What bad sleep is stealing from you
You wake up with no driveSleep deprivation tanks dopamine receptor sensitivity. So even when you have things to do, your brain can't generate the motivation to start them. That "I just can't get going" feeling is neurochemical, not personal.
Your mood takes the hit firstSerotonin and emotional regulation depend heavily on sleep quality. One bad night can make you irritable, anxious, or flat, and after weeks of poor sleep it starts to feel like just who you are.
Your body never fully recoversDeep sleep is when growth hormone peaks and tissue repairs. Miss it consistently and your muscles stay sore longer, injuries linger, and your progress in the gym stalls, no matter how hard you train.
Brain fog that won't liftPoor sleep impairs your prefrontal cortex, the part responsible for focus, decision-making, and clear thinking. You end up reading the same sentence twice, losing your train of thought, and operating at a fraction of your actual capacity.
Blue light is the hidden triggerScreens at night suppress melatonin production by up to 50%, pushing your body clock later without you realizing it. You feel wired when you should feel sleepy, then exhausted when you need to be sharp.
