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What’s So Good about Sleep?

Lady Sleeping

At the outset, it is best to understand why sleep is so important to us,
especially in today’s day and age. Our general health has degenerated
in recent times; that’s a fact no one can detract. Now, there are
several reasons why our health has taken a tumble. We are moving
away from nature and our own natural body patterns each day that
we live. Our food has become synthetic for its most part, the clothes
that we wear and most of the things that we use are not natural at all,
even our civilization itself is completely away from the rule book of
nature.

It is for this reason that we are facing so many health perils today.
And one of the most profound elements that is sordidly missing from
our lifestyle is a healthy sleep pattern.


Here you will learn why sleep is important. Why is it
important for us to devote at least 7 to 9 hours of our day to sleep?
How does sleeplessness or sleep deprivation affect our lives? These
are important questions to answer before we move along with things.

Finding time to sleep in our busy schedules is extremely important
for our health and wellbeing. Most people push the boundaries when
it comes to sleep. We restrict the time we allow for sleep, going to bed
progressively later as we try to fit in the many different jobs that need
completion each day. We underestimate the importance of sleep.
Without adequate sleep, our bodies will react, and those important
schedules we put off sleep to achieve, will be affected eventually.


It’s only recently that we have begun to fully understand just how
much our body needs sleep to function properly. Most of the body’s
normal activities rely on us having a regular sleep and an interrupted
sleep pattern is a significant stress on our bodies.


Our nervous system, our digestive system, and the ability of our body
to repair itself are all dependent on our sleep cycles being consistent
and regular. When we deprive our body of sleep, we inhibit our brains
ability to decide, our emotional responses to situations may
be compromised, and even how we interact socially may be affected.

Sleep is as necessary for our health as eating and drinking is. It has
long been recognized that sleep deprivation is an effective torture
tool, and experiments using rats have revealed that their life
expectancy is significantly reduced when they are sleep deprived
under experimental conditions.


How much sleep a person needs is dependent on factors such as age
and gender. Pregnant women for example, may require more sleep
than a non-pregnant woman of the same age group and a child may
require more sleep than an adult, however an older adult generally
requires less sleep than a younger adult.

The amount of sleep an individual needs is fairly consistent with their
age group. A typical adult will require approximately 7-9 hours of
sleep a night to maintain optimum health and performance. If we
reduce that amount of sleep time over a series of nights, our body will
eventually react and we need to make up that time, usually in what is
termed as a “sleep in”.


However, even though we know we will sleep in on the weekend, our
performance during the working week may be severely affected by our
lack of sleep. If we find ourselves excessively yawning during the day,
or finding it difficult to remember simple details or make simple
judgment calls correctly, it is possible we are suffering from sleep
deprivation.


People take micro sleeps where they lose consciousness for very short
periods of time without realizing it, leading to potentially dangerous
situations. Many road deaths and incidents at work have been directly
traced to insufficient sleep the night before. With so many serious
side effects and consequences of not sleeping, we should all be
ensuring we schedule adequate sleep into our daily lives.