How to Optimize Your Sleep with Dr. Matthew Walker - Transcript

Dr. Mark Hyman
So Matthew, welcome to the doctor's pharmacy podcast. Great to have you here.

Dr. Matthew Walker
It's lovely to be

Dr. Mark Hyman
I've been trying to get you on for a few years now, and finally, we did it.

Dr. Matthew Walker
We made it work.

Dr. Mark Hyman
We did it.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's great. Great to see you. And you're doing great, by the way.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Thank you. And you too. You've got the long COVID hair now, which is Yeah. Exactly. Nobody told you COVID was over, which is

Dr. Matthew Walker
a good Apparently not. You know, probably no one should trust someone who has hair this long. So everyone listening or watching take anything I say with a grain of salt.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Well, that's not true. I actually I had hair actually longer than this when I in college. So really? That was in the seventies.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. You had an excuse. I don't know what mine is. Hashtag midlife crisis.

Dr. Mark Hyman
But anyway maybe so for those who don't know Doctor. Matthew Walker, he is the guru of sleep I would say in today's world. And I, you know, I remember back in Cornell when I took a class with a psychologist, James Mas, he was big intro psych 101, and there was this whole section on sleep and it kind of blew my mind. And there was a guy named, I think, William Dement.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Oh, my goodness.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Who wrote this.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Godfather of sleep?

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. The Godfather of sleep. And so, you know, you know, nobody else really has come on the scene since he was around. And you wrote this book called Why We Sleep.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. Why we sleep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And, you know, it's something probably most people have never thought about. And yet sleep, it turns out, is probably one of the most important things that we do. And in many people in the longevity space and the health space have and I'm so surprised to hear this, have put it above nutrition, above exercise. Right?

Dr. Matthew Walker
It has come on the scene. Yeah. I mean, back then, just before I published the book, sleep and it wasn't the book that did this. Sleep was almost the neglected stepsister in the health conversation of that time back in 2018. Yeah.

And now I think people are starting to really embrace it. Maybe it's the wearable movement. Maybe it's just more people speaking about it. I don't quite know what it is. Yeah.

But now people, as you said, are not only saying it's the 3rd pillar of good health alongside diet and exercise. In fact, if you look at the data, it's it's really not. It's the foundation on which those two other things sit. Yeah. And so I think that's why it's had this really remarkable ascendency in some ways.

Nevertheless, I would still say though that sleep has an image problem in society. Yeah. Meaning that we still apply this label of stigma and laziness. You know, so many people will tell you, you know, how clean they've been eating this past month,

Dr. Mark Hyman
how many

Dr. Matthew Walker
days they've got to the gym. Yeah. I don't know anyone who's sidled up to me and sort of, you know Hey, I slept 9 hours last night. I am consistently see, because people's response is really? And embedded in that that response and the tone is, well, are you not busy?

Yeah. And if you're not busy, you must not be important, and therefore, we have this problem. But anyway, whoever the PR agent for sleep has been in the past 20 years, we should probably find out.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It was no. Certainly not you, because you've done a great job. And you published a paper recently in a very prestigious medical journal, called PLOS Biology, called the new science of sleep from cells to large scale societies, which I thought was an incredible framing around sleep. Because, you know, most of us think we sleep because we have to, we get tired, if we don't we feel crappy, and that's what most of us know. And it sleeps in annoyance for some people because it means they can't get enough work done, and they wanna watch more TV, or they wanna create their business, or they wanna, like, go out and party, but they gotta do this annoying thing called sleep.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And it turns out that it's it's sort of essential to the fabric of everything that we care about that matters right down to our biochemistry and cellular physiology all the way to what happens in society and across across a whole spectrum of human experience. So can you kind of walk us through from maybe start from, like, the big picture from the large scale impact of sleep and lack of sleep and poor sleep, which is an epidemic Yeah. And and sort of layout, like, how big of a problem sleep is for us, because I know I don't think people really realize how big of a problem it is. And then and then let's kind of walk through during the session and podcast how we get down to the biology of sleep, the cellular impact of sleep or lack of sleep, and then the factors that really are driving a lot of the stuff and and the things that people aren't even thinking about. For example, like, the bacteria in your gut.

Like, who thinks that the bacteria in your gut actually play a role in your sleep? But they do and I can tell you they do because I know they they have for me and and there's other things like that that people aren't talking about like nutrition and hormones and other things. So Yeah. Let's start by sort of kind of talking about what inspired you to write this kind of really sweeping view of sleep that you recently published.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I what I really wanted to try to do is capture in a way the full spectrum, the full panoply of sleep's influence in every single facet of us human beings as a species. And as you said, you can start right at the top. Some of our most recent work, which I think is to me was the biggest surprise most recently, sleep is essential for our prosocial behavior. Meaning, there is no there is no major society that has sort of aspect of of developed nations that has evolved without human cooperation, for example.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Mhmm.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's prosociality. And what we found is that when people are sleep deprived, you become asocial. Yeah. You withdraw from society. You just don't want to interact.

Dr. Mark Hyman
They just wanna be the social.

Dr. Matthew Walker
You just want to you know, you just want to shut down. Yeah. Worse still, other people who do not know that you are sleep deprived, when they are asked, would I like to go to coffee with this person when they've watched a video of them, or would I like to make friends with them on Facebook, even though they know nothing about whether that person is well slept or sleep deprived, they will find the person who is sleep deprived more socially repulsive and they will choose not to interact with them. You

Dr. Mark Hyman
mean just by how they look?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Just by how they look and how they talk. So in other words, and then worse still, when you interact with a sleep deprived individual and we ask you, the sleep rested individual, you know, how are you feeling right now? Are you feeling, you know, engaged? Are you feeling lonely? They feel significantly more lonely as a consequence of interacting with the lonely sleep deprived individual.

Dr. Mark Hyman
The sleep deprive individuals kinda checked out.

Dr. Matthew Walker
They're checked out, but in in some ways, there is it's viral transmission Mhmm. Of becoming a social, of social. There's a social repulsion force from a sleep deprived individual that not only makes you step away from them and not engage with them, but it makes you feel even more lonely having interacted

Dr. Mark Hyman
That's crazy. With them.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And you can see this in all manner. Sleep deprived individual people who are more sleep deprived are less likely to engage, for example, in voting during elections. So fundamental aspects of how our civilization operates are dependent on the interlaced factor of sleep at a high level. But then you can step down to the level, let's say, of brain function. And here

Dr. Mark Hyman
Before before you jump into the brain function

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
You know, it's it's true because when you think about, you know, who you wanna hang out with, if someone's depressed, you don't really wanna hang out with them. It's kind of a bummer. No. And if someone's sleep deprived, they're kinda depressed by by default.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Exactly what you that the profile that you see is a high anxious, socially withdrawn, sort of depressogenic natured Yeah. Sort of patient or individual. And why would you? Now there are circumstances where you would because they're your family member, they're your loved one, and so you will help them. But if it's just another individual, you will shy away from them.

Yeah. Interesting. So that stunned me in terms of that aspect. And then, I can walk you through, I won't bore you, but we can go down to the level of the individual and look at their brain, and their brain networks will start to disintegrate when you are sleep deprived. Mhmm.

You lose what's called your prefrontal executive control, which is a very fancy way of saying, you go from a an evolved homo sapien to essentially regressing back to your impulsive emotional tendencies, because you lose that regulatory break from your high level executive front lobe. Right. Right. You're not making good choices. Yeah.

You're starting to become more reward sensitive. You're more risk taking and sensation seeking. You are emotionally unstable. You have pendulum like swings because your brain has lost the emotional break to its accelerated gas pedal. Yeah.

So from a and you're learning in memory, take a nose dive like a dart into the ground. And performance. Quite. And then your performance in terms of your cognitive speed, your speed of processing, all of those things degrade. And then you can also look at what happens for brain clearance.

This has been a stunning, I think, finding. It's one that we've been doing a lot of work on aging Alzheimer's disease. At night, when we sleep, if we are allowed to get enough of it or we give ourselves the chance to get it, your brain cleanses itself of the metabolic detritus that's been building up during the day. And it's it's hubris I mean, it's well, it's hype I should I should say it's hyperbolic in the sense to say that wakefulness from a brain perspective is low level brain damage biochemically, but sleep is your sanitary salvation. And 2 of the pieces of toxic metabolic byproducts that are washed away by sleep at night, beta amyloid and tau protein, 2 protein culprits underlying Alzheimer's disease.

This is why we see that short sleep across the lifespan Yeah. Is predictive of high risk of Alzheimer's disease. So your brain is affected downstairs in the body. We can speak about every major organ system from your metabolic system, your reproductive system, your cardiovascular system, your thermoregulatory system, your immune system, every one of those we can experimentally just tweak your sleep Yeah. And we can measure marked changes in those systems.

But then the article went on to demonstrate that it's not just organ systems, it's individual cells. And even when you go inside of a cell, the specific componentry of a cell, even the nucleus itself is affected. There was a great study from the UK. They took people, healthy people, limited them to 6 hours of sleep a night for 1 week. Now for most people they're thinking 6 hours of sleep?

That sounds almost luxurious. This was their version of sleep restriction. Oh, that's

Dr. Mark Hyman
Alright. Sleep restriction.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And and then what they did was they measured the change in the gene activity profile within that individual compared to that same individual when they've been getting a full 8 hours of sleep opportunity. So everyone acted as their own control. And there were 2 stunning results. 1st, what they found was that a sizable 711 genes were distorted in their activity caused by that short sleeping profile.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So many of those are causes the adverse expression of certain genes that lead to more illness.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Well, and that was the second result. About half of those genes were what we call upregulated. They were overexpressed. And those were genes that were associated with the promotion of tumors, genes that were associated with inflammation and long term chronic inflammation, and genes that were associated with cellular stress and as a consequence cardiovascular disease. Whereas those genes that were actually downregulated were genes that were promoting the the support of your immune system.

So even at a DNA genetic level, you could see your immune deficiency caused by 1 week of short sleep. So I can take you from a societal level and how we operate together as a human society, all the way down to say that there is no aspect of your physiology that can retreat at the sign of sleep deprivation and get away unscathed. It will even tamper with the very DNA nucleic alphabet that spells out your daily health narrative. It's incredible. And everything in between.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's incredible.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And so, yeah. I think but think about it from this perspective too. It shouldn't surprise us, because sleep is the most ridiculous dumb thing you could ever have designed. I know right. Perspective.

You're you're not eating. You're not finding a mate. You're not reproducing. You're not caring for

Dr. Mark Hyman
And you're being eaten by an animal.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Vulnerable to being eaten.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Now on any one of those grounds, but especially as a collective Yeah. Sleep should have been strongly selected against in the course of evolution. And it's once been said that Like

Dr. Mark Hyman
dolphins only sleep, like, one half of their brain at a time, which is That's right. They can keep calm.

Dr. Matthew Walker
They they have to keep coming up for earth. Now you could have designed a system where they just didn't need sleep so that they would never have to worry about something. Sleep was so incredibly necessary for those aquatic mammals. Yeah. They had to figure out how to sleep with one half of their brain Right.

Because they couldn't get around the the this non negotiable thing called sleep. Yeah. And so I think for me what that really tells us is that if sleep doesn't serve an absolutely vital set of functions, it was probably the biggest mistake the evolution process ever made, and now we realize it didn't make a spectacular blunder. Yeah. It is We need a cleanup.

It's it's cleanup. It's sleep is mother nature's best effort yet at immortality based on everything that I've seen.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Rip Van Winkle, lived lived for a long time.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. Sleep it. Sleep to sleep rather well.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I think I think what's so fascinating to me about sleep is that for me, it's really been a neglected science and medicine. We've sort of not paid much attention to it. You know, sleep, take the sleeping pill, and it's really a wrong approach because there's so many root causes of sleep dysfunction. Great point. And I and I really think, you know, they've been under evaluated and under understood.

But before I wanna get into the root causes, I I just wanted you to sort of give us a broad overview of how big of a problem is sleep deprivation and dysfunctional sleep in our population.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And if you look at the data, there has been a pernicious erosion of sleep time over the past 100 years. Now, you know, if you look at it over the past 10 years, that creep has maybe not been so demonstrable, but really think about it. We, you know, we evolved over 1,000,000 and 1,000,000 of years, for our evolution, and it's taken mother nature 1000000 of years to put this necessity of a 7 to 9 hour sleep need in place. And then within the space of a 100 years, we've gone from something that seems to be based on the data around about 8.4 hours of sleep a night that we used to be getting a 100 years ago. Now if you look at the data on average, Americans are sleeping about 6 hours and 40 minutes.

Wow. Now don't forget that's the average. That means that there's a good proportion of people who sit to the left side of that distribution who are getting even less than that. America is not the worst culprit, by the way. Is that why we're all

Dr. Mark Hyman
at each other's throats and not thinking clearly and so it's kind of divided

Dr. Matthew Walker
Well, you know, we we in conflict across the globe. Think about that and we giggle about, but, you know, it's I don't think it's it's a factor to be discounted in our emotional, you know, dysfunction. Your empathy, for example, we did a great study, and we were looking at how empathetically sensitive a human being is. And boy, do you just simply start to ignore other people's pain and their needs?

Dr. Mark Hyman
No. You feel like crap, so it's hard to, like, care. Right? You feel

Dr. Matthew Walker
so bad yourself. You've got to take care of you you know that your your brain well, let me put it this way, human beings are the only species that will deliberately deprive themselves of sleep for no apparent good reason.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Like doctors, you mean?

Dr. Matthew Walker
And like doctors. Exactly. But what does that tell us? That tells us is that mother nature has never had to face this challenge of sleep deprivation. So no wonder there are no safety nets in place.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
So no wonder that we, firstly, you know, go down very quickly biologically in terms of our health. But also, don't forget that that is such a rare circumstance that when it happens, when the brain starts to sense I'm not sleeping enough. Now it doesn't know why because we're watching Netflix. It just says red alert, break glass in case of emergency. I'm not going to care about you, the people that I love.

I've got to go into essentially low battery status and take care of myself. So you lose your empathetic sensitivity. We looked at doctors and there's great study from a team in Israel too. And what they found was that they started to prescribe less it was necessary, less pain medication for their patients the more sleep deprived they were. Why?

Because they lost their empathy. They did not cut.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And so patients are suffering. They are more sort of ensconced in nociceptive, you know, drench of pain because the doctors just don't see it.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I mean, I I remember, honestly, and, Matthew, because I I I was in, you know, residency and working hard and I was living babies, working to the family doctor. I mean, I I spent many, many, many nights not sleeping at all. So not even having 2 hours of sleep, just not sleeping and working 36 hours straight. One shift was 60 hours. And and, you know, I remember how I would feel, and I and I was like, you know, when you force yourself at first, you're like your your body's just like shutting down, and then you learn how to caffeinate and override your body's sense of needing to sleep.

And then you kind of will yourself through. And, you know, the idea is, you know, you're a doctor. You have to be ready to go anytime. You have to deal with crisis and Right. Pick the right answer and do the right thing and be able to function in the worst conditions, which is kinda like a Navy Seal, you know.

Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But it's almost like a hazing that will come through it, and you're gonna have to go

Dr. Mark Hyman
through it. Horrible. I mean, my daughter's in medical now, and she, you know, she called me in one morning after one of her first shifts where she had to do this. She's like, I don't want to do this. This is horrible.

And I'm like and I think it's a, you know, the the sleep deprivation crisis in America, it's like it's it's sort of parallel to the lack of exercise, the crappy diet we have, it's degrading our health, and you combine all those things together with all the chronic stress, it's no wonder we're the sickest and fattest nation in the world pretty much.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And if you look at the curve, the decline in sleep over the past really 70 years for which we have good data, and if you look for example at the rise in obesity over the same duration of time, those two things go in opposite directions as sleeping is coming down, obesity is going up. Yeah. And we know that a lack of sleep changes your appetite hormones. Yeah. It changes your ability to dispose of food and specifically regulate your blood sugar.

Yeah. So you are more obesogenic in terms of your profile of weight gain.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Crave more carbs than sugar. Crave more

Dr. Matthew Walker
carbs than sugar.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I remember that. I mean, when I was, like, you know, 2 in the morning, I'm working in the ER, I'm exhausted, I'm like, give me the sugar. Yeah. That's all. That's all

Dr. Matthew Walker
you want. And that's exactly it's not just that you eat more, which you do, it's what you eat that's the problem. You go after the heavy hitting stodgy carbohydrates, simple sugars, and you shy away from the the sort of, you know, the leafy greens, the nuts, and the good proteins. Yeah. Because you are just on a junk food binge.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Well you want a kind of energy, and you get quick.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And you want it quick. Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. I remember that. So, you know, it's it's the question is you know is is a sleep deprivation, a big part of the cause and I and because of the decline in sleep, it seems like it may because I I've I've read these studies, they take young college kids and they basically sleep deprive them and they they're healthy, but then the ones who get sleep deprived just eat more and eat more sugar and carbs.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's right. And it's and it you can see that same replication of failure across multiple organ systems. So for example, I take a young healthy set of males, I limit them to, let's say, 4 or 5 hours of sleep for 5 nights, They will have a level of testosterone, which is that of someone 10 years their senior. Yeah. So I can age a healthy young man by 10 years by short sleeping them for a week.

You can take people who have perfectly regulated blood sugar, no problems with their blood glucose whatsoever, put them on that same regiment of 4 or 5 nights of short sleep, and at the end of it, someone like you would look at their blood work, and you would say, you are bordering on being prediabetic Yeah. Right now.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. That's right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Again, that's within the space of days.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Days. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And so you can so I I think it's again a demonstration to us that sleep, we don't have any real wiggle room.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's not it's not negotiable. Yeah. So so in terms of the the reasons we're not sleeping, and we we it's clear we're not sleeping. Is it because we're too busy, too stressed, do we have too many obligations? Is it because we're watching too much Netflix?

Is it because we're scrolling on our phones? Is that some other factors? Like, what are the main factors that are leading the sleep deprivation crisis and are causing, you know, I last I heard it was like 70,000,000 Americans having serious sleep issues. Yeah. Right?

What what are the main causes?

Dr. Matthew Walker
All of the above plus more. So there's not necessarily just one cause. Let's start at the hierarchical government level. There is no first world nation that I know of that has had a major public health campaign regarding sleep. Why not?

We've had it for drunk driving, we've had it for safe sex, we've had it for, you know, all of these different things, There's nothing there for sleep. And, yes, you could argue from a cynical perspective, it's because we want you you know, from a capitalist society, we really want you to be doing 2 things. You're either, you know, producing things or you're buying things or you're consuming things. And if you're asleep, you're not doing either of those 2. So you could argue conspiracy.

I don't think it's that.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Probably not.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But and and we've actually I've actually just recently started a public, charity, a foundation specifically designed for global sleep education. Take it a step down, there is the World Health Organization that I spoke to recently, there is no educational module for children translated into 37 different languages across different age ranges that educates them on the importance of sleep. So no wonder there is a parent to child transmission of sleep neglect. We have to change that too. Some of it is about education.

The second part is mental health. We have a rising tide of anxiety in society. People are so stressed, and we get people coming into the center, at UC Berkeley, and they'll say, I am so tired. I am just so tired, but I'm so wired Yeah. That I can't fall asleep.

Sleep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
This tired but wide phenomenon. Yeah. So the anxiety epidemic is causing sleep problems. We've And that's adrenal too. Right?

And that's adrenal. Cortisol rise at night. It's cortisol rise at night. It's because of that what we call the HPA axis, the sort of the cortisol descending chain. It's also because the nervous system almost is forced into a locked position of the fight or flight branch, what we call the sympathetic nervous system, which is anything but sympathetic.

It's very agitating.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And we cannot sleep when we are wired into the fight or flight branch. We have to switch over to the quiescent branch, the parasympathetic. So I think those two factors, the adrenal sort of nation, as it were, together with this fight or flight stance of the nervous system, is a royal roadblock to good sleep at night. I think it's one of the biggest factors. We've then also got the combative forces of entertainment and social media, which are on the, of course, consuming traffic.

Dr. Mark Hyman
My wife to stop scrolling on x every night to figure out what's happening in the world. I'm like, why are you doing that before I

Dr. Matthew Walker
go to the bathroom? Worst time because on in this modern era, we're constantly on reception. Yeah. Very rarely do we do reflection, and the only time we do reflection is when our head hits the pillow, and that is the worst of times to do reflection because when you do that, you start to Ruminating. You start to ruminate.

When you ruminate, you catastrophize, and when you catastrophize, you're dead in the water for the next 2 years Yeah. Because, you know, everything seems twice as bad in the dark of night Yeah. Than it does in the light of day. Yeah. And if we're doing that right before bed so I think there are issues there.

Sleep disorders are on the rise. Insomnia, which I think is a consequence of

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's a symptom.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Of the anxiety and the stress. You know, I often think that insomnia is the revenge of things that we've not processed during the day and and got resolution to. We've got sleep apnea, snoring, I think that's, heavy snoring or can be an indicator of that. That's certainly comorbid with diabetes and also obesity. So I think you've you've got all of this collection of factors together with the stigma that we described earlier, which is, well, I'm not really that proud of of sleeping more, why should I be?

Dr. Mark Hyman
Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Because society doesn't reward it. You know, it's the type a, the early bird catches the worm. Maybe that's true, but I would say based on the data the second mouse gets the cheese. Yeah. And what's strange is that we Never heard that one.

The second mouse gets the cheese. But I find it funny that we we chastise people who wake up late as being lazy.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But we never say, oh, you go to bed early, you're lazy. Yeah. Well, that's night owl and that's morning laughter. It's not your fault. So I think there are a whole collection of conspiring factors that together conflate to this enormous sleep challenge that we have in society.

Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
There's a couple of things I wanna drill down into because I think that that, you know, in your article, you you talked about gut dysbiosis and gut dysfunction, and the microbiome is playing a role in sleep, which is something that, you know, most people have never thought of. Yeah. And it was it was a substantial part of your article, and we'll link to the article in the show notes. But it it was interesting to me because I I think that inflammation plays a big role in sleep disruption.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And the gut microbiome plays a role. And also, environmental toxins may play a role. Nutritional deficiencies may play a role. And there are things hormonal dysregulation plays a role. And these are things that are not really well, investigated by conventional doctors and not well understood.

But sometimes it's as simple as just giving someone magnesium because 45% of the population is low in magnesium, and you get magnesium at night and they're sleeping like a baby. Right. Or their iron's low and they have iron deficiency, and people don't realize that low ferritin is correlated with sleep.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Rest of sight.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Rest of sight. Syndrome and sleep deprivation, and and nobody checks that. So can you kind of walk us through some of those unusual kind of things that may be contributing besides this is the social factors and the stress and the adrenal and the, you

Dr. Matthew Walker
know, the things that we just talked about? Yeah. I think, you know, all of those factors that you just described will all feed into gut dysbiosis. And there is, I think, a bidirectional, and this is what we spoke about in the article, a bidirectional relationship between your gut health and your brain sleep health. Meaning that when your gut is in balance with with that sort of collection of the the flora and the fauna in your gut microbiome, it can send a health related signal through the nervous system by way of a major highway that connects your gut to the brain called the vagus nerve.

And that can help

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's not like Las Vegas, that's b a g u s. That's that's for relaxation. That's the relaxation nerve.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's the relaxation nerve, but it's also a major informational highway bidirectional communication path between your brain and your gut. That's how we think that the gut can influence the brain, and that's how we think that if you get the gut right, it may be a new approach to a sleep aid, because then you can get the brain right. Yeah. And it works in the opposite way, which is that when you are sleeping well, it can communicate a signal for improved gut health through the vagus down into the body. But when you are not sleeping well, there's been some great studies, for example, in the extreme with jet lag, my goodness.

Do you see that when the brain becomes deficient in its sleep through this communication pathway, you will get significant gut dysbiosis. Yeah. And many people will tell you one of the things that happens when I'm jet lagged is that my tummy is just off.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Oh, right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Oh, my goodness. Things don't go well for me, and I don't I don't quite understand why. I'm eating the same things, but it's probably because of this gut dysbiosis caused by a lack of sleep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Interesting. You know, I'm wondering, the top of my head because we know as we get older, our sleep degrades. That's right. And we also know that we as we get older, our gut microbiome degrades and the diversity degrades. Yeah.

I wonder if there is a link there because why do people who get older not sleep as well? It's it's an interesting question. I don't know if it's been answered, but

Dr. Matthew Walker
maybe So it's not it's not been answered yet. I suspect that we have enough data to do the correlation study that you just described, which is, are these two things related? For example, if you look across, you know, a longitudinal study, and if we I mean we haven't been assessing the gut microbiome for probably long enough to have good longitudinal data yet in the gut microbiome, but we've got plenty of longitudinal data in sleep, meaning we've started off assessing people in their thirties or their forties, tracked them over 15, 20 years, and then asked, is the sleep that they've been having across their life predictive of their all cause mortality, cardiovascular mortality, cancer mortality, and we've got that data. What we now need is to look at gut health and ask as that sleep is declining across the lifespan, longitudinally

Dr. Mark Hyman
What happens to their gut? What happens

Dr. Matthew Walker
to the gut?

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. I just was listening to Li Houd's talk for the Human Longevity Institute yesterday. You know, Lee Hood Yeah. Yeah. Fantastic.

Yeah. Systems biologist, and he was talking about how pretty soon we'll be able to look at just a few metabolites in your blood to look at the diversity and health of your microbiome. So through a simple blood test rather than collecting your poop, which isn't really fun for most people.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Oh, no. Yeah. If you're of a certain type to really enjoy

Dr. Mark Hyman
that type of stuff. Exactly. So I mean, there's I think we're getting that. Absolutely. See see these patterns and see the the biomarkers, and also the gut dysbiosis drives inflammation, and it drives activation of of of an irritable brain.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's right. You know,

Dr. Mark Hyman
I think we used to think that irritable bowel in medical school was what we called the supertentorial problem, which in English means it's all in your head. It's about the part of your brain called the tentorium, which just keeps your, you know, your brain on the top. And and it's like it was a pejorative view that we doctors had, which is if you're if you have irritable bowel, it's because you're just a a neurotic person, and it's sort of you're crazy and that's why your tummy's upset. And it turns out that the opposite is true, that it's the the imbalances in the gut flora that are causing the brain to become irritable. And that that's really what you're talking about here is that if you've got imbalanced flora, that your sleep isn't good.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's right. And that's and to me, that's one of the exciting parts of it. Is it treatable? Is that it's it's both treatable and it's a novel, you know, is it a novel sleep aid pathway?

Dr. Mark Hyman
And maybe

Dr. Matthew Walker
I don't know I don't know if it's powerful enough to come close to that. It may not be. But

Dr. Mark Hyman
a patient, n n of 1 or maybe actually n of 2 now, because both people have said this to me. There's probiotic companies making sleep probiotics.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yep. I've seen them too.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And they said it dramatically increased their deep sleep, and I was like, wow. That's crazy. And I was like, how does that work?

Dr. Matthew Walker
I mean, I'd love to see the data,

Dr. Mark Hyman
you know. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's it but it's interesting.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And even I'm not trying to be, you know, too skeptic skeptical because as scientists and doctors, you and I both know absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, so don't judge too quick. Yeah. But right now I think the jury's out.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. For sure. And I think, you know, inflammation also will will drive dysfunction of the brain, and most of the brain diseases when I and I you could argue that sleep is a brain disease. Right? Yeah.

I mean, it's it's the brain not doing what it's supposed to do. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
When you have sleep disruption.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Depression, anxiety, bipolar, schizophrenia, autism, ADD, depression, Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, these are all inflammatory brain diseases. Yeah. So I'm I'm amazed

Dr. Matthew Walker
And Alzheimer's disease, there's some really fascinating data regarding, you know, inflammation and Alzheimer's disease as a causal relationship now.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Oh, for sure.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Quite striking.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Rudy Tanzi, actually, you know Rudy Tanzi? Yeah. He he presents an amazing, set of data which has to do with a certain population that they've studied that have a gene mutation that prevents inflammation. And on autopsy, at death, these people were cognitively perfectly normal. On autopsy, their brains were just filled with amyloid, like the worst end case terminal case of Alzheimer's, but they were perfectly normal cognitively.

Right. Which was so striking to me, and it was the inflammation that's really the the trigger.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Right. And so and I think we don't yet know what's happening with tau, which is the other tau protein, which is the other sort of culprit there with inflammation. I suspect it may be the same story, it may be even more powerfully explanatory of cognition, but, you know, it all of this just once again teaches us, I think you and I, and maybe people listening, that for so long in medicine and science we took a siloed organ or system specific approach. I was a cardiologist, I was a neurologist, you know, I was an immunologist. We are an embodied species, brain, and body

Dr. Mark Hyman
I'm an everythingologist. Yeah. Exactly.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And that's what if your doctor says that, you're with the right doctor.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, this is how the body works. It's just common sense. Right?

We're one integrated ecosystem, and that's what Lee Red Hood has really pioneered, which is the idea of systems medicine and systems biology. We're we're a big network of networks, and everything's talking everything all the time. And so a sleep disruption is is sort of the thing that actually I think is is influenced by so many different factors, like toxins. And I purse I personally had this happen to me. I was the greatest sleeper in the world, and then I got mercury poisoning.

And we know mercury toxicity, one of the symptoms is insomnia.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And and it and and I don't know how it works. I don't know how it causes it, but it's, you know, we were talking early before the podcast started about mitochondria and how many of the things that we are exposed to in the environment are mitochondrial toxins and that it's energy and and the body needs energy to run everything, and I imagine it's critical in in sleep regulation as well. Fundamental.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. I mean, and during sleep we have, you know, a metabolic, reduction part of the one of perhaps the restorative functions of sleep is to have a metabolic downturn to a degree, but I think the other point is there is you spoke about all of these different, you know, I'm a I'm a multisystem doctor, and yes, what we find is that all of those different systems, each by themselves, can all independently affect sleep. If you're in inflammation, if you have high blood pressure, if you have, you know, abnormal hormonal profiles, if you have poor blood sugar, all of these will disrupt your sleep. So it's feed up to the brain, disrupt sleep, but it also is feed down. And I've often thought, and it works both ways for health and ill health with good sleep versus bad sleep.

If you've gone into one of those, fancy music studios and there's that mixing deck with all of those little dials on it.

Dr. Mark Hyman
That makes me so intimidated.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And, yeah, and I'm looking at oh, my goodness. And you can move all of the different dials. They're all of the different systems, but you know that there's that one white dial all the way to the far left that if you move that up, all of the other dials go up with it. Yeah. That to me is sleep.

It's the Archimedes lever of health. So that's why when you move sleep up in the right direction, you cascade down this whole you know, it's the single tide that rises all other health boats in my mind. If you and I think it's not my mind, it's the data.

Dr. Mark Hyman
The data's pretty clear. Yeah. I mean, it's connection to shift workers and increase in mortality and cardiovascular disease and diabetes.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Teen who are sleep deprived because of early school summer time. And the link between a lack of sleep and suicide now. Yeah. I think that's been one of the things that has just suicide now. Yeah.

I think that's been one of the things that has just exploded on the scene in the past 5 years. Certainly, I didn't have anything in the book about that because it was just nascent at the time. Now that data is so compelling, insufficient sleep in teens will predict suicide ideation, meaning thinking about suicide. It will predict suicide attempts, and tragically, it will predict suicide completion. Right.

And it's not just sleep. What we're finding is that a lack of sleep will have maybe a twofold increased risk for suicidality in teens, meaning you may be twice as likely based on a cutoff of insufficient sleep And they're

Dr. Mark Hyman
just getting up late, they're getting up early. Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And it's not their fault, because their their biology as they become adolescents forces them to have a an appetite, a predilection for sleeping much later into the night. They're not trying to be rebellious. It's just their biology. But then, early school start times have them waking up far too early. Yeah.

So the one thing that gets squeezed like vice grips in the middle of the night for these teens is a sufficient night of sleep. Yeah. And but what we've also found is that it's not just sleep. Dreams seem to be and bad dreams in teens seem to be even more predictive of suicide than insufficient sleep itself. We've got no idea why.

It tells us something about dreaming above and beyond sleep that is predictive of our mental health. Interesting.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. I mean, I just came back from Ecuador and there's a culture called the Oshawa culture, one of the last sort of untouched, cultures down there, and every morning they have a ritual. You wake up at like they wake up at like 4 in the morning. I guess they go to bed really early, but they wake up and they drink this thing called mayusa tea, which they drink large volumes of, and it makes you kind of vomit, which I didn't drink enough to vomit, but I drink a little ceremony like. And and then they sit around and they share their dreams.

Weird. And and depending on what their dreams are, they decide either to go back to bed and skip the day or go out in the world and do whatever they gotta do. Because if their dreams are auspicious, they'll have a good day. And if their dreams are bad, they're gonna not go out and take a risk of something bad happening, which I have never.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I I should I should look into that. Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
There's another book you should read. It's called the Kin of Atar Waiting for You. It's all about a culture that's their whole world is all about sleep, and and everything that happens in sleep is what matters, and when you're awake is stuff that really doesn't matter. So I think it like that. Okay.

The the, what I wanna get into now is sort of the sort of the practical things that that because people are listening and thinking, you know, I don't sleep great or I'm a little sleep deprived or, you know, my sleep quality is not good. Everybody's wearing devices, tracking their numbers, and we're seeing stuff. And I think, you know, we talked about a lot of different things from hormonal dysfunction. You know, obviously, menopause is a big factor. We talked about, even thyroid hormones can affect sleep, low thyroid function, nutritional factors like magnesium, ferritin.

We talked about inflammation, the gut microbiome. We talked about just our stressful culture. A lot of factors.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So how do we start to, on an individual basis, start to tease apart what's going on, evaluate our sleep, and upgrade the quality of our sleep?

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think most people can probably tell you to a degree, am I getting the sleep that I need? And you can ask at least 1 of 2 questions to answer that. If your alarm didn't go off tomorrow morning, would you sleep past your alarm? If the answer is yes, you're not done with sleep yet, you're not satiated. Another good example would be, how much are you sleeping during a working week, and how much are you sleeping at a weekend?

And this is not a perfect test for a number of different reasons, but if you're sleeping more at the weekend than you are during the week, then what I know is that you have the capacity to generate more sleep, and you have a higher you have a sleep need that is higher than that which you are giving yourself the opportunity to get during the week. Yeah. So it's not as though you just are someone who actually needs 6 hours of sleep because at the weekend, you get more sleep than you would do during the week. So I think the first thing is ask yourself some honest questions. Am I getting enough sleep?

The next question then is to say, even if the quantity of sleep I'm getting is sufficient, maybe I still do not feel restored or refreshed by my sleep the next day, and that comes on to quality over quantity. Mhmm. It's not just about how much sleep you're getting. It's about how well that sleep restores you the next day. In fact, that's one of our new metrics of insomnia.

You can fall asleep fine, you can stay asleep, but if you don't feel restored or refreshed by your sleep the next day, you can still receive a diagnosis of unrestorative sleep Yeah. Leading to insomnia. Insomnia is much more a waking day disorder than it is a sleeping night disorder.

Dr. Mark Hyman
What do you mean because you feel bad during the day? Because you

Dr. Matthew Walker
feel bad during the day. And so we've now tried to upgrade or at least refine the complexity that is insomnia to represent the patient themselves and their true experience. So understanding that your quantity and quality are good or bad then leads to the next set of questions which is what do I do about it?

Dr. Mark Hyman
So should everybody be measuring that through, like, Oura rings or watches? Are those very accurate? Are they helpful?

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think they now now take what I say with a grain of salt. I'm wearing 2 Oura rings right now and 2 of them. I know. Yeah. 1 is sort of a a next gen and the reason why is that I'm a scientific adviser at the company.

So say take anything I say with a grain of salt. Absolutely. I wanna say next gen. Complete and they look very much similar. But so complete disclosure, and that's important.

I would say though that for most people, tracking your sleep can be a very worthwhile thing. And it's simply because sleep in part is a nonconscious process. I can ask you, you know, Mark, in the past week have you been eating well or not eating well? And you can tell me, have you been exercising consistently or not? Yes, you can.

But if I then said to you, how much deep sleep did you get last Tuesday night?

Dr. Mark Hyman
4 hours and 37 minutes and 22 seconds.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I have

Dr. Mark Hyman
no idea. I have no idea.

Dr. Matthew Walker
No one has any idea unless you have the historical record of your sleep. So I think it can be very helpful. Are they accurate? You know, I only know about aura and I think it's it's probably I know the algorithm, and I've helped with that algorithm. You know, it's going to be about close to 80 maybe more percent accurate at determining wake from sleep.

And then when you split it 4 ways, light non REM, deep non REM, REM sleep, or wakefulness, which are really the 4 states that you can be in, which is a 4 class algorithm, then the accuracy is about maybe 75%. And that seems to be, you know, about best in class right now. Now you may say, well, hang on a second, that doesn't sound so impressive, 75%. Think about this though, I have about $50,000 worth of a spaghetti monster at my sleep center to get a 100% accurate gold standard sleep recording.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Right. Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then you can come along, and within the space of, you know, some development cycles of technology, you can boil it down to a ring this size Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
For several 100 of dollars Yeah. And you can get 75% of the way there, that's bloody remarkable, you know. Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Mark Hyman
But, you know, but they're different, like, I have a Garmin watch and I have an Oura Ring, and I wake up and they have widely different recordings, and I'm like

Dr. Matthew Walker
Different algorithm and, unfortunately, different site of location. Yeah. So I think the reason that Oura and I wasn't with the company when they first made the choice to go with a ring, by the way, the other ring the reason I like the company and the and the ring itself is because of the form factor. We don't put wristwatches on when we go to sleep. Yeah.

Or headbands or chest straps, we take things off.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But rings, we we're accustomed to that. Yeah. So I like the form factor too, which is a low friction, no friction device. I would say though that for the Oura ring in terms of its its sensing capacity, when you get closer to the vasculature of the finger, it's more accurate than it would be necessarily on the wrist itself and the sensor. So that's why Your blood vessels are more Because the, yeah, the computer so you get a better sensing location, number 1.

And number 2, I think the algorithms are different, so that's why you'll get probably quite wildly different numbers from those two devices. But again, I think overall, sleep tracker's largely good. Two more caveats. The first is that that absolute accuracy of 75% is its absolute accuracy. However, its relative accuracy is much higher.

What I mean by that is Right.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's consistent day to day.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Correct. You've nailed it. So don't follow nightly headlines, absolute accuracy. Follow weekly trend lines, which is to say that this thing is 75% accurate, let's say, at separating all of those different categories, but it's consistently inaccurate night after night after night. So its power Yeah.

Is when all of a sudden you see deviations in your trend because it can't be the ring that's deviating. It's consistent. Yeah. It must be you. That's when you should pay attention.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Still off, but it's off by the same amount every time.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Exactly. Yeah. So whatever is changing it, it's not the ring.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So so you think people should be tracking? Because otherwise, how do you know what's going on? Right? And

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think almost all people should be tracking except those who and there's a now obsessive about it. Who obsess about it and become it becomes a challenge. And sleep now has this term that's floating around called orthosomnia. So ortho Orthorexia. So you've heard of yeah.

Ortho sort of straightening. So orthodontics straightening teeth, orthopedics straightening bones. You know, orthosomnia is getting my sleep so straight, and I get so anxious about it that it crucifies my sleep. Yeah. And at that point, I say one of 2 things.

If it's really causing you distress, take it off, put it in a drawer, we'll come back to it, we'll fix your sleep, and we'll get back on track later.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Or keep it on and only look at your data Once a week. Once a week.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Or have someone else look at your data once a week. Interesting. Yeah. And the discipline there is harder, I agree. But, you know, you may not need to throw the baby out with bathwater.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Okay. So so we get a sense of what's going on with our sleep, You know, how do we start to unpack, what to do to fix our sleep? Like, what are the the give us the kind of Matthew Walker take home

Dr. Matthew Walker
Collection list.

Dr. Mark Hyman
You know, like, what what are the things we're doing wrong, and what do we have to fix, and how do we how do we get to, we call it sleep hygiene or sleep practices or Yeah. Or even tests that we should do to figure out, you know, what's going on if we're not sleeping well.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think the first thing we have to do, and sleep is so idiosyncratic that different people will have different problems. First thing that we would want to do with an individual who comes in with complaining, of sleep problems, do sleep test assessments. Do you have insomnia? Do you have sleep apnea? Do you have restless leg syndrome?

Let's discount the sleep disorders. Let's say that you don't have any of those. Let's now take a step down. I would say in terms of recommendations, and it's gonna be different, as I said, for different people, there are probably a collection of common things that you can do now. Don't worry so much about the sleep supplements, and we can come to those later.

But if you're focusing on supplements as your first line approach to getting your sleep corrected, you are majoring in the minors, and you are not, you know, and and you're minoring in the majors. Yeah. You should be focused on firstly regularity. You would be surprised

Dr. Mark Hyman
Same time, no bad.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Everything just falls in place when you get I am I am the most boring individual, I get it, but I am so metronome like in my regularity just because I know how powerful that anchor to my circadian rhythm is to make sure that my sleep is too close. I go to

Dr. Mark Hyman
bed and you wake at the same time

Dr. Matthew Walker
every day. No matter weekday, weekends for the

Dr. Mark Hyman
most part. Now When

Dr. Matthew Walker
you're traveling, you're like When I'm traveling or, you know, sometimes we'll go out with friends, we'll have a later night, of course, you know, I don't want to be puritanical about this. Life is to be lived. Joao de Vivre, No one wants to be the healthiest person in the graveyard. Live life, of course, for goodness sake. But overall, if, you know, 90% of the time, you can be consistent, you would be surprised.

I would say the next big challenge is have a

Dr. Mark Hyman
And wait, before you jump off that, is it matter, like, when? Because I've heard if you get sleep before midnight, it's better quality sleep.

Dr. Matthew Walker
So there is sorry about the mic movement there for folks listening. There is there is nothing special whatsoever about the stroke of midnight and sleep. It's not as though all of a sudden the 2 minutes of sleep that you get after midnight are so much less powerful and, you know, utility beneficial. And the 2 minutes that you got before, that's not true at at all. But getting to sleep earlier, like 9, 10, is that better than going to sleep like maybe one?

Absolutely not. And it can be problematic in at least two ways. The first is that if you are having insomnia and you suffer from sleep onset insomnia, where you can't fall asleep, forcing yourself to go to bed earlier is the worst thing you can do.

Dr. Mark Hyman
You're

Dr. Matthew Walker
not tired enough. Because you're not tired enough, and therefore you remain in bed longer awake, and that only reinforces your anxiety around this place called my bed being the place where I am always awake. So don't do that if you're suffering from insomnia. The rule of thumb there is, and it's just a rule of thumb, only go to bed when you're tired. Don't worry about the clock.

Insomnia patients only go to bed when you're tired. The second reason that going to bed earlier and you sort of hear this this, edict coming down from, I think, maybe influences or people saying, you know, just go to bed early, wake up early, get a jump start on the day, that's the most weight effective way to be productive and healthy, and it changes your life forever. Mhmm. Nonsense. If you're an evening type, let's say you're a night owl who normally has a biological hardwired predilection to go to sleep at 12:30 at night, you can get into bed at 10 PM, and you are going to think that you have insomnia because you're wide awake for the first two hours.

Yep. And you don't have insomnia. You have a mismatch between your chronotype

Dr. Mark Hyman
And your lifestyle.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And your lifestyle. And we see that quite often too. So the advice of always going to bed early or trying to go to bed before midnight is completely dependent on your chronotype. And people can do a chronotype test, or your morning type, evening type, or somewhere in between. Easy to do.

You can just, Google the MEQ test, which stands for morningness, eveningness questionnaire. It takes about 3 minutes. And it will tell you pretty close to your genetics which truly determine it. And it turns out, by the way, that if you are an evening type and you want to be a morning type, it's not that simple. You don't get to decide.

It's gifted to you at birth. There are at least 22 different genes that we know dictate your morningness and eveningness. But this questionnaire comes quite close in terms of its

Dr. Mark Hyman
That's amazing.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Kind of proxy. So I would say that good sleep what is good sleep? Good sleep for me is about 4 macros. I've sort of thought about this and come up with this principle that there are 4 macros of good sleep. And you can remember it by the acronym QQRT, quantity, quality, regularity, timing.

And we've really covered all of them. Quantity, 7 to 9 hours. Quality is are you sleeping consistently, or is your sleep littered with all of these awakenings at night, so you're sort of waking up? That's poor quality. And the way that we measure that is efficiency.

You can see it in your sleep trackers. Yeah. Of the time that you're in bed, what percent of that time

Dr. Mark Hyman
What's a good efficiency?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Is to be. 85% or above. Once you drop below that, we'd like to correct it. So quantity, quality, regularity, going to bed at the same time, waking up at the same time, regularity carries as if not more predictive power over your all cause mortality than quantity does.

Dr. Mark Hyman
That's amazing.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's a recent finding. And literally, a paper came out today that replicated that finding of about 2 years ago. The final one is timing, and you think, well, q q r t, quantity, quality, regularity. Timing sounds like regularity.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Timing is not timing is your chronotype. So if you are an evening type, sleep as best you can with your lifestyle, and I know that I'm talking about the ideal world, and no one lives in that. We all live in the real world. So as best you can, try to sleep closer to your natural chronotype. Because if you sleep against your chronotype, sleeping out of harmony with your biology, when you fight biology, you normally lose.

Yeah. The way you know you've lost is disease and sickness, and we see that in night owls who are forced to sleep like morning larks. So that's why to me, I think you've I would come on to say, firstly, give yourself the right opportunity to sleep. Get regular. Understand your chronotype.

Realize it's not your fault and it's not your choice. Try to get good with your chronotype as best you can, and then finally just make sure that the quality of your sleep, the consistency is good. If the quality is not good, you're waking up a lot

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Let's drill down into that for recommendations. Think about your alcohol and caffeine. Those are probably the 2 lowest hanging fruit that will cause poor quality of sleep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. I mean, the our ring is, like, definitely a metronome for, like, if I drink something.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Oh my god. Devastation is

Dr. Mark Hyman
not Yeah. It's like there is

Dr. Matthew Walker
a blast radius that is nontrivial.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's not.

Dr. Matthew Walker
It is

Dr. Mark Hyman
so The Oura ring has kinda caused alcohol consumption to go down.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And, you know, I I wonder if they've changed alcohol cells. I've if, you know, I don't know among their users. That would be an interesting study, but I would say that the the 2 of the

Dr. Mark Hyman
I'm gonna I tell you, I'm sure it has because everybody going to has an Oura ring tells me they noticed the same thing, and it's

Dr. Matthew Walker
maybe It's changed their amount of alcohol. 100%. Now, you know, you can complain about devices or subscription fees or whatever about all of these different gadgets all you like, but if that's the only thing that they've done in society, I think that your liver is gonna be outside of your, you know, body next day. I'm thanking you, you know, to to the high heavens for saying, thank you for not drinking as much, you know. So let's Alcohol caffeine.

Alcohol caffeine. I would say be mindful of light. We are a dark deprived society in this modern era, and we get junk light at night. And light will stamp the brakes on Melatonin, which is a natural hormone that times our sleep, and it will make you or fool your brain into thinking, I'm not tired. Even though there's all of that tiredness built up inside of you, your over lights or overhead lighting, stimulated, and so your brain gets very confused.

We don't have strong enough daylight during the day to ramp us up and make us awake, so we're sleepy during the day. And we don't have enough darkness at night to make us sleepy, so we're awake at night. I would say recommendation in the last hour before bed, switch off half the lights in your home. Just do me the experiment for the next 10 days, try it. If it doesn't feel any different, great.

Dr. Mark Hyman
But does it matter if you're, like, in your bedroom, you have, incandescent lights? Is that a problem, or should you change those red light bulbs? Or You can

Dr. Matthew Walker
go for red light bulbs, but just keep it you don't have to worry about that fancy stuff. The dimmer matter? Just dimness. Try to get below about 10 luxe. And you can just on your phone, go to the App Store, download a luxe meter, l u x.

Oh. And then just sit in your bed and look to say, you know, or walk around your I do this. This is how I'm

Dr. Mark Hyman
gonna I'm gonna buy a new house in Austin, and I'm really putting in dimmer lights because there's no dimmers in the house. I'm, like, it's, like, $3,000 to put all

Dr. Matthew Walker
No. But I mean, imagine spending that to guarantee sleep for the next years. Yeah. It's a small cost to pay.

Dr. Mark Hyman
For sure.

Dr. Matthew Walker
So I would say grab a lux meter if you want to be nerdy about it.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Mhmm. But

Dr. Matthew Walker
just get dim light. Don't have to be too nerdy. Just turn down half the lights in your house. Next thing for timing, by the way, I should go back to it.

Dr. Mark Hyman
But the light thing, you did you buy this whole red light thing and the Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
The the data there is quite strong on melatonin. However, in terms of the blue light from our devices being the the catastrophic force on sleep decline that we used to think it was, is probably not true.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So if you're on your phone at night, or if you're on

Dr. Matthew Walker
your computer. Blue light is not the villain that we thought.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So do you you shouldn't be buying those blue blocker glasses or

Dr. Matthew Walker
It there's been a great, there's been a guy, in Australia who almost pioneered this, Michael Gradazar. He started to get skeptical of this whole blue light thing. And there's been a couple of powerful studies that, yes, it definitely blocks your melatonin. Yes, it can disrupt your sleep. But what he demonstrated is that it's not the blue light itself, it's that these devices that we use that emit blue light.

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's what we're reading on them.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Are activate they are attention capture devices. They are hugely activating. Yeah. And their sole purpose now is to capture your attention economy. And they do it ruthlessly well.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And and and they stimulate dopamine. And they

Dr. Matthew Walker
stimulate dopamine. They stimulate dopamine. Is

Dr. Mark Hyman
the awake

Dr. Matthew Walker
wake up. Switch on your cortex. Yeah. And that results in this this thing that we call sleep procrastination. Mhmm.

Where you know that you're tired, but then you think, oh, gosh, I'll just look at Facebook one last time, oh, I'll just I'll just check x one more time, and Yeah. Oh, I should have ordered that thing from Amazon, let me just go do that, and you look up and it's 40 minutes later.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And what he's really arguing, and I think the data is compelling now, is that you just need to try to do a digital detox, not for the blue light, but for the demonstrable capturing of your brain's cortical activation.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. I I I use the Kindle, and I think that when you do the Kindle, it's got the black thing and

Dr. Matthew Walker
I would suggest that for people, there are 2 rules of thumb, if you can desaturate your phone to black and white, there are some apps that will do it, big difference. The second is, if you have to use your phone in the bedroom, and I know that genie is out the bottle, no matter what I say it's not going back in anytime soon. The rule of thumb from another friend of mine, Michael Gradner said, and the following, if you have to take your phone into the bedroom, you can only use it standing up. And after about 7 or 8 minutes, you're standing there and you think, I'm just gonna sit down and at that point, sorry, phone goes away, you're done, that's it.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I'll tell my wife that. She's not gonna like that

Dr. Matthew Walker
at all.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I

Dr. Matthew Walker
would say just coming on to some other points of of of suggestion. Yeah. Wind down routine. We all fail to recognize that sleep is not like a light switch, and it shouldn't be that way. Sleep is much more like landing a plane.

It takes time to come down onto the sort of the terra firma of good sleep at night.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then and so you

Dr. Mark Hyman
You'll be answering emails then

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then you don't don't ex why would you expect that? It's like driving into your garage and your sort of your driveway, you know, at still 60 miles an hour, and then slamming the brakes on. You think it's gonna be a good outcome. Yeah. You go down the gears

Dr. Mark Hyman
You're down.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then gradually you're breaking, and you come to a stop. Yeah. That's late for you. Yeah. So we obviously when we, you know, if you have kids, you will know that you have a bedtime routine.

Mhmm. You figure what it is out for your child, you figure out what it is for your child, and then you stick ruthlessly to it because if you don't, bad things happen. Why do we think that as adults? Yeah. We don't also need a wind down routine.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And what does that look like?

Dr. Matthew Walker
It can be hot baths or showers, works very well for sleep, and we can speak about why from a thermal perspective. Yeah. You can have you can do meditation, data on that, very strong indeed. You can do sleep stories. Sleep we read stories to our children.

It turns out that sleep stories, and the reason that they've saved meditation companies like Calm and made them a unicorn $1,000,000,000 company, which it did, the sleep stories, is because we also like to listen to stories ourselves, and I'll come back to why that is in a second.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Cory Booker is a friend of mine, said he listens to my podcast at night to put himself to sleep. I'm like,

Dr. Matthew Walker
well, I've heard that for I I I I I have so many people, and I I deeply despise my own voice. I I loathe it, but so many people have said that listening to my voice. I have a podcast, the Matt Walker podcast, shameless plug, but they actually use it as a sleep aid. Yeah. And it's, you know, it's always very devastating like you because

Dr. Mark Hyman
That's great.

Dr. Matthew Walker
You know, but that's that's lovely for me in truth. And so I'm actually gonna start releasing an app that has sleep stories because people just kept slamming me. So but do a sleep story. I don't care what it is. Hot baths, whether it's meditation, whether it's journaling, whether it's listening to an audio book, whether it's, whether it's yoga, whether it's light stretching, whether it's meditation, the goal is simple.

Get your mind off itself. That's that is the principal reason why most people are not getting

Dr. Mark Hyman
Shut down that crazy person in between your ears?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Correct. And it sleep is like trying to remember someone's name. Yeah. The harder that you try, the more you force it away, and when you stop trying, it comes back to you. And I can't I mean, another trick that I've I recommend people use, if you don't like meditation or any of that kind of stuff, it feels like a bit woo woo, just close your eyes and take yourself on a mental walk that you know with exquisite detail.

So let's say, I'm gonna take the dog out for a walk, I I clip him in, I open the door, I go down the steps, I take a left, go to the end of the driveway, and then sort of go through a little, sort of gate there, and then we take a right, but I always look to the right because the traffic is coming far too quickly. Mhmm. It's in that level of granularity, what's the color of the leash that I'm using today for the dock. That's the level.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Distracting your mind.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And I'm distracting my mind, and then usually the next thing I remember is my alarm going off in the morning. Why? Because I got my mind off itself. So have a wind down routine I would say is absolutely critical. It's one of the lowest hanging fruits that you can you can really Tell us

Dr. Mark Hyman
about the hot bath thing, because I I, you know, I I heard different theories about this, but it's like when you heat your body temperature up, and then when it's coming down, it helps you fall asleep. But I've also heard people saying cold plunges before bedtime, which seems like the opposite of what you wanna do also help with sleep. So I love your thoughts on that.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Data not so strong for cold plunges. In truth, one bath and one shower. It's so reliable that we have a statement called the warm bath effect in sleep science because it's been replicated so many times. Yeah. And I mean,

Dr. Mark Hyman
I do Epsom salt, which is magnesium. It gets your skin. I use lavender drops. I call my ultra bath because the lavender drops reduce cortisol. Right.

And also just the scent of it is calming.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. And that's a calming signal to the brain, which puts you back out of the fight or flight into the restful state, the parasympathetic state. But you're right with the first explanation that when we have a hot bath or a shower, what we do is we encourage all of the blood to race to the surface of the skin. Someone like me, I'll have sort of rosy cheeks when I come out the bath. And essentially, the bath has acted like a snake charmer, that it's charmed all of the trapped hot blood at the core of my body.

And it's brought it to the surface so that when I get out, you think or I think that the reason I I sleep so well after a bath at night is because I'm all warm and toasty. Mhmm. It's the opposite. When I get out the bath, all of the blood at the surface of the skin radiates the heat very quickly, and my core body temperature absolutely plummets. Mhmm.

And temperature in sleep is not quite as simple as we've been led to believe. It's a 3 part equation. You have to warm up to cool down to fall asleep. You have to stay cool to stay asleep. You have to then warm up to wake up.

Yeah. And the first part seems oxymoronic. How can you warm up to cool down to fall asleep? Just as we've said.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Take a bath.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Warm up the surface of the skin to radiate heat to get cold at your core, and that promotes sleep onset. Yeah. Then the cooler you get at night, and that's the reason that these smart mattresses now are working so well. As you get cold They

Dr. Mark Hyman
ate sleep.

Dr. Matthew Walker
They ate sleep. Yeah. Yeah. I've recently, together with Andrew Heumann and and my good friend, Peter Tier, we we joined the company because I've been using it for so long. Yeah.

That's great. And everyone I speak to, all of my sort of concierge clients, they all say it really radically changed life for themselves. If I can help them, I'd love to join help join them.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I was like, I I was using it, but then I hadn't set wrong, and then I got too cold in the north.

Dr. Matthew Walker
So so but if you switch on the autumn, the sort of the AI agent, it will gradually, you know, learn when your thermal sweet sweet spot is. So as you get colder during the night, you get more deep sleep, but then you have to reverse engineer the trick. You have to warm up to wake up, And it's not light that wakes us up, really, it's the warming of our core brain and body that is the true force that wakes us up. Case in point, when you, you know, let's say you come through in the morning, and your significant other is there, and they look at you, and you say, I know I left the dishes in the sink. I'm so sorry, but just give me 2 minutes.

I just need a a couple of of mouthfuls of my of my hot coffee, and then I'll be right with you. And within 5 minutes, you feel like a much better version of yourself. It's got nothing to do with the caffeine. Why? Plasma peak concentration of caffeine isn't gonna hit you until about 15 or 17 minutes later.

What is it? It's the warmth. It's the warmth, And that much more rapidly rises your core temperature, and that's where you get a first hit after the warm beverage in the morning. And then the caffeine kicks in, so you get a second benefit.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Okay. That's good. So if I tried tea, I get the same benefit. Yeah. Interesting.

So the the cool temperature at night is important. Yes, sir. I I would say the best sleep I've had in decades was when I went winter camping a couple years ago, and it was like, you know, the Europe was covered completely in snow. You had to do yourself out and go in, but I was it was, you know, there was no wood stove or anything. I'm in my sleeping bag

Dr. Matthew Walker
and I was warm,

Dr. Mark Hyman
but I was it was cold and I slept like 10 hours, which I don't think is wrong.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Stunning, isn't it? It was really cold. Combination of both the temperature, but also don't forget that you didn't have much electric light polluting you.

Dr. Mark Hyman
No. There was no wifi, there was no electric light. EMS, and I had just, snow skied with cross country skis up a mountain to

Dr. Matthew Walker
get extra sun. You've done all of the right things. Daylight during the day

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Physical activity, darkness at night, coldness at night, and you probably not have as as much digital stimulation as you would otherwise do. That is the perfect sort of prescription in a quote unquote manner

Dr. Mark Hyman
for a

Dr. Matthew Walker
good night's sleep, that's exactly what you got.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And and dark matters too. Right? Not just Correct. Because because I think, you know, we think your eyes are closed so it's dark, but it's not doesn't matter. Right?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Your eyes are open that close enough. Even if you were to sort of, you know, have low level overhead lighting still on during sleep, even though you still sleep, the quality of your sleep is worse because it's still penetrating through your eyelid onto your retina Mhmm. And essentially light infecting your sleeping brain at night. So no light sound? Blackout curtains, the data on noise machines Earplugs.

Equivocal. Earplugs, I do I do I will do eye mask, earplugs. I will have a sound machine if I'm in a noisy environment, because if you look at the data, it's only where you get you only get efficacy, meaning a benefit of these sort of white noise machines at least, in conditions of urban high noise. That's where they seem to be useful. If you're in a beautiful, you know, if you're camping in a yurt, a white noise machine isn't gonna do a thing because it's, you know, there's no noise whatsoever, maybe occasionally, nothing.

But I would say that absolutely the reason that you had that collection of of benefits Yeah. Yeah. Was because of this juicy menu set of options that had finger buffeted your way through.

Dr. Mark Hyman
But I I like to keep the room at like 65 degrees at night.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think that's That's perfect. The problem is that's different for men and women, and that's why I also like these smart mattresses. Yeah. Because you can find your own individual tailored I tell

Dr. Mark Hyman
you, my my wife and I are the same, which is fantastic.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Oh, my goodness. You are It's like you're the right now, you're the envy of so many

Dr. Mark Hyman
people right now. My my, my I call her my my was wife or whatever, my ex wife she she she had the opposite, she liked it hot, I liked it cold Yep. And so she did a whole comedy skit about it, it was very funny.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And you yeah. And you will always struggle with those those problems, so I would absolutely say I think that type of thermal intervention is fairly well replicated.

Dr. Mark Hyman
These are really simple practices. All the things you talked about, the the those practice, the timing, and the regularity, and the quality, and the quantity, the the temperature, the y number routine, the light reduction. These are things that are pretty simple, and and they work. Yep. And it's not rocket science, but the science is actually there.

What about EMS? Is that a thing?

Dr. Matthew Walker
We have not seen much data right now to suggest that sort of, you know, electromagnetic sort of, you know, pollution in the environment is going to be a sleep disruptor. Yeah. I think there's probably some, you know, anecdotal data.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I mean, I noticed when the power goes out in our house for some reason, there's a tornado or something, and then, like, wow, I slept so good last night.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But I think that that's got much more to do with absent light, absent technology. Yeah. You know, I know that when, so I live in Northern California just outside of San Francisco, and up in the Berkeley Hills, which is where I live behind, my campus, trees will go down in the winter, it'll take down the power lines, and you lose electricity for maybe 2 or 3 days. At that point, I've just got, you know, maybe my phone left. I'm trying to save the battery, so I'm not on it much.

I'm reading journals with candlelight. And I know for a fact that I think my natural bedtime I'm I'm a desperately vanilla person, I'm deeply boring, I'm vastly uninteresting, but I'm kind of like an 11:11:30 to kind of 7:30 kinda guy in some sort of rhythm, I'm just slap bang in the in the middle neutral. Yeah. And, but I know that when those nights happen, all of a sudden I'm thinking, it's 10:25 and I'm actually sleeping. Sleepy, yeah.

And what happens is that modernity comes in Yeah. And it hits the mute button on my sleepiness Yeah. And I think I'm an 11 to 7:30 kinda guy.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
When actually I'm probably closer to a 10:15 kinda guy, And so you've got to be a bit mindful of that too.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So, that's really amazing set of simple practices that people can have. What about supplements? Yeah. You know, you know, Andrew talks about epigenin and, you know, different things. How good is the data on that?

Magnesium, for sure, I know is something that did about 45% of the population is low in. It's I call it the relaxation mineral. Yep. It relaxes your muscles, your nervous system, your brain. And and I know anecdotally that my patients all say that if I if I sleep so great with it.

Yeah. Tell me what does the data show about magnesium and

Dr. Matthew Walker
and other supplements? Magnesium is an interesting one. I mean, if you look on Amazon or alike, magnesium sleep, you know, formulations is rife across the board, and they're getting very good ratings. So you don't need a scientific study to suggest that something's going on there.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Right.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But if you dig into the history of magnesium and sleep, you get an interesting kind of paper trail that goes all the way back. The the story emerged from people who were magnesium deficient, and they had really quite profound sleep problems. And when you made the magnesium normative with supplementation Yeah. Their sleep got better. Yeah.

That's very different than saying, okay, Matt, we've looked at your blood work, you are magnesium normative.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then taking vast doses of magnesium, I expect to get even better sleep.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
It's not going to happen. Right. It's a little bit like saying, you I tell you, I've got this amazing new blood oxygen saturation machine. It's stunning. And you say, but my blood oxygen saturation is 90 98, 99%.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Right. Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But do you think that I'm going to, you know, push

Dr. Mark Hyman
you

Dr. Matthew Walker
where no, you're at ceiling.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Yeah. Yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
So you've got to be a bit thoughtful. I think there is a pop a cluster of individuals that magnesium deficient individuals

Dr. Mark Hyman
It's about 45% of

Dr. Matthew Walker
the population. Who who will respond to magnesium for sleep. Yeah. Is If you look at the data, magnesium citrate not so much, magnesium oxide, oxide certainly does seem to be the more Really? There's going to be a form of magnesium that carries the vote so far in the data.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Not 3 and 8, which is better.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Well, I'll come on to 3 and 8, but magnesium oxide is definitely the one that seems to promote it. It's just a little tougher on the tummy.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And it's harder to absorb.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yeah. Correct. And it's harder to absorb, but I would say that the problem with those 2 as an explanation, standard forms of magnesium, not magnesium L threonate, is that none of those cross the blood brain barrier. And so if you're thinking magnesium helps your brain to sleep, how could it? Because it doesn't get into the brain.

And I think it does it indirectly through relaxation of the body which sends a signal through the vagus nerve up to your brain to say That

Dr. Mark Hyman
makes sense.

Dr. Matthew Walker
You're quiet, you're calm, your body is at peace, and your brain says, great, I'm checking out at sleep time. That's the indirect mechanism. However, there is a form of magnesium, magnesium l three and eight that based on some animal data from MIT does seem to cross the blood brain barrier. Now there are no randomized control studies that I know of that have looked at magnesium L3 and eight and sleep improvement, so I think the jury is out. If you put a gun to my head and said which form would you recommend for a patient, I would probably say magnesium threonate because at least it's going to potentially get into the brain.

So magnesium, I think under certain circumstances it can be quite useful. I think the data on GABA is not particularly strong right now, so sort of the GABA supplements I don't think Phenine? Are great. I think theanine has some supportive data to it right now, again it's just not that consistent.

Dr. Mark Hyman
What about melatonin?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Melatonin for people who are not in the fifties or older, and people who are in a stable time zone, magnesium, sorry, melatonin doesn't seem to move the needle.

Dr. Mark Hyman
So so it doesn't work for older people?

Dr. Matthew Walker
No. It does seem to potentially work for older people. For older

Dr. Mark Hyman
people, not for younger

Dr. Matthew Walker
people. And under circumstances of jet lag. If you're younger and you're not in in a state of jet lag, like melatonin, just doesn't seem to be that beneficial. I think there was a meta analysis that said it only improved the speed with which you fell asleep by about 3.9 minutes. Wow.

Not much. And it only improves your sleep efficiency by about 2.2%, not much more than placebo. Now don't forget the placebo effect is the most reliable effect in all of pharmacology. So I'm shy of a an effort, you know, adrenaline shot to the heart, but, so I would say melatonin, I probably wouldn't favor it right now. If you're going to do it, you're probably taking too much right now, you're taking maybe 10, 20 milligrams, get below 5, 10, 20, that's a super physiological dose.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Melatonin, yeah.

Dr. Matthew Walker
That's a dose that the body never would normally release itself, and we don't know what the consequences of that are. Could be fine, may not be fine. Other things I would say for the tired but wide phenomenon, you can try it although some people respond and some people don't, ashwagandha. Yeah. The other one, phosphatidylserine.

Yeah. Not phosphatidylcholine, but phosphatidylserine. Mhmm. Both of those have got pretty good data, not with sleep. There are some data studies on sleep, and here we're talking about 3 to 400 north of those values, milligrams Yeah.

In each dose, but I would say that may certainly help.

Dr. Mark Hyman
400 milligrams of phosphatilserine? Phosphatilserine,

Dr. Matthew Walker
and also ashwagandha, sort of, 400 to 600. You can add, if you would like, some, glutamate, seems to sorry, a glycine. Glycine at probably around 2 grams seems to potentially help regulate the circadian rhythm. That may be useful too. So you may want to try magnesium, ashwagandha, phosphatidylserine, and then maybe add glycine in the mix as well.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Man, man, I can see why all these podcasters have you on for, like, 6 part series. I could talk to you for hours and hours about this. I got, like, a 1,000 more questions.

Dr. Matthew Walker
But again, I would say for the supplements, you know, just be careful. If go back and listen to all of the things that we just said about the majors. Major in the majors, minor in the minors. Yeah. Don't major in the minors.

If you're looking straight away to supplements, you're majoring in the minors.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And and listen, if you're listening out there and you have sleep problems, which I know a lot of you do because it's rampant, definitely read Matt's book, Why We Sleep. Check out

Dr. Matthew Walker
I would say the podcast is probably the best place. The book may scare you if you're not sleeping well, which is the podcast now, there's over 70 different episodes on the podcast, and probably whatever question that you have will be answered there in in a way. And it's a podcast, by the way. I'm nowhere near as elegant and erudite as you are to be an interviewer. My podcasts are usually there are short form podcasts somewhere between 20 to 40 minutes.

They are, short form monologues from yours truly, and they just are a little bite of sleep goodness to accompany your waking day, and most of what you're probably going to ask about is somewhere there on the episode list so far.

Dr. Mark Hyman
And because your voice is so great, if you put it at night, it's the perfect sleep age.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I apparently, most people almost want to lose the will to live when they're listening to me. I think it's mostly because I'm so deeply uninterested. No.

Dr. Mark Hyman
I don't know about that. I don't know.

Dr. Matthew Walker
I think someone once said that my personality was the best prophylactic known to men. So Oh my god.

Dr. Mark Hyman
That's not true. I know you, and I can verify that is not true. Okay. And Matt's website is why we sleep dot org?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Yes. Go to why we sleep dot org. If you would like to support the public foundation, which is a global sleep education foundation, please visit us there. You can also take the, global sleep, assessment that you can get your global sleep score. It is just what we spoke about the QQRT quantity quality regularity.

Get your 4 macros of sleep score. And if you feel good about it, you can click on a button. It will tell you not just your score, but tips for what you can do to change your specific score.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Mhmm.

Dr. Matthew Walker
And then if you really want it, it will give you a 4 week action plan as to how to try to change that. And all we ask for, we don't force it, but we simply ask for that component. Please just consider a wee little donation to the foundation.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Very grateful for your work, Matt. And that the place they can do that qqrt is at the sleepdiplomat.com?

Dr. Matthew Walker
Actually, no. It's if you just everything if you just go to why we sleep dot org and that's It's

Dr. Mark Hyman
all there.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Y w h y rather than the letter y Yeah. Why we sleep dot org, you can get all of that information there and, I would so appreciate any little, gift that you could provide the foundation.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Well, I I know you changed so many people's lives, including mine, and, your work is just tremendous. And I am definitely gonna have to have you back when you're in Austin in my new studio because you're gonna also be living there,

Dr. Matthew Walker
and I'm I will spend some time there about absolutely.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Cannabis, and I wanna ask you about dreams. I wanna ask you about a lot of things we didn't get you today. You're the best man.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Absolutely. When I'm there, my my most better half in life is out there, so I will be there frequently. Would love to stop by, and if people have not had a a vomiting reaction to this first podcast, hang me back on. I would be delighted. And I would say too, in return, thank you for what you do.

What you have done in terms of a public service gift, in terms of medical education should not be underestimated. Oh, thank you. It doesn't come without a toll. Yeah. You know, I understand what it takes to do these things.

Yeah. And when you put your head above the public parapet, you can also get some criticism too, and it doesn't feel so nice

Dr. Mark Hyman
sometimes,

Dr. Matthew Walker
but you still do it. So for what you've done for society and what I hope you continue to do, thank you, and thanks for having me on the show.

Dr. Mark Hyman
Thank you. You know, not I I do all this because honestly I was so sick, and I know how much people suffer and how much needless suffering is out there, and how many answers we actually do have. And so, you know, just talking to you and learning what you've done to sort of investigate the nature of sleep and what it role role it plays in our health and our life is is so important. And for me, it's like, you know, it makes my work easier because I don't have to know everything. You know it.

I can just kinda talk about it. So, man, thanks for being on the podcast. We'll have you back soon, and, good luck with everything you're doing. So excited about what you're gonna be doing next, which I can imagine it's gonna be something really fun we talked about, but we'll talk about it on the next podcast.

Dr. Matthew Walker
Thanks again, Mark. Take care.