Keeping Regular
Hours
I know that it is an obvious thing to say but going to bed and getting up at roughly the same time every day will
train your body to sleep better by getting it into a regular rhythm.
Keeping A Pen And Paper By Your
Bedside
Use them either to make a list before lights out of things that you need to tackle the next day, and/or to write
down, and thus 'dump', worries that may be preventing you sleeping during the night.
Get Some Fresh Air
Studies
show that those who get their fair share of natural daylight tend to sleep better at night.
Take Regular, Moderate Exercise
Yoga,
t'ai chi or simply going for a brisk walk or swim are all ideal. But note that taking vigorous exercise too close to your
bedtime can hinder rather than help sleep.
Make Sure Your Bedroom Is Not Too
Hot, Cold, Noisy Or Light
An overheated, underventilated bedroom can wake you in the middle of the night. Likewise, try
to make your bedroom both as quiet and as dark as possible. A comfortable bed - not too hard, soft or small - and pillow will
also help create a good sleeping environment.
Avoid Excess Alcohol
A small
nightcap might help you wind down and actually get to sleep but alcohol is likely to interrupt your sleep later in the night.
Avoid Coffee And Tea - Especially
In The Evening
Both are stimulants, which can interfere with falling asleep and prevent deep sleep. Even the caffeine
in fizzy drinks can harm sleep
Avoid Over-Indulging
Even eating
too much late at night can ruin your sleep patterns
Don't Smoke
Yes, it's bad for
sleep, too. Nicotine is a stimulant and smokers take longer to fall asleep, wake more often and often experience more sleep
disruption.
Drink A Cup Of Herbal Tea
Unlike
'ordinary' (i.e. Indian) tea, it will relax rather than stimulate you.
Eat Bananas And Avocados
Both
are good sources of vitamin B, which can help those sleep problems that are caused by adrenal stress. You can also buy a good
vitamin B complex - or Astragalus, the herb favoured by Chinese healers - from a health shop and take it at bedtime.
Have A Hot, Milky Drink
Sprinkle
A Few Drops Of Lavender Oil On Your Pillow
Make Love
Sex is nature's best
soporific. And, even if it doesn't work, it's a lot more fun than staying awake.
Try To Relax Before Going To Bed
A
warm bath - especially on cold, winter nights - will gently warm and relax you. A spot of yoga, deep breathing or listening
to soothing music can also help relax both the mind and body. Some people like listening to tapes of whale noises or womb
sounds. Your doctor might be able to suggest a helpful relaxation tape.
Use 'Trigger Pictures' To Relax
You
Try to conjure mental images of a favourite or fantasy place or moment - such as, say, a great birthday party or idyllic
holiday spot - as a way of triggering feelings of relaxation and well-being.
Play Mind Games
Counting sheep
is the most famous such technique but there are countless others, such as the following:
- Imagine a room covered
wall-to-wall and floor to ceiling with black velvet.
- Describe your home village, town or city in the greatest possible
detail, as - though to a complete stranger.
- Keep repeating 'Sleep,
Sleep, Sleep, Sleep' very slowly until you drop off.
- Numb the brain by making it perform a dull, boring task, such
as repeating the words 'Pooh' and 'Bah' in ever increasing numbers. The 'Poohs' must always be two more than the 'Bahs', giving
the following sequence:
1. Pooh
2. Pooh Pooh Bah
3. Pooh Pooh Pooh Pooh Bah Bah... and so on.
Take Sleeping Pills, But...
Sleeping
pills can, of course, help you sleep. However, warns Dr Roger Henderson in his book, Stress Beaters - 100 Proven Ways To Manage
Stress (Metro Books, £7.99), 'Sleeping pills do not cause natural or restful sleep and there is always the risk of becoming
dependent on them. If you do need them, this should be for the short-term only, to help break an abnormal sleep pattern.'
Don't Just Lie There... Do Something
If
you can't sleep, don't just lie there fretting about it. Get up and do something that you find relaxing - reading, watching
TV or whatever - until you feel sleepy again. Then, when you start to feel tired, go back to bed.
Visit
The Relaxation Zone At www.stressbusting.co.uk/relaxation
Or, best of all, get out of bed, turn on the computer and spend
a good long time surfing the Relaxation Zone of stressbusting.co.uk, the nearest thing the web has to offer to an online floatation
tank. Find it at www.stressbusting.co.uk/relaxation