Understanding Our Identity and How It Impacts Our Clients. Start Where you Are. by Phillip Horner
You have probably been told many times how important sleep is or maybe you have found you can operate well without much. There are many new studies out now showing the link between anxiety and sleep. It comes down to a pretty simple formula, lack of sleep.
So
how does a lack of sleep cause us anxiety? The brain needs a time to transport
its toxins out of the neural tissue and through the garbage-removal systems.
This function is dependent on sleep to function properly. This can happen from
gradually losing sleep over time. Most of the sleep that causes sleep
deprivation is specifically REM (rapid eye movement) deprivation, this is when
the body becomes more relaxed and the brain more active. Normally we can spend
about 20% of our sleep in REM. It has been found that even a small REM
deprivation causes increased activity in emotion generating regions of the
brain and reduces the activity in the emotion-regulating regions. Out of this
comes anxiety, which can be generated more steadily when these two main areas
of the brain are changing. On top of that anxiety can also cause high blood
pressure, just another consequence of lack of sleep.
Good
news! A lot of the negative impacts of sleep loss can be reversible after just
one night of peaceful sleep, but how can we get better sleep? There have been
some recent trials showing that mindfulness meditation can be used to help
chronic insomnia.
A
study was done investigating the effectiveness of mindfulness-based stress
reduction (MBSR), mindfulness-based therapy for insomnia (MBTI) or an
eight-week self-monitoring (SM) for sleep problems. It was found that both MBSR
and MBTI improved duration of sleep. Although these are difficult types of
mediation to learn, they can be taught through classes such as our own MBSR eight week course. SM overall had a much lower impact on
improving sleep duration.
Sometimes
getting better sleep is about not doing certain things before bed
(TV/electonrics, drinking alcohol & caffeine) and about relaxing the mind
as much as possible. There are so many solutions and ideas of what one person
can do to improve sleep and thus anxiety. Even though sleep monitoring
(journal) does not show much improvement, sleep routines do have great impacts
on our ability to get regular amounts of sleep each night. Including some
mindfulness or mediation and even better joining a class on MBSR could quickly
improve sleep. With a regular nightly routine around mindfulness and sleep
times, one person could change their sleep quality and anxiety quickly. The
difficult thing is to start and more importantly to keep up such a routine.
Sometimes
having support or someone to talk to about your struggles helps, come see one
of our skilled therapists to help reduce the anxiety in your life
so that sleep can help you rather than hinder you. Read more..
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