Tests, Fixes, and Ideas That Are Shaping My Longevity Strategy

What cognitive behavioral therapy can (& can’t) do for 3 a.m. wakeups after 50

You’ve probably seen “CBT-I” mentioned as the non-drug treatment for insomnia. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia (CBT-I) is a structured, skills-based approach that changes habits, thoughts, and scheduling around sleep.

Insomnia becomes more common with age; roughly 20–30% of older adults live with insomnia, often for years. It’s linked with memory and concentration problems, mood changes, higher fall risk, and worse outcomes in conditions such as heart disease and chronic pain.

Major guidelines, including those supported by the American Academy of Sleep Medicine, recommend CBT-I as the first-line treatment for chronic insomnia, especially in older adults where sedative-hypnotic drugs can raise fall and confusion risk.

At the same time, CBT-I has trade-offs:

It asks you to follow a very regular schedule and temporarily cut time in bed (“sleep restriction”), which can be tiring in the short term.

It takes effort: sleep diaries, behavioral changes, and challenging long-held beliefs about sleep.

Access can be limited – there are not many clinicians trained in CBT-I, and traditional one-to-one therapy is time-intensive and expensive.

In this review, we’ll walk through four recent peer-reviewed studies (2023–2025) that help answer practical questions for adults in midlife and beyond:

What can CBT-I actually do for sleep and daytime function?

How does it seem to work in the brain?

What’s realistic to expect – and by when?

Who tends to benefit most, and where are the limits?

How can you use this evidence to decide whether CBT-I is a good fit for you?

Let’s get started.

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Can exercise help you stay asleep? 2025–2026 research + 5 ways to use it now

You already know that sleep is not just about feeling rested.

Poor or fragmented sleep affects memory, mood, blood sugar, blood pressure, and how much reserve you feel you have for the things you care about most. For many, the options that get suggested first are medications or supplements, and movement often does not enter the conversation.

Exercise, however, is one of highest impact health (& sleep improvement) strategy you fully control.

It interacts with your circadian rhythm, your stress response, your muscles, and your brain. It can potentially deepen your sleep, shorten how long you lie awake during your sleep, and reduce the emotional “charge” around insomnia.

It also has its own direct links to brain health and dementia risk.

Over just the last few years, research on exercise and sleep has accelerated: large wearable-device datasets, pooled analyses of dozens of trials, and brain-imaging work now give a more 3-dimensional view of how movement interacts with your sleep than we have ever had before.

When you look at this newer research as a whole, every decision to move a bit more becomes a positive step you are taking towards sleeping, thinking, and functioning better in the years ahead.

In this article, we’ll cover

– How different exercise types can influence your sleep quality and sleep structure

– What large, recent pooled data sets suggest about how much & what kind of exercise seems most effective for sleep

– Which exercise modes—can influence brain circuits in a direction that looks more like good sleepers.

– What an Alzheimer’s study suggests about exercise and sleep architecture at the level of brain pathology.

– Finally, we’ll cover 5 actionable strategies to help you translate all of this into an exercise approach that supports better sleep, more daytime energy, and longevity.

Let’s get started.

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The Underrated Biomarker That Predicts Stroke & Dementia Risk

It’s not HRV, glucose, or inflammation. But it predicts your risk of stroke, dementia, and kidney decline decades before symptoms.

When was the last time you checked your blood pressure—without being told to?

Most people only learn their numbers when they’re already high.

But here’s what often gets missed:

Blood pressure is one of the strongest, easiest-to-monitor predictors of long-term health.

And ~50% of all U.S. adults already fall above the “normal” range.

That’s not just a cardiovascular issue. It’s a brain, kidney, and aging issue.

Let’s unpack why—plus the simple protocol I’ve followed to keep mine at 101/66 for 20+ years.

No meds. No salt restriction.

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I’ve been taking Benadryl every night for years. Is it bad?

I’ve been taking Benadryl every night for ~3 years now. It’s the only thing that knocks me out. Is it bad?”

This question appeared in my inbox recently, and variations of it come up often. The person mentioned some lingering grogginess in the morning, but otherwise assumed everything was fine.

If some version of that lives in your head, you are not the only one.

Millions of adults use over-the-counter antihistamines as a nightly sleep aid.

The reasoning makes sense: it’s available without a prescription, it’s affordable, and it does produce sleepiness.

On the surface, it looks like a small trade: a familiar allergy ingredient, a predictable sedative effect, and side effects that look like “a little groggy” or “weird dreams.”

This article is about what sits underneath that trade:

The underappreciated risks that go beyond next-day drowsiness.

Why long-term use matters for brain health and dementia risk.

How these drugs disrupt your sleep architecture—even when they help you stay asleep

How to think about your next step in a way that matches the complexity of your midlife physiology, instead of just asking, “What else can I take?”

Let’s get started.

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