Self Improvement Begins With a Good Night’s Sleep
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Self Improvement and Sleeping Well
We all want to be smarter, healthier, well balanced emotionally and physically. We go to sleep each night and wake up each morning, seeking to better ourselves. Now science is learning one of the ways towards self improvement is in the right quality and quantity of sleep. Researchers are learning sleep deprived people have poorer memories, worse judgments, have less patience, more mood swings, and even elicit personality changes.
Sleep is Important to Our Moods and Our Memories
The Biological Causes from Lack of Sleep
Sleep deprivation affects our emotions. Studies have been done to prove there is a neurological basis for this. In analyzing brain imagings, researchers found that a good night’s sleep can regulate a person’s mood and coping skills. Lack of sleep does just the opposite, and can actually increase anxiety, depression and other psychiatric disorders, which can affect controlled and appropriate responses. This happens because the part of the brain called the amygdala, which helps alert us in times of danger, becomes heightened with no sleep. This shuts down the prefrontal cortex, which is where we do our reasoning and logical thinking. Reasoning and logical thinking increases chemicals in our brain that calm down the flight or flight response that is coming from the amygdala. More studies need to be done, but observations are showing that in almost all psychiatric disorders there are some forms of sleep disorders are present.
Lack of Sleep Makes Part of Our Brain Hyperactive
With enough sleep deprivation, even healthy brains can take on psychiatric pathological patterns. In looking at results from fMRI (functioning Magnetic Resonance Imaging), the amygdala became 60 % more reactive sleep deprived people who were shown negative visual stimuli of gory or upsetting pictures. The people in the study stayed awake for a continuos period of 35 hours. The amygdala is integral in processing emotions. In looking at the imaging of people who slept the entire night, the amygdala showed normal activity. The study was done with 26 people in the age range of 18 to 30 years old, with equal number of males and females. They were divided into 2 groups and each shown the same 100 pictures which ranged from neutral to extremely negative depictions. The researchers saw a hyperactive brain response in the sleep deprived subjects, as they looked at the more and more negative pictures.
Lack of Sleep and Driving
People Are Not Good Judges of How Tired They Are
It is believed during the different phases of sleep, the body does some emotional processing and emotional regulation.When people are really sleep deprived, they have difficulties realizing how tired they are.Eight hours is the recommended amount of sleep. The first night or two of lost sleep, people know they are tired, but tell themselves they can manage. After a few days of consistent sleep loss, people don’t realize how poor their judgment and thinking is. Studies have shown people have a poorer memory, impaired thinking and slower reaction times with sleep deprivation Harvard researchers found there is a higher risk of heart disease, diabetes, and obesity. Israeli researchers found worse memory and lower attention in children who got an hour less of sleep than kids who got a full nights sleep.
It Does Not Take Long to Be Sleep Deprived
Researchers firmly believed, after conducting sleep deprivation experiments, that we can not judge for ourselves how tired we are, and what it is actually doing to us. It is believed this may be the reason there are so many car crashes due to lack of sleep.
In a study done, half of the people who caused car accidents didn’t know they were sleepy before the incident. People who are tired are driving impaired, but not aware they are so tired.There are adverse consequences to being sleep deprived, which occur within a short time of not getting enough sleep. Greater than 50% of all Americans, get less than 8 hours of sleep a night.
Constant Insomnia Causes Smaller Gray Matter in the Brain
Sleep Apnea
Scientists at UCLA found people with sleep apnea had brain tissue loss in the area that stores memory. Approximately 20 million Americans have sleep apnea.Sleep apnea happens when the airway is blocked and causes a cessation in breathing, and then loud snores as the breathing resumes.People with sleep apnea do not get a good night’s sleep. They are so fatigued during the day, they can even fall asleep in the middle of doing things. People who suffer from this condition deal with poor memories and lose focus easily. Studies have shown brain differences also.
Strong Neural Connections are Made While We Sleep
Sleep is an important part of learning and retaining new tasks. Not getting enough sleep affects a person’s judgment, mood, perception, and motivation. Gettingenough sleep is important to learn and retain information. The complexity of all this is not fully understood. Quality and quantity of sleep is very important for memory. It is believed that sleep helps us to learn in 2 ways. It helps us focus and it helps store what we have learned into our long term memories. Memory is important for learning new information.
Researchers have looked at different stages of sleep to see how this affects our memory, and also studied how lack of sleep affects our learning. Researchers believe memories are consolidated by neural connection that formed from learning a new task or an experience. Stronger neural connections are made during the hours we sleep. It is not exactly know how this is possible, but the brainwaves during different stages of sleep are probably related to forming memories.
Sleep Needs to Take Priority Over the Other Things We Do
As more studies are done, researchers will learn more about sleep stages and itaffect on memory.
The most important correlation we know for sure is that being sleep deprived impairs memory, learning, and our judgment. Getting enough sleep is more important than we realize.
Too often, we think sleep is something we can give up for other things. But perhaps we all need to reassess what we are doing, and give sleep a greater priority. The hours we sleep are an investment in ourselves, far more than we possibly ever realized.
To Help You Sleep
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CommentsLoading...
Thumbs up from me too - learned a lot from this hub, Cheers - Mel
You are right - sleep is very important. I didn't know the scientific details though, thanks for teaching me :-)
Many people work long hours, and as a result don't sleep enough. Consequently, they become less productive and have to work even more hours.
All this, even though the simple solution would be to just sleep more!
Great hub dear toknowinfo. I have had intermittent sleep for decades. My "usual routine" is to wake at 4 AM and I'm up. I often go to bed later so that I can sleep till dawn. My sleep is often 6 hours but too often it can be 4 hours or so. Occasionally I am pushed internally to take a nap during the day. It just is what it is. I've been living like this for decades.
I'll have to admit that being in a "true relationship" with a loving mate - helps. I've never slept better than when I was loved. God bless you dear heart.
An important hub toknowinfo.;)
LOL. Never enough time. You got me in one tki. I sacrifice sleep to get more time - kids in bed is the only time when one can priortize oneself! I've learned to cat nap - which is not easy being a dog!
Thank you. Both interesting and informatitive. I sleep badly. If I get two hours in a row I am doing well and a total of six hours in a night is amazing. It used to bother me but does not any longer. If I don't worry then I still am rested with just three hours. My brain is at its best at around 06.00 when I rise.
Voted up and useful. It is very informative.In my younger days with work and school I missed a lot of sleep.It never seemed a problem for short periods but or occasionally but consistent lack of sleep is self evidently a problem.
I'm sure I have smaller gray matter because I don't get enough sleep. But I find that if I go to bed later, then I tend to sleep through the night.
I love to sleep more than anything else but that's not to say that I sleep all the time. I crave sleep because I sometimes am deprived (not getting the good 7 to 8 hours of sleep). Your hub highlights the great importance of sleep. If only life can be arranged so there is enough time to sleep and do the other gazillions things waiting to be done. Rated up--you're awesome in detailed information.
Toknowinfo, this is one of the most valuable Hubs I think I have ever read.
I have never been much of a sleeper, with irregular sleep patterns since childhood. Since I became self-employed, (approximately) four years ago, that has intensified on an ongoing basis. As things stand at the moment, I only go to bed on average four nights a week, at most five. Usually when I do go to bed it is at around five or six am, as I live in the UK and work US hours.
I have known for a long time that my sleep patterns (or lack thereof) are dangerous and are harming me but I don't think I realised just how much until I read your wonderful Hub. I am typing these words at just gone 1.30am, having not been to bed for circa 36 hours and suddenly feel really tired. I genuinely am now about to sign the computer off and go to bed.
I am going to bookmark this Hub and read it over again several times in the very near future and beyond.
Thanks.
Hi: I have also researched the importance of sleep and many people are suffering from not getting enough sleep. This is advertised all over, even by doctors. With all the stress we have, health issues, employment loss, personal tragedies, etc., it is not easy to just put those on the shelf for 7-8 hours. What has personally helped me is my faith in God knowing all things are in His hands. Worry and anxiety cannot help the situation, but they actually undermine our thinking and make our choices a bit unclear and then we make decisions based on fear not solid realistic thinking.
In my own life, lack of sleep seems to heighten my feeling of hopelessness in certain situations or just blow their importance up too much.
Always good to be reminded about these important health issues that affect us all.
Thanks,
Joyce Kuras
Great informative hub! It's so easy to push sleep down to the bottom of the "to do" list. As your research shows, there is a price to pay for doing that!
Good Hub toknowinfo- Sleep is indeed so important, we just don't function the same without our quality straight 8!






























Multiman 13 months ago
Great hub! Voted up!