Get Great Sleep
Basic tips for healthy snoozing.

The quality of rest we achieve has a direct effect on
our level of energy.
SLEEP IS an
elemental part of life. The average human being sleeps 6 to
8 hours a night, almost 50 hours a week, and more than 2,600
hours a year—about 182,000 hours during one’s life. That
means, on average, that we spend almost 21 years of our
lives asleep. The duration of our sleep and the quality of
rest we achieve has a direct effect on our level of energy
and our effectiveness during our waking hours. Without
concentrated and reinvigorating durations of sleep, the
quality of the remainder of our life—work, relationships,
and other activities—can suffer dramatically.
Good sleep should be in rhythm with your daily life, but
also with the universe. When your physiological and
biological rhythms are in sync with nature’s—the movement of
the earth, sun, moon, and stars; the cycle of the seasons,
and the pull and push of the ocean tide—sleep becomes
effortless. This type of naturally induced sleep produces an
internal state of euphoria that’s both health promoting and
rejuvenating.
Your body is the best pharmacy in the world. It makes
natural healing substances that protect you from various
illnesses. This pharmacy is strengthened when your body is
in balance. Exercise, sleep, proper diet, and maintaining
biological rhythms are all interconnected and dependent upon
each other.
One of the best-kept secrets for restful, rejuvenating sleep
is the quality of your experiences during the day. When you
live each moment completely and fully appreciate the world
around you, you do not accumulate stress; therefore, dynamic
daily activity directly benefits the quality of your sleep.
Stress is the most frequent cause of disturbed sleep.
Whenever you perceive physical or psychological threats or
whenever you believe that your needs aren’t being met, you
activate the stress response: Your blood pressure rises,
your heart beats faster, your platelets get stickier, and
you pump out stress hormones from your adrenal glands. Over
time, these stress changes—in addition to causing restless
sleep—can lead to hypertension, heart disease, and immune
deficiencies.
The secret to good sleep is dynamic activity during the day,
and the secret of dynamic activity is deep, restful sleep at
night. The two go hand in hand. When this equilibrium is
achieved, good sleep is effortless.
The most important fact about sleep is this: You cannot
force yourself to sleep. You cannot command your body to
sleep. You cannot will your body to sleep. It’s not possible
to make yourself go to sleep in the same way you can make
yourself run, exercise, read, or do any other voluntary
activity.
Since insomnia is a very common problem, many people try to
force themselves to sleep at one time or another. Sleep is a
natural process, and “trying” will have no positive effect.
In fact, it will probably aggravate the insomnia because the
harder you try and less successful you are, the more
frustrated you’ll feel. Trying is not the way in which
nature functions.
It’s important to note that perhaps the single most
important tip with respect to improving the quality of your
sleep and rest is not to get uptight about things as you
take steps to ensure that sleep becomes a natural and
effortless aspect of the rhythm of your life.
A
renowned physician and author, Deepak Chopra is undoubtedly
one of the most lucid and inspired philosophers of our time.
Visit: www.Chopra.com
This article by Deepak Chopra was published at
You can Heal Your Life