Do you struggle to fall asleep at night? Or do you find yourself wide awake at three in the morning staring up at the ceiling and wondering if you’ll fall back to sleep at all before your alarm goes off? If you answered yes, you are not alone. Research has shown that up to 50 percent of the population suffers from sleep problems, with up to a third having struggled with it for at least a year.
The average adult requires a little over 8 hours of sleep each day. However, very few people are able to manage that with lives that are more hectic than ever. Jobs, children, and other obligations require us to be up with the birds and to go to bed far later than we would if we were following our own biological rhythm. A disruption to our circadian rhythm, which governs our hormone production, body temperature, and sleep, can lead to insomnia.
We need adequate, restful sleep in order to perform at our best. Prolonged insomnia can cause mental fuzziness and interfere with how you perform your daily activities. It also increases your risk of depression, headaches, auto accidents, and can lead to substance abuse. Of course, worrying about the lack of sleep you are getting rarely helps you get more sleep! Stress, anxiety, and widespread use of coffee and alcohol are some of the greatest contributors to insomnia.
Learning how to manage stress effectively is one of the best ways to increase your chances of getting a good night’s sleep, and making some changes to your lifestyle may make a difference in the number of hours of sleep you get. Following are some strategies you can use:
- Get regular exercise before dinner, which can help put your body in a restful state by bedtime. Just be sure not to exercise too close to bedtime, as this will likely make you restless.
- Try to get out in the late afternoon sun a soften as possible to stimulate melatonin release, which will help get your circadian rhythm back on track.
- Use stress-reduction techniques such as yoga, meditation, and Tai Chi, which are great ways to help teach your mind and body to relax.
- Caffeine and smoking keep the body stimulated. Try to avoid them from mid-afternoon on, and keep your consumption of alcohol to a minimum.
- Eat a small snack of protein with a complex carbohydrate just before bed, such as peanut butter on a whole-grain cracker. It can keep your blood sugar from dipping too low and waking you up in the night.
- Keep to the same sleeping and waking schedule every day and don’t change it by more than an hour on weekends.
- Avoid television or computer use at least an hour before bedtime, as it stimulates the brain, making it difficult to fall asleep.
- Keep your bedroom dark, quiet, and cool.
- If you are lying awake for more than about 20minutes, get up and go sit in another dimly lit room until you feel sleepy.
These strategies have proven useful for many people in getting them back to a regular sleeping rhythm. Give them a try they may help you too!
If all these techniques don’t seem to work, it might be affecting your cortisol level that could affect your adrenal gland chronically. The following links for the DUTCH test and Neurotram=nsmitter test may give you some insight into complex sleep mechanisms.
Hope this helps. Thanks for reading!
To Your Health,
Disclaimer: These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. The products mentioned on this page are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. The content in this blog should not be used as a substitute for the professional advice and/or recommendation of qualified healthcare practitioners or licensed physicians. The content presented in this blog is intended for information purposes only. Consult your doctor or healthcare practitioners for your current conditions.
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