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julie's avatar

Fast-paced media, rapid light bursts and sound pops have affected the sleep patterns of my retired husband. Having never been on social media,1 year into retirement, he discovered Instagram Reels.

It’s almost as if your article is describing him -his brain reacting as a baby’s brain.

We have been married 45 years and I can vouch that once his head hits the pillow he is basically asleep until 5 AM.

His brain while awake is constantly driving him to do and complete tasks every waking minute. He is a completely driven individual. Instagram reels became his newfound distraction. It re-patterned his brain and now he only sleeps three hours in a row at the maximum, awakens, lies awake for an hour, sleeps two hours, is awake for another hour or sleeps a bit and then just gets up. After one year of retirement, he returned to a new job that keeps him busy during the day, but his preoccupation with the new fascinating life of social media catches his attention at night and he continues to struggle in the poor circle of sleep.

I told him two years ago what was happening with his brain and how he was being fed dopamine by the reels; each click was a stimulant to his brain, and it was keeping him fed with this new stimulation that wished to be fed all night long and that’s why his brain was never sleeping- it won’t turn off.

My whole family thinks I’m kind of a witch doctor and kind of crazy, but they do believe me most of the time. Lol -anyway I think this is what’s happening with him. He’s tried to cut Reels out, but thinks those reels are fun and educational.

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Kate K's avatar

Thank you for this article! Let's commit to developing true happiness in 2026. Imagine the effect on families and communities!

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