Stop The Sleep
Robbers
Are you a victim of sleep robbers? You think you’re getting
enough sleep? Think again, because you’re most likely not.
A lot of studies confirmed that most adults have been
depriving themselves (oftentimes unnoticed) of the amounts of
sleep needed.
You may think that: “Half an hour short of
sleep won’t hurt me.”
Sorry, but it does, especially if this becomes habitual.
Each half or even only a quarter of an hour lack of sleep each
night accumulates in time. You may think that the lack of sleep
the night before is compensated the next night you get enough
sleep. Actually, it doesn’t.
What you owe the night before remains in the IOU list which
piles up each time you lack sleep.
Just how much sleep is enough? Although it varies depending
on the person, it is ideal to consider between seven to eight
hours of sleep as enough for the normal person. Younger people
need more sleep than older ones.
Sleep is vital to overall health and individual
functionality, which is why you have to win back your sleeping
time if you lack it. Here are possible sleep robbers (or
habits) that you can kick out to regain your sleeping time.
The habit of sleeping late
usually starts in a subtle way...
You hardly notice you’re doing it at first, until it becomes
a habit. Identify the cause. If you can’t pinpoint the exact
reasons why you sleep late at night, then chances are, they are
small things or chores that are scattered.
Those little time-consuming things you spend on could be
trimmed and if you review them, the minutes (when accumulated)
can turn to an hour or two which you could devote instead to
sleeping.
You may not be able to correct this
abruptly; actually it would be better to adjust
gradually. Once you are able to find the time to retire earlier
than usual, it may be difficult to fall asleep at once because
of the change in pattern.
Don’t worry, this is normal and only in the first few
nights. Once you have adjusted to your new habit, you will
eventually find it easier to fall asleep early.
Stop your dependency on sleeping aids like alcohol
or sleep inducing pills. These aids may knock you out
of your senses faster but they can cause frequent wakeful
periods thus interrupting your sleep pattern.
If a concern keeps bothering you from getting
asleep, try this method. Get a pen (a marker would be
better) and a piece of paper (big enough to fill in you
concern) and write your concerns on it. Lay it on your side
table or tape it on the wall.
You don’t go to sleep with your robe on, so it’s like taking
your robe off before retiring. In the morning, discard the
paper. Sounds trivial but for some, it stops sleep robbers.
A phone (landline or mobile) on the bedside can be
very handy particularly in an emergency. But it can
also be downright annoying, especially when it is set to ring
aloud. Take that phone away from your ear.
If you need to keep it, set it on silent mode. Depending on
your line of business or profession, that phone may or may be
not be that important for night calls.
Should its presence fall short of its importance, you’re
better off without it during the night.
That once in a lifetime call which you classify as an
emergency may not be worth all the nights you are awakened by a
wrong number or a nuisance call.
The possibility that someone might call in the middle of the
night when you’re asleep results to an agitated feeling that
alters your sleep pattern, keeping you half asleep
subconsciously.
Your brain monitors and maintains a record of all
the hours you owe it in terms of shortage in sleep.
One way or the other, you’ll have to pay for it.
You should be thankful it doesn’t charge interest or
penalties for late payments. Try your best to pull yourself out
of sleep deficits by stopping sleep robbers.
For proper fitness you must
do exercise or should have some equipment in your home for
exercise. You should have water
bottle when you go for running. Many people use pedometer
for running to manage their speed and time.
How to Stop the Sleep Robbers
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