PERSONAL HEALTH  
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Debt Got Your Sleep?

For too many Americans, debt-triggered stress is leading to a host of health problems, including lack of sleep.
 
 
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Recently, I was reading an article online about the health problems plaguing Americans as worries about mounting debt trigger extreme stress. Rather than blaming things like back pain, headaches, ulcers, depression, and even heart attacks on a specific underlying medical cause, all fingers are pointing toward plain old stress.

Stress is a fact of life ...

... and unfortunately debt has also become a fact of life for many of us. 

Compounding the problem are recent economic woes as the real estate market sinks, cost of living expenses rise, and just driving the car to the gym or yoga class to work out those stress-related kinks is getting expensive.

According to an index tied to a recent AP-AOL survey, debt stress is 14 percent higher this year. Revolving consumer debt, almost all from credit cards, now totals $957 billion, compared with $800 billion in 2004, according to the Federal Reserve. Argh!

Debt, Stress and Sleep Problems

I don't have to outline all the statistics that point to our heightened stress level. It's obvious to everyone living in the 21st century, unless you're in denial or have miraculously found the cure to conquering stress. But what the recent article and survey did not indicate is how much this stress is affecting people's sleep.

I have no

doubts that today's intense stress levels are adversely affecting the quality and quantity of our sleep. Not only do we take our worries to bed with us, fueling insomnia, but we also delay going to bed as we tool around the Internet late at night paying bills or seeking support through others on the Web.

This sets us up for feeling more stressed out when sleep deprivation lowers our thresholds for enduring high stress levels. Our moods dim, our immune systems plummet, our body's hormonal clocks tick a little off, our hunger and satiety signals change, our ability to learn new things weakens, our concentration dwindles, our physical bodies miss out on a much-needed time-out to fully recover for the next day, and on and on.

Sleeping More Can Help You Cope

I could list a litany of

problems associated with chronic sleep deprivation. I can also create an even longer list of benefits that come with getting a good night's rest.

And one of them would be this: being able to cope with and manage something as difficult and stressful as serious debt.

With a good

night's rest, you feel energized, upbeat, refreshed, and focused. You can problem solve more easily and find ways to work through your debt so it doesn't become a pain in the neck, the back, your head, your heart, and soul. That said, let me suggest ...

3 Ways to Conquer Debt through Sleep:

  1. Set aside 15 minutes a day to focus on your debt and making plans to diminish it--but avoid doing this at night. Schedule it early in the day or first thing in the morning, and be done with it.

  2. If your

    debt worries keep you up at night, start a Worry Journal. Have it by your bedside, and write in it as your stressful thoughts emerge. Then close the book and close your mind off those thoughts. If solutions or things to do in relation to those worries crop up as you write, record those.

  3. Physical exercise is a great sleep promoter and stress

    reducer. If you find yourself avoiding exercise to "get more done"

    during the day, it's time to re-evaluate. Be sure to schedule in at

    least 30 minutes of physical exercise no matter what. It can be as

    simple as going for a brisk walk in the evening.

Don't let debt get your sleep. Becoming debt free will happen much more effortlessly if you have sweet dreams.

This post is cross-posted at Dr. Breus's blog, The Insomnia Blog.

Dr. Michael J. Breus, PhD, is a Clinical Psychologist and a Diplomate of the American Board of Sleep Medicine.
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