TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Sleep Doctor: If You Wake Up At 3AM, DO NOT Do This!

2h 24m 16s32,737 mots4,747 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

What are the most popular questions

0:02

people come to you with as a sleep

0:03

doctor?

0:04

>> There's three biggies. Number one is,

0:06

"What do I do if I fall asleep, okay,

0:08

and I wake up in the middle of the night

0:09

and I can't fall back asleep?"

0:10

>> And you can help people with that.

0:11

>> Absolutely. The second question is,

0:13

"What pillow should I buy?" And I'm

0:15

going to walk you through which pillows

0:16

make sense for which people. And then

0:18

another one that people ask me all the

0:20

time is, "What's the best time to have

0:22

sex?"

0:22

>> That's a strange thing for somebody of

0:24

your profession to be

0:26

>> about. Well, let me explain why. So,

0:27

I've been an actively practicing sleep

0:29

specialist for 26 years. I take care of

0:31

people's sleep problems like apnea,

0:32

insomnia, and I'm really interested in

0:34

the things that you might be doing right

0:36

now that are messing up your sleep that

0:37

are easy to fix. So, for example, most

0:39

people don't know that they have a

0:41

genetic sleep code inside them called

0:42

their chronoype, which decides when your

0:45

brain releases things like melatonin,

0:46

cortisol, adrenaline, and dopamine. And

0:49

so I can show you based on your

0:50

chronotype when it's bedtime, but also

0:52

the perfect time of day to do almost any

0:54

activity, including the perfect time to

0:56

have coffee and alcohol. Crazy. There's

0:59

even data to show that your ability to

1:02

understand complicated concepts improves

1:04

when you're more in line with your

1:06

chronoype. Now, there are three known

1:07

chronotypes, but what I'm famous for is

1:10

discovering a fourth one, which I think

1:12

might be you. So, we're going to talk a

1:14

lot about that. We're also going to talk

1:15

about dreams because dreams can tell you

1:18

things about yourself that you may not

1:20

want to know. And then there's how to

1:21

fix jet lag, whether you should sleep

1:22

with a TV on, the truth about melatonin

1:24

supplementation, and my favorite way to

1:26

get magnesium.

1:27

>> Before we get into all of that, shall we

1:29

go and look at the best possible sleep

1:30

position?

1:31

>> Yeah, let's check it out.

1:35

>> Guys, I've got a quick favor to ask you.

1:37

We're approaching a significant

1:38

subscriber milestone on this show and

1:40

roughly 69% of you that listen and love

1:43

this show haven't yet subscribed for

1:44

whatever reason. If there was ever a

1:46

time for you to do us a favor, if we've

1:48

ever done anything for you, given you

1:50

value in any way, it is simply hitting

1:52

that subscribe button. And it means so

1:54

much to myself, but also to my team cuz

1:55

when we hit these milestones, we go away

1:56

as a team and celebrate. And it's the

1:58

thing, the simple, free, easy thing you

2:00

can do to help make this show a little

2:01

bit better every single week. So that's

2:04

a favor I would ask you. And um if you

2:06

do hit the subscribe button, I won't let

2:08

you down. And we'll continue to find

2:10

small ways to make this whole production

2:11

better. Thank you so much for being part

2:14

of this journey. Means the world. And uh

2:15

yeah, let's do this.

2:20

>> Dr. Bruce, yes. What is it you do? Why

2:24

does it matter so much now? And what

2:28

perspective do you take on what you do

2:30

that is atypical versus other people I

2:33

might have spoken to about this subject?

2:35

>> I'm a sleep doctor. Um I take care of

2:37

people's sleep problems like apnea,

2:39

narcolepsy, insomnia, things like that.

2:42

I've dedicated a good portion of my

2:44

career not just to understanding how to

2:46

treat those disorders which are sleep

2:48

disorders, but what I also I call

2:50

disordered sleep. I'm really interested

2:52

in behavioral habits. What's going on?

2:55

what are the things that you might be

2:56

doing right now that are kind of messing

2:58

up your sleep that are easy to fix um

3:00

and be able to maybe change how things

3:02

are going forward? You know, I I didn't

3:04

start out thinking I was going to become

3:05

a sleep doctor if I'm going to be honest

3:07

with you. Like that that was not on the

3:08

on the path. Um I was actually going in

3:11

a completely different direction. And

3:13

one of the things I really discovered

3:15

was when you change someone's sleep,

3:17

dude, you change their life. Like it is

3:19

fundamental to who they are. And it's

3:22

important for me to be a sleep educator

3:24

in a way, shape, and form that's

3:25

practical so that people can actually

3:27

get something from what I'm talking

3:28

about and apply it right then and there.

3:30

>> And there's probably a couple of million

3:32

people that have clicked onto this

3:33

conversation to listen.

3:34

>> Yeah.

3:35

>> Who is this conversation for?

3:37

>> I think it's for anybody out there who's

3:39

either curious about sleep or wants to

3:41

try to improve their sleep or maybe

3:43

suspicious that they could have a

3:44

problem with their sleep. I think any

3:46

one of those three types of people would

3:48

find tremendous value here. And what are

3:50

we going to be able to do for those

3:51

people today specifically?

3:53

>> So, I'm going to give people um several

3:54

different like plans, if you will, uh

3:57

maybe even a five-step plan of things

3:58

that they can absolutely learn how to

4:00

do. They're also going to learn about a

4:01

genetic sleep code that they have inside

4:03

them called their chronoype. A lot of

4:05

people don't even know that they have a

4:07

chronoype or maybe they've heard of the

4:08

of the idea, but they haven't ever heard

4:10

of the term. We're going to learn a lot

4:12

about that. We're also going to talk

4:13

about dreams a little bit. Um I'm

4:15

excited to have the opportunity to do

4:17

that. I've spent the last year and a

4:18

half learning more about how to use

4:20

dreams in my clinical work as a

4:22

psychologist, which is very interesting

4:24

stuff. So, I'm excited to share some of

4:26

that. So, I think people are going to

4:27

learn a whole bunch.

4:28

>> And dreams matter.

4:29

>> Oh, yeah. They absolutely matter. I'm I

4:31

call dreams emotional metabolism, right?

4:34

And so, when you're dreaming, what is

4:36

you what is the function? What is the

4:38

purpose? What are you doing? You're

4:40

actually working through your emotional

4:42

states that you had during the daytime.

4:44

Um this is why we have nightmares,

4:46

right? And so in a nightmare, it's a

4:47

scary scene and all a sudden it gets so

4:49

emotional, you wake up. That is

4:51

officially called a nightmare. That

4:53

awakening, but you stop processing. And

4:56

when you go back to sleep, you go back

4:57

to the dream and you get to that scary

4:58

point, you wake up again and you get

5:00

caught in this loop, right? And so

5:02

dreams matter because they can be

5:04

incredibly disruptive. Also, they can

5:06

tell you things about yourself that you

5:09

may not want to know or may not have in

5:12

the front of your mind at all times.

5:14

Right? Sometimes people have very

5:15

interesting dreams like dreams of being

5:17

chased or dreams of their teeth falling

5:19

out or all these different things and

5:20

they can mean a whole host of different

5:22

things. But I want to be super clear.

5:24

There's no guide book that says, "Hey,

5:26

you know, if you're if you're dreaming

5:27

of that you're in water, you hate your

5:29

mother." Like, it doesn't really work

5:30

that way. Dreams mean something to the

5:32

dreamer. And so the goal is to

5:34

understand the context within that. So

5:36

who is the dreamer? What is the dream?

5:39

And then how do those two work together?

5:41

And what is the experience that you're

5:43

drawing from academically but also

5:46

professionally? Give me a view of how

5:47

many people you've worked with and

5:50

the range of things people come to you

5:52

with.

5:52

>> Yeah. So I've been an actively

5:53

practicing sleep specialist for 26

5:55

years. So I work in offices with medical

5:58

doctors cuz I'm not a medical doctor. I

6:00

have a PhD and I work with them on their

6:02

patients. lot of insomnia patients but

6:04

also the apneas, the restless legs, the

6:06

narcolepsies of the world because I have

6:08

kind of a unique distinction in that I'm

6:10

one of 168 people in the world who took

6:12

the medical boards without going to

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