Mark Bell's Power Project - MBPP EP. 627 - Get More Sleep In Less Time ft. Matteo Franceschetti
Episode Date: November 19, 2021Matteo is the Co-Founder and CEO of Eight Sleep, the sleep fitness company. Eight Sleep developed a proprietary technology which is redesigning sleep by developing cutting-edge AI and machine learning... models to track bio signals during the night and optimizing body recovery and rest while asleep. The end goal of the Pod is to compress sleep and scan your body while asleep to monitor your health. Eight Sleep is currently used by pro athletes and top performers across multiple industries and was recognized as one of TIME's "Best Inventions" in 2018 and 2019, was named one of Fast Company's "Most Innovative Companies" in 2018, and has raised over $150M in funding from leading investors, including Founders Fund, Softbank, Khosla Ventures, YCombinator, Valor Equity Partners, General Catalyst, Naval Ravikant, and Patrick Collison. Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Vertical Diet Meals: https://verticaldiet.com/ Use code POWERPROJECT for free shipping and two free meals + a Kooler Sport when you order 16 meals or more! ➢Vuori Performance Apparel: Visit https://vuoriclothing.com/powerproject to automatically save 20% off your first order! ➢Magic Spoon Cereal: Visit https://www.magicspoon.com/powerproject to automatically save $5 off a variety pack! ➢8 Sleep: Visit https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro! ➢Marek Health: https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT15 for 15% off ALL LABS! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: http://drinklmnt.com/powerproject ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Subscribe to the Power Project Newsletter! ➢ https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
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All right, guys, you saw that title. Today, we have Matteo Franceschetti on the podcast. Now,
Matteo is the co-founder and CEO of a company you may know, 8sleep, the sleep fitness company.
Now, 8sleep was named one of Fast Company's most innovative companies in 2018 and has raised over
$150 million in funding from leading investors. One of the big goals of 8sleep is to reduce the
time needed for recovery from eight hours to less than six hours. And we got a lot of great practical tips from Mateo on how to optimize our sleep in this episode.
So because the mattress is patented temperature control technology,
Eight Sleep has been nicknamed the Tesla of sleep.
And you know how much we like Teslas.
And sleep optimization is a massive part of your fitness journey.
So you're going to learn a lot in this episode with Mateo on how to optimize that
and get the most out of your sleep. Enjoy this one. I'm going to start over.
Sorry. Okay. We're good to go now. We're good. Matteo Francischetti or Francischetti. Okay.
You're part Italian. Why the fuck don't you know this? I know. We're childish over here.
At least I am.
I just keep saying that his name's making me hungry, but it's probably just because
I'm fat.
Matteo Francis Chetty.
Oh, that was good.
Yeah.
I dig that.
I dig it too.
Yeah.
How did we find this guy in SEMA?
He's the CEO of a company that we work with, Eight Sleep, who makes the amazing mattresses.
How the hell do you make a mattress?
I mean, there's like springs and shit in there.
No springs in the Eight Sleep mattress, actually.
No springs on me.
Not in the mattress, yeah.
Damn.
Or the mattress.
Yeah, I don't know.
And then it does ship in a pretty big box,
but you're like, how is a king-size mattress
inside this box?
But then you open it up, and it's like, okay.
And then, dude, it was like whoa like do i have
enough room for this oh they just have somebody sit on it right as they wrap it they fold it up
and have someone sit on it or i do want to say somebody with a very powerful suck to get all
the air out yeah that's what they do right they got some sort of packing thing that sucks all
that air out of there and crumples it down into a,
but it's kind of weird because the box is deceivingly heavy too.
Yeah. Because it has a mattress in there, but I think it's cool.
I don't know.
I'm not aware of what some of the other companies do that make similar products,
but I don't think they make mattresses, do they?
No, no, no, no.
Like I think the only other company that makes the technology like Eight Sleep, the cooling technology is the Chili, but they don't have a mattress that they use along with it.
That just seems like a tough way to do it.
And so congrats to them on like figuring that out because a lot of people don't have great mattresses.
And I think that, you know, that's one extra benefit is that you're not only going to, I mean, if you want, you can just buy the top
if you're already happy with your bed. But I like the fact that you can dive in and get a better
mattress because most people need a better mattress. Most people are not sleeping on a
mattress that really fits their needs and is really of good quality. And a lot of people don't
want to spend their money there because they're thinking like, oh, what's really the difference?
But you spend so much time, or at least you should be, you know, if you got good
sleep hygiene, spending minimum of six hours and hopefully you're getting closer to seven or eight
every single night, every single day. Yeah. So it's important. I got a notification just now,
actually. It said your sleep fitness is on a roll. Last night you hit your sleep duration goal by
sleeping seven hours and 19 minutes.
And, no, it's really dope.
Like it tracks your heart rate, slaps your respiratory rate, your heart rate variability.
You'll know if, like, you're sleeping well.
It's, like, it's really sick.
Yeah, my bed sends me text messages also.
It's my best friend, I guess, my only friend.
But, yeah, it says a new HR alert.
Feeling well rested today?
There's no coincidence.
Your resting heart rate was 6% lower than usual last night.
And I did wake up feeling pretty damn rested.
My son slapped the shit out of me.
It was probably around 4 o'clock.
He rolled over and just smack.
I'm like, oh, fuck.
I'm like, okay.
But I felt pretty good.
How old is your son?
Like 15?
Yeah, give or take. felt pretty good. And then. How old did you sound? Like 15? Yeah. Give or take.
A little bit over nine months.
But my watch had went off also.
And it showed that I was like already at like 90% rested.
And I still had time to sleep.
And so I'm like, dude, this is crazy.
And yeah, sure enough, like the bed told me that.
And I feel pretty good today, man.
Like I'm excited.
Dude, I was dying when i was
traveling oh no i'm like i need this i need to bring the eight sleep like uh top with me everywhere
i go my wife too we were dying we were like cold and then we were hot and we were like i don't know
we're just all screwed up the whole time like i can't fall asleep i'm like just laying here sweating
so uh it makes it makes a huge difference yeah
and then right now that it's getting colder i've adjusted my mattress to be a little bit warmer
not warm but warmer than it was and then my wife what number is it so right now i'm at
negative seven that's warmer for you yeah i had it at negative 10 the whole time that's true that's
true okay um so now that it's at seven because man dude i would get in at negative 10 and i'm
like oh shit i think i I spilled water on the bed.
Like, what's going on here?
I don't know if they make a top that has three different things, but they should for us because, you know, Andrew's got his particular way.
You got your particular way.
I got my particular way.
And if we're going to be sharing a bed together as much as we've been, you know, it would be good to get a third one in there, down the middle.
Power Project Special Edition.
Want to know something revolutionary that I saw while I was traveling?
Oh, God.
You guys aren't going to believe this.
You're going to be blown away.
In Copenhagen, individual blankets for a king-size bed.
Like just a long...
Oh, wow.
Yeah, two separate blankets.
They don't expect everyone to be...
And then we weren like fighting over the
blankets we weren't like pulling them off each other yeah you just had your own it was dope it
worked great i was like how this ain't gonna work it's gonna be weird it's not gonna work but totally
worked huh yeah maybe this is in the hotel right yeah maybe they just don't make king-size blankets
there maybe not maybe they just like copenhagen has maybe they would be blown away that we make one maybe they'd be like oh shit what the heck ball is modern
technology holla you guys see this like they wear the dmv for you oh my god tell that story oh yeah
yeah when they're like this guy's rich yeah wait what happened because mark had to or you tell it something happened like at the dmv where they were like um they were just like oh you know um like it's like
a five dollar charge or whatever to do it this way or whatever and i was like oh i was like i don't
oh they were just saying like you shouldn't do it that way because it costs five bucks and i was
like i just don't care since it was already like they were already processing it yeah and the guy that was
like uh working with me he's like he's like yo he's like this guy's rich he said like people
behind like people behind him and the lady uh came came over and she's like oh shit must be nice
everybody look at this guy he don't care it. It was like, I was seriously, whatever the charge was, like eight bucks or whatever.
It was hilarious.
And the guy's like, shit, man, eight bucks.
He's like, I can't believe it.
And he was just like, you know, he's messing around.
That's so funny.
But real quick before I forget.
So we've been talking about eight mattress.
They're incredible.
I have the mattress and the topper.
So as in SEMA, Mark has just the topper because he has his own mattress that he was already using previously. So if you do have your own mattress, you can just get the topper. So as in SEMA, Mark has just the topper because he has a, you know, his, his own mattress that he was already using previously. So if you do have your own mattress,
you can just get the topper. Or if you're like us and you wanted to get both, you can,
and you can do so at eight sleep.com. That's E I G H T sleep.com slash power project.
You will receive $150 automatically off the, uh, the topper or the mattress and the topper,
no code needed.
Just when you guys go to that website, you'll see a banner across the top saying that you're
automatically going to save $150 off.
Again, that's at 8sleep.com slash powerproject.
Links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
How are you guys using yours?
Are you having it do anything special to kind of wake you up?
Because the mattress and the topper or whatever can vibrate right or you can just have
just a certain type of temperature change right yeah i have mine so again like i start out the
night at minus seven and then um when i'm in REM sleep or whatever it's at like minus two
or i forgot the if it's deep sleep REM whichever one. And then as like the night goes on, it actually bump up to like a plus two.
So it's a little bit warm.
So like I don't wake up, like there's no chance of getting me up.
But then as I gets closer to 5am, it gets really hot, gets uncomfortably hot.
And then at five, it starts to vibrate around like my shoulders.
And so it slowly wakes me up and it doesn't like jolt me out of bed gives you a little pinch on the butt yeah a little something like
that and then on top of that it doesn't wake anybody else up which was like a huge problem
with an alarm clocks with a baby you know it's like if i wake him up like i am like not not a
nice person anymore you know so that's how i do it yeah i don't do anything i don't use the alarm
because because i wake up use the alarm because because
i wake up at the same time like every day so i just like generally just wake up um i do have
pretty cold at night though and then it does it's it's it so either you can set the way you want it
to go through the night as in like you can set it when you want it to heat up and cool down but i
just let it automatically do it based off of what it tracked in my heart rate and the way i sleep
it's set up a way that it heats up towards the time that I typically wake up and it's been working great.
Yeah.
Like my sleep has been pretty uninterrupted.
I don't do anything special with it either.
It's just, I just set it to like the coldest temperature pretty much and I just kind of roll with that.
I think it gets a little warmer about an hour or two after I'm sleeping.
Yeah.
Something like that because then it's too cold at some point.
You're like, holy shit, that's cold.
At first, I thought I'd be able to deal with it, but it gets a little too chilly.
Yo.
Yo.
How you doing?
What's up?
We're doing great.
How are you doing?
Good, good.
Excited to be here.
Yeah.
First of all, thank you so much for having your company sponsor our podcast.
We really appreciate it.
We're welcome and excited.
Let's just kind of dive in, if you don't mind.
How did you get this company started and kind of what led you down this path to start 8Sleep?
Yeah, I used to be an athlete.
And so I have always been in performance and recovery.
And so at a certain
point while I was a you know then I became an entrepreneur and so I started looking into my
sleep and seeing why do I have to sleep eight hours so I started reading a bunch of you know
medical and stuff and I realized that there is no real reason it's just the time that currently
takes to our body to fully recover and then I started wondering why Elon Musk is taking me to Mars
and I still spend a third of my life on a piece of dumb phone.
Why technology is not helping me?
And that is how everything started.
Do you believe that if people have higher quality sleep
that they may not need eight hours of sleep?
Yeah, I think we can compress sleep down to six hours.
Is that what you've seen? Yeah. Is that what you've seen a lot with people that have been
using the mattress? Yeah. Obviously, we are not at six hours yet. That is where we want to be,
but we already see people gaining minutes in terms of time asleep to gain the same sleep quality.
Our customers, they fall asleep 20% faster. They get 40% less toss and turns, 30% less wake-ups, up to 40% more deep sleep.
And so we are really improving the sleep efficiency,
which then means you can still sleep eight hours and just be way more refreshed,
or you can sleep less but still feel great um why
uh lean towards temperature you know a lot of people have experimented with like supplements
and a lot of different ways to sleep um what made you kind of lean towards that were you kind of
seeing some research or a trend and in being able to help someone's body temperature to help them
go to sleep better or help them get
into a deeper sleep? Yeah. Yeah. There is a plenty of medical evidence that temperature
is the big elephant in the room when you talk about sleep optimization. And this is also not
proven. If you start talking to people, they will start telling you, look, I fight with my partner
because my partner wants to sleep warmer.
I want to sleep colder.
Or sometimes they feel cold in the middle of the night, but hot in the first part of the night.
And the other big thing is we're not really reinventing the wheel.
Your body temperature is already changing during the night.
And so we just enhance these changes, which is your circadian rhythm and cycle.
enhance these changes which is your circadian uh rhythm and cycle um and so true temperature again uh there is plenty of evidence you fall asleep faster you get more deep sleep you get less wake
ups and less toss and turns how does it like because when i started using my mattress right
it would track the way i slept for a while then it would do its thing in terms of how much it
raises the temperature and whatever towards the way i wake up. How does the mattress know what to do or the
topper? Because I guess that's the technology of the mattress topper. Yeah. So we use a couple of
different biometrics. So on one side, we look at your heart rate, heart rate and HRV, respiration and sleep stages.
We look also simply at the weather.
We look at things like toss and turns.
And so in the future, particularly as we keep developing our machine learning models, there
will be all these factors that will be taken into consideration and the adjustment will
happen in real time.
We will be able to adjust temperature also based on things like what time you train.
Because let's say you just train one hour before going to bed,
probably your heart rate is accelerated and your body temperature is higher.
We can adjust it.
We will adjust based on if you had alcohol or not.
If you just tell us or you use any wearable that might know it,
because obviously wearable alcohol changes your body temperature
and your heart rate and HRV.
And so we're just at the beginning.
I always tell my company we are just at 1% of what we want to build.
But there are many factors that impact temperature.
What have you seen in terms of food?
We've heard all kinds of different things on the show
from many people that study sleep.
Have you noticed that, like, if some people have their last meal two to three hours before their sleep,
that they end up with better sleep?
Or have you noticed it assists people to fall asleep better if they have a kind of small snack before they go to bed?
Yeah, good question. And I'll share a couple of small snack before they go to bed? Yeah, great question.
And I'll share a couple of things.
So first, there is some research that says that, for example, if you eat carbs,
you will fall asleep faster, but the quality of your sleep should be lower, right?
So you will feel droggy, you will fall asleep,
but then the quality during the night will not be great.
Personally, I'm usually on a keto diet.
I cheat on Friday night when I have pizza with my wife.
Every Saturday morning, my biometrics proved that my heart rate at rest was higher than usual
and my HRV recovered less than usual.
So at least for me, carbs and pizza, they have a negative impact.
Then we have a tag in the app, and one that is called Late Meal.
We see a lot of customers tagging Late Meal,
and that usually is correlated with poor quality of sleep.
Usually you should stop eating three to four hours before
going to bed. Have you noticed that that includes like maybe even something smaller, like a protein
shake or anything like that? Have you kind of noticed, you know, if it's not maybe a full meal,
maybe you could still get away with having something a little closer to bedtime?
We don't know that. We are not asking yet. We we will i would imagine that if it's something lighter
and probably is not obviously sugar or carbs it might have a smaller impact or maybe no impact
definitely we know carbs has impact has an impact a full meal has an impact and obviously alcohol
is the other big factor, right?
If you have alcohol before going to bed, you will screw your sleep performance.
You know, you did mention HRV and a lot of people have heard the term HRV or heart rate
variability.
And there's a lot of different explanations for it.
But for athletes or just people, because you'll see it on the app, it tracks your HRV every
single night.
What does HRV tell you? So HRV is a great proxy about how rested you are, right? And you want HRV to be as
high as possible. So the higher, the better. And so HRV, the number is different from every person.
So you should just try to understand your baseline. And in our case, we show you what is
your baseline. And then you can start playing with now your fitness, your nutrition, and then you see
how that impacts your sleep. But the bottom line is when you go to bed, your HIV will be probably
the lowest of the day. And you want to see the delta and recovery compared to when you wake up
in the morning. And again, the higher, the better.
And if it's higher, it means you are fully rested and you can train harder that day.
Do you sleep well?
I know for some entrepreneurs and for some people that are getting after it every day,
for some folks, it's difficult.
Are you good at sleeping?
Yeah, I'm pretty good.
I still have what is called restless legs that are these sort of
cramps that sometimes I have in the middle of the night, but I tend to sleep more than eight hours
per night. So I sleep quite a bit. I'm obviously doing everything to optimize my sleep. Sometimes
I do sauna and ice bath. So what they call a thermal shock. Sometimes I take some supplements.
So what they call a thermal shock.
Sometimes I take some supplements.
I do kind of mobility exercises before going to bed.
All the lights in my house, they switch to orange a couple of hours before going to bed to stimulate melatonin.
And obviously temperature is the other big factor.
So the whole temperature of the bedroom and the bed is optimized for my sleep performance. I've had a lot of cramps in my legs
over the years as well, but I found that electrolytes seem to help quite a bit along
with magnesium supplementation. Not necessarily that I've noticed those things helping my sleep
at all, but I did notice that they definitely assisted in me not having cramps as much. So
have you noticed anything like that yourself?
Have you played around with some different things that may have helped the leg cramps?
Yeah, there are some studies that, yeah, they talk about magnesium and electrolytes.
I tried them.
It's always hard, or at least it was hard for me to have a very real statistical evidence
if they are working or not.
But it seems they are.
And so I would recommend everyone just try and see if they have a positive impact.
Personally, are there like, because on the app also, there's like a meditate section, a breathe section, a listen and a move section on the app, just for good sleep practices.
So for you, I noticed you
mentioned that you do some mobility sometimes, et cetera, but what, what would your suggestions be
for individuals as far as pre-sleep rituals? Just because a lot of people they'll be on their phone
right before they go to bed, but they don't really have a practice or something they do to wind
themselves down before they go to sleep. Yeah, that is a great question. Yeah, in the app,
we provide in our breathing exercises and meditation. At the end of the day, what I always
say is I don't think the problem is the phone itself, it's what you're doing at the phone,
right? If you're chatting with friends, with one of your closer friends, you're just having some
fun and relaxing, that's completely fine.
If you're not working on emails
and you just received a stressful email
from one of your customers,
then it could be pretty bad, right?
And then your mind keeps going.
So to me, it's first,
okay, what are you doing at the phone?
Are you reading?
Are you chatting with friends?
Try to take it easy.
At least one hour before going to bed,
try to wind down and do things that put you in a positive mood.
Maybe it's gratitude or just help you relax.
The other thing to me that works really well is, again, this thermal shock.
You can just do it with shower
and you keep switching between hot and cold shower, 30 seconds each.
That will help you relax.
Or if you are in a hotel and if you can take a sauna and an ice bath,
that will take all the stress away.
Or then, yeah, you can just do meditation and breathing.
There is plenty of medical evidence that they both help you to just wind down and relax before bed.
Millions of people suffer from sleep apnea.
Do you guys have anything in the works to try to research that and try to,
it seems to be really complicated because as a power lifter, former power lifter,
and being around big people for over the years, it kind of makes sense that some of these bigger
people suffer from sleep apnea.
But even when people lose weight, and I even know, I think Andrew ends up having some issues
with snoring. I know some people that aren't particularly huge that still have issues with
this. Is there any, you guys looking into anything like that that could perhaps help
some folks that have sleep apnea? Yeah. The most interesting thing is this.
There is a large segment of population that has sleep apnea. But I would say, based on what I
read, 50 to 70% of them, they don't even know they have sleep apnea, which is interesting and
dangerous, right? The reason is, yeah, maybe now you're snoring. You just say, oh, I'm just
snoring. Now my partner told me, but I don't want to go to a sleep clinic. It's too invasive and
it's a pain. And so one of the things that we will solve will be to potentially identify sleep
apnea for all our customers in the future. The other big thing is obviously if you have a very heavy sleep apnea, you will likely
need a CPAP machine, which sucks. But if you have a light or mild sleep apnea and you just want to
monitor it, not to make sure that it's not now becoming deeper and heavier, that is where we
can help as well. Because with our product, you don't have to wear anything, but we will be able to monitor your respiration.
Oh, go ahead.
I was going to ask.
So, I mean, with the different types of sleep, right?
Light sleep, deep sleep, REM sleep, which phase of sleep helps us feel more rested?
Or is it just like in general getting more sleep?
Because like we were just talking before you came on how today I feel fantastic today. Like I got really great sleep last night. Um, my eight
sleep, um, app mentioned that my HRV was lower today and that that's probably why I feel more
rested. But if there was a certain type of sleep that I would try to get better at, which one is
it that will help make me feel more rested the next day? Yeah. So at the end of the day, what really matters is deep sleep and REM,
right? And they should be anywhere between 18 and 25%. Usually if they are above 20 is what
would be a pretty good sign and recommended. And so you're really talking about probably around
two hours each, right? If you
think eight hours and you're saying 25%, two hours of deep and two hours of REM is what would be
optimal. And it could be an hour and a half, but you want to be in that range. And deep sleep is
the part that is really important for your physical body to recover. So in particular,
if you are an athlete, that is what you should heavily look at. But then also the REM part is extremely important, but that is more focused
on your brain, right? And so making sure that you are relocating all the information that you have
collected during the day. And so as an athlete, for example, even if you're just learning a new
movement that you want to fine tune REM is
still very important for you REM is also the phase of the night when we dream and usually tends to be
predominant in the second part of the night while instead in the first part of the night deep sleep
is what is predominant and if we don't so I mean I don't know if I dream and I just forget them
or if I just completely don't dream anymore but I usually don't remember or I don't so i mean i don't know if i dream and i just forget them or if i just completely don't
dream anymore but i usually don't remember or i don't think i have dreams last last night i did
dream um halo just came out and i was playing halo late last night and i dreamt about playing
halo so i definitely had a dream last night but i more than more often than not like I'm talking like maybe a couple times a month I
will remember that I had a dream does that mean that I'm not getting my REM sleep or could it be
something else it could be that just you just don't remember them I struggle to remember them
as well but I still have a healthy amount of of REM So there is where sleep trackers like 8sleep or others
could become valuable.
So you just check your metrics and you make sure
that REM and DEEP are in a healthy state.
At the same time, it could be that maybe you don't have REM
and at that point, we could take it offline
and we could explore different tests that you could do to improve your RAM percentage and quantity.
I'm curious, since you know a lot about wearables, since the mattress itself tracks all these metrics, which is fucking amazing.
But what wearables do you think would be something that people could look into that would actually be good for sleep?
Because things like the Apple Watch or the the you know the or rings or rings yeah but which ones do you
think do a good job of it yeah i mean first of all um i think the whole wearable market will
keep improving a lot right we all these companies including ourselves they keep developing new
sensors and so sometimes you know five years ago people were saying oh some of these devices are improving a lot, right? All these companies, including ourselves, they keep developing new sensors.
And so sometimes, you know, five years ago,
people were saying, oh, some of these devices are not very accurate.
But day after day, we are all becoming more accurate.
In our case, we are close to,
we are comparable to a medical grade EKG,
which is the device to track your heart rate.
We are within one heartbeat per minute
compared to a medical grade EKG, right?
So, and I'm sure the same is happening to other wearables.
So there are companies like us and others.
I think the advantage that we have compared to some of these other players
is in our case, you don't have to wear or charge anything.
I don't like to have a wearable on my wrist at night
because I put my hand under the pillow.
It's super annoying.
I don't like to charge them because sometimes I forget to charge it.
Or I struggle when I travel because then I need to remember their charger
and then I don't have it.
And so this thing, when I need it because I'm traveling, it's not useful.
But at the end of the day, it's a personal choice.
Again, in our case, nothing to wear.
Then there are some rings.
Then there are other wearables that you just put on your wrist.
What you will see is that all these devices are becoming extremely accurate
in terms of heart rate.
So the heart rate is a metric that you can really trust most of the times.
It's almost medical grade accurate or very close.
The second dimension would be respiration,
which is still important for snoring sleep apnea.
Temperature can be very accurate.
And sleep is actually probably still the least accurate
because the most accurate way to track your sleep
will be through EEG, so through brain
waves. But to collect your brain waves, you will have to wear a device on your head, which customers
don't want to wear. And so what wearables are doing is they are inferring sleep through other
metrics, which are heart rate, respiration, and movement.
And the respiration thing was pretty freaking cool.
One thing that I noticed is that I use mouth tape when I sleep. Okay. So there's,
so that I like breathe through my nose when I sleep. And one thing that I noticed is that
when I use mouth tape, I always need less sleep. Like I always wake up 30 to 45 minutes earlier
than if I don't use mouth tape.
It's pretty consistent too.
But I also noticed that my respiration goes down by like one breath.
So have you, like, how does it track respiration?
How important is that for people to pay attention to?
Because the average is 12 to 20.
And do you, have you messed with mouth tape or have you talked to people who mess with
mouth tape at all?
Not much.
I mean, I have read a bunch about that.
I didn't try it yet.
So this is super interesting for me.
Thank you for sharing.
We should actually probably add the tag in the app
so people using it, they can tag it.
And then we can see the alt tags compared to people
that are not using it or, you know,
you could just A- b test yourself with and
without um the obviously respiration was super important during covid and it's still important
because there's still covid around uh is also another metric that changes um also over time
there is another big value that we have as aid sleep is our retention once you buy our product
you keep using it every single day for multiple years.
And so the interesting thing is your heart rate today and your respiration today is different
from your heart rate and respiration in three years from now.
And so just setting these baselines and see how they change over time, they will start
helping us to give you information about how you're aging and your general health trends.
What do you think the possibilities are for the future?
Since it does track everything for years of people who are using the mattress.
So for those people who have been using the mattress for a long time, maybe what things
could they be looking forward to?
Yeah.
Look, last week I received a message from our customer saying that we just saved his life, right?
And he used the word, you guys saved my life.
This person was now feeling well.
He checked his metrics. The metrics were all over the places.
And he went straight to ER and he got into a surgery immediately.
So we are going to save lives. We already saved the first one, at least the first one that we know. Probably we
already saved a couple. And our goal is to save millions of lives just by measuring your health
every single day and night. It should be noted that people die from sleep apnea. I think that
sometimes people don't recognize that as a problem, but one of the great American football players, Reggie White, he unfortunately died, and I have a friend that also died from sleep apnea. So it's something that if somebody believes they have it, they should really investigate it.
What about being able to track other metrics like maybe your glucose or maybe your insulin or, yeah, being able
to find other things to track during your sleep?
Look, the big advantage we have compared to wearables is we have a lot of space, right?
And because our price point is obviously higher than the one of a wearable, at the same time,
we have more flexibility in introducing new sensors, right?
For us, adding a five bucks sensor doesn't really move the needle in terms of our margins.
And so what you will see over the next few years is we will leverage this space and this
price flexibility, and we will add sensors that no other company can afford.
So we are looking at technologies for body scanning.
In three to five years from now,
going to bed will be more valuable than going to your doctor for an MRI. We will scan your body
every single night. Yeah, that's amazing. In the topper, where is some of these sensors? Because
I know for sure that the things that vibrate to wake me up in the morning, they're right around
my shoulder area, which is perfect. But everything else, I'm just amazed at the things that vibrate to wake me up in the morning. They're like right around my shoulder area, which is perfect.
But like everything else, like I'm just like amazed at the technology that's inside it.
And I was just kind of looking at it the other day.
I'm just like, where are all these sensors?
I'm just curious, like physically, like where are they?
Are they throughout the entire thing?
Or are there certain points that match up with your body?
There are certain points, points that we studied
and tested for a while
in order to make sure
that they were the best spots
to pick up your biometrics, right?
In particular, heart rate and respiration.
And then over time,
we will keep adding more and more sensors.
Almost every year,
as we release a new product version,
there will be new sensors
distributed across the whole bed obviously you don't feel them because they are embedded
in in the bed or the cover itself um but but they are there pat project family what's up have you
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Andrew, can you tell the people how to get it?
Yes.
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Get any four flavors you want, but you're only going to pay for three of them.
That's again at drink l m n t dot com slash power project Links to them down in the YouTube description, as well as the podcast show
notes. Head over there right now. You mentioned tracking sleep through your head. Why not
potentially put some sort of tracking device on like an eye mask or something like that?
Yeah, we're exploring those options as well. The challenge is always, will people wear it?
And will they wear it consistently, right?
Because the last thing you want is, okay, they buy the device,
they use it for 20 days, and then they stop using it
because they need to charge it because it's uncomfortable.
And so at that point, it's not valuable for the customer
and it's not valuable for us because there is no long-term retention.
valuable for the customer and it's not valuable for us because there is no long-term retention.
So one of the pillars of the company of 8sleep is really, can we develop contactless technologies
so you don't have to wear or charge anything, but they still track and measure your health?
Then if we cannot achieve it in a contactless version, then we will develop a wearable.
All right.
That's okay.
I see.
So a tracking pillow, perhaps.
Have you guys,
because I know you guys work with different sports teams and a lot of top-level athletes.
So I'm just curious on the trend that you've seen with those athletes
because a lot of people that listen to this podcast are athletes
and they want to optimize their performance.
So I think you guys work with like the kings and um there's some top level
crossfitters and strongmen that also sleep on the eight sleep so can we talk about some of that
yeah we have um we we we work with the kings uh the justin who just won the crossfit games
is living on our product and he's an eight sleep athlete. There is another eight sleep athlete who was having a major fight match a couple of weeks
ago in New York.
And then he reached out publicly saying, I cannot sleep here without my pod.
Please not ship me a pod.
And so overnight we were able to install a pod in his hotel before the match.
And so that was pretty cool
that we have tennis players we have an nba and nfl athletes um i mean what they realized very
quickly is first temperature just improves you know the just the comfort and feeling of your
sleep but more than anything improves the your performance. And when you are an athlete, you're not playing for a gold medal.
There is nothing that you can leave on the table.
And so you will see our products being used by more and more athletes.
Every day more athletes reach out to sleep on A-Sleep.
How do you travel?
When you travel, are you kind of frustrated that you don't have it with you at all times?
Or do you have some sort of special portable one that we don't know about yet yeah it sucks
it's actually the biggest pain point for our customers because at the end of the day temperature
you just get used to that so easily and so quickly it's like having a thermostat at home
right once you have it you just, how did I live without that?
Think of going in a car without AC, like in the 80s, right?
You say, how did they live in the 80s without AC in the car and just now moving the windows
up and down?
So the same thing happens with the pod.
But today, unfortunately, when you travel, you still go back to the 80s and you sleep
on a piece of dumb foam that just becomes hot and you start struggling.
And so that is the biggest aha moment for all our customers.
And maybe customers can handle that.
But for athletes, it's a big pain, right?
Like this guy, you know, he just reached out to us.
He tagged me on Twitter and said, I just need a pod.
I can't sleep like that.
And I can't compromise my performance. So we are exploring ideas about how to fix the problem when
people are troubled. The thing that I always end up talking about when I mention mattress,
because it's the biggest thing for me, I'm a sweaty sleeper, and you're a sweaty sleeper too.
There'd be multiple mornings when I would wake up in a puddle of my own sweat and then the worst part is if i'm
cuddling with somebody they don't want to cuddle with a moist sweaty dude but this mattress man
i can cuddle and wake up and we're still like and then like it's like it's great neither of us are
sweating it's perfect yeah 50 of us are sweating. It's perfect. Yeah. 50% of the couples, they fight around temperature.
Temperature is so personal.
It's based on your gender.
It's based on your size.
It's based on your metabolism and all that.
And so particularly between men and women, there are major differences.
And so usually women tend to feel cold while men tend to feel hot.
And so you need a personalized temperature setting.
Any specialized blankets in the works or pillows?
Yeah, and the idea is how do we control the whole environment, right?
And it's not just about temperature.
We will tackle light, noise, air quality, potentially oxygen.
I'm curious about this. Most most mattresses whenever they're marketed
they're like oh yeah this mattress has different levels of stiffness or you can get this version
that's softer stiffer whatever right um when you guys like you guys the big thing is temperature
and then there is the pod itself the the actual mattress that comes in one level of stiffness i
believe is that that big of a deal?
Or is this just something that mattress companies, they market because that's what every other
company markets?
Because you don't see other companies marketing temperature.
No other company really does that.
Look, in the bed space, there is a lot of BS, right?
It's like when they try to sell you that, you know,
you should buy a thicker mattress because it's more comfortable.
Usually you don't feel anything below two inches.
Call it four if you want to have a lot of margin.
So everything else is just there to justify a higher price.
In terms of comfort, yeah, you probably have a different preference from mine.
But once you pick it the first night, then that's it for the rest of the lifetime of the product.
And so we don't want to charge customers 5K for something that they use once.
At that point, we use data to identify different type of firmness.
Right now, we offer one.
Maybe in the future, we offer multiple.
But you shouldn't pay 5K for that.
Maybe pay 20 bucks just because
we buy a different layer of foam.
At the end of the day, foam is just a commodity.
You could start a mattress company
today. You just call a foam manufacturer.
I can give you the number and they will ship you the
mattress at 300 bucks.
But then they charge you 1,000 or
they charge you 2,000
and it's just a scam.
With all the technology that's in the mattress and in the app,
how easy is it for 8Sleep to send firmware updates and that sort of thing?
Because it is kind of a higher price point to get in,
and I would just hate to have purchased the 8Sleep mattress,
and then all of a sudden, a couple weeks down the road, it's like oh here's the new new pod pro so what's the um yeah like how long is like
the life cycle of one of these mattresses and how easy is it for new updates and new features to be
implemented inside a a mattress with what's already inside right now. Yeah, absolutely. That is why now our customers,
they call us the Tesla of sleep, which is something we are really proud of. The reason is
you get software updates. So you wake up one morning and by the time you go to bed that same
night, your product will have new and more features, right? So actually the value of your
investments keeps going up over time.
There is almost capital gain.
And the reason is all these features are shipped through your Wi-Fi for free.
And so your product, now you buy a product today,
buying one year from now, you might have two, three X more features.
It would be two, three X more accurate because our algos keep improving
and they are just shipped to a firmware update.
So that is the real disruption here.
It's not even what you buy today.
It's what the pod today will become in one year, two years, and three years from now.
I own my own business and have some of my own inventions and creations and stuff, but I find that what you've done and what your company has done to be
kind of mind-boggling in my opinion, because I'm like, how the hell did this guy figure out how to
make a mattress and then put all this technology? What were some of the key components in being able
to start this company? It sounds like, just in my estimation, I would assume that you have
previous businesses that you must have started to where you
kind of had some knowledge going into this on how to have a plan of attack. Did you assemble a
really good team? Was that kind of one of the key ingredients or how do you see it?
Yeah. So this is my third business. But yeah, obviously the key was first, I was in on the
founding team. So my co-founders, they were all extremely relevant.
In particular, one of my co-founders, Max, he's the CTO.
He's the technical genius who can build a spaceship in the garage in one night.
And so he was able to build the first prototype.
And obviously there is Alexandra.
She runs all of our branding and marketing.
But all the original people have been key.
Obviously, hardware is hard, right?
And I had to move to China for a couple of months at a certain point because we were not finding a manufacturer.
And so I went to my wife and I say, look, I'm going to China.
And she said, oh, cool.
When?
Tomorrow.
I said, oh, wow.
When are you back?
And I say, oh, once I have fixed it, the problem.
I say, okay.
And so bottom line, I think I was there for a couple of months.
And then I finally was able to come back.
And so it's not easy.
I had no experience in hardware at all.
None of the co-founders had experience.
And so you just need to be resourceful
and go through the pain.
How did you find a good team?
Because I think that that's a really difficult process
to try to go through.
How did you find some of these people
to put this kind of dream team together here?
It takes time.
It requires you to be very passionate about the mission
because at the end of the day,
in particular in the early days,
when you didn't already prove private market fit,
people just really bet on the other people in the team
and you need to sell them a vision.
And you will make mistakes, in particular if you don't know hardware and you need to sell them a vision. And you will make mistakes,
in particular if you don't know hardware
and you need to hire hardware people, right?
It's extremely difficult.
So then some investors or other friends
with experience in the field, they might help.
One thing I'm really, I want to know is like,
you know, you started this company,
you had two other businesses,
but I don't know, maybe I'm not noticing. How did you come to focus on, on sleep? Cause I don't know what other businesses you were in before, if it was something within the health space,
but now just dumping into, I'm going to make really dope temperature controlled mattresses.
I'm just curious how the idea came to be, because think the we were talking about this earlier the only
other product that we know that does something like this is maybe chili but they don't have
near what this mattress topper has yep it was the combination of two things the good or bad
the first one is as an entrepreneur i wanted to sleep less and recover faster. So I could gain
time. And that is how and why I started looking into sleep. Then as a former athlete, I also
started thinking, okay, what else can we do here? Can I enhance my recovery? Can I scan my body to
identify early signs of illnesses? And so that is how everything started.
And it was on my head for a couple of years before starting AIDS sleep,
because that is when I started really wondering,
why do I have to spend a third of my life on a piece of dumb food?
If you think the time you spend asleep every night is almost equivalent to fly
from New York to Europe every single day.
So you're taking an intercontinental flight every single night, but you spend that on
a piece of damp foam and you're not putting any effort in maximizing that time.
But that time is a lot of time.
And that is how everything started.
Then I was curious, started looking into research.
Why do we sleep eight hours? Can I sleep
six hours? And the bottom line is we don't need that light sleep. It's just our body being
inefficient. What you really need is 25% of deep, 25% of REM, and then the rest maybe can be cut.
And that is also how the name Eight Sleep came out. Because Eight Sleep comes from eight hours.
We don't believe in eight hours of sleep.
We believe that you must be able to sleep only six hours and get the same amount of rest that you used to have when you were sleeping eight hours.
Arnold Schwarzenegger has the legendary quote where he says, I suggest that you sleep faster because you do spend so much time asleep.
sleep faster because you do spend so much time asleep. It's a big deal nowadays to try to find more things to assist with stress mitigation. People have a lot of stress, anxiety. We see
more and more anxiety, depression, addiction. There's lots of stuff flying around these days
that seems to be more prevalent than ever. And I think it is a really
important factor that you work on your sleep. And sometimes I've tried a lot of different
supplements over the years. I've tried a lot of different regimens and I've never really found
anything other than messing around with the temperature control and using your product
to be able to actually really truly assist with my sleep. I've tried magnesium and zinc and just any suggestion anyone can think of that's listening
to this right now. I've utilized all those things. I would say that stopping my eating early before
bed, that was another thing that assisted quite a bit. But yeah, this technology has helped
me massively. And I'm sure some of the listeners that have utilized the technology probably know
what I'm talking about. Yeah. Temperature is, again, the big elephant in the room is the 80-20
of sleep enhancement. That is why we started there. Then I think other things could be,
you know, sleeping in a completely dark environment.
It could be eliminating any sort of noise.
It could be air quality.
It could be oxygen.
You have heard of athletes sleeping in altitude tents.
So we are looking into that as well.
The idea is, again, in a few years from now, the whole environment will be personalized and optimized to maximize your sleep so you will sleep faster.
And at the same time, during that time, we'll scan your body to detect any early sign of illness or potential injury if you are an athlete, right?
So any sort of inflammation.
I always thought you should sleep in something that kind of looks like a coffin, you know, or a tube or something like that.
With a helmet and all that stuff. I'm
curious. So for, um, I hear a lot of, I'll say non-athletes, uh, claim that they like,
oh, I can't fall asleep or I, my sleep sucks. I can't go to sleep. Like I just sit there in bed
and I don't fall asleep. I just sit there and, you know, twiddle my fingers or whatever. Um,
we had talked about, you know, being on your phone, but you had mentioned maybe it's like what you're doing on your phone is preventing you from falling asleep. What do
you think are some of the things that people or general population, again, non-athletes are doing
that's preventing them from falling asleep faster and staying asleep?
Yeah, I would say outside temperature optimization, I think alcohol has a major impact.
Again, you should stop drinking three to four hours before going to bed.
And it's also a matter of how much you drink, right?
So one cocktail is different from four cocktails.
Is the last meal of the day when you had it and how heavy it was?
And then I think it's a matter of winding down
from things that now keeps you stressed.
Again, I don't think the problem is using the phone or not.
The problem is what you're doing at the phone.
If you're working or if you're reading
or fighting with someone versus maybe,
you know, talking to a close friend
and closing the day with a positive attitude.
You mentioned earlier about being an athlete.
What kind of athlete were you and what do you do nowadays
to kind of challenge your physicality and fitness?
Yeah, I was mainly a tennis player, but I have also been a ski racer
and then I race with cars quite a bit.
That's why there is a helmet there with one of my trophies
and today I still play
tennis, I still race cars
from time to time and then I just
do a lot of heat
so high intensity interval training
and yeah I try to stay fit
and take care of my health
I'm on a keto, I fast
I usually eat once a day. And I cheat
from keto once a week on Friday night. Yeah, you use a tremendous amount of fasting.
You look like you're in great shape. You look like you're lean. So what's the reason for the
implementation of so much fasting? I just find it useful for my performance. I can perform the
whole day without any drop in terms of energy or any grogginess. And my body works well. I have
used CGMs for quite a while. And I have noticed that my glucose levels, they stay stable, even if
I don't eat. And I'm lucky that I don't get hungry.
Well, for example, my wife tried to do the same and I was pushing her to do the same,
but then with the CGM, we noticed that her glucose levels were dropping below the minimum.
And so it was not good for her. And this goes back to my point where health needs to be
personalized. It's different for everyone.
But yeah, generally, I love ketone fasting.
They keep my energy up and I'm able to perform at peak performance.
Do you do anything during your day
to personally stave off hunger for yourself?
Because at the beginning of October,
we did something called Sober October,
but none of us drink a lot of alcohol
or do anything crazy.
So these two are like, let's get rid of drinking coffee.
And once I got rid of drinking coffee, I bitched out of it at like day six.
I was like, fuck you guys.
I'm drinking coffee because fasting is harder.
So for you, are you just able to not eat or do you use tools to fight off hunger during the day?
Good question.
By the way, I stopped drinking as well. I think now it's two years and a half. I don't drink at all. Alcohol or coffee?
Yeah, alcohol. I still have coffee. I have around two espresso a day in terms of coffee.
For food, most of the times, no. What I do if I'm hungry, at that point, I break the fasting with nuts or with berries.
That's the only thing I eat if I'm really starving.
Other than that, usually I just challenge myself and I wait until 7.30, 7 p.m. when I eat.
I got to ask, because you were talking about racing,
is that a picture of your Z in the background?
It looks like a Z.
I'm not 100% sure, but is that one yours?
The one in the back?
Yeah, the car.
Yeah.
No, yeah, that is just a model that my wife bought it for me,
but the helmet is my helmet,
and that is when I finished third at the 12 hours of Abu Dhabi.
I raced with the Maserati GT.
Yeah.
And so we finished third.
And so I'm pretty proud of that accomplishment.
I bet keto and fasting definitely helps with that, right?
Yeah, 100%.
Oh, my God.
That's sick.
Awesome.
Congratulations on all the success.
We really, again, we appreciate,
uh,
you supporting this podcast and we appreciate that you made a great product.
Congratulations on all the success and hopefully a lot more is coming down the
road.
Thank you.
Thank you very much.
And thank you for having me.
Yeah.
Thanks for your time.
Have a great day.
All right.
See you later.
Bye.
Yo,
that was great.
It was,
I'm excited to see like, cause it really is like the Tesla of fucking mattresses because it's updating.
Oh, for sure.
I think it helps, too, that when the CEO is a savage, you know, when you see the guy that's behind it and, you know, that guy doesn't have to be doing some of the things he's doing.
Like, he looks great.
Like, he looks like he's really fit.
Looks like he's in great shape.
Uh, it's probably not a lot of reasons for him to like, you know, only eat one meal a day, but it's helping him, you know, from a mental standpoint.
So he leans into it, leans into that discomfort a little bit.
And it's also, I find it dope that like the whole, the whole point of it is to try to
sleep less.
Cause like we, like when you really do think about it, when I was younger, I didn't really think that much about the mattress I was sleeping on.
I would just go to sleep, wake up, and be like, whatever.
Well, that was a good night.
That was a bad night.
But more average-ass nights than good nights.
But then once I actually started sleeping on a good mattress, specifically this one, I noticed a big difference.
It's substantial when you actually pay attention to the thing you're sleeping on.
I don't think a lot of people do that.
Yeah, no more guessing, right?
You're just kind of like throwing darts at a board.
Like, oh, I got good sleep last night.
I wonder why.
Like, oh, I felt like shit again today.
I wonder why.
Now you actually have something that's going to track and tell you, like, hey, you're good to go today.
Go, you know, have a workout, whatever you want to do.
I like that.
I think most people need some help with their sleep, and they might not even just recognize it.
Think back to when you were a teenager.
You could sleep like a king, you know.
You could sleep forever.
And, I mean, you really don't remember or recall, like, really being tired unless your parents are trying to make you do something you didn't want to do.
And you're all of a sudden tired, right?
Just waking up early was hard.
Yeah.
Once you get going.
Well, it's because you went to bed late, right?
But then you sleep till like 12 in the afternoon or some shit, depending on if you have any responsibilities for that day at all.
But I think most people could use a little, a little boost in their sleep.
And so it's definitely worth, uh, worth looking into and worth giving a shot. Yeah. Yeah. No,
it's so sick. And again, the big, a really big, cool thing we've mentioned this before is that
like, it's the technology, like the mattress is really dope, but if you already have a mattress
and you're like, I just want to use my mattress, you can literally just get the top or put it on
top of your mattress. And now you have a neat sleep. The to use my mattress, you can literally just get the topper, put it on top of your mattress,
and now you have a neat sleep.
The mattress is great too, but like you, you just put the topper on.
So it works.
You can just do that. I'm fascinated by the fact that they're looking into oxygen
and that sort of thing.
That is really, really interesting.
I've kind of felt this way a long time about sleep.
I felt like you should be in some sort of pod.
I don't know why.
I don't know what happened to us along the way.
I don't know why we're not as efficient at sleep as we like.
I don't know.
We should just naturally like fall asleep very easily and you shouldn't really have any problems with it.
But maybe just so much modern technology maybe over the years has kind of just thrown us off to the point
where it makes it difficult for us to sleep because we have so much stimulation every single day
yeah like being able to sleep like on the hard surface ground now if i did that i'd probably
wake up with like a really bad back yeah i'd be screwed but then also the opposite if i slept on
something too soft i'd feel the same way yeah So, yeah, who knows what happened. Did you wake up with some wood after having that dream about playing that video game?
Be honest, bro.
Hardest he's ever been, probably.
How did you know?
Robbing.
Were you there?
Holy shit.
I know the two veins on the bottom are kind of weird.
It's just on the right side.
Yeah, what else does that thing track that we don't know about?
Weren't you talking about that?
You were talking about how it needs to track your boners to make sure that your test levels are good?
Actually, that would be a good idea.
We should track your heart rate during sex.
Well, I know my watch does.
It does.
Why did we do this to ourselves?
But you also had given him an oh about the mouth tape thing like adding adding that in there so we should say like i don't know did you
have a boner when you woke up like yes i did oh that explains why your bed has a hole in it and
you know there's water everywhere but as joel green said at least for men that is that is a
teller of health like
do you still have morning wood not in all seriousness like do you still have morning
wood yes cool no might want to get that yeah yeah you might have to look into figuring out
some more shit to do with your sleep and you know you can do at home sleep studies
um do that i will work on trying to find a link for people. The name's not coming to me right now, but maybe I can get it to you later and throw it in the show notes.
Because, man, people need to take this seriously.
I mean, if you're trying to lift, you're getting some other form of exercise. You're trying to be lean.
You're trying to gain muscle or whatever these particular goals are that you have.
I mean, they're just going to be really kind of just not optimized if you're not getting proper sleep.
Yeah.
If you want to live honestly, like, I mean, thinking about it, like this, they're definitely prolonging people's lifespans because sleep is where you
recover it's where your muscles recover it's where your brain's able to you know repair repair so
quite literally the better quality sleep you get bar tragedy you will live a longer life i also
wonder um it seems like women sleep way easier than us.
And I don't know why, but I mean, at least my wife just,
I mean, she goes to bed and she's just out cold and then she's up in the morning swimming and just,
I don't know, maybe that's part of the reason
why they live longer and stuff like that too.
I don't know what it is with chicks, but they're i don't know slight hypothesis okay okay so he mentioned all
jordan peterson on us no no i'm gonna get us in trouble no he mentioned how um women tend to be
uh they tend to prefer prefer warmer temperatures and men tend to prefer cooler mattress temperatures. I've noticed that too.
They tend to prefer warmer. I always tend to prefer cooler. Um, but most mattresses themselves
are always going to be warm. If you're using a blanket and a mattress, most of the time you're
going to be warm. It's got one way to go. It's not going to get cold. It's not going to get
cold. It's just going to get warmer. right? So ladies are usually getting better sleep, probably on average more than men.
Right?
I mean, if that's what their data, and they have thousands of data points from tens of
thousands of men and women on a pod.
So that's the averages.
That's probably the averages for people too.
Yeah.
Sometimes you just see women, like when you're out in the street, sometimes you're just like
in a t-shirt and you walk by them and they're like shivering and they got like two jackets on or something.
Yeah, yeah.
You're like, damn, they're cold for whatever reason.
But maybe for some particular instances, like going to sleep, maybe it's super helpful, super useful.
Yeah, it makes sense.
My wife has her side of the bed, I think, just plus two throughout the entire night.
Plus two through the entire night?
Mm-hmm.
Bruh, my mattress would be wet if I did that.
It'd just be, I'd be in a puddle.
Yeah.
No, I don't, it's partially because, you know, Aurelius will go from his crib to our bed,
so I think she doesn't want it too hot or too cold.
But, yeah, I don't know.
I keep telling her like
oh just like let it do its thing and let it adjust and she's like no i want to make it so that way
it's comfortable for him maybe it is comfortable for him oh yeah my wife just has some crazy
genetics too because like i've struggled with sleep i wake up a lot in the middle of the night
and uh you know i'll tell her about this or that and she might have like a bad night of sleep here
or there and uh i think maybe it was a couple weeks ago.
I don't know.
Something was going on where she just didn't get much sleep for a little period of time.
And she was just like dying.
I was like, that's the way I feel sometimes because that's kind of what I suffer from because I wake up quite a bit.
And sometimes I just have a hard time getting back to sleep.
But I think overall, I think my sleep has improved a lot, especially since getting this.
And I just – one of the things that's hard for me is like I just sometimes don't really – I don't really want to sleep and I don't know why.
And I'm actually really not tired.
It's rare for me to be tired.
So that's the other side of it.
Like I kind of think I can perform just fine with like five or six hours of sleep.
But what I always wonder is if I slept a little bit more, if I had more optimal sleep, what does that look like?
And so that's why I got an eye mask.
I got the dark out shades or black out shades or whatever.
I got the temperature control going on with the eight sleep.
I even wear like an eye mask and I'll throw on a mouth tape and I'll just do
whatever I can.
I even got a mouthpiece.
I'll just do it all.
Still hit the sauna before bed too.
Yep.
Still hit the sauna.
That helps a lot.
The sauna or the hot tub or sometimes a combination of those two or sauna
contrast with the shower.
And like,
it's just like, I don't ever have a problem falling asleep though it's really that's really really rare i always can fall asleep fine it's
just the staying of sleep staying the sleep that uh is sometimes troublesome but the hot tub and
the sauna and those things they definitely help me fall asleep even faster. It's kind of like being a little kid and changing into your pajamas
and just getting all cozy and just passing out.
Yeah.
And then so, like I said, last night I got really good sleep,
and this makes me curious about potentially exploring a CPAP machine or something
because my wife said I didn't snore last night, and I feel great today.
What was the reason you didn't?
Like, did you do anything differently before you went to sleep?
Um,
I guess maybe I didn't eat nowhere close to my bedtime.
And you typically do.
And,
uh,
yeah,
sometimes,
you know,
whether it be like,
just like smart pop popcorn or like,
um,
a protein shake or like maybe a bowl of cereal with protein or something,
you know,
but no,
it's, it's been, it's been pretty bad with snoring, right?
But then last night I didn't eat because I was playing Halo.
So I didn't eat.
And then I went to bed, so maybe that was part of it.
But I'll try it again tonight and see.
But I'm curious, like, dude, what would this be like if I got this every night?
Like, that would be awesome.
Because I don't, and it's kind of a bummer.
I wonder if there's anything in the days prior that kind of led because I always kind of think you've got a two- or three-day delay
on how stress and different things hit you.
So maybe just things are clicking, maybe you feel pretty good,
and maybe you're able to get a little more peaceful sleep.
Well, we did have our podcast yesterday.
We were together again.
So I think maybe you just had a good night's sleep.
Honestly, yeah, everything's back to normal.
Everything is right in the world.
Yep.
We got back together.
I saw Andrew outside smoking that cigarette.
Yeah.
Post.
Never mind.
Take us on out of here, Andrew.
All right, guys.
Thank you for checking out today's episode.
A huge shout out to Mateo and Eight Sleep Mattresses for sponsoring today's episode.
Links to them down in the description below.
But it's eightsleep.com slash powerproject to save $150 off of these amazing mattresses and mattress covers.
Links to them down in the description below, like I just said.
And please follow the podcast at Mark Wells power project on Instagram at MB
power project on Tik TOK and Twitter,
my Instagram and Twitter is at,
I am Andrew Z at the Andrew Z on Tik TOK and SEMA.
Where are you at?
And it's in the ending on Instagram,
YouTube and SEMA yin yang on Tik TOK and Twitter.
Mark doing anything with your jujitsu stuff on any of your social media.
I don't really see you talk about jujitsu on any of this stuff.
Um,
just do it.
Shirtless oiled up. Shirtless oiled up jujitsu. Uh, I mean, I talk about itjitsu on any of this stuff? Just do it shirtless oiled up.
Shirtless oiled up jujitsu.
I mean,
I talk about it
every now and then,
but I haven't recorded
roles much recently.
I should.
I really should.
Just post some stuff
up every now and then.
I also need to get back
on YouTube.
So that's,
I'm going to do that too.
Cool.
I was just wondering. Yeah. I'm at Mark's Millie Bell strength is never
weak this week this never strength catch
you guys later bye