Her voice, tone, pronunciation, annunciation, crystal clear & smooth delivery is just perfect. No likes, no buts, no umms, no filler words. Just flawless. I wud pay thousands to take speech and voice lessons from her.
I think they were purposefully talking gently either because of who they encounter everyday or because you might be watching this when you should be sleeping lol
@@PalpatinesPlumber She has a wonderful soft, but clear voice, everything is pronounced neatly and it's really calming but it also raises respect. She sounds more like a great educator - a knowledgeable college professor invested in sharing the knowledge.
These two brings me at peace. The man sounds so kind and gentle I’d feel like I can trust him. And the lady’s tone and energy is literally like a sunshine. They are both amazing and did an amazing job!
As a night shifter, I can confirm this world is absolutely built to force a morning-day productivity schedule. What a world it would be if everything was open all the time and the people who were more productive later could work those shifts. Imagine what a boost in productivity we'd see across all types.
It's so sad for us. I'm also a night person, and the only night jobs are cash registers or factory line work. I tried to apply for factory ones but they told me I'm grossly overqualified and told me to "go get a high paying desk job", but working in the day is so horrible for me. I'm really tired and I feel kinda groggy the whole time. Covid lockdowns have been the best thing that happened to me because we get to work at home I've been napping in the day and doing my work at night when my colleagues are asleep. They start work in the morning and everything is done. lol.
Contracting work, you can work whatever hours you want as long as you get the work done and make a few meetings here and there you're good to go. Also, positions like a security guard, nursing, doctors, paramedics, police etc all have night shifts.
@@KryaDiere not necessarily true, there are a lot of overnight shifts in IT. i currently work as an overnight cybersecurity engineer and i would not trade it for a day shift.
As a teen I was a night person, but as my circadian rhythm "grew out" of it (teens just naturally get tired later) I became a morning person. Not entirely, I still find myself the most mentally productive towards the end of the day. The reality is, the majority of people are "morning/day people" due to well, biology, meaning the majority of society will accommodate that. Having more businesses open at night would force more people into night shifts. There's already quite a few jobs out there that are overnight, shift work jobs for those types of people. There isn't a "need" for an increase in jobs for night owls, because the majority of adults aren't like that.
@@KryaDiere the office I work in has night/evening shift workers, 4-12. gotta find a sector that operates 24/7 (like trades and logistics, shipping never stops)
Thank you for debunking the myth about night owls. For years, I have been patronised for sleeping and waking up late. This has made feel bad about myself and I ended up internalising the notion that I simply have bad habits or a bad lifestyle, which inside, I truly did not believe about myself. This society IS in favour of early birds and it will always be a continuous struggle for night owls to navigate and compromise their schedules and plans. In an ideal world, our society should function to serve both kinds!
I felt the exact same way. Still do sometimes. I get the feeling that others in my life think I’m lazy because I sleep till noon most days. But then I’m up later than them and getting work done at hours when they just don’t see it.
@@Couchlover47 But they are. A victim of a screwed up work culture. One of millions actually. Many workplaces enforce unreasonable working hours for nigh owls to handle. Like, why do you need me to be at work at 8:00am even though I'm not seeing any clients, I'm not opening the shop or taking any phone calls at that time anyway? If anything, night owls are much less productive in the morning, so you're actually sabotaging your company if you expect them to be up early for no good reason. I'm a night owl myself and when I worked for a company like that, I'd always be slow, groggy and unpleasant in the morning, and I'd only start waking up after 11:00am or so. Thankfully I left that company and found a job where I can come in at 10:30, eat breakfast, catch up on emails and start work at 11:00. My productivity increased through the roof. My boss is clearly happy, because I'm constantly getting praise and bonuses, I'm happy, the customers are happy, everyone's happy. And all it took was shifting my work schedule to my natural waking hours. But a lot, and I mean a LOT of employers still don't understand that. They think "If I'm up, you're up" and won't hear an argument to the contrary.
@@B3RyL Not to mention school. I'm a night owl as well, and when I was in school I wouldn't be tired until around 12pm. My school would start at 7:30, but I had to get up around 5:30am to have enough time to shower, eat, get fully ready, and walk 20 minutes to school. I need about 8-10 hours before I feel well rested, so most often I would fall in the habit of snoozing the alarm a lot, rushing to get ready just so I could be on time, and I would sleep in class a lot. It really killed my productivity, what little I had with my ADHD Inattentive, which I was led to believe is fake and a sign of laziness.(definitely not fake). It was super stressful and demotivating, but it really wasn't my fault. I really wasn't remotely tired until midnight. In fact, it's 4am right now as I'm typing this. And now, after all those years of being forced to work against my natural schedule, I'm tired all the time and have issues feeling well rested even when I get the correct amount of sleep. It's very annoying that we have to conform to an early bird society
I like these two a lot. A bunch of the other experts they've had on here sound so snarky and smug when they're debunking things, and it really puts me off. These two were so nice!
Funny joke. You are also the reason why doctors hate their job they learn to tell important info and yet you immaturely reject for "comfort"/freedom, when your comfort gets less and less because of lack of sleep then you will regret not fixing your sleep schedule earlier now of course if you ain't a student or don't need to wake up early then sure stay up later and wake up later to get enough sleep
It feels nice my brain completely memories a you tube video and then when I sleep I get the dream then when I say to myself in the dream it’s time to go sleep I wake up then sleep again
I feel like that a lot. My sleep is definitely screwed and I don’t know how to fix it. When I wake up I don’t feel like I just slept usually like you said, I also wake up either to an alarm or whatever reason before I get up and I go back to sleep and that’s the only time I can or ever will dream; after I wake up and then fall asleep again. At my old job I use to have to drive peoples cars and one time I almost fell asleep at the wheel on the highway in someone’s car. I couldn’t believe it afterwards cause I’m the kind of person who would do anything to not mess up someone else’s belongings such as someone’s car. I’m always extra careful.
I really wish this idea of night owls being a real thing was more common knowledge and widely accepted. As a night owl, my ideal wake up time is 8am and then get ready slowly and start work around 10:30-11, finish work around 6-7pm, have dinner, and then do some hobbies until midnight/1ish. But with full time 9-5 work, I have to be up before 7, and have eaten breakfast and be out of the house by 8 to start work at 9. It really doens't work for me and I genuinely believe it's lead to me being depressed and unable to relax because I always feel like whenever I get up late that I'm wasting time.
Its only been a day that I realized genetics can define night owls and larks, it was enlightening, I have been living my life thinking being a night owl is the trait of a lazy person or less qualified. I feel so much better now. I feel you.
I’m not sure that if for you waking up at 8am is ideal then you’re a night owl. To me it’s more like waking up at 12 pm, and then being awake till 3-4 in the morning.
Yep, I hate when people act like waking up very early is the key to good health and successfulness. If you can't help your schedule then you have no choice of course but if you are lucky enough to choose it, then there isn't reason to force yourself to become an early bird.
I am sorry but, as a night owl, who literally goes to sleep around 1 to 2am, and used to feel more focused at night, feel the great need of changing that. I have done some days of sleeping and waking up early and let me tell you, those have been the best days for me, in energy and productivity. I remember one time I slept three days in a row at 8-9pm and after the third day, even my memory got better. I could remember easily what I did those three days, to the slightest detail, I mean I could remember quite well, compare to when I slept late. I am talking about in summertime when I could sleep the 8 hours no matter what time I went to sleep. Nights are meant to sleep, naturally, our bodies need darkness when tire, and that is at night and we need daylight and sunlight to do things. I mean, the sun is energy, literally. Flowers get it from it, and we get some too. I feel you because I still go to sleep late, but recently I feel my body is begging me to change that. I will listen and act accordingly. Take care of yourself, and I will encourage you to implement what is naturally better, getting ready to sleep and sleeping when is dark outside and waking up when the sun goes up. Tech and human inventions had damaged our sleeping schedules. 200 hundred years ago, not sleeping at night, was not a big problem as it is today. Society was adjusted to what was natural, but now we have disrupted what is natural.
I've been doing an internship for the last 3 months and had to get up at 5:30 am every morning.... I swore to myself that I will never choose a job where I have to get up this early ever again 😂 I can't remember the last time I felt so tired the whole time and it really caused me to have a bad mood😒
@@luissanchez2428 Maybe you are not an owl then? I feel the best when I sleep at midnight or a little bit later and wake up at 10 am. Not when I try to sleep with the sun.
It's interesting how dreams are non-linear. For instance, I've had dreams where the sound of the alarm was incorporated in the dream but not as an ending. It was some place in the middle.
I was dreaming that I was at my dentist office arguing with my dental hygienist and dentist, and all of a sudden I could hear a moose calling. My mom was staying over, and snoring next to me. Her snoring sounded like a moose call, and it invaded my dream lol 😆 I teased her pretty hard the next day lol
As a lucid dreamer, I can assure you that dreams are weird and wonderful things... I can also assure you that the human mind does NOT really process time in any consistent manner... Your alarm goes off while you're dreaming... Your brain CAN take that sound and incorporate it anywhere it decides "to make sense of it"... AND even that does NOT have to make any kind of logical sense to you or me. Remember he said "Dreams are emotionally substantive, so you'll tend to remember things like a loved one dying horribly"??? Well, emotions don't always make logical sense either... Falling asleep in front of a TV playing has taught me, that there's no legitimate sense of time in my mind... I can wake up to the very conversation I thought I was having in my dream HOURS AGO... AND then sit there wondering what the HELL was going on in the "Idiot Box" when I was chasing some horrible monster between then and waking up... Time doesn't mean much of anything, so trying to track the TV programming or trying to make any sense of dream incorporation from the outside world influences is best faced as a playful pass time unless you LIKE driving yourself batty. SO even that lucid dreaming is being able to "realize the dream is a dream" and take agency rather than wake up, it doesn't mean you entirely control all aspects of the dream. Think the episode of HouseMD when House gets shot at the beginning of the show, because he's wrestling through a differential diagnosis (like usual) but {spoiler alert} it's only at the end of the show that he realizes he's dreaming and can force himself to wake up and demand a katamine treatment to help the pain in his leg... It's not quite that out of whack, because (as you get "better skilled") you really CAN do some crazy things in dreams that you'd ordinarily never even think to try... BUT most of the time, in the dream, even though you know it's YOUR dream, your brain has already created and inherently "bought" the reality as-is... Whatever physics you've got in there, you still have to conform... You may or may not be able to fly unaided, and it's not universal (for instance)... Of course, when I can fly (like Superman) in a dream, it's an awful lot of fun! (among other things... tongue firmly planted in cheek)... ;o)
As someone that is unable to produce melatonin and has been taking it my whole life (14 years) I can tell you that it’s extremely draining, also for your mental health. I now take 3 mg a night at 20:00/8 pm and it can make you feel groggy, sleepy and sick even. Prioritize sleep, people. I try to do slo but it’s kinda impossible for me
Me and you both I’ve been a terrible sleeper since a toddler, i think it’s done a lot of damage in my school/working life etc. it’s currently 6AM and I can’t sleep
Idk if ur gonna get this but I’ve heard to cut those melatonin pills in half bc the 3 mg is too much for the human body and makes you super groggy in the morning
Is it me or Rebecca's voice is just crystal clear , loud . She could easily be a narrator or a podcaster or a voice actor or even the next Siri. Edit:well its just my opinion btw
As a long sleeper myself, I found it interesting that every time they mentioned "here's the average, but it you need this amount that's ok too", they always went down in hours (aka short sleepers), but never up (aka long sleepers). Not that it's all that important, I just find it to be much more of a detriment in society than being a night owl/lark, you know? Like, I feel many of the negatives of being a night owl (which I also am) can largely be smoothed over in modern society, but regularly needing 10-12 hours of sleep a night is still seen, not only as "lazy", but also as being a sloth in a hyper speed world.
I know right? I'm also night owl. I also expected them to say something about the people who sleeps more. And they said if you fall asleep right away, it means you don't get enough sleep. But in my case, eventhough I sleep for 9-10 hours, I still will fall asleep right away as soon as I get into bed🤔 I never get enough sleep. So what is our problem?😕
TRUE. I need about 9 hours a night, more if I'm sick or really run down. I don't sleep with an alarm clock anymore because I go to bed every night at the same time, and I consistently wake up at the same time every morning after a full 9 hours.
Agreed. People with chronic illnesses and/or physical disabilities, like myself, also need more sleep simply because our brain and/or our body is working more / using more energy due to the illness and/or disability. Additionally, though -- I do recommend fellow long sleepers get assessed for sleep apnea, as the need for extra sleep despite sleeping more than 7 hours could have a more physical cause. & it's better to be safe!
I am not sure if 12 hours is really normal if you are healthy, fit and have no other conditions that your body is working on fixing. 9? Sure, that seems to considered still in the range. But over that? I would guess that more often than not there is a different reason than biorhythm for that. Sickness, Fitness issues, to high cortisol levels, depression, etc plenty of things that might stress your body more and make it want more sleep.
No, I think the point of a nap is to not fall into deep sleep and just staying in the 1st and maybe 2nd stages of sleep which take place in those 20 minutes.
@@jiminsjams8668 It usually takes me at least 20 minutes to fall asleep, even if I am extremely tired... I'm jealous of anyone who can go to sleep fast!
I really appreciate how they debunk these myths without talking down or insulting the people who may have grown up with them It's a much more kind and gentle reeducation, and you genuinely believe that they just want people to have the healthiest sleep they can Would absolutely listen to them give a full lecture on the science and study of sleep - they're quite engaging and I feel like I would learn a lot
God bless both you and whoever is reading, dont forget Jesus loves you. He died on the cross for our sins and rose three days later. Have an amazing and safe day!
@@feraynironmane8101 ADHD night-shifter here. It at least lets me have music on to ground me and block out other distractions while I work. Whiskey puts me to sleep and coffee wakes me up (and focuses me, hello stimulant).
@@wordsmith451 Some nights it's a one-coffee night, sometimes it's a two-coffee night. Some mornings it's a one-whiskey morning and others it's a two-whiskey morning. ^_^
I'm a nurse, on a rotating roster ( a random mixture of nights, evenings, mornings, never the same days off) hearing about how important sleep, and regular sleep schedules is, hurts me on a spiritual level
Seeing that picture of sleeping positions where the person has a cushion and/or pillow under or between their legs does help make feel a tad more normal with me stuffing an extra pillow between my legs when I sleep. Really helped to keep my legs from 'falling asleep' because of poor blood circulation around that area.
If you're a side sleeper, absolutely put something between your legs if it feels more comfortable. You can end up with poor sleep and chronic hip problems if you don't. I'm slender, I don't have thunder thighs, so I need support there. If I can't have it, then I have to sleep on my back, or do the 3/4 stomach/side combination, which isn't great for neck and back. Bottom line is, humans are built for bipedal locomotion and height. Everything horizontal is an afterthought at best.
My work flips my schedule all the time.. I have to force myself to stay awake so I can sleep at a time that'll have me get up for work at the right hour. x.x
You're going to experience that attitude throughout your life. My profession allows me to indulge my inner night owl-even pays higher. When I discovered I like night shift, I realized it had always been true. As a child,we had few restrictions in the summer and I stayed up most of the night frequently. But even after working nights for 36 years, even my family just don't really believe it's natural. My mother worked nights even longer, but when she retired she immediately began trying to have a "normal" routine. Not very successfully 😁
Yeah, there's a lot of stigmatisation out there of night owls. It's amazing the mental gymnastics people go through to claim with a straight face that I'm 'lazy' for sleeping 6.00am-2.00pm, when them sleeping 10.00pm-6.00am is perfectly fine.
The saying may be "the early bird gets the worm," but I always add, "yes, but the early worm gets eaten!" It's a matter of perspective, see? 😆 (I am indeed a night owl; mornings are terrible... lol)
I didn't think there were identifying characteristics for sleep researchers, but I 've changed my mind; they fit the profile. I feel like both of them just radiate gentle, cozy vibes: perfect for bed-time sleepiness.. and their research.
@@GamerGirlKat94 I love and hate these dreams. I had one once and only once so far, where I lived out a majority of a life. Waking up to my alarm in my own body was SUREAL it took me all day to orient myself and convince myself I didn’t just time travel back and it was just a long ass dream. Crazy how dreams work.
I grew up with a condition called ‘Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome’ so have gone through many sleep management practices. I remember once being subscribed some very strong melatonin supplements. It really messed with my mental alacrity the following day and was definitely too high of a dose. Less can be more. Don’t over do it. You want the minimum that can work for you and focus on practicing good ‘sleep hygiene’.
It shocks me how unregulated melatonin is in America. I live in New Zealand and take melatonin every night and I need a prescription from the doctor so I can get it. One time we bought a huge tub of melatonin from America that my dad’s work mate brought over for me since it was cheaper. We stopped doing that because the doses were too high and we couldn’t find one low enough for my prescription. They can get such huge doses so easily!
Never been diagnosed formally, but I've long suspected I've had that. Always been that way my whole life. I've just kind of learned to function with it and it doesn't get in my way (mostly).
I have both those types of insomnia, nightmares, and night terrors. I suffer from PTSD, as well as bipolar and social anxiety disorder. I've read that PTSD causes nightmares and night terrors in all stages of sleep, not just REM. they started when I was a kid, but have gotten worse the older I get. I'm 31. Life is not good to me, so the more I live, the worse my sleep is.
@Meryemyarba it depends who you are. Im autistic and it doesnt work for me. It actually makes things so much worse for me. There are some studies that are just coming out that indicates it might not be the best for neurodivergent people. But just like anything it really depends on the person. I seen at least one autistic person say it worked great for them. For me it left me more traumatised and made things worse and ruined the relationship with me and my therapists. Ive heard other autistic people say the same. Just a little psa that it might not work for everyone.
After starting to work night shift I kept being told it would mess up my sleep health, but now I wake up naturally without an alarm every day 4 hours before work and I feel good about it. I get better sleep than a majority of the day people I think
True. And people forget sometimes that some of us have no choice than to work night shift. How do you think your amazon orders arrive so fast? And public health, the mailing, people work 24/7. Some people gotta do it, you know. So this dogma of "If you don't sleep during the night your life is fucked up", I don't care at all. Society simply just wouldn't function correctly if everyone slept at night. Most people tend to forget it.
@@Narusasu98 the thing is that your body needs natural light and vitamin D. Our bodies are designed to be awake during the day, sleeping through the whole day can actually mess up your health. No one thinks your life is fucked up if you work night shift (that I know of), people know someone has to do it but people are still just concerned about your health. I know someone has to work night shift but I’m still worried about their health. Everyone I’ve talked to who works nights has said it affected their health. Until recently, I was sleeping during the day and awake during the night and it definitely affected me, my body was craving sunlight. It would be the middle of the night and I would be crying because I was confused because it felt like it should be sunny but it was only dark since it was night.
@@akiyachef_5213I thought it could be 24/7 but I was not sure, and I did not want to check it. So, I just wrote it the way we say in my native language - 7 days, 24 hours-.
I can't believe their advice for jetlag is 'avoid caffeine' and 'prepare four days early and give yourself a couple of days on arrival'. This is a classic case of an expert telling you what's 'best' in a very narrow sense that relates only to their field, instead of what's best in a more holistic sense. Naturally adjusting might be best for my sleep, but it's not best for ME. A night of bad sleep is a price I'm willing to pay.
Same here, I’m forever hitting the snooze button or sleeping 12 hours on the weekend cause mornings are just soooooo exhausting 😪I like getting up late and staying up late !
Been a stomach sleeper all my life. My mom told me that even when I was a baby, she would put me on my back and I’d flip onto my stomach. Somethings never change.
@@SkippyJon15 It's actually good if you do it the right way. I use to sleep with the back sligtly tilted on the side and supported by a folded knee. It's difficult to explain but that position gives your back just the perfect natural curvature it should have
I'm a night owl and I keep trying to switch my clock. I can do it with determination, but it takes one night of staying up late and I'm back to being a night owl. I could easily stay up till 4am, but I make myself go to bed around 3. Funny though I just looked at the clock and it's 3:30 am! LOL
Omg this! I have the same exact problem. Just one late night will screw up a few days streak of "normalcy". Also I find myself most productive/active during 1-5am
this has helped me in ways i didn't even realize i needed, i never would have realized SO many of my issues are very likely influenced by my sleeping difficulties i've had since childhood or possibly infancy.
I’m so confused by their logic on that. They just want you to go through the jet lag for a few days. But you can easily fix it within a day if you just stay up during the day when you want to sleep and then go to sleep at night when you’re really tired. I feel like being jet lagged for multiple days would be worse for your health than just staying up longer for one day. No one wants to spend the first half of their holiday just recovering from jet lag.
i also do by just going to bed earlier or late depending on how far i am from the timezone i live in. i went to colorado like 2 weeks ago and just went to bed 2 hrs earlier
This is very helpful and well presented. I had no idea you were supposed to take melatonin 3-4 hrs before bed. I have been taking it directly at bedtime and it feels like it doesn’t help. I have a variety of sleep issues. Sleep onset insomnia, sleep maintenance insomnia, delayed sleep phase disorder (basically programmed to be a night person in a daytime person’s world- so I feel like I have permanent jet lag) and I had obstructive sleep apnea, but since I’ve started losing weight, that’s cleared up a lot (which is good, because there was one night I was constantly waking up choking and I was terrified of literally dying in my sleep). I also get sleep paralysis. It had been years since the last time I dealt with it, but recently, it happened like three times in one week- the kind where you’re trying to wake up and you feel like you’re going through the motions of getting out of bed but your body isn’t actually moving, or trying desperately to wake up but you feel trapped like the blanket suddenly weighs a ton, or your arms and legs are like Thor’s hammer. Or you think you’ve successfully moved and woken up, only to realize you’re stuck in another dream where you’re trying to wake up. If you get stuck in a position where its hard to breathe, its really scary. I try to sleep on my side with pillows supporting me in a specific way- I started doing that to help with the apnea, but then I realized that if I get “stuck” asleep, its a more comfortable position to be in cause I don’t feel as pinned. Anyway… Watching this after a night with zero sleep, and a day with no nap where my body has decided that even though every fiber of my being is exhausted, my brain didn’t want to sleep. Its probably just trying to get back on track, and 1AM is better than 6 AM I guess… I freaking hate my relationship with sleep.
I also have issues with sleep paralysis, and it mostly shows up during the transition between summer and fall (for some reason, I'm not sure why). What usually helps me is turning on a noise machine, usually wave sounds to help me regulate my breathing and stay asleep. I feel like it lulls my brain to a complete rest instead of it waking up before my body does. Maybe that will help you!
Rebecca's voice is the kind of voice I need to hear to make me feel that everything is gonna be okay even though I'm in the middle of war and I'd believe her instantly 😂😂😂
I feel like a sleep guru because I work overnights and flip to a normal schedule on my weekends. Never have trouble getting to sleep or staying asleep, or waking up really. My first day of the week I need to sometimes push through a bit or have an awkward nap but it's not bad. My trick is to get your schedule consistent, but go to bed with 9-10 hours until your alarm, and let yourself wake up on your own (with the alarm as backup for those days you want to sleep). The amount that this has improved my life is immense.
@@abbsterlicious5186 it's easier if you don't "veg out" on TV or social media. I got an extra hour of sleep a day when I uninstalled Twitter from my phone
My son had night terrors all his life till he was 8. It affected his behaviour during the day but it turns out he actually had swollen adenoids and tonsils. :/ only diagnosed at 8! Argh! Still feel bad about that- we went to so many doctors over the years and I took a random article I read about the symptoms of enlarged tonsils in children to get his fixed. His sleep has been great since then!
Good to know that my routine of always leaving waking up until the absolute latest possible time so that I get more sleep is actually a GOOD thing 😂 Example: I have work at 8am I know it takes 25mins to drive there and that it only takes me 10mins to get dressed etc. So I set my alarm for 7:10 which allows me ten minutes to wake up and check my phone etc then get dressed grab a muesli bar for breakfast and then travel to work!
Bleh, screw that. If I have to be somewhere at 8am, I'm up at 6am so I can have 2 hours to ease into the day, eat a nice breakfast, take a long shower, or just generally chill. I used to do the last minute wake up throw myself into the shower and drive half asleep to work thing, but it sucks.
I wake up around 11am-12pm to get ready for work. I clock in by 2:30pm I clock out at 11pm I get home by 11:30pm I stay up until at least 4am-5am Repeat. I love how informative and inclusive this was for early bird AND night owls! Soothing and reassuring! Edit: does any one else needs background noise when sleeping? I like to use rain sound with thunderstorms on youtube.
I prefer to sleep with as little noise as possible. The quieter the better. Also I get up at 11 am Clock in by 1:15pm Clock out at 11:45pm Get home at 12:40am Stay up until 3:00-3:30am if I stay up later I am too tired the next day.
I also use background noise. My great grandmother used to have this sound machine for sleep and when she died my mum took it. I started using that when I was probably about 10 to help me sleep. I would play the brook sound on it. Then it broke and I started using TH-cam videos. For the past few years I’ve been playing this one video of an open window in New York at night. I like it for multiple reasons. One, it drowns out my tinnitus. Two, it hides the bumps in the night so they don’t scare me. Three, I find it calming hearing that there are other people nearby when I’m trying to sleep so if anyone tried to murder me other people would hear. Four, I often can’t sleep because of my anxious thoughts so I like to imagine I’m this random person in New York and I imagine what my room looks like. It also just seems to soothe me.
@@rachelcookie321 can I get the link to this? I need so much noise to fall asleep. Used to listen to trains, rain, thunderstorms, binaural beats, alpha waves, fans, coffee shop ambiance, etc and they all work at first but then they stop working after a few weeks and I have to find something else. Silence is too loud for me to sleep lol
I need so much noise to fall asleep. Used to listen to trains, rain, thunderstorms, binaural beats, alpha waves, fans, coffee shop ambiance, etc and they all work at first but then they stop working after a few weeks and I have to find something else. Silence is too loud for me to sleep lol also what kind of job do you have because I would love this schedule. The only time I enjoy mornings is when I've been up all night and I watch the sunrise. I feel so alive then and productive and then I'm asleep by 7 lol
I want a whole episode on why napping should only be 20 minutes or so. I like to take naps that are significantly longer because I enjoy feeling like I actually /slept/, which I usually only get after about 90 minutes or so...
It’s about not falling into sleep cycles. 20 minutes will allow a re-boot of cognition without falling in deeper, which makes you feel like crap and can make it hard to go to sleep at night. If your schedule is to sleep through a cycle or two, go for it. Sleep fragmentation bothers most people, but if it’s optimal for you, ok.
I'm a big fan of the 100 minute nap, 10 minutes to fall asleep, 90 minutes to do one circadian cycle. I usually feel much better after. Often times I just take a 30 minute nap (20ish minutes of sleep) to not interrupt sleeping at night, but sometimes long naps are the best thing.
90 minutes is also just as good (in fact it may help you feel even more rested since it’ll give you time to complete a sleep cycle), just saying “20 minutes is ideal” is an oversimplification on their end
Easier said than done. I tried that. I’ll get tired about 9pm, be in bed by 10, can’t fall asleep until 2am. Wake up at 8am. Same thing again. But I’m not working right now. When I start working I think I’m going to age rapidly 😢
As someone who has always thought, “I always wake up sweating during my bad dreaming”- I know now that’s it’s because of my warm tempered bedroom is the CAUSE of my nightmares. Definitely enjoyed watching this and learning!
For any suffering from insomnia: I was an insomniac from my late teenage years through age 39. I'd say any two out of three days I was sleep-deprived. Around age 39, I started noticing a pressure in my chest...not painful exactly, just pressure. It came and went, and eventually I picked up a pattern. It was most prevalent after I ate, but it definitely wasn't heartburn or anything else that felt digestion related. I then further noticed it was especially after I ate sugary breads (cakes, pastries, etc.). So, I gave up food with high amounts of sugar in them for a week, just to see if the pressure stopped. It did. But what was really interesting is that toward the end of that week, I was falling asleep within 30 minutes of going to bed, and staying asleep. In the last 4 years, I've eaten maybe 10 servings of high-sugar foods. Zero nights of insomnia. It has absolutely been worth cutting out sugar to never again feel the despair of sleeplessness. I figure I'm not the only one out there who had this issue. EDIT: It's worth mentioning that I still drink black coffee and sugar-free sodas. Caffeine was definitely not causing my insomnia.
How do you set an alarm for a 20 minute nap? I have no idea how long it will take me to fall asleep, 30 mins-few hours, regardless of how sleep deprived I am. At what point are you setting the 20 minute alarm?
If ur rly tired, u would sleep right after 5 mins of closing ur eyes. So set 20 mins at the time. But if u have difficulty falling asleep during a nap, it could just mean you're not tired enough to take the nap. So get your butt up and get ok with your day.
@@clwt4075 that’s complete bullshit, I have severe insomnia, I can not sleep for a week and still not be able to sleep. I have never in my life took less than 30 minutes to fall asleep, and that has nothing to do with how tired I am.
Sleep tip I learned that always work for me: Tense all the muscles in your body, from your legs to arms or arms to legs. You can do it as many times as you want. It tires out your muscles, and relaxes them, and hopefully your mind.
7:30 i often have dreams that feel like they go on for years and i check my fitbit sleep tracker and i will have like 40 min to an hour-long REM cycle.
I pulled so many all nighters in college & I definitely would've benefitted from the all nighter tip that they gave. I always tried sleeping immediately after I was done with school work & I slept terribly throughout the day/woke up so thrown off.
exactly correct what was said at 3:20; having flown all over the world, best advice; as you step off the plane, USE THE NEW TIME in the country immediately . . . .if you arrive at 6pm but your "body time " is already 11pm, STAY UP. You can go to sleep a little earlier (9pm) but use the new time in the country. No one can't survive a few more hours before you sleep [called being a mom]. By next evening, all is good.
We tried this in Australia, by 3pm we went to nap (it was raining pretty hard) “before dinner” we woke up and it was 2am! (This is after flying in from NY, so it’s a pretty big time change).
@@joermnyc never been to Australia or Japan, but did fly non stop from my home in NYC to Hawaii some bizillion time zones earlier and by day 2 it worked for me.
Traveled from Germany to New Zealand so a 12 hour difference. But as I was nervous and didn't sleep well the night before and the second flight was a night flight, so everything was prepared for people to sleep, I was able to get a couple of hours sleep before arriving at 6am in New Zealand (6pm in Germany) and got through the entire day til 8pm. No jet lag the after this. Another girl I met on the plane directly went to sleep after arriving and had a jet lag for over a week. So yeah, one day of a bit of discipline and being tired, which is quite manageable when keeping yourself occupied, is definitely worth it to not suffer from severe jet lag for a week. And you get to enjoy more of your time abroad
@@esciteach7997 yeah we went back to sleep (it was 2am) and by breakfast we were okay, thankfully the weather cleared up except for some early morning showers (we went in August) and it was a nice holiday.
That's what I did when I went to Canada (I'm french). Basically after 6 hours of flight I arrived at the same time I had left Paris... I went to bed a little bit earlier that day and I was still feeling a bit tired the next day, but after that I was on the local schedule
I've been an insomniac since I can remember. Always thought that there is a trick to learning how to fall asleep fast and that I would get it as I get older. Was extra painful when I had to share a bedroom with my parents or when we go on summer holidays, the snoring just kills any illusion of sleep. Personally what helped me the most was when I found out about ASMR still at it's early stages before that I just played Skyrim's ambience track over and over. Insomnia still comes, but not as often. I think Rebbeca has that great calming voice that ASMRtist strife for.
I also struggled with falling asleep my entire childhood and always wondered why. then my sophomore year of highschool, I was diagnosed with ADHD, and it all made sense why I was the only kid who couldn’t fall asleep during preschool nap time. ASMR has helped me as well, I’ve come to prefer sounds like drawing and tapping.
@@c3ru1ean41 LOL i have adhd and was always the one kid that couldnt nap at pre-school too! I’d take my headbands and try to break them.. gotta keep busy somehow
Always had insomnia, just the falling asleep part, most of the times im just not sleepy enough, that until i fond melatonin gummies, just 1mg 20min before bed time, its incredible everything in my life improved, i actually wake up at a regular time and feel rested... if you suffer from insomnia you should try it, but ofc speak to a doctor first.
Prob my top 3 FAVORITE video on this channel of all Times. Thanks for inviting those 2 amazing people for the video on the field of expertise they have. They are both stunning.
For some reason I was really confused by their answer. So if you don't mind, do you mean instead of snoozing or going back to bed, you wake up immediately after the alarm goes off?
@@GarnetsWeb Yes, that is exactly what it means. They want you to wake up on one alarm, not going back to bed after hitting snooze (or having 5 more alarms). So set your alarm to the time you want to wake up, and get up when it goes off.
Great vid. Would have liked to have seen Narcolepsy mentioned when they discussed sleep latency, as sooooo many of us don’t get a proper diagnosis until we’re middle-aged - and falling asleep quickly + excessive daytime sleepiness are some of the most common indicators of N. Though there is no cure, treatment is still life-changing for many (most?) of us.
I’m Scandinavian, and I’m not sure it’s because the US is so different when it comes to the weather, but the Norwegian government recommends sleeping a a room 10 degrees Fahrenheit lower than what the US suggests. It’s super common for kids in kindergarten to sleep in their strollers outside which has shocked lots of my American friends. Maybe cooler is better. 😉
i think it does have to do with the weather, getting a room to 58 F at night in the summer would be very expensive for your power bill, if you could manage it at all (air conditioners are only designed to bring the temp down a certain amount)
I guess norway is much cooler than united states any day. And maybe lots of people are used to colder weathers normally that 10 F cooler is tolerable and also more comfortable. Be near the equator and 75 F is perfectly cool
I mean I honestly was surprised that the temperature recommendation is so specific... I understand that cooler is generally better. But people's range of comfortable temps can vary a lot! I bet that if you have someone from Thailand follow Norwegian recommendations they would not sleep well and visa versa... And it can vary individually too. Id also bet that if this based on any studies it is based on studies done on Americans in America so yeah....
Much of the Southern US is desert or subtropical, in other words it has very hot weather. My family in Florida think that 70F (21C) is cold. I'm not kidding. People who live in the colder, more Northern parts of the US tend to like to sleep in cooler temperatures. I live in Eastern Washington state. I keep the window open at night until it drops to about 33F (0.5C) in the winter. I tend to be uncomfortable at night if it gets much above 50F (10C).
I tried a new sleep position as I took a nap earlier. I realized how it was more comfortable to lay on my back than my side. Then when I woke up, I grab my phone, and see this video on sleeping positions in my suggestions 😳
i have sleep apnea but i don’t snore. the doctor conducting the sleep study actually had to wake me up in the middle of the practice because i stopped breathing for more than a few seconds. checking up on yourself is important. my parents would get upset that i would sleep immediately after school but realistically im not breathing at night.
Hahaha!! Yeah, good luck with that, eh? I've had the corrective surgery, but I still have a double curve (well, triple if you include my neck), they're just _much_ smaller. Even still I have to use a ton of pillows in order to align things as best as possible to sleep- certainly never going to be straight, though! Lol I hope your scoliosis doesn't cause you too much trouble- cheers!
I was always a massive sleep wriggler ever since I was a baby Cut to 25 year old me learning I have mild scoliosis and going "that would explain why my sleep quality shot through the roof once I slept with my legs elevated and tilted through the pelvis..."
I know someone who had night terrors when they were younger and those were pretty scary to witness. In the middle of the night they'd suddenly start screaming violently as if someone had broken into their room and started stabbing them to death or something. It scared the shit out of everyone else in the house too of course, and I wouldn't be surprised if the neighbors heard it.
@@samuelbahij4878 it's a lot!!! she did warn me about it well before we spent a night together, and it's different from an awake scream, usually? so i can deal with it, but it can be really upsetting, especially when i'm in another room and it activates the "GO HELP" instinct but i know there's nothing i can do.
@@MorganChaos yeah same, my husband did that too a couple of times- just a very terrifying, blood curdling scream and hysterical thrashing about. My heart almost stopped lol. It was horrible
Insomnia sucks. I get it often. And nothing fixes it. Every behavior change, every drug, nothing works. Those sleeping pills just make me feel tired and terrible, but still can't sleep. If you are like me, the best trick I have found is put an old TV show on, something you have watched many times and aren't really interested in. Turn the volume down so you can just barely hear it occasionally. Now with your eyes closed, follow the story of the show with just your memory. Every time a song starts in your head or you start thinking about other things, focus on the sound of the show. Don't try to sleep, just try to focus on the show. You will hopefully fall asleep quietly eventually.
As a fellow warn humid climate dweler, I didn't think it would be such a low temperature until i did the convertion to celcius! Omg its so cold!! 🥶 How do you not get sick!!? The lowest i can go is 75. That's just insane
Oh, man I have so much to ask about 1) 20 mins naps are impossible for me because usually it takes me more than 30 mins to fall into a half-asleep drugged-like state (I keep "resurfacing" with all progress gone) and then 30 more to get into actual sleep mode. Is this something to be concerned about? 2) I remember vividly 90% of my dreams with exact details about clothes, architecture, character personality, touch, smell and *insanely* detailed plots. People think I am making it up but I can't possibly make up a 4 page Google doc story with themes, an entire cast etc. on the spot. Those dreams feel like a movie, a series with multiple seasons, an entire franchise and sometimes years out of somebody's life. It gets so disorienting, yet people say they envy me 3) Is it possible for me to have a stable sleep schedule when sometimes for work I need to get up at 4:30am, sometimes 5:30, 6:30 and sometimes I can sleep in as long as I want to? Without naps I am unable to function and mine are usually more than 1 and a 1/2 hours.
I find that I really struggle if I get less than 8 hours of sleep. My optimal sleep duration is usually 9-10 hours. Anything more than that isn't really necessary (though I've never really observed anything negative as a result of sleeping 12+ hours). Anything less than 8 hours and I have motivation problems the next few days, anything less than 7 and I struggle to function. Occasionally I get the chance to sleep longer than 12 hours... if I actually stay fully asleep for that full period, the following day is often my best day of the month. Unfortunately, I don't often sleep that full duration, usually I'll wake up after 8-9 hours feeling like I should have slept longer. I don't need to have more than 9 hours regularly, but it's quite nice to get it when I can, especially if I've been getting 7 or less hours a few nights prior.
I do relate as well, perhaps our sleep requiered is Somewhere in the 9 to 10 but doing 12 hour sleeps is actually to catch up physical tiredness. Getting insomnia is perhaps if you force yourself for thoes extra hours ?
Thank you for saying this! I feel it's never mentioned that some people need a little more than 7-8 hours of sleep, even though it's reagularly mentioned that some people only need 5-6 hours. So statistically it stands to reason that while 7-8 hours might be average, there can be "outliers" in both directions, who need either only 6 or even 9 hours of sleep. I feel failing to mention that can put these long sleepers at a disadvantage, because they feel they have to get up after 8 hours and wonder all the time why it doesn't seem enough. Now if you regularly need more than 10 hours of sleep, I'd do a health check up to ensure it's not due to underlying health problems or bad sleep quality (e.g. sleep apnea). But personally I've always done better with 8.5 to 9 hours of sleep. I also got diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder about 2 years ago and I suspect the ongoing, subtle inflammation process in my body contributes further to needing more sleep to keep the damage in check. I wish someone would do a video about sleep and chornic illness, since it's often so interconnected - either because an illlness can cause insomnia or because our sleep needs might change due to it.
I’ve found 10 hrs seem to work best for me. That might be cos I have chronic pain and fatigue but I will definitely say different people need different amounts.
As a night terror victim even at 27, it's so much worse than nightmares. You have like a nightmare, then wake up partially but don't realize you woke up and most of the time I see things in the room that scare me to death, then I try to get away from the horror IRL, resulting in sometimes dangerous situations. I once ran down the stares to get away from a figure on the ceiling and that's could have wrong real quick.
Night owl here 🙋🏻♀️ I can EASILY stay up until 3-4AM but when I need to wake up early say at like 8am I feel so horribly sluggish and lethargic and it legitimately takes my body about a full half hour to even find any energy to be productive
Her voice, tone, pronunciation, annunciation, crystal clear & smooth delivery is just perfect.
No likes, no buts, no umms, no filler words.
Just flawless.
I wud pay thousands to take speech and voice lessons from her.
Go to Harvard and study medicine
But when she talks you can hear all the spit on her mouth and her voice is nice but that’s all I can focus on
I think being a teacher who gives lecture is what contitutes in this level of speaking skills.
I don't find her voice perfect at all, because of the sibilant. I hate when people talk like that, it's driving me crazy.
The lack of no filler words may be a result of this being edited/retakes.
Some people are meant to be in their profession and these two have the voice to be in this path. I love it
I think they were purposefully talking gently either because of who they encounter everyday or because you might be watching this when you should be sleeping lol
Nah she sounds too fake nice, like she's talking to a child all the time
@@PalpatinesPlumber projection
She has such exaggerated mouth movements making smacking ass noises every word
@@PalpatinesPlumber She has a wonderful soft, but clear voice, everything is pronounced neatly and it's really calming but it also raises respect. She sounds more like a great educator - a knowledgeable college professor invested in sharing the knowledge.
Found the fix to my snooze problem; set it to every 20 minutes so I can take at least 3 ideal naps in the time it takes me to get up. Thanks!
No lie, I already have three alarms set at 20 minute intervals and I was like “you know what, I guess I’m good then.”
Genius
Yo fr
Ha! Genius!
😂😂😂
These two brings me at peace. The man sounds so kind and gentle I’d feel like I can trust him. And the lady’s tone and energy is literally like a sunshine. They are both amazing and did an amazing job!
As a night shifter, I can confirm this world is absolutely built to force a morning-day productivity schedule. What a world it would be if everything was open all the time and the people who were more productive later could work those shifts. Imagine what a boost in productivity we'd see across all types.
It's so sad for us. I'm also a night person, and the only night jobs are cash registers or factory line work. I tried to apply for factory ones but they told me I'm grossly overqualified and told me to "go get a high paying desk job", but working in the day is so horrible for me. I'm really tired and I feel kinda groggy the whole time. Covid lockdowns have been the best thing that happened to me because we get to work at home I've been napping in the day and doing my work at night when my colleagues are asleep. They start work in the morning and everything is done. lol.
Contracting work, you can work whatever hours you want as long as you get the work done and make a few meetings here and there you're good to go. Also, positions like a security guard, nursing, doctors, paramedics, police etc all have night shifts.
@@KryaDiere not necessarily true, there are a lot of overnight shifts in IT. i currently work as an overnight cybersecurity engineer and i would not trade it for a day shift.
As a teen I was a night person, but as my circadian rhythm "grew out" of it (teens just naturally get tired later) I became a morning person. Not entirely, I still find myself the most mentally productive towards the end of the day.
The reality is, the majority of people are "morning/day people" due to well, biology, meaning the majority of society will accommodate that.
Having more businesses open at night would force more people into night shifts. There's already quite a few jobs out there that are overnight, shift work jobs for those types of people. There isn't a "need" for an increase in jobs for night owls, because the majority of adults aren't like that.
@@KryaDiere the office I work in has night/evening shift workers, 4-12. gotta find a sector that operates 24/7 (like trades and logistics, shipping never stops)
These people have the most relaxing voices of all time o my LORD
I could fall asleep listening to them
the woman especially would make a great asmrtist!
I would totally watch sleep science ASMR
theory: in order to be a really good sleep scientist, you have to take classes on how to have a calming and relaxing demeanor and speech pattern
@@sethescope I never thought about that actually
they're so experts at sleep that their voices almost made me want to go to bed
I literally almost fell asleep watching this
I'm going to sleep watching this.
Exactly!
You probably aren't sleeping enough
@@pinchpeak5203 who is tho
Thank you for debunking the myth about night owls. For years, I have been patronised for sleeping and waking up late. This has made feel bad about myself and I ended up internalising the notion that I simply have bad habits or a bad lifestyle, which inside, I truly did not believe about myself. This society IS in favour of early birds and it will always be a continuous struggle for night owls to navigate and compromise their schedules and plans. In an ideal world, our society should function to serve both kinds!
I definitely resonate with this. I even reached a point where I felt guilty sleeping in on weekends
I felt the exact same way. Still do sometimes. I get the feeling that others in my life think I’m lazy because I sleep till noon most days. But then I’m up later than them and getting work done at hours when they just don’t see it.
I was lucky to have a second shift job for 30 years!
@@Couchlover47 But they are. A victim of a screwed up work culture. One of millions actually. Many workplaces enforce unreasonable working hours for nigh owls to handle. Like, why do you need me to be at work at 8:00am even though I'm not seeing any clients, I'm not opening the shop or taking any phone calls at that time anyway? If anything, night owls are much less productive in the morning, so you're actually sabotaging your company if you expect them to be up early for no good reason. I'm a night owl myself and when I worked for a company like that, I'd always be slow, groggy and unpleasant in the morning, and I'd only start waking up after 11:00am or so. Thankfully I left that company and found a job where I can come in at 10:30, eat breakfast, catch up on emails and start work at 11:00. My productivity increased through the roof. My boss is clearly happy, because I'm constantly getting praise and bonuses, I'm happy, the customers are happy, everyone's happy. And all it took was shifting my work schedule to my natural waking hours. But a lot, and I mean a LOT of employers still don't understand that. They think "If I'm up, you're up" and won't hear an argument to the contrary.
@@B3RyL Not to mention school. I'm a night owl as well, and when I was in school I wouldn't be tired until around 12pm.
My school would start at 7:30, but I had to get up around 5:30am to have enough time to shower, eat, get fully ready, and walk 20 minutes to school. I need about 8-10 hours before I feel well rested, so most often I would fall in the habit of snoozing the alarm a lot, rushing to get ready just so I could be on time, and I would sleep in class a lot. It really killed my productivity, what little I had with my ADHD Inattentive, which I was led to believe is fake and a sign of laziness.(definitely not fake). It was super stressful and demotivating, but it really wasn't my fault. I really wasn't remotely tired until midnight. In fact, it's 4am right now as I'm typing this.
And now, after all those years of being forced to work against my natural schedule, I'm tired all the time and have issues feeling well rested even when I get the correct amount of sleep. It's very annoying that we have to conform to an early bird society
I like these two a lot. A bunch of the other experts they've had on here sound so snarky and smug when they're debunking things, and it really puts me off. These two were so nice!
I agree
The others are snarky because they don't get enough sleep
@@monicawalls8184 I was literally just about to write this 😂👍👍👍
Agreed
If you spend a day as a medical professional you'll see where they're coming from
"Wake up as late as you possibly can" is the only part I choose to take away from this video.
🤣🤣🤣 Same
Funny joke. You are also the reason why doctors hate their job they learn to tell important info and yet you immaturely reject for "comfort"/freedom, when your comfort gets less and less because of lack of sleep then you will regret not fixing your sleep schedule earlier now of course if you ain't a student or don't need to wake up early then sure stay up later and wake up later to get enough sleep
@@meh6513 it not that deep brudha
@@meh6513 it’s a joke
@@scrums4748 And? Nothing wrong with throwing some facts out just cause somebody made a stale joke.
I desperately need these two to tell me its gonna be alright on loop
Right? These voice could stop wars 😅
@@NadiaSeesIt true that
Real
There is also paradoxical insomnia where someone thinks they’re awake but are actually sleeping most of the night
I get this so much, it’s very annoying, I am sleeping full 10 hours but feel like I’m awake the whole time
@@numodumo6094 I’m so sorry to hear that, you should see a sleep specialist to figure out why that is happening!
It feels nice my brain completely memories a you tube video and then when I sleep I get the dream then when I say to myself in the dream it’s time to go sleep I wake up then sleep again
Oh so thats maybe why hours go so unusually fast sometimes at night
I feel like that a lot. My sleep is definitely screwed and I don’t know how to fix it. When I wake up I don’t feel like I just slept usually like you said, I also wake up either to an alarm or whatever reason before I get up and I go back to sleep and that’s the only time I can or ever will dream; after I wake up and then fall asleep again. At my old job I use to have to drive peoples cars and one time I almost fell asleep at the wheel on the highway in someone’s car. I couldn’t believe it afterwards cause I’m the kind of person who would do anything to not mess up someone else’s belongings such as someone’s car. I’m always extra careful.
This woman needs her own sleeping podcast. Her voice is very soothing.
Her voice sounds like she's doing a commercial for a medicine brand. "Talk to your doctor about x today."
and the dude looks like far cry character
Her voice reminds me of Ivanka Trump. 🙄 Like she’s overly faking it, maybe just another trust fund baby. Not hating, just sounds forced.
Your pfp omg
Matthew Walker x Rebecca podcast
Average person: "He died peacefully in his sleep"
Sleep doctor: "He suffocated to death due to untreated sleep apnea"
Good one here
Underrated comment!
Average person: This comment made me laugh
Laugh doctor: .
I remember not being able to breath in a dream one time and it was the farthest thing from peaceful. Since then I never sleep on my back.
why did i picture it in my head lol
Rebecca sounds like a professional narrator
She should do a sleeping podcast. Her voice is so soothing
Yes! I want to listen to her podcast!
@@fmsneuroscientist me too!!
Ikr! She sounds like the one in psych2go
I thought the same thing 😊
I really wish this idea of night owls being a real thing was more common knowledge and widely accepted. As a night owl, my ideal wake up time is 8am and then get ready slowly and start work around 10:30-11, finish work around 6-7pm, have dinner, and then do some hobbies until midnight/1ish. But with full time 9-5 work, I have to be up before 7, and have eaten breakfast and be out of the house by 8 to start work at 9. It really doens't work for me and I genuinely believe it's lead to me being depressed and unable to relax because I always feel like whenever I get up late that I'm wasting time.
i feel you
Its only been a day that I realized genetics can define night owls and larks, it was enlightening, I have been living my life thinking being a night owl is the trait of a lazy person or less qualified. I feel so much better now. I feel you.
I don't think that's an example of a night owl .
I’m not sure that if for you waking up at 8am is ideal then you’re a night owl. To me it’s more like waking up at 12 pm, and then being awake till 3-4 in the morning.
thats not a night owl, i sleep at 3-6 am and wake up at around 1-3 pm
“The ideal time for napping is 20 minutes,”
Me who sleeps for 5 hours and calls it a nap 🧍🏻♀️
I do the same.
Lol word
same! i feel attacked xD
20 minutes is about the time it takes me to realize that I have to pee and that I can't nap before I do, and then nap-time is over.
Understandable have a nice day.
Yep, I hate when people act like waking up very early is the key to good health and successfulness. If you can't help your schedule then you have no choice of course but if you are lucky enough to choose it, then there isn't reason to force yourself to become an early bird.
I am sorry but, as a night owl, who literally goes to sleep around 1 to 2am, and used to feel more focused at night, feel the great need of changing that. I have done some days of sleeping and waking up early and let me tell you, those have been the best days for me, in energy and productivity. I remember one time I slept three days in a row at 8-9pm and after the third day, even my memory got better. I could remember easily what I did those three days, to the slightest detail, I mean I could remember quite well, compare to when I slept late. I am talking about in summertime when I could sleep the 8 hours no matter what time I went to sleep. Nights are meant to sleep, naturally, our bodies need darkness when tire, and that is at night and we need daylight and sunlight to do things. I mean, the sun is energy, literally. Flowers get it from it, and we get some too. I feel you because I still go to sleep late, but recently I feel my body is begging me to change that. I will listen and act accordingly. Take care of yourself, and I will encourage you to implement what is naturally better, getting ready to sleep and sleeping when is dark outside and waking up when the sun goes up. Tech and human inventions had damaged our sleeping schedules. 200 hundred years ago, not sleeping at night, was not a big problem as it is today. Society was adjusted to what was natural, but now we have disrupted what is natural.
@@luissanchez2428 😴
@@luissanchez2428 TeCHnORoGy BAd
I've been doing an internship for the last 3 months and had to get up at 5:30 am every morning.... I swore to myself that I will never choose a job where I have to get up this early ever again 😂 I can't remember the last time I felt so tired the whole time and it really caused me to have a bad mood😒
@@luissanchez2428 Maybe you are not an owl then? I feel the best when I sleep at midnight or a little bit later and wake up at 10 am. Not when I try to sleep with the sun.
I like how harmonious and in-sync these two are.
Yes
these two are cool, like the other side of the pillow
I think there's more going on here
It's so satisfying
They absolutely got enough sleep, that’s why!
Me: Yes, yes I absolutely agree.
Also me: *watching this at 3:34 am with a terrible ADHD sleep cycle*
I feel the pain 🥺
haha what a funny comment, this doesnt apply to me! looks in the corner of my laptop .... realizes it is 1:45am ... oh.
@@PinkieSugar It happens to the best of us 😂
5:16 here
3:41am 🙈
You can tell that she gets enough sleep everyday
She seems so well-adjusted that it makes me kind of angry.
@@wordsmith451 this comment is absolute gold
but he doesn't, look at his eyes.
@@wordsmith451 I think she may also live in UTAH.
DEADDDDDD.
As a person who sleeps almost every night for his entire life, I approve this message.
Thanks for the likes :D
That’s some dedication right there
Wow what a streak
Wow I appreciate your commitment!!
who are you master?
almost?
It's interesting how dreams are non-linear. For instance, I've had dreams where the sound of the alarm was incorporated in the dream but not as an ending. It was some place in the middle.
Me too like I can literally hear the conversation going on in my dream and its not even the end of the dream
He said dreams are a reflection of our day. Every single dream I can remember is about fighting to the death. I don't get it.
@@willek1335 it could be that you're stressed about something going on with you
I was dreaming that I was at my dentist office arguing with my dental hygienist and dentist, and all of a sudden I could hear a moose calling. My mom was staying over, and snoring next to me. Her snoring sounded like a moose call, and it invaded my dream lol 😆 I teased her pretty hard the next day lol
As a lucid dreamer, I can assure you that dreams are weird and wonderful things... I can also assure you that the human mind does NOT really process time in any consistent manner...
Your alarm goes off while you're dreaming... Your brain CAN take that sound and incorporate it anywhere it decides "to make sense of it"... AND even that does NOT have to make any kind of logical sense to you or me. Remember he said "Dreams are emotionally substantive, so you'll tend to remember things like a loved one dying horribly"??? Well, emotions don't always make logical sense either...
Falling asleep in front of a TV playing has taught me, that there's no legitimate sense of time in my mind... I can wake up to the very conversation I thought I was having in my dream HOURS AGO... AND then sit there wondering what the HELL was going on in the "Idiot Box" when I was chasing some horrible monster between then and waking up... Time doesn't mean much of anything, so trying to track the TV programming or trying to make any sense of dream incorporation from the outside world influences is best faced as a playful pass time unless you LIKE driving yourself batty.
SO even that lucid dreaming is being able to "realize the dream is a dream" and take agency rather than wake up, it doesn't mean you entirely control all aspects of the dream.
Think the episode of HouseMD when House gets shot at the beginning of the show, because he's wrestling through a differential diagnosis (like usual) but {spoiler alert} it's only at the end of the show that he realizes he's dreaming and can force himself to wake up and demand a katamine treatment to help the pain in his leg... It's not quite that out of whack, because (as you get "better skilled") you really CAN do some crazy things in dreams that you'd ordinarily never even think to try... BUT most of the time, in the dream, even though you know it's YOUR dream, your brain has already created and inherently "bought" the reality as-is... Whatever physics you've got in there, you still have to conform... You may or may not be able to fly unaided, and it's not universal (for instance)...
Of course, when I can fly (like Superman) in a dream, it's an awful lot of fun! (among other things... tongue firmly planted in cheek)... ;o)
As someone that is unable to produce melatonin and has been taking it my whole life (14 years) I can tell you that it’s extremely draining, also for your mental health. I now take 3 mg a night at 20:00/8 pm and it can make you feel groggy, sleepy and sick even. Prioritize sleep, people. I try to do slo but it’s kinda impossible for me
Me and you both I’ve been a terrible sleeper since a toddler, i think it’s done a lot of damage in my school/working life etc. it’s currently 6AM and I can’t sleep
Idk if ur gonna get this but I’ve heard to cut those melatonin pills in half bc the 3 mg is too much for the human body and makes you super groggy in the morning
I want him to read a book. Like old history book. His voice is so soothing
Everyone is commenting about Rebecca’s voice, I’m glad to see some love for Girardin too!
Yess! His voice is very soothing. I don’t like how she pronounce “s” haha
🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹🇭🇹
asmr plz dadddy
I think they both have soothing voices but he doubles down with that delightful melodic accent *chefs kiss*
Is it me or Rebecca's voice is just crystal clear , loud . She could easily be a narrator or a podcaster or a voice actor or even the next Siri.
Edit:well its just my opinion btw
The American accent is kind of annoying.
It’s creeping me out
She has such a soothing voice
Like checkkk
@@jamesvelazquez1004 haha thanks man
She seems kinda fun to be with.
Sounds like psycho to me
right
As a long sleeper myself, I found it interesting that every time they mentioned "here's the average, but it you need this amount that's ok too", they always went down in hours (aka short sleepers), but never up (aka long sleepers). Not that it's all that important, I just find it to be much more of a detriment in society than being a night owl/lark, you know? Like, I feel many of the negatives of being a night owl (which I also am) can largely be smoothed over in modern society, but regularly needing 10-12 hours of sleep a night is still seen, not only as "lazy", but also as being a sloth in a hyper speed world.
I know right? I'm also night owl. I also expected them to say something about the people who sleeps more. And they said if you fall asleep right away, it means you don't get enough sleep. But in my case, eventhough I sleep for 9-10 hours, I still will fall asleep right away as soon as I get into bed🤔 I never get enough sleep. So what is our problem?😕
Agreed.
TRUE. I need about 9 hours a night, more if I'm sick or really run down. I don't sleep with an alarm clock anymore because I go to bed every night at the same time, and I consistently wake up at the same time every morning after a full 9 hours.
Agreed. People with chronic illnesses and/or physical disabilities, like myself, also need more sleep simply because our brain and/or our body is working more / using more energy due to the illness and/or disability. Additionally, though -- I do recommend fellow long sleepers get assessed for sleep apnea, as the need for extra sleep despite sleeping more than 7 hours could have a more physical cause. & it's better to be safe!
I am not sure if 12 hours is really normal if you are healthy, fit and have no other conditions that your body is working on fixing.
9? Sure, that seems to considered still in the range.
But over that? I would guess that more often than not there is a different reason than biorhythm for that. Sickness, Fitness issues, to high cortisol levels, depression, etc plenty of things that might stress your body more and make it want more sleep.
So if it takes you 15-20 minutes to fall asleep, and the ideal nap time is 20 minutes, do you set an alarm for 40 minutes?
No, I think the point of a nap is to not fall into deep sleep and just staying in the 1st and maybe 2nd stages of sleep which take place in those 20 minutes.
If I set a timer, then I can't fall asleep for a nap.
I do this - set an alarm for approx 40mins as I know it’ll take time to settle into the nap. Works for me!
@@jiminsjams8668 It usually takes me at least 20 minutes to fall asleep, even if I am extremely tired... I'm jealous of anyone who can go to sleep fast!
Lately it takes me 1-2 hours to fall asleep, so naps are out of the question. I can't sleep during the day anyway.
I really appreciate how they debunk these myths without talking down or insulting the people who may have grown up with them
It's a much more kind and gentle reeducation, and you genuinely believe that they just want people to have the healthiest sleep they can
Would absolutely listen to them give a full lecture on the science and study of sleep - they're quite engaging and I feel like I would learn a lot
Shut up
God bless both you and whoever is reading, dont forget Jesus loves you. He died on the cross for our sins and rose three days later. Have an amazing and safe day!
@@user-oh6xq8lx3z 🧢
It’s because they are highly educated individuals and not people that make their money making content
World need love
Rebecca literally needs to read audiobooks…..her voice is built for narrating
defunitely built for it... definitely
Would be so much help for insomniac
She speaks like shes trying not to wake someone up; so gentle.
“Avoid alcohol and stimulants, don’t hit the snooze button”
You might as well ask me to sprout wings.
Buddy you spoke my mind better than I would have
As someone with ADHD and depression, and works the night shift, I'm 100% screwed.
@@feraynironmane8101 ADHD night-shifter here. It at least lets me have music on to ground me and block out other distractions while I work. Whiskey puts me to sleep and coffee wakes me up (and focuses me, hello stimulant).
@@laner.845 plus, the dosage is easy to understand. If the last dose wasn’t enough, try another one!
@@wordsmith451 Some nights it's a one-coffee night, sometimes it's a two-coffee night. Some mornings it's a one-whiskey morning and others it's a two-whiskey morning. ^_^
Imagine her reading you a bedtime story
That will be awesome
Simp
@@bobtheagent9087 omg bob shut up
I’d fall asleep right away
@@HzizsVynryn yeah same
I'm a nurse, on a rotating roster ( a random mixture of nights, evenings, mornings, never the same days off) hearing about how important sleep, and regular sleep schedules is, hurts me on a spiritual level
God bless you, thank you for helping others !
May god bless you with peace and enough rest.
That's banned in my country because it's so detrimental to health. I hope you find a better schedule:(
I feel you. I work in the 911 service.
@@helmaschine1885 Your country banned the police and medical emergencies services too?? Because those also need workers 24/7.
Seeing that picture of sleeping positions where the person has a cushion and/or pillow under or between their legs does help make feel a tad more normal with me stuffing an extra pillow between my legs when I sleep. Really helped to keep my legs from 'falling asleep' because of poor blood circulation around that area.
If you're a side sleeper, absolutely put something between your legs if it feels more comfortable. You can end up with poor sleep and chronic hip problems if you don't. I'm slender, I don't have thunder thighs, so I need support there. If I can't have it, then I have to sleep on my back, or do the 3/4 stomach/side combination, which isn't great for neck and back.
Bottom line is, humans are built for bipedal locomotion and height. Everything horizontal is an afterthought at best.
5:59 "now hopefully you're not pulling an all-nighter"
Students: haha you bet 🤓
My work flips my schedule all the time.. I have to force myself to stay awake so I can sleep at a time that'll have me get up for work at the right hour. x.x
Literally me watching this at 1am as I finish a 4000 word report😂😂😂
Wow, I love that they talked about night owls! I always thought I just had bad habits because that's how people around me treated it :o
You're going to experience that attitude throughout your life.
My profession allows me to indulge my inner night owl-even pays higher. When I discovered I like night shift, I realized it had always been true. As a child,we had few restrictions in the summer and I stayed up most of the night frequently.
But even after working nights for 36 years, even my family just don't really believe it's natural. My mother worked nights even longer, but when she retired she immediately began trying to have a "normal" routine. Not very successfully 😁
Yeah, there's a lot of stigmatisation out there of night owls. It's amazing the mental gymnastics people go through to claim with a straight face that I'm 'lazy' for sleeping 6.00am-2.00pm, when them sleeping 10.00pm-6.00am is perfectly fine.
@@BlueTressym there's potentially some detriment on a psychological level by seeing so little sunlight.
If you are a teenager, it’s even more important that you actually fall asleep later around 11-11:30 pm
@@npip99 you can always use sun lamps :)
The saying may be "the early bird gets the worm," but I always add, "yes, but the early worm gets eaten!" It's a matter of perspective, see? 😆 (I am indeed a night owl; mornings are terrible... lol)
underrated comment
And the second mouse gets the cheese.
@@dontrend5956 Hahaha! Love it!!! 🤣😂
@@dontrend5956 💀💀💀
We are the bird not the worm lol
I didn't think there were identifying characteristics for sleep researchers, but I 've changed my mind; they fit the profile. I feel like both of them just radiate gentle, cozy vibes: perfect for bed-time sleepiness.. and their research.
Ma’am you could have told me that my moms life saving operation costed 10 million dollars and I’d still fall asleep listening to you talk.
.
Those “few second” dreams can feel like hours though…relativity is real
I swear to god I’ve had dreams where I will live out every single day in a five year span it’s very disorienting. Those last like an hour for me irl.
Probably why anesthetic feels like it takes two seconds for you when it can last hours, sleep is really weird!
I have the opposite where I accidently fall back asleep for like an hour and I only thought it was like 1 minute
Inception
@@GamerGirlKat94 I love and hate these dreams. I had one once and only once so far, where I lived out a majority of a life. Waking up to my alarm in my own body was SUREAL it took me all day to orient myself and convince myself I didn’t just time travel back and it was just a long ass dream. Crazy how dreams work.
What are the possibility of having them read us a bedtime story? Their voices have a very soothing effect
I grew up with a condition called ‘Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome’ so have gone through many sleep management practices. I remember once being subscribed some very strong melatonin supplements. It really messed with my mental alacrity the following day and was definitely too high of a dose. Less can be more. Don’t over do it. You want the minimum that can work for you and focus on practicing good ‘sleep hygiene’.
It shocks me how unregulated melatonin is in America. I live in New Zealand and take melatonin every night and I need a prescription from the doctor so I can get it. One time we bought a huge tub of melatonin from America that my dad’s work mate brought over for me since it was cheaper. We stopped doing that because the doses were too high and we couldn’t find one low enough for my prescription. They can get such huge doses so easily!
Never been diagnosed formally, but I've long suspected I've had that. Always been that way my whole life. I've just kind of learned to function with it and it doesn't get in my way (mostly).
I would love to have Rebecca as a mom she seems so reassuring and calm 😂
yes!
Mummy*
@@бехрузхамидов-щ1й mummys are dead
Yeah I’d call her my mommy too 🤤
This is a compliment but imo it's a weird compliment
Her voice is so relaxing
I find it really annoying, especially the weird sounds she produces with words that contain an 's' or a 't'.
Then go out with her
If I had to sit through a class at university with her as the teacher, I'd probably phase out in less than 3 minutes.
@@50-50_Grind same, its so American, its annoying 😂
she sounds like she narrates adverts on US network TV, those ones that try to convince you that you need a product they're selling
These two are great! They compliment each other really well & they both have such soothing voices!
You know this is cap
@@2muchNATSU what cap
I have both those types of insomnia, nightmares, and night terrors. I suffer from PTSD, as well as bipolar and social anxiety disorder. I've read that PTSD causes nightmares and night terrors in all stages of sleep, not just REM. they started when I was a kid, but have gotten worse the older I get. I'm 31. Life is not good to me, so the more I live, the worse my sleep is.
Do a research on EMDR therapy and how you can get it in your country. It is an amazing therapy for ptsd and healing from it!
@Meryemyarba it depends who you are. Im autistic and it doesnt work for me. It actually makes things so much worse for me. There are some studies that are just coming out that indicates it might not be the best for neurodivergent people. But just like anything it really depends on the person. I seen at least one autistic person say it worked great for them. For me it left me more traumatised and made things worse and ruined the relationship with me and my therapists. Ive heard other autistic people say the same.
Just a little psa that it might not work for everyone.
After starting to work night shift I kept being told it would mess up my sleep health, but now I wake up naturally without an alarm every day 4 hours before work and I feel good about it. I get better sleep than a majority of the day people I think
True. And people forget sometimes that some of us have no choice than to work night shift. How do you think your amazon orders arrive so fast? And public health, the mailing, people work 24/7. Some people gotta do it, you know. So this dogma of "If you don't sleep during the night your life is fucked up", I don't care at all. Society simply just wouldn't function correctly if everyone slept at night. Most people tend to forget it.
@@Narusasu98 the thing is that your body needs natural light and vitamin D. Our bodies are designed to be awake during the day, sleeping through the whole day can actually mess up your health. No one thinks your life is fucked up if you work night shift (that I know of), people know someone has to do it but people are still just concerned about your health. I know someone has to work night shift but I’m still worried about their health. Everyone I’ve talked to who works nights has said it affected their health. Until recently, I was sleeping during the day and awake during the night and it definitely affected me, my body was craving sunlight. It would be the middle of the night and I would be crying because I was confused because it felt like it should be sunny but it was only dark since it was night.
These two are such a mood and the mood is PEACE.
Rebecca Robbins has an absolutely amazing voice and diction that have awed me. God, I can listen to her on 7/24.
7/24?
@@akiyachef_5213 7 hours per day because he needs to sleep obviously. Only 24 days, maybe he has another thing to do. 🤣🤣
@@akiyachef_5213I thought it could be 24/7 but I was not sure, and I did not want to check it. So, I just wrote it the way we say in my native language - 7 days, 24 hours-.
@@sertankacar8594 oh ok……I didn’t even thing of that. I get it now
Same
I can't believe their advice for jetlag is 'avoid caffeine' and 'prepare four days early and give yourself a couple of days on arrival'.
This is a classic case of an expert telling you what's 'best' in a very narrow sense that relates only to their field, instead of what's best in a more holistic sense. Naturally adjusting might be best for my sleep, but it's not best for ME. A night of bad sleep is a price I'm willing to pay.
I'm a night person, I can't function in the morning but give me something to do in the evening and I'm super focused.
Owls unite🦉. Don't let those larks moralise sleep schedules!
its funny cuz about 50% of the population is a late day person, yet everyone is forced to wake up so early to go to work
Me too. Hello fellow night owl.
Owls unite! 🦉
Same here, I’m forever hitting the snooze button or sleeping 12 hours on the weekend cause mornings are just soooooo exhausting 😪I like getting up late and staying up late !
Been a stomach sleeper all my life. My mom told me that even when I was a baby, she would put me on my back and I’d flip onto my stomach. Somethings never change.
I am the same! I’ve always read/heard it’s the worst for your back but it’s literally the only way I can sleep
I was a stomach sleeper until health problems started appearing, now I prefer to dleep on my right side with a blanket between knees.
Yeeah stomach gang UNITE
@@francesco5254 Yo yo stomach fist buuuuuuuuump.
@@SkippyJon15 It's actually good if you do it the right way. I use to sleep with the back sligtly tilted on the side and supported by a folded knee. It's difficult to explain but that position gives your back just the perfect natural curvature it should have
I'm a night owl and I keep trying to switch my clock. I can do it with determination, but it takes one night of staying up late and I'm back to being a night owl. I could easily stay up till 4am, but I make myself go to bed around 3. Funny though I just looked at the clock and it's 3:30 am! LOL
Honestly, if you want to be more or a day person, cool shower in the morning. Warm shower in the evening. Make sure to eat meals timed to it as well.
Omg this! I have the same exact problem. Just one late night will screw up a few days streak of "normalcy". Also I find myself most productive/active during 1-5am
@@MilkTeaLessSugar welcome to my side of the world. lol If it wasn't for my partner sleeping I would be vacuuming/cleaning as well. haha
This is 100% me!
@@juniemarin welcome to my side of the world. haha there is something about those late-night hours that are so peaceful though. :)
"Napping is an interesting subject in our field."
I'm not sure why, but i like this line so much
this has helped me in ways i didn't even realize i needed, i never would have realized SO many of my issues are very likely influenced by my sleeping difficulties i've had since childhood or possibly infancy.
I've avoided jet lag several times by just staying up until the new zones evening. Works great for me.
its the only way.
Yeah they say to take days to adjust but if you have to work that's not realistic
I’m so confused by their logic on that. They just want you to go through the jet lag for a few days. But you can easily fix it within a day if you just stay up during the day when you want to sleep and then go to sleep at night when you’re really tired. I feel like being jet lagged for multiple days would be worse for your health than just staying up longer for one day. No one wants to spend the first half of their holiday just recovering from jet lag.
i also do by just going to bed earlier or late depending on how far i am from the timezone i live in. i went to colorado like 2 weeks ago and just went to bed 2 hrs earlier
Rebecca has such an amazingly soothing voice, i would love to learn more of whatever she has to say if she has her own youtube or podcast
imagine her with an ASMR channel and it's just her talking
This is very helpful and well presented. I had no idea you were supposed to take melatonin 3-4 hrs before bed. I have been taking it directly at bedtime and it feels like it doesn’t help.
I have a variety of sleep issues. Sleep onset insomnia, sleep maintenance insomnia, delayed sleep phase disorder (basically programmed to be a night person in a daytime person’s world- so I feel like I have permanent jet lag) and I had obstructive sleep apnea, but since I’ve started losing weight, that’s cleared up a lot (which is good, because there was one night I was constantly waking up choking and I was terrified of literally dying in my sleep). I also get sleep paralysis. It had been years since the last time I dealt with it, but recently, it happened like three times in one week- the kind where you’re trying to wake up and you feel like you’re going through the motions of getting out of bed but your body isn’t actually moving, or trying desperately to wake up but you feel trapped like the blanket suddenly weighs a ton, or your arms and legs are like Thor’s hammer. Or you think you’ve successfully moved and woken up, only to realize you’re stuck in another dream where you’re trying to wake up. If you get stuck in a position where its hard to breathe, its really scary. I try to sleep on my side with pillows supporting me in a specific way- I started doing that to help with the apnea, but then I realized that if I get “stuck” asleep, its a more comfortable position to be in cause I don’t feel as pinned. Anyway… Watching this after a night with zero sleep, and a day with no nap where my body has decided that even though every fiber of my being is exhausted, my brain didn’t want to sleep. Its probably just trying to get back on track, and 1AM is better than 6 AM I guess… I freaking hate my relationship with sleep.
I also have issues with sleep paralysis, and it mostly shows up during the transition between summer and fall (for some reason, I'm not sure why). What usually helps me is turning on a noise machine, usually wave sounds to help me regulate my breathing and stay asleep. I feel like it lulls my brain to a complete rest instead of it waking up before my body does. Maybe that will help you!
God bmess you, pray God and then the sleep paralysis will disapear
Rebecca's voice is the kind of voice I need to hear to make me feel that everything is gonna be okay even though I'm in the middle of war and I'd believe her instantly 😂😂😂
I feel like a sleep guru because I work overnights and flip to a normal schedule on my weekends. Never have trouble getting to sleep or staying asleep, or waking up really. My first day of the week I need to sometimes push through a bit or have an awkward nap but it's not bad.
My trick is to get your schedule consistent, but go to bed with 9-10 hours until your alarm, and let yourself wake up on your own (with the alarm as backup for those days you want to sleep). The amount that this has improved my life is immense.
girl how do you have time to sleep 9-10 hours before your alarm!!
@@abbsterlicious5186 it's easier if you don't "veg out" on TV or social media. I got an extra hour of sleep a day when I uninstalled Twitter from my phone
My son had night terrors all his life till he was 8. It affected his behaviour during the day but it turns out he actually had swollen adenoids and tonsils. :/ only diagnosed at 8! Argh! Still feel bad about that- we went to so many doctors over the years and I took a random article I read about the symptoms of enlarged tonsils in children to get his fixed. His sleep has been great since then!
How did you get rid of it?
Good to know that my routine of always leaving waking up until the absolute latest possible time so that I get more sleep is actually a GOOD thing 😂
Example: I have work at 8am I know it takes 25mins to drive there and that it only takes me 10mins to get dressed etc. So I set my alarm for 7:10 which allows me ten minutes to wake up and check my phone etc then get dressed grab a muesli bar for breakfast and then travel to work!
Bleh, screw that. If I have to be somewhere at 8am, I'm up at 6am so I can have 2 hours to ease into the day, eat a nice breakfast, take a long shower, or just generally chill. I used to do the last minute wake up throw myself into the shower and drive half asleep to work thing, but it sucks.
I wake up around 11am-12pm to get ready for work.
I clock in by 2:30pm
I clock out at 11pm
I get home by 11:30pm
I stay up until at least 4am-5am
Repeat.
I love how informative and inclusive this was for early bird AND night owls! Soothing and reassuring!
Edit: does any one else needs background noise when sleeping?
I like to use rain sound with thunderstorms on youtube.
I prefer to sleep with as little noise as possible. The quieter the better. Also I get up at 11 am
Clock in by 1:15pm
Clock out at 11:45pm
Get home at 12:40am
Stay up until 3:00-3:30am if I stay up later I am too tired the next day.
I also use background noise. My great grandmother used to have this sound machine for sleep and when she died my mum took it. I started using that when I was probably about 10 to help me sleep. I would play the brook sound on it. Then it broke and I started using TH-cam videos. For the past few years I’ve been playing this one video of an open window in New York at night. I like it for multiple reasons. One, it drowns out my tinnitus. Two, it hides the bumps in the night so they don’t scare me. Three, I find it calming hearing that there are other people nearby when I’m trying to sleep so if anyone tried to murder me other people would hear. Four, I often can’t sleep because of my anxious thoughts so I like to imagine I’m this random person in New York and I imagine what my room looks like. It also just seems to soothe me.
@@rachelcookie321 can I get the link to this? I need so much noise to fall asleep. Used to listen to trains, rain, thunderstorms, binaural beats, alpha waves, fans, coffee shop ambiance, etc and they all work at first but then they stop working after a few weeks and I have to find something else. Silence is too loud for me to sleep lol
I need so much noise to fall asleep. Used to listen to trains, rain, thunderstorms, binaural beats, alpha waves, fans, coffee shop ambiance, etc and they all work at first but then they stop working after a few weeks and I have to find something else. Silence is too loud for me to sleep lol also what kind of job do you have because I would love this schedule. The only time I enjoy mornings is when I've been up all night and I watch the sunrise. I feel so alive then and productive and then I'm asleep by 7 lol
@@emmontesantilli4351 did it work? I posted a comment but sometimes comments with links get removed.
I want a whole episode on why napping should only be 20 minutes or so. I like to take naps that are significantly longer because I enjoy feeling like I actually /slept/, which I usually only get after about 90 minutes or so...
It’s about not falling into sleep cycles. 20 minutes will allow a re-boot of cognition without falling in deeper, which makes you feel like crap and can make it hard to go to sleep at night.
If your schedule is to sleep through a cycle or two, go for it. Sleep fragmentation bothers most people, but if it’s optimal for you, ok.
@@TheGooglyminotaur neat
Thank you for the thoughtful response, man
I'm a big fan of the 100 minute nap, 10 minutes to fall asleep, 90 minutes to do one circadian cycle. I usually feel much better after. Often times I just take a 30 minute nap (20ish minutes of sleep) to not interrupt sleeping at night, but sometimes long naps are the best thing.
Simple response: do what feels right.
90 minutes is also just as good (in fact it may help you feel even more rested since it’ll give you time to complete a sleep cycle), just saying “20 minutes is ideal” is an oversimplification on their end
i can literally ONLY sleep on my stomach. Anything else I can lay there for hours.
Oh my god same. My arms hate me if I don't go on my stomach
Any other position and I will snore so loud I'll wake myself up.
i lay halway on the side and my stomach, my right arm is under the pillow supporting my face and my stomach is laying flat
Sleeping on you stomach is one of the worse sleeping positions. It can change the way your spine is so RIP
@@axnyslie that uh. that might be sleep apnea bud
it cannot be stressed enough how beautiful their voices are!!! they should do sleep stories, that would help my sleep onset insomnia 😂
This is what I was taught: healthiest sleeping schedule is to go to sleep as soon as you're feeling tired and wake up at the same time every day.
Easier said than done. I tried that. I’ll get tired about 9pm, be in bed by 10, can’t fall asleep until 2am. Wake up at 8am. Same thing again. But I’m not working right now. When I start working I think I’m going to age rapidly 😢
As someone who has always thought, “I always wake up sweating during my bad dreaming”- I know now that’s it’s because of my warm tempered bedroom is the CAUSE of my nightmares. Definitely enjoyed watching this and learning!
Yes!!! Sweat from dreams./ Nightmares
They are both so cute, I could listen to them speak for hours!
Right! Their professional chemistry is stellar.
i want them to read my eulogy
For any suffering from insomnia:
I was an insomniac from my late teenage years through age 39. I'd say any two out of three days I was sleep-deprived.
Around age 39, I started noticing a pressure in my chest...not painful exactly, just pressure. It came and went, and eventually I picked up a pattern. It was most prevalent after I ate, but it definitely wasn't heartburn or anything else that felt digestion related. I then further noticed it was especially after I ate sugary breads (cakes, pastries, etc.). So, I gave up food with high amounts of sugar in them for a week, just to see if the pressure stopped. It did. But what was really interesting is that toward the end of that week, I was falling asleep within 30 minutes of going to bed, and staying asleep.
In the last 4 years, I've eaten maybe 10 servings of high-sugar foods. Zero nights of insomnia. It has absolutely been worth cutting out sugar to never again feel the despair of sleeplessness. I figure I'm not the only one out there who had this issue.
EDIT: It's worth mentioning that I still drink black coffee and sugar-free sodas. Caffeine was definitely not causing my insomnia.
How do you set an alarm for a 20 minute nap? I have no idea how long it will take me to fall asleep, 30 mins-few hours, regardless of how sleep deprived I am. At what point are you setting the 20 minute alarm?
If ur rly tired, u would sleep right after 5 mins of closing ur eyes. So set 20 mins at the time. But if u have difficulty falling asleep during a nap, it could just mean you're not tired enough to take the nap. So get your butt up and get ok with your day.
Exactly what the previous response said. If you can't fall asleep for a nap almost immediately, you don't need a nap.
@@clwt4075 that’s complete bullshit, I have severe insomnia, I can not sleep for a week and still not be able to sleep. I have never in my life took less than 30 minutes to fall asleep, and that has nothing to do with how tired I am.
@@Laladust no it’s not true, you are lucky if that is true for you.
Hmm good question. I have that one too. Maybe set the timer for 30 minutes if you take 10 to fall asleep
Her voice sounds like a narrator on Headspace.... It's so relaxing!😴
Sleep tip I learned that always work for me:
Tense all the muscles in your body, from your legs to arms or arms to legs. You can do it as many times as you want. It tires out your muscles, and relaxes them, and hopefully your mind.
7:30 i often have dreams that feel like they go on for years and i check my fitbit sleep tracker and i will have like 40 min to an hour-long REM cycle.
I pulled so many all nighters in college & I definitely would've benefitted from the all nighter tip that they gave. I always tried sleeping immediately after I was done with school work & I slept terribly throughout the day/woke up so thrown off.
exactly correct what was said at 3:20; having flown all over the world, best advice; as you step off the plane, USE THE NEW TIME in the country immediately . . . .if you arrive at 6pm but your "body time " is already 11pm, STAY UP. You can go to sleep a little earlier (9pm) but use the new time in the country. No one can't survive a few more hours before you sleep [called being a mom]. By next evening, all is good.
We tried this in Australia, by 3pm we went to nap (it was raining pretty hard) “before dinner” we woke up and it was 2am! (This is after flying in from NY, so it’s a pretty big time change).
@@joermnyc never been to Australia or Japan, but did fly non stop from my home in NYC to Hawaii some bizillion time zones earlier and by day 2 it worked for me.
Traveled from Germany to New Zealand so a 12 hour difference. But as I was nervous and didn't sleep well the night before and the second flight was a night flight, so everything was prepared for people to sleep, I was able to get a couple of hours sleep before arriving at 6am in New Zealand (6pm in Germany) and got through the entire day til 8pm. No jet lag the after this. Another girl I met on the plane directly went to sleep after arriving and had a jet lag for over a week.
So yeah, one day of a bit of discipline and being tired, which is quite manageable when keeping yourself occupied, is definitely worth it to not suffer from severe jet lag for a week. And you get to enjoy more of your time abroad
@@esciteach7997 yeah we went back to sleep (it was 2am) and by breakfast we were okay, thankfully the weather cleared up except for some early morning showers (we went in August) and it was a nice holiday.
That's what I did when I went to Canada (I'm french). Basically after 6 hours of flight I arrived at the same time I had left Paris... I went to bed a little bit earlier that day and I was still feeling a bit tired the next day, but after that I was on the local schedule
I've been an insomniac since I can remember. Always thought that there is a trick to learning how to fall asleep fast and that I would get it as I get older. Was extra painful when I had to share a bedroom with my parents or when we go on summer holidays, the snoring just kills any illusion of sleep.
Personally what helped me the most was when I found out about ASMR still at it's early stages before that I just played Skyrim's ambience track over and over. Insomnia still comes, but not as often. I think Rebbeca has that great calming voice that ASMRtist strife for.
I also struggled with falling asleep my entire childhood and always wondered why. then my sophomore year of highschool, I was diagnosed with ADHD, and it all made sense why I was the only kid who couldn’t fall asleep during preschool nap time.
ASMR has helped me as well, I’ve come to prefer sounds like drawing and tapping.
@@c3ru1ean41 LOL i have adhd and was always the one kid that couldnt nap at pre-school too! I’d take my headbands and try to break them.. gotta keep busy somehow
@@palomamartorell4184 trying to break stuff bc you’re bored is such an adhd kid move💀lmao
What usually helps for me is doing something to wind down before trying to sleep, preferably by reading a book.
Always had insomnia, just the falling asleep part, most of the times im just not sleepy enough, that until i fond melatonin gummies, just 1mg 20min before bed time, its incredible everything in my life improved, i actually wake up at a regular time and feel rested... if you suffer from insomnia you should try it, but ofc speak to a doctor first.
Prob my top 3 FAVORITE video on this channel of all Times. Thanks for inviting those 2 amazing people for the video on the field of expertise they have. They are both stunning.
ever since i found out back in hs that its bad to hit snooze, ive never hit snooze ever again and let me tell u i feel way better when i wake up now
For some reason I was really confused by their answer. So if you don't mind, do you mean instead of snoozing or going back to bed, you wake up immediately after the alarm goes off?
@@GarnetsWeb Yes, that is exactly what it means. They want you to wake up on one alarm, not going back to bed after hitting snooze (or having 5 more alarms). So set your alarm to the time you want to wake up, and get up when it goes off.
@@GarnetsWeb yea i turn off the snooze option on my alarm so i have to wake up immediately
Okay, thanks for you guys' responses! ^^
Rebecca's voice is so soothing. Halfway through video I am feeling calmness. Wish we could Change digital Assistant voice to Rebecca
Great vid. Would have liked to have seen Narcolepsy mentioned when they discussed sleep latency, as sooooo many of us don’t get a proper diagnosis until we’re middle-aged - and falling asleep quickly + excessive daytime sleepiness are some of the most common indicators of N.
Though there is no cure, treatment is still life-changing for many (most?) of us.
her calming voice puts me to sleep
Her voice sounds automated, but it’s so relaxing at the same time lol. His voice is relaxing enough to put you to sleep.
HER VOICE IS SO RELAXING!
I’m Scandinavian, and I’m not sure it’s because the US is so different when it comes to the weather, but the Norwegian government recommends sleeping a a room 10 degrees Fahrenheit lower than what the US suggests. It’s super common for kids in kindergarten to sleep in their strollers outside which has shocked lots of my American friends. Maybe cooler is better. 😉
58 F sounds cold! I have heard 63, 64 before though. I was surprised when she said 68!
i think it does have to do with the weather, getting a room to 58 F at night in the summer would be very expensive for your power bill, if you could manage it at all (air conditioners are only designed to bring the temp down a certain amount)
I guess norway is much cooler than united states any day. And maybe lots of people are used to colder weathers normally that 10 F cooler is tolerable and also more comfortable.
Be near the equator and 75 F is perfectly cool
I mean I honestly was surprised that the temperature recommendation is so specific... I understand that cooler is generally better. But people's range of comfortable temps can vary a lot! I bet that if you have someone from Thailand follow Norwegian recommendations they would not sleep well and visa versa... And it can vary individually too.
Id also bet that if this based on any studies it is based on studies done on Americans in America so yeah....
Much of the Southern US is desert or subtropical, in other words it has very hot weather. My family in Florida think that 70F (21C) is cold. I'm not kidding. People who live in the colder, more Northern parts of the US tend to like to sleep in cooler temperatures. I live in Eastern Washington state. I keep the window open at night until it drops to about 33F (0.5C) in the winter. I tend to be uncomfortable at night if it gets much above 50F (10C).
I tried a new sleep position as I took a nap earlier. I realized how it was more comfortable to lay on my back than my side. Then when I woke up, I grab my phone, and see this video on sleeping positions in my suggestions 😳
LIE
I've been talking about how I think I didn't sleep well this week pretty much all week and now it gets suggested to me at 1am lol
Back sleeping feels as though I can't breath
My neck hurts if I sleep on my back 😅
Well it's a completely new video, but still weird.
i have sleep apnea but i don’t snore. the doctor conducting the sleep study actually had to wake me up in the middle of the practice because i stopped breathing for more than a few seconds. checking up on yourself is important. my parents would get upset that i would sleep immediately after school but realistically im not breathing at night.
Expert: "You need to sleep in a position that aligns with your spine."
Me who has double scoliosis: 👀💦
Hahaha!! Yeah, good luck with that, eh? I've had the corrective surgery, but I still have a double curve (well, triple if you include my neck), they're just _much_ smaller. Even still I have to use a ton of pillows in order to align things as best as possible to sleep- certainly never going to be straight, though! Lol
I hope your scoliosis doesn't cause you too much trouble- cheers!
I was always a massive sleep wriggler ever since I was a baby
Cut to 25 year old me learning I have mild scoliosis and going "that would explain why my sleep quality shot through the roof once I slept with my legs elevated and tilted through the pelvis..."
Wait, so Is you spine like a snake?
@@shivertron Yup.
I feel you. I've tried a bunch of different positions but my scholiosis gives no shites lmao
Rebecca’s voice is amazing. Someone has to get her to do asmr.
I know someone who had night terrors when they were younger and those were pretty scary to witness. In the middle of the night they'd suddenly start screaming violently as if someone had broken into their room and started stabbing them to death or something. It scared the shit out of everyone else in the house too of course, and I wouldn't be surprised if the neighbors heard it.
my wife still has night terrors as an adult and has woken me up with her screaming before. it is not great!!!!!
Tina from Bob's Burgers
@@MorganChaos Jeez I feel for you...I hope I never hear my SO scream like that, that would be traumatizing.
@@samuelbahij4878 it's a lot!!! she did warn me about it well before we spent a night together, and it's different from an awake scream, usually? so i can deal with it, but it can be really upsetting, especially when i'm in another room and it activates the "GO HELP" instinct but i know there's nothing i can do.
@@MorganChaos yeah same, my husband did that too a couple of times- just a very terrifying, blood curdling scream and hysterical thrashing about. My heart almost stopped lol. It was horrible
Insomnia sucks. I get it often. And nothing fixes it. Every behavior change, every drug, nothing works. Those sleeping pills just make me feel tired and terrible, but still can't sleep.
If you are like me, the best trick I have found is put an old TV show on, something you have watched many times and aren't really interested in. Turn the volume down so you can just barely hear it occasionally. Now with your eyes closed, follow the story of the show with just your memory. Every time a song starts in your head or you start thinking about other things, focus on the sound of the show. Don't try to sleep, just try to focus on the show. You will hopefully fall asleep quietly eventually.
Rebecca's voice is so calming, she can tell me a horror story before at night and i'd still sleep peacefully.
Professionals explaining the necessity of proper sleep
*Me at 4AM asking myself if I should even go to sleep*
the answer is
lets watch next video
btw its now 4am here
"Ideal sleeping temperature is around 68 degrees"
A Floridian that gets cold at 75 during the day: You what?
As a fellow warn humid climate dweler, I didn't think it would be such a low temperature until i did the convertion to celcius! Omg its so cold!! 🥶 How do you not get sick!!? The lowest i can go is 75. That's just insane
@@AliCirilo Really? That is way too hot for me. I love cold weather. around 60 to 61 degrees is perfect for me. I get hot real easy and real fast.
@@AliCirilo Because people's bodies climatize according to their environment.
68°F is still on the hot side for my Floridian fiancé. He actually does better than me in the chilly Dutch weather that I grew up in 😂
No matter the temperature for some reason I always sweat while sleeping
Oh, man I have so much to ask about
1) 20 mins naps are impossible for me because usually it takes me more than 30 mins to fall into a half-asleep drugged-like state (I keep "resurfacing" with all progress gone) and then 30 more to get into actual sleep mode. Is this something to be concerned about?
2) I remember vividly 90% of my dreams with exact details about clothes, architecture, character personality, touch, smell and *insanely* detailed plots. People think I am making it up but I can't possibly make up a 4 page Google doc story with themes, an entire cast etc. on the spot. Those dreams feel like a movie, a series with multiple seasons, an entire franchise and sometimes years out of somebody's life. It gets so disorienting, yet people say they envy me
3) Is it possible for me to have a stable sleep schedule when sometimes for work I need to get up at 4:30am, sometimes 5:30, 6:30 and sometimes I can sleep in as long as I want to? Without naps I am unable to function and mine are usually more than 1 and a 1/2 hours.
I find that I really struggle if I get less than 8 hours of sleep. My optimal sleep duration is usually 9-10 hours. Anything more than that isn't really necessary (though I've never really observed anything negative as a result of sleeping 12+ hours). Anything less than 8 hours and I have motivation problems the next few days, anything less than 7 and I struggle to function.
Occasionally I get the chance to sleep longer than 12 hours... if I actually stay fully asleep for that full period, the following day is often my best day of the month. Unfortunately, I don't often sleep that full duration, usually I'll wake up after 8-9 hours feeling like I should have slept longer. I don't need to have more than 9 hours regularly, but it's quite nice to get it when I can, especially if I've been getting 7 or less hours a few nights prior.
I really relate to this!
I do relate as well, perhaps our sleep requiered is Somewhere in the 9 to 10 but doing 12 hour sleeps is actually to catch up physical tiredness. Getting insomnia is perhaps if you force yourself for thoes extra hours ?
Thank you for saying this! I feel it's never mentioned that some people need a little more than 7-8 hours of sleep, even though it's reagularly mentioned that some people only need 5-6 hours. So statistically it stands to reason that while 7-8 hours might be average, there can be "outliers" in both directions, who need either only 6 or even 9 hours of sleep. I feel failing to mention that can put these long sleepers at a disadvantage, because they feel they have to get up after 8 hours and wonder all the time why it doesn't seem enough. Now if you regularly need more than 10 hours of sleep, I'd do a health check up to ensure it's not due to underlying health problems or bad sleep quality (e.g. sleep apnea). But personally I've always done better with 8.5 to 9 hours of sleep. I also got diagnosed with an autoimmune disorder about 2 years ago and I suspect the ongoing, subtle inflammation process in my body contributes further to needing more sleep to keep the damage in check. I wish someone would do a video about sleep and chornic illness, since it's often so interconnected - either because an illlness can cause insomnia or because our sleep needs might change due to it.
Same! But if i sleep more than 10h i usually struggle to fall asleep at night and feel kinda slow during the day.
I’ve found 10 hrs seem to work best for me. That might be cos I have chronic pain and fatigue but I will definitely say different people need different amounts.
As a night terror victim even at 27, it's so much worse than nightmares. You have like a nightmare, then wake up partially but don't realize you woke up and most of the time I see things in the room that scare me to death, then I try to get away from the horror IRL, resulting in sometimes dangerous situations. I once ran down the stares to get away from a figure on the ceiling and that's could have wrong real quick.
what's your location
Sounds like shadow people some that suffer from sleep paralyzys see. Best to see a doc for some sleep aid and/or see if there is an underlying reason.
Her voice... I can listen to her talk all day
Night owl here 🙋🏻♀️
I can EASILY stay up until 3-4AM but when I need to wake up early say at like 8am I feel so horribly sluggish and lethargic and it legitimately takes my body about a full half hour to even find any energy to be productive
that makes sense