Sleep Better Now: 3 Ways Your Heart Can Help | The Huffington PostLast Updated on Thursday, 09 February 2012 13:10 Written by Doc Childre and Deborah Rozman, Ph.D. Monday, 18 January 2010 07:45 Articles - Health & Well-Being
One of the things to remember and have compassion for during this Sleep Challenge is the challenge of insomnia. It can be just plain harder to sleep these days even when we try. People's stress levels are on the increase and that also means stress hormones are changing our sleep patterns. We are overloaded with too much to do, or over-stimulated with too much we'd like to do. Either way, the result is the same. If we don't get enough sleep, it builds up until we're exhausted, mentally foggy, irritable and running on empty emotionally.
Sometimes we can't wait until everyone's in bed and the house is quiet so we can finally do things we want to do but can't seem to get to any other time -- like just-one-more-web search that stimulates one more and one more until it's the wee hours of the morning. Sometimes we watch TV to numb our brain before bed but as we sleep the theme of the last show we watched hijacks our brain, infiltrating thoughts and dreams, causing restless sleep. We wake up wishing we'd never watched that show. Our mind replays at night what we habitually do during the day, like an endless loop tape. Just today we were talking with a friend who spends all day writing emails then during sleep he dreams he's still answering emails. Often he thinks he's actually sent an email and when the recipient says, "When are you going to respond," he realizes he only replied in his dream. One of the biggest reasons for restless sleep or insomnia is those unresolved problems, big or small, that finally "have their time" to play out on the stage of our thoughts, feelings and reactions while we're trying to shut it all down and sleep. If any of the above describes you or someone you care for, or if you've tried dozens of sleep remedies and none seem right for you, new research is saying there is a place we can turn to for help that most of us wouldn't even consider. That place is our heart. How the Heart Can Help Us Get Some Much Needed Rest?Our heart beats in a rhythm. Research at the Institute of HeartMath found that when we are over-stimulated, overloaded, stressed, frustrated, worried or anxious- that rhythm becomes jagged and irregular. The more stressed we are, the more chaotic and incoherent the heart rhythm becomes (see top half of graph below). So what can make our heart rhythm smooth out fast? Research shows that sincere positive feelings, like love, care, gratitude, appreciation, compassion or joy, smooth out our
What's interesting here is that both of the above graphs are of the same person feeling one way and then the other within a period of a few minutes. What's interesting is this smooth, coherent heart rhythm is the pattern that naturally occurs during deep, restful sleep. And what's exciting for those of us who are sleep deprived is that we can learn to move intentionally into this smooth pattern. Here are three ways get your heart working for you and improve your sleep.
Taking heart coherence breaks a couple times a day has other benefits as well. It increases emotional resilience, and helps you listen to your heart's intuitive guidance on what else you need to do to release or prevent stress and find more balance in your life. Using these simple HeartMath tools for a few weeks can actually help reset the heart's natural rhythms to bring you more restful sleep and more ease and balance as you move through your day. Surveys of over 3000 employees from over 100 companies who have used HeartMath tools reported on average 31 percent improvement in getting adequate sleep a 46 percent improvement in feeling exhausted, and over 40 percent improvement in getting upset easily, in worrying, and in work/home conflicts. To get real-time feedback of when you are in heart coherence, you can use a fun, handheld heart rhythm coherence device called the emWave Personal Stress Reliever, which won the Consumer Electronics Show Last Gadget Standing People's Choice Award in 2009 and the American Institute of Stress Award for Innovation. If you think this is important information for the sleep-deprived but not readily accessible yet, what would you suggest to help get the word out? Send us your comments, suggestions, and thoughts on this. Put them in the comments section below or send us an email at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it . Join us on the HeartMath Facebook and Twitter pages and YouTube channel where the latest stress relief resources are often announced and made available. Doc is founder of the non-profit Institute of HeartMath, co-author of The HeartMath Solution and From Chaos to Coherence. Deborah is a psychologist and business executive, and co-author with Doc of Transforming Stress, Transforming Anger, Transforming Anxiety and Transforming Depression. You can find out more about HeartMath, Doc Childre, and Deborah Rozman and HeartMath at www.heartmath.com. Doc Childre is an internationally renowned stress expert, creator of the HeartMath System, considered by many hospitals, organizations and health care professionals to be a best practice in stress management, and Chairman and co-CEO of Quantum Intech, Inc the parent company of HeartMath LLC. He is also founder of the non-profit research and education organization, the Institute of HeartMath and author of a dozen books on stress, wellness and heart-based living including The HeartMath Solution, From Chaos to Coherence, The HeartMath Approach to Reducing Hypertension, and the Transforming Series of books with co-author Dr. Deborah Rozman. Doc is the creator of the emWave Personal Stress Reliever technology, which won the Last Gadget Standing People's Choice Award at the 2009 International Consumer Electronics Show. Deborah Rozman Ph.D., is a psychologist, business executive and co-author with Doc Childre of Transforming Stress, Transforming Anger, Transforming Anxiety, Transforming Depression and Stopping Emotional Eating: The emWave Stress and Weight Management Program. She is President and co-CEO of Quantum Intech, Inc. and serves on the scientific advisory board of the Institute of HeartMath. She is a key spokesperson for HeartMath on stress management and the role of heart intelligence and heart-based living. |
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