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12.9.2006
you can sleep when you're dead
SLEEP THERAPIST DR. RUBIN NAIMAN EXPLAINS THE TRUE CAUSES OF SLEEP DISORDERS, CAFFEINE CRAVINGS AND SLEEP HORMONE IMBALANCESBy Dani VeracityNews TargetMonday, January 16, 2006http://www.newstarget.com/016768.htmlSeventy-six percent of Americans are lacking something right now. No, it'snot the latest fad fashion, electronic device or even money in the bank.It's sleep. Thomas Edison invented the light bulb so that people could workat night, and there are now 25 million night shift workers in U.S.-occupiedterritory. Thanks to the light bulb and the later invention of television,sleep quantity (per person) has decreased by about 20 percent since 1900.Furthermore, 76 percent of Americans have a sleeping disorder at least a fewdays per week, contributing to our society's epidemic of daytime sleepiness,depression and adrenal fatigue, sleep therapist Dr. Rubin Naiman said in hisNovember lecture at the 2005 Complementary and Alternative MedicineConference (CAMCON) in Tucson, Ariz.Modern Western society doesn't comply with our natural biorhythms. Humansare built to nap, according to Dr. Naiman. When we override our naturaldesire for midday rest, the conflict carries over to sleep disturbances atnight. Furthermore, similar to the problem of our junk food-laden diets,we're overfed yet undernourished when it comes to light. During the day, wereceive dampened light from fluorescent bulbs rather than the vitamin D-richsunlight that our bodies need. Then, during the night when we need the darkto trigger essential melatonin production, excessive light at night (LAN)erodes our "lunar consciousness" and throws our body rhythms out of balance.In short, we have too much light when we don't need it (at night) and toolittle when we do (during the day).Melatonin, a neurochemical released from the pineal gland, is as essentialto the human body today as it was during our evolution. Accordingly, Dr.Naiman talks in great detail about this product of serotonin, even lookingback into the ancient Greco-Roman perspective of it and sleep in general.From a purely biological standpoint, melatonin, which is produced duringabsence of light, communicates the fact that it is night to our bodies,triggering the release of GABA, our bodies' natural tranquilizer. LANsuppresses melatonin production, hindering this entire process and settingthe stage for a phenomenon many of us know all too well: Daytime sleepiness.Even though we're tired during the day, rest is somewhat of a taboo topic inmodern society. We tend to associate it with laziness and, as Dr. Naimanpoints out, "When we rest, we experience the opportunistic emergence of ourshadow issues." In other words, resting often gives us time to think abouteverything we'd rather forget, which is one of the reasons why many peopledon't like to rest. It's the common "I-don't-have-time-to-think" phenomenon.Unfortunately, as adrenal fatigue expert Dr. James Wilson explains in hisNovember lecture at the 2005 First Arizona Choices Exposition in Tucson,Ariz., "Our lifestyles have changed, but our bodies haven't." We may notlike to rest, or perhaps have time for it, but our bodies still desire it.In fact, napping can provide amazing health benefits. It lowers diastolicblood pressure, improves mood, improves work and school performance (bossesand educators take note) and helps readjust our nighttime sleep patternsback to the way our ancestors slept before the Industrial Age and, accordingto some experts, the way our bodies were designed to sleep at night.Historian A. Roger Ekirch of the Virginia Polytechnic Institute found that,before the Industrial Age changed everything, people slept in two phases:"First sleep," a period of being awake shortly after midnight, and "secondsleep."Using this historical data as his guide, National Institute of Mental Health(NIMH) psychiatrist Dr. Thomas A. Wehr set out to learn if the human bodywould revert back to this segmented sleep pattern, given natural,pre-Industrial conditions. In Dr. Wehr's study, 15 healthy adults wereprohibited from using any artificial light from dusk to dawn and given 14hours (6 p.m. to 8 a.m.) for sleep. They slept 11 hours each the first fewnights to presumably catch up on lost sleep, but then eventually settledinto a pattern beginning with a few hours of nighttime rest.This nighttime rest is "an essential bridge to night consciousness,"according to Dr. Naiman. We have to slow down before we can fall asleep andexperience hypnagogia, a sleep-onset dream. Unfortunately, many of us don'ttake the time to pursue nighttime rest for psychological and sociologicalreasons.After a few hours of nighttime rest, Dr. Wehr's volunteers then fell intoREM asleep for three to five hours ("first sleep") before awakening. DuringREM sleep, the brain is as active as when it is awake. Due to this alertnesswithout daytime constraints, regularly awakening from REM sleep issignificant in itself, as it allows people to remember and reflect on theirdreams in a semiconscious state, according to Dr. Wehr. In fact, heattributes modern society's disconnection with dreams, myths and fantasiesto our lack of midnight reflection.Following this hour or so of quiet time, the volunteers then slept for aboutfour more hours before finally awakening. In conclusion, the NIMH studyreinforced Ekirch's historical data, making it seem likely that the humanbody would naturally like to sleep as it did before artificial lighting, andthat waking up midway through the night is innate, rather than a diseasemeant to be treated with sleeping pills.Given that most of us are not getting the quality or quantity of sleep ourbodies require, and that our schedules often don't allow time for naps, whatare we supposed to do about our daytime sleepiness? Many of us turn tohigh-glycemic carbohydrates like white flour or refined sugar as the answer,putting our bodies at risk for obesity and type 2 diabetes. We also mask oursleepiness with caffeine, making it what Dr. Naiman calls the "fuel ofindustrialized culture."Three hundred million cups of coffee are consumed in the United States eachday and it is the second-most commonly traded commodity in the world.Unfortunately, our misguided "solution" to daytime sleepiness only adds tothe sleep disorders we experience at night, as caffeine's half-life is 7.5hours, meaning that you still have half the amount of caffeine in yourbloodstream more than seven hours after you drink or eat a caffeinatedproduct. No wonder we can't fall asleep at night, or even get a "goodnight's sleep" when we do.Lack of sleep eventually leads to fatigue, which is much more serious thaneveryday drowsiness. By Dr. Naiman's definition, fatigue is a "sustainedstate of exhaustion, a lack of physical or mental energy." As you mightimagine, fatigue is all too common today, accounting for 10 millionoutpatient physician visits in the United States per year, mostly associatedwith depression. Ironically, Big Pharma's answers to depression, SSRI drugs,actually worsen the sleep-related problems they were designed to relieve.Pharmaceuticals like Prozac cause reduced REM latency, which actuallypromotes depression, Dr. Naiman explains.The real solution to fatigue is easy enough: Make time to rest. Taking abreak from time to time doesn't mean that you're lazy; it means that youwant to be healthy. Plus, keep in mind that attaining healthy sleep willactually increase your overall productivity and your enjoyment of life.
The above is proof that being tired is not laziness--it's an indicator of an unhealthy lifestyle.
Right now it's 4am and I'm up, in flourescent light, doing stuff when I should be sleeping so I can call bill collectors early in the morning. Living example of the above. And the living dead.
Posted at 3:42 am by Jagged
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