Why You're Not Losing Fat (And What to Fix)
Eating clean and training hard but the scale won't budge? These are the most common reasons fat loss stalls — and exactly how to break through each one.

We live in a culture that glorifies the grind and treats sleep as optional. "I'll sleep when I'm dead" might be the dumbest thing you can say if you care about your health and performance. Here's what actually happens while you sleep. Growth Hormone Is Released During Sleep: The majority of your daily growth hormone (GH) release happens in the first few hours of deep sleep. GH drives muscle repair, fat metabolism, and cellular recovery. Cutting sleep short means cutting GH output — no amount of training or supplementation compensates for that. Muscle Is Built During Recovery,
Not Training: Training creates the stimulus. Sleep is where the adaptation happens. Protein synthesis peaks during sleep. If you're training hard and sleeping poorly, you're tearing muscle down faster than you're building it back. Sleep Debt Kills Performance: Research from the University of Washington found that athletes who extended sleep to 10 hours per night showed faster sprint times, improved reaction times, and reduced fatigue. Conversely, six nights of sleeping six hours tanks cognitive and physical performance as much as 24 hours of total sleep deprivation. Practical Tips: Keep a consistent sleep schedule — same time to bed and same wake time, including weekends. Keep your room cool (16–19°C is optimal). Avoid screens for 60 minutes before bed. Don't eat large meals within two hours of sleep. These aren't hacks — they're basics that work.