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Sleep Patterns
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Hi All,
I was once told that if you go to sleep before midnight, the sleep you get is worth more than if you go to bed after midnight.
I think the person who told me said it was akin to one hours sleep being like two hours before midnight. (I'm not entirely sure that makes sense. Oh well).
Anyway, I was just wondering if anyone knows if this is true or not?
Cheers
China xx
I was once told that if you go to sleep before midnight, the sleep you get is worth more than if you go to bed after midnight.
I think the person who told me said it was akin to one hours sleep being like two hours before midnight. (I'm not entirely sure that makes sense. Oh well).
Anyway, I was just wondering if anyone knows if this is true or not?
Cheers
China xx
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No best answer has yet been selected by China Doll. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I think that is hugely generalised, we are all different, our sleep patterns are very different. I rarely go to bed before 12.30 and up at 6.45 most mornings, if I have a long lie in, I get up at 8.30, no longer being able to sleep and always refreshed. Even as a teenager I would be out of bed before 9.30am.
Its a really interesting area of ongoing research China, is sleep, and its value.
We are conditioned to require 8 hours sleep as optimum for performance. Modern day living, with artificial light etc has changed the natural circadian rhythms that we still have. The first 1-2 hours of sleep and the last 1-2 hours of sleep are probably the most important. We have 90 minute cycles of REM and non REM sleep.
Typical 9-5 working days and family commitments mean that many people will need to wake at around 7am. In order to get the optimum 8 hours sleep therefore, you really need to be asleep at around 11pm.
I would think your friend is broadly correct.
We are conditioned to require 8 hours sleep as optimum for performance. Modern day living, with artificial light etc has changed the natural circadian rhythms that we still have. The first 1-2 hours of sleep and the last 1-2 hours of sleep are probably the most important. We have 90 minute cycles of REM and non REM sleep.
Typical 9-5 working days and family commitments mean that many people will need to wake at around 7am. In order to get the optimum 8 hours sleep therefore, you really need to be asleep at around 11pm.
I would think your friend is broadly correct.
Thanks everybody, that's really helpful....
Naturally I have terrible sleeping patterns, (insomniac tendencies, one of those body clocks that only needs one night to be put out of sync for a week and I also wake up most nights for at least an hour.) I've also always been a night owl by habit. I just wondered if there really was some logic to what I was told.
My conclusion is that there is and I should try getting to bed earlier!!
Naturally I have terrible sleeping patterns, (insomniac tendencies, one of those body clocks that only needs one night to be put out of sync for a week and I also wake up most nights for at least an hour.) I've also always been a night owl by habit. I just wondered if there really was some logic to what I was told.
My conclusion is that there is and I should try getting to bed earlier!!
China, re that waking up in the middle of your sleep cycle thing... read this link here, which suggests that this is actually a natural and very common feature of normal sleeping patterns.
http://circadiana.blogspot.com/2006/03/what-is -natural-sleep-pattern.html
http://circadiana.blogspot.com/2006/03/what-is -natural-sleep-pattern.html
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