Living Simpler with Amy Mewborn
You slept eight hours. Maybe nine. And you still woke up feeling like you had not slept at all. That gap between the hours you logged and the way you actually feel is not in your head. It is not laziness, it is not weakness, and it is not just getting older. It is your body sending you a clear, measurable signal that something inside is disrupting the repair work your body is supposed to do while you sleep. In this episode, Amy Mewborn breaks down exactly why sleep quality is not the same as sleep quantity, and why so many high-achieving women are waking up empty no matter how many hours they put in. If you have ever stared at the ceiling at 2 AM wondering why your brain will not turn off, or dragged yourself out of bed after a full night wondering why you feel worse than you did yesterday, this episode is built for you. This is not surface-level sleep hygiene advice. This is a real, evidence-based look at the five specific physiological reasons your sleep is not restoring you, and what you can actually do about each one starting tonight. Your brain moves through 90-minute cycles of light sleep, deep sleep, and REM sleep throughout the night. Deep sleep is where your body repairs tissue, balances hormones, and consolidates memory. REM sleep is where your brain processes emotion, regulates your nervous system, and integrates learning. When something disrupts those cycles, it does not matter how many hours you are in bed. You are simply not getting what you need. This episode walks through five specific drivers that disrupt those cycles, none of which require a prescription to address. Key Topics Covered in This Episode The difference between sleep quantity and sleep quality, and why hours in bed do not equal restoration How cortisol rhythm disruption causes you to feel wired at 10 PM and destroyed at 7 AM Why blood sugar instability is triggering middle-of-the-night cortisol spikes and what to eat to stop it How systemic inflammation interferes with sleep architecture and why women with autoimmune conditions, gut issues, and chronic stress feel like their sleep never restores them The liver's detox window and why waking consistently between 1 AM and 3 AM is a liver and cortisol signal How a nervous system stuck in sympathetic dominance prevents your body from being able to shift into rest and repair Specific, practical steps for each driver including nutrition, supplementation, breath work, and environmental changes A note on tracking your wake window pattern to identify which driver is most active for your body Amy also references the previous circadian rhythm episode as the foundational piece that leads directly into this conversation. If you have not heard that episode yet, it is worth going back to it first. Standout Moments From This Episode Amy explains that your cortisol rhythm is supposed to be at its lowest at bedtime, rise slowly through the night, and peak around 7 or 8 AM. That peak is what wakes you up feeling alive. When you are in chronic stress, that pattern flips entirely. She shares that the 1 AM to 3 AM wake window correlates with the liver's primary detoxification window in traditional medicine, and that there is real physiology to support it. If your liver is overwhelmed by hormone metabolites, environmental toxins, or alcohol, it signals stress, cortisol rises, and you wake up. On nervous system dysregulation, Amy explains that your body cannot distinguish between a stressful email and a physical threat. Information is stimulation. The wind-down window is not optional. It is medicine. One of the most actionable moments in the episode is the physiological sigh technique: a full inhale through the nose, followed by a sharp second inhale at the top, then a slow exhale through the mouth. This breath pattern activates the vagus nerve and begins shifting the nervous system into parasympathetic mode in minutes. Amy closes with an important reminder. Every one of these five things is addressable. None of them require something extreme. They require understanding what is happening and taking consistent, targeted action over time. This episode is for the woman who is done being told she is fine when she does not feel fine. It is for the woman who wants to understand what is actually happening in her body so she can do something real about it. If this episode connected with you, share it with a woman in your life who keeps saying she is exhausted but cannot figure out why. When you are ready to go deeper on sleep, hormones, nervous system regulation, and real protocols built for women, the Living Simpler Collective is where that work happens. Full courses, real implementation guides, and a community of women doing this work alongside you. Resources and Links Living Simpler App: https://living-simpler.com/app/ [https://living-simpler.com/app/] Living Simpler Collective: https://living-simpler.com/collective/ [https://living-simpler.com/collective/] Free Resources: https://living-simpler.com/resources [https://living-simpler.com/resources] Favorites: https://living-simpler.com/favorites/ [https://living-simpler.com/favorites/] Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/amymewborn [https://www.instagram.com/amymewborn] Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/shop/amymewborn [https://www.amazon.com/shop/amymewborn] Labs: https://partners.superpower.com/amy-mewborn [https://partners.superpower.com/amy-mewborn] Peptides: https://elliemd.com/livingsimpler [https://elliemd.com/livingsimpler] Peptide Partner Program: https://partner.elliemd.com/MemberToolsDotNet/EnrollmentV4/StartPublicEnrollment.aspx?EnrollmentCode=DEALER&referringDealerId=1019111 [https://partner.elliemd.com/MemberToolsDotNet/EnrollmentV4/StartPublicEnrollment.aspx?EnrollmentCode=DEALER&referringDealerId=1019111] #WakingUpExhausted #SleepQuality #WomensHealth #HormoneHealth #LivingSimpler
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