4.7 • 7.3K Ratings
🗓️ 8 April 2019
⏱️ 125 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In part 2 of this 3 part series, Matthew Walker, professor of neuroscience at UC Berkeley and expert on sleep, describes the preponderance of evidence linking poor sleep to cardiovascular disease, cancer, and sexual function. He also details the impact of cortisol on our nervous system contributing to sleep disturbances and insomnia as well as the efficacy and risks associated with the most common sleeping pills. Matthew also describes the sleep needs of teenagers and urgently lays the case that we should reconsider school start times. We also get into the effect of electronics at night, the efficacy of napping, the general impact of modern society on our sleep habits, and what changes we can make to course correct.
We discuss:
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0:00.0 | Hey everyone, welcome to the Peter Atia Drive. I'm your host, Peter Atia. |
0:10.0 | The drive is a result of my hunger for optimizing performance, health, longevity, critical thinking, |
0:15.7 | along with a few other obsessions along the way. I've spent the last several years working |
0:19.6 | with some of the most successful top performing individuals in the world, and this podcast |
0:23.8 | is my attempt to synthesize what I've learned along the way to help you live a higher quality |
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0:41.6 | Hey everybody, welcome to this week's episode of The Drive. I'd like to take a couple of |
0:45.6 | minutes to talk about why we don't run ads on this podcast and why instead we've chosen to |
0:50.3 | rely entirely on listener support. If you're listening to this, you probably already know, |
0:55.0 | but the two things I care most about professionally are how to live longer and how to live better. |
1:01.1 | I have a complete fascination and obsession with this topic. I practice it professionally, |
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1:16.3 | and even before starting the podcast, that became clear to me. The sheer volume of material |
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1:31.2 | in a league of their own. In fact, we now have a full-time person that is dedicated to producing |
1:35.9 | those, and the feedback has mirrored this. So all of this raises a natural question. How will we |
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1:47.4 | to do this is to sell ads, but after a lot of contemplation, that model just doesn't feel right |
1:53.3 | to me for a few reasons. Now, the first and most important of these is trust. I'm not sure how you |
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