#283 - Helen Sernett - How Sleep Deprivation Destroys Your Mental Health & The Science of Getting Better Rest

MAR 13, 202631 MIN
Mental Matters Hosted By Asekho Toto

#283 - Helen Sernett - How Sleep Deprivation Destroys Your Mental Health & The Science of Getting Better Rest

MAR 13, 202631 MIN

Description

<p>Helen Sernett is a sleep advocate, burnout recovery specialist, and creator of <em>Sleep Lists</em> — a free podcast of relaxation audio tools designed to shut down the anxious mind and help you fall asleep.</p><p>Most of us treat sleep like an inconvenience — something that interrupts life rather than powers it. But here&#39;s the thing: every time you skip sleep, your brain loses its only window to process trauma, consolidate memories, and clear the cellular waste that builds up during the day. Helen hit rock bottom with insomnia after years of career burnout and tried everything — pills, white noise, sleep podcasts, even marijuana gummies. Nothing worked. So she built her own tool from scratch, and what she discovered changed how she understands the brain entirely.</p><p>Expect to learn why burnout is often the hidden root cause of chronic insomnia, how sleep is the only time your brain can separate emotion from memory and process trauma, why alcohol before bed actually ruins your sleep quality instead of improving it, what happens to your brain cells when you don&#39;t complete full sleep cycles, how neuroplasticity depends on sleep and why you can&#39;t rewire a tired brain, the surprisingly simple &quot;pretend to sleep&quot; technique that can trick your body into real rest, why the standard advice about cold rooms and complete darkness doesn&#39;t work for everyone, how morning sunlight exposure sets up your melatonin production 16 hours later, the exact pre-sleep routine order of operations that signals your brain to wind down, why sleeping pills are an emergency tool and not a long-term solution, and much more.</p><p>This conversation will challenge how you think about rest — and make you realize that fixing your sleep might be the most important mental health investment you ever make.</p>