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Slot a 20' siesta right after having your fave coffee. Sorted. You can deduct It from your doomscrolling routine. EDIT: JOHNNY! MY BROTHER IN COFFEE-NAP!
Things I’ve tried: - exercising - developing a routine - not using electronics late - making a to-do list - diet and eating time So it’s refreshing to not hear someone recommend that for the millionth time.
Try this: f i spend most of my working day outside , still on PC keyboard but breathing fresh air looking at green, a bit more sun light- i am not crashing in afternoons. Yes if a throw in a green smoothie and a walk on my break im kicking ass even more.
I was reading recently a book that argues about how work used to be something we completely disconnected from once we punched out (you can’t really keep assembling a car while the factory is closed) Now the most common work is intellectual, you think for a living and that means you think about your marketing presentation while doing laundry at home or cooking dinner for your kids, essentially meaning you’re working A LOT more than 9-5. That’s exhausting and as humans we haven’t evolved fast enough to understand how to deal with those changes so our mind gets depressed, anxious and exhausted.
That is a very valid point; a good observation. I would add to that the problem of how jobs that include deadlines really impose a cause for us to take work home with us, and stress out about deadlines. I lived with jobs that had deadlines for years. Then I got a lower paying job that didn’t have deadlines, and was much happier. Punch out, go home, relax.
The fact that you consult with the audience before you launch something makes us feel valued and appreciated. Thank you so much for that. And yes, if it's not too much work, you should open a store for them, I probably won't get any cuz I'm not into maps but yeah. Amazing video btw
I'm a clinical psychologist researching sleep and I want to make a some comments/corrections on what you've said in the video: - You have mixed up tiredness/fatigue and sleepiness. Those are two different feelings and processes, although in everyday language we use tiredness/fatigue for both feelings, so it's hard for us to know the difference, because we use the same word wrongly for two different feelings. Sleepiness (yawning, drowsing) is caused by a quantitative lack of sleep, so if you sleep, that feeling will go away. Tiredness/fatigue is a lack of energy that has A LOT of causes (diseases, poor mental health, overstimulation, stress, worry, ...). When you're tired, you need to rest. If you rest, the tiredness will go away. - The study on glutamate literally says this: "research is needed to explore the recovery of glutamate levels at rest or during sleep." In other words, if we know whether rest or sleep decreases the glutamate, we will know which feeling it causes (tiredness or sleepiness). But the study also says this: "it has been shown that glutamate concentrations decrease during sleep, in relation to EEG slow-wave activity. Glutamate could therefore belong to the potentially toxic substances that are eliminated during sleep" so it seems that too much glutamate creates sleepiness. In that case, there is but one solution: you need to sleep. - Biphasic sleep isn't the same thing as napping in the afternoon. Before everyone had clocks, people would go to bed when the sun went down and they would rise when the sun rose, because the main source of information for your brain on whether or not you should sleep is the presence of sunlight. So depending on where you live in the world and how much daylight you have there, you would have a different sleep pattern. If you live somewhere where in the winter, the sun goes down early and rises late, you would do the same thing. Except, it would be darker for much longer than the amount of sleep that you need, so you would wake up in the middle of the night, do stuff, go back to sleep and then wake when the sun rose. Since most people in the past were farmers and hunter-gatherers, in the winter during the day, there wasn't much to do anyway and si they didn't need a lot of wake time with sunlight. If however, you lived somewhere where the sun went down very late and rose very early, it wouldn't be dark long enough for you to have all of your hours of sleep, so you would need to do a nap in order to have all the sleep you need. That nap is usually taken right after noon, because it's the warmest moment of the day and so potentially too warm to do something, but also because your body temperature naturally decreases after noon and we need this decrease to fall asleep. (Body temperature also decreases in the evening). If you can't take a nap during the day, don't try it. If your sleep is not biphasic, you don't want to create a biphasic sleep. - Adenosine is causing sleepiness, not tiredness, so when you have too much adenosine, you should sleep, not rest. - If the coffee nap works for you, that's great, but I would not advise this to people. Coffee basically works like a painkiller: the sleepiness is still there, you just don't feel it. It doesn't do anything to the cause of the problem. - What you've said about chronotypes is correct. Our society is actually made for morning persons. If you're working in the arts, bars, restaurants, clubs, ..., it's best if you're an evening person. - Regarding melatonin and the light of screens, the impact of screen light on our sleep is very very small. The media focuses far too much on that. The main negative impact of screens on your sleep is 1) delaying your bed time to be on a screen and 2) waking up at night because of notifications from your phone. I recommend the review by Bauducco et al. (2024) called "A bidirectional model of sleep and technology use: A theoretical review of How much, for whom, and which mechanisms". I realize it might look like I think that everything you've said is wrong, but that's not the case: chronotypes, the difference between our modern life and the caveman life, neurons, the effect of caffeine, ... that's all correct and most of your advice is also good advice. Also, I think your video looks really great visually!
At my previous 9-to-5 job, we had long lunch breaks. Instead of going out to eat, I used that time to sleep in my car. Those naps were honestly a godsend and not only kept me more focused but happier for the rest of the day.
@@Staroymy chinese boss takes naps during the day and he has missed meetings because of this. And then he uses it as an excuse to call me on sundays and at 9 pm.
I’ve been chronically tired for the past 10 years. I just cut out sugar/processed foods/coffee, started exercising, and cut my social media/digital consumption by 80%. I’ve never had more energy/been happier.
Here they are for anybody who doesn't have time to watch the full video: - Take an early afternoon nap - Limit decisions - Meal planning - Drink coffee then take a nap - Sync with your natural sleep schedule - Get quality sleep
I quit a very fulfilling job as a biomedical scientist because of decision fatigue and consequently severe burnout. I'm now working retail and my employer is worried I'll run off to something bigger and better. But honestly, I'm done with a life spent constantly exhausted. Quality of life doesn't look the same for everyone.
I truly, truly understand this. I used to be a biomedical scientist too for about 10 years, and right after I left the field for data science because the bench was too exhausting, I fell ill with a mysterious chronic multi-system disease that I am unable to figure out, the main symptom of which is severe unexplained fatigue. 😑 Irony upon ironies I swear... I'm glad you found a lifestyle that allows you to be healthy. Biomedicine in all its supposed quest to improve health, consistently makes the people who work within it miserable and stressed..
About 3 months ago, the YT algorithm sent me a clip of a 5 hour video of a winding river, in the Colorado Rockies. I watched like about 45 seconds, then got bored. That wasn't the remarkable thing. I clicked on the profile, and on its home page was a video entitled, "Why I quit as a neurosurgeon". Its run time was 1.5 hours. This doctor explained, that he spent 10 years studying, got 3 degrees from 3 different universities, then started his residency. 10 years later, as a senior level brain surgeon in a prestigious hospital, respected by colleagues around the world, he quit. He just found the work too demanding. To operate on his patients, one of the requirements in his area of expertise was, surgery on the nervous system. The amount of intricate knowledge on the human anatomy was overwhelming. The video went on, in detail, about his personal life. He discussed this with his wife. She went out and got a job, he just went up to the mountains to shoot videos of rivers. A bizarre story, but I got it. Life was too stressful in that level of his industry. He recognized the pain he was going through, then acted on the changes he figured he needed. Problem solved. Now he faces other challenges. But according to his video, he was dealing with it.
Made a switch from professional services/ data science to bartending/ hospitality/ event management and I totally agree. Make less dough but I don't feel like committing seppuku at the end of a work day. Totally agree.
No wonder we’re always tired! There's so much toxic stuff in food. I started realizing that after reading "Health and Beauty Mastery". The book exposes so many shocking truths about what’s happening in the health industry. I completely changed my habits
Back when I was in the national guard, I always felt less tired during annual training, drill weekends, and whenever I went away for months of training. I did not understand why I felt less tired with doing more physical labor and challenging tasks but now I think I understand. I was less tired because day to day I had less choices to make. When I went away for months of training I did not have to make a billion choices. I knew my routine and I knew exactly what to do. It is also the reason why I miss not being in the Guard anymore even though it caused so many other problems. Less decisions made me feel more rested.
That makes complete sense. I've never been in the military, but I have attended military "like" programs before, and I have never felt more awake in my life.
Yes! I was a medic with a field artillery unit in the Guard. I looked forward to AT because it forced me to disconnect, and I was around friends and contributing meaningfully to a tight-knit unit. Long days spent out in the deserts spent reading, training and treating injured/sick soldiers. I miss it.
Write down every idea or thing you feel you need to remember. Make sure its always visible so you know it's a reliable backup. Entries in calendars, notes, everything. The second you write these things down, your mind stops bringing them up. You free up space. No mental alarms go off and theres significantly less noise overall. Less ruminating on whats to come or what must be done, and less anxiety about what might be missed. This has not only significantly reduced stress and anxiety, its stopped much of the fatigue that comes from overthinking and decision making throughout the day. Offload the work your brain has to do.
same with meetings with friends, schopping, sports - every activity can be in the calendar a year ahead and you do not need to worry about it - just quick glance every evening you can postpone, you can delete - that doesn‘t matter, the main advantage of all it is the free mind
I'm so surprised reading this here! I've been doing this for years because it felt like it works, especially the part about "backup", if the mind believes the information that's offloaded might not be accessible then it will not actually "let go" of the information. I've started using Google Keep as a journaling app because the info is on the cloud rather than on my phone, so as long as Google doesn't delete my account, I know that once I've committed my thoughts to digital paper, it's reliably online and accessible from my phone or PC. I've also learned how to use my Google Assistant to verbally take notes ("hey Google take a note") in case my hands are busy (washing dishes, driving etc.)
I absolutely agree. I have a calendar hanging next to my desk, and anytime I gotta do something outside of work, I write it down. If not, I'm always thinking about what I gotta do so I won't forget. Plus it's kind of a cool almost journal. I look back on it at the end of the year and am like, oh yeah, I remember that birthday party. I remember that going away celebration. I miss working with her. It's pretty cool.
Something I love about your channel is how different each and every video is. From learning about why McDonald's ice cream machines are always seemingly broken, to learning about the gun culture in Switzerland, and how sleep affects us. I absolutely cherish your channel. Side note: I would love to see you start a map shop/store. I love maps myself and would love to see what you have to offer. Thank you for your amazing channel.
One student at a friend's college would wake up, go to classes for a few hours, immediately go to bed, wake up 4 hours later, study, go to bed, wake up 4 hours later, repeat. He usually felt well rested and got 8 hours of sleep.
I've taken a 5-15minute naps 99% of days between 1pm-3pm since I was 17 years old. It's weird, I will get really tired, pass out for like 8 minutes and wake up feeling totally refreshed. I do it at work, I had a spot at school I use to do it, even outside when I worked in the forest. I love it.
I do "quarter hour power naps" where if I feel badly I will set a timer for 15 and go lay down. If i don't sleep it means I need a snack or a drink or to access myself further. If i sleep i tend to wake up fully and feel refreshed. It's a way to get in touch with myself.
I wish to have a job where I can nap, but I need 50 min. It takes me 20-30 minutes to fall asleep and 20-30 minutes to have a good power nap. So a full hour could potentially be too much, but if I can feel I'm really tired 40 is enough too. I'm sensitive to sound during that falling asleep time and it jolts me in a way that causes my heart rate to uncomfortably increase and makes me angry. I don't think very clearly and all I angrily want is to get my nap. And that's not a good state to be in at work! So I'd need a fairly quiet place to nap. And I think what concerns me the most is how people see it. If I tried to fight for my nap I'm concerned people would see me as a very spoiled and irrational person.
@@essennagerry I feel you on the part about the heartrate. When one is currently falling asleep and some sudden noise startles one, the spike in heartrate is very annoying and usually leads to a very alert state that makes it borderline impossible to fall asleep again, even if you know where the noise came from and that it's normal and whatnot. It's just like your brain heard a branch snap and now thinks it might need to go into fight or flight any moment now lol..
You are so lucky. Best habit your body ever learned. Aside from your heart and kidneys, your brain is the next most important thing to maintain for longevity. Don't have kids, you might lose your ability.
On my breaks at work I sometimes spontaneously doze off (and I have sleep issues) I feel that refreshing feeling wash over my brain. I feel thankful my job allows me to do that, I need that power nap. I often have trouble getting to sleep, and getting up to pee and sometimes failing to return to sleep state. So I often wind up at work sleep deprived.
I’ve made my sleep 10x better by following some very simple rules: -Avoid coffee, but certainly no later than 12p, if I have to drink it. -Audiobooks, instead of scrolling or watching, for 1-2 hours before bed. -Only lay in bed when it’s actually bedtime. -Get physical activity in during the day so I feel like I need rest.
Woah, I've stumbled up the exact same habits! Plus going to bed slightly hungry helps me. Even if you think you can have a coffee right before bed, try no caffeine after noon or even earlier. A lot of people who think caffeine doesn't matter will be blown away by the results.
For those who tend to overthink in bed, here's something that helped me: Take more time to think during the day. I used to always listen to music or scroll through shorts on the train, but now I just sit and look out the window for the 20-minute ride. For me, using social media during downtime blocks out my thoughts, and they flood back when I'm trying to sleep. I've started doing nothing for 20-30 minutes, just looking outside, and it's really helped clear my mind. I truly believe we're overstimulated, and for me, this even includes music.
@@Retrohunter1994 100% agreed re: overstimulation. I do listen to music still on the bus (only time I really have the opportunity) but I've completely stopped scrolling through my phone, it goes in my pocket so I can people watch or stare out the window and think.
It’s mostly people are not physicaly exhausted anymore. Mentally exhausted is not the same. Source: landscaper/tree trimmer and I’ve slept like a baby for 20 years.
I quit smoking, quit drinking, started a more balanced diet, started walking instead of driving, meal prepped for diabetes and started going to sleep by 10. I still have an occasional drink though but only on special occasions.
I was always tired in the past. Since i started training martial arts two years ago i have been great and extremely confident. I'm always full of energy even though the martials arts training is exhausting, it gives me a great joy in life.
One problem is that we usually only see the fruits of our labor in our bank account. Almost no one knows the satisfying feeling of completing a complete piece of work, of seeing something finished in front of you. Most people are just small cogs in the machine and once one task is completed, the next and the next follows immediately... so you never finish!
I am a cabinet and furniture maker. I also do finish carpentry and build out decks. It is satisfying and the admiration is a perk for sure. But i hurt and am tired as well lol. But i am generally very happy with my life.
"Labour is external to the worker - i.e., does not belong to his essential being; that he, therefore, does not confirm himself in his work, but denies himself, feels miserable and not happy, does not develop free mental and physical energy, but mortifies his flesh and ruins his mind. Hence, the worker feels himself only when he is not working; when he is working, he does not feel himself. He is at home when he is not working, and not at home when he is working. ... It is, therefore, not the satisfaction of a need but a mere means to satisfy needs outside itself. ... External labour, labour in which man alienates himself, is a labour of self-sacrifice, of mortification. ... the activity of the worker is not his own spontaneous activity. It belongs to another, it is a loss of his self."
unmatrix, you hit the head of the nail on this one for me. i feel un completed when i do work that is repeted and as you say it dont get done as its next and next again and i dont feel satisfied with my non ending task of work as i would with a task that i can see the end result when its done.
That's why writing tasks down and crossing them off helps. You see completion. Yes, you do the the same tasks all again the next day, but you used to have to search for water every day, no different. And you need a physical hobby that isn't social media. Make the invisible work, visible.
@@MilwaukeeWoman got hobbys (rc cars and other things) that makes me come out of the house and socialise with real people, have not used my tv more then ten times since 2018 and only watch news and social media on computer in the eavenings. actually start to feel good about living this way.
Humans greatest fear is the unknown, and right now is the most complex things have ever been in the history of humanity. The average person has to do so many things in a day to survive in this complex world. So by not eating right or exercising or self medicating only makes that worse. A ton of people are low on vitamin D and don’t realize the huge roll that plays in feeling better. Mental health is really the most important thing in the history of humanity, but it’s so hard to “fix” bc it’s not physical, you can’t see it and mental illness’s are just best guesses or guidelines of symptoms.
A massive one you missed out: meditation. I always struggled to get to sleep, and it was because of the evolutionary mismatch, my brain was always overthinking, which carried over into night time, keeping me awake, but after taking up meditation before bed, i’ve started getting to sleep practically on demand. Focus on one thing and one thing only, like your breathing, and try to completely silence your mind, try not to think about anything, and after a while, you will literally feel waves of relief wash over your brain as it takes a much needed rest from the constant state of mind-chatter that you’re in for 99% of your day. I have Alan Watts to thank for this
So that's why Albert Einstein bought several sets of clothing that were all exactly the same and just wore a clean set each day and never wore socks. He eliminated the need to make decisions about what to wear and that freed up his prefrontal cortex to do work and make decisions about things that were more important to him.
Chronotypes speaks to me. My whole life it’s been obvious to me that I’m good at staying up late, I’m more alert in the evening and I get my best sleep in the morning. My body also craves afternoon naps. I’m 32 and my whole life I’ve been fighting against what my body wants me to do. Forcing myself to wake up at 7am, stay awake all day and go to sleep at 11pm. We’re told if we do this long enough we’ll start feeling well rested and energised all day. Well I’ve felt completely exhausted my whole adult life and I’ve been attempting to win that battle by following the rules. I think it’s time I listen to my brain/body and sleep when I feel like it. My job will have to deal with it!
I was a night person for most of my life. I really get going around 6pm and can function best till around 2am. Waking up is miserable to me and it takes me well over a hour to get even moving around. Some days are different but that’s basically the way I am best.
dude wow this speaks to me so much... ive been pretending to be a morning person my whole life also!! that being said, when i started doing mainly WFH and started running during the day, it helped a lot with being tired at night..
You need to get diagnosed with DSPS (Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome). I also experienced those issues and the sleep deprivation, combined with excessive amounts of coffee or energy drinks were starting to attack my cardiovascular system and digestive system, as well as crippling my cognitive functions. After the diagnosis I was able to request accommodations and now I live healthier than ever, with enough sleep and no need for stimulants.
Another idea that could help reduce the number decisions you make is having a designated spot for everything in your house to go. Your keys always go on a specific hook. Your wallet always goes on this shelf. Not only does that eliminate the decision on where to put things, it also helps reduce decisionmaking when searching for those things later (e.g. deciding which drawer to look in).
Things I always do to keep my decision making process to a minimum, even though I have ADHD: 1: Eat the same thing everyday 2: Wear any kind of black tshirt and blue jeans everyday (Other than the occasional event which require shirts and pants) and the same pair of boots. 3: Sleep at least 7 hours at night and wake up 2 hours before work (8am, cuz I get to work at 10am) 4: Minimal Caffeine intake (Max 2 cups of coffee) and never after 6pm, since I sleep around 1am 5: Always keep a full water bottle near me wherever I sit for long times, like work desk, home desk and near the bed. 6: No food after 10pm (3 hours before sleep) 7: (controversial, but works wonders) Shake one off right before sleeping.
There's a book called Hidden Time Wealth, and it talks about how using some secret techniques, you can overcome procrastination and accomplish anything in life. It's not just a bunch of empty promises; it's the real deal.
physical activity in general was the main reason why i used to feel energetic and happy, and since i cannot do sports or physical labour like working in agriculture anymore because of injuries and cronic pains, quality of life has dropped drastically. some days i'm just depressed and drained out of life. my dream is to get back my health and be the person i was once again. take care of yourself guys
I think you can get creative, e.g. doing sit-ups or leg raises in bed, or body weight squats, lifting dumbbells that you can handle, etc. My point, just do what you can, as often as you can. If that isn't much, then it's still better than nothing. I also believe cold showers/ ice baths to be effective at reducing pain and boosting mood. Hope your condition improves!
Im a restaurant owner and we always discuss how we can have 500 guests on a day and we wont be tired but the day when its time to do paperwork and or maybe fix something during a shift which requires a loads of quick thinking and decision making makes us tired in 2-3 hours.
Exactly. Normal work does not make me stress, no matter how much i have to do. But as soon as there is a problem which diverts from the normal solutions, im under so much stress 😩
love the map store idea. absolutely fell in love with the video and the content but most of all, the delivery. people like you are why i can’t bring myself to get rid of youtube. this was beautiful :)
This really explains why I feel more well-rested on holidays even though I sleep at 12mn and wake up early the next day at 7am. Yeah the hotel beds are comfortable but there's less decisions to make in the day too when you're just exploring and giving your brain a break. It also explain why despite the intense physical trainings, I felt more rested and awake during my time in the military. The days and meals were already planned out for you This makes so much sense!
I NEVER wake up refreshed. The ONLY time I did was when I did a sleep study to find out if my chronic fatigue was due to Sleep Apnea. They woke me early because there weren't signs of Apnea, and I surprisingly felt alert. I've been chasing that feeling for over 20 years!
Did they have any kind of breathing device? It was it monitoring only? It’s possible they woke you up gently at the end of a sleep cycle, which is best anyway. Try a sleep app that does this.
Dude thisss can`t be real , I asked this question to myself today and was puzzling my mind above this and just opened youtube and saw the title ... It felt personal .. okay lets watch this
I've been dealing with learned helpessness and mental burnout causing me performance anxiety. Moreover, because I'm extremely compulsive, small setbacks in my plans become more of a mental strain. I am constantly dealing with decision fatigue regardless on how much I automate or priortize tasks. All I can do is practice sell efficacy and adopt a "good enough" mindset, or else I will always deal with the sunken cost issue.
This is such a great video with such great points. Me and my friends always talk about how increasingly tired we are as we get older, summing up to old age. But I think the real truth is that as we get older there are more decision fatigue, and more exhausting decisions to make everyday. As someone who feels chronically fatigued, I feel so understood and relieved from watching this.
Yes absolutely! A map store would be amazing! Definitely prints as well if you’re going to sell the originals too. The prints could be expanded as well, shadowboxes, anti glare glass, lighting ect. Great idea
This makes so much sense. I work as a doctor and can work 10 hours straight seeing 20-30 patients, calling patients, checking labs, dealing with staff, filling out forms. In that entire 10 hours I might only have one 15-20 minute break to eat lunch and use the bathroom. Rest of the time is active work with my brain. I’m a zombie and feel like I can’t even stand to talk when I get home those days. Switching to scrubs has been nice, easy to put on in the morning and takes little thought but it’s not enough. I’m also a natural night owl having to work 8-6 and struggle with ADHD. I’m just not well adapted to this lifestyle. 😬
YES! I'd REALLY LOVE to buy maps from you. Not just coz I'm a Map geek just like you but also coz I want to support you and your work. Sending tons and tons of love from India. 💌
This is the best animation I've seen in a while, I literally study your videos to get inspired and do something similar, I don't think people fully understand our appreciate how much time editors spend to make something like that, hats off for that and keep inspiring
5:25 bro has done science artwork. I am in awe of the production values of this channel. Top 3 in terms of composition and production, structure, and delivery on the whole of YT for me
I used to work as a chef, and my Sunday/Monday used to involve finishing at 11pm Sunday and being back on at 7am on Monday. I found that if I drank an energy drink before bed, so that I was asleep before it kicked in, I not only felt like I had a super long sleep (even though it was typically 5hrs) but I did not feel tired the next day. Nice to see there's some science backing this up and I wasn't just giving myself a placebo effect.
Despite my snarky comment (which I still stand by), as a physician, I want to say thank you Johnny for this video. So many patients have a learned helplessness. They have insomnia and fatigue but they don’t want to change anything to get over these problems. They want me to tell them they’ve got some rare disease to explain it, or they want a magic pill. This video helps to reinforce the fact that we are still in control of our lives. Work may dictate schedules to a large degree, but we can make a lot of changes to help ourselves live healthier.
I'm an Internet doctor so disregard... Tell 90% of them to change their diet and not eat dumb food if they don't want to feel like crap. Doctors like to push pills in some cases and probably many cases when a diet change is necessary to achieve the patient's goals. Pills are sometimes great but 90% of the time, eating dumb foods is needed too.
Without me even watching, I can say the main reasons are: - Sugar intake (usually presents as an afternoon slump) - Caffeine dependency - lack of exercise - Lack of sunlight - inconsistent sleep schedule - low iron/low RBC count - Sleep disorder (Sleep apnea, narcolepsy etc.) - poor nutrition/poor health - Alcohol (as pointed out in the replies)
@JustAnotherAccount8 drinking in general adds a 3 to 5 day energy and mindfulness fog. It is a major contributor to a massive fatigue cycle that encourages more drinking and caffeine dependency. Glad I quit
this DOES explain why i'm always so damn tired and also why i start feeling better when i stop using social media. the days when i'm least mentally fatigued are when i just go outside and look at some birds. because there's no mental load. i don't have to think about anything,.
I'm spending 50 hours a week (42% of my awake time) working soul crushing job which is far from being paid amazing. I'm spending 20 hours a week (17% of my awake time) studying pretty complex things and concepts in order to be able to advance in my career. That's why I feel dead-tired all the time.
I am really amazed by how you showed your ‘wrong’ daily routine, which is actually similar to mine. I do all of these things almost every day-drinking coffee late at night to boost my energy and then struggling to sleep. After watching your video, I decided to make some changes in my life. Thanks for the video, I really love it❤️
_such_ an amazing video. As someone who gets overwhelmed with the amount of decisions in the modern world I: - have a capsule wardrobe, and wear the same outfit every work day, Steve jobs style - have a weekly meal plan, which means buying the same thing each week. Those 2 things have dramatically improved my life and energy levels.
Out of laziness or so I thought I moved in this direction. I wear only a few outfits. Buy the same groceries every week. I can actually get extra sleep because of this and save time just in general.
I’m an ironworker who wears a 30 pound tool belt and I bust my ass everyday, recently I became a supervisor. While physically I feel better, my back doesn’t hurt as much I’m not as sore, I have to take a nap after work because I am so exhausted from the constant string of decisions I make. It’s a high risk job and I am really good at being a worker, still working on the supervisor part but man I am so tired the big decisions, the stress, it all adds up and I feel like I’m a chicken with it’s head cut off. Hope it gets easier.
The nature spent millions years of evolution to build our bodies as a perfect tool to run, climb, crawl, swim, hunt, fight, lift weights. 20-25 years ago humanity said: STFU, I'm gonna sit still at the desk for 10 hours.
it doesn't. that's just the nature of the beast. If it was easy, then anybody could do it. I used to think, I wouldn't ask anybody, to to anything, that I wouldn't do. but it turns out, I'm willing to do a lot more, than most. so now, my advice, is CYA!
But management has it's perks. I did miss sliding down the iron, did I date myself lol. Man those were the days.remember having to tie myself so I wouldn't fall off sitting waiting for the next piece. Then they started Christmas treeing ...
yeah buddy, i completely believe that. i make constant decisions at my current job as well and it's just whatever you know. it's a big load for the mind to handle. decision making is just exhausting and it's all whatever stuff that only wears on the mind. sure you have physical energy available, but you feel like you're on another planet mentally. man is it all bogus i tell ya
Since I really cut down on drinking, and started reading a book before bed, I've started to feel better every day for probably two years. Before that I would've never believed this could happen to me
And that's why in Islam it is highly discouraged to overthink.. We literally say sometimes, "La hawla wala quwaata illah billah.." which means "There is no might nor power except with Allah." Which suggest that we rely on Him only and say "will see whatever happens, I am just going to do my work and letting all the worries to the Al Mighty Allah."
As an engineer, idk how applicable this is to me. Making lots of decisions is my life, and i enjoy it. I get bored when things are a routine and when i dont have to think. And it actually makes me tired.
How about when those decisions are what to do with 50 or 60 emails in your inbox everyday? Emails that aren't just FYI that you can write a rule to send to trash but emails that are to-do items that stay in your inbox until you take action or decide next step or keep it there to remind you. That isn't "living the dream" but you'll do it until you reach your limit and burnout whether 5 years or 20. Trying to think using a head made of stone from that day in and day out isn't the same as getting a stimulating workday. It's easy to think "I was bored all day with little to do and so here at the end of the workday, I'm tired from all that boredom" when that's just a biorhythm.
@@Longwing70 i am not saying my job is perfect. there are lots and lots of tedious tasks like the one you described that must get done. but tedious tasks are tedious because they are the same task over and over again. they don't take a lot of thinking and are just boring. the thing that really gets me going are the tasks that require me to constantly think and problem solve, even if i keep failing, i live for a challenge like that. Also my dad is in the same industry i am in and has been for almost 50 years. he can retire if he wants to but doesn't because he enjoys it to much and doesn't want to get bored.
I have DSPS, my sleep rhythm is 4-6h from the social norm. It almost killed me, hopping off the rat race and having my own natural rhythm restored my physical and mental health. Living in a different rhythm feels like constant jet lag, you get mood swings, depression, lethargy and general feeling of "ill". Since then i've learned why our society shuns everyone who does not wake up early: it is all about money. Churches have also played their part, making it akin to sin to sleep late. Neither cares how much you do or what you accomplish, they just want everyone to wake up at 6AM work until they can't anymore and go straight back to sleep.
I am in the same boat but I am 6-8 hours off. Going full remote and waking up closer to my body´s natural time has helped me a lot, I was having thoughts of self harm before, now? Not a single one, I was gaining weight, now I can maintain it, and so on.
@@silajim Same here, self destructive behaviour and intrusive thoughts are gone, my blood pressure is not all over the place, mood swings are gone and i lost 15kg (i did gain some of it back, but it is well in the "manageable" category). At one point i worked in NY time, in Finland... that was a bit oo late but still manageable. Remote work is a blessing for millions and millions of people. I do believe that we lose millions of people each year just because of society is stigmatizing sleeping late. In many workplaces what you do is not as important as showing up on time. And i predict we will at some point look at the last two centuries as insane, "how could we do this to humans?".... The attitudes changes with the pandemic, before it we call it a disorder, now people talk about chronotypes. It is a huge change in attitudes.
@@squidcaps4308 True. Going to bed late and waking up late is the only time I feel refreshed and rested. But I sadly have to work morning shift and wake up 7 am every day. Ever since then I am perpetually tired and exhausted every single day. But what can I do? I need this job.
When I quit coffee, I slept less and felt better. If you're feeling like it could be worth trying, cut back slowly. Caffeine withdrawals include migraines and they're brutal. First, bias your intake to the morning, then reduce the amount. Wait for a long weekend with no plans, and then stop. What you'll find is that you can then use coffee occasionally tactically when you really need it. It'll be very effective, and you won't have withdrawals from a one-off.
Huh, idk if I’m fortunate or cursed but does caffeine really wire y’all up? I get almost zero effect from caffeine so I never understood why everyone drank coffee in the morning for anything other than the taste.
@@edited1325i can also sleep after a energy drink, cola or a cheap coffee, no problem. Too bad i can't offer you my coffee that i drink. That thing will make you sleepless guaranteed.
I started drinking half caff years ago....not sure I could drop caffeine totally, but that's the goal. I've given up every other "vice" imaginable, so I think I'm clinging onto coffee like grim death...
My husband, who is a total night owl, has found a great way to sync life with his chronotype. We moved to Spain, but he still works (remotely) US east coast hours. It works remarkably well for him. Not for everyone, but it does for him! 😅 Oh, and yes, the siestas are great!
When I was an Automotive Technician working for dealerships and independent shops I was constantly having to solve problems. I got a disproportionate amount of problem cars (vehicles needing extended diagnostics vs just installing some brakes). Even though I hadn't done heavy lifting, just lots of standing, looking at wiring diagrams, squeezing my old body into tight spaces, I'd come home and be completely wiped out.
oh yeah, it's completely believable buddy. you were deciding your ass off all day. you wore your mind out to the limit. we're pushed to the limit in these garbage jobs these days to not fall behind financially
Huge change in my life: don’t use screens after 7pm, read before bed and sleep at 9pm, wake up at 5am workout first thing. Sounds fucking crazy I know, but the days I get this right and hit the gym in the morning I feel SO MUCH BETTER.
Yeah, but the gym is totally optional for working out. What if you can’t hit the gym every morning because there isn’t one where you live or whatever? Stretching, especially extensive stretching, is a universal, always-available solution. You’ve always got your body with you, so you can stretch anytime. It’s the only "equipment" you really need.
Yup. You need proper sleep so that your brain & body can recover. Not just that. You should also check for vitamin b12, Vitamin D, Blood sugar level and blood pressure. These are the most common causes. That's why balanced diet, little bit of excercise & good sleep is necessary.
@@user-op8fg3ny3jSame for me actually, and now when I do get caffeine on rare occasions, it sure hits me hard lol! Definitely feels like a big boost rather than something I need now. Use it when shooting for PR's or on very hard hikes/climbs.
In Spain we do not take siestas on working days, it’s a very common misconception. We take them on the weekends or on very hot days in the summer because temperature’s too high to go outside anyways, so we take a nap and then prolong our day during the night time.
Idk why, but I have ADHD, and virtually all of this works for me in the exact opposite way. The more decisions, the more energy, if there's few, I feel asleep, if there's none, I am restless, caffeine and blue light in the dark make me fall asleep
Thank you for this video! I noticed that my attention span has decreased significantly since things became ‘normal’ again after covid. I feel like all these choices everyday (what to watch, what to eat, what to do next) have made me way more unproductive than I was when I was in university, which is saying a lot because I was a lazy student 😅
4:52 Never in a million years did I think I would find an Always Sunny reference in a Johnny Harris video. MASTER OF KARATE, AND FRIENDSHIP, FOR EVERYONE!
Hi Johnny! Currently getting my PhD in sleep and chronobiology, this is a well done video but I will say there is a lot more complexity to this (for example glutamate and adenosine are only two of the numerous sleep/wake promoting pathways) If you ever want to learn more about how our modern environment effects sleep and circadian rhythms I have plenty of sources!
That's the point, do not believe some famous journalist on internet who has less idea what he's talking about, ends up spreading more misinformation. Like Johnny
yes. to maps. I’ve been searching ebay tonight for maps and charts to use in my science classroom. soon after TH-cam offered me your episode on California mapped - which I enjoyed, thanks.
Just do a experiment. Choose a task yourself and do it or let somebody else decide what you have to do. The motivation is completely different. If you do the whole day what somebody else tells you you get completely sick of it. In modern world most of us get orders from a boss or multiple bosses as a freelancer. If you can decide freely what to do, the many decisions to take make much more fun than when somebody else tells you how you have to decide.
As someone who owns a small business and does freely decide what to do everyday, I would say this is true, HOWEVER, burn out does still occur. The body will still show signs that it wants to slow down either every afternoon or at times for a whole day. We generally push ourselves to work a lot more than the 9-5 worker and it catches up with us.
Yeah sounds kinda nice, a stress free lifestyle where your only concerns are food, water, shelter and staying alive. Being in tune with nature. We'd probably be more happy
@@harmonic5107 I remember there was a docudrama on the history channel about a family that survived societal collapse and lived in a cabin in the woods. The dad cut his finger chopping wood and next scene he was dead in the bed.
I love old maps. I don't mind the original reprinted on a new paper. Years of struggling with burnout, I cannot get through the day. I have to take naps in between and it definitely helps a lot.
No Johnny, you're confounding "cognitive fatigue" with "postprandial somnolence" and they have totally different mechanisms. The early afternoon slump is a physiological response to having lunch. There are many mechanisms for this, for example the insulin spike causes tryptophan to pass through the blood-brain barrier, and in the brain tryptophan is immediately transformed into melatonin, which causes your slump. Also the "adenosine" mechanism you talked about is not caused by cognitive fatigue, but by glucose concentration. If you can't allow to take a siesta, then you'll have to eat little at lunch, for example just a raw salad, or skip lunch entirely.
Im curious how significant it might be for those who vape all day, which I'd imagine are just giving themselves constant glucose spikes at a high level........most of the issues john john covers are directly correlated to modern society....essentially, our brains have been studied by companies to be exploited in ways that we are poorly equipped to fight against.
I stopped eating breakfast and lunch. I have 2 small snacks, then a big ass meal at the end of the day just before I go to sleep. Best decision I ever made honestly
I think my one meal a day diet (early evenings, no coffee, no tea, just water) and my sometimes sleepiness around 3 pm disagree with your, apparently very strict, definitions
Totally agree with the postprandial somnolence correction, but I disagree about your Adenosine take. Adenosine is a byproduct of ATP/ADP/AMP dephosphorylation (energy consumption) which is directly associated with cognitive function as it is the facilitating mechanism. An increase in cognitive function (neural signaling) and synaptic release, an increase in adenosine levels. Have a good day!
I am a person who has started his first real job very few months ago. And it was a burning question for me, why do I feel so tired all the time? Now I know the answer.
Before I even watch, im going to guess living under constant anxiety, stress, and fear of the unknown. It's eating at us, taking a lot of our energy up during the day, and also making sleep crappy. The last 5 years, it has been one catastrophe after another.
Yeah mental fatigue is the reason, and no internet isn't the only at fault, it's the current way society makes us live, it just goes faster than our brain really likes
@@Leftistattheparty judging by your username, I'm assuming that you've made your whole life about politics so I can understand how it's difficult for you to comprehend, but it is possible to take a break and still care about the issues. You just don't have to be in the trenches everyday. Taking a break is healthy. Reading doom and gloom (most of which is biased) on the internet everyday, and in your case arguing for the sake of arguing, is not.
Excess glutamate is also neurotoxic….im a brain injury specialist…and part of what makes a traumatic brain injury so horrible is glutamate toxicity…which happens as part of the secondary injury after a TBi…damage to neurons releases so much glutamate that it outright causes apoptosis of neurons…so glutamate is nasty stuff…necessary but the mitochondria can’t clear it out fast enough and every cell that self destructs releases more glutamate…this is a big part of what makes TBIs so devastating…and it happens quickly…sometimes before the patient gets to the hospital.
I saw a sleep doctor, and it turns out I had bad sleep apnea because my tonsils were really large, blocking my airway while sleeping. Had them removed, and I sleep much better as long as I get my 8 hours.
Damn, sleep apnea is no joke. I once slept 15 hours, woke up for three hours, and slept 15 hours more. But everyone just calls you lazy... It's no wonder I've always had dreams of drowning.
00:36 I'm looking to phone before go to bed, and i realised so I'm going to sleep 😴. I'll not watch this video today and I don't know about tomorrow. So.. your audience retention with affected. This is what happens with a true creator ❤
Great video! I loved the diagrams and visuals they truly make everything so much clearer and more engaging. Now, onto my map emergency: I'm in desperate need of some cool maps! My current paper folded expandable world map is driving me insane, and I've always admired your maps in the studio. I remember you showing off those blind like roll down maps. If you ever decide to sell any of them, I’d love to add one to my collection preferably without needing to take out a house loan! The only hiccup is shipping since I'm over here in Australia. Do you think we could make it work? By the way, your video was awesome, it’s wonderful to see new and interesting stuff. I might need to take out the trash from my mind.
I think I’ve got a bit lazier now that I’m in my 30s, have a kid, have lots of financial stressors and a stressful job. But I used to be able to juggle a lot of things a decade ago. I think for me, I need to get a planner like my spouse does, and check things off to fuel myself with small accomplishments throughout the day.
I work as a commercial plumber. Working in the trades is not only mentally exhausting, but it's also physically exhausting. I know many tradesmen know what I mean.
I respect your hard work man. I did a lot of physical labor earlier in life and it is tough. I appreciate you who keep doing those needed services. So thank you
I mow lawns and am fitter and healthier for it. Still have energy to go for a 5-10k run at the end of the day too. But no way I could do it 40 hours a week. I just do enough to get by. Life is too short..
I'm an arborist. When I worked full time it was exhausting, incredibly physically demanding and many very important decisions that meant the difference between life and death, or very expensive property damage.
Exactly that. Burnout is the reason why I'm tired all the time. Videos don't go into it because... well... not much we can do about it. Using your phone? You can adjust it. Diet and activity? You can adjust that. Shitty job? Good luck!
A year ago, I was feeling so tired and always had brain fog. So I decided to stop eating junk food, start exercising, reduce (or better yet, no) alcohol, go to bed early, no sensational news, and block social media. As a result, I feel so much better and have far more energy(although I have slipped back into some bad habits). It truly is going back to the basics that makes all the difference.
YES WE WANT MAPS, I'm obsessed with maps and think it's a really cool idea. Also super interesting video, very well put together with all the animations.
One thing you should of mentioned, is that your body builds adenosine primarily through the burning of energy (ATP, Adenosine Tri Phosphate). Your brain, while using a lot of energy to do its tasks, doesn't require the same huge calorie demands for more difficult tasks as your muscles do. You can get far more rewards from using a little bit of brain power than you can your muscles. This means that yes while the number of tasks matters, you also need to consider that you're not using your body enough. When you become depleted, it should feel good. If it's not, you're fatigued, not depleted, you don't need to sleep you need a break. Sleep cleans up the mind, but the problem is the fundamental imbalance of tasks, no matter how well rested you are, you'll be in the same position eventually. In short, if you did pushups as well as solving problems, you would feel more appropriately tired, faster, and you'll feel better about it. Our ancestors didn't need to do much mathematics, but they did do LOTS of walking.
Check out ground.news/johnnyharris to see how any news story is being framed by news outlets around the world and across the political spectrum. Use my link to get 40% off unlimited access with the Vantage Subscription.
Great video #JohnnyHarris! 💪🙏🫡
Slot a 20' siesta right after having your fave coffee. Sorted. You can deduct It from your doomscrolling routine.
EDIT: JOHNNY! MY BROTHER IN COFFEE-NAP!
14:24 their website crash when login haha
Classic monkeys in suits fallacy
Sell maps!
The concept of health in "The 23 Former Doctor Truths" book completely explains this. I wish I read it sooner.
Things I’ve tried:
- exercising
- developing a routine
- not using electronics late
- making a to-do list
- diet and eating time
So it’s refreshing to not hear someone recommend that for the millionth time.
Stay away from Diddler parties🤯
I feel you !!!
Agreed
Try this:
f i spend most of my working day outside , still on PC keyboard but breathing fresh air looking at green, a bit more sun light- i am not crashing in afternoons.
Yes if a throw in a green smoothie and a walk on my break im kicking ass even more.
I don't see "talking to my doctor" on that list. Maybe you should be asking a professional instead of asking google....
I was reading recently a book that argues about how work used to be something we completely disconnected from once we punched out (you can’t really keep assembling a car while the factory is closed) Now the most common work is intellectual, you think for a living and that means you think about your marketing presentation while doing laundry at home or cooking dinner for your kids, essentially meaning you’re working A LOT more than 9-5. That’s exhausting and as humans we haven’t evolved fast enough to understand how to deal with those changes so our mind gets depressed, anxious and exhausted.
what book is that
Please share the name of the book
joining the waitlist for the book name
That is a very valid point; a good observation. I would add to that the problem of how jobs that include deadlines really impose a cause for us to take work home with us, and stress out about deadlines. I lived with jobs that had deadlines for years. Then I got a lower paying job that didn’t have deadlines, and was much happier. Punch out, go home, relax.
As a retired autoworker, you just made a DAMN GOOD POINT!
The fact that you consult with the audience before you launch something makes us feel valued and appreciated. Thank you so much for that. And yes, if it's not too much work, you should open a store for them, I probably won't get any cuz I'm not into maps but yeah. Amazing video btw
I'm a clinical psychologist researching sleep and I want to make a some comments/corrections on what you've said in the video:
- You have mixed up tiredness/fatigue and sleepiness. Those are two different feelings and processes, although in everyday language we use tiredness/fatigue for both feelings, so it's hard for us to know the difference, because we use the same word wrongly for two different feelings. Sleepiness (yawning, drowsing) is caused by a quantitative lack of sleep, so if you sleep, that feeling will go away. Tiredness/fatigue is a lack of energy that has A LOT of causes (diseases, poor mental health, overstimulation, stress, worry, ...). When you're tired, you need to rest. If you rest, the tiredness will go away.
- The study on glutamate literally says this: "research is needed to explore the recovery of glutamate levels at rest or during sleep." In other words, if we know whether rest or sleep decreases the glutamate, we will know which feeling it causes (tiredness or sleepiness). But the study also says this: "it has been shown that glutamate concentrations decrease during sleep, in relation to EEG slow-wave activity. Glutamate could therefore belong to the potentially toxic substances that are eliminated during sleep" so it seems that too much glutamate creates sleepiness. In that case, there is but one solution: you need to sleep.
- Biphasic sleep isn't the same thing as napping in the afternoon. Before everyone had clocks, people would go to bed when the sun went down and they would rise when the sun rose, because the main source of information for your brain on whether or not you should sleep is the presence of sunlight. So depending on where you live in the world and how much daylight you have there, you would have a different sleep pattern. If you live somewhere where in the winter, the sun goes down early and rises late, you would do the same thing. Except, it would be darker for much longer than the amount of sleep that you need, so you would wake up in the middle of the night, do stuff, go back to sleep and then wake when the sun rose. Since most people in the past were farmers and hunter-gatherers, in the winter during the day, there wasn't much to do anyway and si they didn't need a lot of wake time with sunlight. If however, you lived somewhere where the sun went down very late and rose very early, it wouldn't be dark long enough for you to have all of your hours of sleep, so you would need to do a nap in order to have all the sleep you need. That nap is usually taken right after noon, because it's the warmest moment of the day and so potentially too warm to do something, but also because your body temperature naturally decreases after noon and we need this decrease to fall asleep. (Body temperature also decreases in the evening). If you can't take a nap during the day, don't try it. If your sleep is not biphasic, you don't want to create a biphasic sleep.
- Adenosine is causing sleepiness, not tiredness, so when you have too much adenosine, you should sleep, not rest.
- If the coffee nap works for you, that's great, but I would not advise this to people. Coffee basically works like a painkiller: the sleepiness is still there, you just don't feel it. It doesn't do anything to the cause of the problem.
- What you've said about chronotypes is correct. Our society is actually made for morning persons. If you're working in the arts, bars, restaurants, clubs, ..., it's best if you're an evening person.
- Regarding melatonin and the light of screens, the impact of screen light on our sleep is very very small. The media focuses far too much on that. The main negative impact of screens on your sleep is 1) delaying your bed time to be on a screen and 2) waking up at night because of notifications from your phone. I recommend the review by Bauducco et al. (2024) called "A bidirectional model of sleep and technology use: A theoretical review of How much, for whom, and which mechanisms".
I realize it might look like I think that everything you've said is wrong, but that's not the case: chronotypes, the difference between our modern life and the caveman life, neurons, the effect of caffeine, ... that's all correct and most of your advice is also good advice. Also, I think your video looks really great visually!
Really good additional information, this comment should be pinned!
Nice comment thanks!
Damn, what a tremendous load of valuable information! Thank you, Doctor!
Fatigue = Lack of energy needed to accomplish activities of daily living.
Solution: ????
Tired/Sleepy = Lack of or need of restful sleep.
This clearly should be pinned!
At my previous 9-to-5 job, we had long lunch breaks. Instead of going out to eat, I used that time to sleep in my car. Those naps were honestly a godsend and not only kept me more focused but happier for the rest of the day.
I used to do that. My boss one day asked me if I was napping in my car at lunch, as if there was something wrong with me.
@@np8173 Japan and China it is normal for everyone to take a nap at lunch, wish the west would normalize this. Both healthier and more productive
I used to nap in my car when I had office jobs
That’s a pathetic existence and it’s unacceptable.
@@Staroymy chinese boss takes naps during the day and he has missed meetings because of this. And then he uses it as an excuse to call me on sundays and at 9 pm.
I’ve been chronically tired for the past 10 years.
I just cut out sugar/processed foods/coffee, started exercising, and cut my social media/digital consumption by 80%. I’ve never had more energy/been happier.
exactly. well done. it is not easy to change all those habits.
What are processed foods exactly? If you can give some examples*
Sugar was HUGE for me. Once I cut that out, I felt way more energy throughout the day.
@@forza8719I'd say anything that didn't grow in the ground or come from an animal counts as processed. Anything with a super long shelf life
THIS. 👏👏👏
Here they are for anybody who doesn't have time to watch the full video:
- Take an early afternoon nap
- Limit decisions
- Meal planning
- Drink coffee then take a nap
- Sync with your natural sleep schedule
- Get quality sleep
Thanks, I stoped watching at 30 seconds it answered the whole thing haha
I quit a very fulfilling job as a biomedical scientist because of decision fatigue and consequently severe burnout. I'm now working retail and my employer is worried I'll run off to something bigger and better. But honestly, I'm done with a life spent constantly exhausted. Quality of life doesn't look the same for everyone.
I truly, truly understand this. I used to be a biomedical scientist too for about 10 years, and right after I left the field for data science because the bench was too exhausting, I fell ill with a mysterious chronic multi-system disease that I am unable to figure out, the main symptom of which is severe unexplained fatigue. 😑
Irony upon ironies I swear... I'm glad you found a lifestyle that allows you to be healthy. Biomedicine in all its supposed quest to improve health, consistently makes the people who work within it miserable and stressed..
me but with being an accountant / auditor! Currently on a career break but it burnt me out so much
About 3 months ago, the YT algorithm sent me a clip of a 5 hour video of a winding river, in the Colorado Rockies. I watched like about 45 seconds, then got bored.
That wasn't the remarkable thing. I clicked on the profile, and on its home page was a video entitled, "Why I quit as a neurosurgeon". Its run time was 1.5 hours. This doctor explained, that he spent 10 years studying, got 3 degrees from 3 different universities, then started his residency. 10 years later, as a senior level brain surgeon in a prestigious hospital, respected by colleagues around the world, he quit.
He just found the work too demanding. To operate on his patients, one of the requirements in his area of expertise was, surgery on the nervous system. The amount of intricate knowledge on the human anatomy was overwhelming.
The video went on, in detail, about his personal life. He discussed this with his wife. She went out and got a job, he just went up to the mountains to shoot videos of rivers. A bizarre story, but I got it. Life was too stressful in that level of his industry. He recognized the pain he was going through, then acted on the changes he figured he needed. Problem solved.
Now he faces other challenges. But according to his video, he was dealing with it.
I quit an office job for retail, best decision ever so far.
Made a switch from professional services/ data science to bartending/ hospitality/ event management and I totally agree. Make less dough but I don't feel like committing seppuku at the end of a work day. Totally agree.
Can we please just collectively applaud how amazing the graphics of this video is
and that, he is not wearing pants.
😂@@tberg132
The CBC socks was an interesting touch.
Yaaap so amazing. How does he make this edits
@@JudeMbairelotta money for experienced editors
No wonder we’re always tired! There's so much toxic stuff in food. I started realizing that after reading "Health and Beauty Mastery". The book exposes so many shocking truths about what’s happening in the health industry. I completely changed my habits
I heard about that
Exactly!
Bot
I got it, one of the best books ive read
bot
I’m glad you put this out there, I felt like I was going crazy. I feel like I’m way too young to be THIS chronically exhausted.
Back when I was in the national guard, I always felt less tired during annual training, drill weekends, and whenever I went away for months of training. I did not understand why I felt less tired with doing more physical labor and challenging tasks but now I think I understand. I was less tired because day to day I had less choices to make. When I went away for months of training I did not have to make a billion choices. I knew my routine and I knew exactly what to do. It is also the reason why I miss not being in the Guard anymore even though it caused so many other problems. Less decisions made me feel more rested.
That makes complete sense. I've never been in the military, but I have attended military "like" programs before, and I have never felt more awake in my life.
*Fewer
(fewer choices, Fewer decisions)
I wish I would have joined the military in my youth.
“Me make choices, choices hard” - You
Yes! I was a medic with a field artillery unit in the Guard. I looked forward to AT because it forced me to disconnect, and I was around friends and contributing meaningfully to a tight-knit unit. Long days spent out in the deserts spent reading, training and treating injured/sick soldiers. I miss it.
Write down every idea or thing you feel you need to remember. Make sure its always visible so you know it's a reliable backup. Entries in calendars, notes, everything.
The second you write these things down, your mind stops bringing them up. You free up space. No mental alarms go off and theres significantly less noise overall. Less ruminating on whats to come or what must be done, and less anxiety about what might be missed.
This has not only significantly reduced stress and anxiety, its stopped much of the fatigue that comes from overthinking and decision making throughout the day. Offload the work your brain has to do.
same with meetings with friends, schopping, sports - every activity can be in the calendar a year ahead and you do not need to worry about it - just quick glance every evening
you can postpone, you can delete - that doesn‘t matter, the main advantage of all it is the free mind
My notepad is filled, this is the way I do take stress off but in the end things just pile up and keeps adding up
I'm so surprised reading this here! I've been doing this for years because it felt like it works, especially the part about "backup", if the mind believes the information that's offloaded might not be accessible then it will not actually "let go" of the information. I've started using Google Keep as a journaling app because the info is on the cloud rather than on my phone, so as long as Google doesn't delete my account, I know that once I've committed my thoughts to digital paper, it's reliably online and accessible from my phone or PC. I've also learned how to use my Google Assistant to verbally take notes ("hey Google take a note") in case my hands are busy (washing dishes, driving etc.)
I absolutely agree. I have a calendar hanging next to my desk, and anytime I gotta do something outside of work, I write it down. If not, I'm always thinking about what I gotta do so I won't forget. Plus it's kind of a cool almost journal. I look back on it at the end of the year and am like, oh yeah, I remember that birthday party. I remember that going away celebration. I miss working with her. It's pretty cool.
What if you were too tired to write down anything
Something I love about your channel is how different each and every video is. From learning about why McDonald's ice cream machines are always seemingly broken, to learning about the gun culture in Switzerland, and how sleep affects us. I absolutely cherish your channel.
Side note: I would love to see you start a map shop/store. I love maps myself and would love to see what you have to offer.
Thank you for your amazing channel.
same
Agree with anything this guy put together 😅
He gets his ideas from mathematicians, look it up
I want a map store!
Yes, please do the Map Store!!
One student at a friend's college would wake up, go to classes for a few hours, immediately go to bed, wake up 4 hours later, study, go to bed, wake up 4 hours later, repeat. He usually felt well rested and got 8 hours of sleep.
I would love the old map store! Johnny these videos are so personal its like talking with a friend. Love them, keep em cooming!
Only here to say this, 😂 so many people giving their own knowledge about sleep and I’m like “clearly none of you watched to the end”
Yaaassss. +1
Agree
I too enjoy maps
I'd buy a map!!
I've taken a 5-15minute naps 99% of days between 1pm-3pm since I was 17 years old. It's weird, I will get really tired, pass out for like 8 minutes and wake up feeling totally refreshed. I do it at work, I had a spot at school I use to do it, even outside when I worked in the forest. I love it.
I do "quarter hour power naps" where if I feel badly I will set a timer for 15 and go lay down. If i don't sleep it means I need a snack or a drink or to access myself further. If i sleep i tend to wake up fully and feel refreshed. It's a way to get in touch with myself.
I wish to have a job where I can nap, but I need 50 min. It takes me 20-30 minutes to fall asleep and 20-30 minutes to have a good power nap. So a full hour could potentially be too much, but if I can feel I'm really tired 40 is enough too. I'm sensitive to sound during that falling asleep time and it jolts me in a way that causes my heart rate to uncomfortably increase and makes me angry. I don't think very clearly and all I angrily want is to get my nap. And that's not a good state to be in at work! So I'd need a fairly quiet place to nap. And I think what concerns me the most is how people see it. If I tried to fight for my nap I'm concerned people would see me as a very spoiled and irrational person.
@@essennagerry I feel you on the part about the heartrate. When one is currently falling asleep and some sudden noise startles one, the spike in heartrate is very annoying and usually leads to a very alert state that makes it borderline impossible to fall asleep again, even if you know where the noise came from and that it's normal and whatnot. It's just like your brain heard a branch snap and now thinks it might need to go into fight or flight any moment now lol..
You are so lucky. Best habit your body ever learned. Aside from your heart and kidneys, your brain is the next most important thing to maintain for longevity. Don't have kids, you might lose your ability.
On my breaks at work I sometimes spontaneously doze off (and I have sleep issues) I feel that refreshing feeling wash over my brain. I feel thankful my job allows me to do that, I need that power nap.
I often have trouble getting to sleep, and getting up to pee and sometimes failing to return to sleep state. So I often wind up at work sleep deprived.
I’ve made my sleep 10x better by following some very simple rules:
-Avoid coffee, but certainly no later than 12p, if I have to drink it.
-Audiobooks, instead of scrolling or watching, for 1-2 hours before bed.
-Only lay in bed when it’s actually bedtime.
-Get physical activity in during the day so I feel like I need rest.
Woah, I've stumbled up the exact same habits! Plus going to bed slightly hungry helps me. Even if you think you can have a coffee right before bed, try no caffeine after noon or even earlier. A lot of people who think caffeine doesn't matter will be blown away by the results.
For those who tend to overthink in bed, here's something that helped me: Take more time to think during the day. I used to always listen to music or scroll through shorts on the train, but now I just sit and look out the window for the 20-minute ride. For me, using social media during downtime blocks out my thoughts, and they flood back when I'm trying to sleep. I've started doing nothing for 20-30 minutes, just looking outside, and it's really helped clear my mind. I truly believe we're overstimulated, and for me, this even includes music.
@@Retrohunter1994 100% agreed re: overstimulation. I do listen to music still on the bus (only time I really have the opportunity) but I've completely stopped scrolling through my phone, it goes in my pocket so I can people watch or stare out the window and think.
It’s mostly people are not physicaly exhausted anymore. Mentally exhausted is not the same. Source: landscaper/tree trimmer and I’ve slept like a baby for 20 years.
fuck no coffee
I quit smoking, quit drinking, started a more balanced diet, started walking instead of driving, meal prepped for diabetes and started going to sleep by 10. I still have an occasional drink though but only on special occasions.
I was always tired in the past. Since i started training martial arts two years ago i have been great and extremely confident. I'm always full of energy even though the martials arts training is exhausting, it gives me a great joy in life.
Exercise is overall considered good for your health, it helps but it doesn't help with the root reason
What type of training?
let me join martials arts
Ai comment
@@GenericTH-camCommenter241 Muay Thai and Wrestling
One problem is that we usually only see the fruits of our labor in our bank account. Almost no one knows the satisfying feeling of completing a complete piece of work, of seeing something finished in front of you. Most people are just small cogs in the machine and once one task is completed, the next and the next follows immediately... so you never finish!
I am a cabinet and furniture maker. I also do finish carpentry and build out decks. It is satisfying and the admiration is a perk for sure. But i hurt and am tired as well lol. But i am generally very happy with my life.
"Labour is external to the worker - i.e., does not belong to his essential being; that he, therefore, does not confirm himself in his work, but denies himself, feels miserable and not happy, does not develop free mental and physical energy, but mortifies his flesh and ruins his mind. Hence, the worker feels himself only when he is not working; when he is working, he does not feel himself. He is at home when he is not working, and not at home when he is working. ... It is, therefore, not the satisfaction of a need but a mere means to satisfy needs outside itself. ... External labour, labour in which man alienates himself, is a labour of self-sacrifice, of mortification. ... the activity of the worker is not his own spontaneous activity. It belongs to another, it is a loss of his self."
unmatrix, you hit the head of the nail on this one for me.
i feel un completed when i do work that is repeted and as you say it dont get done as its next and next again and i dont feel satisfied with my non ending task of work as i would with a task that i can see the end result when its done.
That's why writing tasks down and crossing them off helps. You see completion. Yes, you do the the same tasks all again the next day, but you used to have to search for water every day, no different. And you need a physical hobby that isn't social media.
Make the invisible work, visible.
@@MilwaukeeWoman got hobbys (rc cars and other things) that makes me come out of the house and socialise with real people, have not used my tv more then ten times since 2018 and only watch news and social media on computer in the eavenings.
actually start to feel good about living this way.
Anxiety has gotten worse in my generation, whether it’s work or college. It’s hard to pay attention to things when we’re doing stuff 24/7
I've lived outside the US for 8 years and I once saw an article claiming that anxiety was America's biggest export & I think that might be correct
I started having nightmares and waking up super early worn out
You probably lack nutrients
Humans greatest fear is the unknown, and right now is the most complex things have ever been in the history of humanity. The average person has to do so many things in a day to survive in this complex world. So by not eating right or exercising or self medicating only makes that worse. A ton of people are low on vitamin D and don’t realize the huge roll that plays in feeling better. Mental health is really the most important thing in the history of humanity, but it’s so hard to “fix” bc it’s not physical, you can’t see it and mental illness’s are just best guesses or guidelines of symptoms.
@@hunterbiden6913 false.
A massive one you missed out: meditation. I always struggled to get to sleep, and it was because of the evolutionary mismatch, my brain was always overthinking, which carried over into night time, keeping me awake, but after taking up meditation before bed, i’ve started getting to sleep practically on demand. Focus on one thing and one thing only, like your breathing, and try to completely silence your mind, try not to think about anything, and after a while, you will literally feel waves of relief wash over your brain as it takes a much needed rest from the constant state of mind-chatter that you’re in for 99% of your day. I have Alan Watts to thank for this
So that's why Albert Einstein bought several sets of clothing that were all exactly the same and just wore a clean set each day and never wore socks. He eliminated the need to make decisions about what to wear and that freed up his prefrontal cortex to do work and make decisions about things that were more important to him.
Steve Jobs too.
@@aaronseet2738Homer Simpson as well
im gonna be better than old albert then......im just gonna stay in the same clothes forever!
@@marky5493 lol
Well there were no color camera so it didn't matter much anyways
Chronotypes speaks to me. My whole life it’s been obvious to me that I’m good at staying up late, I’m more alert in the evening and I get my best sleep in the morning. My body also craves afternoon naps. I’m 32 and my whole life I’ve been fighting against what my body wants me to do. Forcing myself to wake up at 7am, stay awake all day and go to sleep at 11pm. We’re told if we do this long enough we’ll start feeling well rested and energised all day. Well I’ve felt completely exhausted my whole adult life and I’ve been attempting to win that battle by following the rules. I think it’s time I listen to my brain/body and sleep when I feel like it. My job will have to deal with it!
I was a night person for most of my life. I really get going around 6pm and can function best till around 2am. Waking up is miserable to me and it takes me well over a hour to get even moving around. Some days are different but that’s basically the way I am best.
dude wow this speaks to me so much... ive been pretending to be a morning person my whole life also!! that being said, when i started doing mainly WFH and started running during the day, it helped a lot with being tired at night..
If you don't mind can I ask you a question?
Have you checked your Thyroid levels?
@@KishuTambe-fg9zh yeah I’ve had plenty of tests over the years, all normal.
You need to get diagnosed with DSPS (Delayed Sleep Phase Syndrome).
I also experienced those issues and the sleep deprivation, combined with excessive amounts of coffee or energy drinks were starting to attack my cardiovascular system and digestive system, as well as crippling my cognitive functions.
After the diagnosis I was able to request accommodations and now I live healthier than ever, with enough sleep and no need for stimulants.
Another idea that could help reduce the number decisions you make is having a designated spot for everything in your house to go. Your keys always go on a specific hook. Your wallet always goes on this shelf. Not only does that eliminate the decision on where to put things, it also helps reduce decisionmaking when searching for those things later (e.g. deciding which drawer to look in).
Yes exactly, have set things in place for the 80% of life which is maintenance, and only 20% of your time in decision making for improvements/changes
Things I always do to keep my decision making process to a minimum, even though I have ADHD:
1: Eat the same thing everyday
2: Wear any kind of black tshirt and blue jeans everyday (Other than the occasional event which require shirts and pants) and the same pair of boots.
3: Sleep at least 7 hours at night and wake up 2 hours before work (8am, cuz I get to work at 10am)
4: Minimal Caffeine intake (Max 2 cups of coffee) and never after 6pm, since I sleep around 1am
5: Always keep a full water bottle near me wherever I sit for long times, like work desk, home desk and near the bed.
6: No food after 10pm (3 hours before sleep)
7: (controversial, but works wonders) Shake one off right before sleeping.
There's a book called Hidden Time Wealth, and it talks about how using some secret techniques, you can overcome procrastination and accomplish anything in life. It's not just a bunch of empty promises; it's the real deal.
Lmao clown, ignore the bots in this comment thread
@@NoSaysJo nah dude shits the real deal 😂
I was expecting a bot chain down here, did they bug out or something?
@@winzyl9546lmao
Bots getting too advanced, I cant even trust the people above me 😂
physical activity in general was the main reason why i used to feel energetic and happy, and since i cannot do sports or physical labour like working in agriculture anymore because of injuries and cronic pains, quality of life has dropped drastically. some days i'm just depressed and drained out of life. my dream is to get back my health and be the person i was once again. take care of yourself guys
I think you can get creative, e.g. doing sit-ups or leg raises in bed, or body weight squats, lifting dumbbells that you can handle, etc. My point, just do what you can, as often as you can. If that isn't much, then it's still better than nothing. I also believe cold showers/ ice baths to be effective at reducing pain and boosting mood.
Hope your condition improves!
Try ddpyoga, martial arts, exercises you find fun
Im a restaurant owner and we always discuss how we can have 500 guests on a day and we wont be tired but the day when its time to do paperwork and or maybe fix something during a shift which requires a loads of quick thinking and decision making makes us tired in 2-3 hours.
Exactly. Normal work does not make me stress, no matter how much i have to do. But as soon as there is a problem which diverts from the normal solutions, im under so much stress 😩
love the map store idea. absolutely fell in love with the video and the content but most of all, the delivery. people like you are why i can’t bring myself to get rid of youtube. this was beautiful :)
This really explains why I feel more well-rested on holidays even though I sleep at 12mn and wake up early the next day at 7am. Yeah the hotel beds are comfortable but there's less decisions to make in the day too when you're just exploring and giving your brain a break.
It also explain why despite the intense physical trainings, I felt more rested and awake during my time in the military. The days and meals were already planned out for you
This makes so much sense!
Sell the prints, keep the originals for life, and then donate them to a deserving and well funded museum.
This, or auction the originals for charity.
??? AI generated comment
@@theultimatetrashman887 you have horrible sense for ai guy. I am definitely a person. Stay up and blessed
@@NVclosetmedgrower this comment has nothing to do with the video, even some of those ai comments kinda understand the videos they comment on.
@@theultimatetrashman887 Watch the video till the end next time
I NEVER wake up refreshed.
The ONLY time I did was when I did a sleep study to find out if my chronic fatigue was due to Sleep Apnea.
They woke me early because there weren't signs of Apnea, and I surprisingly felt alert.
I've been chasing that feeling for over 20 years!
Do another
What do you mean ‘they woke me early’ ?
A CPAP machine will help you
He literally said there was no sleep apnea. You don't need a CPAP if you breathe normally @@shahirshahir2
Did they have any kind of breathing device? It was it monitoring only? It’s possible they woke you up gently at the end of a sleep cycle, which is best anyway. Try a sleep app that does this.
I love your witty view on things, So I subscribed! Keep the great effort up man!
Dude thisss can`t be real , I asked this question to myself today and was puzzling my mind above this and just opened youtube and saw the title ... It felt personal .. okay lets watch this
Same. Need some exercise
@@propfam Physical activity keeps you awake, wdym by that? If you want to be more active in the day, get an ice plunge in the morning.
I did the same thing this morning 😂 I was trippin when I opened youtube when I got to work and saw the title...
Just quit caffeine.
same here, i guess its common now because of the modern lifestyle
I've been dealing with learned helpessness and mental burnout causing me performance anxiety. Moreover, because I'm extremely compulsive, small setbacks in my plans become more of a mental strain. I am constantly dealing with decision fatigue regardless on how much I automate or priortize tasks. All I can do is practice sell efficacy and adopt a "good enough" mindset, or else I will always deal with the sunken cost issue.
same with me dude
Ditto 😢
learned helplessness can be unlearned by doing little by little again, it happened to me at least once every decade after a major defeat.
This is EXACTLY how I feel
This is such a great video with such great points. Me and my friends always talk about how increasingly tired we are as we get older, summing up to old age. But I think the real truth is that as we get older there are more decision fatigue, and more exhausting decisions to make everyday. As someone who feels chronically fatigued, I feel so understood and relieved from watching this.
Yes absolutely! A map store would be amazing! Definitely prints as well if you’re going to sell the originals too. The prints could be expanded as well, shadowboxes, anti glare glass, lighting ect. Great idea
This makes so much sense. I work as a doctor and can work 10 hours straight seeing 20-30 patients, calling patients, checking labs, dealing with staff, filling out forms. In that entire 10 hours I might only have one 15-20 minute break to eat lunch and use the bathroom. Rest of the time is active work with my brain. I’m a zombie and feel like I can’t even stand to talk when I get home those days. Switching to scrubs has been nice, easy to put on in the morning and takes little thought but it’s not enough. I’m also a natural night owl having to work 8-6 and struggle with ADHD. I’m just not well adapted to this lifestyle. 😬
YES! I'd REALLY LOVE to buy maps from you. Not just coz I'm a Map geek just like you but also coz I want to support you and your work. Sending tons and tons of love from India. 💌
if he does start selling his maps physically I hope he autographs them
Seconded!
This is the best animation I've seen in a while, I literally study your videos to get inspired and do something similar, I don't think people fully understand our appreciate how much time editors spend to make something like that, hats off for that and keep inspiring
It enhances the story a lot! And indeed very inspiring, or even addictive 😅
5:25 bro has done science artwork. I am in awe of the production values of this channel. Top 3 in terms of composition and production, structure, and delivery on the whole of YT for me
Being mentally tired is nothing when you’re physically tired as well… that’s when it gets rough.
I used to work as a chef, and my Sunday/Monday used to involve finishing at 11pm Sunday and being back on at 7am on Monday. I found that if I drank an energy drink before bed, so that I was asleep before it kicked in, I not only felt like I had a super long sleep (even though it was typically 5hrs) but I did not feel tired the next day. Nice to see there's some science backing this up and I wasn't just giving myself a placebo effect.
@@tommyp614me as well! I cant just take a chug a coffee and take a quick 15 minute nap, ill be lying awake for 15 minutes until the timer goes off
Did the same thing with black tea while I was still studying and had to be up way before my natural waking time.
Despite my snarky comment (which I still stand by), as a physician, I want to say thank you Johnny for this video. So many patients have a learned helplessness. They have insomnia and fatigue but they don’t want to change anything to get over these problems. They want me to tell them they’ve got some rare disease to explain it, or they want a magic pill.
This video helps to reinforce the fact that we are still in control of our lives. Work may dictate schedules to a large degree, but we can make a lot of changes to help ourselves live healthier.
I'm an Internet doctor so disregard... Tell 90% of them to change their diet and not eat dumb food if they don't want to feel like crap. Doctors like to push pills in some cases and probably many cases when a diet change is necessary to achieve the patient's goals. Pills are sometimes great but 90% of the time, eating dumb foods is needed too.
Without me even watching, I can say the main reasons are:
- Sugar intake (usually presents as an afternoon slump)
- Caffeine dependency
- lack of exercise
- Lack of sunlight
- inconsistent sleep schedule
- low iron/low RBC count
- Sleep disorder (Sleep apnea, narcolepsy etc.)
- poor nutrition/poor health
- Alcohol (as pointed out in the replies)
Also too much drinking
@@zoanth4 how did i forget that. Yeah drinking before bed leads to really poor sleep quality
@@propfam Really? tends to make me sleepy. a quick burst of cold in the shower also tends to help.
hydration?
@JustAnotherAccount8 drinking in general adds a 3 to 5 day energy and mindfulness fog. It is a major contributor to a massive fatigue cycle that encourages more drinking and caffeine dependency. Glad I quit
Maybe this is why social media feels soo good in the moment, im barely using my brain as I scroll so my tired body feels relaxed.
this DOES explain why i'm always so damn tired and also why i start feeling better when i stop using social media. the days when i'm least mentally fatigued are when i just go outside and look at some birds. because there's no mental load. i don't have to think about anything,.
I'm spending 50 hours a week (42% of my awake time) working soul crushing job which is far from being paid amazing.
I'm spending 20 hours a week (17% of my awake time) studying pretty complex things and concepts in order to be able to advance in my career.
That's why I feel dead-tired all the time.
same. working and studying at the same time is draining
Are you a PhD student??
@@kemaldonlic7601 No.
Wooow amazing! Go you!
what are you learning?
I am really amazed by how you showed your ‘wrong’ daily routine, which is actually similar to mine. I do all of these things almost every day-drinking coffee late at night to boost my energy and then struggling to sleep. After watching your video, I decided to make some changes in my life. Thanks for the video, I really love it❤️
I just started watching your videos tonight and wow. GREAT work. Thank you!
_such_ an amazing video. As someone who gets overwhelmed with the amount of decisions in the modern world I:
- have a capsule wardrobe, and wear the same outfit every work day, Steve jobs style
- have a weekly meal plan, which means buying the same thing each week.
Those 2 things have dramatically improved my life and energy levels.
Out of laziness or so I thought I moved in this direction. I wear only a few outfits. Buy the same groceries every week. I can actually get extra sleep because of this and save time just in general.
I’m an ironworker who wears a 30 pound tool belt and I bust my ass everyday, recently I became a supervisor. While physically I feel better, my back doesn’t hurt as much I’m not as sore, I have to take a nap after work because I am so exhausted from the constant string of decisions I make. It’s a high risk job and I am really good at being a worker, still working on the supervisor part but man I am so tired the big decisions, the stress, it all adds up and I feel like I’m a chicken with it’s head cut off. Hope it gets easier.
The nature spent millions years of evolution to build our bodies as a perfect tool to run, climb, crawl, swim, hunt, fight, lift weights.
20-25 years ago humanity said: STFU, I'm gonna sit still at the desk for 10 hours.
it doesn't. that's just the nature of the beast. If it was easy, then anybody could do it. I used to think, I wouldn't ask anybody, to to anything, that I wouldn't do. but it turns out, I'm willing to do a lot more, than most. so now, my advice, is CYA!
Mental task can be more draining compared to physical. Mental exhaustion just seem to have more impact… I could be wrong tho
But management has it's perks. I did miss sliding down the iron, did I date myself lol. Man those were the days.remember having to tie myself so I wouldn't fall off sitting waiting for the next piece. Then they started Christmas treeing
...
yeah buddy, i completely believe that. i make constant decisions at my current job as well and it's just whatever you know. it's a big load for the mind to handle. decision making is just exhausting and it's all whatever stuff that only wears on the mind. sure you have physical energy available, but you feel like you're on another planet mentally. man is it all bogus i tell ya
Since I really cut down on drinking, and started reading a book before bed, I've started to feel better every day for probably two years. Before that I would've never believed this could happen to me
I learn a new language every night for half an hour that way. I am productive and learn something new.
And that's why in Islam it is highly discouraged to overthink.. We literally say sometimes, "La hawla wala quwaata illah billah.." which means "There is no might nor power except with Allah." Which suggest that we rely on Him only and say "will see whatever happens, I am just going to do my work and letting all the worries to the Al Mighty Allah."
As an engineer, idk how applicable this is to me. Making lots of decisions is my life, and i enjoy it. I get bored when things are a routine and when i dont have to think. And it actually makes me tired.
Same. It's called ADHD :)
That's a great disposition and attitude to have.
How about when those decisions are what to do with 50 or 60 emails in your inbox everyday? Emails that aren't just FYI that you can write a rule to send to trash but emails that are to-do items that stay in your inbox until you take action or decide next step or keep it there to remind you. That isn't "living the dream" but you'll do it until you reach your limit and burnout whether 5 years or 20. Trying to think using a head made of stone from that day in and day out isn't the same as getting a stimulating workday. It's easy to think "I was bored all day with little to do and so here at the end of the workday, I'm tired from all that boredom" when that's just a biorhythm.
@@Longwing70 i am not saying my job is perfect. there are lots and lots of tedious tasks like the one you described that must get done. but tedious tasks are tedious because they are the same task over and over again. they don't take a lot of thinking and are just boring. the thing that really gets me going are the tasks that require me to constantly think and problem solve, even if i keep failing, i live for a challenge like that. Also my dad is in the same industry i am in and has been for almost 50 years. he can retire if he wants to but doesn't because he enjoys it to much and doesn't want to get bored.
@@deedee7780 yeah, i got that to.
I have DSPS, my sleep rhythm is 4-6h from the social norm. It almost killed me, hopping off the rat race and having my own natural rhythm restored my physical and mental health. Living in a different rhythm feels like constant jet lag, you get mood swings, depression, lethargy and general feeling of "ill".
Since then i've learned why our society shuns everyone who does not wake up early: it is all about money. Churches have also played their part, making it akin to sin to sleep late. Neither cares how much you do or what you accomplish, they just want everyone to wake up at 6AM work until they can't anymore and go straight back to sleep.
I am in the same boat but I am 6-8 hours off. Going full remote and waking up closer to my body´s natural time has helped me a lot, I was having thoughts of self harm before, now? Not a single one, I was gaining weight, now I can maintain it, and so on.
@@silajim Same here, self destructive behaviour and intrusive thoughts are gone, my blood pressure is not all over the place, mood swings are gone and i lost 15kg (i did gain some of it back, but it is well in the "manageable" category).
At one point i worked in NY time, in Finland... that was a bit oo late but still manageable. Remote work is a blessing for millions and millions of people.
I do believe that we lose millions of people each year just because of society is stigmatizing sleeping late. In many workplaces what you do is not as important as showing up on time. And i predict we will at some point look at the last two centuries as insane, "how could we do this to humans?".... The attitudes changes with the pandemic, before it we call it a disorder, now people talk about chronotypes. It is a huge change in attitudes.
@@squidcaps4308 True. Going to bed late and waking up late is the only time I feel refreshed and rested. But I sadly have to work morning shift and wake up 7 am every day. Ever since then I am perpetually tired and exhausted every single day. But what can I do? I need this job.
When I quit coffee, I slept less and felt better.
If you're feeling like it could be worth trying, cut back slowly. Caffeine withdrawals include migraines and they're brutal.
First, bias your intake to the morning, then reduce the amount. Wait for a long weekend with no plans, and then stop.
What you'll find is that you can then use coffee occasionally tactically when you really need it. It'll be very effective, and you won't have withdrawals from a one-off.
Huh, idk if I’m fortunate or cursed but does caffeine really wire y’all up? I get almost zero effect from caffeine so I never understood why everyone drank coffee in the morning for anything other than the taste.
And you are still on TH-cam?
@@edited1325i can also sleep after a energy drink, cola or a cheap coffee, no problem. Too bad i can't offer you my coffee that i drink. That thing will make you sleepless guaranteed.
@@edited1325 It's possible you have ADHD
I started drinking half caff years ago....not sure I could drop caffeine totally, but that's the goal. I've given up every other "vice" imaginable, so I think I'm clinging onto coffee like grim death...
My husband, who is a total night owl, has found a great way to sync life with his chronotype. We moved to Spain, but he still works (remotely) US east coast hours. It works remarkably well for him. Not for everyone, but it does for him! 😅
Oh, and yes, the siestas are great!
When I was an Automotive Technician working for dealerships and independent shops I was constantly having to solve problems. I got a disproportionate amount of problem cars (vehicles needing extended diagnostics vs just installing some brakes). Even though I hadn't done heavy lifting, just lots of standing, looking at wiring diagrams, squeezing my old body into tight spaces, I'd come home and be completely wiped out.
oh yeah, it's completely believable buddy. you were deciding your ass off all day. you wore your mind out to the limit. we're pushed to the limit in these garbage jobs these days to not fall behind financially
Huge change in my life: don’t use screens after 7pm, read before bed and sleep at 9pm, wake up at 5am workout first thing. Sounds fucking crazy I know, but the days I get this right and hit the gym in the morning I feel SO MUCH BETTER.
Yeah, but the gym is totally optional for working out. What if you can’t hit the gym every morning because there isn’t one where you live or whatever? Stretching, especially extensive stretching, is a universal, always-available solution. You’ve always got your body with you, so you can stretch anytime. It’s the only "equipment" you really need.
Yes. Also sounds boring.
Yup. You need proper sleep so that your brain & body can recover. Not just that. You should also check for vitamin b12, Vitamin D, Blood sugar level and blood pressure. These are the most common causes. That's why balanced diet, little bit of excercise & good sleep is necessary.
@@charlieshanowsky6103you can do full body workouts without anything but yourself
I do the same only I do screens until 11pm and wonder why I’m tired at 5
It was low vitamin D for me. Now even during the dark winters, I still feel sharp
Morning exercise has also replaced my need for morning caffeine.
@@user-op8fg3ny3jSame for me actually, and now when I do get caffeine on rare occasions, it sure hits me hard lol! Definitely feels like a big boost rather than something I need now. Use it when shooting for PR's or on very hard hikes/climbs.
So true! I stopped my menopause symptoms, eating vitamins d and k and magnesium!
Same for me, Vitamin D pills and Exercising at least 3 days a week helped immense.
In Spain we do not take siestas on working days, it’s a very common misconception. We take them on the weekends or on very hot days in the summer because temperature’s too high to go outside anyways, so we take a nap and then prolong our day during the night time.
I scaled back podcasts because I got tired of my brain always being "on." I went back to listening to music and I'm happier for it.
constant podcasts may keep you company when doing chores, but suck attention span
There is nothing in this wrorld I want more than Johhny Harris maps. High quality copies would be nice.
Idk why, but I have ADHD, and virtually all of this works for me in the exact opposite way. The more decisions, the more energy, if there's few, I feel asleep, if there's none, I am restless, caffeine and blue light in the dark make me fall asleep
Bro is catching up with evolution.
@@KeplerZarsadhd is the cure
Most people with adhd have delayed sleep phase disorder. A fancy word for your sleep schedule keeps drifting later and later
Bruh stop attributing every single thing to ADHD you think that disorder fundamentally change your whole biology?
So true! Glad I’m not the only one…this is so odd right? Is it evolution? I do ponder this.
Thank you for this video! I noticed that my attention span has decreased significantly since things became ‘normal’ again after covid. I feel like all these choices everyday (what to watch, what to eat, what to do next) have made me way more unproductive than I was when I was in university, which is saying a lot because I was a lazy student 😅
4:52 Never in a million years did I think I would find an Always Sunny reference in a Johnny Harris video.
MASTER OF KARATE, AND FRIENDSHIP, FOR EVERYONE!
Hi Johnny! Currently getting my PhD in sleep and chronobiology, this is a well done video but I will say there is a lot more complexity to this (for example glutamate and adenosine are only two of the numerous sleep/wake promoting pathways) If you ever want to learn more about how our modern environment effects sleep and circadian rhythms I have plenty of sources!
Do you care to share a link to documents or resources you have? I’d be grateful.
@@oscarkallixtuskalleson1959 same
Please share the links if possible...want to learn more
That's the point, do not believe some famous journalist on internet who has less idea what he's talking about, ends up spreading more misinformation. Like Johnny
@@gamerdude4465 But how can you know Maeve is for real? Currently they only have a claim of authority and no backing of sources.
Stopping caffeine was a real game changer for me! More people should try it.
yes. to maps. I’ve been searching ebay tonight for maps and charts to use in my science classroom. soon after TH-cam offered me your episode on California mapped - which I enjoyed, thanks.
Just do a experiment. Choose a task yourself and do it or let somebody else decide what you have to do. The motivation is completely different. If you do the whole day what somebody else tells you you get completely sick of it. In modern world most of us get orders from a boss or multiple bosses as a freelancer. If you can decide freely what to do, the many decisions to take make much more fun than when somebody else tells you how you have to decide.
Thanks for the refreshing reset insight.
As someone who owns a small business and does freely decide what to do everyday, I would say this is true, HOWEVER, burn out does still occur. The body will still show signs that it wants to slow down either every afternoon or at times for a whole day. We generally push ourselves to work a lot more than the 9-5 worker and it catches up with us.
I wanna go back to the Johnny Caveman days
Yeah sounds kinda nice, a stress free lifestyle where your only concerns are food, water, shelter and staying alive. Being in tune with nature. We'd probably be more happy
Granted!
* You die of scurvy 3 months later...
U can always find countries with the facilities
@@Impetuss"stress free"
Dies of a small scratch that got infected.
@@harmonic5107 I remember there was a docudrama on the history channel about a family that survived societal collapse and lived in a cabin in the woods. The dad cut his finger chopping wood and next scene he was dead in the bed.
I love old maps. I don't mind the original reprinted on a new paper.
Years of struggling with burnout, I cannot get through the day. I have to take naps in between and it definitely helps a lot.
Clean food/protein and some exertion to the point of sweating is what changed me!! I’m sure it won’t work for everybody but what a change 🙏🏻
No Johnny, you're confounding "cognitive fatigue" with "postprandial somnolence" and they have totally different mechanisms.
The early afternoon slump is a physiological response to having lunch.
There are many mechanisms for this, for example the insulin spike causes tryptophan to pass through the blood-brain barrier, and in the brain tryptophan is immediately transformed into melatonin, which causes your slump.
Also the "adenosine" mechanism you talked about is not caused by cognitive fatigue, but by glucose concentration.
If you can't allow to take a siesta, then you'll have to eat little at lunch, for example just a raw salad, or skip lunch entirely.
Im curious how significant it might be for those who vape all day, which I'd imagine are just giving themselves constant glucose spikes at a high level........most of the issues john john covers are directly correlated to modern society....essentially, our brains have been studied by companies to be exploited in ways that we are poorly equipped to fight against.
I stopped eating breakfast and lunch. I have 2 small snacks, then a big ass meal at the end of the day just before I go to sleep. Best decision I ever made honestly
I think my one meal a day diet (early evenings, no coffee, no tea, just water) and my sometimes sleepiness around 3 pm disagree with your, apparently very strict, definitions
Totally agree with the postprandial somnolence correction, but I disagree about your Adenosine take.
Adenosine is a byproduct of ATP/ADP/AMP dephosphorylation (energy consumption) which is directly associated with cognitive function as it is the facilitating mechanism. An increase in cognitive function (neural signaling) and synaptic release, an increase in adenosine levels.
Have a good day!
@@Clayvalue Well, it depends what you call "snacks"...
I am a person who has started his first real job very few months ago. And it was a burning question for me, why do I feel so tired all the time? Now I know the answer.
Before I even watch, im going to guess living under constant anxiety, stress, and fear of the unknown. It's eating at us, taking a lot of our energy up during the day, and also making sleep crappy. The last 5 years, it has been one catastrophe after another.
Take some time off the internet. You'll find that almost all of those feelings will fade.
@hotfiyah so ignore the issues?
Yeah mental fatigue is the reason, and no internet isn't the only at fault, it's the current way society makes us live, it just goes faster than our brain really likes
@@Leftistattheparty judging by your username, I'm assuming that you've made your whole life about politics so I can understand how it's difficult for you to comprehend, but it is possible to take a break and still care about the issues. You just don't have to be in the trenches everyday. Taking a break is healthy. Reading doom and gloom (most of which is biased) on the internet everyday, and in your case arguing for the sake of arguing, is not.
Why do you have fear of the unknown? isn't it a great thing that we get opportunities to do new and different things?
Excess glutamate is also neurotoxic….im a brain injury specialist…and part of what makes a traumatic brain injury so horrible is glutamate toxicity…which happens as part of the secondary injury after a TBi…damage to neurons releases so much glutamate that it outright causes apoptosis of neurons…so glutamate is nasty stuff…necessary but the mitochondria can’t clear it out fast enough and every cell that self destructs releases more glutamate…this is a big part of what makes TBIs so devastating…and it happens quickly…sometimes before the patient gets to the hospital.
I saw a sleep doctor, and it turns out I had bad sleep apnea because my tonsils were really large, blocking my airway while sleeping. Had them removed, and I sleep much better as long as I get my 8 hours.
Damn, sleep apnea is no joke. I once slept 15 hours, woke up for three hours, and slept 15 hours more. But everyone just calls you lazy...
It's no wonder I've always had dreams of drowning.
Finding the 'hidden laws of the game' ebook should be your top priority, even if it's the last thing you do in life
scam
Bot comment
"top priority" "last thing you do in life"
If your cognitive dissonance is any indication of that book, I don't want it.
STOP SCAMMING NEEDY PEOPLE
You're one of the few TH-cam channels that I actually find useful and informative, rare to find these days.
Keep up the good work!
00:36 I'm looking to phone before go to bed, and i realised so I'm going to sleep 😴. I'll not watch this video today and I don't know about tomorrow. So.. your audience retention with affected. This is what happens with a true creator ❤
The levels the motion graphics team did here are above any levels so far. I say RAISE THEM PAYCHECKS!!
Yeah I love the graphics!
Great video! I loved the diagrams and visuals they truly make everything so much clearer and more engaging.
Now, onto my map emergency: I'm in desperate need of some cool maps! My current paper folded expandable world map is driving me insane, and I've always admired your maps in the studio. I remember you showing off those blind like roll down maps.
If you ever decide to sell any of them, I’d love to add one to my collection preferably without needing to take out a house loan! The only hiccup is shipping since I'm over here in Australia. Do you think we could make it work?
By the way, your video was awesome, it’s wonderful to see new and interesting stuff. I might need to take out the trash from my mind.
Depression, anxiety, stress, poor sleep, childhood neglect, not enough money. Those are my reasons for being tired all the time.
Once again, the real answers are in the comments.
Depression and anxiety destroy your nerves and completely zap away your energy. No one who's happy is going to be tired all the time.
If you're a wuss, these are the reasons you would think. 😂
Childhood neglect?! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA 😆😂🤣
@@knav5216 you thought that was it huh?
I think I’ve got a bit lazier now that I’m in my 30s, have a kid, have lots of financial stressors and a stressful job. But I used to be able to juggle a lot of things a decade ago. I think for me, I need to get a planner like my spouse does, and check things off to fuel myself with small accomplishments throughout the day.
I work as a commercial plumber. Working in the trades is not only mentally exhausting, but it's also physically exhausting. I know many tradesmen know what I mean.
I respect your hard work man. I did a lot of physical labor earlier in life and it is tough. I appreciate you who keep doing those needed services. So thank you
I mow lawns and am fitter and healthier for it. Still have energy to go for a 5-10k run at the end of the day too. But no way I could do it 40 hours a week. I just do enough to get by. Life is too short..
I'm an arborist. When I worked full time it was exhausting, incredibly physically demanding and many very important decisions that meant the difference between life and death, or very expensive property damage.
work is never ending now.
Exactly that. Burnout is the reason why I'm tired all the time.
Videos don't go into it because... well... not much we can do about it. Using your phone? You can adjust it. Diet and activity? You can adjust that. Shitty job? Good luck!
@@harmonic5107there needs to be a push towards a 4 days work weeks.
A year ago, I was feeling so tired and always had brain fog. So I decided to stop eating junk food, start exercising, reduce (or better yet, no) alcohol, go to bed early, no sensational news, and block social media. As a result, I feel so much better and have far more energy(although I have slipped back into some bad habits). It truly is going back to the basics that makes all the difference.
Agreed, I have the same experience although my fatigue ramped up after having covid and never properly normalises
Hearing the alarm sent a shiver up my spine.
I love your normal content but I also love these types of videos too. So informative and something I want to share with everyone lol
Hi
Johnny! I love collecting old maps, if you decide to sell them, I would happily buy them!
YES WE WANT MAPS, I'm obsessed with maps and think it's a really cool idea.
Also super interesting video, very well put together with all the animations.
Man, the music and graphics production value is through the roof on this one. great work!
Downloading now to watch on the train to work tomorrow where I will inevitably be too tired 😴
It's quite shocking how few people know about the forbidden book hidden laws of the game on borlest
Dude, what?!
That book is a scam, don’t fall for it
hello bot
One thing you should of mentioned, is that your body builds adenosine primarily through the burning of energy (ATP, Adenosine Tri Phosphate). Your brain, while using a lot of energy to do its tasks, doesn't require the same huge calorie demands for more difficult tasks as your muscles do. You can get far more rewards from using a little bit of brain power than you can your muscles. This means that yes while the number of tasks matters, you also need to consider that you're not using your body enough. When you become depleted, it should feel good. If it's not, you're fatigued, not depleted, you don't need to sleep you need a break. Sleep cleans up the mind, but the problem is the fundamental imbalance of tasks, no matter how well rested you are, you'll be in the same position eventually.
In short, if you did pushups as well as solving problems, you would feel more appropriately tired, faster, and you'll feel better about it. Our ancestors didn't need to do much mathematics, but they did do LOTS of walking.