In-situ Health and Fitness
Welcome to the In-situ Health and Fitness podcast! In each episode, we explore the latest trends and research and offer expert advice on all things health and fitness. From workouts and nutrition to mental health and wellness, we cover a wide range of topics to help you live a long, happy and healthy life. Tune in and get inspired to reach your goals!
In-situ Health and Fitness
Episode 196. How To Get Better Sleep
Welcome to another episode of the In-situ health and fitness podcast! This week on the show, we dive into the fundamentals of sleep to help you achieve better rest and overall well-being. In this episode, we explore the QQRT framework from Dr. Matthew Walker: quantity, quality, regularity and timing. We'll also discuss practical tips for enhancing your sleep hygiene, from managing light exposure to maintaining a cool bedroom environment. If you often wake up feeling unrefreshed, this episode is packed with strategies to improve your sleep and, by extension, your daily health and performance. Tune in to learn how you can start sleeping better tonight!
Notes;
Dr. Matt Walker: The Science & Practice of Perfecting Your Sleep - https://open.spotify.com/episode/4KNsmuCgX6lz8GE2J3393Y?si=ASbg_RhMSPikc5cV9SRkYA
10-Minute Guided Sleep Meditation | SELF
https://youtu.be/LWGSwfchz_A?si=MTuD1WEtnbB2gFFQ
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If you have any questions or topics you would like us to cover in the podcast, you ca...
What is up everybody welcome back to the
in-situ collective podcast on today's
episode we're going to teach you how to
get the best night sleep
[Music]
ever we have been getting a lot of
requests for this episode
sleep is very important everybody else
is starting to catch on to that and
learn how important sleep is for you not
just for your overall health Wellness
but reaching your goals as well but how
do we do that how do we know if we're
getting a good night's sleep all those
questions we're going to answerer in
today's episode so make sure you hang
around to the end do you want to kick us
off with the first so let's just go over
briefly what we're going to cover
because we haven't done a sleep episode
like an educational start one for ages
but we keep saying oh we've got a good
sleep episode or we're going to do a
good sleep episode so I feel like the
structure today is going to be firstly
something new that I learned from an
Andrew hubman and Dr Matthew walk up
Podcast which is the Sleep fundamentals
of
qqr so that stands for quantity quality
regularity and timing which is something
we haven't discussed specifically on the
podcast we've probably done it
individually
different episodes yeah so I thought
we're going to like bring everything
we've scattered around our episodes
together into this episode then we'll
talk about like sleep hygiene Basics so
how to improve your sleep if you think
that your quality isn't all that and
then at the end we'll talk about like
what to do when you struggle falling
asleep because a couple of weeks ago I
sent out an email about ruminating
before falling asleep and how to work
with that and I got a lot of feedback on
how helpful that was and I didn't
realize how much people struggled
actually falling asleep so I thought I'd
put that in at the end nice okay so
firstly I feel like the most obvious is
quantity of sleep and the general
guideline is 7 to9 hours and that is so
that you get sufficient deep sleep and
sufficient REM sleep which is rapid eye
movement sleep so you need a certain
amount of cycles per night to feel
rested the next day and that's different
for everybody so you might feel rested
after 7 hours I might feel more rested
after 8 or 9 hours so it just depends on
you as the person um so you pay
attention and record I was going to say
how do I know yeah how much sleep you're
getting um in an ideal world you would
wear like a wearable of some description
like an aura ring or a whoop or whatever
else Apple watch maybe to track your
sleep to see how long you're actually
sleeping because just because you go to
bed at 9:00 doesn't NE necessarily mean
you're going to sleep at 9: um and maybe
you push snooze a few times in the
morning when your alarm goes off Etc
there's lots of variables but yeah just
tracking how much sleep you get and if
you want to if you aren't using
something like a whoop which also has
like a journal aspect where you can put
in how you feel as well um if you're
just writing it down say for example
just note how you feel like if I if you
slept for 6 and 1 half hours and you
feel great put down how you feel did you
have an afternoon crash though like what
is how are you feeling throughout the
day is a big indicator of how much sleep
you should need at night yeah one of our
clients Dino actually asked like what
wearable is the best to track your sleep
and we actually just come to the
conclusion that he should just keep a
diary yeah like when you have a bad
night's sleep you can go over like what
led up to that night's sleep you know
why was it so bad so you don't repeat
those things because a lot of the time
we keep repeating processes that give us
a bad sleep and don't even realize it
when you write it down you can look over
last week or so you actually go oh yeah
true yeah I was doing that one thing
that you know made me have a bad night's
sleep so journaling is quite effective
as well yeah definitely I do like if you
wanted to choose one wearable I would
say whoop I've never used Aura ring so
I'm not really sure how it works but
when we were wearing a whoop wow that
was a lot of W's when we were wearing a
whoop um it asks you in the morning
questions like did you have alcohol last
night when was your last um coffee like
how stressed were were yesterday and
then at the end of the week and at the
end of the month it gives you a report
on how those things affect your recovery
and your sleep which is super insightful
but it's a little nerdy like it's a next
level up from a journal probably yeah it
takes a journal and body metrics and
join them join them together yeah is
very effective because you can see in
real time and over the periods of time
what is actually affecting yeah yeah it
is a good feature I do like that
so the next one the next cue is quality
so the the structure of your sleep
throughout the night how broken is it
how much deep sleep are you getting how
much REM sleep are you getting and that
is a lot harder to track unless you're
wearing a we a wearable unless you're
waking up and like writing it down but
then you're probably like you could be
waking up in light sleep or you could be
fully awake and like how often are you
waking up how often are you spending in
light sleep a lot of those things are
really hard to track unless you're
wearing
something but at the same time wearing
something and worrying about the quality
might cause anxiety and might lead you
to sleep less efficiently as well so it
just depends how poorly you think you're
sleeping like if you feel like you are
waking up heaps or you feel like you are
getting 8 or 9 hours sleep and you still
feel exhausted then maybe there's
something going on with the quality of
your sleep and then maybe consider
tracking it so you can try and find like
what is it that is not right like are
you not getting enough REM are you not
getting enough deep sleep and then you
can sort of work backwards to see how
you can fix that which we will get
to
um yeah after so after quality which is
probably going to be the the basis of
this podcast is how to improve the
quality we have regularity we talk about
this all the flipping time right have a
regular sleep schedule that is the
absolute best thing can do for your
energy for your sleep for weight loss
for muscle building everything that we
ever talk about having a regular sleep
schedule is the best cost most cost
effective easiest thing that you can do
what do you mean by regular that means
going to bed and waking up at the same
times with a 30 minute buffer each each
side ideally so if you go to bed at 9
8:30 or 9:30 not going to make much of a
difference and if you get up at 6
getting up at 5:30 or 6:30 that's okay
like that's there's like a window of
error um but if you're pushing it out
like on the weekends and you're sleeping
in an hour an hour and a half 2 hours
longer which I know is appealing at the
time um but it's got you're doing
yourself a disservice like come Monday
for example cuz it makes it so much
harder for you to feel alert and for
your body to get back into the Rhythm
and honestly you probably spend 3 4 days
getting the Rhythm them back by going to
bed at the same time and getting up at
the same time and then you ruin it by
staying up late or sleeping in on the
weekends and then it's just like so much
effort to get back into the Rhythm so
just I was going to say like if
somebody's doing it Friday Saturday
Sunday night staying up a little bit
later because it's a weekend and then
what you've only got Monday Tuesday
Wednesday Thursday to recover and then
it's back into Friday night where you
stay like it's it's very hard for your
body to get in that cycle but even
waking like so we're not saying you can
never go out again or have fun but even
when you stay out try and get up at the
same time or close enough to that same
time that you normally wake up as well
and just know that staying out later or
sleeping in is going to make you feel
groggy and not make you feel your best
like we're not saying do do or don't do
these things but it's just what we're
giving you today is trying to help you
have the best sleep so that you feel the
best so that you can perform the best in
life essentially um real life example we
were very social on the weekend and went
out and stayed out past our bedtime even
all of our friends are like oh you guys
are you okay to keep going and doing
things um I got sick every time that we
do that because my sleep schedule is
pretty like dialed in um and it is cold
as hell here at the minute
but my I went to bed a lot later I had
drank alcohol so I My Sleep Quality was
very poor so everything was out the
quantity I slept probably 5 or 6 hours
cuz I got up at the normal time instead
the quality terrible because I drank
alcohol the regularity out the window
and then the timing also out the window
which is the next thing we're going to
talk about which is aligning your sleep
schedule with your chronotype we haven't
talked about chronotypes for years right
yeah I feel like you put me on
chronotypes maybe 5 years ago and then
we sort of just for about it why did
that happen it's just very hard to
incorporate your chronotype with your
lifestyle because the world is set up
for 9 to
5 um so this is probably an optional
extra but if you have the flexibility
highly recommend I'll put the link to
the chronotype quiz that Dr Matthew
Walker recommends um in the show notes
so you can go and find out what your
chronotype is and if you have the
flexibility to sort of shift your sleep
schedule so just what's a chronotype a
chronotype is whether you are a morning
person a night hour or a regular like
middle of the day so I feel like a
morning person would probably go to bed
at 9:00 get up at 5: say and then maybe
the next chronotype would be like going
to bed at 10 or 11: and getting up at 7
or 8 and then the the other chronotype
might be like around 12 and getting up
at like
n or 10 yeah um so like genetically your
body will have a preference to one of
those time slots and if you're fighting
against it like if you are a night owl
and you're trying to force yourself to
be a morning person then you can feel
like you're always tired and you're
never rested you're never getting a good
night's sleep because your biological
clock just doesn't agree with that so do
the quiz um play around with it like I
guess it is also up to interpretation
quizzes and anything like that that give
you some kind of label also depend on
how you answer so even take it a few
times whenever we do personality quizzes
and stuff um at Uni for psych they
always say take it at different times of
the day take it when you're in different
moods and just cross reference your
responses because take it after a night
out take it after a good night sleep
exactly because how you respond can yeah
determine where how you set the rest of
this up yeah I it's just like I'm I
guess I haven't talked about it for so
long because I just all I don't know I'm
not convinced I guess it is comes down
to that interpretation because at the
moment 4:35 o00 is my wake time and to
start with it was hard but now I F it
quite easy like can your body just get
used to different chronotypes I would I
feel like
yeah I feel like you can definitely
train your brain to get used to a
different chronotype but I don't know
personally I've always been I need to
like like 9:00 for as long as I can
remember has been my bedtime I don't
know if that's because that's what I
want physically or if that's just
society's trained that into
me but it feels best intuitively it
feels best for me um like if you could
do whatever and you didn't have clients
why are you yawning talking about sleep
if you could do whatever and you didn't
have clients in the morning what time
would you want to get up I'd still like
I don't know I like getting up that
early same so I feel like we're the
morning type um even just asking
yourself that question without even
going and doing the chronotype quiz like
if nothing in your life else mattered if
nothing else mattered in your life what
time would you want to get up and what
time would you want to go to bed mine
would still be the same as it is
now okay yeah I don't know something to
consider yeah so how to determine if you
are getting a good quality night's sleep
firstly do you feel refreshed and
restored when you wake up do you want to
get out of bed or do you want to lay
there and rot for another hour then I
would say do you feel like you can sleep
well past your alarm because sometimes
in the morning the alarm goes off and I
want to lay in bed but I can't sleep
anymore because my body's like this is
when we get up let's get up so just
consider those things um and if you feel
like you don't feel refreshed restored
you want to sleep for hours the next
things that we are going to talk about
might help you feel better
because they'll ideally improve your
Sleep
Quality um I was just having a flashback
y it has been a long long time since
we've done as sleep episode yeah I feel
like we're and were they good ones back
then yeah proba we don't go back and try
and find them but one thing I again back
then and I remember talking about it now
you should wake up happy hungry and
horny oh yeah three hes so you should
wake up every morning hungry for food CU
you should have just done a big fast MH
if you eat 3 hours before you go to bed
which I'm sure we'll go over maybe we've
talked about in other podcast so it's
been a while since you've eaten so you
should be hungry and you should wake up
happy you should be waking up ready to
rock and roll and get into your day and
biologically you should be horny in the
mornings is that just for boys though
could be don't know feel like that's a
boy thing I guess so CU boys you know
yeah again evolutionary like you should
wake up and that's
the mornings are your optimal time for
your hormones so yeah true and we always
say if you are trying to achieve a
health and fitness goal or Aesthetics or
anything like that the best time to
train is in the morning because your
body is optimized to perform best in the
morning so you know hormones come into
that so your hormones should be firing
so you should be horny so horny is just
not just a state of mind it is a
chemical reaction in your body as well
so the morning erections are a good sign
of vit
ality and health and a good night's
sleep okay let's stay on the hormone
topic I want to talk about light using
light and dark and the hormone melatonin
which is what makes you feel sleepy F I
keep hitting this goddamn mic um so
melatonin is the hormone that makes you
feel sleepy um it does other things too
but we'll just talk about it in the
context of sleep so Darkness allows the
release of melatonin to Signal sleep so
Darkness in the evening allows the
release of melatonin to Signal sleep and
then obviously light in the morning is
going to suppress melatonin so you will
feel more
alert um so I feel like that should be
intuitive right so in the mornings you
want to expose your eyes and skin to as
much light as you can ideally sunlight
but if you live in a gloomy place or
you're starting the morning super early
or you're going to the gym in the dark
then any light still um screens overhead
lights ideally just something that's s
that that simulates
simulates something that simulates the
sun um to tell your body your brain and
then your body that it's time to
suppress melatonin and start to feel
alert and ready for the rest of the day
um and then obviously at nighttime I
feel like we talk about this a lot maybe
it's just you and I that talk talk about
it but minimize screens and overhead
head light at night that should be
common sense but maybe it's not so in an
Ideal World you want to stop watching TV
being on your phone whatever it is an
hour at least before going to bed and if
you can even earlier than that just have
lowle lights on so lights that are like
on the ground rather than your lamps and
stuff rather than like your ceiling
lights and if you want to take it to
another level get like orange or red
bulbs in your lamps um
um yeah just be careful don't run into
things no you'll be able to see still
but yeah that is a really good way to
like indicate to your brain that it's
time to start whining down and get ready
to go to sleep for the next 7 to 9
hours
um the other thing for light I would say
would be considering blackout blockout
curtains and if you can't do that then
get a sleep mask um but light does also
come in through your skin and your brain
does register that so in an ideal world
no lights in the bedroom at all but you
could consider a sleep mask as well yeah
um yeah and also like I know that Hues
and I know that we talk about trying to
get sunlight 10 to 15 minutes with
within waking up or within the first
hour of waking trying to get natural
light into your eyes um but in places
like Melbourne it's so gloomy sometimes
in the morning like the sun Sun hasn't
even come out yet today and I'm sure
there's lots of places like that around
the world but there's still light
photons coming through the clouds so
when you think about how light it is in
the day versus the night that's still
light so your brain will still register
it as light so definitely still go
outside even if it's gloomy and dark
because it is still going to benefit
your sleep later that night mhm are you
good I feel like you need a nap no no
just just thinking as we go on okay
anything to add to the light and dark
section no I was just going to say uh
blue light blockers sometimes can be a
good tool to have especially if you have
to be on your screen I guess too late
yeah um and I guess this is where
supplementing melatonin because I've had
a few clients struggle with sleep and
then they supplement with melatonin M
but if you are again supplements are
there if you need them not saying
they're good or bad but it's pointless t
a melatonin supplement and then still
like having screens and overhead lights
and all that sort of stuff sort of
like you're giving your body the hormone
to send you to sleep but actually giving
the external signals of stay awake yeah
so I just say be careful of that as well
um I think there's a lot of I haven't
really dived into it but I've been
hearing it a bit about melatonin and
supplementing and all that sort of stuff
that doesn't seem to be quite good so
all I'd say to those people just be
careful with that sort of stuff as well
CU obviously you're sending mixed
signals to your body and that can be
quite damaging and it's not going to
help you sleep at
all wait what's not going to help you
sleep when you're you're taking
melatonin and having overhead lights you
got that oh I see it's counteract
counterintuitive to your body yeah that
makes sense um I feel like if you just
start to use if you don't already use
the light and dark technique and you
start to use it you not you should
definitely notice a massive difference
um because that's so hardwired for that
it's insane so use it to your advantage
okay the next thing I wanted to talk
about was temperature because I feel
like this is very overlooked I don't
know what it is with people here but
when it's cold outside they want the
temperature in their apartment to be
like 30° it's insane right whereas we
like we have a what do you call it
central heating and cooling ducted
ducted Heating and Cooling um so like in
the day we probably have it on 24 or
something warm but then at night time or
in the after in the evening probably we
turn it down to like
19° cool so that the bedroom is cool
because it is really hard for your body
to relax and get into it's actually more
your brain your brain needs to cool for
you to be able to get into the deep and
the REM sleep so ideally you want it to
be your bedroom 19° or less that's the
number that um Matthew Walker like
recommend aiming for 19° but also do
your best to support your body in
cooling its core body temperature down
as well um because I I'm pretty sure it
has to cool down like a whole degree for
you to be at like the optimal body
temperature which doesn't sound like
much but when you think about it it's a
lot of work for your body to do that so
you can do that basically by having a
hot shower um because you'll increase
your body's temperature and then it will
it'll decrease itself it'll like work
it'll take it as a signal to decrease
the body temperature for you to get
ready to go to bed does that yeah yeah
definitely it just it's very confusing
when people hear that it's like I want I
want to get hot to get cold yeah so you
think about it your body regulates so
when you jump in a cold ice bath your
body's trying to warm itself up to
combat that cold so your body
temperature doesn't get too cold and
then when you have a hot shower it's
trying to cool you down so you don't
overheat yeah so it's just a bit
around and and understandable and I
think a lot of people get that wrong as
well and jump in a cold shower before
bed you should have a hot shower and
your body starts to try and cool itself
MH yeah yeah like the last couple of
nights our AC hasn't been working and
the irregularity in the temperature of
our bedroom has ruined our sleep like
honestly it made has made such a big
difference that I forgot how much of an
impact the temperature and having a
temperature control department has on
our ability to have a good night's sleep
it's crazy so yeah definitely consider
that okay next I had food and meal
timing mhm so what was the three a while
ago you you put out an analogy like
three 3 2 1 yeah go on yeah a lot of
people found it quite easy and i' got a
lot of comments which is quite cool but
3 hours before bed no food 2 hours
before bed no liquids M and one hour
before bed no
screens yeah yeah that's right y um
obviously again that's a lot easier said
than done sometimes life and all that
sort of stuff you have to eat three like
you know maybe two or 1 hour before bed
so be it but just trying to work on that
makes a big difference um I know it's
quite hard not to drink 2 hours before
you go to bed but maybe just less a lot
less like I just find like just tiny
little sips of water cuz I think I'm
thirsty but not that thirsty just cuz
I've been drinking so much throughout
the day um and yeah definitely no
screens an hour before bed you know
that's I think that's the easiest one
for most people to do uh the other two
sort of obviously family friends you
know lifestyle come into it as well so
but just I think everybody can sort of
try and work on at least 60 Minutes of
no screens before bed is quite easy to
start with yeah um I think worst case
scenario like try 2 hours
maximum eating something 2 hours maximum
before going to bed and if you have to
eat close to going to bed just eat
something like smaller because it is
it's a lot of work for your body to
digest food so then you aren't getting
in the full body deep sleep like you
would if you had eaten 2 hours prior to
getting into bed and then there's like
it increases the chance of reflux it
increases increases the chance of you
being thirsty and waking up to go get a
drink which then increases the chance of
you having to go to the toilet so just
it's a ripple effect you just push it
out for 3 to 2 hours before there's a
lot of things that won't happen that
will help you sleep better and I know
there's some people out there like
caffeine they're like I can have a
coffee or I can eat just before bed and
it doesn't affect me it does you just
don't realize it and you could be having
a better night's sleep and not realize
it just by pushing that back a little
bit Yeah okay the next thing I want to
talk about was caffeine oh yeah um so
caffeine just to clarify coffee caffeine
does not reduce your need for sleep I
feel like it's common that if I have
coffee then I I can function on less
sleep so that's fine but it doesn't
reduce your need for sleep it only
temporarily masks your sleepiness so
think about it as if you are tired
honestly I don't really have caffeine
because I'm tired I have caffeine
because I want to work and I like the
taste of it like I don't wait until I'm
sleepy to have caffeine does that make
sense yep um um
so yeah try to think of it
as something to increase your Baseline
rather than get you to Baseline yeah
does that make does that make sense um
so if you are yeah you're getting to the
afternoon and you're getting sleepy and
then you get that coffee it's not
actually doing anything it's a Band-Aid
effect that's temporarily making you
less sleepy and it's going to affect
your sleep the coming night and then
make you sleepier the next day and it's
a never ending vicious cycle of caffeine
dependence yeah it's more and more
sounds like a drug yeah well it is but
it's just like yeah if you're somebody
that wakes up and can't function without
a
coffee I've heard people that are on
meth say the same thing about meth can't
function without meth and like don't
rely on it yeah don't rely on it use it
as a tool so in an Ideal World you want
to avoid having caffeine 8 to 10 hours
before going to sleep obviously some
people metabolize caffeine a lot faster
and a lot more efficiently which means
they get it out of their system um a lot
quicker than other people but ideally 8
to 10 hours before bed don't have any
caffeine um and also if you are
experiencing afternoon crashes
frequently then definitely try delaying
your caffeine intake in the morning
because that like having an after I know
it's very very common to have an
afternoon crash of energy but that is
your first sign that something with your
sleep isn't quite right and the fact
that it's really hard for you to get out
of bed but if you're having like a
massive afternoon slump like you can't
get through the afternoon without sugar
or chocolate or something caffeinated
then you need to change something so
ideally delaying your coffee in the
morning should help you not have a slump
until it's bedtime so Andrew hubman does
recommend 90 minutes with don't have C
within 90 minutes of waking um we do
that and I think it makes a massive
difference huge difference yeah yeah so
try to delay your caffeine the first 90
minutes honestly fill it with trying to
get sunlight in your eyes going for a
10-minute walk doing a 10minute yoga
drinking water having a
shower 90 minutes of pass eating 20
grams of protein yeah you can easily
fill 90 minutes in the morning with
other things before having caffeine y
okay do you think that that is
sufficient caffeine rundown just be
careful of caffeine as well a lot of
teas are caffeinated I think people get
like they're like I'll swap my coffee
for a green tea um there's still a lot
of caffeine in green tea MH uh it's just
Caff uh teas have Aline in it which what
we got in this which masks the caffeine
high that you would get from coffee so
just be careful of Caff uh teas as well
and energy drinks obviously yeah uh it
can be quite caffeinated
cool okay next we have implementing a
windown routine I think this is often
overlooked a lot of people like super
busy with their day then they come home
and they're cooking cleaning doing
chores watching Netflix and then they're
like I got to go to bed quickly and
you're probably like have a million
things going through your mind you're
like energized over tired most likely
over caffinated most likely um so I
think that implementing a a windown
routine is just as important is having a
morning
routine so you can signal to your brain
and body it's all about signaling to
your brain like your brain will do
whatever you tell it to do you just have
to choose the right things to tell it
that you want for it to get the behavior
that you want yeah
so I feel like it's obvious but trying
to do relaxing activities an hour before
bed like meditation reading stretching
even cleaning the house like in low
light um yeah I was going to say that
like obviously every this is going to be
very different for everybody and there's
obviously a lot of people out there with
you know um kids and all that sort of
stuff
like your routine is going to look like
whatever but you know if you are still
working and doing things before bedtime
you can turn the lights off yeah you
know be in a relaxed State you don't
have to have the TV Go music playing and
working and got you know chores going
you can just do slowly calmly do one
thing at a time you'll chip through them
but it's just no distractions like
probably getting rid of your phone a
little bit before bed as well obviously
getting off social media and all that
sort of stuff I know a mom that instead
of watching TV after 7even she has two
kids and instead of watching TV they put
on a podcast and they often actually
listen to Andrew hubman um and the kids
like they don't really know what's going
on but they still pick up on things like
as far as their language allows them to
understand what's happening but it's
very low stimulation you don't have the
blue light from the TV like you're just
listening to his calm deep voice while
they do their bath routine and
everything and then everyone feels calm
and rested and it's like just makes you
all slow down and come more inward I
suppose yeah I think another important
thing in the windown routine should be
considering avoiding stimulating
activities in your bedroom or in bed so
no TV in bed no phone no social media in
bed
um no eating in bed no drinking in bed
like you want to tell your brain that
bed is the place to sleep the more you
can make that connection the stronger
you can make that connection between the
bed being just the place you sleep the
better so do everything in your power to
tell your brain every single night that
this is where we go to sleep and that's
it still blows my mind that people have
TVs in their bedrooms it's the biggest
thing one of the a lot of people say I
can't sleep without the TV you can sleep
a whole lot better without TV it's just
going to take a little while to get used
to it but yeah get rid of the TV in your
bedroom best thing you can do I agree
okay the last point before we move on to
what to do when you have trouble falling
asleep is alcohol very true briefly
alcohol is a sedative not a sleep aid
alcohol might help you fall asleep
faster but it absolutely Ruins Your
Sleep Quality it just causes fragmented
sleep you don't get the deep sleep you
don't get the rapid eye movement sleep
as much as you need all it does is give
you the illusion that you can fall
asleep faster that's all I want to say
on alcohol it's not a sleep aid it's a
sedative okay is that clear yep um
so this mean it let's this leads us
directly in when you have trouble
falling asleep because I feel like a lot
of people will have what you call a
night cap assuming that that is what's
helping you fall asleep yeah and maybe
it is but this the quality is not there
so when you have trouble falling asleep
first I would say get out of bed if
you're in bed and you're tossing and
turning and getting on your phone and
getting more frustrated and angry that
you can't fall asleep just get out of
bed go sit on the couch and read a book
like walk around do some yoga because
like I said before you want to only
associate bed with falling asleep so
just get out for 20 minutes your phone
shouldn't be in your bedroom anyway and
well everyone's phone phones in the
bedroom let's be real um so yeah just
get out and try
and I guess signal to your brain like
we're calming down and then go back and
try to fall asleep and then repeat as
much as you have to honestly um because
it will take
practice the next thing that I would say
when you have trouble falling asleep is
just do nothing like just be still out
of the bed right um just sit there
because you're going to get bored and
you're going to get sleep sit there in
the dark if you have to and just do
nothing until you're sleepy enough to go
to bed it sounds dumb but yeah that's
that's the only way to tell your brain
that we're ready to sleep like if you're
scrolling then your brain's like oh
we're still doing something we're still
looking for something what are we
looking for so it's going to stay alert
um yeah I don't know what else to say on
that point the next thing that I put in
my email a couple of weeks ago was doing
a mental walk so I do this quite often
where like your TOs and turning and
you're thinking about the day and the
things you should have said and the
things you should have done and the
things you have to do tomorrow just try
your best
to take yourself on a mental walk
without those other things coming in so
pick a place that you know a route that
you know and just pretend you are
walking through there it's like it's
similar to the counting sheep technique
but there's more to think about because
it's like what is around you you know
you are trying to retrieve from your
memory the things that you have passed
um and if you can even better on your
walk take more pay more attention to the
things around you so you can use that at
night like what am I actually seeing on
this walk rather than just you know
mindlessly walking
um yeah and then the last one I was
going to say was limit naps I don't
really care about naps I would just
prefer to push through but I know lots
of people nap and if you have trouble
falling asleep then definitely and you
are napping in the day limit them to 20
to 30 minutes maximum you don't need to
have a nap for an hour and a half 2
hours in the day unless you're sleeping
like 4 hours at night maybe but if
you're sleeping for 7 to 9 hours and you
still are napping for like an hour maybe
something is a little wrong do you have
anything else that you would like to add
um one thing I do I probably did this
meditation like I could probably count
the times I've done a guided meditation
on one hand I don't even think I've done
it five times but it's a type of
meditation where you take a breath in
into I don't even how to explain it I've
done a few guided ones I'll try and put
it in the show notes I'll find out what
it's actually called but you take a
breath in as you breathe in you breathe
that breath goes into your hand then as
you breathe out the tension leaves and
you just breathe all that tension and
you draw that tension out of your
hand like I've literally done that
guided I think before with you and if I
can't can't sleep I literally just do
that it just blocks everything out of
your mind and you listen to your body I
I don't know like again it's not
something that I spent a lot of time
learning how to do it's quite easy yeah
and when I can't fall asleep and my
mind's racing I just do that sometimes
it doesn't work but most of the times it
does and again it's super easy like I
don't know it's just one thing I've
always done without much practice I know
a lot of times people hear oh breath
meditations and all that sort of stuff
and you know hate doing it or hate
learning how to do it I think if you do
it once guided you have the gist and
it's quite effective that's one thing I
do yeah I think similar to that is just
like a body scan too yeah like mentally
just like relaxing like I love it in the
yoga session when you do shavas
shavasana is that what it's called and
you like have to go through and like
physically relax every part of your face
yeah it's pretty much that you're just
using your breath to breathe into those
parts and then breathe out like I guess
it's the same thing that's yeah one last
thing I would say about when trying to
fall asleep and ruminating would be to
write things down that you have to do
tomorrow so you don't have to keep
rethinking it while trying to go to
sleep I'm so bad at that if you can just
quickly like write down all of the
things you have to do tomorrow even if
it even if it's like change batteries in
the remote like all the little things
that you're just keeping in your brain
for later just write them all down
because then you're like I know it's
there I don't have to worry about it and
I can just go to sleep something I need
to start doing again I've done that in
the past super effective yeah I think so
too cool that's all that I that I wanted
to talk about today perfect anything
else that you think would be
beneficial
um no do we sort of spoke about taping
mouths and all that sort of stuff in the
last episode maybe go back and have a
quick listen to that I do Tim stamp all
the episodes so obviously if you've
lasted this long you've lasted through
the whole lot but if you're like what
did they say about timing you can just
go back and I'll time stamp it for you
so it's easy to relisten to that one
part um but as always we want to hear
everybody else's like mac was actually
saying the other day that we get so
caught up in our routine that we forget
that other people do this or that or we
don't know about that or yeah I really
struggle when we come to the educational
episodes like this
one I I feel like we always Overlook the
basics because the basics are so normal
to us but like the last two weeks or so
when I've been speaking to people it's
so apparent that people don't actually
know how to improve their sleep if
they're sleeping poorly already it's
just I feel like it's not as common
knowledge as you and I assume it to be
so and we have spent a lot of time
working on this a lot of time it's not
like we just went yeah overnight and
we've changed everything we've spent
quite a few years dialing everything in
changing everything learning stuff like
are we still I'm still learning stuff
about how to make it better and how to
make it more digestible and easy for you
guys to interpret and use because
there's endless even for us to interpret
and use so it's it's a constant thing
that slowly changes again one thing I
want to just before we go is just it's
not going to change overnight like if
you've done a few changes you're not
going to wake up the next day feeling
amazing and on top of the world it does
take a few nights unfortunately I feel
like it might take 2 or 3 weeks for your
sleep to get better and your siav
rhythms to dial in and all it takes is
one night to throw it out yeah it's just
the part about it but that's just
how it is for us humans so don't feel
discouraged after if it doesn't feel
like it's changing after a few nights
give it a few weeks and yes you're can
to have the odd night sleep here
and there but that happens you can learn
from that right and just keep moving
forwards awesome thank you everybody for
tuning in we appreciate your time and
we'll talk to you all in the next
episode bye
oh
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