Wow , so nice of all of you to reply! Thanks a lot. His name is Leo and he is 7 month old. Today I got him a higher perch and in a few min I will know if he takes it. I can take a pic of our setup tomorrow and post and introduce him. I love him already so much, it is insane

and we are glad that even if he keeps sleeping like that it is fine. We let him fly in the room today, but he crashes a lot , guess he needs more training...(He was in a cage and is not used to fly).
One strange question... Leo mated with my hand today. Does that mean he is male or do females do that too ? (My female bunnies hump each other a lot).
Thanks for all your kindness to help out a newbie!
Are you certain he mated your hand? You ABSOLUTELY DO NOT want to allow this behavior. Consider whatever you were doing that triggered it and don't do it in the future. You do not want a hormonal bird on your hands. Both male and female birds will masturbate on people and objects when sexually stimulated or frustrated. Do not scold the behavior, but avoid all triggers and do not allow the bird to continue--put it down and change the subject right away.
7 months seems young for this behavior, but I don't know Lori's well- if you are sure he mated with your hand, are you sure he is 7 months?
EDIT---Google says that some will mature as early as 9 months, so it's quite possible.....Hormonal birds develop all sorts of behavioral (screaming, plucking, aggression) and health problems -- egg-binding can kill the females (a hormonal female can lay eggs without a male and they can get stuck inside of them).
No shadowy/dark spaces in the cage
Pet only on the head/neck
do not allow access to shadowy places outside of the cage (under clothes, blankets, furniture etc).
Make sure your bird is getting a solid 12 hours of uninterrupted sleep nightly
Make sure that you have a light/dark routine that you follow daily
Warm/mushy foods can trigger hormones in some birds---even though I know your bird has unique dietary requirements
Certain shredding toys (if too much like grass) can lead to nesting behavior in an already hormonal bird.
If you see any hormonal behavior, change the subject immediately and do not attend to it. If you are touching your bird when it happens, stop immediately and put the bird down.