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The Art of Sleeping: the secret to sleeping better at night for a happier, calmer more successful day

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2019
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27 2.00 Deepest sleep 21.00 Melatonin secretion starts 19.00 Highest body temperature 17.00 Greatest cardio- vascular efficiency and muscle strength 14.30 Best co-ordination 15.30 Fastest reaction time 4.00 Lowest body temperature 6.45 Sharpest blood pressure rise 7.30 Melatonin secretion stops 12.00 Midnight 12.00 Noon 18.006.00 10.00 Highest alertness 18.30 Highest blood pressure

28 e modern human is thought to have originated just north of the equator in Africa, which is a region that has a constant 12 hours of daylight, and research has shown how evolution has impacted on our body clock. As humans migrated into a range of latitudes, they became exposed to variations in the length of daylight, which is thought to have influenced their biological clocks. ese rhythms are ingrained in us and make up the very fabric of our being. Wherever you live, the processes in your body are driven by the basic fact that every 24 hours the Earth pirouettes on its axis, creating a fixed pattern of sunlight and darkness. e knowledge that this clock keeps on ticking regardless of what’s going on in our lives is quite comforting. Under normal circumstances, the biggest energy dips happen in the middle of the night (somewhere between 2am and 4am) and just aer lunchtime (around 1pm to 3pm), which is when many people crave a post-lunch nap. However,

these times can vary slightly depending on your chronotype, which defines whether you’re a morning lark or a night owl, which I will explain later (see page 59 (#litres_trial_promo)). Sleep deprivation can make these fluctuations in sleepiness and alertness more noticeable, so if you’re a good sleeper you’re less likely to feel the dips as strongly as someone who doesn’t get enough sleep. Routine is essential in our day-to-day lives, as it helps us to keep in sync with the natural flow of our circadian rhythm. Going to sleep and waking up at the same time every day will keep your body in a steady state of flux, maintaining energy levels and ensuring proper regeneration throughout the body. Interrupted or erratic sleep will inevitably leave you feeling fatigued and out of sorts, while the effect of light can also influence your biological clock and circadian rhythm. 29

30 THE BODY CLOCK Yes, this really is a thing! Your circadian rhythm can be thought of as a cycle of established events working in the background of your brain, but it’s the complex action of nervepathways in response to light that ensures they occur like clockwork. Exposure to light stimulates a nerve pathway from the retina in the eye to an area in the brain called the hypothalamus. ere, a special centre called the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) works like a clock that sets off a regulated pattern of activities that affect the entire body such as the regulation of body temperature, heart rate, blood pressure and the release of hormones that help us to sleep.

31 MELATONIN: THE SLEEP HORMONE Melatonin is a natural hormone made by your body’s pineal gland and is the key hormone that drives our sleep/wake cycle. is is a pea-sized gland located just above the middle of the brain; during the day the pineal is inactive, but when the sun goes down and darkness occurs, the pineal is ‘turned on’ by the SCN and begins to actively produce melatonin, which is released into the blood. Usually, this occurs between the hours of 9pm and 11pm. As a result, melatonin levels in the blood rise sharply at this time and you begin to feel less alert, making sleep more inviting. Melatonin levels in the blood stay elevated for about twelve hours – all through the night – until the light of a new day breaks, when they fall back to low daytime levels by about 9am. Daytime levels of melatonin are barely detectable.

32 CORTISOL: THE WAKE HORMONE Once exposed to the first light each day, the ‘clock’ in the SCN begins performing functions like raising body temperature and releasing stimulating hormones such as cortisol, made by your adrenal glands, which also encourage the uptake of the ‘feel-good’ hormone serotonin. e SCN delays the release of other hormones such as melatonin (which is associated with sleep onset) until many hours later when darkness arrives.

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SLEEP ARCHITECTURE e term ‘sleep architecture’ refers to the structural organisation of normal sleep. In the same way that your circadian rhythm can be characterized by a set of actions occurring in a cycle, so can the structure of your sleep, which occurs in different stages throughout the night. Sleep can be divided into two groups: non-rapid eye movement sleep (NREM) and rapid eye movement sleep (REM). During NREM sleep your breathing and heart rate become slow and regular, your blood pressure drops and you remain relatively still.

35 As the name suggests, REM sleep is characterized by rapid eye movements as your pulse and breathing quickens, but the rest of your body remains motionless. It is during REM sleep that you’re more likely to dream, and this is also the stage that occurs before you wake up. A single sleep cycle is made up of four stages, each lasting around 90 minutes, which alternate cyclically throughout the night. e first three stages of the sleep cycle are NREM, each of which have their own set of unique characteristics, including brain wave patterns, eye movements and muscle tone – this takes up around 75 per cent of the cycle. REM sleep occurs in the fourth stage of the sleep cycle, taking up around 25 per cent. STAGE ONE Stage one is a short transition lasting only 5–10 minutes. During this unrestful stage, your eyes are closed but sleep is shallow, and you still have a sense of awareness. In stage one your brain is dipped into sleep, but you don’t feel as though you are asleep. It is during this stage of sleep that you’re most easily woken.

36 STAGE TWO Stage two is oen referred to as ‘light sleep’ and represents one of the most important parts of the sleep cycle, taking up almost half the night and characterized by a slowing down of both breathing and heart rate. Memories and emotions are processed during this stage, as is the regulation of your metabolism – the chemical processes that occur in the body to maintain life. STAGE THREE Breathing is slowest during this stage of NREM sleep and your muscles also start to relax, while heart rate is regulated. You’re unlikely to be woken up in this stage, and if you are you will feel disorientated for a short while aerwards. e difficulty in waking up at this point in your sleep is one reason why your body tries to get deep sleep over with as quickly as possible. Your body has its own natural drive for deep sleep, so once you have met that, the need dissipates. e third stage normally occurs halfway through the night and your cycle then adjusts to more time in light sleep and REM.

ese stages of sleep are very much about your body as the thinking parts of the brain go ‘offline’. During deep sleep your body secretes the human growth hormone to help rebuild and repair cells of tissue, bone and muscle. Stages one to three also help to strengthen the immune system. Age can impact the sleep cycle, as you spend more time in light sleep and less time in these stages of deep sleep as you get older. STAGE FOUR While the previous stage of deep sleep is all about the body, stage four – or REM – is focused on the brain, because it is at this point in the sleep cycle that it is most active. Your body will largely remain inactive but your eyes will move rapidly in different directions. During this stage your heart rate increases and your breathing becomes more irregular. Protein synthesis also peaks, helping to maintain the processes required to keep your body working properly. Dreaming usually occurs in this fourth stage, as well as the regulation of emotions and memories.

39 DREAMING Dreaming is one of the most notable but least understood characteristics of sleep, during which our thoughts follow bizarre and seemingly illogical sequences, sometimes random and sometimes related to experiences gathered during wakefulness. While the most intense dreams occur during REM sleep, because this is when the brain is most active, some can still occur during the stages of NREM. Dreams oen take on a fantastical feel, as within them we’re able to act out scenarios that would never be possible in real life. However, the experience is not always positive, and nightmares can induce

40 feelings of terror, anxiety and distress, which have been linked to sleep problems such as insomnia. ere are many explanations as to why we dream, and these have been offered by both philosophers and psychologists. Sigmund Freud suggested that dreams reveal a person’s deepest unconscious desires and that we disguise these impulses with symbolic objects. Other theories offered by researchers have suggested that dreams may be a type of offline memory processing, whereby the brain consolidates learning and daily memories, and that dreams even offer a way of developing cognitive capabilities. It has also been suggested that dreams are an ancient biological defence mechanism, simulating threatening events so that we’re more perceptive and able to avoid them in real life. However, others believe that dreams are simply a result of random activity in the brain. e true meaning of dreaming is still something of a mystery and many questions remain unanswered by the current available research. Perhaps we will never know, but for now you can choose what you would like to believe.

43 THE STUFF OF NIGHTMARES Most people don’t get enough sleep. We are a society that burns the candle at both ends, a nation where people stay up all night to study, work or have fun. However, going without adequate sleep per night carries with it both short- and long-term consequences that can affect every aspect of our lives. e optimum number of hours of sleep is thought to be just under eight, but research carried out by the Royal Society for Public Health has shown that most people manage less than seven. Over the course of a week this deficit equates to a whole night’s sleep, and research by e Sleep Council has shown that 33 per cent of people only manage 5–6 hours, while 7 per cent get less than 5 hours. e regenerative power of sleep allows the brain to process information, muscle and joints to recover and enables protein to be replenished

44 in every part of the body, which promotes the growth and repair of tissues, cells and organs. Most of us are familiar with the short-term effects of not getting enough sleep, when we experience fluctuations in mood, concentration and alertness, and our ability to recall memories, our creativity and decision-making are also affected. All of these can filter through into many areas of everyday life, such as relationships and work. But it’s the long- term effects of poor sleep that will really give you nightmares. DIABETES Research published in the journal Sleep Medicine Clinics found that insufficient sleep could put you at a greater risk of type 2 diabetes by affecting the way your body uses glucose, the carbohydrate fuel that energizes cells. e study showed that when healthy subjects had their sleep cut in half from eight to four hours per night, they processed glucose more slowly than when they slept for twelve hours. It’s a finding that is reflected in many other studies of a similar nature.

45 HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE Inadequate sleep can also cause elevated blood pressure, even when this happens over minor periods of time. A study carried out by the University of Alabama found that a single night of inadequate sleep in people who already have high blood pressure can cause elevated levels the following day. As high blood pressure is a risk factor for heart disease and stroke, this contributes to the correlation between poor sleep and heart disease. MENTAL HEALTH Your mental health can also be affected by lack of sleep. Given the effect a sleepless night can have on your mood and concentration, it’s not too much of a leap to think that chronic sleep deprivation may result in more serious mood disorders. Already there is lots of well-documented research showing an association between chronic sleep issues and depression, anxiety and mental distress. In one study carried out by University College London, subjects who slept only four hours per night showed declining levels of optimism and sociability following repeated days of inadequate sleep. In a similar study, subjects with less than four hours’ sleep reported feeling sadder, stressed, angry and

46 mentally exhausted. Notably all of these symptoms improved dramatically when they returned to a normal pattern of sleep. WEIGHT GAIN If you’re putting on weight or finding it difficult to lose weight, research suggests this may have something to do with a lack of good-quality sleep. Studies carried out by Loughborough University found that people who habitually sleep for less than six hours per night were more likely to have a higher than average Body Mass Index (BMI) while those who got eight hours had the lowest BMI score. It’s becoming more widely accepted that along with a lack of exercise and poor diet, a lack of sleep may potentially be just as influential in the development of obesity. is is because lack of sleep is thought to impact on the hormones leptin and ghrelin which control our appetite and may play a role in weight gain. Leptin, oen referred to as the satiety hormone, is released from fat cells and sends signals to the hypothalamus in the brain, which helps to inhibit hunger and regulate energy balance so the body does not trigger hunger responses when energy is no longer needed. Ghrelin is oen referred to as the hunger hormone and is released by the stomach to stimulate appetite, thus increasing food


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