'm back, I'm ready to go with my consistency. If it's a long flight, if I'm going to Europe europe i try to use melatonin to readjust i like for example when i go to europe to fly in the night i go to the hotel and i immediately go to the gym and so and i try to at night no i land in the morning so i i leave the u.s let's say i live miami usually the flights at 8 or 10 p.. And you land around 6 to 8 a.m. It depends where you're going.
Starting point is 00:56:26 I try to immediately get sunlight. I try to immediately have some breakfast, even if usually I don't have breakfast, but I want to reactivate my body. And then I try to go to the gym. Perfect. And then I stay up until the night. It will be hard somewhere around 12 p.m. to 2 p.m. I really feel sleepy. But if you can cross that window, then you will feel good.
Starting point is 00:56:51 And then I take some melatonin in the night, and I try to go to sleep. And when you say some melatonin, how many milligrams are you normally? Yeah, one to two. One to two. Yeah, that's about one to three is about what I'm doing. Once again, West Coast, I just stay on my routine. I try to set the right temperature of the bedroom. I try to do a bath or a shower before going to bed.
Starting point is 00:57:17 So I try to replicate the same habits. And sometimes I do some breath work if I feel I cannot. Yeah, the box breathing, really. I mean, that's another one of those hacks that's worked very, very well for myself and my audience. You know, the four-second inhale, four-second hold, four-second exhale, four-second hold. That seems to work incredibly well for lots of people. And it's free. I mean, there's no downside to trying that.
Starting point is 00:57:40 I find that if I tried to do six or eight cycles, I don't think I've ever made it to eight cycles. You know, as I sort of get to that, I get actually tired of doing it and I go right down into sleep. I mean, blows my wife's mind. So talk to me a little bit about what the future of Sleep 8 holds. I know you've got some technologies that you're working on, that you're releasing some, you're willing to talk about some not yet. But what is the future of sleep aid? Because, you know, what's exciting to me is this convergence again of AI and data and massive amounts of data and the fact that you can actually make adjustments in real time and feed it back to these people that are trying to get a better night's sleep. So where is technology going for your company? In a few years, your bed will become the most advanced preventative health platform in the world.
Starting point is 00:58:35 And I'll tell you how, but I also tell you why. The reason is the form factor. We have a lot of space, right? Our product is at the price point where adding certain sensors for $5 is not going to change anything, right? Well, instead for wearables, they have battery problems, they have space problem, and because of the price at which they sell, $5 in the cost of the device makes a difference for their margins. Right.
Starting point is 00:59:09 The other big thing we have is once you install our product, you don't remove it. It's not like a wearable. Wearable, they have a lot of drops after six months. People stop using it because they forget to charge it or they forget to bring the charger with them. Our product, once you install it, it stays with you for the next three, four, five, six, seven, and hopefully 10 years, right? And even if you don't open the app, it still means we have the data of what is happening in your body,
Starting point is 00:59:32 and so we can come back to you with valuable information. But in 2017, I wrote a memo, which is what then drove for us to raise the first large amount of money from Cosla Ventures. And the vision is what I call HyperPod. HyperPod is a canopy bed, right, where there are blackout curtains, and we control air temperature, air quality, and oxygen level while you're asleep. And because there is a ceiling, we work on certain technology for full body scanning. So even when you were talking about thermoregulation earlier in our chat, And because there is a ceiling, we work on certain technology for full body scanning.
Starting point is 01:00:11 So even when you were talking about thermoregulation earlier in our chat, that is something we are already working on. Wow. So we want to scan your body every single night to detect early signs of certain diseases that might be developing in your body. Wow. The other big thing is because we have this longitudinal data, right? Some of our customers now they have been with us for four years. So maybe you don't have a certain cardiovascular problem today, but we will have soon enough data to know that just based on the trajectory of your heart rate, HRV, and other biometrics, you might develop arrhythmia five years later. Wow.
Starting point is 01:00:47 The real power of AI and machine learning right now will be the prediction, not even the detection. Detection will already be 100 times better because we can scan you every night. But the real true value to reach the 500 years of life will be to be able to predict five, 10 years in advance what might happen with 80% chances. And intervene now. And intervene now, because maybe you can start taking drugs for diabetes now instead than
Starting point is 01:01:19 when you discover you already have the diabetes. Right, right. Right? That's fascinating. And obviously for cancer, you know, things like pancreatic cancer, if you discover you already have the diabetes. Right, right. Right? That's fascinating. And obviously for cancer, you know, things like pancreatic cancer, if you discover it very early, you have 90% chances to survive. If you discover it late, you have 90% chances to die. Right.
Starting point is 01:01:34 And with thermal imaging, maybe you don't know if you have a pancreatic cancer, but what you could see is that the temperature around the pancreas is two degrees higher than what has always been your baseline. And so maybe at the beginning, we will not know what the disease is or what the problem is, but we will be able to tell you, go to your doctor. We don't expect to replace the doctor,
Starting point is 01:01:54 but go to the doctor and check this specific thing because we are seeing a thermal difference compared to your baseline. Wow, that is fantastic. And how soon on the horizon are some of these changes coming for you guys? It's purely a matter of priorities, meaning we could have these in six months if we wanted.
Starting point is 01:02:15 The technologies already exist, so I'm not talking about building reusable rockets like Elon 15 years ago, right? All the pieces of the puzzle already exist. It's just a matter of eight sleep, do we want to focus on this now or we release the next version of the current product? Right. And how much money we want to deploy in R&D in one year versus over three years.
Starting point is 01:02:36 Right. But I already sleep in an hyperpod. Yeah. Oh, you do? This is already available. Yeah. I mean, it's not available for normal people, but for this year of the company, yes. And so I'm already sleeping in a canopy bed.
Starting point is 01:02:51 It doesn't have all the features yet, but it has many of these features. Have you found any positive impacts even beyond the regular sleep aid of being in this pod? Yeah. First of all, I mean, even just the blackout curtains, they are very basic, but sleeping in a completely dark environment makes a massive difference. I have tested altitude tents for quite a while, and I saw major benefits in my HRV and HR.
Starting point is 01:03:20 Most of this- Of becoming hypoxic. Correct. Hyperoxic, okay. Exactly. We actually believe that exactly the shifting between hypoxic and hyperoxic multiple times during the night is what will give you the biggest advantage, but we need to run more clinical tests.
Starting point is 01:03:37 Sleeping in mountain air, I call it, so in a very purified air the whole night for eight hours should have a major benefit. And then on thermal imaging, we can already see a major inflammation. So imagine even for athletes, right? You work with a lot of athletes. If you're LeBron James and we start seeing you're developing an inflammation in your elbow,
Starting point is 01:03:59 we're going to see it with high accuracy because these thermal cameras already exist. Wow. That is absolutely fascinating. Well, Teo, this has been unbelievable. And I think my audience is going to get a lot of benefit out of this. You know, I end every podcast the same way. I ask every podcast guest, if you watch my podcast, you already know this question's coming. But I ask, you know, there's no right or wrong answer to this question. I ask, you know, what does it mean to you to be an ultimate human? It's a matter of healthspun and lifespan, right? Lifespun, we all know is, okay, how many years you will live.
Starting point is 01:04:40 But the healthspun is, okay, let's say it's 100 years, hopefully, or 100 years plus, as you were saying. How many of those years I will be active, I will be able to play with my grandkids, and I can keep playing paddle with my friends. I had a grandma, she died, I think she was 92, 93, but probably the last 10 years of her life, she was really sitting on her chair. And it was still beautiful to have her because I loved her and she loved me, but she couldn't really live her life in the way I would want her to have live it. And so that for me means having a superhuman life. Wow. That is amazing, man. Guys, definitely check out the Sleep Aid. I'm going to put links in the show notes below. How can they find out more about you, find out more about 8Sleep? Where do they go to get more information on your product or your technology?
Starting point is 01:05:35 Yeah, go on 8sleep.com. 8, spell out like the number, E-I-G-H-T, sleep.com. So there you can see and find all our technologies. There is also something really cool coming out soon. So stay tuned. And for me, you can find me on Twitter with my name and last name. I'm pretty active there.
Starting point is 01:05:56 So you can ping me and ask me anything on Twitter and I will reply. That sounds amazing. And as always, that's just science.

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