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Everything is worse at three in the morning.

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There's that to-do list piling up or that early clinic you've got to make,

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or that thing you said to your colleague that you just can't stop thinking about.

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These worries just pile up at night and that's on top of that cheeky glass

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of wine late at night or that piece of cheese or that doom scrolling when all

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you meant to do was set your alarm.

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And we are constantly told how important getting a good night's sleep is,

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particularly in a high stakes job.

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But it's easier said than done, and it does feel like something

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we don't have much control over.

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So this week in our summer wellbeing series, I'm joined by Dr. Steve Smith.

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He's a GP and a self-certified insomniac, and he's developed some training to

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help people get a good night's sleep.

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Now Steve has worked extensively in the field of substance abuse, and he's

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previously been on the podcast talking about the importance of forgiveness,

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particularly as a mental health strategy, and he's found some unexpected connections

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between substance abuse and sleep, and he's sharing some of his tried and

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tested strategies as well as some new and surprising ways to improve both the

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quality and the quantity of your sleep.

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Spoiler alert is not just about REM sleep.

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So grab yourself a hot, milky drink, preferably without any caffeine

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if it's after midday, and enjoy this conversation with Steve.

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And if you want to start putting his advice into practice, stay tuned

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for an exclusive discount on his course, especially for Frog listeners.

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If you're in a high stress, high stakes, still blank medicine, and you're feeling

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stressed or overwhelmed, burning out or getting out are not your only options.

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I'm Dr. Rachel Morris, and welcome to You Are Not a Frog.

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Well, hello, I'm Dr. Steve Smith.

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I am a GP and for two or three decades I've been working as a GP specialist

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in substance misuse in addiction.

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but in more recent years I have been working, on the subjects of sleep

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and have a great interest in sleep.

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And I'm currently working in a clinic in North London where a big part of our

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work is helping people with sleep issues.

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great to have you back on the podcast, Steve, 'cause you've been here

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before talking about forgiveness.

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Coming up to a year ago.

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Gosh.

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And I, it is interesting 'cause that was a big part of your work with,

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um, people with addiction as well.

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You found forgiveness was a real, a real thing that people needed to

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sort of get to the bottom of it.

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Is that the same reason why you got into sleep and stuff like that?

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I think sleep, sleep is very much a big part of why people

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are addicted to substances.

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But one of the, my main interests in sleep is my own personal journey with insomnia.

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So I've, I've described myself as having been a certified insomniac.

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So, um, that's, that's been a big motivator to, to, to study it more,

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to look into it and, you know, done a lot of reading, attended

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seminars, uh, and and so on.

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So that's, that's, um, so it's been, been professional and

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personal interest in sleep.

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how long have you been a, a certified professional insomniac for?

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So when, when did your issues with Sleeping first start?

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I, I was actually thinking about that 'cause I was, I and I, I've, I've

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thought about it a, a number of times.

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I really cannot remember having any sleep issues as a child.

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But what I really, really remember having, when I really ha remember having

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sleep problems was as a junior doctor.

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We, I know as you, as you know, we used to work sometimes

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these ridiculously long shifts.

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I remember starting on a Saturday morning when I did a one in four weekend and

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I was always on call on Monday nights.

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Um, so I would, I would start on Saturday morning doing a busy surgical job

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where there were always things going on during the night or very often.

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And then I would go home on Tuesday, five o'clock crash and would you believe it?

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I was on call Mondays and Wednesdays.

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And so then, then I would have, then I would work from Wednesday

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morning till Thursday evening.

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So it was just an exhausting job.

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And, and then when there were opportunities to sleep, whether it

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was between cases in the middle of the night or when I got home, I was just

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so often obsessed with, I've gotta sleep, gotta sleep, that I absolutely

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had good doses of sleep anxiety.

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So yeah, uh, it's been on and off over the years.

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but I, I really understand the issue of sleep anxiety, which, which is one

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of the major causes of, of insomnia.

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Because you don't often hear much about that, do you?

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When when people talk about sleep, they talk about sleep hygiene, yeah, yeah,

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we all pretty much know what to do.

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But the sleep anxiety and it exists.

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I'm literally thinking about three times in the last month where I've

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had exactly that where my daughter hap had an operation on her foot, so we're

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having to get up really early to get her to the mini bus to get to school.

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I'm not sleeping so well 'cause I'm waking up and checking my clock.

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I was doing a keynote talk in Edinburgh.

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It started at 8 45.

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I had a really nice hotel.

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It was really comfortable.

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I hardly slept a wink that night because I was so worried about missing

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my alarm to get up to to do it.

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It was just a bit mad really.

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So it sleep anxiety, something that happens to everybody or just a few

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people, or It happens to most people occasionally, but there are some

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few people that get it really bad?

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What I would say is it's a major cause of anxiety and it is totally,

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ugh, not totally, but it's largely overlooked and poorly understood.

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And I think also by medical professionals, by healthcare professionals.

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And I, I was at St. George's Hospital in the 1980s, actually

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the seventies, let's be honest.

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where I was at medical school and it was a particular medical school where sleep was

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taught probably better than other places.

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But we didn't have very much about sleep at all.

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And the only lesson, the only lecture I can remember on sleep.

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Sleep hygiene.

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That's all we were told.

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Yeah, tell them, you know, not to drink too much coffee and maybe,

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maybe have a milky drink and exercise here and there and all those things

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that maybe we can talk about.

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'Cause they're, they are important.

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I mean, they, they, they are part of, what people need to tackle, but it's

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not, it's not the most important thing.

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It's, it is, it's, the way I look at how to help people is, is, is there's

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various steps in, in how I help people.

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And one, one of them is sleep hygiene, which needs to be looked at early on.

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But, but absolutely is the anxiety of not sleeping that is

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what really keeps people awake.

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And people, time and time again, especially when I'm, when I'm

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working in an addiction clinic, people just don't get that.

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'cause they, they've learned.

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They've taught themselves that it's substances that they

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need to, to get through life.

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And, and of course it's not, not, that's, that's true for so many people,

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whether or not they go to a drug clinic.

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And they've learned that, yeah, if I take this, I sleep well.

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And if I don't take it, I don't, I don't sleep.

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Um, and so this, they take a lot of persuading that anxiety is an issue and

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I'm, that's the clinic I'm working in now.

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I'm working in a clinic now where we're helping people manage,

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prescribed benzos that's a and another and opiates and z drugs.

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And it's, it's a big lesson to, for them to learn that it's sleep anxiety.

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'Cause, 'cause so often when people have been taking a substance.

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whether it's prescribed or it's illicit or whatever, the, the substance has

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actually stopped working a long time ago.

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It's, it's, it's lost its benefit, but it's, it's the reason why they don't

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sleep when they don't take their, whatever it is, they have their, their

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cannabis, alcohol, promethazine, whatever it is, the reason why sleep is poor

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is, is because they're thinking, oh no, I haven't had my sleeping tablet.

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I'm not gonna sleep well.

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like most things in life, the, the root is all up here, isn't it?

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It's the way we think about everything and, and, and what's going for us, and

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those underlying concerns and worries.

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Absolutely.

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I mean, I've heard you talking about things at different times, um, in

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relation to stress management and so on.

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the whole Chimp Paradox, you know, the limbic system, it's a

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big part of, of sleep management

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And it's really interesting 'cause I must say, yeah, I haven't

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really heard about it before.

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So obviously there's a, a great book, Matthew Walker, why We Sleep, you

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know, fantastic and recommend everybody to, I think every single healthcare

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professional should read that, not just for themselves, but so they

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can advise their patients about it.

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So, um, quick, quick summary.

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Let's just give it like a one minute summary, um, Steve,

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of why we need to sleep.

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So I wanna go on and talk more about sleep anxiety, but let's get out of the way,

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first of all, why sleep is important.

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And number two, quick, you know, 32nd summary of sleep hygiene.

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'cause I think, you know, we, we just need to know it.

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And then it's, let's look at the thing that actually really makes a difference.

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So why sleep?

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Important quick

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my goodness.

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That, that's such a big subject.

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Okay.

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It's so important for, for our life, for our health, for

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our wellbeing, for creativity.

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So just quickly for our life, you did, did you know that if you

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consistently sleep less than five hours at night, Your, your risk of

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death from all causes is 15% greater.

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If you sleep less consistently, sleep less than six hours, at night, you,

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you have a 30% increased risk of cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

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One is 55% more likely to be obese if you're sleeping less than seven

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hours actually compared to somebody who sleeps more than seven hours.

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One really big deal.

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I mean, this is really big, a really big deal for healthcare professionals who

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are managing people in general practice.

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It's, I really like to stress that mental health and insomnia

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are a two-way street because.

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We were all taught in medical school that somebody's come, somebody

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presents with insomnia, oh, they must be depressed, probably depressed.

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And, and that was certainly how I used to think.

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I mean, that's how I, I, I understood most GPs thinking that they're not sleeping.

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Well, why are they depressed?

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Let's put 'em on antidepressants.

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And what's really interesting is how many people are anxious or depressed,

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primarily because they've got insomnia.

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Gosh.

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And it is, it's, and that's so overlooked, um, by so many.

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And they are depressed.

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They are depressed, but, and so the antidepressants will probably help.

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But, but the, but the primary issue is, is, is the insomnia.

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Memory.

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uh, dementia.

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So we detox, our brains are busy detoxing, uh, ourselves of beta amyloid, you the

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protein that's, uh, associated with Alzheimer's in the brain during the night.

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And there are so many stories of, of people just not sleeping

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and, and obviously dementia's common anyway, but it's very like,

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closely linked with, poor sleep.

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I mean, I remember in the 1980s, uh, I don't, you know, there might be

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others listening to this, remembering about the power of, of power naps.

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You know, you could sleep, you could, you could rest for 10 minutes and have

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the equivalent of two hours sleep.

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And that just seemed amazing.

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And I think that's how people like Margaret Thatcher got by,

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just by, working all night, having these little power nap and, and

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functioning, but massive correlation with, with memory loss and dementia.

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So that, that, are those a few good reasons,

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Gosh, that that's good enough for me.

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Yeah.

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yeah.

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And, and just productivity, creativity, um, um, they're massive as well.

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It's just the, it's the laying down of memories and the solving of problems

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and things that particularly happens in your REM sleep, doesn't it?

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And I think for me, yes, let's, let's get rid of all the AM amyloid.

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But actually, if you wanna have an impact, if you want to solve

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problems and, and feel better, you need a good night's sleep.

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So there's stuff we can do.

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And if I was to list sleep hygiene as a, if I remember back to my GP days,

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it's make, make the bedroom really dark.

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Make it cold-ish, you know, not too well, not too cold, but not too hot either.

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Um, don't have any caffeine from midday.

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'cause the half, the half life of caffeine is six hours.

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So you'll still have aquar, quarter of the strong cup of

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I thought it was eight

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system, or

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Yeah.

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Or well, whatever.

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Yeah, it's,

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yeah.

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So avoid caffeine and, and chocolate and stuff like that before bed.

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Um, sound, you know, go somewhere quiet.

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Um, go to bed at the same time.

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Get up at the, get up at the same time.

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Absolutely.

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Yes.

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we are really conditionable creatures, you know, we all know Pavlov's,

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Pavlov's dogs and, and, and we can do so much to condition ourselves

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to, to sleep, to sleep well.

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Um, and so you, you mentioned things about the bedroom, have the bedroom cool, dark,

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um, have a good sleeping environment, but, but, but have the bed bedroom.

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Only associated in your mind with, with sleep and intimacy and nothing else.

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No.

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Scrolling through your, and, and get, keep, get your

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phone away from your bedroom.

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Uh, oh my goodness.

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But, um, you know, when, when people are watching TV, even reading, studying,

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working, scrolling through Instagram, whatever it may be in the bedroom,

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we condition ourselves to be awake.

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And that's not even taking into account the blue light, which maybe,

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um, is also not insignificant.

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So, so all those things that we've discussed, really important.

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You've mentioned rhythm, and I think I, I, I like to con consider

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rhythm as such a massive subject in itself that it, that it warrants.

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A whole, whole discussion, a whole course, a whole, um,

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session because it's so important.

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Yes.

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Get, let's get up, let's get up consistently, get up in a good time in the

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morning and go to bed at the same time.

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'Cause 'cause then we're, I mean, do we wanna talk about the, the sleep drive?

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But the, there's two, two things that are important for sleep drive and one of them

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is circadian rhythm and that's massive.

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And so if we, if we can be consistent in when we are getting

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up, that will really help.

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And then conversely when we go to bed.

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But also resting, you know, re that, that's, um, I like to say the fight

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for the night is fought in the day and, and, and, and so we need to have

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a rhythm of rest during the day as well as during the night and during the week.

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You know, I've heard you talking about rest and, and to rest during

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the day, to rest during the week, have a day off during the week to have.

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vacation to have a holiday during the year.

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I mean, I think people who don't have a holiday, uh, they have

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the same increased cardiovascular risk as people who sleep badly.

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And, and there's probably a massive overlap.

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You, you, you are, you are 30% more likely to have a cardiovascular

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event if you, if you're somebody who doesn't have a holiday.

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Well, if you're somebody who doesn't have a holiday, there's probably a

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per, you're probably a personality type that's not gonna sleep.

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So there's probably different factors that play there.

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But, but yeah, lot, lots, lots of things under, under the heading of sleep hygiene.

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But, but they're all important.

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But, but I think rhythm is massive

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Gosh, there's a lot.

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There's a lot there that I'm quite interested in actually.

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Well, first of all, if I, I'm quite knackered, if I had a few late nights.

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Are you saying that actually it would be better for me to get up

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at 7 o'clock on a Saturday morning than to stay in bed for those two

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extra hours if I can till 9 o'clock?

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Well, there's something called, social jet lag, and I can't remember

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the name of the psychologist.

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It's a German psychologist who coined that phrase.

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Now, if, if, if it is, you know, one off.

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Yeah, then yeah, sure.

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That's, that's fine.

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You had a late night and yeah, we'll sleep in, if it's a regular pattern, which is

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for a lot of people, it's, it's, it's a massive problem for a lot of people,

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they work really hard during the week.

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They get up at five in the morning, four in the morning,

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whatever time it is, go to work.

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And then, then it's tg.

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IF thank God it's Friday party, Friday late nights watching movies.

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Same again Saturday.

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and you've just shifted your body clock.

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You might as well have flown to mo to Greece or somewhere, you know, you've,

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you've gone forward, you put your, your, um, clock forward three hours or whatever.

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and then suddenly you wanna go to bed early on Sunday and then get up early on

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Monday and it, and it's, it doesn't work.

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So, so if you're doing, if you're doing what you described on a

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regular basis and you are sleeping badly, then that's something that

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absolutely needs to be addressed.

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And, and there's a phrase for it as, as I say,

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Social jet like that, that makes a lot of sense to me.

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Okay, thank you.

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That's useful.

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One question students.

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Yeah, gosh.

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The other thing I wanted to ask you about was rest.

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So are you saying that if you are totally knackered, you've really not had any

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time to rest in the week, I would've thought, well, you're gonna sleep almost

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better 'cause you're so knackered.

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Are you saying that actually if you've not been taking the time to rest,

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the quality of your sleep is worse?

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Or you don't get to sleep as easily or you're gonna wake

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up earlier in the morning?

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Yeah, it's, it's a, it is a complex answer.

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Helping people to sleep better can involve deliberate sleep deprivation.

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So one of the most common ways of treating people, and I don't think

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it's necessarily the be all and end all is, is, is sleep restriction.

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Actually, that's, that's the phrase.

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So, so we can improve the quality or, or the technical term is the term is the

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efficiency of our sleep by restricting our sleep and then we sleep better.

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So, so to a degree that we can use that.

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But, but what is, what is bad is, is when, is when we vary

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enormously vary what we do.

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For example, during the week as compared to the weekend.

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If that's a regular pattern, that's not good.

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There, there are, there are various myths at play out there.

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I've mentioned one, one that I bought into is that, you know,

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you can have these power naps.

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Another myth is that you can catch up with lost sleep at the weekend

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and maybe to a degree you can, but you, you once sleep's lost, it's

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lost and you pay a price for it.

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So yeah, you know, if you, you get yourself exhausted during the week,

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well yes, you probably will sleep well.

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There's, we, we have rebound REM.

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you know, we, we are programmed if you like to get a certain amount of REM sleep.

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And if we deprive ourselves of sleep, then we sort of catch up with it.

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So there's a degree of catching up, which is an interesting subject.

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Because a lot of people, it's really important for people to understand

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that whole concept of REM rebound.

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A lot of people take substances to, to sleep well, or so they think

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they actually to sedate themselves.

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And I like to point out that there's a big difference

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between sedation and good sleep.

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And when they're, when they're sedated with substances, cannabis, alcohol,

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whatever it may be, they're not getting the REM sleep that, that, that they need.

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And then, so when they stop taking the alcohol cannabis, they, they

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have a, a REM rebound, and then they have these vivid dreams, and then

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they have these nightmares and, and then, and then they'll think, oh my

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goodness, I need, I need the cannabis.

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I need the alcohol to stop, stop these terrible nightmares, which

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is what I have certainly seen repeatedly, um, in the clinics.

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So sleep restriction has its place, but it's not something that that's, that's

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good when it's uneven, as it were.

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So are we saying then that REM sleep is literally the holy grail of sleeping?

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That's what we're really trying to get as much of as possible.

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No,

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Oh, okay.

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I always, I always believed that.

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'cause when I had some sleep tracker on, I was like, it was pretty

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low on REM, but, you know, high on the other things, but, okay.

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What type of sleep are we aiming for then?

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We, what we want is a nice good cycle.

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We want a good cycle.

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We want, we want the, the different, the four phases of sleep.

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We want, we want light sleep.

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We want deep sleep and, and we wanna come outta deep sleep with REM sleep.

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And you, you referenced creativity and, and the benefits

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to our emotional wellbeing.

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During REM sleep, that's massive.

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But during deep sleep where we're out of it.

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there's a lot of restoration going, a lot of muscle rebuilding.

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I, I think I'm right in saying that there's a surge in, um, growth

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hormone during, during sleep in general, but during deep sleep, a

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lot of muscle repair takes place.

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A lot of, you know, just mentioned the benefits of sleep, muscle repair.

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Athletes are much more likely to have accidents, to have, to have injuries,

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sorry if, if they don't sleep.

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So, um, and that, and there's, you know, various things there.

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There's muscle repair, there's coordination.

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Talking of, um, being poorly coordinated.

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When we're sleep deprived, we might as well be intoxicated with alcohol, and

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that, and that's something to, to re remember when you've got doctors that have

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been working really long shifts in mental, mental ability and, and coordination

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is impaired by poor sleep, just in the same way as it is with alcohol.

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But no.

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So yeah, we want, we want rem sleep, we want deep sleep and,

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and we want the light sleep.

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And, and actually understanding what light sleep is, is, has been for me and

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for many people, a game changer as well.

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Recognizing that light sleep is on the edge of consciousness.

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' Cause a lot of people are in, are in light sleep and they're cognizant, they're

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thinking things and that what they can be thinking is, oh no, I'm not sleeping,

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when actually they're in light sleep.

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so when you've, when all night you think, I just haven't slept a wink all

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night, you probably, you know, without being like, thing I'm, I'm awake.

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But actually it's likely that for quite a lot of that, if you haven't

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been like, just looking around and thinking, should I get up or not?

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But you, you've just been conscious, you've been thinking all night.

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That might be because you've been in light sleep, not because

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you've actually been awake.

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Yes.

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There there's two conditions that are worth thinking about in relation to

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insomnia, and you've mentioned sleep tracking and, and then we could bring

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sleep tracking into the, into this.

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There's ortho insomnia and paradoxical insomnia.

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Now I absolutely remember, see, I can think of one particular case of

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what we call paradoxical insomnia, where somebody believes themselves

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to have slept badly and they have in fact slept a whole lot better.

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I just remember being on the ward.

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I was a, I was, it's my very first house job.

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Um, and just, I remember somebody snoring heavily on the ward.

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I was working during the night and then on the ward round in the morning,

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he just told me how badly he'd slept.

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And I thought, no, you didn't.

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And, and yeah, we don't remember how well we sleep.

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And that's, that's one thing, but also a lot of sleep is light sleep.

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And so if we, if we're anxious about not sleeping, we can be remembering

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when we were in light sleep thinking we were not sleeping and, and

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then counting that as poor sleep.

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So that's one of the bene there, there's pros and cons of where

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of, of, of, um, sleep trackers.

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So I've mentioned paradoxical insomnia.

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The, the value of a sleep tracker can be, and I, and I've really benefited from this

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myself in the past, is whether it's on a phone or a watch, one of the benefits is,

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looking back and thinking, oh my goodness.

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the night wasn't half as bad as I thought it was.

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And that happens so often.

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So that's so, so it is good to track your sleep, but when you start looking

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at it every, when you, well, when, when you wake up in the morning, think,

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oh no, I didn't have enough sleep.

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I didn't have enough REM, I had too much this, too little of that, then the

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whole obsession with sleep, which is what a lot of people get, particularly

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with sleep trackers, is, is in itself a cause of sleep, anxiety and insomnia.

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So I've, I've heard a number of people, uh, one person in particular in a sleep,

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sleep therapist saying, no, no to sleep trackers, but they have their place.

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But, but use them with care.

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I mean, it's, I think the same goes with blood pressure monitors.

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People start getting really anxious about their blood pressures when they're

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checking their blood pressure and

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well, any sort of monitoring, right?

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It makes you more obsessed with the figures and then you end up treating the

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figures and not, not the thing that's going on and that, that, that makes sense.

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So not a good idea to use sleep trackers unless you're sort of really needing

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it for a certain thing, perhaps.

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Or if you're the sort of person that's gonna get a bit obsessed

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by it and get worried by it,

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Yeah, I, I would say I, I'd say it's, it is often got a place, actually,

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'cause I think there's a lot of people who can be reassured by it.

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But what you've gotta do, you've just gotta do it.

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Use it with care.

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And it gives you good data, doesn't it?

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Because you can see how alcohol would affect your REM sleep or things like that.

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And that, that was one of my big disappointing discoveries is just

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the effect of alcohol in your sleep.

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And that's the one thing that's maybe cut right down, because even

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just after one unit, two units, your sleep is really disrupted,

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which is so depressing, isn't it

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is.

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but, um, and of course there are people who will use the alcohol to get to

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sleep, but even people who don't have an issue with alcohol, as you say, have

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got to be aware that they're not gonna, they're gonna knock their rem yeah,

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as you say, even with a small amount.

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Well there's, that's another reason for eating early.

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Okay.

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We, we, we mentioned mentioned, um, sleep hygiene, go backtrack to sleep hygiene.

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Eating suppresses melatonin.

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So if we're eating a big meal late in the evening and having a drink with

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it, then let's not expect to have the best night's sleep, let alone

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the dyspepsia we might be having.

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it did make me laugh when I read, um, Matthew Walker's book about

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why we sleep, the, the one piece of advice they gave about alcohol.

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They said, well, you know, we can't in any good conscience say that it's

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okay to drink alcohol for sleep, but we can say that if you get drink

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alcohol, drink it at nine o'clock in the morning because it'll be out

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your system by the night, I'm, yeah,

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So, okay, so we've got these different types of, insomnia.

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We've talked a little bit about, about sleep hygiene.

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One of the reasons I think people get difficulty sleeping or that the reason

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I find difficult sleeping is when you're suddenly waking up worrying about stuff.

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and that does interfere with my sleep sometimes.

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But now you've mentioned the sleep anxiety.

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I'm wondering whether it all sort of.

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Interacts and in and intermingles.

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So what do you think actual anxiety is a more common sleep

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blocker than sleep anxiety?

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Or do you think sleep anxiety has a, has an even bigger role than we thought?

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Well, they're all interrelated.

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One thing I would say is that, you know, recovery from sleep, and I use that word

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recovery 'cause I, I liken it almost to drug and alcohol recovery is, it's

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a journey and it's not a quick fix.

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Um, I've heard you talking, I heard you talking once about the fact that

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you are a, you help people manage stress, but you, there was a time when

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you were talking about how you were drifting into, into stress yourself,

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and, and we can know all the answers, uh, but I, it, it happens to us all.

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And I, for the me routine is a really big deal when I've lost my routine and

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then life is frantic, i've got lots of things on my mind, they may not, they may

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not necessarily be bad things, actually.

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They may just be busy things.

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A lot of things I'm thinking about planning.

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when my, when my head is, when I'm frantic, I'd say it's being

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frantic is, is a massive issue.

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Whether or not it's things you're actually anxious about.

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But yes, it's, it's a big, it's an interplay.

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So you could be anxious about, you can be anxious about whatever it is, your health,

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your, your, your, your relationships, finances, whatever it may be.

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And so of course that that's gonna be a big deal.

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So, so that's why I like to say the fight for the night is sports in the

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day, let's, let's, let's make time in the day to manage our anxieties so that

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when we wake up in the night, we can think, yeah, I've, I've parked that one.

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And, I'll tell you one massive game changer for me and this, this isn't,

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I haven't, I, I, I came across it and I hadn't a while back, and I've not

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heard anybody else say, this is during the night when you are asleep, your

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prefrontal cortex activity is suppressed.

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And I thought, wow, isn't that, that's such a big deal.

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'Cause, 'cause again, you've, you talk about chimp brain and human brain.

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Well, our human brain goes to sleep before our chimp brain does.

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And, do I, do we, do we need to talk about what that means?

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I think probably a lot of people know that, but you know, our, our, our,

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our limbic system, our amygdalas are, are, are, are much busier than our,

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our thinking brains during the night.

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So that's just say, that's our threat detection system.

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So the thing that's gonna, uh, make you feel anxious and worried and

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detect threats all over the place.

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So they, that, that's what you're talking about when talking about

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the chimp brain, the, the amygdala versus the prefrontal cortex, which

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is the rational side of things.

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So, so, and, and again, you know, when, when you, when you're lying awake and you

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can rationalize, when you can, when you, when you've got enough, consciousness to

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think, right, I'm anxious, I'm thinking about this stuff, but it's, I, I can

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actually, I can actually, I, I've done this now and it really helps, is I, I

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think, right, I don't, I don't, I can't, I'm not in a good place to think about

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what might, what, whatever it might be, this, this meeting that's coming

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up because I'm not using my prefrontal cortex, and I've been able to do that in

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light sleep and, and, and think, right, I'm gonna park it, leave it for tomorrow.

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Takes a lot of practice.

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That's where learning to be mindful comes in, I believe.

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But, but, but a big, a massive interplay between anxiety, sleep

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anxiety, and again, it's, it goes back to what I was saying earlier.

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There's a, it's a two-way street.

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Men, good mental health, poor mental health, and insomnia are a two-way street.

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One causes the other both directions.

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So I mentioned it in relation to depression earlier on, but of course,

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exactly the same applies to anxiety.

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I was in India and I saw this man with a t-shirt It, it just said in

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the daytime, I don't believe in ghosts at nighttime, I'm more open-minded.

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I thought, yes, that's, that's, that, that's exactly it.

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Um,

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Or we start just completely catastrophizing and worrying

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about stuff that, and I think sometimes your brain just even

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looks around things to worry about.

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Um, which is quite uncanny, isn't it?

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That's why useful to keep like a piece of paper by your bed.

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So I was thinking, well, I'm just gonna write it down and I'll make

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sure I worry about that tomorrow.

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So don't worry in a chimp or amygdala, I'll worry about that

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tomorrow and then tomorrow I'm like, oh, that's, that's not important.

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But I think that's, that's useful because we worry then we worry about

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the worry and then we worry about not sleeping and then we get ourselves

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mixed up in the right old muddle.

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And I guess that's, that's part of the problem with sleep anxiety.

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So we worry about not sleeping and then we worry about worrying about not sleeping.

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Before you know it, you've got a million worries all over the fact

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that, yeah, you might not have enough sleep for tomorrow or you might miss

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your alarm or, or something like that.

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What can we do if, like, if, like me, you've gotta suddenly get up really early

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because you've got keynote talk or you're gonna miss a plane, or you know, so you've

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got less than normal, you've got a early deadline and you lie awake all night.

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Or the second one, I guess is for somebody that has had a lot of trouble

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sleeping in their lives, and then it just becomes a chronic, oh gosh, am I

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going to, am I gonna get sleep tonight?

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How am I sleeping?

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All that sort of stuff.

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So do you manage those in two completely different ways?

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Or is it the same sort of thing either way?

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Yeah.

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I, I think you, you, you, you manage things together and I think you've,

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we've gotta talk about people who have chronic insomnia versus people whom

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it's just an intermittent problem.

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One thing that's really helpful to recognize is that actually it's

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not the end of the day, if you really sleep particularly well.

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You know, we can function.

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I mean, I remember one of my worst nights, actually, this is before I

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was working as a junior doctor, so maybe, this was a medical student.

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I remember the day before my pediatrics exam.

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And I, I just had this sudden thought at 8:00 PM that I, I, I

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dunno anything about pediatrics.

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And I literally stayed awake all night.

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Re I was up, I was up reading pediatrics textbook.

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Stupid.

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I mean, it just, you know, but I, I thought I've got to go through it and,

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um, and, um, but yeah, the exam went fine and it, the point being that we,

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we c if it is an occasional bad meeting, occasional meeting, and we're thinking,

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um, oh, I've gotta go to sleep well for, for that meeting tomorrow, we can also

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tell ourselves, well, even if I don't, it's not gonna be the end of the world.

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But that, so that, that's for, for, for, for the occasional.

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Um, bout of insomnia.

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For the, for the chronic in insomniac, it's, it's, it's different.

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We, we need to be more, you know, we need to be more purposeful in managing

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that on a, on a daily basis, I'd say.

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So what sort of techniques would you be recommending to people

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for, for that sort of thing?

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I, I, I have a, a, a four step approach.

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I, we, we've talked a bit about the sleep science and I, I think

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understanding sleep science is important.

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We've talked about sleep hygiene and that and that, and I would,

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that's another key thing.

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And then rhythm and then, and then what, what we massively need to

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do, having done the other things, arguably, arguably first, is to work

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on what I call having a sleep mindset.

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What I think is massive, absolute game changer.

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Is something called a, it's a more modern therapy.

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It's called Accept Acceptance and commitment therapy.

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And when we spoke, I think, I think it was May last year, so it was coming up

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to a year ago, we talked a bit about accepting the things that we can't

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control, having the courage to change the things that we can, and that's such

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a massive, massive part of my journey, and, and, and those that I have, I've

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helped to, to come to, to, um, a better place with in terms of life in general.

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But, um, in terms of bed sleeping better in particular.

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Learning to relax about the things that, that I don't have any control over.

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I don't have, nor do you, nor does anybody listening to this, generally speaking,

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we do not have the ability to say, right, I'm gonna lie down now and go to

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sleep unless you're totally exhausted.

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You can't choose to go to sleep at, I'm gonna go to sleep at 10:30 PM tonight.

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It's not within my skillset.

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And so if I learn to accept that and don't fight against that desire to

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go to sleep, I've gotta, I've gotta fall asleep, I've gotta fall asleep.

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I've don't fall asleep.

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I'm gonna be so tired if I learn to accept that, I can't control that, but

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what I can do is I can control the things that are within my skillset are what

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we talked about in terms of, our sleep environment and how much caffeine we

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drink and so on, and my, and then I can control what I choose to think about,

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and I can control how much rest I take then, then sleep probably will follow

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And so is there any other way that ACT therapy helps?

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Because I think I, I love ACT therapy and when, when I've sort of heard

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about it before, I think I've read a couple of books about it, one of the

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things that has been really powerful for me is being able to choose

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the thoughts that you latch onto.

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So sort of accepting the thoughts that's there and either just, and, and

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trying to detach yourself from, oh, I, I'm noticing I'm having the thought,

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or I am thinking rather than, or I am stressed, or I'm thinking I'm stressed.

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I'm noticing I'm having the thought, I'm stressed.

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Therefore, that you're sort of distancing yourself each time.

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absolutely.

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What particular distancing things have you found have helped you

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when it comes to the sleep?

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An anxiety.

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What's the sort of changing in the thinking that's helped?

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there are a couple of things, and the first thing you've just, first

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thing you've mentioned is, is massive.

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Is, is, is, you know, as soon as we say to ourselves, oh, I'm having a, an

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anxious thought, ooh, I can feel my heart beating, I can feel the tension in my

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neck, or whatever it is, as soon as we describe our, describe what's going on,

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we have distanced ourself to some degree.

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So, and, and, um, the phrase that I love is, um, not being at

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the mercy of, of that thought.

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So, so choosing, choosing to notice it rather than be at the mercy of it.

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Um, so that's one part of, of, that's a big part of acceptance

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and commitment therapy.

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For those that are not familiar with it, it's, it's, it's, it's a therapy

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that came, was devised by somebody called Steven Hayes in the 1980s.

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So it's really relatively, um, recent.

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I mean, I feel it's based on ancient wisdom, but big part of it is just

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learning to, to be mindful, be observant.

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And the other thing is, is what, what Stephen Hayes is and, and his and his

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successors have really helped us to do is to, is to recognize that the things

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that we worry about don't actually have the power that we think they do.

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So what ACT therapists do is they encourage, encourage us to see

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our anxieties as monsters, sleep monsters, whatever it is, you know?

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And, and, and that, that has, that has been really helpful.

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So see it as a monster that, that can't actually hurt you.

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It's like, it's like a dog that's barking.

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It's really a really scary bark dog, but it's on a lead, it's chained.

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And so it can, it can bark really loudly, but it can't actually,

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you, you know, it can't bite you.

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And if you start thinking, yeah, that dog or that monster, um, it's, that's, it's

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keeping me awake, but it can't hurt me.

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And if I, if I, if I focus on it, if I bark back at the dog or the monster,

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it'll bark back even louder and it'll, and it'll, and then I'm on a downward spiral.

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And some people will say, recognize that okay, I'll thank my amygdala

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'cause it's trying to help me.

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You know, we, our amygdalas are lifesavers, aren't they

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in the right circumstances?

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And you're crossing a field and a bull's chasing you, thank, thank God for a,

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for the amygdala, which gives you then releases the adrenaline, which causes

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the adrenaline to come up, which means you escape from the t from the bull.

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But we don't want, we don't, we don't want its help at nighttime.

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And so we can thank the amygdala if we want to, um, and, and then

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just sort of diffuse the, the power of that sleep monster.

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So I think, I think, um, the, it, it's a, it's a silly picture,

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but I, I don't mean it silly.

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It's, you know, it, it sounds, sounds a bit inane, but it actually

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works to to see your anxiety as a monster that can't actually hurt you.

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And the fact that if you engage with that dog, the anxiety or the

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monster, that actually just, it just gets louder and louder and louder.

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You've just gotta ignore it.

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It's fascinating this, this sleep mindset stuff.

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If there have been any sort of quick hacks that have really helped you, any

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sort of mantras or quick shifts that have helped you with the, that sleep mindset

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and to get rid of your sleep anxiety?

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I, I mean there are some quick fixes and one is to believe that you can do it.

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I mean, what I say to people, I say any to anybody who.

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has insomnia.

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I'll say there probably was a day when you slept like a baby.

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Nobody had to teach you how to sleep when you were a baby so you can sleep.

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So, so many people, I've heard so many people tell me, I can't sleep.

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I'm deficient in something.

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I don't, my brain doesn't produce melatonin.

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I'm, whatever it may be.

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I think they've got a lot of people truly believe they've got a

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physical cause for their insomnia.

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And you say, no, you know, you, you've got what you need and

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you once slept like a baby.

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And to, to learn to believe that you can sleep like a baby again, that's maybe

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sometimes we can have breakthroughs.

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Absolutely we can have breakthroughs and we learn how to manage certain issues.

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But I thi I think what my, what I would encourage people who've got chronic

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insomnia and when we say chronic insomnia, we mean insomnia that's

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persisted for more than three days a week for more than three months.

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Um, I'd say well see it as a journey.

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And um, another little metaphor is, which I think is really helpful.

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is somebody paddling on a boat in a, on a, on a river where everything's

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lovely and the gr trees are green and the sky is blue, the bird

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singing, it's all very ni nice.

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You're in this paddle boat and behind you is a waterfall, and if

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you stop paddling, you'll be slowly dragged back into the waterfall.

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So for me and for people that I've, um, helped, I encourage

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just to see it as a journey.

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You're gonna keep paddling and it's very similar to people maybe who've had, who

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have got tendency towards an addictive behavior or or substance, whatever.

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It's, it's not there, there aren't many quick fixes.

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So how many people do actually have a medical condition

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that means they can't sleep?

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You know, what percentage of, of everyone with insomnia will find out that there is

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a sort of physical medical reason for it?

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Is it just tiny, tiny tiny percentage?

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Yeah, it's, it's, it's relatively small there, but there are a bunch of, um,

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sleep disorders and, and there will probably be people listening to this who

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have got, who've got physical issues.

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Now there's obstructive sleep apnea.

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and that's a physical issue, which is, which is really, it's really

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significant and it is often, it's badly, it's often not diagnosed.

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Is it 2% of women, 4% of males and, and, and increased with people with obesity.

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So there's not an insignificant number of people have.

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And, and there, there is a physical cause there's, there's intermittent,

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um, sort of partial collapsing of, of the airways, which causes intermittent

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choking and snoring, having snoring, which then wakes the person up.

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Sometimes they don't really realize that they've woken up

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and then they fall asleep again.

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But they've had significant impairment of, of the normal sleep rhythm.

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Um, there's restless leg syndrome, whether that's truly a physical issue,

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you know, the sleep movement disorders.

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And that affects a lot of people.

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And that's up to 10% of people actually.

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Um, sometimes, sometimes for them there's iron deficiency, which is a factor.

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And then, and then, yeah, there, there, there are circadian rhythm disorders,

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whether that's, uh, a physical cause, but, but it's, but it's a recognized issue.

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There's narcolepsy, there's, there's, there's various other

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sleep disorders, but, but, but the biggest problem with sleep that

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causes so much distress is insomnia.

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And the one, perhaps the most single, most important factor is sleep anxiety.

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Um, I guess that's good news, isn't it?

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Because that means that we can overcome it.

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That means it can get better.

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It's a journey.

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Just because you don't see it well now doesn't mean you are never going to

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be able to, but it's gonna take, gonna take a bit of time, gonna take a bit of

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effort, and I guess it's like everything.

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Wouldn't it be great if there was just pill you could take and totally cure it?

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Unfortunately, with sleeping, we, the pills often make it worse, don't they?

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Or, yeah, they cause they cause extra problems.

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But like you said, it's a journey.

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It takes work.

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But the great news is you're in control of it.

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If it's to do with the way we are thinking and what's in our mind,

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then there are things we can do.

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Yeah, and actually you, you asked about physical causes of insomnia.

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What I didn't think to say is, yeah, there's a lot of people

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who've got secondary insomnia.

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So insomnia is, there's different ways of categorizing it.

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And one way is primary versus secondary.

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And secondary is secondary to what may be a physical or, or a secondary, uh,

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physical or a mental primary cause.

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So, you know, we've talked a lot about the mental health issues that may be

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the underlying cause for insomnia, but of course there's a lot of people who

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can't sleep 'cause of pain, genuine pain.

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And, and so the clinic I am, working in at the moment in London is, is for people

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who are, have ended up on high doses of prescribed opiates and benzodiazepines.

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And so they, they will attribute their poor sleep to their backache,

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their sciatica, their postoperative pain, whatever it may be.

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And that probably is a factor, but actually.

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It always invariably becomes compounded and it becomes a mixed picture.

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And, and so the anxiety aggravates the pain and, and, and, and very

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often, even though there may be some genuine underlying pain that's

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coming into play, if we can deal with the, the mindset, then we can make

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things a whole lot more tolerable.

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And of course, a, a big part of pain management is, is the mindset as well.

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I know you've sort of mentioned mindfulness earlier on, but you know,

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that's a huge part of pain management as well, and I can imagine it's part of sleep

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management and, and everything like that.

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So just yet another reason why meditation, that sort of thing can be really helpful.

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Steve, there, there's so much we could talk about with this.

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Um, and in a minute, I know you've got a, a course that you've done.

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So anybody who wants to dig in deeper to this will be able to, do this

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course and that find out more and, and really hear some of your tips and

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techniques in, in much greater detail.

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Could you just share what was your top three things?

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You know, if, if someone came to you and they said, right,

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well, I'm, I'm struggling.

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I can't really find a cause.

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I'm not really, um, in, in any pain.

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I don't think I've got a physical thing, but it's just, just getting worse.

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What was your, what would the basics we would say, okay, these three things, just

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go and do, go and have a look at now?

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The number one and two is to pray whether or not you believe anybody's

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listening, still pray the serenity prayer.

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God give me the grant, me the serenity, and we talked about this,

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to accept the things I cannot control.

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That's number one.

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Accept the things I cannot control.

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I cannot control my insomnia.

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Accept it, don't fight it.

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Number two, courage to change the things I can and again, that's massive.

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And, and I guess what I was gonna say for number three really comes onto

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number two, but I'm gonna say anyway, is, is really work on a healthy routine.

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I love this expression.

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Somebody said, put your phone to bed.

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Parent your phone.

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You know, we, we, those of us that have had kids, we like to put our beds, our

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kids to bed at an early, an early time so that we can then enjoy the rest of the

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evening without whilst they're asleep.

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We'll, put your bed, put your phone to sleep, leave it in another room.

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I mean that is my number one sleep tip.

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Whenever we do any training, it's like, yeah, 'cause uh, you check

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your phone or, and the main problem is, is everyone uses their phone.

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It's an alarm clock.

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And this is probably part of the reason why I can't sleep when I go away, because

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of course I don't take my alarm clock.

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So I use my phone.

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But then what you did before, the minute you just about to go to sleep,

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you check that you've set your alarm on your phone and while you're there,

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you check your texts, you check your messages and you think, well,

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while I'm here just check my emails.

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And what am I doing tomorrow?

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Check your diary and before you know it, you've done half an hour more of work.

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So forget the blue light.

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Forget anything.

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It just intrudes in, it makes work and everything else that you get obsessed

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with and distracted by, intrude into everything and so no wonder can't

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sleep because your brain is going.

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And even at home, when I find, when I've maybe got my phone next to my

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bed, 'cause maybe one of my teenagers out really late and I think, well,

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I can't put my phone down, so I need to be able to hear it if they're in

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trouble, I find myself scrolling on it, even when I know it is just stupid.

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It's so annoying.

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So I think number one tip, and honestly I have bought myself an

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alarm clock, and it's a digital one because I hate ticking, from Amazon.

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It costs like 20 quid.

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It's honestly the best buy ever, and it's really reliable.

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It never, it never alarm, never doesn't go off and all that.

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So it's, you know, honestly, top tip, I think Steve, that's absolutely

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I just make add to that actually, there, there I, I have

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what I call a Sabbath phone.

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' Cause because it's, you know, Sabbath is not, is not, doesn't

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have to be anything religious.

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It's about just means having a rest, have a rest once a

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week, have a digital Sabbath.

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But we, we, goodness me, you know, I, I, I like listening to music.

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So my, I've used my, I need, I need my phone for Spotify and then

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I, I like to do meditations and I use the me the phone for that.

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Well have a phone that doesn't have your email, your Facebook and everything else.

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A separate phone that you use when you are off duty.

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Even better.

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I'm looking around my desk.

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Oh, it's over there.

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I've got a thing called a brick, which I haven't used yet.

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Have you heard about the brick?

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Well, I've heard of people referring to their

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No.

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This is an actual brick and, hang on, I'm just gonna get it.

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Wait a sec. Can I just say, I have no financial interest in the brick company,

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but my friends told me about this.

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And it comes in a little box.

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You stick it on your fridge.

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And what the brick does, you download the app onto your phone and the it turns your

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phone into a brick phone, into a no phone.

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Or you can choose what apps you want it to access and what it blocks.

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But if you want to unlock it, you literally have to go and tap your

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phone on the brick to unlock it.

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So it turns your smartphone into a brick or, or, or whatever you want.

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So you could leave Spotify on it, for example.

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Um, and everything that you need.

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you can, then you can choose, you don't have to have everything

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off your phone, but I thought that was absolute genius idea.

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So yeah, I have to set that up.

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Anyway, steve, it's been wonderful to have you with us.

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If people wanna find more about you and more about your sleep

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course and everything else that you do, where can they find you?

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Where's the best place to go?

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so I, I've set up a website, it's called fightforthenight.com, and I've

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got a sleep course on there, which is, um, expanding really all the

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things that we've been talking about.

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And, um, I'm delighted to be able to offer, I think it's really, really

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very well priced anyway, but for anybody who follows your podcast,

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we've got a, a code, which is FROG20, which gives you a 20% discount.

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So do, do, check that out.

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Use that code as a discount.

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I think, you know, if you struggle with sleep, then get on and do this course.

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It's part of their like courage to change the things that you can get yourself.

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Get yourself educated.

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Get a book, read the Matthew Walker.

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Why we, why We sleep book and all that sort of stuff.

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Steve, thank you so much for being here and, uh, be good to

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chat again soon at some point.

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Thank you.

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My pleasure.

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Thank you for having me.

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Thanks for listening.

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Don't forget, you can get extra bonus episodes and audio courses along with

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unlimited access to our library of videos and CPD workbooks by joining

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