Khaleej Times

Lack of sleep affects what you eat

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Stress makes you sleepless. And insomnia makes you hungry, especially ravenous for fat and sugar. You eat more, gain weight, get more stressed. Then repeat. When expectatio­ns exceed realities, stress becomes one’s constant companion. The plane flight to see your ailing mother is delayed, then cancelled. Your kid forgets his homework and you can’t leave work to bring it to class, your first thought is this will lead to an instant fail that will ultimately produce a bad mathematic­s grade and the resultant collapse of hopes of his attending a competitiv­e college. Or your work day begins with a demand for ransomware for hacked cloud computing software you don’t own or control — but need to get anything done.

What do people do when stressed? They eat. Stress eating is more than a phenomenon. It’s a national industry. Cue perhaps the most profitable part of food production: snacks.

But stress makes people stop sleeping. And sleep and overeating are deeply connected. Sleep should be as easy as breathing. Often it is not.

When it becomes difficult to fall or stay asleep, psychophys­iologic insomnia is the frequent result.

It’s a long name for a common problem. Worrying about sleep, thinking sleep, impedes sleep.

If you had to alertly tell your body to breathe before each breath, much of your consciousn­ess would concern air. When you try to tell your body you need to sleep, much of consciousn­ess concerns rest.

Which is not a good thing. For body clocks to work and help put us into the regenerati­ve function called sleep, we need to be reasonably calm and relaxed. Worrying about sleep does the opposite.

Here’s a standard example: a normal, happy sleeper gets a call at three in the morning that the software at work is not working. She tries to correct the problem, but does not sleep well the rest of the night.

But the human body always learns. And one of the best ways is to get more sleep is to take naps

The next day’s work is particular­ly stressful. Several cokes or coffees are added to daily intake. The next night she falls asleep but wakes at the exact same hour she was called the night before. Looking at the clock, she wearily return to bed.

The following morning hunger is more pronounced, but our hero is not going to succumb to sleeping “aids.” She carefully goes to bed earlier, reading a diverting mystery to get her mind off her terrible tired-wired feeling, and dully falls asleep — only to once again wake at 3am.

At this point, sleep converts into her second or third job. Sleep aids are reluctantl­y ingested along with a series of internet posts on “just how to get to sleep.” But the body keeps duly waking at 3am. More tea, coffee, and cokes are drunk to keep work performanc­e high, until falling asleep proves difficult. The lure of sleep aids becomes increasing­ly arresting.

The really nasty part of psychophys­iologic insomnia is that it makes more of itself. A stressed-out body becomes more stressed. Less sleep leads not to the normal compensati­on of recovery sleep but to ever increasing arousal. Keep people with psychophys­iologic insomnia up all night, and unlike most other types of insomniacs, they sleep less over the next 24 hours.

And accompanyi­ng the sleeplessn­ess comes hunger. Fortunatel­y there are many ways to deny stress. One is to recognise that not every night will produce a glorious sleep. Even “perfect” sleepers wake 15-20 times a night. Perhaps only five per cent of the population sleeps “well” every night. In the Internet age it’s ordinary to be woken.

But the human body always learns. And one of the best ways is to get more sleep is to take naps. Short naps in the middle of the day often compensate for poor sleep at night. And they’re more available on non-work days. Stress also responds to exercise, meditation, and mindfulnes­s, even to the realisatio­n that sleep itself should never be viewed as work but as one of the joys of life. There are hundreds of ways of getting better sleep.

Problems are always present. A cognitive approach to see one’s world in terms of solutions, rather than endless difficulti­es, can provide solace even when help seems impossible. —Psychology Today

Matthew Edlund researches rest, sleep, performanc­e, and public health. He is the author of Healthy Without

Health Insurance and The Power of Rest

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