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I know of a tip to wake you up feeling fresh
There are various stages of sleep, one being light sleep and the other being heavy. Waking up refreshed depends on the stage you are at when you are awake. If you set 2 alarms, you can force your body to wake up in the light sleep cycle, which will make you feel good when you wake up
How? Set the first alarm for the earliest you want to wake up. Make sure it is a quiet alarm or radio etc. but not very loud. Next, set the second alarm for the latest time you want to wake up. Make it a normal volume, or loud enough to definitely wake you up.
So how does it work? When in light sleep your body can be awoken by quieter sounds, and in heavy sleep by louder noises. The purpose of the quiet first alarm (make sure it is set not to end until you stop it manually) is to remain sounding until your louder alarm goes off. As you cycle through the stages constantly during sleep, no doubt you will get to light sleep while your quiet alarm is going off, so it will wake you up refreshedAnd just in case it doesn't, you have the loud alarm to definitely wake you up
Sorry if I worded the explaination badly, I couldn't think of a good way to explain it :lol:
That sounds good in theory Tomthedude, but a Nuclear Blast couldn't wake me up sometimes...lol
I suffer from Sleep Paralysis(Something I wondered MJ had) cause his sleep was jacked up to and I lucid dream (which is cool but feels like you been awake all night).
I sleep really well, about 7-9 hours of sleep every night, but my problem is that I still feel tired. If I go to sleep at 12 I'll usually wake up between 9 and 10 feeling like I should sleep some more. I generally am not able to do anything without my 2 mugs of coffee in the morning, and it takes a while to get me going. Exercising helps a bit and drinking lots of water, but I still wish I could get up in the morning feeling good and energetic instead of feeling like it's the middle of the night.
8 hours???? never, I never sleep at night, i think is insomnia, i use to bother about it, well its aweful, cause in the night in my case i have to stay quite, thats my problem... anyway, i got this problem since i was 10 years old, but there are times in which i would sleep well at time, but i also tend to believe that i waste my time sleeping too much, i dont know... but i know is not super good for my age its recommended to sleep 8 hours, i just cant, God knows when younger i tried everything, i was on alcohol at 18 cause of this, aweful, then pillls and stuff, but its not good you end up like a zombie... now im 22 and i just dont care, i do what i have to, as long as i do it well, i dont care, i do get sleepy at times, i say i sleep about 4 hours a day, may be less, then i wake up.
Thank you for your help, to be sincere, it does not affect me that much (Thanks God) i have a wonderful health (thanks God TOO), the thing is I DO KNOW THE PROPER THING IS TO SLEEP THE FULL 8 HOURS, I KNOW IT, is just that i cant, see mainly cause of my thinking, i tend to THINK A LOT, many times positive, many times negative, but i just cant help it, im like a machine that way, i cant help it...Well, if it's any consolation, here is an article from Time Magazine about how much sleep we need:
http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1812420,00.html
Sleep is one of the richest topics in science today: why we need it, why it can be hard to get, and how that affects everything from our athletic performance to our income. Daniel Kripke, co-director of research at the Scripps Clinic Sleep Center in La Jolla, Calif., has looked at the most important question of all. In 2002, he compared death rates among more than 1 million American adults who, as part of a study on cancer prevention, reported their average nightly amount of sleep. To many, his results were surprising, but they've since been corroborated by similar studies in Europe and East Asia. Kripke explains.
Q: How much sleep is ideal?
A: Studies show that people who sleep between 6.5 hr. and 7.5 hr. a night, as they report, live the longest. And people who sleep 8 hr. or more, or less than 6.5 hr., they don't live quite as long. There is just as much risk associated with sleeping too long as with sleeping too short. The big surprise is that long sleep seems to start at 8 hr. Sleeping 8.5 hr. might really be a little worse than sleeping 5 hr.
Morbidity [or sickness] is also "U-shaped" in the sense that both very short sleep and very long sleep are associated with many illnesses—with depression, with obesity—and therefore with heart disease—and so forth. But the [ideal amount of sleep] for different health measures isn't all in the same place. Most of the low points are at 7 or 8 hr., but there are some at 6 hr. and even at 9 hr. I think diabetes is lowest in 7-hr. sleepers [for example]. But these measures aren't as clear as the mortality data.
I think we can speculate [about why people who sleep from 6.5 to 7.5 hr. live longer], but we have to admit that we don't really understand the reasons. We don't really know yet what is cause and what is effect. So we don't know if a short sleeper can live longer by extending their sleep, and we don't know if a long sleeper can live longer by setting the alarm clock a bit earlier. We're hoping to organize tests of those questions.
One of the reasons I like to publicize these facts is that I think we can prevent a lot of insomnia and distress just by telling people that short sleep is O.K. We've all been told you ought to sleep 8 hr., but there was never any evidence. A very common problem we see at sleep clinics is people who spend too long in bed. They think they should sleep 8 or 9 hr., so they spend [that amount of time] in bed, with the result that they have trouble falling asleep and wake up a lot during the night. Oddly enough, a lot of the problem [of insomnia] is lying in bed awake, worrying about it. There have been many controlled studies in the U.S., Great Britain and other parts of Europe that show that an insomnia treatment that involves getting out of bed when you're not sleepy and restricting your time in bed actually helps people to sleep more. They get over their fear of the bed. They get over the worry, and become confident that when they go to bed, they will sleep. So spending less time in bed actually makes sleep better. It is in fact a more powerful and effective long-term treatment for insomnia than sleeping pills.
Thank you for your help, to be sincere, it does not affect me that much (Thanks God) i have a wonderful health (thanks God TOO), the thing is I DO KNOW THE PROPER THING IS TO SLEEP THE FULL 8 HOURS, I KNOW IT, is just that i cant, see mainly cause of my thinking, i tend to THINK A LOT, many times positive, many times negative, but i just cant help it, im like a machine that way, i cant help it...
I have done everything to sleep well, but sincerely as long as my health is good, im OK, i've been preocupied about this for a LONG time and i just dont want to now, i cant sleep, then i will sleep when i can, as long as i do what i have to and i do it happily, im fine, as long as my health is ok im fine.
Thank you for your help :flowers:
I know of a tip to wake you up feeling fresh
There are various stages of sleep, one being light sleep and the other being heavy. Waking up refreshed depends on the stage you are at when you are awake. If you set 2 alarms, you can force your body to wake up in the light sleep cycle, which will make you feel good when you wake up
How? Set the first alarm for the earliest you want to wake up. Make sure it is a quiet alarm or radio etc. but not very loud. Next, set the second alarm for the latest time you want to wake up. Make it a normal volume, or loud enough to definitely wake you up.
So how does it work? When in light sleep your body can be awoken by quieter sounds, and in heavy sleep by louder noises. The purpose of the quiet first alarm (make sure it is set not to end until you stop it manually) is to remain sounding until your louder alarm goes off. As you cycle through the stages constantly during sleep, no doubt you will get to light sleep while your quiet alarm is going off, so it will wake you up refreshedAnd just in case it doesn't, you have the loud alarm to definitely wake you up
Sorry if I worded the explaination badly, I couldn't think of a good way to explain it :lol:
Your iron levels must be low.
I once slept through a fire alarm. :doh:
8 hours? I'm lucky if I get 5.
I have a problem. I guess there are just too many distractions in my bedroom...TV, computer. There's also a touch of rebellion. And some anxiety. But I can't seem to get to bed before 2AM or 3Am most nights. I'll try for a night or two to go to sleep by 1am but pretty soon I'm back in the old pattern.
Do you typically get 8 hours of sleep a night, sometimes 6 and then occasionally 13 hours? I just got up from 13 hours of sleep! LOL!
What is your sleep pattern? I'm just curious...I want to know if anyone else is like me....(God forbid! LOL!)