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How to Have It All, Sleep Included
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A thriving career. A house with 2.5 kids, the average. Time to exercise. A vibrant social life. A great romantic relationship, whether married or not. And you sleep like a baby at night for a full X-hours, whatever you need to feel like a million bucks the next day. Is this possible? Is this a total fantasy?
I'm not trying to state the obvious or beg the obvious answer. My gut feeling is that having it all, including sleep, is a tall order. And recent research proves it. A Canadian article I read online outlines researchers' data about the relationship between sleep and lifestyle, which includes a number of things like employment status, gender, and marital status.
Do you commute a long way to work? Do you work full-time (i.e., long hours)? Do you have kids, especially ones under the age of 15? If yes, then chances are you don't get as much sleep as someone who answers no to most of these questions. And I don't think you have to be Canadian to fit the bill of what these researchers found. In fact, in America I think we tend to fare far worse.
There's nothing very revolutionary about these study results. Other interesting findings to note:
It's hard to know what to do with a study like this. It points out the obvious, and I'm not about to tell someone to sacrifice having children, working full time, and making more money for sleep. But surely this kind of news helps call out what we can attempt to modify in our lives for the sake of restful Zs. After all, being well-rested is what makes our jobs easier, our quest to be fit more doable, and our capacity to parent and deal with the hassles of life, including stress, much bigger.
Can You Achieve a Balance?
Here are some questions to ask yourself. Your answers may help you to see how you actually can have it all -- or as much of "all" as possible:
I'll leave you with this: can you imagine being rich, fit, and well-rested? Yes you can.
See more stories tagged with: health, work, sleep, lifestyle
Dr. Michael J. Breus, PhD, is a Clinical Psychologist and a Diplomate of the American Board of Sleep Medicine.
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