đ Read time: 4 minutesÂ
Coming up: curtains, cortexes, sympathy, screen time, spooky studies, some simple life hacks, why stress and sleep are intimately intertwined, and how one simple supplement can easily help with both.
â We all know stress is bad.
â We all know poor sleep is bad.
And even though Rob and I are a health-conscious couple, we spent years thinking stress and sleep were two very-separate issues.
But we were very wrong.
(... and we were also very stressed and very sleep-deprived. Strange).
After doing some research, we learned:
đ§ High stress makes sleep worse
đ„±Â AND bad sleep makes stress worse
⊠and if youâre not controlling both, youâre not really controlling either. Hereâs more:
Our stress and sleepÂ
đ Weâre Elaine and Rob, the married-couple team behind Sentro Labs.
Weâre normal people, both in our 40s, and parents of two kids. Which means:
â Life is stressful.
â Good sleep comes at a premium.
So, we went on a mission to improve both our sleep and our stress.Â
We tried MANY different things (which weâll come to later), including engineering our own supplements (which weâll also come to later).
⊠but, first, the very delicate relationship between sleep and stress:
Part 1: how stress makes sleep worse
Although it might seem like an enemy, stress is meant to be a friend.
 Basically, stress exists to keep us:
- Ready
- Energetic
- Alert and alive
đš That might be useful if youâre a caveman being chased by a saber-toothed tiger.
⊠but itâs not so useful if youâre just an overworked office-managing parent trying to get good sleep.
Hereâs what happens when youâre stressed:
- Your sympathetic nervous system is activated: your bodyâs 'red alert' mode, this cranks up your heart rate and blood pressure, and sends your brain into panic mode.
- Cortisol is released (thatâs the bodyâs stress hormone). Amongst other effects, cortisol is designed to keep your brain awake and alert, and not at rest.
- Your body gets stuck in hyperarousal, which makes you literally unable to relax. Your senses and emotions are heightened, and you might feel sweaty and restless. This is considered one of the major causes of insomnia.
In short, stress puts you in a state of active unrest. And if your brain and body canât relax, you arenât gonna sleep well.
But, the bad news isnât over (sorry):
â° Yep, high stress makes sleep worse.
Ⱐ⊠but bad sleep also makes your stress worse:
Part 2: how bad sleep = bad stress
When your brain and body are rested, they can cope better with stressâŠ
⊠but when youâve had bad sleep, your brain and body become more emotional, and more fragile. Many studies have shown how worse sleep leads to worse emotional resilience.
Other studies have shown how sleep deprivation:
- Makes the amygdala go into overdrive. This is the brainâs emotional centerâand when the amygdala is overworked, youâre more reactive to negative stimuli, you have more negative feelings, and it becomes difficult to regulate emotions.
- Encourages your prefrontal cortex to get sleepy and ineffective. This part of your brain has a big part to play in decision-making, reasoning, controlling impulses, and planning. And if you canât do those things properly, youâre gonna get stressed.
- Reduces emotional reasoning in general. So, youâre more likely to become emotional, youâre more likely to respond to things in a negative way, and youâre less likely to work through your day with logic.
Put simply: bad sleep makes you worse at handling stress, which makes your sleep even worse, which makes you worse at handling stress. And so on and so on and so on.
Things weâve done to improve our sleep & stress
Over the past few yearsâŠ
(... thanks to diminishing testosterone and some perimenopause symptoms)...
⊠weâve become much more mindful about how we manage our sleep, stress, diet, and exercise.
So, here are some things that work for our sleep + stress (and maybe theyâll work for you too):
- Staying properly hydratedÂ
- Reducing evening screentime
- Trying to get around 7 hours sleep a nightÂ
- Getting some daylight as soon as we wake up
- Doing some relaxing exercise, like walking or yoga
- Cutting back on caffeine (and having a caffeine curfew)
- Sleeping and waking at the same time each day (well, when we can)
- Drinking less alcohol (and if we are going to drink, we try not to drink at night)
-
Eliminating ALL artificial light from our bedroom (and getting blackout curtains)
đ§ Although Robert isnât hugely into trendy mindfulness stuff, Elaine has also tried meditation, journaling, and gratitude exercisesâand theyâve all helped too.Â
(for much more detail, here are 7 surprising tips for better sleep).
â But, crucially, and maybe most importantly, we also started taking the right supplementsâespecially useful given some of the above can be a bit challenging and unrealistic when you try to do them every day.
Some of these supplements worked; some of them didnât.
⊠so, eventually, we developed our own sleep & stress complex EQUILIBRIUM. Designed specifically to reduce stress and improve sleep, it features L-Theanine, Lemon Balm, Magnesium Bisglycinate, Chamomile Extract, Hops Extract, L-Ornithine HCL, and KSM-66 Ashwagandha.Â
Taking EQUILIBRIUM has made us much more alert and energeticâand helped us sleep better and stress less.Â
đš And by fixing both our sleep and stress, itâs helped us break the horrible bad-sleep-bad-stress cycle.Â
Why bad stress means bad sleep: final thoughts
So, there you go:Â
Thatâs everything weâve learned about the links between bad sleep and bad stress.
To sum up:
- Bad stress makes sleep worse
- Bad sleep makes stress worse
- By controlling one, youâre getting better control of the other
- Lifestyle changes can definitely help (even if you canât do them every day)Â
- And a good supplement (like EQUILIBRIUM) can be a massive game-changerÂ
Thanks for reading, and hopefully some of this helps,
Elaine and Rob đ
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