Unlocking the Secrets to Better Sleep with Dr. Catherine Darley

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Dr. Catherine Darley a sleep specialist, delves into the role that sleep plays in our overall health and well-being. She provides a comprehensive overview of the three pillars of healthy sleep—duration, quality, and timing—and examines the societal hurdles contributing to widespread sleep insufficiency.

Key Discussion Points:

The Three Pillars of Healthy Sleep:

  • Duration: Understanding the importance of getting enough sleep and how to determine the optimal amount for individual health.
  • Quality: The significance of sleep quality and practical ways to enhance it.
  • Timing: The role of timing in sleep health, including maintaining a consistent sleep schedule.

Sleep as a Health Priority:

  • Catherine emphasizes the need to prioritize sleep on par with nutrition and exercise.
  • Discussion on the detrimental effects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performance, emotional intelligence, and overall well-being.

Societal Challenges and Sleep:

  • Exploration of modern societal factors that contribute to insufficient sleep, such as work demands and screen time.
  • Practical advice on managing these challenges to improve sleep quality.

For more information about Dr. Catherine Darley and where to find her check out her guest profile here.

Transcript
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Well, I have Catherine with me today.

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She is a sleep specialist.

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And I'm so glad you're here because we're going to talk about everything sleep today.

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So welcome, Catherine, to the podcast. Great. Thanks.

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I'm glad to be here.

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Before we get started, how, why did you decide to focus on sleep?

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What was what was the thing that intrigued you about that?

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You know, I've been interested since actually early college and my whole work life has been

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in sleep, sleep research, sleep medicine.

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And when I was a kid, 12 years old, I was a sleepwalker.

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And I once sleepwalked out of our house across our yard into the neighbor's house and through

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their house to the opposite end. No way. Yeah.

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So that is a true story of extreme sleepwalking.

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Boy, I bet your parents were.

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That would be so scary for everyone involved.

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You know, you're yes, at two in the morning or whatever. Oh, wow.

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So that that I mean, thinking about back to your sleepwalking days, that really kind of was

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the impetus for Yeah, and just that I think I observed early on that sleep is one of those core

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pillars of health and nutrition and exercise for decades have gotten a lot more attention.

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And to me, it's like a two legged stool.

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Nobody wants to sit or at least very long on a two legged stool.

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You need that third leg, which is sleep, sleep, movement and good nutrition.

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That is a solid foundation.

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And so my career mission has been to really uplift the importance of sleep and give people sleep

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skills so that they know what to do to sleep well.

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That is so true, because you always hear about you need to eat right, you need to exercise more.

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And then a lot of times with sleep, you hear things like, well, you know, don't be on your phone

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before you sleep and not really like any sort of impactful techniques that we can use to help us sleep. But so that's great. I love that.

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And I always love the analogy of the three legged stool. So tell us why.

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First of all, two questions, you can answer them any order you want.

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Why are we not sleeping?

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And why is sleep just as important as nutrition and exercise and all the other things they tell us to do?

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Yeah, I think that it's really comes down to societal values and modern lifestyle, why people aren't sleeping.

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There's three things to consider for healthy sleep. One is sleep duration. Are you sleeping enough?

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And over a third of people are simply not giving enough time in their schedule for the sleep they need.

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The second piece is sleep quality.

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Do you have a sleep disorder or is there something in your environment that is disrupting your sleep quality?

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And then the third piece is sleep timing.

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And that's all about whether you're a night owl, a morning person or neither.

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And honoring that and scheduling your lifestyle to accommodate that.

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And you know, of course, we don't always have 100% control over our schedule.

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Bosses dictate our work hours or whatnot.

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But there are some places where we do have control and we're not scheduling our life around

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whether we're that morning person, night owl or neither.

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That's interesting about the night person, morning person, night owl, because I'm actually a morning person.

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I can be in bed by 8.30 and up at five and I'm perfectly content.

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But so how many hours?

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We always hear we should be sleeping like eight or nine hours. Yeah.

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So the thing that I think people may not be clear about is that's a bell curve.

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So the typical bell curve of how much sleep an adult would need is somewhere between seven and

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nine outliers would be some people do fine with six.

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That's like 2% of the population, maybe three and about one to 2% of us need 10.

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But so it's not that every adult will be fine so long as they're getting seven.

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It means that you may be at seven and a half.

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That's how much sleep you do best with.

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I know I do best with eight and a quarter.

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Somebody else might need nine.

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And so that person who needs nine hours, if they're getting only eight a night, which most people

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would go only eight, that sounds like plenty.

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They're still sleep deprived an hour every night and they're going to suffer from that.

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Their performance isn't going to be as good.

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Their health isn't going to be as good.

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Their mood and their ability to interact well with others is just not going to be as good when

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they're getting only eight if they truly need nine.

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So one of the first steps I like people to do is to identify how much sleep you do best with.

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And there's a couple of ways you can do this.

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One is you can think back to a time that you were really well rested and operating really well.

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Cognitively sharp, safe on the road, emotionally even keel, and identify how much sleep were

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you getting at that point.

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The other thing, the other method is to give yourself 10 days in a row to just get as much sleep

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as you need at night and not wake up with an alarm.

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One red flag that you are not getting enough sleep is if you're waking up with an alarm.

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An alarm means you're truncating your sleep and you're interrupting your sleep.

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That is a novel idea for a lot of people, but it can be really useful.

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So you know, if you're chronically sleep deprived, giving yourself 10 days with 10 hours a night

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in bed to really catch up on your sleep and hopefully, if you're not too sleep deprived, it'll

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start to even out and you'll know, okay, how much sleep do I need on a regular basis?

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Well, that's a super interesting way to do that because I've never heard that you're the first

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person that ever said, you know, like, let's determine first how many hours you need to sleep.

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I'm a nine hour sleeper. I do know that.

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And it's also fascinating that even just an hour less than my needed time can cause so much havoc in your life.

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I mean, I know if I only sleep five hours because something's happened or I can't fall asleep at night. Oh my gosh. It's terrible.

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I'm just like, don't talk to me.

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But you know, it's fascinating how just an hour can do that.

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And I've noticed too, since I've gotten on a more, well, since I started caregiving is I set

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my alarm for six because I need to check on Steve after so many hours in the night.

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And I just now I'm waking up like five or 10 minutes before the alarm goes off.

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I don't even really need the alarm anymore that I've, you know, if I go to sleep at my normal

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time and get my, you know, nine hours of sleep, I just like wake up at 10 till, you know, I

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still set the alarm just in case.

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So that's really, but I've never heard anyone say, let's figure out your baseline before we do anything. Yeah. Yeah. It's, it's important. Yeah. Important. Like first step.

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So why do some people need seven and some people need nine?

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Is there some sort of like physical or physiology sort of thing going on there?

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It's it's not, it's not anything negative.

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It's really just that, you know, if you took women my age in the US, if you and you track like

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how tall we are, we would fall on a bell curve.

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And, you know, how much sleep you need is not, you know, it's nobody should be making a moral

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judgment about, you know, it's just what your set point is.

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I think of it like your eye color, your height, it's both how much sleep you need is given to

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you and whether you're not a night owl or a morning person or neither is also given to you.

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And I think there's been, unfortunately a lot of kind of blame and shame of people who are night

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owls, you know, early bird gets the worm.

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And if you just would, you know, turn off your phone at night, you could get up in the morning

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or if you actually had were motivated and not lazy, you can get up, you know, that is not true at all.

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That's it's just like, you know, and and what's really interesting is if you think about human

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history, when there were smaller groups, tribes, you know, that it is actually adaptive to have

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people who are awake and alert at different times of day to watch over the group.

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And, you know, that is probably why we have this variability across the human population of

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some people are extreme night owls and some people get up at the crack of dawn.

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I am strongly a morning person and I usually wake up by 430. Oh, wow. That is a morning.

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Even if even if I stay up late, yeah, I still wake up at 430.

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Like that's my time and you know, my best work hours are before one or two o'clock in the afternoon. Same. Yeah.

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Well, thank you so much for saying that, because I do know that there is a lot of, you know,

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how do you get anything done?

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And there is a lot of judgment and then all these like, you know, get up at five o'clock and

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do your morning routine kind of thing.

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So thank you for saying that. I do appreciate that.

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So why do we why do we need to sleep?

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What happens when we sleep?

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Why is that so important for us?

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Oh, my goodness, this could be an eight hour class.

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Well, we can always do a two parter.

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I think about it in five domains.

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So I'm just going to kind of give an over a high level overview and we can go down into some

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of the weeds that are interesting to you.

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I think about it in five domains, your physical health, when you're sleep deprived, actually

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your blood sugar control isn't as good.

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And that is obviously an issue for a lot of people in America.

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They have blood sugar problems, pre-diabetes, diabetes.

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And if you're not getting enough sleep, it's going to alter your blood sugar control.

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It's going to also alter your appetite hormones.

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When people are sleep deprived, they tend to eat about 300 calories more a day.

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And to put that into perspective, that's 30 pounds over a year.

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So if you're just constantly like many people like myself struggling with that, you know, are

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you eating more calories and less healthy calories?

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So physical health, mental health, anxiety is so common in our society.

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And it's really interesting that you could see sleep hours in America have decreased over the

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decades since the 1920s sleep hours in America have decreased.

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And it looks like anxiety rates are also increasing, which we would anticipate because being

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sleep deprived does increase anxiety, increases depression, increases panic.

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Then think about cognitive performance and physical performance.

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So cognitive performance, you know, we have a really broad spectrum of tasks, cognitive tasks

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we have to do things like me remembering that your name is Shelley.

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We have just met this morning.

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We had some emails, but you're a new a new friend.

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So simple tasks like remembering someone's name to really the other end of the spectrum, which

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is that complex problem solving that we all need to do, you know, like as you were things out

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and do some problem solving and then physical performance, like if you're doing any kinds of

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athletics or fitness activities, greater increase, greater likelihood of injuries.

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If you are not well rested, dry, drowsy driving is particular concern.

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We're recording this at the beginning of July.

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Lots of people have summer trips, road trips, and then we'll have the fall and winter holidays that also involve driving.

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You're at greatly increased risk of a collision if you're drowsy driving.

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And then the last piece, which I'm really excited about and I think is is a growing area of

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research and just insight in the sleep medicine community, is that when we are not getting adequate

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sleep, it changes our emotional intelligence and our ability to get along with others.

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We are less observant of other people's experience.

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We are more self-focused in our reasoning and frankly, less kind. Yeah.

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Well, yeah, I've never heard that about the emotional intelligence, but I guess that would make sense.

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So let me ask you this, Catherine, we talk about anxiety and one of the things I talk about

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caregiving is like there's a lot of systemic issues within institutions and various just work

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schedules and caregivers not getting support, moms not getting support, just families in general not getting support.

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And I know on this podcast, we're not going to change the issues, the systemic issues that are

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out there in this country, in the world.

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So how can how can we sleep better knowing that we've got some of these issues?

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I mean, think about how I need to ask this.

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How can we sleep better knowing that we've still got some of these things that we have to deal

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with, like kids and, you know, people to care for and bosses and all those things or some practical ways to help us?

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Yeah, so I think about it as having a sleep healthy lifestyle because there's multiple things

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that you can do during the day and just kind of incorporate into your lifestyle that don't necessarily

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take much more time, but are going to make sure that you're you've got physiology on your side.

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And one of the things that is probably new information for folks is the importance of light and dark.

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One thing that happened with the adoption of the electric light is that human beings moved indoors,

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indoors during the day, indoors at night.

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And we have significantly altered in a very short span of time, our light, dark cues.

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And we have a circadian rhythm, which is this 24 hour pattern in our function where we do more

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of our function at certain times of day and less at others.

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For instance, we're awake during the day, we're asleep at night, which is a really basic that everybody knows.

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But if you go down to the organ system and even the cellular level, every cell does more or

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less of its function at different times of day.

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For instance, your digestive cells and your digestive organs, they are programmed to be more

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active in the day than they are at night.

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And many people can can personally identify with this.

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Think of a time that you ever did over, you know, pulled an all nighter to get a project done

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or you had to get up super early to a travel day.

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If you try to eat at a time that you're usually asleep, the food could just sit there. Right.

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It does not digest well because your digestive system is off.

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Basically, it's the light, dark cues that set our circadian system.

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And now we're indoors during the day and indoors has maybe 10 percent of the light intensity as outdoors does.

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And then at night we're indoors and we are getting more light at night than we would have.

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So we are getting our light is not enough during the day and it's too much at night.

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So there's actually recommendations that have been put forward by health organizations on how

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much light you're supposed to get.

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And this makes a huge difference.

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You want your circadian system to have you be widely awake or deeply asleep. And what we get.

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With these altered light conditions is we're a little bit awake.

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We're a little bit asleep.

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So you asked about practices.

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That was a lot of the why and the science.

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Let's go into the practices.

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You want to in the morning, get up and within the first couple hours of your day, be outside for 20 minutes.

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That is critical because that morning light signals to your body strongly that it's morning

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is time to get into active mode.

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And it actually will increase your nocturnal melatonin and shifted earlier.

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If you get that bright light and then throughout the day, go outside every couple hours.

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So if you are a caregiver and you have the possibility of taking the family outside with you

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to sit on the porch or sit, you know, a window is really not enough light, but if that's the

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best you can do, it's better than nothing.

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But sitting outside on a patio or a porch and having your breakfast and having getting bright

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light is going to be really important for people of all ages.

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And then you mentioned earlier today about the blue light at night and your screens that actually

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has a huge impact for three hours before bed.

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We're supposed to be in dim light conditions that are 10 lux or less.

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Lux is a measure of a light that one lux is equal to one candle flame.

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So 10 lux is not very much.

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And I think this is one of those areas where many people have heard about turning off the screens

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or dimming the lights, but don't necessarily understand how huge of a difference it can make.

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Shelley, if you can hold your hand out at arm's length and see your fingers wiggling, that is

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enough light to suppress your melatonin.

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And for sleep, we want our melatonin to be high.

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So I've got a couple tricks.

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One is on your phone, you can download what's called a lux meter, LUX meter, and it just uses

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the little camera lens to measure the light.

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Um, so the, the recommendations there is during the day, 250 lux of light with blue light.

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Um, it's unlikely that your home or work environment has that.

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Typically offices and homes are about 160 lux, whereas outside is 16,000 lux.

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So outside is 16,000 indoors, 6, 160.

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So we want 250 lux during the day.

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And then three hours before bed, we want 10 lux or less without blue.

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And that's why we need to turn off our screens because the screens give blue.

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I mean, even if you just see my hand here, it's has like this bluish, um, bluish hue from the light of the computer.

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LED lights have, have, so you can measure the lux.

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I think for many of us, we are still in a really active part of our day, three hours before bed. Right.

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Um, and if that's the case, you can wear blue blocking glasses and that is a good alternative

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or, you know, dim the lights as you can and where the blue blockers, um, a tip, if you're gonna,

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I basically think everyone who has electric light in their home needs blue blockers.

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Um, a tip you want to get this strong reddish orange color.

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If they have just this yellow color, that's not enough for those three hours before bed.

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You might use these during the day to protect your eyes from the computer.

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If you're on the computer all day, some, uh, I doctors recommend that, but for the night or

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evening, you need this strong reddish orange color.

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Well, that's where, yeah, those are, you know, I'm, I'm seeing it as you're talking and all

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that first, first things that sort of popped into my head was, um, I've heard this phrase called rage scrolling.

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So like people who don't have the day to themselves, they tend to be on their screens at night,

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like rage scrolling, because I don't, this is my time to do what I want.

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And I, I get that, but, you know, we watch TV, we do this, we do that.

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I don't want to give that time up.

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I think we have to decide what's, what's the most important thing for you.

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I would say sleep is more important than binging TV till 11 o'clock at night.

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I mean, not judgment call or anything like that.

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I mean, not judgment, but, you know, I would just think that for me, it's more important to

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get sleep than it is to, you know, spend two hours on the phone or TV.

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I mean, that's just my opinion, you can take it or leave it.

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But I know a lot of people push back with that because they think, well, this is something we do.

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This is a habit we've developed.

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And maybe we just need to look at a different direction and think maybe sleep needs to be my priority now.

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So yeah, I have a few ideas on that.

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One is that, um, we need rest and we need recreation.

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Um, and it's unfortunate when people feel like they need to cut their sleep to have that, uh, rest and restoration.

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I, um, you know, I myself have been a single mom, which puts a lot of demands on time.

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And, uh, you know, maybe some people don't want to do this, but I, um, you know, when my kid

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was eight or 10 or something, I just decided I want to have rest.

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That is like fun recreational time.

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And of course I want to have enough sleep.

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And so I just honestly lowered my standards.

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Like I love to garden, but I turned some of my garden back into lawn because I was like, I don't

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have the time for this.

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And it just, I needed to have less actual tasks to do every day.

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And, you know, we may not like that or we might get some pushback, but you know, we do need

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to have rest work, sleep, rest, and like rest would include play and positive rest.

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And I think, you know, one of my concerns with the scrolling on the phone is that it's not really satisfying or constructive rest.

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It's more kind of vacuous or, um, you know, once we get going and I mean, I am not, um, I, I

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can get into this particularly with, you know, so much going on in the news.

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I can get into scrolling.

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So don't, don't think I'm like on my high horse over here because I am fighting this myself,

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but I think, you know, how can we have habits that are constructive rest, like, you know, being

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in a bath for some time before bed and reading a paper book, much more constructive bath helps us sleep.

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The paper book isn't as stimulating.

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We're not getting that blue light.

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Um, you know, so I think about, yes, we need rest and what can we do that's constructive and

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healthful rest, you know, also hobbies are a great thing to do.

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You know, that is much more joy giving than scrolling on the phone. Typically. I like that.

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I like what you said about taking some tasks away.

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So like you realize that you needed to let go of some of your garden.

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And as you were saying, I was thinking, what can I let go of myself?

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And sort of this panic set in, like, I don't know if I want to let go of these things, but I

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like that because I think we're over scheduled. We overschedule our kids. We overschedule ourselves.

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It's like, you know, we have to be doing something all the time.

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So thank you for saying that.

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I think that's really great advice, but let me ask you about, like, I have a Kindle.

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I read paper books, but I also have a Kindle that I tool around on the day.

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I know you can take the settings on the Kindle and lower the light.

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Is that, is that good?

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Or am I just fooling myself?

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There was a study that looked at that and the Kindle is still too much, too much light.

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So really a paper book, if you can, is better.

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A Kindle is better than your phone or the computer screen.

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So, you know, make, make improvements as you can, but still paper is better.

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So what are your, oh, I'm sorry, didn't mean to interrupt you.

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What are your thoughts on melatonin, these so-called natural sleep aids?

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You know, some people do CBDs or have THC gummies to sleep or melatonin or valerian, or I can't remember what.

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I can't do those things because I get a hangover.

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Like I call it a melatonin hangover.

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Even at three milligrams, I wake up next morning and for hours, I'm just groggy.

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So what are your thoughts on, on some of those sleep aids? Yeah.

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So I have two, two parts.

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The first thing I want to do is not answer your question directly, but there are 58 sleep disorders. Oh, wow. Yeah. Right.

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Way more sleep disorders than people may know.

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And, um, and sleep disorders are largely undiagnosed.

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So if you're having a sleep problem, I would recommend you consider that you may have an undiagnosed sleep disorder.

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Uh, and you know, I imagine that a lot of your community are women, women after menopause have,

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um, high rates of both obstructive sleep apnea and restless legs syndrome.

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And they are typically, um, underdiagnosed population.

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So just be aware that your risk as a woman of those two diseases does increase as we get older.

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So what was the first one you said?

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Obstructive sleep apnea and restless leg syndrome.

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Um, so, uh, sometimes people tell me, oh, I've tried different stuff and it hasn't worked.

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And whenever I hear that, I think, oh, well maybe you have one of those 58 sleep disorders.

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And of course it's not going to work if you're not matching the treatment to the cause. Right. Brilliant. Yeah. Yeah. Makes total sense.

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So then, um, talking about sleep AIDS, melatonin, uh, for sleep and circadian rhythm disorders,

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we really, uh, don't recommend there's no evidence for more than three milligrams working. Yeah.

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Uh, sometimes melatonin has many actions throughout the body.

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It's also anti-inflammatory it's antioxidant.

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People might want to take it for other conditions.

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And that's a really exciting area of research is using it for cardiovascular disease and osteoporosis

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and reproductive disorders and just whole other classes of disorders.

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But for that sleep and circadian, uh, 0.5 to three milligrams most, and the timing makes a big

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difference in the effect and the dosage.

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Um, and it's really, there is a science to melatonin and the use of melatonin that is just really

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not, um, discussed or shared by the, um, the companies that are pushing melt over the counter melatonin.

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So if you want to do melatonin, I would actually check with a licensed healthcare provider who

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knows, you know, what dose and when for the kinds of So I'm, um, I've gone to my doctor to do

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some blood work for, because what's happening with me, Catherine is I'm sleeping my eight to nine hours.

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And then I wake up, I'm still exhausted.

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I mean, I wake up before my alarm goes off, but I'm just like exhausted.

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And I find myself, um, I could sleep for two hours in the afternoon.

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I mean, sometimes even at 10 in the morning, I'm like exhausted.

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I, I, I don't think it's a physical thing and it's, I'm not going to go into, uh, I think it's

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more anxiety and stress and maybe a little depression, but my doctor has, um, done some blood

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work and it's all coming back. Fine.

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And so she says, maybe you need a sleep test because maybe you have sleep apnea and you don't know it.

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And so I really liked what you said about, because I am almost, well, it'd be 62 in three days

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and I've gone through menopause and I've had some restless leg and magnesium really seemed to help that.

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But, uh, so, and I don't have sleep apnea. I don't snore.

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I don't do those things.

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So she goes, no, you know, if we can't find anything, let's, let's do a sleep test on you.

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So you've sort of convinced me that maybe I've got some other issues there that, um, I I'm in denial of.

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Yeah, I think that's a good idea.

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The thing is both estrogen and progesterone, which decline, um, across menopause.

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So they're much lower, um, is, um, excuse me, estrogen actually helps us keep the tone of our tissue.

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We can observe that in our external body, but people don't think about it also affects your airway.

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So your airway also loses its tone because of the, the lower estrogen, the progesterone actually is a respiratory.

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Um, it, it improves our respiratory drive, our, our breathing, our drive to breathe.

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So that is also decreased.

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So you've got some very real mechanisms that would increase our risk of obstructive sleep apnea as we age.

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Oh my gosh, that's fascinating.

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So with the obstructive sleep apnea, is that like, I don't wake myself up snoring that when

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you say, when you talk about sleep apnea, that's what I think about, you know, someone going

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like, you know, like snorting themselves awake or something.

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I don't, I don't wake up during the night and let's have to go to the bathroom.

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So that's why I'm like, I don't have sleep apnea.

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And she's like, well, you never know. Yeah.

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People can, people can sleep.

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What's happening with obstructive sleep apnea is we have these little 10 minute, 10 second or more apneic pauses. They're called.

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And if you have 10, if you have five or more of those an hour, then that is considered apnea.

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And it can get really severe.

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People can have 35, 40 of these apneic pauses an hour.

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They can last much longer than 10 seconds. 10 seconds is the minimum for the definition, but

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they could last 30 seconds or more.

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And people are not necessarily going to wake themselves up out of it.

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And it really can have impacts on your overall health, particularly metabolic disorder and diabetes

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type conditions, blood pressure can be increased, stroke risk, heart attack risk also increased.

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So you do want to get it addressed. Thank you so much.

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I mean, I, you just don't hear about these things, you know, it's just like, and you know, there's

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so much information we're just in overload of information era.

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And so, you know, is this good? Is that good? Is this good?

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But I've never had anyone explain sleep apnea.

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Cause you always think about, you know, these, these, you know, they say as you get older and

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you get heavier or whatever, and, and you, you snore really loudly when you have sleep apnea.

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And I, you know, I don't, I don't never been told I snore.

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If I do, it's just like a little sinus thing that I've got going on.

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So, oh my gosh, that was fascinating. That was so fascinating.

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So, okay. We're going to pause here a second, cause I need to edit this out.

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What else would you like to say before we wrap up?

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And I'm not talking about like the wrap up thing, but is there any other important points that

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we should touch on before we wrap up that you'd like to tell the audience?

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I think that's, I think that's good.

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I mean, we got some good information out there. Yeah.

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I think that was, and thank you so much.

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Cause I don't know a lot about this issue, so I sort of stumbled through it.

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But you just have done a really great job of bringing some things to light that I never, ever

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would have even thought up.

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And I'm going to go get a sleep test now. Okay.

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So back to our regularly scheduled program.

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So that was so good.

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You know, I just learned so much and I am going to go get a sleep test now.

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I'm going to do what my doctor told me to do, especially after you talked about what sleep apnea,

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what our general perception of sleep apnea is not.

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So before we finish up our conversation, Catherine, is there anything you'd like to tell my

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listeners about, you know, if there's something you've got going on and then any parting words

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of wisdom that you have for us?

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Yeah, so I have a series of online sleep courses that have been customized to the needs of people in different circumstances.

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So I do have a course that is targeted for families, talks about sleep problems kind of across the lifespan.

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I do have another one that's targeted for the needs of women.

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And you can see a couple other populations that I have customized courses for you.

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So you can find those at skillsleeper.com.

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I also have a freebie, which is a sleep plan.

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You can download and then a free webinar that can lead you through building your own sleep plan.

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And that would be a good starting place for people who are curious,

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and the things that I'm trying to