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

Why You Really Wake Up to Pee at 3am

Peeing at night is often misunderstood, and the specific pattern of nighttime urination points to different potential causes and different solutions. For the generally healthy individual, nighttime peeing falls into sleep-related and non-sleep-related categories, each with distinct drivers. Changes in antidiuretic hormone regulation, reproductive hormones, and sleep disruption all play a role in why this […]

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Is It Just Stress? 4 Reasons You’re Waking at 3 A.M.

Waking at 3 a.m. with racing thoughts isn’t just about work pressure, relationships, or caregiving responsibilities — those are only one category of stressor. There are at least 4 elements that activate the same stress response pathways and can keep your brain in a more activated state during sleep: physical stressors, metabolic issues, chronic low-grade

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3 Reasons You Keep Waking Up at 3 a.m. After 40

Worse sleep in midlife is usually blamed on age — but for generally healthy adults, age itself isn’t the problem. What changes is your vulnerability to disruptors that were always there, now compounding through shifts in your underlying physiology. Three underappreciated factors — chronic low-grade inflammation, blood sugar instability, and stress tolerance — are often

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Waking at 4 a.m—Is 7 hours good enough?

A Yale-trained a psychologist & psychoanalyst in our community, asked me recently:

“If my sleep has moved from 5–6 hours to ~7 hours, but I’m still waking up around 4 a.m., how do I tell if that’s good enough? I used to go to bed around 10 and get up at 5 or 6. But the older I’ve gotten the earlier I’ve been waking up. It seems no matter what time I go to bed, 3 or 4am—sometimes 4:30—is the wake time now. To help, I now go to bed on the earlier side, 8 or 9.

How can I tell if its good enough?

The honest answer is: it depends.

7 hours can be good for some people. For others, 7 hours that ends at 4am still leaves them under-recovered—because the question is not only “how many hours,” but also

“are those hours landing in the part of the 24-hour cycle when your brain is set up to produce your most restorative sleep?”

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The 3 Forms of Sleep Disruption That Shrink Your Brain—And How to Tell If Your Sleep Is Actually Protecting You From Cortical Atrophy, Brain Shrinkage and Neurodegeneration

Even if you’re getting “enough” sleep, your brain might still be shrinking.

MRI studies show that disrupted, fragmented, or REM-poor sleep is linked to measurable brain atrophy—especially in regions that govern focus, planning, and emotional regulation. And this starts earlier than most expect—often in your 30s and 40s.

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How Do You Fall Back Asleep? The Question That Changed How I Think About Sleep

Falling back asleep after waking mid-sleep isn’t a technique problem—it’s a capacity problem. That capacity is determined by your parasympathetic baseline: your autonomic nervous system’s ability to rapidly return to vagal dominance after a wake episode. When it’s strong, brief wakings resolve almost automatically; when it’s compromised, exhaustion alone isn’t enough to return to sleep.

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“Why Can’t I Stay Asleep Longer Than 5-6 Hours?”

When you fall asleep without difficulty but consistently wake after 5–6 hours—lying restless and unable to return to deep rest—the issue is sleep architecture in the second half of the night, not sleep hygiene. Three mechanisms tend to break down in those later hours: cholinergic-GABAergic imbalance, inadequate adenosine buildup from daytime activity, and melatonin offset

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