[go: up one dir, main page]

0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views94 pages

хуберман подкаст про сон

This podcast episode discusses sleep and wakefulness. It will provide tools to help listeners sleep better by falling asleep faster, timing sleep appropriately, and improving sleep quality. It will also discuss how to stay focused and alert during wakefulness, as sleep and wakefulness are interrelated. The host is a neurobiology professor who produces this podcast to educate the public about science.

Uploaded by

aleksandravlas
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
23 views94 pages

хуберман подкаст про сон

This podcast episode discusses sleep and wakefulness. It will provide tools to help listeners sleep better by falling asleep faster, timing sleep appropriately, and improving sleep quality. It will also discuss how to stay focused and alert during wakefulness, as sleep and wakefulness are interrelated. The host is a neurobiology professor who produces this podcast to educate the public about science.

Uploaded by

aleksandravlas
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 94

00:00

welcome to the hubermann lab podcast


00:02
where we discuss science
00:03
and science-based tools for everyday
00:05
life
00:09
i'm andrew huberman and i'm a professor
00:11
of neurobiology and ophthalmology at
00:13
stanford school of medicine
00:15
today's podcast episode is all about
00:17
sleep
00:18
we're also going to talk about the
00:20
mirror image of sleep which is
00:22
wakefulness
00:23
now these two phases of our life sleep
00:25
and wakefulness
00:27
govern everything about our mental and
00:30
physical health
00:31
and we're not just going to talk about
00:33
what's useful about sleep
00:34
we're also going to talk about how to
00:36
get better at sleeping
00:38
and that will include how to get better
00:39
at falling asleep timing your sleep
00:42
and accessing better sleep quality in
00:44
doing so we're also going to discuss how
00:46
to get
00:47
more focused and alert in wakefulness
00:50
so because sleep and wakefulness are
00:52
related we really can't have a
00:53
conversation about one without the other
00:55
now in keeping with this theme you may
00:58
catch a few
00:59
snores in the background unlike me my
01:01
bulldog costello can fall asleep
01:03
anywhere anytime and he happens to be
01:05
sleeping over there in the corner
01:06
so if you hear snoring that's what
01:09
that's about
01:10
as always i want to just mention that
01:11
this podcast is part of my effort to
01:13
bring zero cost to consumer
01:15
public education about science and
01:17
science related tools
01:19
it is unrelated to my teaching and
01:21
research roles at stanford school of
01:22
medicine
01:23
today's podcast is brought to us by
01:24
helix mattresses
01:26
having the proper sleep environment both
01:28
the environment you're sleeping
01:29
in and the object you're sleeping on is
01:31
critically important to getting a good
01:33
night's sleep
01:34
helix mattresses are a little different
01:36
than most because they're matched to
01:37
your specific sleep needs as well as
01:40
whether or not you tend to
01:41
run hot or cold as you sleep through the
01:44
night what position you sleep in and so
01:46
forth
01:46
so if you go to their website they have
01:48
a quiz that you can take that matches
01:50
you to the particular mattress that's
01:51
going to be best for your sleep needs
01:53
i've always had a lot of trouble
01:55
sleeping
01:55
i'm one of these people that can fall
01:56
asleep easily but then i wake up and i
01:58
have a hard time getting back to sleep
02:00
and once i switch to a helix mattress
02:02
that was precisely matched to my sleep
02:04
needs
02:05
i found i could sleep through the night
02:06
which has made a tremendous difference
02:08
for me
02:08
if you want to try helix mattresses you
02:10
can go to helix
02:12
sleep.com huberman and that will give
02:14
you up to two hundred dollars off on a
02:16
mattress order as well as two pillows
02:18
free
02:19
with your mattress order and of course
02:21
having the proper pillows
02:22
is just as important as having the
02:24
proper mattress
02:25
today's podcast is also brought to us by
02:27
headspace
02:28
headspace is a meditation app that
02:30
teaches you how to meditate
02:32
it's fair to say that now there's a ton
02:34
of research out there
02:35
in peer-reviewed journals supporting the
02:37
fact that mindfulness meditation can
02:39
support
02:40
mental and physical health but many
02:42
people find it hard to meditate
02:44
in fact i'm one of these people i
02:46
started meditating in my teens but then
02:47
i would drop it
02:48
every few weeks or so and then i'd get
02:50
back to it maybe the following week or
02:52
every year i just was not very regular
02:54
about my meditation practice
02:56
then a few years ago i was flying a lot
02:58
for work and i was on jetblue flights
03:01
and they have headspace as part of the
03:03
choice of things that you can watch on
03:04
the tv screen
03:05
and as i started meditating more
03:07
regularly what i found is my sleep was
03:09
better
03:09
i would arrive feeling more rested it
03:12
just had tremendous effects
03:13
on my work performance and other aspects
03:15
of my life
03:16
if you want to try headspace you can go
03:18
to headspace.com
03:20
special offer if you do that you'll get
03:23
one month
03:24
of all of headspace's meditations for
03:26
free that's the best offer right now
03:28
so if interested go to headspace.com
03:31
special offer
03:33
so let's talk about sleep sleep is this
03:35
incredible period of our lives
03:37
where we are not conscious we might
03:40
dream
03:41
we might twitch we might even wake up
03:44
but in
03:44
sleep we are only in relation to things
03:47
that are happening within our brain and
03:48
body
03:49
outside sensory experience in most cases
03:52
can't really impact us and yet sleep is
03:55
this tremendously important period of
03:57
life because
03:58
it resets our ability to be focused
04:02
alert and emotionally stable in the
04:04
wakeful period
04:06
so we can't really talk about
04:07
wakefulness focus
04:09
motivation mood well-being without
04:12
thinking about sleep and that's why
04:14
we're devoting this entire month to the
04:16
discussion about sleep
04:18
but we also can't talk about sleep and
04:19
think about sleep without thinking about
04:21
wakefulness because it turns out
04:23
that the period that we call sleep and
04:26
the period we call wakefulness are
04:27
tethered to one another
04:29
what we do in the waking state
04:31
determines when we fall asleep
04:33
how quickly we fall asleep whether or
04:36
not we stay asleep
04:37
and how we feel when we wake up the next
04:39
day and today we're going to talk mostly
04:42
about how to get better at sleeping and
04:45
the reason for
04:46
starting the conversation that way as
04:48
opposed to just diving into a lot of
04:50
biology about sleep
04:52
is because first of all there's a lot of
04:54
information out there already
04:56
about the biology of sleep we're going
04:58
to touch on a little bit of this
04:59
things like stages of sleep and sleep
05:01
spindles
05:02
melatonin and dreaming but i think that
05:06
by now
05:07
most people are aware that getting a
05:10
really good night's sleep on a
05:11
consistent basis
05:12
is critically important but most people
05:15
don't know how to do that
05:16
in fact i'm guessing that very few of
05:19
you out there
05:20
are consistently getting seven to nine
05:22
hours of really terrific sleep waking up
05:25
feeling rested
05:26
like you're ready to attack the day and
05:27
being able to go through the day feeling
05:29
focused and alert
05:30
without dips in energy or focus so if
05:34
you're like most people
05:35
which includes me you have some
05:37
challenges with sleep at least
05:39
every third or fifth night or so and
05:41
maybe even more often
05:42
so we're really going to go tool heavy
05:44
today and talk about tools
05:46
that can help you fall asleep sleep
05:48
better and emerge from sleep feeling
05:50
more rested
05:51
and we're going to do that by grounding
05:53
our discussion of tools
05:55
in peer-reviewed studies mostly from the
05:58
last
05:58
10 years although some even more recent
06:00
than that and we're going to start
06:02
by discussing what is sleep and what
06:05
governs the timing
06:07
of the onset of sleep in other words
06:09
what makes you get sleepy at a
06:10
particular time of day
06:12
so what determines how well we sleep and
06:15
the quality of our wakeful state
06:18
turns out that's governed by two forces
06:20
the first force is a chemical force
06:23
it's called adenosine adenosine is a
06:26
molecule in our nervous system and body
06:28
that builds up the longer we are awake
06:31
so if you've just slept for
06:33
eight or nine or ten really deep restful
06:36
hours
06:37
adenosine is going to be very low in
06:39
your brain and body
06:40
if however you've been awake for 10 15
06:43
or more hours adenosine levels are going
06:46
to be much higher
06:47
adenosine creates a sort of sleep drive
06:50
or a sleep hunger
06:52
and actually hunger is the appropriate
06:53
word here because for most of what we're
06:56
going to discuss today
06:57
we can think of it in an analogous way
06:59
to nutrition
07:01
your nutrition and how well you feel
07:04
after you eat certain foods your overall
07:06
level of
07:07
fitness and your cellular health and
07:09
your heart health
07:10
isn't governed by any one food item that
07:13
you might eat or not eat
07:14
it's governed by a number of different
07:15
factors how often you eat how much you
07:17
eat
07:18
which items you eat etc and what works
07:20
best for you
07:22
in the same way your sleep and your
07:24
wakefulness
07:26
are the product of kind of the average
07:28
of a number of different behaviors
07:30
how long you've been awake is a key one
07:32
because of this molecule
07:33
adenosine so the reason you get sleepy
07:36
when you've been up for a while is
07:37
because adenosine
07:39
is creeping up steadily the longer
07:41
you've been awake
07:42
and a good way to remember this and
07:44
think about adenosine is to think about
07:46
caffeine caffeine for most people
07:50
except a very small percentage of people
07:52
wakes them up
07:53
it makes them feel more alert in fact
07:55
some people are so sensitive to caffeine
07:57
that they feel
07:58
jittery if they drink it even in small
08:00
amounts
08:01
other people can drink large amounts of
08:03
caffeine and not feel
08:04
jittery at all caffeine
08:08
acts as an adenosine antagonist what
08:11
that means
08:12
is that when you ingest caffeine whether
08:14
or not it's coffee or soda or tea
08:16
or in any other form it binds to the
08:19
adenosine receptor it sort of parks
08:21
there just like
08:22
a car would park in a given parking slot
08:24
and therefore adenosine can't park in
08:26
that slot
08:27
now when caffeine parks in the adenosine
08:29
receptor slot
08:32
nothing really happens downstream of
08:34
that receptor the receptor can't engage
08:36
the normal cellular functions of making
08:38
that cell and you feel sleepy so
08:42
the reason caffeine wakes you up is
08:44
because it blocks the sleepiness
08:46
receptor it blocks the sleepy signal and
08:49
this is why when that caffeine wears off
08:52
adenosine will bind to that receptor
08:54
sometimes with even greater what we call
08:56
affinity
08:57
and you feel the crash you feel
08:59
especially tired
09:00
now i'm not here to demonize caffeine i
09:03
love caffeine
09:04
i drink it in the morning and i drink it
09:06
in the afternoon but i'm one of these
09:08
people that either
09:09
because of my tolerance or because of
09:11
some genetic variations that exist among
09:13
people
09:14
in terms of their adenosine receptors i
09:17
can drink caffeine as late as four or
09:19
five pm in the evening and still fall
09:20
asleep just fine
09:22
some people can't have any caffeine at
09:24
all or can't have any caffeine past 11
09:27
a.m or else their sleep is totally
09:28
disrupted
09:29
all of this has to do with the
09:32
relationship between
09:33
adenosine and these adenosine receptors
09:35
genetic variation
09:36
things that are very hard to find out
09:38
except experimentally
09:40
meaning each of you needs to decide and
09:42
figure out for yourselves
09:43
whether or not you can tolerate caffeine
09:45
and at what times of day you can
09:46
tolerate caffeine
09:48
in order to still fall asleep easily and
09:50
get good
09:51
sleep so rather than demonize caffeine
09:54
or say that you know everyone can drink
09:57
caffeine until late
09:58
you need to figure out what's right for
10:00
you caffeine
10:01
has a lot of health benefits it also for
10:04
some people can be
10:06
problematic for health it can raise
10:07
blood pressure etc
10:09
caffeine increases this molecule that's
10:11
a neuromodulator that we call
10:13
dopamine we discuss this in episode one
10:16
which tends to make us feel good
10:17
motivated
10:18
and give us energy because as you may
10:21
have learned in episode one
10:23
dopamine is related to another
10:25
neuromodulator called epinephrine which
10:27
gives us energy in fact epinephrine is
10:29
made from dopamine so let's just take a
10:31
step back
10:32
and think about what we're talking about
10:33
when we're talking about sleep
10:34
sleepiness
10:35
sleepiness is driven by increases in
10:38
adenosine that happen
10:39
naturally caffeine
10:42
prevents the adenosine from having its
10:45
action of making us sleepy by blocking
10:47
that receptor
10:48
so it gives us energy and it increases
10:50
our dopamine levels
10:52
but some people can't tolerate caffeine
10:54
very well
10:55
other people can tolerate it just fine
10:57
so you need to determine that
10:58
experimentally
11:00
all the data say there's tremendous
11:01
variation and right now the only way
11:03
that i'm aware of for you to decide
11:05
whether or not caffeine is a good or a
11:07
bad thing for you
11:08
and whether or not you should ingest it
11:10
at a given time of day
11:11
or at all is really to figure that out
11:14
on your own in fact there's a small
11:15
subset of people
11:16
that can drink caffeine until very late
11:19
and they have no trouble falling asleep
11:20
because
11:21
they actually have a mutant form of the
11:23
adenosine receptor
11:24
so in keeping with the theme of science
11:26
and related tools
11:28
this is one of those cases where i can't
11:30
give you a one-size-fits-all
11:31
prescription
11:32
except to say you need to experiment
11:34
with caffeine in a way that's safe for
11:36
you
11:37
and explore that and figure out what
11:38
works for you and then stick with that
11:41
okay so adenosine is driving the sleep
11:43
hunger when adenosine is low
11:45
it's like we're well fed we're not very
11:47
hungry and when adenosine is high
11:50
it's like we're fasted for a long time
11:52
and we tend to be very hungry
11:53
so when adenosine is high we really want
11:56
to fall asleep
11:57
if you want i'm not suggesting you do
11:59
this experiment but you can do it
12:00
you can stay up for four more hours then
12:03
you're used to staying up and you'll
12:04
find that you're very very sleepy
12:07
that's because adenosine is building up
12:08
at levels higher and higher
12:10
because you've been awake for those
12:12
extra four hours
12:13
however if you've ever pulled an
12:15
all-nighter you'll notice something
12:16
interesting
12:18
as morning rolls around you'll suddenly
12:20
feel an increase in your energy and
12:22
alertness again
12:23
even though adenosine has been building
12:26
up for
12:26
the entire night why is that
12:30
the reason that is is because there's a
12:31
second force which is governing
12:33
when you sleep and when you're awake and
12:35
that force
12:36
is a so-called circadian force circadian
12:40
means
12:40
about a day or about 24 hours
12:44
and inside all of us is a clock that
12:47
exists in your brain and my brain
12:49
and the brain of every animal that we're
12:51
aware of
12:52
that determines when we want to be
12:55
sleepy and when we want to be awake
12:57
just think about it we don't go through
12:59
the day wanting to fall asleep every 30
13:01
minutes and then
13:02
feeling like we're wide awake our sleep
13:04
and our period of sleepiness tends to be
13:06
condensed
13:07
into one block typically one
13:10
six to ten hour block although there's
13:12
also variation in terms of how much
13:14
people want to sleep and we're going to
13:16
discuss
13:16
how you can diagnose your absolute sleep
13:19
need
13:20
as well as how to recover sleep that
13:21
you've lost
13:23
that block of sleep and when it falls
13:26
within each 24-hour cycle
13:28
is governed by a number of different
13:30
things
13:31
but the most powerful thing that's
13:33
governing when you want to be asleep
13:34
and when you want to be awake is light
13:38
and in particular it's governed by
13:40
sunlight i can't emphasize
13:42
enough how important and how actionable
13:44
this
13:45
relationship is between light and when
13:48
you want to sleep
13:50
it's quite simple on the face of it and
13:53
it's quite simple to resolve but people
13:55
tend to make
13:56
a big mess of this whole circadian
13:57
literature frankly
13:59
so let's just break it down from the
14:01
standpoint of
14:02
what's going on in your brain and body
14:05
as you go through
14:06
one 24-hour day let's start with waking
14:09
so regardless of how well you slept at
14:11
night or whether or not you were up all
14:12
night
14:14
most people tend to wake up sometime
14:16
around
14:17
when the sun rises maybe not right at
14:19
sunrise but within an hour
14:21
or two or maybe three of sunrise now i
14:24
realize there are night shift workers
14:25
and there are people traveling and
14:27
experiencing jet lag
14:28
where this is not going to be the case
14:30
we are going to deal with jet lag
14:31
and shift work at the end of this
14:33
podcast
14:34
but for most people we tend to wake up
14:36
about the time that the sun
14:38
is rising or so and as we do that
14:42
adenosine levels tend to be low if we've
14:44
been asleep
14:45
for reasons that you now understand and
14:48
our system generates an internal signal
14:52
that is in the form of a hormone
14:54
now i've talked a lot about
14:55
neuromodulators and neurotransmitters i
14:57
haven't talked a lot about hormones
14:59
yet on this podcast the definition of a
15:02
hormone
15:03
is it's a substance a chemical that's
15:05
released from
15:06
one organ in your body that goes and
15:08
acts on
15:09
other organs elsewhere in your body
15:11
including your nervous system
15:13
when you wake up in the morning you wake
15:16
up because a particular hormone called
15:18
cortisol
15:19
is released from your adrenal glands
15:21
your adrenal glands sit right above your
15:23
kidneys
15:23
and there's a little pulse of cortisol
15:25
there's also the pulse of some
15:28
and when i say a pulse i just mean it
15:29
the release of a little bit
15:31
there's also a pulse of epinephrine
15:34
which is adrenaline from your adrenals
15:37
and
15:37
also in your brain and you feel awake
15:40
now that pulse of cortisol and
15:42
adrenaline and epinephrine might come
15:44
from your alarm clock
15:45
it might come from you naturally waking
15:47
up but it tends to
15:49
alert your whole system and your body
15:51
that it's time to increase your heart
15:52
rate it's time to start tensing your
15:54
muscles it's time to start moving about
15:56
it's very important that that cortisol
15:59
pulse come
16:00
early in the day or at least early in
16:03
your period of wakefulness
16:04
i say that because some people are
16:06
waking up at 8 pm and are sleeping all
16:08
day
16:09
but it's very important that that pulse
16:10
of cortisol occur early in the day
16:12
and that it happens all at once it sort
16:16
of sets a
16:17
rising tide of cortisol in your system
16:19
now many of you have probably heard
16:21
about cortisol
16:22
in relation to stress and indeed as we
16:24
go through our day
16:25
and our life different stressors
16:27
different events happen in our life
16:30
that make us feel more alert some of the
16:32
more stressful ones might be
16:33
looking at your credit card bill and
16:35
seeing a what seems to be a fraudulent
16:37
charge
16:38
or looking at your phone and suddenly
16:40
seeing a text that something you thought
16:42
was going to happen a particular time is
16:43
not going to happen or you're running
16:44
late
16:45
those will tend to increase
16:47
norepinephrine and epinephrine
16:48
and adrenaline in your system and if
16:51
they're severe enough
16:52
you'll start getting some pulses of
16:53
cortisol released from your adrenals
16:55
throughout the day
16:57
but there's this normal healthy rising
17:00
tide of cortisol that happens early in
17:02
the day
17:02
and i say healthy because it wakes you
17:04
up it makes you feel alert it makes you
17:06
feel
17:06
able to move and wanting to move and to
17:08
go out your day for work for exercise
17:11
for school for social relations
17:13
etc so when you wake up in the morning
17:16
is when that
17:17
cortisol pulse takes off and something
17:20
else important happens
17:21
a timer is set in your body and in your
17:24
nervous system
17:25
that dictates when a different hormone
17:28
called melatonin
17:29
which makes you sleepy will be secreted
17:33
from a particular brain region so let's
17:34
talk about that
17:36
when you wake up in the morning and you
17:37
experience that rise in cortisol
17:40
there's a timer that starts going and
17:43
these are cellular timers and they're
17:45
dictated by the relation between
17:46
different organs in your body
17:48
that says to to your brain and body that
17:51
in about 12 to 14 hours
17:53
a different hormone this hormone we're
17:55
calling melatonin
17:57
will be released from your pineal gland
18:00
so there's two mechanisms here a
18:01
wakefulness signal
18:02
and a sleepiness signal and the
18:04
wakefulness signal triggers the onset of
18:07
the timer
18:08
for the sleepiness signal now that
18:10
sleepiness signal that we call melatonin
18:12
that's released from the pineal
18:14
comes only from the pineal unless you're
18:17
taking exogenous melatonin you're
18:19
supplementing with melatonin
18:21
the only source of melatonin in your
18:22
body is going to be this pineal gland
18:25
so let's talk about the pineal gland for
18:27
a second the pineal gland
18:29
is a gland that sits kind of in the
18:33
little structure near for the
18:34
aficionados out there
18:36
it's kind of near the fourth ventricle
18:38
it's about the size of a p
18:40
descarte the philosopher said that the
18:42
pineal was the seat of the soul
18:45
he said that because it's one of the few
18:47
structures in the human brain
18:49
that there's only one of them you know
18:51
most structures there's one on either
18:52
side of the brain
18:54
so called by hemispheric but the pineal
18:55
there's only one
18:57
i don't know anything about souls really
18:59
um certainly not the science of souls
19:01
but i think it's very unlikely that the
19:03
pineal is the seat of the soul
19:05
but it is a very interesting organ
19:08
because it's the only organ in our body
19:10
that releases melatonin and that
19:13
melatonin makes us sleepy and
19:15
lets us fall asleep now i'm guessing
19:18
that many of you are probably asking
19:21
should i take melatonin my personal bias
19:24
on this
19:25
is except in rare cases no
19:28
for the following reason melatonin has a
19:30
second function
19:32
which is that melatonin also suppresses
19:34
the onset of puberty
19:36
in kids and especially in babies
19:38
melatonin isn't just released in the
19:40
evening 12 to 16 hours after we wake
19:44
melatonin is released chronically or
19:47
tonically
19:47
throughout the day and night and that
19:50
chronic or tonic release of melatonin
19:52
is known to suppress some of the other
19:54
hormones in other regions of the brain
19:55
that trigger the onset of puberty now if
19:58
you or your child has been taking
19:59
melatonin don't freak out
20:01
as always any kind of supplement or
20:04
anything that you're going to take
20:06
or think about taking you really need to
20:08
consult with your doctor
20:09
i've said this many times on this
20:11
podcast and it's in the show notes etc
20:13
but before you remove anything or
20:16
add anything to what you're already
20:18
doing please do consult with a
20:20
health care professional however
20:22
melatonin is known
20:24
to suppress the onset of puberty so much
20:27
so that
20:27
regular cyclic cycled periods of
20:30
melatonin released from the pineal
20:32
really correlate with the onset of
20:34
puberty and early adulthood
20:36
meaning as we start secreting melatonin
20:39
only at night
20:40
that's also when we tend to transition
20:42
out of puberty now there are a lot of
20:44
things that correlate in our nervous
20:45
system
20:46
so it doesn't necessarily mean it
20:47
controls it but in this case we know
20:49
based on lots of data endocrinology and
20:52
so forth
20:52
that melatonin suppresses the onset of
20:55
puberty
20:56
so supplementing melatonin could be
20:58
problematic for that reason
21:00
but if you're if you've already gone
21:01
through puberty it could
21:03
also have some impact on other hormone
21:06
systems in your body so that's why
21:08
i personally don't like to use melatonin
21:10
to fall asleep
21:11
there's another reason which is that
21:13
melatonin will help you fall asleep but
21:14
it won't help you stay asleep and many
21:16
people who take melatonin find that they
21:18
wake up
21:19
three to five hours later unable to fall
21:21
back asleep
21:22
part of the reason for that might be
21:25
that melatonin purchased
21:27
you can buy it over the counter in most
21:29
areas of the world even though it's a
21:30
hormone which is a little unusual you
21:32
can't just go into
21:33
a pharmacy at least in the u.s and buy
21:34
testosterone or cortisol or estrogen
21:37
you need a prescription but you can go
21:38
buy melatonin for whatever reason i
21:40
don't know the
21:41
the reasons for the that legality
21:44
but it's been shown many times and now
21:47
i'm um
21:47
borrowing from some items that were in
21:49
matt walker's book while we sleep
21:52
where he stated the there is evidence
21:54
that
21:55
in commercially available melatonin the
21:57
amount of melatonin
21:58
has been tested in for various brands
22:01
and it can range
22:02
anywhere from being 15 percent of what's
22:05
listed on the bottle
22:07
okay so if they list this is a hundred
22:09
milligrams would be a tremendously high
22:10
dose
22:11
it turns out it's only 15 milligrams in
22:14
that particular pillar capsule
22:16
or up to 400 times more than what's
22:19
listed
22:19
on the bottle so it's completely
22:21
unregulated and so for those of you
22:23
taking melatonin
22:24
i will discuss at the end of the podcast
22:26
some other potential alternatives that
22:29
are probably safer and don't have these
22:31
issues
22:32
so should you take melatonin my personal
22:35
bias is
22:36
no but for many people they find that it
22:39
does help
22:40
them and so if you do find it helps you
22:41
then just consider what i'm saying in
22:43
light of
22:44
the other practices that you're doing
22:47
and talk to your healthcare professional
22:48
okay so the rhythm of cortisol and
22:52
melatonin
22:53
is what we call endogenous it's
22:55
happening in us all the time
22:57
without any external input in fact if we
22:59
were
23:00
in complete darkness living in a cave
23:02
with no artificial lights whatsoever
23:04
or we were in complete brightness where
23:07
we never experienced
23:08
any darkness these rhythms of cortisol
23:11
and melatonin would continue you would
23:14
have a bump in cortisol or a pulse in
23:16
cortisol that would drop off with time
23:18
and then melatonin would come up about
23:20
12 to 14 hours
23:22
later but these endogenous
23:25
systems of our body which are both
23:27
hormonal
23:28
and neural were set
23:32
so that external things could govern
23:35
when they happen now this takes us back
23:38
to episode one of the podcast that if
23:40
you
23:40
haven't listened to already you might
23:41
want to listen to where we talked about
23:43
sensation and perception and all that
23:45
i'm not going to review it again here
23:47
but there's one particular sensory event
23:50
one particular influence on your nervous
23:53
system that determines
23:54
when that cortisol is going to start to
23:57
rise
23:58
so if you were in complete darkness it
24:00
would happen once per 24 hour cycle
24:03
but it would be somewhat later in later
24:06
each day
24:08
whereas under normal under normal
24:10
circumstances what happens
24:12
is you wake up and what happens when you
24:14
wake up
24:15
you open your eyes when you open your
24:17
eyes light comes into your eyes
24:20
now the way this system works is that
24:22
you have a particular set of neurons
24:24
in your eye they're called retinal
24:25
ganglion cells you don't have to
24:26
remember that if you don't want to
24:28
but these retinal ganglion cells are
24:30
brain neurons
24:32
again the retina is just the one piece
24:34
of your brain actually two pieces
24:35
because most of you have two retinas
24:37
that resides outside the skull per se
24:41
when light comes into the eye there's a
24:43
particular
24:44
group of retinal ganglion cells or type
24:46
of retinal ganglion cells
24:48
that perceives a particular type of
24:51
light
24:52
and communicates that to this clock that
24:54
resides right above the roof of your
24:55
mouth
24:55
called the suprachiasmatic nucleus okay
24:59
so i know this can get a little
25:00
complicated but these retinal ganglion
25:01
cells
25:03
when you open your eyes light comes in
25:05
and an electrical signal is sent to this
25:07
central clock we call the
25:09
suprachiasmatic nucleus
25:11
and the suprachiasmatic nucleus has
25:13
connections
25:15
with essentially every cell and organ of
25:17
your body
25:18
now it's vitally important that we get
25:21
light communicated to this central clock
25:23
in order to time the cortisol and
25:26
melatonin properly when i say properly
25:29
i can say that with confidence because
25:30
we know based on a lot of evidence that
25:33
if you don't get
25:34
your cortisol and melatonin rhythms
25:36
right
25:37
there are tremendously broad
25:41
and bad effects on cardiovascular health
25:44
dementia metabolic effects
25:46
learning depression dementia in fact
25:49
there's so many negative effects
25:51
associated with getting this
25:52
wrong that i don't want to go into it in
25:54
too much detail in fact i feel like
25:56
we've been bombarded with all this
25:58
information about how we're not sleeping
26:00
well we're not sleeping at the right
26:01
times we're not sleeping enough
26:02
to the point where people now have sleep
26:04
anxiety they they if they can't sleep
26:06
well for a night
26:07
they're feeling overwhelmed by that and
26:09
sort of now they're stressed about not
26:10
being able to sleep which is making it
26:12
harder to sleep etc
26:13
i really want to focus on what we can do
26:16
to anchor these systems properly
26:18
so let's think about what happens when
26:21
we do this correctly and how to do it
26:22
correctly
26:23
when we wake up our eyes open now if
26:25
we're in a dark room
26:28
there isn't enough light to trigger
26:31
the correct timing of this cortisol
26:33
melatonin
26:34
thing these rhythms you might say
26:37
well why won't any light do it well it
26:39
turns out
26:41
that these neurons in our eye that set
26:43
the circadian clock and then allow our
26:44
circadian clock
26:46
to set all the clocks of all the cells
26:47
and organs and tissues of our body
26:49
responds best to a particular quality of
26:53
light an amount of light
26:56
and those are the qualities of light and
26:59
amount of light that come from sunlight
27:02
so these neurons
27:05
what they're really looking for although
27:07
they don't have a mind of their own
27:08
is the sun at what we call low solar
27:11
angle
27:12
the eye and the nervous system don't
27:13
know anything about sunrises or sunsets
27:15
it only
27:16
knows the quality of light that comes in
27:19
when the sun is low in the sky the
27:20
system evolves so that when
27:22
the sun is low in the sky there's a
27:25
particular contrast between
27:26
yellows and blues that triggers the
27:29
activation of these cells
27:31
so if you wake up and you look at your
27:32
phone or your computer or you flip on a
27:34
bunch of artificial lights
27:36
will these cells be activated and the
27:39
answer is sort of they'll be activated
27:41
but not
27:41
in the optimal way what you want to do
27:44
is get
27:45
sunlight in your eyes as close to waking
27:47
as possible now i want to be really
27:49
clear about this because i've talked
27:50
about it on other podcasts
27:52
when i was a guest and i've talked about
27:54
it on my instagram feed and there seem
27:56
to be the same questions coming up again
27:57
and again
27:59
these neurons don't know sunlight per se
28:01
they don't know
28:02
sunrise rise or sunset for that matter
28:05
they don't know artificial light
28:06
from sunlight what they respond best to
28:10
however
28:11
is the quality and amount of light that
28:13
comes in when the sun is low in the sky
28:16
that means that if you can watch the
28:18
sunrise
28:19
great that's perfect for triggering
28:21
activation of these cells
28:23
however if you wake up a few hours after
28:26
the sunrise which
28:27
i tend to most days personally you still
28:30
want to get outside
28:31
and view sunlight you don't need the
28:34
sunlight beaming you directly in the
28:36
eyes there's a lot of photons
28:38
light energy that scattered from
28:39
sunlight at this time
28:41
but the key is to get that light energy
28:45
from sunlight ideally into your eyes now
28:48
i know many of you are already asking
28:50
well i live in scandinavia or i can't
28:52
get sunlight there's buildings around me
28:54
etc
28:54
we will get to all of that but it's
28:56
critically important that you get
28:58
outside to get this
28:59
light i had a discussion with a
29:01
colleague of mine dr jamie zeitzer who's
29:03
in the
29:04
department of psychiatry and behavioral
29:06
sciences at stanford
29:08
a world expert in this and he tells me
29:11
that it's
29:12
50 times less effective
29:15
to view this sunlight through a window
29:19
through a car windshield or through a
29:21
side window of a car
29:23
than it is to just get outside with no
29:24
sunglasses
29:26
and view light early in the day now if
29:28
you can't
29:29
see the sunrise like i said you can see
29:31
this within an hour or two of sunrise
29:33
but it has to be low solar angle once
29:35
the sun is overhead
29:36
the quality of light shifts so that you
29:39
miss this opportunity
29:40
to time the cortisol pulse and that
29:42
turns out to be a bad thing
29:45
to do you really want to time that
29:47
cortisol pulse properly
29:49
because we'll get into this a little bit
29:51
more later
29:52
but a late shifted cortisol pulse
29:55
in particular 9 p.m or 8 p.m increase in
29:58
cortisol
29:59
is one of the consequences and maybe
30:02
one of the causes of a lot of anxiety
30:06
disorders and depression so it's kind of
30:07
a chicken egg thing we don't know
30:08
whether or not it's the
30:09
correlated with it's the cause or the
30:11
effect but it's a signature of
30:13
depression and anxiety disorder
30:15
bringing that cortisol pulse earlier in
30:18
your
30:18
wakeful period earlier in your day has
30:21
positive benefits ranging from blood
30:23
pressure to
30:25
mental health etc i'm not going to list
30:26
them all off because they're just
30:28
so many of them but many many positive
30:30
things happen
30:31
when you are getting the cortisol early
30:33
in the day
30:34
far away from your melatonin pulse okay
30:38
so how long should you be outside well
30:40
this is going to vary tremendously
30:42
because some people live in environments
30:43
where it's very bright so let's say
30:45
it's colorado in the middle of winter
30:48
there's a snow field there's no cloud
30:50
cover and you walk
30:50
outside you there's going to be so much
30:53
photon light energy
30:55
arriving on your retina that probably
30:56
only takes 30 to 60 seconds to trigger
30:59
the central clock
31:00
and set your cortisol and melatonin
31:02
rhythms properly and
31:03
get everything in lined up nicely
31:07
whereas if you're in scandinavia in the
31:09
depths of winter and you wake up at 5am
31:11
and the
31:11
sun is just barely creeping across the
31:13
horizon then goes back down again a few
31:14
hours later
31:16
you probably are not getting enough
31:18
sunlight
31:19
in order to set these rhythms so
31:23
many people find that they need to use
31:25
sunlight simulators
31:27
in the form of particular lights that
31:28
were designed to simulate sunlight
31:30
however i'm not out to attack the
31:33
companies that produce those
31:34
there's another solution to that you can
31:37
simply go outside for longer
31:39
even if there's a lot of dense cloud
31:41
cover you're probably getting
31:44
anywhere from 10 000 to 50 000 lux
31:47
lux was just a measure of light energy
31:50
and that should be sufficient to set the
31:52
circadian clock
31:55
you could say well the lights in my
31:57
house or my phone are really really
31:58
bright
31:59
right everyone's telling us to stay off
32:00
our phones at night because they're
32:02
really bright
32:03
but guess what it turns out that early
32:05
in the day
32:06
your retina is not very sensitive which
32:09
means you need a lot of photons
32:12
ideally coming from sunlight to set
32:13
these clock mechanisms so looking at
32:15
your phone or artificial lights is fine
32:17
if you wake up before
32:18
sunrise but it's not going to
32:21
work to set these clock mechanisms and
32:24
this is supported by
32:25
dozens if not hundreds of quality
32:27
peer-reviewed studies
32:29
so you want to use sunlight if you can't
32:31
see sunlight
32:32
because of your environment then you are
32:34
going to have to opt for artificial
32:36
light and in that case you're going to
32:38
want
32:38
an artificial light that either
32:40
simulates sunlight or has a lot of blue
32:42
light
32:43
now without going off course here you
32:45
might be saying wait i've heard blue
32:47
light is bad for me
32:48
actually blue light is great for this
32:51
mechanism during the day
32:53
we can talk about blue light and blue
32:56
blockers
32:56
but you really want a lot of blue and
32:59
yellow light arriving on the retina
33:01
early in the day
33:01
let me be clear about something you
33:04
never ever
33:04
want to look at any light sunlight or
33:06
artificial light
33:08
that is painful to look at if you find
33:10
that your eyes are watering or you're
33:11
having challenges
33:13
um maintaining uh you know looking at
33:14
this thing for a while because it's
33:16
painful
33:16
that light is too bright and you do not
33:18
want to damage your retina so you don't
33:20
want to gaze at the sun
33:21
you know refusing to blink and
33:24
burn your retina that's actually
33:26
possible to do you don't want to do that
33:29
you have a proper blink reflex installed
33:31
in you since birth
33:32
and if you feel like something's too
33:34
bright and you need to blink it means
33:35
you need to blink that it's too much too
33:37
much light
33:38
so please don't beam your eyes with
33:40
really bright light
33:41
but blue light in particular blue light
33:43
and yellow light coming from sunlight is
33:45
ideal
33:45
if you're going to get it from
33:46
artificial light because you can't get
33:48
enough sunlight
33:49
well then artificial lights that are
33:52
rich
33:52
in blue blue wavelengths are going to be
33:56
ideal for setting this mechanism
33:58
a lot of people say oh i should be
33:59
wearing blue blockers throughout the day
34:01
no that's the exact wrong thing you if
34:04
you're going to use blue blockers we can
34:05
talk
34:06
about that that should be reserved for
34:07
late in the evening
34:09
because light suppresses melatonin
34:13
i've been asked many times before about
34:15
this pineal gland
34:16
and there are a lot of ancient practices
34:19
that map to some of the things that i'm
34:20
saying and people always say oh i heard
34:22
that sunlight is great for the pineal
34:24
well perhaps but we have to be careful
34:27
about that phrase
34:28
sunlight inhibits the pineal it prevents
34:31
it from releasing
34:32
melatonin darkness allows the pineal
34:36
to release melatonin so the pineal is
34:39
not the gland or the organ of sunlight
34:41
it is the gland of darkness
34:43
in fact melatonin can be thought of as a
34:46
sleepiness signal that's correlated with
34:47
darkness
34:48
so get up each morning try and get
34:50
outside
34:51
i know that can be challenging for
34:53
people but anywhere from
34:55
two to ten minutes of sunlight exposure
34:58
is going to work well for most people
34:59
and you want to do this on a regular
35:00
basis
35:01
and you don't have to do it exactly at
35:03
sunrise i realize i'm repeating myself
35:05
but somehow despite barking at people
35:07
about this
35:08
for a couple years now i keep getting
35:10
the same questions and somehow
35:12
it hasn't been sinking in which could be
35:15
related to some circadian disorder i'm
35:16
just kidding
35:17
if it's not sinking in it's probably
35:18
that i'm not being effective in
35:20
communicating the information
35:22
but get that bright light early in the
35:24
day from sunlight and if you can't get
35:26
it from sunlight get it from artificial
35:27
light
35:28
what kinds of artificial lights will
35:29
work well there are the sunlight
35:31
sunrise simulators but the ring lights
35:34
that people use
35:35
for um selfies and this sort of thing
35:38
for posting on instagram those generate
35:40
a lot of blue light
35:42
if you want to get experimental about
35:43
this there's a free app i have no
35:45
relationship to the app but it's a great
35:47
app
35:47
called light meter that you can use your
35:49
phone and you can measure the amount of
35:52
photon energy in your environment it's
35:54
kind of a fun experiment to do you can
35:55
go outside in the morning and you'll see
35:56
that there's 10 000
35:57
20 000 lux even though it might seem
36:00
like it's kind of dim or there's tree
36:01
cover or cloud cover
36:02
you go inside and you shine that um
36:05
an artificial light at your phone press
36:07
the button on light meter and you'll
36:09
find that it's only 500 or a thousand
36:11
lux
36:12
and you realize that even though it
36:14
seems really bright
36:15
the artificial light is very condensed
36:17
whereas
36:18
the outside light is scattered in the
36:21
atmosphere and so you can think that
36:23
you're not getting much sunlight but
36:24
you're actually getting much more
36:25
outside so get outside get that sunlight
36:27
early in the day and try and do it on a
36:29
consistent basis if you can't do it
36:30
every day or you sleep through this
36:32
period of the early day
36:33
low solar angle don't worry about it the
36:36
systems in the body these hormone
36:38
systems and neurotransmitter systems
36:39
that make you
36:40
awake at certain periods of the day and
36:42
sleepy at other times
36:44
are operating by averaging when you view
36:48
the brightest
36:49
light now that can immediately tell us
36:52
that what most people are doing
36:54
is terrible they're waking up and
36:55
they're looking at their phone which
36:56
isn't triggering activation of these
36:58
cells in the eye and the central
36:59
circadian clock then a few hours later
37:01
they might get in their car with
37:02
sunglasses and drive
37:04
now a note about sunglasses and
37:06
prescription lenses
37:08
absolutely never ever ever compromise
37:11
safety for the sorts of things i'm
37:13
talking about so if you need to wear
37:14
sunglasses for safety reasons wear them
37:17
absolutely if you wear prescription
37:18
lenses or contacts wear them they won't
37:20
filter out
37:22
the wavelengths of light that are
37:23
necessary for setting these
37:25
central clocks so safety first of course
37:28
if you have a retinal degenerative
37:29
disorder
37:30
retinitis pigmentosa macular
37:31
degeneration or glaucoma or those run in
37:33
your family
37:35
you want to avoid excessively bright
37:37
light all the time you want to be very
37:39
cautious about that you're going to want
37:40
to get
37:41
your light exposure by through seeing
37:44
dimmer light including sunlight but for
37:46
longer periods of time perhaps
37:49
you might immediately ask what about low
37:52
vision or blind people
37:53
how do they set these central clocks
37:55
well turns out that low vision and blind
37:57
people
37:58
most of them provided they still have
37:59
eyes that the eyes weren't removed
38:01
because of a burn or tumor or something
38:02
like that
38:03
still maintain these neurons that set
38:06
the circadian clock which brings me to a
38:08
really important point
38:10
it's not about seeing and perceiving the
38:12
sun
38:13
this is a subconscious mechanism by
38:15
which these neurons
38:17
which are called melanopsin ganglion
38:20
cells
38:20
these neurons set your central clocks
38:24
by getting activated by the particular
38:27
wavelengths of light that are present in
38:28
the atmosphere even coming through cloud
38:30
cover and
38:32
you don't need to see or perceive the
38:34
sun in order to get this mechanism
38:36
to start now it's such a vitally
38:38
important mechanism because it dictates
38:40
how well and what time you will want to
38:44
fall asleep later in the day
38:46
so for those of you that are night owls
38:47
and you insist that you're a night owl
38:49
and you have the genetic polymorphism
38:50
that makes you an idol
38:52
you may very well have that genetic
38:53
polymorphism those genes that make you
38:55
want to stay up late and wake up
38:57
late but chances are about half of you
39:00
that think that your night owls
39:01
are just not getting enough sunlight
39:03
early in the day so viewing light early
39:06
in the day
39:06
ideally sunlight is key for establishing
39:10
healthy sleep-wake rhythms and for
39:12
allowing you to fall asleep
39:14
easily at night now it's not going to
39:17
make sure that all that happens every
39:18
single time but it is the foundation
39:21
of proper sleep and what we call
39:23
circadian health
39:25
it governs metabolism and so many other
39:28
things that are
39:29
supposed to exist on a regular 24-hour
39:31
cycle
39:33
some of you many of you might be asking
39:36
what else can help set this rhythm
39:37
well it turns out that light is what we
39:39
call the primary zeitgeber the
39:42
time giver but other things can help
39:46
establish this rhythm of cortisol
39:48
followed by melatonin 12 to 16 hours
39:50
later as well
39:52
the other things besides light are
39:55
timing of food intake
39:56
timing of exercise as well as
40:00
various drugs or chemicals that one
40:02
might ingest not illegal drugs although
40:04
those will impact circadian mechanisms
40:06
as well
40:08
but the reason we focus so heavily on
40:09
light is that light
40:11
is the main way that this central clock
40:15
the suprachiasmatic nucleus
40:17
was supposed to be set we know that
40:19
because it's the only direct
40:21
input to the clock these neurons in the
40:24
eye that are also part of the brain that
40:25
we call melanopsin ganglion cells
40:27
that not so incidentally were discovered
40:30
by my friend and colleague david berson
40:32
at brown university
40:33
and others samar hattar king wai yao etc
40:37
worked out the mechanisms the molecular
40:38
mechanisms but it was really david
40:40
burson
40:41
that discovered these incredibly
40:44
fascinating
40:45
non you know these are cells that aren't
40:47
important for sight like pattern vision
40:49
but are for setting our clocks david's
40:52
really credited with making that
40:53
discovery
40:55
those cells are the main
40:58
way and the only direct way to set the
41:00
clock
41:01
in fact it's fair to say that light
41:04
viewed by these melanopsin cells
41:07
particular sunlight
41:08
is a thousand to ten thousand times more
41:11
effective
41:12
than say getting up in darkness and just
41:14
exercising
41:15
that doesn't mean that you shouldn't
41:16
exercise early in the day in darkness if
41:18
that's what you like to do it will have
41:20
somewhat an effect on raising your
41:23
wakefulness early in the day and setting
41:25
this
41:26
these rhythms and this is because of
41:28
some other pathways for the aficionados
41:30
out there who want to know more
41:31
neuroscience
41:33
here's how it goes you've got this clock
41:34
above the roof of your mouth that churns
41:36
out this 24-hour rhythm and is
41:37
communicated to all the other organs and
41:39
tissues of your body
41:40
but there's another structure has a cool
41:43
name it's called the intergeniculate
41:44
leaflet
41:45
which sits a few millimeters away in the
41:47
brain and it's involved in regulating
41:50
the clock
41:50
output through what's called non-photic
41:53
non-light
41:54
type influences like exercise and
41:56
feeding etc
41:58
so if you are not feeling awake during
42:01
the day and you're having trouble
42:03
sleeping
42:04
get the sunlight exposure that we just
42:05
talked about
42:07
but in addition to that if you want to
42:09
become an early riser for instance
42:11
and you want to feel more awake during
42:12
the early part of the day
42:14
by getting that light exposure and
42:17
exercising early in the day
42:18
you will after two or three days you
42:21
will naturally start to wake up earlier
42:22
in the day
42:23
and that's because these clock
42:24
mechanisms have shifted it's like
42:26
setting the clock
42:27
earlier as opposed to delaying the clock
42:30
and
42:30
that takes us to a somewhat complicated
42:33
but
42:33
very important aspect to all this which
42:35
is what sets the clock and keeps it
42:38
anchored
42:39
the main thing is that bright light
42:40
early in the day
42:42
the other thing is sunset when the sun
42:45
is
42:45
also at low solar angle low close to the
42:48
horizon
42:50
by viewing sunlight at that time of day
42:52
in the evening
42:53
or afternoon depending on what time of
42:54
year it is and where you are in the
42:55
world
42:57
these melanopsin cells these neurons in
42:59
your eyes signal the the central
43:00
circadian clock that it's the end of the
43:02
day
43:03
and there's a really nice study that was
43:05
published last year and i will put links
43:07
to these references
43:08
on a website not too long from now there
43:11
was a really nice study that showed
43:14
that viewing sunlight around the time of
43:17
sunset doesn't have to be just crossing
43:20
the horizon
43:21
but circa sunset within an hour or so of
43:24
sunset
43:26
prevents some of the bad effects of
43:29
light
43:29
in preventing melatonin release later
43:32
that same night
43:33
so let me repeat this viewing light
43:35
early in the day is key viewing light
43:37
later in the day when the sun is setting
43:39
or around that time
43:41
can help protect these mechanisms your
43:44
brain and body
43:45
against the negative effects of light
43:47
later in the day
43:48
so let me talk about how you would do
43:50
that you'd go view the sunset
43:52
or you would go outside in the late
43:54
afternoon or evening
43:55
again if you safely can do that with
43:57
sunglasses off you will
43:59
if you need to wear sunglasses fine but
44:00
it will take probably a hundred to a
44:02
thousand times
44:03
longer with dark sunglasses than if you
44:05
take them off
44:07
again if you want to do this through a
44:08
window at work that's fine but it'll
44:10
take 50 times longer
44:11
so the best thing to do is just to get
44:13
outside for a few minutes anywhere from
44:15
two to ten minutes
44:16
also in the afternoon having those two
44:18
signals arriving to your central clock
44:20
that your body your internal world knows
44:23
when it's morning and nose when it's
44:24
evening
44:25
is tremendously powerful maybe think
44:28
about it this way
44:29
every cell in your body needs glucose
44:31
and energy
44:32
it needs whether or not gets that from
44:34
meat or it gets it from ketones or it
44:36
gets it from carbohydrates
44:37
or fruit or vegetables doesn't matter it
44:39
is eventually converted into
44:41
a certain form of energy that all your
44:42
cells use but
44:44
you don't take glucose you don't take a
44:46
bread or a steak
44:47
or a nice orange and shove it in your
44:49
ear you put in your mouth it goes into
44:51
your stomach
44:52
it's digested and then that it that
44:54
resource is distributed to all the cells
44:56
of your body
44:57
every cell in your body needs oxygen and
45:00
you don't put a hose
45:01
you know through your nostril or through
45:03
your ear or through some other orifice
45:05
in your body
45:06
you inhale air and it's then distributed
45:09
via the lungs to the cells
45:11
uh in your bloodstream and that's
45:12
distributed to all the organs of your
45:13
body
45:15
every cell and organ in your body needs
45:17
light information
45:19
and the way to get that light
45:20
information to all those cells because
45:22
you have a
45:23
thick skull and dark you know
45:26
inside of you is dark inside your skin
45:28
there's no sunlight getting in there
45:30
is by viewing sunlight with your eyes at
45:32
the two times a day that i'm referring
45:34
to
45:35
okay that's the only route there was a
45:37
study published in science an excellent
45:39
journal
45:40
well over 10 years ago that showed that
45:44
light shown on the back of the knee
45:46
could set these
45:47
the circadian rhythms that study was
45:49
retracted and unfortunately most people
45:51
don't know that it was retracted
45:53
there were some experimental flaws that
45:54
people were actually viewing light
45:56
through their eyes that study was
45:57
repeated turns out there is
45:59
no extraocular photoreception in humans
46:03
whatever somebody tells you that light
46:04
to the skin or light to the wherever
46:07
is beneficial for your health we can
46:09
talk about that
46:10
but there is no way that light
46:12
information is setting your clocks
46:14
you need to these cells in your eyes to
46:16
perceive
46:17
or to see light at the particular times
46:20
of day that i'm referring to
46:22
some animals like snakes and other
46:24
reptiles actually have a hole
46:26
in the top of their skull to get light
46:28
information directly to their pineal
46:30
where to suppress melatonin we don't
46:33
have that hole i mean most of you don't
46:34
have holes in your skull
46:37
these holes in your skull that we call
46:39
the sockets for the eyes
46:41
are actually there primarily to allow
46:44
light information
46:45
to this central clock and then vision
46:47
and pattern vision and color vision came
46:48
much later in evolution we know this on
46:51
the basis of genetic studies we could
46:52
discuss in a future podcast so get that
46:55
light information
46:56
to the cells of your brain and body by
46:59
viewing sunlight at the two times a day
47:01
that i refer to
47:03
there's always a lot of questions about
47:05
how long how much how do i know if i've
47:07
had enough you'll know
47:08
because your rhythm will start to fall
47:10
into some degree of normalcy
47:12
you'll start to wake up at more or less
47:14
the same time each day you'll fall
47:15
asleep more easily at night generally it
47:17
takes about two or three days for these
47:19
systems to align
47:20
so if you've not been doing these
47:22
behaviors it's going to take a few days
47:24
but they can have tremendous benefits
47:26
and sometimes rather quickly on a number
47:28
of different
47:28
mental and physical aspects of your
47:30
health
47:32
now let's talk about the bad effects of
47:34
light because
47:36
light is not supposed to arrive in our
47:38
system
47:40
at any time and nowadays because of
47:42
screens and artificial light
47:44
we have access to light at times of day
47:47
and night
47:48
that normally we wouldn't now earlier i
47:51
said
47:52
that you need a lot of light in
47:53
particular sunlight to set these clock
47:54
mechanisms
47:56
that's true but there's a kind of
47:57
diabolical feature to the way all this
47:59
works which is
48:00
the longer you've been awake
48:03
the more sensitive your retina and these
48:06
cells are to light
48:07
so that if you've been awake for 10 12
48:10
14 hours it becomes
48:12
very easy for even a small amount of
48:14
light coming from
48:15
a screen or from an overhead light
48:19
to trigger the activation of the clock
48:21
and make you feel like you want to stay
48:23
up later make it harder to fall asleep
48:24
and disrupt your sleep pattern
48:26
okay so the simple way to think about
48:29
this is you want as much light as as
48:31
safely possible
48:32
early in the day morning and throughout
48:33
the day including blue light
48:35
so take those blue blockers off during
48:37
the day unless you have a real issue
48:38
with screen light sensitivity
48:40
and you want as little light coming into
48:43
your eyes artificial or sunlight
48:45
after say 8 pm and certainly you do not
48:48
want to get bright light exposure to
48:50
your eyes between 11 pm and 4 am and
48:52
here's why
48:53
david berson who i mentioned before and
48:56
another friend and colleague samuel
48:57
hatar
48:58
who's director of the chronobiology unit
48:59
at the national institutes of mental
49:01
health
49:02
published a paper in cell which is a
49:04
journal
49:05
another excellent journal very high
49:07
stringency showing
49:08
that light that arrives to the
49:12
eyes between 11 pm and 4 am
49:14
approximately
49:16
suppresses the release of dopamine
49:20
this neuromodulator that makes us feel
49:21
good is sort of an endogenous
49:24
anti-depressant
49:25
and can inhibit learning and create all
49:27
sorts of other
49:28
detrimental effects it does this through
49:31
a mechanism for those of you who want to
49:32
know the neural pathways
49:34
that involves light to the eyes that's
49:36
then signaled to a structure called the
49:37
habenula
49:38
they let the habenyl looks like two
49:39
little bat ears sitting right in the
49:41
middle of you
49:41
structure your brain called the thalamus
49:43
don't worry about these names if you're
49:44
not interested in this stuff if you are
49:46
these are just avenues to explore when
49:48
that habenula gets activated it's
49:50
actually called the disappointment
49:52
nucleus because it actually makes us
49:55
feel less
49:56
happy and more disappointed and can lead
49:58
to certain forms of depression
50:00
in the wakeful state now if you wake up
50:02
in the middle of the night and you need
50:03
to use the bathroom or you're on an
50:04
all-night flight and you're
50:06
uh you know your need to read or
50:08
whatever it is
50:09
fine it's you know every once in a while
50:12
it's not gonna be a problem to get
50:13
bright light exposure to your eyes
50:15
in the middle of the night but if you
50:17
think about our lifestyle nowadays and
50:19
being up late looking at phones
50:21
even if you dim that screen you're
50:22
triggering this activation
50:24
because your retinal sensitivity and the
50:26
sensitivity of these neurons has gone up
50:28
late in the day
50:29
now i'm not here to dictate what you
50:30
should or shouldn't do but for those of
50:32
you that are experiencing
50:33
challenges with mood those of you that
50:35
have anxiety learning problems issues
50:37
focusing
50:38
the questions i usually get are how can
50:40
i focus better well we will get to that
50:42
but one of the best ways you can support
50:45
your mechanisms for good mood
50:47
mental health learning focus metabolism
50:50
etc
50:50
is to take control of this light
50:53
exposure behavior
50:54
at night and not get much or any bright
50:58
light exposure in the middle of the
50:59
night
50:59
red light won't trigger this pathway but
51:02
very few people have
51:03
the kind of infrared lights that are set
51:05
up or floor lights
51:07
that brings me to an important point
51:08
which is about the location of light
51:10
this hasn't been discussed much out
51:12
there i don't think
51:13
these cells in our eye these neurons
51:16
that signal the central clock
51:18
reside mostly not exclusively but mostly
51:20
in the bottom half of our retina
51:23
and because we have a lens in front of
51:24
our retina and because of the optics of
51:26
lenses
51:27
that means that these cells are actually
51:29
viewing our upper
51:31
visual field there's an inversion of the
51:33
visual image etc you can look that up if
51:35
you want to learn more about
51:36
retinal optics it's fascinating but not
51:38
the topic for today
51:40
these cells are in the bottom half of
51:41
your retina mostly and so they're
51:43
viewing
51:44
the overhead visual space around you
51:48
this is probably not coincidental that
51:51
these cells were essentially designed to
51:54
detect
51:54
sunlight which is overhead of course
51:58
so if you want to avoid
52:01
improper activation of these neurons
52:05
it's better to place lights that you use
52:08
in the evening
52:08
low in your physical environment so on
52:11
desktops or even the floor if that's
52:13
if you want to go that way as opposed to
52:16
overhead lights so
52:18
overhead fluorescent lights would be the
52:19
worst that would be the worst case
52:21
scenario
52:23
lights that are overhead that are a
52:24
little bit softer of the sort of yellow
52:26
or reddish tints would be slightly
52:28
better but dim lights that are set low
52:30
in the room
52:31
are going to be best because they aren't
52:33
going to activate
52:35
these neurons and therefore shift your
52:37
circadian clock
52:39
so that's a goal some people like sammer
52:42
hattar that i mentioned earlier he turns
52:43
his home basically into a cave in the
52:45
evenings
52:46
candle light actually does not trigger
52:49
activation of these cells so
52:50
candle light and fireplaces and
52:53
campfires
52:54
are are fine dim lights very dim lights
52:57
are fine
52:58
and light's low in the physical
52:59
environment of course the problem with
53:00
candlelight
53:01
and fireplaces is the fire hazard but
53:04
you're smart people you know what to do
53:05
about that
53:07
don't burn down whatever structure
53:09
you're in including
53:11
forests please so
53:14
keep the lights low in your environment
53:16
what if you
53:17
wake up in the middle of the night and
53:18
you find yourself watching tv
53:21
or on the computer and well in that case
53:24
you might want to wear blue blockers and
53:25
you certainly would want to dim
53:26
the screen but ideally you're not doing
53:29
that it's remarkable
53:31
the positive effects of getting that bit
53:33
of sunlight early in the day maybe even
53:35
also around sunset and avoiding
53:37
bright lights and especially overhead
53:39
bright lights
53:40
between about 11 pm and 4 am now i'm not
53:43
talking about shift work
53:44
i'm realizing that we're probably going
53:46
to have to have an entire discussion
53:47
devoted just to shift workers because
53:49
there's some good information there
53:50
about how they can protect themselves
53:52
against some of the very bad health
53:54
effects of shift work
53:56
of getting light in the middle of the
53:57
night but we rely on shift workers and
53:59
they're super important
54:00
to culture and society and the economy
54:03
so
54:03
i want to acknowledge them and let you
54:05
know that we will do a discussion
54:07
about shift work and jet lag
54:10
but let's talk about what light can do
54:14
in terms of shifting us
54:15
in healthy ways so the way to think
54:19
about this whole system again is you've
54:20
got adenosine building up depending on
54:22
how long you've been awake and it's
54:24
making you sleepy and then you've got
54:25
their circadian mechanisms that are
54:26
timing your wakefulness
54:28
and timing when you want to be asleep
54:29
mainly through cortisol and melatonin
54:32
but there are a bunch of other things
54:33
that are downstream of cortisol
54:34
melatonin like
54:36
we tend to be hungrier during our
54:38
wakeful period
54:40
than late at night some people like to
54:41
eat it late at night but if you're
54:43
finding that you
54:44
can't become a day person or a morning
54:46
person shifting your
54:47
light exposure exercise and food intake
54:50
to the daytime will help
54:52
some people like to stop eating around
54:55
six or eight pm because of
54:57
metabolic reasons or they're trying to
54:59
maintain their weight or lose weight
55:01
that's actually not supported so well by
55:04
the literature the literature around
55:06
nutrition essentially says that
55:08
it's best to restrict your feeding to a
55:10
certain period of each 24-hour cycle to
55:12
not be eating around the clock
55:14
and whether or not that's four hours or
55:15
eight hours or 16 hours
55:17
is a fur is a much lengthier discussion
55:19
than we have time for now i would refer
55:20
you to
55:21
sachin panda's book the circadian code
55:24
which talks all about that he's an
55:25
expert a former colleague of mine from
55:27
the salk institute in san diego you can
55:29
explore intermittent and circadian
55:32
fasting so to speak um through sachin's
55:35
literature we'll talk about that we
55:36
might even get sachin in here if we're
55:37
if we're lucky at some point in the
55:38
future
55:39
but you can actually use light to wake
55:41
up earlier
55:43
jamie zeitzer and colleagues had did a
55:45
beautiful study showing that
55:47
if you turn on the lights before
55:50
waking up so around 45 minutes to an
55:53
hour before waking up
55:54
even if your eyelids are closed provided
55:56
you're not under the the covers
55:59
after doing that for a few days that
56:02
increases your total sleep time
56:04
and shifts forward the time at which you
56:06
feel sleepy it makes you want to go to
56:08
bed
56:08
earlier each night now in a kind of
56:11
uh diabolical way they did this with
56:13
teenagers who are notorious for wanting
56:16
to wake up late and stay up late and
56:17
what they found was
56:18
bright light flashes just turning on the
56:20
lights in their environment overhead
56:21
lights because they're trying to
56:22
activate the system
56:23
and that's why they're using overhead
56:24
lights even through the eyelids
56:27
before these kids woke up then made
56:30
those kids naturally want to go to bed
56:32
earlier and they ended up sleeping
56:33
longer so that's something you could try
56:35
you could put your lights on a timer to
56:36
go on
56:38
early in the day before you wake up you
56:41
could
56:41
open your blinds so that sunlight is
56:43
coming through now again if you you know
56:45
curl up under the covers then it's not
56:47
going to reach
56:48
these neurons but it's remarkable the
56:50
light can actually penetrate the eyelids
56:52
activate these neurons and go to the
56:53
central clock
56:55
that study illustrates a really
56:56
important principle of how you're built
56:58
which is
56:59
you have the capacity for what are
57:01
called phase advances
57:03
and phase delays and i don't want to
57:05
complicate this too much
57:07
so the simplest way to think about phase
57:09
advances
57:10
and phase delays is that if you
57:13
see light late in the day and in
57:15
particular in the middle of the night
57:17
your brain and body for reasons that now
57:20
you understand
57:22
will think that that's morning light
57:24
even though it's not sunlight because
57:25
you have this heightened sensitivity and
57:27
it will phase delay will delay your
57:29
clock it will essentially make you want
57:30
to get up later and go to sleep later
57:33
so if you get light exposure too late in
57:35
the evening or in the middle of the
57:37
night
57:37
it's going to make it hard to want to
57:39
wake up the next morning early and to go
57:41
to bed early
57:44
the opposite is also true if you
57:47
wake up early say you know
57:51
6 a.m or 7 a.m and get light exposure or
57:54
even earlier 4 a.m
57:55
and get light exposure it will phase
57:58
advance your clock
57:59
okay it's going to make your clock think
58:01
it's earlier and you'll want to wake up
58:03
earlier
58:04
so the simple way to think about this is
58:06
if you're having trouble waking up early
58:08
and feeling
58:09
alert early in the day you're going to
58:12
want to try and get bright light
58:13
exposure
58:14
even before waking up because it will
58:16
advance your clock it will
58:18
sort of like turning the clock forward
58:20
whereas if you are
58:21
having trouble waking up early you
58:22
definitely don't want to get
58:24
too much light exposure or any light
58:26
exposure to your eyes
58:27
late in the evening and in the middle of
58:29
the night because it's just going to
58:30
delay your clock more and more
58:33
so rather than get into the specifics of
58:35
everybody's situation because there are
58:37
many of you out there with different
58:38
situations and
58:39
lifestyle requirements etc the way to
58:42
think about this
58:43
is that you have these internal
58:45
mechanisms of adenosine and circadian
58:47
clocks and they're
58:48
always operating and what you're trying
58:50
to do is provide them
58:51
anchors you're trying to provide them
58:53
consistent powerful anchors
58:55
so that your cortisol your melatonin
58:59
and then everything that's that cascades
59:01
down from that like your metabolism and
59:03
your
59:04
ability to learn and your sense of
59:05
alertness your dopamine your serotonin
59:08
all that stuff is timed regularly
59:11
one of the reasons why there's so much
59:14
uh
59:14
you know challenge out there with focus
59:17
and anxiety and depression
59:20
there are a lot of reasons for that but
59:21
one of the reasons is that
59:23
people's internal mechanisms aren't
59:25
anchored to anything regular
59:27
now this doesn't require being
59:29
neurotically attached to getting up at a
59:31
very specific time going outside viewing
59:33
the sunlight same time every day
59:35
these systems again will average but if
59:36
you can provide them consistent
59:38
light anchors early in the day and in
59:41
the evening and avoiding light at night
59:43
you will be amazed at the tremendous
59:45
number of positive effects that can come
59:47
from that
59:47
at the level of metabolic factors
59:50
hormones and just general feelings of
59:52
well-being
59:53
in fact most of us are familiar with
59:56
what it is to not
59:57
sleep well and all the terrible effects
59:59
that has maybe one night you're fine
60:01
two nights even for the new parents out
60:03
there i
60:04
i sympathize with you but most people
60:07
are not familiar with what it is to
60:09
sleep
60:10
really really well on a consistent basis
60:13
and when you start
60:14
doing that by controlling your sleep
60:16
environment right get the proper sleep
60:17
surface
60:18
get the proper pillow get the
60:20
temperature in the room right get your
60:22
light exposure right
60:23
start timing your exercise at normal
60:25
periods or times throughout the
60:27
day and week it's amazing how many other
60:30
biological systems just naturally fall
60:32
in line
60:33
and this is why whenever people ask me
60:35
what should i take which is one of the
60:37
most common questions i get what
60:38
supplement should i take what drugs
60:39
should i be taking what things should i
60:41
be taking
60:42
the first question i always ask them
60:45
is how's your sleep and ninety percent
60:48
of the time they tell me they either
60:49
have trouble falling asleep or staying
60:51
asleep or they don't feel rested
60:52
throughout the day
60:54
a brief note about naps naps provided
60:57
that they're less than one ultradian
60:58
cycle
60:59
provide their 20 minutes or 30 minutes
61:01
or even an hour can be very beneficial
61:03
for a lot of people
61:04
you don't have to take them but many
61:06
people naturally feel a dip in energy
61:08
and focus late in the afternoon in fact
61:10
if we were going to look at wakefulness
61:12
what we would find is that you get that
61:14
morning light exposure hopefully your
61:15
cortisol goes up people start feeling
61:17
awake and then around two or three or
61:18
four in the afternoon
61:19
there's a spike in in everything from
61:22
alertness
61:23
to ability to learn some metabolic
61:25
factors drop and then it just naturally
61:27
comes back up
61:28
and then it tapers off as the night goes
61:30
on so
61:32
for some of you naps are great i love
61:34
taking naps
61:35
some people they wake up from naps
61:36
feeling really groggy
61:38
that's probably because they're not
61:39
sleeping as well as they should at night
61:42
or as long as they should at night and
61:43
so they're dropping
61:44
into rem sleep or deeper forms of sleep
61:47
in the daytime and then they wake up and
61:49
they feel kind of disoriented
61:51
other people feel great after a nap so
61:52
that's another case where just like with
61:54
caffeine you sort of have to evaluate
61:56
for yourself as we discuss this you're
61:58
probably realizing this is a lot like
62:00
nutrition where nowadays it's just crazy
62:02
i mean if you go on
62:03
social media it's like you've got people
62:04
who are pushing carnivore you got other
62:06
people
62:07
pushing vegan other people are pushing
62:09
you know
62:10
paleo every variation of every diet and
62:12
there's a lot of data to support
62:14
any and all of those and the arguments
62:16
go on and on and there's probably a lot
62:18
of genetic variation and lifestyle
62:19
variation
62:20
that's going to dictate whether or not
62:22
something is good for you whether or not
62:23
you like it whether or not you'll stick
62:24
to it
62:25
the same thing is true for circadian
62:29
and sleep and wakefulness behaviors
62:32
except the light viewing behavior that i
62:34
talked about before there's no way
62:35
around that that's hardwired into our
62:37
system the same way
62:38
we could factually say that everybody
62:41
needs
62:42
some nutrition at some level from some
62:45
source everybody needs
62:46
light information arriving in their
62:48
system in some way
62:50
at regular intervals so that's really
62:52
what this is about
62:53
okay so naps are going to be good for
62:55
some people not for others i have a
62:56
colleague
62:57
a very accomplished neuroscientist who
62:59
likes to take naps
63:01
just after lunch i personally like to
63:03
take a nap around 3 or 4 p.m
63:06
but there's a practice that i've adopted
63:08
in the last five years that i've found
63:10
to be immensely beneficial
63:12
that is sort of like napping but isn't
63:14
napping it's a
63:16
thing that they call yoga nidra yoga
63:18
ninja actually means yoga sleep
63:20
and it's a sort of meditation that you
63:22
listen to there are a number of scripts
63:24
i've talked about this on podcast before
63:26
but i'm going to post a link to the two
63:27
that i like
63:28
most that allows you
63:32
to consciously bring your entire body
63:35
and mind into a state of deep relaxation
63:37
and sometimes you fall asleep and
63:39
sometimes you don't
63:41
this is done for 10 to 30 or even 60
63:44
minutes
63:44
at a time the other thing that works
63:46
really well is meditation
63:49
so i'm talking about naps but i'm also
63:51
talking about yoga nidro which is sort
63:53
of a form of meditation and then more
63:54
standard forms of meditation
63:57
all three of those do something powerful
64:00
which is that they bring our mind
64:02
into a state of less so-called
64:03
sympathetic nervous system activation
64:05
go back and listen to episode one if
64:07
that doesn't make any sense which is
64:08
what governs your alertness
64:10
and instead it activates cells and
64:12
circuits in your body
64:14
that promote the parasympathetic nervous
64:16
system or the calming system
64:18
a lot of people are not good at falling
64:20
asleep because they're not good at
64:22
calming down so some people have no
64:24
trouble falling asleep
64:26
but many people have a hard time falling
64:28
asleep or at least every once in a while
64:30
experience
64:30
challenges falling asleep i don't have
64:32
problems falling asleep
64:33
most nights but i've noticed that if i'm
64:36
working very hard or if the world is
64:37
particularly stressful
64:38
my mind gets into a bit of a kind of ocd
64:40
loop where i tend to ruminate on things
64:42
and
64:42
i'm not even thinking about anything in
64:44
particular it's just challenging for me
64:45
to disengage and fall asleep
64:48
meditation and yoga ninja scripts have
64:50
been immensely helpful for me
64:52
in terms of accelerating the transition
64:54
to sleep
64:55
so they involve taking a few minutes 10
64:58
to 30 minutes or so just like you would
65:00
for a nap
65:01
and just listening to a script almost
65:03
passively and
65:04
it has you do some particular patterns
65:06
of breathing and some other
65:08
kind of body scan like things that can
65:10
really help people
65:12
learn to relax not just in that moment
65:14
but get better at relaxing and turning
65:16
off
65:16
thinking in order to fall asleep when
65:18
they want to do that at night
65:20
there's another thing that's similar to
65:22
this which is certain forms of hypnosis
65:23
for sleep
65:24
for that i'll just refer you to the
65:26
website of a colleague and collaborator
65:28
of mine
65:28
david spiegel who's our associate chair
65:32
of psychiatry and behavioral sciences
65:34
at stanford he's developed a website
65:37
which is reverie
65:39
r-e-v-e-r-i-e health dot com so
65:42
reveriehealth.com
65:43
that has a lot of science-supported
65:46
clinically supported
65:47
hypnosis scripts that essentially take
65:50
the brain into states of deep relaxation
65:52
for sake of rewiring the brain and
65:54
neuroplasticity but one of those scripts
65:56
that's there and is available free
65:58
is for sleep and we'll talk more about
66:00
hypnosis at a later time because it has
66:02
a ton of other effects
66:04
that aren't just limited to sleep so
66:07
a period of time each day that you
66:09
devote to getting better at falling and
66:11
staying asleep
66:12
is actually a really good practice to
66:13
adopt the other thing about these
66:15
practices like meditation
66:17
yoga nidra and hypnosis is people always
66:20
say to me
66:21
well when should i do them and i would
66:22
say well the best time of day to do it
66:24
is
66:24
when you first wake up in the morning
66:25
provided you've got in your sunlight
66:27
already
66:28
anytime you wake up in the middle of the
66:29
night or any time of day in other words
66:31
they're always good for you because it's
66:33
a training mechanism by which you
66:34
self-train your nervous system
66:36
to go from a state of heightened
66:38
alertness that you don't want
66:40
to heighten relaxation that you do want
66:43
and so it's really teaching you to hit
66:45
the break and that brings us to an even
66:47
more important point perhaps which is
66:49
we've all experienced that we can stay
66:52
up if we want to
66:53
right if we want to stay up late on new
66:56
year's or we want to push an all-nighter
66:58
some people can do that more easily than
66:59
others but we're all capable of doing
67:02
that
67:03
but it's very hard to make ourselves
67:04
fall asleep and so there's a sort of
67:06
asymmetry to the way our autonomic
67:08
nervous system which governs this
67:10
alertness calmness thing the sympathetic
67:12
and parasympathetic nervous system
67:14
there's an asymmetry there where we are
67:16
more easily able to engage
67:18
wakefulness and drive wakefulness we can
67:20
force ourselves to stay awake
67:22
then we are able to force ourselves to
67:25
fall asleep
67:26
and one of the things that i say over
67:28
and over again and i'm going to continue
67:29
to say over and over again
67:31
is it's very hard to control the mind
67:33
with the mind
67:34
when you have trouble falling asleep you
67:36
need to look to some mechanism that
67:37
involves the body
67:39
and all the things i described
67:40
meditation hypnosis yoga nidra
67:43
all involve exhale emphasize breathing
67:46
certain ways of lying down and
67:48
controlling the body we're going to get
67:50
into breathing
67:50
in real depth at another time but all of
67:53
those involve using the body
67:55
to control the mind rather than trying
67:57
to you know
67:58
wrestle your mind into a certain pattern
68:01
of relaxation
68:02
so earlier in episode one
68:05
i talked about the mobius strip this
68:08
continuous loop that is the brain-body
68:10
relationship
68:11
or the mind-body relationship and when
68:13
we're having trouble controlling the
68:14
mind i encourage people to look towards
68:16
the body
68:17
look toward sunlight avoid sunlight if
68:20
in bright light if that happens to be
68:21
late at night so there's a theme that's
68:23
starting to emerge which is in order to
68:25
control this thing that we call the
68:26
nervous system
68:27
we have to look back to some of the
68:29
things we discussed earlier like
68:30
sensation perception etc
68:32
but we have to ask what can we control
68:34
well i'm talking about controlling light
68:36
exposure controlling
68:38
your breathing and body i'm not going
68:40
into details right now but you can see
68:42
the yoga ninja script or the
68:43
reveriehealth.com or headspace would be
68:46
a great place to
68:47
adopt the meditation practice any of
68:49
those are really teaching you to use
68:51
your body to control your mind
68:53
and to allow you to explore the
68:54
mind-body relationship in a way
68:56
that gives you more control over your
68:59
mind and the mind-body relationship
69:01
okay so we talked about light
69:04
we talked about activity and timing of
69:06
light talked about the usefulness of
69:08
naps and these things that i'm calling
69:10
non-sleep
69:11
deep rest which include meditation yoga
69:14
nidra
69:14
and hypnosis non-sleep deep rest
69:18
or what i hereafter we will refer to as
69:21
nsdr not to be confused with emdr i
69:24
don't think i've ever heard
69:25
nsdr so i'm i'm planting a flag
69:28
for nsdr non-sleep deep rest
69:31
as a way to reset one's ability to be
69:35
awake after you emerge from an sdr so to
69:38
get some more wakefulness and ability to
69:40
attend some emotional stability
69:42
reset as well as make it better
69:45
and easier to fall asleep when you want
69:47
to go to sleep at night
69:49
now non-sleep deep rest does have some
69:51
research to support it
69:52
there's a beautiful study done out of a
69:55
university
69:56
in denmark i will later provide a link
69:58
to that study
69:59
that showed that this meditation and
70:02
yoga nidra type meditation
70:05
allows dopamine and other
70:07
neuromodulators in an area of the brain
70:08
called the striatum that's involved in
70:10
motor planning and motor execution
70:12
to reset itself in other words this nsdr
70:16
can reset our ability to engage in the
70:19
world in a way that's very deliberate
70:21
and not to throw in another acronym but
70:22
nsdr resets your ability to engage in
70:25
dpos duration path and outcome
70:27
so now you're probably rolling your eyes
70:29
like oh my goodness the number of
70:30
acronyms but
70:31
just bear with me because nsdr is
70:35
so powerful because first of all it
70:37
doesn't require
70:39
that you rig yourself to any device it
70:41
doesn't require
70:42
that you take much time out of your day
70:44
it doesn't require that you ingest
70:45
anything
70:46
except air and it can have
70:49
so many positive effects right down to
70:51
the neuromodulator level
70:53
so i think in years to come my lab is
70:55
exploring this in
70:56
collaboration with david spiegel's lab
70:58
but other labs are looking at this as
70:59
well i think nsdr
71:01
is going to start to play a more
71:02
prominent role in
71:04
what we call wellness and health both
71:06
mental health and physical health so i
71:07
encourage you to explore those practices
71:09
okay so what about things that we can
71:12
and maybe
71:12
should or should not take in order to
71:14
control and
71:16
access better sleep and better
71:17
wakefulness we've talked about
71:19
things you can do or not do we've talked
71:23
about nutrition and the timing of
71:24
nutrition
71:26
now let's talk about compounds those
71:27
could be prescription drugs those could
71:29
be
71:29
supplements there are a number of
71:31
different things that will affect your
71:33
circadian timing and behavior in fact
71:37
almost everything that you could take
71:41
will affect your circadian timing and
71:42
behavior that's right
71:44
so years ago when i was in graduate
71:47
school i had a professor unfortunately
71:48
he passed away now but his name was ted
71:50
jones the late edward jones
71:51
who was a world-class neuroanatomist he
71:53
wrote the book
71:54
on the thalamus in fact it's called the
71:56
thalamus and an expert
71:58
on patterns of activation in the brain
72:00
during sleep and i'll never forget that
72:02
during one of these lectures
72:03
someone asked ted the question you know
72:06
what is the effect of some drug
72:08
on these waves of activity in the
72:10
thalamus or something
72:11
and his answer was incredible he was a
72:13
pretty gruff guy
72:15
and so his answer was delivered in the
72:17
form of a kind of aggressive direct
72:19
statement he said
72:20
a drug is a substance that when injected
72:23
into a person
72:24
produces a scientific publication and
72:26
what he was saying
72:28
is actually quite true which is that
72:30
most
72:31
every compound will have some effect on
72:34
some aspect of biology
72:36
this is why it's hard to sort through
72:37
everything that's on pubmed if you put
72:39
any molecule or compound or drug into
72:42
pubmed and then you put
72:44
sleep next to it or alertness next to it
72:46
you're likely to find a paper where
72:48
there's an effect
72:49
but that's not necessarily telling you
72:53
that that drug is useful or helpful for
72:55
that
72:55
what it's telling you is that anytime
72:57
you change
72:59
what you take or you stop taking
73:01
something
73:02
say you're taking sleeping pills ambien
73:04
or whatever it is and you stop taking
73:05
them your
73:06
sleep behavior will change let's say you
73:09
take an aspirin you don't normally take
73:10
aspirin
73:11
you will shift your circadian rhythm now
73:13
you might not shift it perceptibly you
73:15
might not
73:15
create problems for yourself but anytime
73:17
you ingest a compound
73:19
at high potency you're going to cha
73:21
provide some shift to your circadian
73:23
rhythm
73:24
now that said there are a couple things
73:25
that are directly in line with the
73:27
biology related to falling and staying
73:29
asleep and directly in line with the
73:30
biology of wakefulness
73:32
there's a whole category of things like
73:35
stimulants
73:36
cocaine amphetamine and prescription
73:38
stimulants
73:39
that are the prescription ones were
73:41
designed for the treatment of narcolepsy
73:43
so things like modafinil or armadaphenyl
73:46
that are designed to create wakefulness
73:48
they are all essentially
73:50
chemical variants of things that
73:53
increase
73:54
epinephrine and dopamine now of course
73:56
i'm of the the standpoint that things
73:58
like cocaine amphetamine are just across
74:00
the board bad
74:00
they have so many addictive and terrible
74:03
effects in
74:04
the proper setting prescribed by the
74:07
proper professional things like
74:08
modafinil for narcolepsy
74:10
um might be appropriate i know that a
74:12
lot of people out there take adderall
74:15
even though they haven't been prescribed
74:16
adderall in order to increase
74:18
wakefulness
74:20
that is essentially uh you know well
74:22
it's illegal for one but it's also
74:24
it's abusing the system in the sense
74:26
that you're pushing back on the
74:27
adenosine system slightly differently
74:29
than you do caffeine
74:30
it will make you feel more alert there
74:32
tends to be a heavy rebound and they do
74:33
have an addictive potential
74:35
there are also some other effects of
74:36
those that can be quite bad so we're
74:37
going to explore
74:39
stimulants in a whole month related to
74:41
drugs
74:42
but there are some supplements and some
74:44
things that are safer
74:46
certainly safer and that
74:49
in cases where you're doing all the
74:51
right behaviors you're
74:52
exercising and eating correctly and
74:54
you're still having trouble with sleep
74:56
that can be beneficial for falling and
74:59
staying asleep now i want to be very
75:00
clear i'm not pushing supplements i'm
75:02
just
75:03
pointing you towards some things that
75:04
have been shown in
75:06
peer-reviewed studies to have some
75:07
benefit
75:09
the first one is magnesium there are
75:12
many forms of magnesium but certain
75:13
forms of magnesium
75:14
can have positive effects on sleepiness
75:17
and the ability to stay asleep
75:18
mainly by way of increasing
75:21
neurotransmitters like
75:22
gaba which help turn off the
75:26
dpo the kind of thinking about the
75:27
future duration path outcome analysis
75:29
and make one sort of um one's mind kind
75:33
of drift
75:33
in space and time and make it easier to
75:35
fall asleep there are a lot of forms of
75:37
magnesium
75:38
out there but one in particular is
75:39
magnesium 3 and 8
75:42
t-h-r-e-o-n-a-t-e which
75:44
you have to check to see if this right
75:46
is right for you check with your doctor
75:48
but magnesium-3 and 8 is associated with
75:50
transporters in the body
75:52
that bring more of it into cells that
75:54
allow people to
75:56
feel this kind of drowsiness and help
75:57
them fall asleep so i personally i can
75:59
only talk about what i personally do
76:00
i personally take three or four hundred
76:03
milligrams of magnesium three and eight
76:04
about 30 to 60 minutes before
76:06
sleep and it helps me fall asleep the
76:08
other thing is theanine
76:15
t-h-e-a-a-t-h-e-a-n-i-n-e
76:16
theanine 100 to 200 milligrams of
76:19
theanine for me
76:20
also helps me turn off my mind and fall
76:22
asleep i take it 30 or 60 minutes
76:24
throughout the day
76:24
interestingly theanine is now being
76:26
introduced to a lot of energy drinks
76:29
in order to take away the jitters that
76:31
are associated with
76:32
drinking too much caffeine or with some
76:34
other things that are in the energy
76:35
drinks
76:36
energy drinks are can be problematic um
76:39
they can contain a lot of l-taurine i'll
76:41
just tell you an anecdote when i was a
76:43
postdoc i was drinking a lot of a
76:44
particular energy drink
76:45
has a lot of taurine in it and actually
76:48
the
76:49
the whites of my eyes the sclera as it's
76:52
called in my eyes turned beet red
76:54
and i went to a friend who's an
76:55
ophthalmologist um
76:57
i said look i'm not a marijuana smoker i
76:59
haven't been hit on the head i don't
77:00
know what's going on
77:02
and he looked and he said i think you've
77:03
got some microvascular damage
77:06
and we walked through what i was taking
77:07
and doing and he said oh it's probably
77:09
the taurine excessive levels of taurine
77:11
can create some microvascular damage
77:13
so if you're having the microvascular
77:14
damage in your eye you'll probably have
77:16
microvascular damage deeper
77:18
in your skull so i stop that's the
77:19
reason why i don't take energy drinks
77:21
so just a consideration again i'm not
77:24
here to tell you what to do or not do
77:25
but
77:26
just want to arm you with information
77:29
the the thing about theanine and
77:32
magnesium is taken together they do
77:34
for some people they can make them so
77:36
sleepy and sleep so deeply
77:38
that they actually have trouble waking
77:39
up in the morning so you have to play
77:40
with these things and titrate them if
77:42
you decide to use them again if you
77:43
decide to go this route i would not
77:45
start by taking supplements
77:46
i would start by getting your light
77:48
viewing behavior correct
77:50
and then think about your nutrition and
77:51
then think about your activity and then
77:53
think about
77:54
whether or not you want a supplement we
77:55
already talked about melatonin earlier
77:57
there's another supplement that could be
77:59
quite useful which is apogenin
78:02
a-p-i-g-e-n-i-n
78:03
which is a derivative of chamomile 50
78:05
milligrams of apogenin
78:08
also can augment or support this kind of
78:11
creation of a sleepiness to help fall
78:13
asleep and stay asleep
78:15
a note about sleepwalkers and people
78:16
with very vivid dreams
78:19
feeling can often make your dreams very
78:21
vivid sleepwalkers should be careful
78:23
about taking theanine
78:24
everyone should be careful about taking
78:25
anything and don't take anything without
78:27
consulting your
78:28
board certified md or healthcare
78:30
professional first okay
78:32
your health is your responsibility i am
78:34
not going to take responsibility for
78:36
what you decide to do experimentally in
78:38
any case
78:38
but especially as it relates to
78:40
supplementation and drugs
78:43
as a important point apogenin is a
78:46
fairly potent estrogen inhibitor
78:48
so women who want to keep their estrogen
78:50
levels high
78:52
or at whatever levels they happen to be
78:53
at should probably avoid apogenin
78:55
altogether
78:56
and men take that into consideration as
78:59
well
78:59
uh men need estrogen also you don't want
79:01
to completely eliminate your estrogen
79:03
that can create all sorts of bad effects
79:05
on
79:06
libido and cognition etc so apogenin and
79:09
some people is going to be a pretty
79:10
strong estrogen inhibitor so
79:12
keep that in mind there are other things
79:15
you can take to help you sleep better
79:16
um those are the legal ones that at
79:19
least i'm aware of have pretty broad
79:20
safety margins but again
79:22
you need to explore your safety margins
79:24
with any compound
79:26
i think a great website that i can refer
79:28
you to is examine.com
79:30
examine the word just as it sounds dot
79:32
com is a website i have no relation to
79:34
them
79:34
but there you can find links to
79:37
peer-reviewed studies for any compound
79:39
or supplement as well as some important
79:41
warnings related to the things i
79:42
discussed as well as any other
79:44
thing that you might decide to
79:45
supplement with or ingest
79:47
to help improve your sleep okay
79:51
that was a lot of information about how
79:53
to get better at
79:54
sleeping falling asleep wakefulness etc
79:59
an important feature of this podcast as
80:01
you know is that we dive deep into
80:02
topics for
80:03
several episodes at a time at least a
80:05
month at a time
80:07
so by stopping here i recognize that
80:10
there are probably many more questions
80:12
that you still have and the great thing
80:14
about that is that we have another
80:16
episode coming up soon i'm going to hold
80:18
office hours where i'm going to answer
80:21
your specific questions about
80:22
episodes one and two so if you have
80:25
questions about this episode
80:26
you have questions about episode one
80:28
write them down put them in the comments
80:30
i'll also do a post on instagram where
80:32
you can put them in the comments there
80:34
but put them in the comments to this
80:35
episode
80:37
as well please recommend the podcast if
80:40
you like it
80:41
please subscribe to it here on youtube
80:44
please
80:45
subscribe to it on apple we're now on
80:46
spotify as well
80:48
recommend it to a friend the community
80:50
that we're creating here
80:51
around these topics of sleep and
80:53
wakefulness and other neuroscience and
80:54
health related
80:55
themes is best supported by your
80:58
involvement and your questions and so
81:00
i'm going to be reading all of your
81:01
questions distilling those into the most
81:03
commonly asked questions
81:05
and liked questions so if you see
81:07
something below that you are
81:08
particularly interested in you don't
81:09
have to put that question in again you
81:11
can just give it a like the little
81:12
thumbs up tab
81:13
and if you're listening to this on
81:15
spotify or apple
81:17
please go to youtube subscribe and put
81:20
your question there or check out the
81:21
huberman lab instagram
81:22
and you can put your questions there so
81:24
that next episode i can answer those
81:26
questions and then we can move forward
81:28
even more deeply into these critical
81:30
topics around
81:31
sleep and wakefulness so that you can be
81:33
armed with all the information and
81:34
resources that you need last but not
81:37
least
81:38
a number of you have very graciously
81:39
asked how you can support the podcast
81:41
the best way to support the podcast is
81:43
to subscribe on youtube or one of the
81:45
other platforms we're now on spotify
81:48
and apple and the other way you can
81:50
really support the podcast is to check
81:52
out our sponsors
81:53
which were discussed at the beginning so
81:55
thank you so much for your time and
81:56
attention and above all
81:57
thank you for your interest in science

You might also like