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Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Why Your House is Making you Sick and Tired

Dr. Berg’s Healthy Keto and Intermittent Fasting Podcast

Dr. Eric Berg

Health & Fitness

4.71.7K Ratings

🗓️ 18 February 2026

⏱️ 11 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Chronic disease isn’t just caused by what you eat. In this video, uncover the indoor lighting dangers you probably don’t know about! Find out how to stop circadian rhythm disruption, melatonin suppression, and other modern lighting health problems.



Download Dr. Berg’s Free Daily Health Routine: https://drbrg.co/46POGyB



0:00 Introduction: Artificial light health effects

1:45 Lux explained

2:50 Why indoor lighting is bad for your health

4:36 Indoor lighting and melatonin suppression

4:57 Indoor lighting and sleep

7:44 How to improve sleep and reduce circadian rhythm disruption



Light affects the circadian system, which in turn influences your mood, metabolism, hormones, sleep, and more. The circadian rhythm is a clock controlled by light and dark signals.


In our modern-day environment, the days are too dim and the nights are too bright. During the day, sunlight is filtered through glass, preventing exposure to UV and infrared light, and at night, we’re exposed to LED lights, TVs, phones, and tablets. We’re dealing with a lack of contrast!


Historically, humans were exposed to significantly more light during the day and minimal light at night. Modern lighting leads to melatonin suppression and affects your sleep and cortisol levels.


Most people are not getting the restful sleep that they need. This affects the metabolism, insulin, blood sugar, and mood. Research has shown that bright nighttime light exposure can increase your risk of type 2 diabetes. Increasing sunlight exposure alone can improve your blood sugar, while evening bright light exposure can worsen it.


Constant lighting is even considered psychologically harmful. Humans have evolved with significantly more light contrast, so we’re dealing with an ancestral mismatch.


To restore your circadian rhythm and combat the harmful effects of indoor lighting, try the following:


1. Make your days aggressively brightEnsure adequate sun exposure before noon, and avoid wearing sunglasses.


2. Make the night genuinely dark Turn off overhead lighting, use soft night-lights, and dim screens 3 hours before bed.


3. Restore contrast Focus on bright light during the day and remove light sources from your room at night. Replace light bulbs with incandescent lights if possible.


Addressing the problems with modern light is one of the easiest ways to improve sleep naturally and restore your circadian rhythm.


Dr. Eric Berg DC Bio:

Dr. Berg, age 60, is a chiropractor who specializes in Healthy Ketosis & Intermittent Fasting. He is the Director of Dr. Berg Nutritionals and author of the best-selling book The Healthy Keto Plan. He no longer practices, but focuses on health education through social media.



Disclaimer:

Dr. Eric Berg received his Doctor of Chiropractic degree from Palmer College of Chiropractic in 1988. His use of “doctor” or “Dr.” in relation to himself solely refers to that degree. Dr. Berg is a licensed chiropractor in Virginia, California, and Louisiana, but he no longer practices chiropractic in any state and does not see patients, so he can focus on educating people as a full-time activity, yet he maintains an active license. This video is for general informational purposes only. It should not be used to self-diagnose, and it is not a substitute for a medical exam, cure, treatment, diagnosis, prescription, or recommendation. It does not create a doctor-patient relationship between Dr. Berg and you. You should not make any change in your health regimen or diet before first consulting a physician and obtaining a medical exam, diagnosis, and recommendation. Always seek the advice of a physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

What if I were to tell you that one of the most dangerous things isn't necessarily food or stress or aging?

0:08.7

It's actually the lighting inside your house.

0:12.7

The lighting in your house might sound like a very trivial thing.

0:16.9

And the reason why so many people don't even see this is because it's been normalized.

0:22.6

Everyone uses it.

0:23.6

And it doesn't even feel dangerous at all.

0:25.9

And this one single environmental mismatch, and when I talk about mismatches, I'm talking about

0:31.5

comparing way back in the day when our environment was very, very different compared to modern day.

0:39.3

And out of all the mismatches, light is at the top of the list because light affects

0:44.3

something called the circadian system. This has to do with your mood, your metabolism,

0:49.3

your hormones, and you can be eating fine and actually exercising and sleeping enough

0:55.0

but still have a problem if your lighting is incorrect.

0:57.0

Your circadian rhythm is a clock, okay?

1:00.0

And it's controlled by light and dark signals.

1:03.0

But you also have different clocks in different organs in the body

1:06.0

and they're all synced by this master clock in your brain.

1:09.0

And so this circadian system is on a rhythm.

1:13.6

And the most important thing about it is this one word right here, contrast.

1:19.9

Light and dark.

1:21.3

Way back in the day, we were exposed to very bright light during the day.

1:27.4

And also when the sunset, we were exposed to darkness.

1:31.5

And out of that, this system was created called the circadian rhythm that we're still operating

...

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