Monday, 13 July 2026

8 facts about sleep you probably didn’t know and why shut-eye affects every aspect of life

From scmp.com

From the science behind sleep paralysis to lucid dreams and memory making, experts help us understand little-known but vital aspects of sleep 

Little was known about sleep until modern science revolutionised our understanding. It turns out that what happens while you are unconscious dictates almost every aspect of your waking health, mood and brainpower.

While knowing how to get better sleep and why you need it is vital, the nocturnal world holds some interesting secrets. Here we look at eight things you probably did not know about sleep.


1. Testy times

If young men don’t get enough sleep, they have a level of testosterone that is equivalent to that of someone 10 years older, says British neuroscientist and renowned sleep expert Matthew Walker. That is because a big chunk of testosterone release happens while sleeping. Low testosterone levels affect energy levels and mood – and sperm production.
In women, too little sleep changes the way reproductive hormones are regulated, although the science is more complicated than a simple “less sleep equals less oestrogen” formula. They may experience a breakdown in the delicate monthly timing system that keeps their reproductive health and moods stable. Those who get fewer than six hours of sleep can see up to a 20 per cent reduction in ovulation-inducing hormones.
Lack of sleep disrupts our metabolic systems quickly. Getting only five hours of sleep for four nights in a row can negatively affect blood sugar levels, reducing insulin sensitivity to the extent that one could be classified as pre-diabetic, Walker says.
The immune system is also affected: restricting a healthy person to just four hours of sleep for a single night results in an alarming 70 per cent drop in the activity of natural killer cells – cytotoxic white blood cells that act as the immune system’s first line of defence.

2. Justice for owls

Some sleep scientists feel that modern society discriminates against those whose circadian rhythms – or internal clocks – make them night owls rather than larks who are up at the crack of dawn and go to bed early in the evening.
Since the Industrial Revolution in the 18th and 19th centuries, work has started early, and those who find it difficult to be in top form in the morning are looked down upon. This is considered unfair, as it is not possible to change your circadian rhythm.

A change in perception could be positive for businesses, Dr Stefan Volk of the University of Sydney Business School told this writer in a 2018 interview. Volk’s paper, “Chronotype Diversity in Teams: Toward a Theory of Team Energetic Asynchrony”, published in the Academy of Management Review, argued it would be productive to introduce a shift system so larks start work early and night owls start later, enabling everyone to work at their peak capacity.

Sadly for night owls, that is not on the horizon.

3. Memory making

Sleep is essential for forming memories; in deep sleep, bursts of activity in the hippocampus, which stores short-term memories, send information to the cortex, which stores long-term memories. Photo: Dreamstime/TNS
Sleep is essential for forming memories; in deep sleep, bursts of activity in the hippocampus, which stores short-term memories, send information to the cortex, which stores long-term memories. Photo: Dreamstime/TNS
An important function of sleep is to consolidate memory; it turns short-term memory into long-term memory and stabilises new memories so that they stick.

In deep sleep, bursts of activity in the hippocampus, which stores short-term memories, send information to the cortex, which stores long-term memories.

The brain also cross-indexes memories and links them together during sleep, and adds new information gained in the day to what we already know by replaying recent experiences.

After a good night’s sleep, your memories will seem clearer and more coherent.

Sleep also consolidates learning by connecting facts into knowledge, notes Dr Barbara Oakley, a professor of engineering at Oakland University in Rochester, in the US state of Michigan, in her course “Learning How To Learn” on the online learning platform Coursera.

That is why a good night’s sleep before an exam is better than staying up all night cramming. Simply reading over your notes before going to sleep can be beneficial.

4. Connecting with the past

Dreams play an important part in our mental well-being. Sigmund Freud, the founder of psychoanalysis, believed the cause of a patient’s neurosis – usually a repressed traumatic childhood experience – could be determined by analysing their dreams.

That idea has generally been discredited, but sleep researchers still think dreams play a big role in our state of mind, changing our emotional relationship with our memories in a way that makes us feel better about them when we wake up.

The late sleep researcher and psychologist Rosalind Cartwright – known as the “queen of dreams” – said dreams are an important part of grieving and can take away the pain associated with the memory of a loss.

Through dreaming, we can gradually come to think of a deceased loved one more objectively, without the pain that comes with grief.

The same is true when something shocks us. If we see someone injured, or worse, in an accident or as the victim of a violent crime, dreaming will help us eventually be able to replay the event in our minds without the accompanying horror we felt when it occurred.

5. Dreams as therapy

The brain knows it is good for you to wake up in a calm mood, and uses dreaming to achieve that goal – dreams act as a kind of internal therapy.

“When all goes well, we awake refreshed with a modified strategy for guiding our behaviour,” wrote Cartwright in her 2010 book, The Twenty-four Hour Mind: The Role of Sleep and Dreaming in Our Emotional Lives.

Dreams help the mind work through the emotional business of the day, away from the stress of waking life.

6. Fright night

During the transition between wakefulness and sleep, some people see ghosts and demons – or think they see them. While falling asleep, some become paralysed and sense an evil or macabre intruder in the room watching them.

Sometimes things get physical, and there are reports of women feeling like they are being sexually assaulted by a strange creature – an “incubus”, as they are called in mythology – while being physically unable to flee.

But as “anomalistic psychologist” Professor Chris French explains in his 2024 book The Science of Weird S***, there is nothing supernatural in play; it is a well-documented scientific phenomenon called sleep paralysis.
This occurs when the mind is awake but the body is sleeping. Dreams occur mainly in REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, when the body is paralysed to stop the sleeper physically acting out those dreams – a state that is called REM atonia.

Due to a biological glitch, the paralysis can occur while the mind is awake.

Psychologist Chris French explains the science of sleep paralysis in his book The Science of Weird S***. Photo: gold.ac.uk
Psychologist Chris French explains the science of sleep paralysis in his book The Science of Weird S***. Photo: gold.ac.uk

Researchers suggest the demons appear because we have evolved to subconsciously monitor the outside world for threats at all times while we are awake. Our brain is still focused on this task during sleep paralysis, but it becomes confused by the situation and invents the demons.

French says that few doctors are aware of sleep paralysis, and many people suffer unnecessarily because they think they are going mad – or really seeing evil intruders.

7. Living the dream

It is possible to control your dreams and influence their direction. This is called “lucid dreaming”, a term coined by Dutch psychiatrist Frederik van Eeden in 1913 in the journal Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research.

The ability comes naturally to some people, although others have to practise by keeping dream journals to train the brain. Essentially, sleepers become aware they are dreaming, and some then consciously take control of the dream.

As with sleep paralysis, it is believed to be made possible by the interplay between REM sleep and wakefulness, although scientists are still figuring out how that works.

Some enjoy lucid dreaming and find it useful in inspiring creativity. It may even have been a factor in The Beatles’ classic song “Yesterday”. Paul McCartney is reported to have composed the melody for it after hearing it in a dream. Upon waking, he immediately played the tune on a piano next to his bed to capture it before it faded.

8. Moving for better sleep

Research suggests that tai chi and yoga can help you sleep and stay asleep for longer.

Tai chi practitioners can extend their nightly sleep by more than 50 minutes and can fall asleep 25 minutes faster than non-practitioners, according to a study published in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine.

Yoga can add up to two hours of sleep each night and reduce the number of times you wake up.

In a similar vein, a study from the University of Hong Kong found that tai chi may provide as much relief as talk therapy does for those suffering from insomnia. 

The next time you are tempted to stay up a little later when it is time to turn in, remember that sleep is much more than a passive break from reality. It is an active, dynamic state in which our minds heal, memories lock in and bodies reset.

https://www.scmp.com/lifestyle/health-wellness/article/3359982/8-facts-about-sleep-you-probably-didnt-know-and-why-shut-eye-affects-every-aspect-life

Nature’s Sleeping Pill: How Common Fruits Engineer Better Sleep

From streamlinefeed.co.ke 

Clinical sleep expert Dr. Michael Breus explains the neurochemical science behind using bananas, kiwis, and pineapples as highly effective, natural sleep aids

In an era where synthetic sleep aids generate billions in pharmaceutical revenue, clinical sleep specialists are increasingly pointing patients toward the produce aisle. A prominent clinical psychologist and sleep expert, Dr. Michael Breus—widely known as The Sleep Doctor—has identified a specific profile of common fruits that trigger the exact neurochemical pathways necessary for deep, restorative sleep. Leading the charge is the humble banana, which Breus has unequivocally labelled nature's sleeping pill.

For consumers in agricultural powerhouses like Kenya and Uganda, where bananas and pineapples are staple exports, these findings offer a highly accessible solution to the growing global epidemic of insomnia. Rather than relying on over-the-counter melatonin supplements, integrating specific fruits into a pre-bedtime routine provides a bioavailable, natural mechanism to regulate the circadian rhythm.

The Neurochemistry of the Banana

While commonly associated with morning energy boosts, the biological profile of a banana makes it an optimal night-time sedative. According to nutritional analysis, a medium-sized banana (approximately 126 grams) delivers around 34 milligrams of magnesium, alongside significant doses of potassium, vitamin B6, and the amino acid tryptophan.

Dr. Breus explains the physiological chain reaction, noting that bananas contain melatonin, tryptophan, vitamin B6, and magnesium, which are all excellent for producing serotonin and facilitating sleep. Magnesium is critical; it acts as a natural muscle relaxant and helps suppress the central nervous system, reducing the levels of cortisol (the stress hormone) that frequently prevent sleep onset.

The Banana Tea Hack

To maximize these benefits, Dr. Breus advocates for an unconventional preparation method: banana tea. By boiling the fruit with its skin intact, consumers can extract the concentrated magnesium stored primarily in the peel.

The process requires slicing off the ends of an organic banana, cutting it in half, and boiling it in three cups of water for three to five minutes until the peel darkens. The resulting infused water delivers a potent, fast-acting dose of magnesium without the heavy digestive load of eating solid food immediately before bed.

The Melatonin and Serotonin Boosters

Beyond bananas, clinical research supports the efficacy of several other specific foods in altering brain chemistry to induce sleep:

  • Kiwis: Consuming kiwifruit an hour before bed has been shown to decrease the time it takes to fall asleep. Dr. Breus notes that kiwis help promote serotonin in the brain, the calming hormone that assists in relaxing the body prior to sleep. Serotonin is also the direct biochemical precursor to melatonin.
  • Pineapples: This tropical fruit is a massive natural source of melatonin. Studies have indicated that consuming fresh pineapple can increase melatonin marker levels in the human body by up to 266 percent, signalling to the brain that it is time to shut down.
  • Greek Yogurt: Often overlooked as a sleep aid, dairy is crucial for the absorption of sleep-inducing amino acids. Medical professionals assert that since many individuals lack adequate calcium, Greek yogurt can bridge the gap, helping the brain utilize the amino acid tryptophan to manufacture the sleep-inducing melatonin.

Timing and Digestion

While these fruits possess powerful sedative properties, sleep experts warn that timing is critical. Consuming heavy meals or foods with high glycaemic indexes too close to bedtime can spike blood sugar levels, leading to a reactionary crash that actually disrupts the sleep cycle and causes midnight awakenings.

The recommended protocol is to consume these specific, targeted snacks approximately 60 to 90 minutes prior to sleep. This allows the digestive system to process the nutrients and release the necessary amino acids into the bloodstream, where they can cross the blood-brain barrier and begin the conversion into serotonin and melatonin.

As global populations report increasing levels of stress and poor sleep architecture—often exacerbated by blue light from digital screens and sedentary lifestyles—the shift toward holistic, food-based interventions is gaining significant traction. By utilizing the biochemical properties of bananas, pineapples, and kiwis, individuals can biohack their night-time routines using ingredients readily available at their local market.

https://streamlinefeed.co.ke/news/sleep-doctor-michael-breus-banana-kiwi-pineapple-insomnia

These overlooked insomnia causes may be why you still can't sleep

From msn.com/en-us
Key takeaways
  • Gut Health Matters: Low gut microbiome diversity is linked to poor sleep, later chronotypes, and social jet lag. Boost diversity with fibre-rich foods like legumes, oats, leafy greens, yogurt, kimchi, or kefir.
  • Social Jet Lag: Large differences between weekday and weekend sleep schedules disrupt your body clock and gut health. Keep wake times within a 1-hour window and adjust gradually if needed.
  • Body Temperature Tricks: Warming your body before bed (e.g., warm bath 90 min prior) helps trigger natural sleep cues. Keep your bedroom cool and consider a fan or cooling pad for deeper restorative sleep.

If you've already tried cutting caffeine, ditching your phone before bed and counting breaths until you pass out, and you're still lying awake at 2 a.m., the problem probably isn't your willpower.

Researchers are finding that some of the biggest overlooked causes of insomnia hide in places most sleep advice never goes: your gut bacteria, the gap between your weekday and weekend sleep schedules and even how warm your body gets before bed. Here's what the science says and what's actually worth trying tonight.

Why Your Gut Bacteria May Be Wrecking Your Sleep

The freshest insomnia research right now isn't about blue light or relaxation apps. It's about microbes. A February 2026 study in Nature Communications analysed 6,941 participants and found that lower gut microbiome diversity was directly linked to poorer sleep quality, a later chronotype and greater social jet lag.

Researchers identified 137 bacterial species tied to sleep, and more than a third of those associations held up in an independent cohort.

What to try: A fibre-rich diet is the most direct lever you have on gut diversity. Think legumes, oats, leafy greens and fermented foods like yogurt, kimchi or kefir. Food sources tend to be more effective than supplements and you don't need to overhaul your entire diet. Start with one meaningful addition per week.

What Social Jet Lag Is Doing to You Every Single Weekend

Think of social jet lag as the jet lag you give yourself on repeat. Stay up until 1 a.m. Saturday, sleep until 10, then try to be in bed by 10:30 Sunday for a 6 a.m. alarm? You've flown yourself several time zones without leaving your bedroom.

The same Nature Communications study found that this kind of weekly schedule shifting drives measurable changes in gut microbiome composition, compounding the sleep disruption. A September 2025 review in Medicina confirmed it also promotes systemic inflammation.

What to try: Keep your wake time within a consistent one-hour window across the whole week. The wake time anchor is what matters most to your body clock. If you've been sleeping in two or more hours on weekends, bring it back gradually by 20 to 30 minutes at a time.

The Hot Bath Trick That Sleep Researchers Are Actually Testing

A UCSF-led randomized trial (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT07036705, updated February 2026) is currently testing passive body heating via sauna blanket alongside CBT-I. The mechanism: warming your body before bed raises skin temperature, which then triggers your core temperature to drop, which is the physiological cue your brain reads as permission to sleep. A Scientific Reports study of 72 participants found that external body cooling during sleep significantly increased slow-wave N3 sleep, the deepest restorative stage.

What to try tonight: Take a warm bath or shower about 90 minutes before bed, not right before. You need the post-bath temperature drop to kick in before you get into bed. Keep your bedroom cool and if you sleep hot, a fan or cooling mattress pad can shift how deeply you sleep.

When Your Sleep Tracker Is Actually the Problem

Northwestern University researchers coined the term "orthosomnia" for insomnia triggered by fixating on tracker data. In their research, patients were losing sleep specifically because they were anxious about hitting perfect scores on devices like Oura and Whoop.

What to try: Give yourself a two-week tracker break and notice whether your sleep anxiety shifts. If you keep using it, check weekly trends rather than nightly scores. Night-to-night variation is normal and often meaningless. The pattern over weeks is what matters.

Why CBT-I Should Be Your First Call Before Medication

For chronic insomnia, cognitive behavioural therapy for insomnia is the clinical first-line recommendation ahead of sleeping pills. It targets the thought patterns and behaviours that sustain sleeplessness. Roughly half of people who complete it still have some residual symptoms, per the UCSF trial documentation, which is why researchers are now testing body-based add-ons on top of it.

What to try: Look into a structured digital CBT-I program before assuming you need a prescription. Several telehealth platforms now offer clinically validated versions that are far more accessible than in-person therapy.

Insomnia is rarely just a discipline problem. It's biological, which means it's more fixable than most people assume. For anyone also exploring the breathing side of better sleep, what research says about the 4-7-8 method is worth a read alongside everything here.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/health/other/these-overlooked-insomnia-causes-may-be-why-you-still-can-t-sleep/ar-AA2496Fz?uxmode=ruby