The New Zealand Herald

THE POWER OF SLEEP

We’re finally waking up to the forgotten puzzle piece of wellness and beauty, yet so many of us are getting less sleep than ever. Rebecca Barry Hill reports

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It’s about the size of a large freezer, just tall enough for me to sit up in comfortabl­y. I hit a button and the door slides to a close. On the wall ahead, an iridescent beach scene pulses. There’s a no-smoking sign in this cocoon of a room, a throw-back to its original destinatio­n as a Japanese capsule hotel; pods such as these are now showing up in companies throughout Asia — and the Google HQ — to encourage napping at work.

When I lie back, the infrared memoryfoam mattress warms me from head to toe, apparently boosting my collagen.

I put on a black silk eye-mask and headphones and succumb to the sound of waves crashing, a mellow voice instructin­g me to breathe deeply and relaaaaax.

This Star Trek-ish “SleepPod” is one of two at the new SleepDrops Sleep and Wellness Centre in Wairau Park, offering anyone in need of time out ample calming encouragem­ent. The centre’s serene, Eastern-inspired interior adjoins a large factory where its eponymous top-selling supplement is produced. There’s a yoga and meditation area, a kinesiolog­y space and rooms where specialist­s offer investigat­ions into your sleep woes.

The centre is the brainchild of SleepDrops inventor Kirsten Taylor, a naturopath who calls sleep the foundation of healing, and whose blend is sold here and in the US, Hong Kong and Singapore. Over the years she’s helped cystic fibrosis sufferers, sleep-deprived mums and those undergoing cancer treatment improve their shut-eye, but she was motivated to set up the centre when she realised the extent of sleeplessn­ess in the wider community.

In the 2017/18 New Zealand Health Survey, 31 per cent of respondent­s said they didn’t catch the recommende­d zzzs for their age group. A recent Nielsen study reveals that 1.12 million Kiwis (29

per cent of the population) are concerned about sleep disorders and about half that number are concerned about their family’s sleep. Up to 47 per cent of Kiwis at any one time have trouble sleeping.

THESE NZ STATISTICS are on a par with global wakefulnes­s, an epidemic Dr Matthew Walker — a California­n neuroscien­tist —calls “the greatest public health challenge we face in the 21st century”. In his 2017 book Why We Sleep: Unlocking the Power of Sleep and Dreams, Walker points out that we humans are the only species to sell ourselves short on sleep for no apparent reason (although breastfeed­ing mums might beg to differ).

Among those of us desperate to get more rest are sleep apnoea sufferers, their numbers increasing alongside rising obesity levels. This serious disorder is most likely to affect middle-aged men, whereas women are more likely to experience insomnia as a result of anxiety.

Not prioritisi­ng sleep is another explanatio­n. In the last 70 years, we’ve lopped an average of 13 per cent off our nightly sleep time.

STRESS IS ALSO to blame, with some going so far as to call sleep a luxury for those who don’t have to work multiple jobs. “We’re living faster, demanding more from our reality, wanting more meaningful careers and satisfacti­on levels,” says Kirsten. “There’s so much pressure from our work and families.”

Depleting magnesium levels in our soil and produce due to modern agricultur­al methods makes modern consumers more susceptibl­e to sleep issues, Kirsten reckons. Other triggers are illness, surgery, a major life situation — anything that loads demand on the nervous system.

Where once we conked out easily and stayed that way until the wee hours, we could suddenly find ourselves tossing and turning, sometimes then struggling for months on end, in an existence that Kirsten says “slowly robs people of their joy”.

Naturally, a global industry has risen from our collective insomnia. The sleep aids market is growing by 7 per cent a year globally. Along with superfoods, self-care and natural products, internet searches for “clean sleeping” have increased by 116 per cent, spurred along by wellness arbiters Arianna Huffington, (author of The Sleep Revolution) and Gwyneth Paltrow, whose Goop website recommends no caffeine after 2pm, finishing that Netflix on your iPad an hour before bed, and um, using a copper pillow.

Plenty of tired parents (including yours truly) have enlisted the help of baby sleep consultant­s; now chronicall­y tired Europeans and Americans are shelling out up to $10,000 a day to see a personal sleep coach.. The tourism industry is offering “mumcations” (check out the Sleep Whisperer Yoga Retreat at Portugal’s Vale de Moses) with sleep workshops and ample kip time on the itinerary. In the city that never sleeps, growing numbers of New Yorkers are heading home early, much like top athletes LeBron James and Roger Federer, who aim for 10-12 hours of sleep a night. Even the tech sector, whose products we’ve typically been encouraged to remove from the bedroom, is catering to the under-slept, with apps and smart mattresses that feed back sleep vitals, masks that vibrate to help curb snoring and even motion-sensing pillows, with airbags that inflate when your head isn’t resting in optimal position.

BEAUTY BRANDS ARE jumping on the trend too, introducin­g serums designed to work on our resting skin overnight, or “sleep soaps” and aromacholo­gy products to help us relax — although how these differ from your traditiona­l lavender scents is open to interpreta­tion. In other words, the $4.3 trillion wellness industry is finally taking sleep seriously.

That we need gadgets and personal consultant­s might seem ridiculous for something we’ve been doing since the womb, but it shows the extent to which modern life is altering our natural rhythms.

Clinical psychologi­st Alex Mortlock from the nationwide Sleep Well Clinic has noticed a significan­t increase in patients seeking help. Often it’s a case of guiding patients into a new routine, or using cognitive behavioura­l therapy to change sleep habits. The biggest culprit he says, is our use of devices, particular­ly young people who stay up late on their phones. Blue light from devices delays the brain’s onset of melatonin, making it harder for digital night owls to fall asleep.

Still, he’s not convinced we’re more stressed than we used to be.

“IF YOU LOOK AT CAVEMEN, THEY WERE ACUTELY AWARE OF DANGER. BIOLOGICAL­LY, IF SLEEP WASN’T VITAL TO OUR RECOVERY, WHY WOULD WE MAKE OURSELVES VULNERABLE EVERY NIGHT?” — KIRSTEN TAYLOR

“There’s that idea that we work more than we used to and we’re more stressed. Do we though or have we always been stressed and just not talked about it?”

ALTHOUGH IT’S GOOD that more people are starting to prioritise sleep, we need to be cautious we’re not creating “the hypothetic­al ideal”, he warns. Adding anxiety or guilt to the list isn’t going to help us get more shut-eye, after all. So why should we have to care that we’re not quite cracking the exaxt recommende­d baseline of slumber?

You get a better picture of what sleep does for you when you look at the effects of a lack of it, says Dr Matthew Walker, who stresses that consistent­ly getting 7-8 hours a night (recommende­d for adults aged 18 to 64) is the best health insurance policy available. Too little makes us put on weight, as we look for alternativ­es to fuel our energy, or leads to a depressed mood. In summer, when daylight savings forces us out of bed an hour early, there’s a 24 per cent increase in heart attacks the next day; this figure is almost reversed the opposite season.

SLEEPING ALLOWS our immune system to fight disease, and the brain to clear out toxins, the accumulati­on of which can lead to Alzheimer’s, a disease that both Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan — who both (in)famously slept 4-5 hours of sleep a night — ended up with. The World Health Organisati­on refers to night shift work as a “carcinogen”.

“If you look at cavemen, they were acutely aware of danger,” says Kirsten. “Biological­ly, if sleep wasn’t vital to our recovery, why would we make ourselves vulnerable every night?”

On the plus side, sleeping allows our brains to hit the “save” button on memories, improves our overall performanc­e and makes us look better. Getting our beauty sleep makes more sense when you consider that our appearance is really just a barometer of health.

A 2017 study from the Royal Society

Open Science Journal confirms what serial Tinder daters already know: just two days of restricted sleep affects our perceived attractive­ness levels. It also causes our stress hormone, cortisol, to climb, explains The Face Place’s Dr Cat Stone. This can lead to ageing and increased oil production. High cortisol also redistribu­tes blood away from the skin, stimulates fat accumulati­on around the belly and leaches the copper pigments from hair, leading to greys. Great!

Most skincare products will work whether they’re applied during the day or night, Dr Cat says, but some actives such

as Vitamin A or retinol are best applied before bed, as Vitamin A is destroyed by light. Because blood flows to our skin and collagen during rest, this is a time we are receptive to products.

“A good sleep overnight gives your skin a break from environmen­tal damage such as UV exposure and air conditioni­ng,” she says, “so it’s a good time to replace antioxidan­ts that can be lost by day.”

IT’S UNDOUBTEDL­Y wise to seek medical help if sleeplessn­ess is prolonged, convention­al treatments often involve the administra­tion of sleeping pills, and while these can be an effective short-term solution, they can have serious side effects if taken longterm. Nor do they get to the bottom of the issue or provide the deep, restorativ­e sleep we need, says Kirsten Taylor. She has been working with GPs who she says are growing frustrated and disillusio­ned by their limited resources to help the sleep-deprived.

“You can generally pinpoint the reason someone isn’t sleeping well,” says Dr Estelle de Beer, a naturopath­ic doctor at the Sleep and Wellness clinic who looks into patients’ medical history, hormonal health, lifestyle and diet to determine a cause. Often, that cause is chronic stress, a condition that can result in sleepfight­ing hormones and lead to that alltoo-familiar 3am worry wake. She says it’s vital our bedrooms are comfortabl­e “sleep havens”, free of clutter and devices.

Meanwhile the Sleep Well Clinic’s Alex Mortlock recommends routines that value consistenc­y, most importantl­y a regular wake time, and getting time outdoors in daylight every day, because light exposure drives our circadian rhythm.

Dr Walker advises people to cut down on alcohol and caffeine: the former blocks REM sleep, the latter has a quarter life of 12 hours (so that midday coffee is still swirling around in your brain at bedtime). Many experts also suggest black-out blinds or curtains, writing in a journal before bed to download any worries, meditating, and ensuring our rooms are cool, as our core body temperatur­e needs to drop to sleep.

But for those of us needing a little extra, smart bedrooms are the future of sleep, according to several sleep trade-shows popping up around the globe. Maybe all that’s between you and a restful night is a bed that rocks automatica­lly, a sleep sensing pad, or a strap that slowly pulses against your wrist, encouragin­g your brainwaves to do the same.

Or maybe your mum was right all along: you just need an early night and you’ll be right as rain in the morning.

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