The modern brain is exhausted! Most of us are sleeping less than we should, constantly reachable, and switching between emails, meetings, and notifications without pause. It feels normal because everyone is doing it, but the brain keeps score. The way we sleep, respond to stress, and use screens quietly shapes how we think, focus, and regulate our emotions. While the science is clear, the real challenge is implementation.
What are the three components of lifestyle?
Here is why these three pillars matter and how to actually integrate them into your busy lifestyle:
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Sleep
Sleep is when the brain does its housekeeping. During deep sleep, a specialised waste-clearance system called the glymphatic system becomes active. Think of this as a ‘dishwasher’ for the brain. "While you are awake, your brain cells are busy and produce metabolic ‘trash,’ including a protein called amyloid", Cognitive Neurologist Dr Aditya Aundhakar tells Health Shots. If this trash builds up, it can form plaques that are closely linked to alzheimer’s disease and cognitive decline.
When you enter deep sleep, your brain cells actually shrink slightly. This creates more space between the cells, allowing cerebrospinal fluid to rush in and ‘wash’ away those toxic proteins. Research from the University of Rochester and the Whitehall II study shows that consistently sleeping six hours or less in midlife significantly increases the risk of Dementia later because the brain never gets a full cleaning cycle.
We often fall short of sleep because our social lives do not support it.
- The social shift: "I often suggest finding a circle of friends who are comfortable with an early dinner between 7 and 9 PM. In my experience observing communities with high longevity, such as parts of Kerala, there is a strong culture in which children are in bed by 8 PM and adults shortly after," says the doctor. This habit has a profound impact on both cardiovascular and cognitive health because it aligns with our natural circadian rhythms.
- The charging station: Move your phone charger to another room. If you have to get out of bed to physically check a notification, you likely will not do it.
2. Stress
Stress in short bursts can improve performance, but chronic allostatic load (the biological wear and tear from never switching off) reshapes the brain. When you are stressed, your body releases a hormone called cortisol. In small doses, cortisol helps you focus. "However, if cortisol remains elevated for weeks or months, it begins to act like a corrosive acid on the hippocampus, which is the region of the brain responsible for memory and learning", says the doctor. Prolonged exposure can actually cause the connections between brain cells to wither, making it harder to store new information or regulate your emotions.
The goal is to build ‘recovery blocks’ into a high-pressure day:
- Structured recovery: Schedule 10-minute blocks in which you consume no new information. Practice slow breathing, with the exhale longer than the inhale. This simple mechanical shift triggers the vagus nerve, which tells your nervous system to ‘downshift’ from a state of high alert (fight or flight) to a state of recovery.
- Environmental boundaries: Create a ‘No-Work Zone’ in your home. This could be a specific chair or a corner where you never take a work call. This trains your brain to associate that physical space with safety rather than cortisol production.
3. Screen time
The issue with screens is the frequency of interruptions. Every time a notification pings, your brain has to perform a ‘context switch.’ Research from Stanford University shows that heavy multitaskers lose the ability to filter out irrelevant information.
Furthermore, screens emit blue light, which suppresses melatonin. Melatonin is the hormone that signals to your brain that it is nighttime. "When you look at a bright screen at 11 PM, your brain thinks it is noon, which delays the glymphatic ‘cleaning’ process mentioned earlier", says the neurologist.
To fight back, you must make your devices less stimulating:
- The grayscale hack: Go into your phone settings and turn the display to black and white. "Removing bright colours makes apps significantly less enticing, reducing the dopamine ‘hit’ you get from scrolling and making it easier to put the phone down", says the expert.
- Batching notifications: Turn off all non-human pings. Only allow notifications from actual people. "Work in 30- to 60-minute distraction-free blocks to rebuild your focus muscle", says the expert.
Poor sleep increases stress reactivity. Chronic stress disrupts sleep quality. Late-night screens worsen both. These changes are gradual. Subtle shifts in focus or reaction time often begin long before they feel like a medical problem. "Your brain reflects your daily habits, but your habits are a product of your environment," shares the doctor. Make yourself accountable by sharing your plans to develop new habits with a confidante and start by choosing one practical shift this week, perhaps an earlier dinner or moving your charger, to protect your clarity for tomorrow.