Iran Daily

Do you need eight hours of sleep a night and is coffee before bed a bad idea?

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Sleep. We all know we need it. Most of us feel we don’t get enough.

We’re constantly tired — and tired of being tired — as we struggle to achieve those elusive eight hours’ sleep each night, according to independen­t.co.uk.

But it may be that stressing out about not getting enough sleep is actually what’s making you feel so exhausted, rather than the lack of sleep itself.

According to sleep expert Dr. Neil Stanley, not everyone needs eight hours’ sleep a night — you just need to listen to your body.

This is just one of many sleep myths many of us believe to be true.

Stanley de-bunked some of the most common misconcept­ions around sleep, and explained which ones are actually true:

Everybody needs eight hours of sleep

Stanley said, “Sleep need is like height, we are all different and how much we need is to a large degree, geneticall­y determined. Eight hours is an average, not an ideal.

“The amount of sleep you need is the amount that allows you to be awake, alert and focused during the day.

“If you are feeling sleepy during the day then there is most likely an issue with the quality of sleep that you’ve had during the night.”

Quieting mind important thing is the most

In order to get to sleep you need three things: A bedroom conducive to sleep’ a relaxed body and most importantl­y a quiet mind.

You can’t go to sleep if your mind is racing and so anything you can do to slow it down will help you sleep.

There is no magic way of doing this, you have to find what works for you, be that reading, a warm bath, mindfulnes­s, aromathera­py or listening to a music.

It doesn’t matter what you do as long as it stops you worrying about the stresses of the day.

Drinking coffee before bed

Some people are very sensitive to the effects of caffeine and for these people it’s important to avoid drinking beverages containing caffeine too close to bedtime — but there is no golden rule about this, just listen to your body.

For some people the effects caused by caffeine are much lower and may not have any effects at all.

If you have been drinking two strong black cups of coffee every evening for the past 40 years and you have just developed a sleeping problem, then it is almost certainly not the coffee.

Exercising before bed

Exercising in the evening does not necessaril­y affect your ability to sleep positively or negatively. What is important is that you wind-down sufficient­ly after your exercise before getting into bed.

We need less sleep as we get older

Sleep needs become fixed in our early twenties and don’t change that much as we get older.

What does change with age is our ability to get the sleep we need. As we age our sleep becomes lighter and less refreshing, so we are more easily woken in the night and once awake there is little pressure to go back to sleep.

Teenagers need to sleep more than adults

Teenagers need more sleep because they are going through puberty which causes major physical and emotional changes to occur and sleep is important in these processes.

Moreover, teenagers also need to go to sleep later than adults due to a shift in their circadian rhythms.

When you are ill you should ‘soldier on’

When you’re ill your body needs rest to recuperate and fight the infection — being a ‘hero’ and continuing to go to work means that not only will it take you longer to get better but you will most likely infect your colleagues.

In this cold and flu season, take to your bed, wrap up warm, have a hot soothing drink of lemon, honey and ginger and use a clinically proven product like Vicks Vaporub to ease your symptoms.

You can catch up on sleep

If you have a bad night’s’ sleep one night in the week, you can usually make up for this the following night.

However, if you don’t get a lot of rest consistent­ly during the week, this cannot be ‘made up’ by sleeping in at the weekend.

Having a lie-in is better than nothing if you are sleep-deprived but you will never get back all the hours that you lost.

Sleep position tells something about personalit­y

You make 12-20 major positional changes during the night so the position you fall asleep in and the position you wake up in is not the position you sleep in, therefore there is no correlatio­n between your sleep position and your personalit­y.

If you’re a couple, this is not an indication of the strength of your relationsh­ip.

Avoiding blue light will help to sleep

Exposure to blue light, such as that produced by smartphone­s, tablets, etc., before bed has been shown to disturb sleep and cause daytime sleepiness the next day.

However, bright light has similar effects so even using a ‘paper white’ device has been shown to have negative effects.

Hence the advice to avoid all screens for a least 30 minutes before sleep.

 ??  ?? netdoctor.co.uk
netdoctor.co.uk

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