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Hey guys I've looked at many other posts about sleeping, and I've tried a lot of suggestions ( magnesium, tea, gaba) with little success however I feel that my sleep gets worse if I have a day with very low carbs, So I was wondering is carbs help someone sleep? and when should I eat them if so, I am trying to lose weight so I've typically been eating no carbs and it is than I found my problems started. Another thing is when I do fall asleep I wake up extremely early having to pee something that has never happened to me before. Should I eat carbs in morning, Post workout, b4 bed? whats the suggestions

Thanks

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I'm in the same boat - VLC. Im also following the leangains protocol 16hr fast 8hr eat, which i eat carbs PWO but not alot. No matter what time I go to bed I wake up at 5am...I dont care so much, but I'm worried that cortisol release will interfere with my last couple of fat lbs im trying to lose. Eatings carbs could help, but I wonder if I stop my ice cream eating once a week might help. I always have a craving for sugar and barely eat carbs....sweet potatoes PWO and once a week ice cream. – GPS Jul 2 2011 at 12:57
I had the same issue and tried all sorts of supplements that didn't help. Then one night had a small orange before bed and slept like a baby. Now I have no issue. I have a cup of herbal tea and a small piece of fruit immediately before going to bed and works like a charm..and the nice thing is the sleep has promoted weight loss. – Rebecca Feb 25 2012 at 14:55

10 Answers

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Mike, many of us have had this experience. Yes, add in plenty more carbs and you should be ok in a couple of days.

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Eat them throughout the day...heavier dose PWO. No particular time. – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 15:12
I didn't know about that! Now I know why I couldn't sleep a lot 2 days ago, I ate waaay less vegetables back then. – Korion Jun 30 2011 at 15:45
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The most powerful sleeping agent is the sun so you have to do a better job of waking up early and starting your clock early. Your biorhythms may require a period of many days before they become synchronized with the sun. But the point is, you will eventually be able to regulate your sleep cycle because we are wired to rise and fall with the sunrise and sunset. Our cells actually use Vitamin D from the sun to help synthesize serotonin, a neurotransmitter involved in feeling awake and content. In the absence of Vitamin D/sunshine, we convert serotonin into melatonin.

BTW, if you eat late at night or drink late at night you will pee early. So try not to eat after 7PM.

Force yourself to go outside for a walk in the morning even if you have to start your day earlier to squeeze in this time. The sun will kickstart your clock even though you may feel groggy or tired on the surface. I've tried this and it works great.

Wake early

Walk 15 minutes in morning sun (does not have to be direct sunlight)

Drink Green Tea

Eat a protein-based breakfast. I eat nuts and berries in the morning...or a smoothie.

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Just an additional point. If you have trouble falling asleep, morning light is most important. If you rise too early, then late afternoon/evening sun is most important, according to what I know. – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 16:32
I agree that sun exposure has an effect. i spent the whole day outside(first in a long time) and im here up at 4am and it was hell to get to sleep in the first place. im looking forward to testing more on this – OptimusPrimal Jul 1 2011 at 8:58
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Carbs will help you sleep as they stimulate a release of seratonin. Best time is evening, with dinner - a la the Carbohydrate Addicts Diet. PWO is a good time as well, especially if it's an afternoon workout. The trouble I have is that carbs in the morning leads to craving them all day. Generally, a sweet potato with dinner doesn't cause me problems.

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I'm finally deciding to go with the evening carbs. I've already started taking in hi-carb meals (+160 grams) PWO. Rest days with 60-70 grams carbs have definately affected my sleep. I think I'm going to start taking in about 100-120 grams of carbs on rest days, and having about half of them for dinner. – Antti Jul 4 2011 at 5:49
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Melatonin.

I've tried everything else. Melatonin works.

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It does but rather than introduce an excess of a molecule into your body, I think it's more Paleo to manipulate the precursor (Serotonin) so that the body produces its own higher levels of melatonin. Melatonin works well but it's effects can linger and make you feel groggy long after supplementation. – BAMBAM Jun 30 2011 at 15:36
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In the book "Lights Out: Sleep, Sugar and Survival", authors Wiley and Formby strongly recommend NOT taking Melatonin to help with sleep. They say it downregulates the body's ability to manufacture it. I'm still not sure if they are nutbags or geniuses - but I think they are correct on this one. – Dave S. Jun 30 2011 at 17:00
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Avoid the damn carbs. Sorry for the emphasis, but I'm tired of ppl saying to go for it (Carbs). We don't need them. The human body can function for over a month in a fasted state (with water of course), so why do we need carbs? It's like telling a coke head or heroin junkie that a little bit will take away the pain. Go without for a week or two, you may even get headaches, but after that, you should be okay.

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A TRUE BELIEVER! – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 16:32
+1 just to balance out all the haters - and points well taken. But paleo does not equal low carb - although many do a low carb paleo. Carbs aren't evilz. Industrial food and refined sugar/flour/fructose are evilz. Once you are obese/insulin resistant/leptin resistant/fatty liver/diabetic - well, then even sweet potatoes and rice aren't doin' you no favors. – Dave S. Jun 30 2011 at 17:08
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The Original Post was about "sleep" not about the pros and cons of carbohydrates. Many people have noticed that adding back in more carbs has helped in this regard. This answer does not seem to address the issue at hand. Does Ari believe that carbs interfere with sleep? – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 18:28
I don't know why ppl voted my comment -4, there isn't anything in it factually wrong. If we eat the recommend diet according to just about every site out there, the carb count would be well below 100g per day. If we are going to say that we need carbs or carbs aren't evil, then where are the sites touting beer as the perfect paleo food/beverage? I mean, if carbs aren't bad, then beer is okay. Carbohydrates are converted into sugar in the body, and it leads to the other problems. Do I believe that carbs interfere with sleep? To some degree, yes. – Ari Jul 1 2011 at 4:16
Nobody is saying to pig out on 300+ grams! Or to drink beer. She stated that she is very low carb at the moment. I take that to mean less than 20g per day (or certainly less than 30g). Dr. Harris never gives macros, just says avoid NADs. Sisson says to keep below 150g, although the 100-150g range is more for the lean and active types... – Dave S. Jul 1 2011 at 10:51
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I agree with the last post; no need to add any extra. I experience this when I just consume too much food...as if I just have more energy to burn off.

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I am on the carb side of the fence here. I added back nighttime carbs and my sleep is much better for it. I think this strategy works for a few reasons:

Carbs suppress the release of certain blood sugar raising hormones like cortisol and adrenaline. These things can cause you to have bad sleep.

Carbs at dinner/night will keep your blood sugar from crashing during sleep, which can raise those stress hormones at some inconvenient hour. Those are the hormones that help wake you in the morning- which hopefully comes 8 hours after you go to bed.

I know it's popular to say carbs aren't essential. I honestly can't understand where this comes from. There are so many "paleo" carbs like potatoes and squash that it seems silly to label them as unhealthy. Natural carbs like potato are one of the highest in potassium. Potassium helps turn glucose into glycogen in the absence of insulin. To compare a potato with bread or some other kind of manufactured carbohydrate containing food is ridiculous.

You can still keep lowish carb and save them all for your dinner - which is what I do. So far so good.

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I think your paragraphs two and three are right on the money. – ben61820 Jun 30 2011 at 16:33
It also might be worth considering, keeping a little something by your bed, so that if you wake up in the middle of the night, you can eat it. This issue of high cortisol seems to be a big issue and trying to eat like Grok (however that is imagined to be) does not seem to be helpful. – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 16:35
Thanks - I'm not cortisol phobic - really! But I know what it feels like to run around depleted and feeling stressed out - these things I attribute to high chronic cortisol from having depleted liver glycogen stores brought on by a very low carb regimen. I am friends with acute cortisol release. – none Jun 30 2011 at 16:37
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Uh, Meredith, that's not a sausage in Grok's loincloth :) – Thomas Seay Jun 30 2011 at 17:13
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Oh, well I guess if you go paleo long enough all sorts of meat start looking edible. :) – none Jun 30 2011 at 17:22
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I've been moderately low carb paleo for over a month and I've completely eliminated my alarm clock because even with less sleep, I've been waking up bright eyed and bushy tailed without it. I'm NOT sleeping very well -- going to bed later, waking up earlier -- but the lower carb intake seems to make this more tolerable for some reason. (bear with me, this is going somewhere relevant.)

So yesterday I ate more carbs than I have in ages. I ate a bunch of dates, had several artichokes over the course of the day, and then drank a large cider in the late afternoon. Compared to how I've been eating, my carb intake was through the roof (I blame PMS). I went to bed at my usual time and conked out for almost 10 hours straight! I didn't even stir at my usual wake up time! Since I've been fairly strict and tracking everything (for the paleochix experiment) the only reason I can think of that caused me to sleep so much is the elevated carb intake. Which leads me to believe that yes, at least for myself, carbs are tied with sleep. It's complicated though, I feel like I sleep more because I need more sleep. I woke up feeling exactly like I did pre-paleo, when I woke up groggy every morning.

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PS. I just listened to the Robb Wolf podcast where he recommends the following sleep cocktail (developed by a sleep expert): 4000IU Vitamin D3 (sublingual) + 1-2 MG Melatonin (sublingual) + 400 MG GABA. I haven't tried it, but it sounds intriguing. – lunabelle Jun 30 2011 at 20:05
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I am LC or VLC and have been for years, do not have trouble sleeping. What I find interesting is that some people do seem to get to sleep better with some carbs later in the day, now I wonder if this was selected for in our evolution or is it a result of our modern culture eating primarily SAD.

I have family in northern Canada that basically follow a paleo lifestyle and have so for generations, with little modern food (by choice). they live as close to the way our ancestors (Native Americans) did, hunting, fishing, etc and overall eat very little in the way of carbs. No one there has any sleep issues.

I think modern society has taken us so far away from natural food and sleep that we may not be able to get back to that state. There are a multitude of factors that affect our sleep patterns, so is reaching for carbs late in the day a solution or is it just a band-aid that covers up the underlying cause.

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I have reviewed some of the above posts. I have been cutting carbs except for veggies. I had concerns about cutting out veggies & didn't want to become irregular regarding elimination. I am very athletic, love to work out. Three years ago I gained 25 lbs during school (LPN) program. All day in class and 4 hours of home work each night/high stress with big family, also a foster parent at the time. It really brought my exercise habit to a halt. Finished up school and began the next year working at a nursing home where I worked 9 hour days (on my feet) no breaks all day. Ate when I got home. gained another 20 or so over a year. Soooo, I decided enough of this crap. Started taking a lunch break and healthy snacks. Figured the law allowed a lunch break and I would just take one. Healthy choice meals for lunch, things like that. Started working out more consistently. I actually have taught off and on aerobic kickboxing and other classes over the years. Well one year later I am down 25 lbs. Stuck there for months. Intensified my workouts- Still stuck. Eating healthy daily and treats about once a week. So I decided to change things up by cutting carbs except veggies. I am down maybe 2 lbs over a week. I do notice I crave carbs less, still regular with elimination But... I have not been able to sleep at all. I take Melatonin, (normally as needed) - nothing. Tylenol PM and melatonin=nothing. Took Magnesium the last 2 nights. Nothing. Saw above adding some carbs may help. Going to try to have a sweet potatoe tonight before bed. Suggestions? let me know. I am physically exhausted though mentally alert, ...Dianna

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