Thursday 11 April 2013

Sleep Your Troubles Away


What started off as a pure coincidence, turned into a pretty effective experiment that gave life to the following article. All of us have certain weak points in our immune system that manifest negatively in times of high stress and are especially triggered off when the body is not well rested. Many of us suffer from bad migraines, digestive disorders, skin rashes, obesity and the list goes on. As strange as it sounds, the only time in the day when all of these problems are put to rest is during our hours of sleep. Our body actually needs those hours of sleep to restore and reboot the central nervous system, ready to kick off the next day. Although your body is resting, your brain is actually at work during these hours of sleep, it is committing new information to memory through a process called memory consolidation. In children the growth hormone is secreted during slow wave sleep. If you do not allow your brain to clean and feed you during the night, you wake up only half ready for the next day.

Coming back to my accidental experiment. I went through a week where without realising I was on a mere 6 hours or less of sleep per night. The first night this happened, I had been a victim of raping the World Wide Web. One bookmark leads to another and suddenly you are surfing the intricate corners of the world at your fingertips. I am not the first victim on this addiction, so I’m sure many of you can identify with the game.

In a couple of days I had noticed the subtle yet dangerous effects of not sleeping so much. Heavy eyelids and two cups of coffee later I was mostly running on sunshine and pure adrenalin till about two pm. My body was pleading for a nap by Wednesday, yet the stubborn witch inside me would see no mercy. As a sports fanatic, this lack of rest only added hurdles to my performance at the gym and even in what should be a “relaxing” yoga class, turned into an hour of treacherous agonizing stretching. I could not even see the signs, well ironically I was defocussed and simply walking a path of disaster.

By Thursday I had not only introduced bad carbs in between meals, I was also irritable with my kids and a slight whine of my daughter seemed like the roar of a lion to my ears. I admit I was not a pleasant human being to be around. On Friday I had my first wake up call as “sleepzilla”. I experienced road rage for the first time in many years, and in all honesty it was not even the other persons fault as much as it was mine. My inner conscience woke me up and reminded me this was not a good sign. I promised myself I would take a short nap that afternoon and try to make the rest of the day a better one. As it turns out the nap never took place, I found replacement chore to occupy my half hour of grace. By this point my week was in the blood red zone of -7 hours of sleep. That is what most people sleep every night and I had managed to slowly eliminate these hours out of my only 4 day week so far. Friday was coming to an end and the carbs continued to pile. I was aware of the bloated feel, I was aware of my mood swings, I was aware of my fatigue and I was also aware of my borderline delirious crazed state of mind. I simply felt the need to numb all these feelings and forget everything. One would think sleep seemed the most coherent solution to all this, and yet it was six pm and I could not afford to get into bed yet, so I opted for possibly the worst remedy – a glass of wine. Yes, I resorted to alcohol and looking back I don’t think it was a crime to have a drink at that time of the day, but what was not clear was the reasoning behind that glass of wine. It was the decision of a cloudy and sluggish state of mind. I remember sipping the wine and not even enjoying it so much, I simply waited for the light-headed numbness to settle in and calm my palpitations down. Mission accomplished indeed! In all the fuzziness I actually forgot to finish certain very important errands like picking up medication for a family member. The latter was the icing on the cake, as forgetfulness is a clear sign of lack of rest. I was now the perfect candidate who was starved and sleep deprived.

That night was when my body actually gave up and I found myself looking in the mirror and saw a face that was switched off, dull, blotchy and not to mention the dark circles which I had so cleverly concealed all week thanks to some fabulous makeup. I unmasked the woman who had been fighting to stay awake all week, at the cost of her most precious possession: her health. I had been a speeding convoy all week and it took me 4 nights and 5 days to ultimately become a train wreck. My stubborn self had prioritised incoherently my regular shuteye only to find myself in bed and fast asleep at nine pm on Friday night. Phew!

The effects of sound uninterrupted sleep are simply orgasmic and I don’t think can be compared to any artificial stimulant or drugs of the like. I am not a coffee addict or an alcoholic or even an unhealthy eater, but one just needs to be in that vulnerable state of mind to feel the attraction towards such stimulants. Your body calls for help and I have said this time and time again, please listen to it by feeding it simple rest and not pumping it up with temporary solutions to then run on low battery.

Waking up the next day after a solid 11 hours of sleep was a new me. I was a vivacious, energetic and full of pep woman! It was such a surreal feeling after being so cloudy and opaque all week. Yes it was a rather simple solution and I should have adopted it much earlier.

However, in hindsight I can say I have been on the dark side and know the deleterious effects of little sleep. I could call myself an accidental experiment as I mentioned at the beginning of this article. The scientific data only proves my experience:

There are too many scary effects of the too little sleep and a recent study in the U.K. showed that sleep deprivation actually messes with over 700 genes in your body. This can somewhat explain the serious consequences that have linked short sleep to problems such as obesity, heart disease and diabetes. "Clearly sleep is critical to rebuilding the body and maintaining a functional state, all kinds of damage appear to occur,” Colin Smith, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Surrey, told the BBC. "If we can't actually replenish and replace new cells, then that's going to lead to degenerative diseases."
Sometimes we cannot help but be on little sleep, due to late working hours or having a young baby. In my case I had no excuse and I was just stupid and reckless. As Ernest Hemingway said “I love sleep. My life has the tendency to fall apart when I'm awake, you know?" This is pretty much what happened to me during that week. I wish not to go back if I can help it.


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