Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-04-10 17:00:00| Fast Company

Olivia Walch is an investigator in the Department of Neurology at the University of Michigan and CEO of a tech start-up called Arcascope. Her research has been featured on CNN, NPR, and in The Atlantic, among other outlets. Beyond sleep research, she coedited Political Geometry, a book on the mathematics of gerrymandering, and published comics with The Nib and Silver Sprocket. She is also the cartoonist of Imogen Quest, a webcomic that won her the Americas Next Great Cartoonist prize from the Washington Post. Whats the big idea? If you are dancing and cant catch the beat, you are not dancing well. In this way, if your sleep doesnt follow a regular pattern that matches your biological beat, then you are not sleeping well. To find the beat your body is wired to cycle through and not just step along with it but groove with that beat, its important to develop an intuition about how your circadian rhythms work to shape overall health. Below, Olivia shares five key insights from her new book, Sleep Groove: Why Your Bodys Clock Is So Messed Up and What To Do About It. Listen to the audio versionread by Olivia herselfin the Next Big Idea App. 1. Sleep is like your heartbeat; rhythm is central to health. Even if both beat 60 times a minute, you wouldnt say an arrhythmic heartbeat was as healthy as a regular one. Yet, we do this all the time when it comes to sleep. We think that as long as we get eight hours a night on averageeven if one night you go to bed at 8 p.m. and the next you stay up until 2 a.m.the rhythm doesnt matter. Except it totally does. A recent study found sleep regularity (how much your sleep schedule on one day resembles your sleep on the next day) to be a better predictor of mortality than sleep duration. Every day, a new study comes out linking sleep irregularity to hypertension, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, you name it. Sleep regularity correlates with all these things because it correlates with circadian health. Specifically, when you have regular sleep, the signals you send to your bodys circadian clock are very rhythmic. When you give your clock rhythmic inputs, then it is more confident about when daytime is and when nighttime is, and it does a better job scheduling things that happen during the day, at night, and at all the times in between. One of those things is making you feel sleepy at bedtime, but other things include metabolism, DNA repair, and immune response. In general, you do better when your body does those things confidently at the right times versus muddling through them at all hours because of mixed signals. 2. Circadian rhythms are like being on a swing. The same input can give you wildly different outputs depending on when its delivered. When I say being on a swing, I mean a classic playground-style swing. In this analogy, that rhythm (swinging back and forth) is a stand-in for your circadian rhythms. The input, when youre on a swing, is a push in the forward, outgoing direction. Biologically, that push in the outward direction can be anything that affects your clocks sense of time. The biggest influence on your bodys sense of time is light exposure, but meal timing and exercise can also affect what time your body thinks it is. Lets go with light exposure since its the primary signal your clock pays attention to. Getting light exposure when your body expects it, during the day, is like a push in the forward direction when youre heading forward. It helps reinforce your rhythm; it helps you get to a higher amplitude swing. But that same forward push when youre on the backswing actively messes up your rhythm. You dont want someone to give you a forward shove when youre swinging backward. Similarly, when youre entering your biological night, you dont want a burst of light exposureyou want to continue in the dark. Just like how a forward push is good at some times, that burst of light exposure is critical for health only when you get it during your biological day. When youre entering your biological night, you dont want a burst of light exposure. This is both a simple pointif I get light during the middle of the night, it will confuse my brain and throw off my rhythmsand a hard one to internalize. Were not primed to understand how the same thing can go from good to bad to good again as time passes. We dont think of anything being more rhythmic as making us healthier. I chose the title Sleep Groove because groovealong with getting in the swing of thingsis a concept that explicitly ties rhythmicity to positive outcomes. I think our way of understanding health writ large will change once we begin to think of not just sleep but all aspects of health, in terms of how much theyre grooving. 3. Circadian rhythms are like walking. Circadian rhythms are robust, stretchy, able to entrain, and can be more or less in a groove. Lets say I gave you a yellow shoe and a black shoe, and I told you to walk on a sidewalk with alternating yellow tiles and black tiles, with your yellow shoe hitting yellow tiles and black shoe hitting black tiles. If the tiles were well sized for your legs (not too long, not too short), youd be able to adapt your stride to match this yellow-on-yellow, black-on-black pattern. This process of adapting your rhythms (your gait) to match the environment (the sidewalk) is something circadian scientists call entrainment. Youre able to stretch or shrink your walking pattern to match the size of the tiles, which is what I mean by stretchy. If I randomly put a puddle on the sidewalk that you had to step around, you could do that, throwing off your walking pattern temporarily, and then falling back into the pattern once you were around the puddlewhich is what I mean by robust. Your bodys clock is the same. For circadian rhythms, its not the color of tile your body is adapting to but the light exposure you get. Your natural day lengthhow often your circadian rhythms would repeat if you were cut off from all signals, like light and food timingis probably a little longer than 24 hours, but your circadian clock adapts to match the lighting patterns in your environment the same way you can adapt how long your stride is on a sidewalk. Or at least it tries to. Imagine I take that original sidewalk and change it so youve got a yellow tile, followed by a black tile, and then a shorter grayish tile that looks halfway between yellow and black. Step with the yellow foot on the yellow tile and the black foot on the black tile, I tell you, except now its kind of hard to do. You can still manage it, but youre not taking strides of an even size with a consistent tempo. Youve gone from walking in an easy, effortless groove to stepping. When we give our brains ambiguous day/night signals, our circadian clocks struggle to keep a rhythm going. Its one of the reasons why Daylight Savings Time, which moves the light later in the day, is so disruptive to sleep and health. 4. Your sleep system is like a watercooler. Listen, you might be saying, this is all very well and good, but my problem is that I wake up in the middle of the night and cant fall back aslep. What do multi-day patterns of light and dark have to do with me waking up on Tuesday at 3:40 a.m.? Youve probably been to a barbecue before, gone up to a watercooler to fill your glass, and noticed, as youre pouring, that the levels getting low. If it drops too low and falls below the level of the tap, your flow of water is going to stop. So, you tilt the watercooler toward you to keep the flow going and get a nice, long, uninterrupted pour. Your circadian clock tilts your system in favor of sleep during your biological night, allowing you to sleep longer than you would without the tilt. This is exactly what your circadian clock does during your biological night. Think of your sleep system as governed by two things: how hungry for sleep you are (how full your cooler is) and how much your circadian clock is promoting sleep (how tilted your watercooler is). Sleeping is when you drain the watercooler, and if your water level (sleep hunger) falls below the level of the tap, you wake up. Your circadian clock tilts your system in favor of sleep during your biological night, allowing you to sleep longer than you would without the tilt. It also tilts away from sleep at some times. If youve ever tried to scoot your bedtime up a few hours and been unable to do it, it could be because your circadian clock is tilting your sleep watercooler away from you, making it so that even though youre pretty full of water (sleep hunger), the level is below the tap and you cant fall asleep. If you wake up in the middle of the night and cant fall asleep again, here are three reasons why that might happen: You might have gone to sleep earlier than your clock expected. The tilt is still coming; its just late. If you stay in the dark and wait for it to hit, you might be able to fall back asleep. You might have gone to sleep later than your clock expected. The tilt could have come and gone already. In this case, it could be tough to fall back asleep, even if you try to wait. Try going to bed earlier the next day. Maybe you tilted at the right time, but it wasnt a big enough tilt. It was a shallow, barely-there tilt. That can happen to older people or those who have lower amplitude rhythms. The theoretical way to boost amplitude is to get really bright light during the day and the darkest dark at night, at the same time every day. If you think you might not have enough of a circadian tilt to your sleep at night, send your brain clear, unambiguous day/night signals for at least two weeks and see what happens to your sleep. 5. Circadian rhythms are like an audio recording slowed way, way down. We dont understand how much of our health is rhythmic because the rhythms happen on a timescale too slow for us to really notice. But rhythms are fundamental to how our bodies work, even if we dont always consciously register them. Lets bring it back to the heartbeat analogy. If you were performing chest compressions on someone in cardiac arrest, you wouldnt do one push, sit back, and decide youve done everything you could. We intuitively understand that rescuing a heartbeat means giving it a clear rhythm of inputs to lock onto. The same goes for your sleep. To rescue a grooveless sleep rhythm, theres no one-time hack. You need to fundamentally change how you think about light, activity, and food to center rhythmicity. If you give your body enough time to find the beat, youll notice differences not only in how you sleep but also how you feel. To listen to the audio version read by author Olivia Walch, download the Next Big Idea App today: This article originally appeared in Next Big Idea Club magazine and is reprinted with permission.


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

14.12Heres whats next from the creator of the Pebble smartwatch
14.12The December effect: How constraints create better leadership decisions
14.12How to make the most out of your company holiday party
13.12How Taylor Swift is turning the NFLs mass-media machine into a a pipeline for new male fans
13.12AI advertising slop is on the rise. The cure? The STFU brand strategy
13.12CNBC replaces its peacock with . . . a triangle
13.12The 3 key financial lessons of Its a Wonderful Life
13.1290 housing markets cross critical inventory thresholdtilting power toward buyers
E-Commerce »

All news

14.12Condo Adviser: Board has right to access units for insect abatement treatment
14.12Train timetable revamp takes effect with more services promised
14.12Ahead of Market: 10 things that will decide stock market action on Monday
14.12Tories to scrap petrol car ban if they win next election
14.12Heres whats next from the creator of the Pebble smartwatch
14.12How 100-year-old firm went from Hull to Hollywood
14.12Brixton Soup Kitchen prepares for busy Christmas
14.12FPIs withdraw Rs 17,955 cr from Indian equities in Dec; total outflow at Rs 1.6 lakh cr in 2025
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .