Dr. John La Puma discusses how everyday environmental choices shape sleep, cognition, and long-term health. Drawing on research from medicine, neuroscience, and environmental science, he explains why many professionals unknowingly experience what he calls "cognitive drag," the gradual decline in mental clarity caused by indoor lifestyles, poor light exposure, and excessive screen use.
A central theme of the conversation is the biological importance of natural light. Morning sunlight triggers a cortisol activation signal that helps set the body's circadian rhythm and supports deep sleep later in the night. Without that signal, the cycle of melatonin release and restorative sleep becomes disrupted. Even simple routines, such as spending time outside shortly after waking and obtaining brief midday sunlight to support vitamin D production, can help restore these rhythms.
The discussion also examines how physical environments influence mental and physiological health. Dr. La Puma distinguishes between green spaces and blue spaces. Forests, parks, and other green environments are well studied and associated with measurable benefits, including exposure to plant compounds such as phytoncides that appear to stimulate natural killer cells in the immune system. Blue environments—water, coastlines, or lakes—seem to affect the nervous system differently, often producing a more meditative and calming response.
Several practical habits follow from this research. Indoor lighting late at night interferes with sleep signals, and small sources of artificial light such as indicator lights in bedrooms can disturb rest more than many people realize. Managing exposure to screens in the evening, reducing unnecessary light in sleeping spaces, and prioritizing consistent sleep hygiene all contribute to improved recovery and cognitive performance.
The episode also addresses what Dr. La Puma describes as "digital obesity," the accumulation of sedentary screen time that gradually replaces movement, sunlight, and outdoor experience. Reversing that pattern does not require dramatic lifestyle changes. Regular outdoor exercise, time in nature, and brief daily exposure to natural light can produce measurable improvements in mood, sleep quality, and attention.
For leaders managing demanding schedules, the implications are practical: the environments in which we live and work are not neutral. They shape the biological systems that govern energy, concentration, and long-term health. Understanding those mechanisms allows individuals to make small, deliberate adjustments that support clearer thinking and sustained performance.
Get Dr. John La Puma's book, Indoor Epidemic, here: https://tinyurl.com/h4krw94e
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