Getting a good night’s sleep is much more important than you think. In fact, it is vital for overall health and performance potential.
Yet despite this, many people get an inadequate amount of sleep due to many factors both intrinsic and extrinsic. Below are things that you can change to help improve sleep.
“Sleep hygiene” is the term used to describe the habits and rituals around bedtime and sleep. Practicing good or bad hygiene is up to you. Positive habits will support a good night’s sleep and prevent you from laying awake, tossing around, and waking up tired and exhausted. This can be especially true for wheelchair users who challenge their bodies and minds on a daily basis, remaining in seated positions all day. Decent sleep hygiene will help the nervous, as well as the musculoskeletal system to recover and recharge overnight.
Studies have shown that inadequate rest impairs our ability to think, to handle stress, to maintain a healthy immune system and to moderate our emotions. In fact, sleep is so important to our overall health that total sleep deprivation has been proven to be fatal: lab rats denied the chance to rest die within two to three weeks. Other typical effects of sleep deprivation include heart disease, hypertension, weight gain, diabetes and a wide range of psychiatric disorders such as depression and anxiety.
Considering that our immune system may already be suppressed by various conditions and daily stresses on our bodies’ systems, the reasons listed above clearly show how important a good night’s sleep is for our overall health.
A good sleep routine is not only created in the evenings. It starts with your behaviour throughout the day:
How is your sleep hygiene? Can you optimise your sleep? Or are you already doing everything to wake up energised and ready to smash anything that life throws at you?