Sleep is the brain’s most powerful performance tool, and most people treat it like a negotiable expense. Neuroscience is blunt: when you cut sleep, the brain shifts into survival mode. Astrocytes prune more synapses. Microglia stay activated. The glymphatic “night shift” that clears waste runs poorly. You don’t just feel tired. You lose clarity, memory consolidation, and emotional control. Decisions get riskier. Empathy gets thinner. Creativity shrinks. It’s not hours you’re sacrificing. It’s executive function. High performance isn’t willpower, it’s architecture. The brain thrives in rhythm, not chaos. Try this for 7 days: • Wake at the same time daily (weekends too). Let bedtime adjust earlier. • Light before phone: 5–10 minutes of outdoor light upon waking. • Caffeine curfew: none after 2 PM. • Protect one 90-minute deep-work block after your best sleep. • Swap micro-scrolls for a 10–20 minute early-afternoon nap. • Dim lights and screens 60–90 minutes before bed. • Run a 10–15 minute wind-down ritual (shower/stretch/paper journal, same order every night). Small rituals, massive neurological returns. Leaders don’t optimize sleep because it’s soft; they optimize it because it’s leverage. Start tonight. ♻️ Kindly repost to share with others Follow Benjamin B. Bargetzi for more on Neuroscience, Psychology & Future Tech
Evening Routine For Efficiency
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You don’t need more time after work. You need a better evening routine. Here’s how I stopped wasting my evenings—and finally started using them to rest, recharge, and actually move forward. The most successful people understand this and spend their time on things that matter the most to them. Here are 7 small changes to try in your evenings: 1. Interrupt the autopilot loop The first 5 minutes after work shape the next 5 hours. Change your environment → change your default. Create your ritual: tea, music, walk—anything but your phone. 2. Use the MVP Method Break your evening into 3 parts: M = Maintenance (rest and recovery) V = Value (focus time for something meaningful) P = People (connection time with others and yourself) 3. Close open loops Before switching off, brain-dump all unfinished tasks. Loose ends, ideas, tomorrow’s top 3. Free your mental bandwidth so you can actually relax. 4. Align with your energy (Shoutouts to Simon Alexander Ong's book Energize) Not all hours are created equal. Track when you feel sharp vs. drained in the evening. Know your chronotype—are you a morning lark, night owl, or somewhere in between? 5. Have one unstructured evening per week No plan. No guilt. Just embracing the joy of missing out. This intentional pause boosts creativity, energy, and consistency. This isn’t about doing more. It’s about doing what matters—without burning out. 🎥 I share all 7 shifts in my latest video, dive deeper here: https://lnkd.in/eK4euGgT What’s one thing you wish you had more time for in the evening? ♻️ Repost this to help someone else create better routines 🧠 Grab my Productivity Matrix Guide by commenting “FOCUS”.
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“I feel like I have 12 tabs open in my brain and I can't shut them off before bed” she exclaimed. My client A is a police officer who works overnights. She has a high-stress career and found it hard to “turn off” when she needed to sleep. Her energy was low and dragging most days with consistent mood swings. She developed inconsistent eating habits during her work hours and recently gained more body fat around her midsection. I completely understand that it’s not easy to just tell someone to get eight hours of sleep, especially if they are working overnight. Client A came to me wanting to lose body fat and get stronger, but we needed to address her sleep hygiene first. 👉Sleep is a NECESSARY component of LIFE!! Sleep influences your hormones, metabolism, nutrition choices, building muscle improving mental cognition, stress management, immunity, and more. ✅ Here are 4 Tips that we added to her bedtime routine. More solutions are in the comments. 💤1. Start turning down the light when dusk comes. Use warm and amber lights. This will help tell our brain to secrete melatonin. This is a hormone that our body naturally creates. When melatonin starts to secrete our body starts to relax and fall into its sleep cycle for our circadian rhythm. 💤2. Open the window. Research shows that The ideal temperature for sleep is about 65°F (18.3°C), give or take a few degrees. Our body temperature naturally drops a little during sleep and a cool sleeping environment is ideal to have a good night’s sleep. 💤3. Turn on the Night Shift mode on your phone. Our brain is sensitive to blue lights that are emitted from electronic screens like your phone. The night shift mode will automatically change to warmer tones. Set boundaries with your devices before bed. Pick a time to power down. 💤4. We used caffeine and naps (sleep-wake cycles) to maximize her sleep on her night shifts. In her particular case, we needed to decrease her sleep debt as much as possible **This is also a useful method for professionals who travel in different time zones. There are many ways to create a bedtime routine that works for you. Quality sleep is essential for a healthy body and mind. 😴Do you have trouble “shutting off” your thoughts before bed?
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Everyone talks about morning routines - Meditation. Exercise. Journaling. Planning. But nobody tells you that Mornings are for planning but Evenings are for learning. Most of us professionals end our day exhausted and reactive—rushing to close the laptop, disconnect, and collapse. But when we follow this routine we end up missing the most valuable 5 minutes of their entire day. The evening debrief. Studies show that writing down goals and reviewing them through journaling can increase achievement rates by about 42% compared to keeping them in your head. Evening reflection gives you distance from the heat of the moment. You review decisions without the emotion. You see patterns in how you think, decide, and react. And it clears mental clutter before sleep—offloading the unfinished loops from your mind to paper. Here is my 3Q Evening Debrief - a performance review that I run for myself every evening and you can use it too: 1️⃣ Identifying ONE decision, conversation, or task that truly mattered to my goals and drove results. 2️⃣ Noting down ONE moment of stress, conflict, or frustration and naming it as emotional labeling reduces anxiety and sharpens self-awareness. 3️⃣ Choosing ONE small adjustment – how I will prepare, respond, prioritize, delegate, or set a boundary – because small changes compound. By following this method, you will notice: ✅ Sharper, less reactive decision-making ✅ Clearer priorities (and fewer distractions) ✅ Better sleep (no more replaying the day at 2am) ✅ Faster career growth through pattern recognition I want you all to try it tonight - 5 minutes. 3 questions and let me know what do you think changed for you—your decisions, your boundaries, or your sleep? #journaling #mentoring #coaching #thoughtleadership
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Most people don’t have a sleep problem. They have a stress problem that shows up at night. This is something that shows up with nearly all the high performers I work with. They’re in bed for 7–8 hours but wake up groggy, feeling unrested, and needing coffee just to get through the morning meetings. (Note: If you need coffee to get through the day, something is wrong.) The issue isn’t just that they didn’t get enough sleep, it’s also because they’re not getting enough deep sleep. And deep sleep is a crucial part of sleep where important things happen: • Brain “cleanup” (glymphatic system) • Nervous system downregulation • Growth hormone release • Testosterone support If that phase is compromised, you feel it the next day. And this lack of deep sleep compounds quickly. This is where a simple addition to your routine makes a disproportionate difference: A pre-sleep cortisol dump. The goal is to lower your stress load before your head hits the pillow. Here’s what that looks like in practice: 1. Move your body (but don’t redline it) Evening training—especially strength work—can help “use up” circulating stress hormones. The key is to not overdo it, because that will wreck deep sleep even more. 2. Create a clear transition out of your day Work → gym → dinner → lights down If you go straight from laptop to bed, your nervous system doesn’t get the message that it’s bedtime. 3. Support the downshift Magnesium glycinate + glycine can improve relaxation and sleep quality. I’ll sometimes throw phospatidylserine into the mix if it’s needed, too. 4. Block artificial light at night Overhead lights and screens keep your brain in “day mode.” Dim the environment after ~8pm. --- The goal doesn’t have to be to sleep more. My clients are busy and have fewer hours than most. But you must pay attention to the quality of sleep you do get. High performers need their nervous system to fully switch off. If you get that right, everything else gets easier: • Better focus • Better energy • Leaner body composition
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Here’s the biggest differences I see between founders/executives and athletes: Athletes don't just walk off the court and go home. They take time to shower, decompress, and wind-down to properly transition back into their daily lives. And when it’s time to get back on the court? They warm up. But what do founders and executives do? They go straight from a high-stakes board call to dinner with their kids. Nearly all tend to skip the evening routine and many skip the morning warm up. No wind-up into high performance mode and no wind-down into home life. But if you do this consistently, what unfortunately happens is this: You won’t ever be fully showing up for either. You're home physically, but mentally you're replaying that investor conversation. Your partner asks about your day, and you give them 30% of your attention. Your kid wants to show you something, and you're checking Slack. Then tomorrow morning, you're back at your desk carrying guilt about missing dinner. Distracted from the work that matters. You end up performing worse at work AND not being present at home. This is why morning and evening routines are one of the first systems I implement with clients. Morning routines to get centered, and evening routines to close out the day. The evening routine I build with founders is simple: reflection, debrief, plan tomorrow. 15 minutes. That's it. No excuses not to do it. What went well today? What needs attention tomorrow? Write down your three main priorities for the morning. This wind-down time works to do something more important than simple self-care: It closes your mental loop. Real presence with your family shouldn’t be seen as time taken away from work. Rather, it should be an investment in tomorrow's performance. You'll show up sharper because you've had time to switch off and you’re not carrying yesterday's stress and today's guilt. Athletes understand this. They have post-game routines because performance doesn't end when the buzzer sounds. Recovery is part of the job. The same applies to founders and executives. You can either build in recovery time now, or your performance will slowly deteriorate until you're forced to take it anyway. One path takes 15 minutes a day. The other could cost you months. Have you committed to a wind-down routine?
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Morning routines are overrated. There. I said it. Everyone's obsessing over meditation apps and ice baths at 5am. But they're missing the point entirely. Your day is decided by what you do the night before. I've worked with hundreds of executives who were burning out despite "perfect" morning routines. The problem wasn't how they started their days. It was how they ended them. Here's what actually works: ☀️ Light exposure during the day helps your body clock. Walking meetings, stepping outside between calls, whatever you can manage. 🌚 Dim your lights as evening approaches. Blue light isn't just trendy science - it genuinely messes with your sleep. ✍️ Brain dump before bed. Write down 3-6 priorities for tomorrow. Get it out of your head. 🚿 Hot shower 90 minutes before sleep. The temperature drop afterwards signals it's time to wind down. 📧 Stop checking emails by 7 PM. Yes, even you. The world will survive. 🛌 Set both soft and hard bedtimes. Mine are 10pm ideal, 11pm absolute latest. The truth? Without quality sleep, your morning routine is just expensive procrastination. Most of my clients see 40% better energy levels within a month just by fixing their evenings. Stop obsessing about how you start your day. Start obsessing about how you end it. What's the one evening habit that's changed your performance most?
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The secret to high performance isn't what you do during the day. It's what you do at night. As a CEO, I became pretty rigid about my sleep routine. The difference in my performance after a good night of sleep versus a bad one was glaringly obvious. When I’m tired, I get… - Irritable and impatient with people - More easily overwhelmed - Less inspiring and effective …not ideal for making important decisions every day. Now as a coach, I see so many CEOs fighting the same battle. Pushing harder and sleeping less, thinking that's the price of success. But effective sleep is a non-negotiable if you want to be at your best. During sleep, our brain literally repairs itself, clearing out toxins and reinforcing neural connections essential for memory and learning. Deep sleep in particular plays a vital role in restoring overall cognitive function. So, how can you optimize sleep for brain health and performance? Here's my battle-tested sleep stack: 1. Daily exercise (but not within 3 hours of bedtime) 2. No screens 1 hour before bed (especially not email) 3. 15-20 minutes of reading (a non-business book, preferably) or Yoga Nidra (“sleep yoga”) 4. CBD, 350mg of magnesium glycinate, and L-Theanine supplements (but ya know, consult your doctor first) 5. Dark, cool room (64-67 degrees) 6. Comfortable sleep mask & earplugs (to tune out all external stimuli) 7. Whoop device (to measure recovery and adjust accordingly) The best leaders aren't the ones who need the least sleep. They're the ones who protect their recovery as fiercely as their KPIs.
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If you want better sleep, start with what actually moves the needle. Temperature matters more than most people realize. A cooler room supports melatonin release and deeper sleep cycles. Darkness is non negotiable. Even small amounts of light can suppress melatonin and disrupt your circadian rhythm. Consistency may be the most underrated variable. A stable sleep window trains your circadian system. Going to bed and waking up at roughly the same time builds neurological predictability, and your body thrives on predictability. Cutting food three to four hours before bed allows digestion to complete and prevents blood sugar fluctuations from interfering with deep sleep. This alone can transform sleep quality. Blue light exposure in the evening impacts melatonin production. Blocking that stimulation can help, especially if screens are unavoidable. Melatonin supplementation can help initiate sleep for some people, but it is not a long term solution for sleep architecture. It should not replace proper circadian alignment. Wearables can provide useful feedback, but data should guide behavior, not create anxiety. Sleep is not built on hacks. It is built on fundamentals repeated consistently. If you fix temperature, light, timing, and digestion, you are already ahead of most people. #SleepOptimization #LongevityHealth #CircadianRhythm #Melatonin #RecoveryMatters
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Good sleep is a godsend. 🌙 The Science of Perfect Sleep: Insights from a Former Insomniac Sleep is the cornerstone of good health, yet many struggle to achieve quality rest. As someone who battled insomnia for years, I've developed a system that consistently yields near-perfect sleep scores. Here's what I've learned: 🕰️ Timing is Everything Your sleep journey begins hours before bedtime. I implement a strict "hard stop" on intense mental work at 3 PM. This allows my brain's "flywheel" to slow down gradually. By 7-8 PM, I'm in full wind-down mode, usually watching a movie or enjoying calm music with my wife. 🍽️ Mindful Eating and Drinking I stop eating by 6-7 PM to avoid digestive issues interfering with sleep. For middle-of-the-night wake-ups, I keep a specialized electrolyte drink (Dr. Berg's sports electrolytes with added lemon juice) on my nightstand. This simple trick often helps me fall back asleep quickly. 🛏️ Bedroom Optimization My sleep environment is carefully curated. I use a white noise generator, maintain a cool room temperature with a fan, and employ a single red night light to preserve circadian rhythms. All screens and devices are banished from the bedroom. 💊 Targeted Supplements While melatonin's effectiveness is debatable, I've found significant benefits from CBN oil. Research shows it improves sleep architecture, enhancing the natural cycling between light, deep, and REM sleep stages. 🧘 Consistent Bedtime Rituals A regular pre-sleep routine signals to your body that it's time to rest. My wife and I always have a brief check-in, sometimes exchange massages, and make a point to connect lovingly before sleep. By implementing these strategies, I've transformed from struggling with 5-6 hours of poor-quality sleep to consistently achieving 8-10 hours of restorative rest. The impact on my overall well-being and productivity has been profound. Remember, good sleep isn't about drastic lifestyle overhauls. It's about understanding your body's needs and creating an environment conducive to rest. With patience and consistency, anyone can dramatically improve their sleep quality. https://lnkd.in/gdQ-3TyS
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