Your Best T1D Year

How to Use Your Overnight CGM Data to Improve Sleep and Blood Sugar

5 min · 17 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio How to Use Your Overnight CGM Data to Improve Sleep and Blood Sugar

Descripción

SHOW NOTES: You've been sleeping next to one of the most detailed health monitoring devices that exists. Every single night. For however many years you've had your CGM. It has been logging everything -- every rise, every drop, every 3am event, every overnight pattern. It has been very patient about all of this. Most T1D people use their CGM reactively at night. The alarm fires, you check, you respond or silence, you go back to sleep. What almost no one does is look at the full overnight graph proactively -- not to respond to a single moment, but to read the shape of the whole night. Your CGM shows you the dawn phenomenon, the post-exercise glucose drop, the cortisol spike, the active insulin tail. It has been a map this whole time. We've been treating it like a fire alarm. This is Week 7 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. This is the episode that changes how you use the device you already wear. In this episode: * The difference between reactive and proactive overnight CGM use * How to read the shape of an overnight graph -- not just the morning number * What the dawn phenomenon, exercise drops, and cortisol spikes look like in your data * Why your CGM graph is a map, not a report card * How one minute of overnight data review can improve the next night This Week's Challenge: Tonight, look at last night's full overnight CGM graph. The whole shape. Not to judge it. Not to fix it. Just to see what was there. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

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204 episodios

episode How to Use Your Overnight CGM Data to Improve Sleep and Blood Sugar artwork

How to Use Your Overnight CGM Data to Improve Sleep and Blood Sugar

SHOW NOTES: You've been sleeping next to one of the most detailed health monitoring devices that exists. Every single night. For however many years you've had your CGM. It has been logging everything -- every rise, every drop, every 3am event, every overnight pattern. It has been very patient about all of this. Most T1D people use their CGM reactively at night. The alarm fires, you check, you respond or silence, you go back to sleep. What almost no one does is look at the full overnight graph proactively -- not to respond to a single moment, but to read the shape of the whole night. Your CGM shows you the dawn phenomenon, the post-exercise glucose drop, the cortisol spike, the active insulin tail. It has been a map this whole time. We've been treating it like a fire alarm. This is Week 7 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. This is the episode that changes how you use the device you already wear. In this episode: * The difference between reactive and proactive overnight CGM use * How to read the shape of an overnight graph -- not just the morning number * What the dawn phenomenon, exercise drops, and cortisol spikes look like in your data * Why your CGM graph is a map, not a report card * How one minute of overnight data review can improve the next night This Week's Challenge: Tonight, look at last night's full overnight CGM graph. The whole shape. Not to judge it. Not to fix it. Just to see what was there. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

17 de jun de 20265 min
episode T1D Sleep Hygiene: The One Pre-Sleep Habit That Actually Makes a Difference artwork

T1D Sleep Hygiene: The One Pre-Sleep Habit That Actually Makes a Difference

SHOW NOTES: "Sleep hygiene" sounds like you're brushing your sleep's teeth. Nobody has ever said that phrase in a natural conversation. And this episode is not about a 12-step pre-sleep protocol that you'll implement on Monday and abandon by Wednesday when life gets in the way. It's about one thing. Just one. Because T1D brains are very good at building complicated systems -- we've been doing it since diagnosis -- and when we hear "build a routine," we design a fourteen-point optimization plan that fails by Wednesday, raises our cortisol, and disrupts our blood sugar. One anchor behavior, repeated consistently, is how habits actually form. You already have a pre-sleep T1D routine. We're extending it by about thirty minutes, in one direction. We're in Week 7 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. In this episode: * Why multi-step sleep protocols fail and what actually sticks long-term * The three pre-sleep candidate behaviors that research supports for T1D people * Why "the one that feels manageable" beats "the one that seems most impactful" * How to use your existing T1D bedtime routine as an anchor for one new behavior * What five nights of one habit actually tells you about whether it's working This Week's Challenge: Pick one of the three pre-sleep behaviors from this episode. Commit to it for five nights. Write down what you notice. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

15 de jun de 20266 min
episode Late-Night Exercise and Blood Sugar: What Your Evening Workout Does to Your T1D Overnight artwork

Late-Night Exercise and Blood Sugar: What Your Evening Workout Does to Your T1D Overnight

SHOW NOTES: Your Tuesday 8pm HIIT class has opinions about your 3am blood sugar. The data is pretty clear on this. Neil is giving you fair warning before the episode starts. This episode covers the timing of exercise and its downstream effects on both sleep quality and overnight glucose in type 1 diabetes. Afternoon and evening exercise produce very different results -- not because exercise is bad for T1D management (it isn't), but because your core body temperature, cortisol rhythm, and post-exercise glucose patterns interact with your sleep in ways that depend heavily on when you moved. The 8pm workout can raise core temperature, spike cortisol, and set up a 2am glucose drop that fires an alarm -- all without any other mistake being made. We're in Week 7 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. In this episode: * Why afternoon exercise (roughly noon to 6pm) supports better sleep and overnight glucose stability * What high-intensity evening exercise does to core body temperature and cortisol levels * How post-exercise glucose drops in T1D can create 2-3am lows and trigger alarms * What to look for in your overnight CGM data on workout days vs. rest days * How even a modest timing shift can meaningfully change the overnight picture This Week's Challenge: What time was your last workout? Pull up your overnight CGM from that night. Did anything look different than your non-workout nights? Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

12 de jun de 20267 min
episode T1D Sleep Stages Explained: Why You're Exhausted After 7 Hours of Sleep artwork

T1D Sleep Stages Explained: Why You're Exhausted After 7 Hours of Sleep

SHOW NOTES: You slept seven hours. By any reasonable measure, that should be enough. You woke up feeling like you slept four. You weren't imagining it. This episode breaks down sleep stages -- light sleep, deep sleep, REM -- and explains exactly where type 1 diabetes disrupts the sequence. The most important stage, slow-wave sleep (NREM Stage 3), is where your body does its deepest repair work: growth hormone release, cellular recovery, immune restocking, brain waste clearance. T1D adults get measurably less of it. Not because of anything you're doing wrong, but because T1D interrupts sleep architecture in ways that are documented in the research and that most T1D people were never told about. This is Week 6 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. This is the episode that explains WHY you're tired even when the hours were there. In this episode: * The 90-minute sleep cycle and what each stage actually does for your body * Why slow-wave sleep is the stage that matters most -- and why T1D adults get less of it * How every alarm, partial arousal, and cortisol spike sends your brain back to Level 1 * The difference between "not enough hours" and "disrupted sleep stages" -- they feel the same but aren't * How to check your deep sleep percentage if you have a wearable This Week's Challenge: If you have a wearable that tracks sleep stages, check last night's deep sleep percentage. The average for most adults is 15-20%. Just know your number. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

10 de jun de 20266 min
episode Fear of Hypoglycemia: The T1D Sleep Problem That Doesn't Show Up in Your CGM Data artwork

Fear of Hypoglycemia: The T1D Sleep Problem That Doesn't Show Up in Your CGM Data

SHOW NOTES: Your CGM says 115. Flat arrow. No active insulin. You've checked it twice. The number is completely fine. And you're still awake at 2:48am. This is not you being dramatic. This has a name: Fear of Hypoglycemia (FOH). It's a documented, peer-reviewed phenomenon in T1D populations -- a specific pattern of nighttime hypervigilance that persists even when blood sugar is stable. The anxiety is the disruptor, independent of the actual glucose level. And it's one of the most undernamed contributors to T1D sleep disruption. In this episode, Neil explains where Fear of Hypoglycemia comes from, why it makes complete sense that it developed, and why having the name for it changes how you relate to the 2am wake-up. Nobody told most T1D people this name. That's the problem this episode is here to fix. We're in Week 6 of the While You Were Sleeping Challenge. In this episode: * What Fear of Hypoglycemia actually is and what peer-reviewed research says about it * Why the overnight hypervigilance response is a rational system with an irrational trigger * The difference between "I'm being irrational" and "I have a documented T1D sleep phenomenon" * Why naming FOH changes how you relate to being awake at 2am with a perfect number * What comes next: what you can actually do about it This Week's Challenge: Have you ever been awake at 2am with a completely stable blood sugar and still couldn't sleep? Just acknowledge that it happened. That's the whole challenge. Helpful resources and newsletter: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Connect with Neil: TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@the.betes [https://tiktok.com/@the.betes] Instagram: https://instagram.com/thebetes [https://instagram.com/thebetes] Facebook: https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse [https://facebook.com/neilgreathouse] LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912 [https://linkedin.com/in/neil-greathouse-a607b912] Website: https://yourbestt1dyear.com [https://yourbestt1dyear.com] Books on Amazon: Type 1 Diabetes – One Day at a Time: https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ [https://a.co/d/6UHooWJ] Type 1 Diabetes – True Stories: https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1 [https://a.co/d/dfIlyI1]

8 de jun de 20267 min