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Sleep FAQs

1st February 2022 by Sam

We were proud to work with Dr Hillary Jones recently to be featured in his Live to 100 magazine which is available through news outlets across the UK as well as online (click here for latest edition).  Working with our sleep expert Dr Neil Stanley, we pulled together this sleep FAQ and were keen to share it with you here.  Hope it helps you sleep well.

 

  1. In what way can the quality of my sleep affect my health?

More than half of Britons say stress or worry keeps them awake at night, and a third of adults in the UK have taken medication in an attempt to relieve sleeping problems.  A third! However, the cost of all those sleepless nights is more than just bad moods and a lack of focus. Regular poor sleep puts you at risk of serious medical conditions, including obesity, heart disease and diabetes. Sleep debt is such a huge issue in today’s society due to our “always on” lifestyles and people are now waking up to the benefits of a great night’s sleep.

 

  1. What are the main factors that can disrupt my sleep?

Take a look at your lifestyle to see if there are things that may be causing your sleep disruption.  These could be your diet, exercise patterns (or lack of exercise) and your sleeping environment.  Is your room too hot or too cold? Do you have a partner that disrupts your sleep? Are you stressed and find that your worries are stopping you from nodding off? Then consider your sleep schedule.  Ideally you would enjoy a regular relaxing bedtime routine that allows your mind to unwind and you will be going to bed and getting up at the same time, even at the weekends.

 

  1. How many hours of sleep should I be getting per night?

The Sleep Council says the recommended sleep for 18-65 year olds is seven to nine hours a night.  Some people need more, some less.  The real sign of whether or not you are getting enough sleep is if you feel tired in the day. Worryingly, the average UK person is under sleeping by at least an hour a night.  We’re a tired bunch and it’s really impacting our health and wellbeing!

 

  1. What measures can I take to make sure I’m getting the right amount of sleep every night?

There isn’t a one size fits all solution to sleeping.  Find out what works for you and try to establish a bedtime routine.  These three key elements will really help you get your eight a night:

 

  1. A Quiet Mind

The number one essential for getting to sleep is a quiet mind. If you find yourself tossing and turning at night with a head full of worry, get up and only go back to bed when you feel tired. Try writing down what is worrying you in a journal before bed to give your mind permission to switch off and pick things back up in the morning.

 

  1. A Relaxed Body

Try to find ways to help you relax in the evening.  It could be by enjoying a warm milk drink, having a long soak in the bath or by snuggling up with a great book.  Trying deep breathing practices can also help you relax and prepare your mind and body for sleep.

 

  1. A Bedroom For Sleeping

The bedroom should be a sanctuary reserved for sleep.   Somewhere not too hot or cold – the ideal temperature should be around 16-18°C (60-65°F). Your bedroom should be pleasant and relaxing with fresh air and blackout curtains.  Invest in a high quality and comfortable bed and go for the biggest one you can fit in your bedroom.

 

  1. Recently, I’ve been struggling to fall asleep. What can I do?

One of the most important things you can do is to establish a regular, relaxing bedtime routine. When we were younger most of us had an established bedtime routine.  Now, many of us work late and fall into bed far later than planned, with no thought for a bedtime routine. Creating this sleep routine will signal to the body that it is time for sleep and will allow you to put the stresses and worries of the day behind you.  What you do just before you go to sleep directly affects the quality and duration of your sleep.

 

  1. Does what I eat and drink throughout the day affect the quality of my sleep?

We know that certain foods and drinks can interfere with sleep, the most obvious ones being caffeine and alchohol. A heavy meal close to bedtime may make you less comfortable when you settle down for your night’s rest. At the same time, going to bed hungry can be just as disruptive to sleep as going to bed too full. Enjoying a light meal a good few hours before you plan to sleep should set you up for the best chance of getting a good night’s rest.

 

  1. Is napping during the day disrupting my sleeping schedule?

Whilst naps will never make up for a poor night’s sleep, a short nap of just 20-30 minutes can help pep you up, both improving your performance and reducing the number of mistakes you’re likely to make during the day if you’re overtired. Psychologically, a nap also feels like a ‘treat’, providing much needed respite from a stressful day and improving your overall sense of wellbeing.

However the best way to get a good night’s sleep is to be awake during the day.  It sounds obvious but sleeping in late and excessive napping will play havoc with your sleep patterns.

 

  1. Are there any products available on the market that can help me have a better night’s sleep?

Sleep Well is made from three simple and nutritious ingredients associated with a good night’s sleep: pure wholesome Jersey milk, honey and valerian.  Because of its relaxing ingredients, Sleep Well helps to calm you down. It’s perfect for those nights you really need to sleep but your brain won’t switch off. Drinking Sleep Well thirty minutes before you want to sleep can help you wind down and have a restful night.  Delicious drunk warm or cold, Sleep Well is available in handy 200 ml ‘sip and sleep’ cartons.

Buy Sleep Well here…

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bed, bedtime, bedtime routine, dream, dreaming, environment, exercise, insomnia, Melatonin, nap, napping, sleep, sleep routine, Sleep Well, stress, sweet dreams

Make Sleep Your New Year Resolution

7th January 2022 by Sam

If you’re thinking about a healthier start to the new year, then make sleep your new year’s resolution. Scientists and doctors agree that it’s one of the keys to good mental and physical health. If you’re wanting to lose weight it can also help with that too.

The post-Christmas sleep hangover

Many of us have fallen into bad habits over Christmas and New Year. We’re not just talking about eating and drinking too much. Socialising and binging on holiday TV means we stay up later and have a nice lie in. While we all need a rest, changing our sleeping patterns by a few hours has the same effect as jet lag. This results in tiredness, poor concentration and motivation, and disrupted eating habits. This is because you’ve disrupted your own internal clock – your circadian rhythm.

If this sounds like you then you need to read our blog on The Good Sleep Habit. With a great, and free, downloadable bedtime routine we’re here to help get your body back in synch.

Does getting good sleep help you lose weight?

Yes, according to the scientists. So if having a trimmer figure is one of your resolutions, ensure you are sleeping well. Research suggests that there is a positive link between good sleep and healthy body weight. One of the reasons involves how our body transmits the message that it’s hungry. Some studies suggest that lack of sleep increases your appetite, and that it also makes you crave foods that are higher in calories and carbohydrates.  Other studies indicate that sleep disorders impact your metabolism, the rate at which you burn calories, and can lead to weight gain. Less sleep might also simply mean that you’re awake and able to consume more food. If you can’t get to sleep late at night, or are waking in the early hours, you might turn to comfort food.

Finally, some research also indicates that if you are on a diet, insufficient sleep can restrict the diet’s effectiveness to lose fat. Having an unhealthy lifestyle, staying up late, being inactive and eating lots of comfort food means poor sleep and diet go hand in hand. But there’s clear evidence to suggest that if you sleep well and keep to a regular bedtime routine it can help battle the bulge and prevent obesity.

Download: Get The Good Sleep Habit

How do good sleep habits make you healthier?

Apart from your weight, getting good sleep has plenty of other health benefits. It keeps your immune system active for one thing, which we all need during a pandemic. During sleep your body repairs itself and produces what it needs to keep healthy. Poor sleep is also linked to an increased likelihood of getting dementia. A Harvard Medical School study found that getting less than five hours’ sleep at night made you twice as likely to develop dementia. While another study in Europe concluded that less than six hours sleep gave you a 30% increase in dementia risk. Other studies also suggest it increases the risk of diabetes and heart problems.

Sleep and its impact on motivation and mental health

The post-Christmas winter months are tough enough at the best of times, without the added stress and restrictions from Covid. Many people suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder due to the lack of sunlight, which in turn disrupts sleep. Ensuring you have a regular bedtime routine and adequate sleep will help you with your mental and physical state. A recent John Hopkins study found healthy men and women whose sleep was interrupted throughout the night had a 31% reduction in positive moods the next day.

There’s no doubt that depression and insomnia go hand in hand. But it’s not clear which one comes first. What the doctors do recommend is that you should treat both symptoms if you want to be well. There’s no point trying to treat your depression if you continue to have poor sleep.

Practical ways to make sleep your new year resolution

If you do the same thing every day for 30 days, then it soon becomes a habit. You can download our bedtime routine now to help you improve your sleep in 2022.

Bedtime routine top tips include:

  • Sticking to the same bedtime hours
  • Getting ready for the next day the night before to reduce stress
  • Switching off tech an hour before bedtime
  • Having a warm milky drink – especially if it’s got natural sleep enhancing herbs like Sleep Well milk
  • Write a journal to calm your mind
  • Make your room as dark as possible.

We also have a downloadable 30 tips for getting ready for bed. Download it today for the best chance to make sleep your new year resolution.

All the Sleep Well team wish you a good, healthy sleeping 2022

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: beat insomnia, bed, bedtime, bedtime routine, good sleep, natural sleep remedy, natural sleep solution, new year resolution, sleep, sleep routine, Sleep Well, sweet dreams

Sleep Well hot chocolate

20th December 2021 by Sam

Enjoy our delicious Sleep Well hot chocolate recipe, easy to make and perfect to wind down with at the end of a long day.

Sleep Well Hot Chocolate
Make your own Sleep Well hot chocolate

Sleep Well Hot Chocolate

So rich and creamy, just perfect for cold winter nights as part of a healthy bedtime routine. 😴

And best of all, it’s so easy to make! 😌

What you need

  • 1 x 200 ml carton of Sleep Well chocolate milk
  • 1 tbsp of whipped or squirty cream
  • 1 tbsp mini marshmallows
  • 1 tbsp chocolate sprinkles
  • A pinch of cinnamon powder (optional)

STEP 1

Heat the Chocolate Sleep Well milk in a small pan over a medium heat. Transfer to your favourite hot chocolate mug.

OR

Pour the Chocolate Sleep Well into your mug and heat for 30 seconds on high in the microwave. Give it a good stir to remove any hot spots.

STEP 2

Squirt the cream on top of the Sleep Well and add your favourite toppings. We love mini marshmallows and chocolate sprinkles. Why not add a little cinnamon for a final aromatic touch?

Download and print yours here 👇🏻

sw-hot-chocolate-print-recipe-2Download

Wishing you a happy sleepy bedtime from the Sleep Well team. 🌟 🎄

Would you like to get more tips and exclusive Sleep Well discounts? Sign up to our newsletter for more sleep tips. 👇🏻

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bedtime, bedtime habit, christmas, christmas eve, christmas recipe, christmas time, hot chocolate, insomnia, recipe, relaxing christmas, sleep, sleep aid, sleep well milk, sleeps, valerian, vanilla milk, warm milk

Health Benefits of Sleep

21st June 2021 by Sam

Sleeping well is crucial to our mental health and wellbeing. Lack of sleep can have a negative impact on our mood, concentration, immune system and so much more! How do you feel after a bad night’s sleep? Tired, irritable, fuzzy headed? These are all common signs of poor sleep.

Instead of telling you all the bad things, here are 5 health benefits of sleep:

BOOSTS IMMUNITY

While you’re sleeping, your immune system releases a type of small proteins called cytokines. If you’re sick or injured, these cytokines help your body fight inflammation. Getting good quality sleep can help you battle bugs or germs. 

SUPPORTS MENTAL WELLBEING

There are many ways we can boost our mood (exercise, diet etc) but sleep plays a critical role when it comes to maintaining positive mental health. One bad night’s sleep can leave us feeling stressed and exhausted, so it’s no surprise that long term sleep deprivation can trigger anxiety and depression.

PROTECTS YOUR HEART

Research conducted by the British Heart Foundation suggests that combining a good night’s sleep with other healthy lifestyle choices can reduce your risk of heart disease. For optimum health, we should be aiming for 7 – 8 hours of good quality sleep a night. 

HELPS REPAIR MUSCLES

During strenuous workouts, muscles can tear. Sleep helps heal these tears as the body produces large molecules to repair the damage. During sleep, extra oxygen is supplied to the muscles which helps the breakdown of lactic acid, and we also see a spike in growth hormone.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: heart health, immunity, mental health, mental wellbeing, muscle repair, sleep, sleep benefits, sleep health, Sleep Well, sleeping

UNDERSTAND YOUR SLEEP CYCLE BETTER

31st July 2020 by Sam

Did you know? Sleep researchers divide sleep into four stages—stages 1, 2, 3, which are NON-REM and stage 4 which is REM. During the course of an eight-hour sleep period, a healthy sleeper should cycle through the various sleep stages roughly every 90 minutes. 

Here we’ve given you an overview of the different stages of sleep. It’s fascinating to understand what your body goes through and the changes it experiences during these vital eight hours.

LIGHT SLEEP

Stage 1

The sleep cycle begins here. This is the lighter stage of sleep. It’s when you’ve just drifted off to sleep, you’re still hearing things and have a sense of awareness so you can still be easily woken. During stage 1, your brain produces alpha and theta waves and your eye movements slow down. This stage usually only lasts around 7 – 10 minutes.

Fun fact: It’s common for people to experience sudden jerks or a sensation of falling during this stage.
 
Stage 2

during this stage, you are in a slightly deeper sleep which means you are less likely to awaken. It is during stage 2 where your body temperature drops and your heartbeat slows down.  The brain produces sudden increases in brain wave frequency known as sleep spindles. Following a spindle, the brain waves slow down again. Typically, we spend roughly 50% of our sleep time in stage 2.

Fun fact: If you were to schedule a “power nap” you’d want to wake up after this stage, before you head into a deeper sleep.

DEEP SLEEP 

Stage 3

This is the restorative stage. Stage 3 is the beginning of deep sleep, when the body repairs muscles and tissues, stimulates growth and development, boosts your immune function, and builds up energy to set you up for the day ahead.

Fact: it is during this stage when parasomnias like sleepwalking, talking or night terrors happen.
 
REM: 

This is the deepest of the four stages. It is during this stage when most dreaming happens, usually vivid ones too.Your eyes move rapidly in different directions (Rapid Eye Movement), your heart rate increases and breathing becomes more irregular. REM sleep helps the brain consolidate and process information it has gathered from the previous day, storing and filing it away into long-term memory. You tend to enter REM sleep about 90 minutes after falling asleep and it can last up to an hour. 

Fun fact: we often have customers saying they experienced more dreams than usual when they have had Sleep Well before bed. We take this as Sleep Well doing the trick at getting our happy sleepers into a deep sleep.

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: bedtime, REM, sleep, Sleep cycle, Sleep Well

THE BEST SLEEP-BOOSTING FOODS

27th July 2020 by Sam

Did you know? Certain foods are known to help calm the brain and promote good sleep. The best night time snacks are ones that contain complex carbohydrates and protein to optimise tryptophan levels. Tryptophan is the amino acid that the body uses to produce the sleepy hormones serotonin and melatonin that help slow down and relax the body. 

Pop these sleep-friendly foods in your shopping basket:

NUTS: Walnuts, flax seeds, pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds are packed full of magnesium and tryptophan so are great serotonin boosters.Try snacking on a handful an hour or so before bed. 

BANANA: Turns out bananas aren’t just for breaky or pre workout, they also make the perfect sleep aid. Bananas pack a punch of magnesium and potassium to help relax overstressed muscles, plus the B6 found in the fruit convert tryptophan into serotonin to help calm your brain for a restful slumber. 

KIWI: Small but mighty! Kiwis can be a powerful aid in helping you sleep due to their high levels of antioxidants and serotonin. According to the Sleep Foundation,eating two kiwis before bed can increase your sleep duration by an hour or so over the course of a month. 

SWEET POTATO: As well as being loaded with sleep-promoting complex carbs, Sweet Potato also contains the natural muscle-relaxant potassium. So a double whammy of sleepy goodness.

MILK: A glass of milk contains four sleep-promoting compounds: tryptophan, calcium, vitamin D, and melatonin. There is also the psychological link between warm milk and bedtime as a child. For super sleepy milk, sip on Sleep Well. Our nutritious bedtime drink is made with whole Jersey milk, honey and valerian – the natural herb proven to help you relax and sleep. Buy now

OATS: While most of us associate oats with breakfast, they also make the perfect evening snack. Without getting too technical – oats contain Tryptophan, an amino-acid the brain converts into serotonin, which helps relax and calm the body. Their high carb content can help you feel sleepy too! Try mixing with milk (or better yet, Sleep Well milk) and chopped up banana for a tasty treat that is sure to get you snoozing. 

Filed Under: Blog Tagged With: MILK, OATS, sleep, SLEEP FOODS, sleep tips, Sleep Well, SWEET POTATO

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