• This Bean Story Could Change Your Life
    May 1 2026

    A man spent an entire cruise eating canned beans. In this episode, Justin explores how this story relates to our habits, sleep, overthinking, and survival patterns. What are you still tolerating that is keeping you from the life already available to you?

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    4 mins
  • How to Align to Your Goals on a Cellular Level
    Apr 30 2026

    You can know what you want, know why you want it, and still avoid the action that would move you forward. In this episode of Night Shift, Justin shares a simple idea from Day 3 of Tyler Watson’s Full Time Coach Challenge: resistance is not the enemy — it is information. Learn how to spot resistance before, during, and after action, then use a simple alignment process to take the next step from choice instead of force.

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    10 mins
  • Is Your Why Strong Enough to Wake You Up?
    Apr 29 2026

    You can want something deeply and still not follow through. In this episode, Justin breaks down a lesson from Tyler Watson’s Full Time Coach Challenge: your “why” has to become stronger than the resistance that keeps pulling you back. Real change is not just about working harder. It is about finding the hidden patterns, fears, and habits that quietly sabotage your results.

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    7 mins
  • Why You Resist the Life You Say You Want
    Apr 28 2026

    Inspired by Day 1 of Tyler Watson’s Full Time Coach Challenge, this episode explores the hidden “allergies” we have toward our ideal life and the “addictions” we have to staying stuck. The moment you say what you truly want, resistance appears. The work is not pretending it is gone. The work is learning how to move through it.

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    6 mins
  • Sunglasses Might Be Hurting Your Sleep
    Apr 27 2026

    Timing matters more than you think. In this episode, we break down how light exposure controls your circadian rhythm and why wearing sunglasses at the wrong time can sabotage your sleep. You’ll learn why morning sunlight—without sunglasses—is critical for resetting your internal clock, boosting energy, and improving sleep quality. Then we flip it: how reducing light in the evening, even with sunglasses or blue-blocking lenses, can protect melatonin and help you fall asleep faster. Simple rule, big impact—use light strategically and your body follows.

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    2 mins
  • Selective Memory: What Sleep Decides to Keep
    Apr 26 2026

    In this episode, Justin breaks down a memory experiment from Why We Sleep that challenges a common assumption: you don’t remember everything equally—and sleep plays a decisive role in what stays and what fades.

    Participants were told what to remember and what to forget. Only one variable changed: some took a nap, others didn’t. The result? Sleep didn’t just strengthen memory—it filtered it. The brain actively reinforced what mattered and weakened what didn’t.

    From there, Justin stress-tests a popular idea from NLP—using cues like “cancel, delete, erase” to dismiss unwanted thoughts—and asks a harder question: can intention actually influence what your brain keeps overnight?

    This episode doesn’t give you false control. It gives you a more accurate model:

    • Attention tags the memory
    • Emotion strengthens it
    • Sleep decides its fate

    Tonight’s experiment: don’t just “think better”—be precise about what you rehearse before sleep. Your brain is already choosing. The question is whether you’re guiding it or leaving it to chance.

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    2 mins
  • Weekend Paradox
    Apr 25 2026

    Sleeping in on the weekend feels like recovery, but it can quietly shift your body clock and make Monday feel heavier than it needs to. In this episode, Justin explains how inconsistent wake times create mild “social jet lag,” why your body wakes better with rhythm, and how one simple weekend rule can protect your energy for the week ahead.

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    2 mins
  • Six Hours is Not Enough
    Apr 24 2026

    Most adults need 7–9 hours of sleep, but many people treat six hours like it’s close enough. In this episode of Night Shift, Justin breaks down why seven hours is the minimum, why eight is a better target, and how sleeping only six hours can affect your brain, mood, memory, metabolism, immune system, appetite, and discipline.

    Tonight’s reminder: six hours is not a badge of honor. It’s a debt your body will eventually collect.


    Source notes

    The adult sleep recommendation of 7+ hours is supported by the CDC and the AASM/Sleep Research Society consensus statement.

    The CDC notes that sleeping under 7 hours is associated with obesity, diabetes, high blood pressure, heart disease, stroke, frequent mental distress, and mortality.

    The cognitive-performance claim comes from Van Dongen et al., which found chronic restriction to 6 hours or less produced cumulative deficits comparable to up to two nights of total sleep deprivation.

    The memory claim is supported by a 2024 meta-analysis finding that sleep restriction of 3–6.5 hours impaired memory formation compared with 7–11 hours.

    The immune/cold claim comes from Prather et al.; people sleeping 6 hours or less had about a fourfold higher cold risk after viral exposure than those sleeping more than 7 hours.

    The appetite claim is supported by Spiegel et al., which found short sleep associated with lower leptin, higher ghrelin, and increased hunger/appetite.

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    7 mins