Getting A Good Rest For Your Body Matters
Posted by Jason Todd on April 28th, 2009 filed in Sleep HealthMost of our grandmothers taught us that eight hours was a good night’s sleep. And in my grandmother’s time, where the average night of sleep was nine hours, getting eight hours was not nearly as difficult as it is today. People in her generation more often did physical labor, and although they rose at the crack of dawn, they frequently went to bed at 7 or 8 p.m., a time when many people today are just getting home from work.
It was also believed that different hours in the day made the difference in the quality of sleep. It was commonly held in her time that hours of sleep before midnight were more valuable than hours of sleep after midnight. That’s why you hear so many people saying get to bed early, or don’t go to be too late.
But in todays times, many people are cutting back on sleep to get things done. It is no wonder that the average night’s sleep has decreased from nine hours in our grandmother’s day to seven and a half hours today, and is undoubtedly still declining.
Perhaps sleep is just a luxury we can do without, we often think. Not so. The National Institutes of Health, our largest and most sophisticated government research body on all aspects of health, is clear that the whole eight hours is still needed, and that doing without the whole eight hours on more than an occasional basis, can lead to some significant health problems.
Many start to normally get sleep deprivation. Ask any parent of an infant about sleep deprivation. It often becomes standard operating procedure as infants develop the maturity of their nervous systems to be able to sleep through the night that their parents rarely sleep through the night. Once this develops, it can last longer, or even a lifetime. And that’s about the time, on average, when families choose to have another child, prolonging their sleep deficit for an additional two or more years. Most of these parents, male or female, are also expected to perform at work the next day after a night of sleeping poorly or sometimes not at all.
The longer a pattern develops and becomes entrenched, the more time it takes to overcome it. Sleep is no exception. Although the body becomes acclimated to a certain number of hours, do not allow yourself to think that less than eight hours of sleep a night is somehow acceptable and has no consequences for your health. Fight for that eight or even more hours of sleep in your schedule as if your life depended on it. It probably does.