Some cuts from the article:
They found that individuals with very short sleep, high inactivity and low moderate to vigorous activity had the highest rates of dementia and evidence of accelerated brain ageing on MRI.
How to stave off dementia when you’re a short sleeper
To figure out your optimal ratio, we should start with a baseline understanding of our sleep.
For instance, are you a short sleeper (who gets less than six hours of sleep) or a normal sleeper (who gets between six and nine hours)?
If you’re a short sleeper, the study found that increasing sleep duration was associated with a lowering of dementia risk when at the expense of inactivity or light activity, but not when at the expense of moderate to vigorous physical activity.
Specifically, increasing sleep by 30 minute instead of engaging in inactivity or light activity was associated with a 9 per cent and 19 per cent reduction in dementia risk, respectively.
Oddly specific headline. But the gist: if your sleep is trash, going balls to the wall at CrossFit won’t make you healthier. Which… duh. Hard exercise breaks down the body. Recovery builds it back up stronger. If you never recover, all you are doing is constantly breaking yourself down.
S-Tier ELID (“explain like I’m dumb”); thank you for your service.
I I start work later and leave earlier, I can do both!



