This is not the episode you think it is. This conversation is not about convincing anyone to sleep away from their partner, and it isn’t just for people considering a “sleep divorce.” It’s for any woman who feels exhausted, wired, foggy, emotional, or disconnected from herself and is trying to understand what her sleep is actually telling her.
In this episode, sleep is treated as data, not a moral issue. We unpack why women both need more sleep and are more negatively impacted by sleep loss, how hormones and the nervous system change sleep across a woman’s lifespan, and why listening to your body around rest is often the first place intuition tries to get your attention.
In this episode, we cover:
- My personal experience with sleeping separately during pregnancy and postpartum
- Removing shame, secrecy, and “extreme solution” narratives around sleep
- Why women need more sleep than men, backed by research
- The role of estrogen and progesterone in sleep quality and REM sleep
- How sleep loss impacts the nervous system, cortisol, and intuition
- Viewing sleep and sleeping arrangements as information, not failure
- An introduction to the Traditional Chinese Medicine clock
- Energy, sensitivity, and what happens when two nervous systems are in different places
- The real benefits of sleeping together and when they actually work
- Why rest has to come before co-regulation and connection
The Summit Takeaway:
This episode isn’t asking you to change your sleeping arrangements. It’s asking you to listen to what your sleep is already communicating. Fixing your sleep isn’t about choosing distance. It’s about choosing clarity so whatever you choose next is actually aligned.
If this episode resonated, I’d love to hear your thoughts. Let’s continue the conversation over on Instagram @alannacrawford_.
And if this landed for you, please like, share, or comment to help keep this podcast growing.
Have a beautiful week — I’ll be setting sail on a Caribbean cruise while the rest of you brave the polar vortex, and I wish I could pack you all in my suitcase.
Sources:
Horne, J. (2010). Sleepfaring: A Journey Through the Science of Sleep. Oxford University Press. Duke University Medical Center sleep research summaries
Baker, F. C., & Driver, H. S. (2007). Circadian rhythms, sleep, and the menstrual cycle. Sleep Medicine National Sleep Foundation reports on women and sleep
Mong, J. A., Baker, F. C., Mahoney, M. M., et al. (2011). Sleep, rhythms, and the endocrine brain: Influence of sex and gonadal hormones. Journal of Neuroscience, 31(45), 16107–16116.
Baker, F. C., & Driver, H. S. (2007). Circadian rhythms, sleep, and the menstrual cycle. Sleep Medicine, 8(6), 613–622.
Zhang, B., & Wing, Y. K. (2006). Sex differences in insomnia. American Academy of Sleep Medicine
Goldstein, A. N., & Walker, M. P. (2014). The role of sleep in emotional brain function. Annual Review of Clinical Psychology