Never too old to nap
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Young Chang
NEWPORT-MESA -- The only thing I don’t love about sleeping is waking.
I could sleep all day and even for many days. I love the experience of
climbing into bed and I love mentally spiraling into semiconsciousness.
It’s sort of dizzying and euphoric because I’m not fully alert.
This week’s leisure story is about the art of relaxing -- sleeping,
napping and moving from stressed-mode to snooze-mode.
Talk about leisurely.
The National Commission on Sleep Disorders tells us 60 million
Americans are sleep deprived.
The National Sleep Foundation says 74% of surveyed women get less
sleep at night than men.
Christopher Ingalls, a Newport Beach psychologist, says we’re mentally
busier today than we were 20 years ago.
“That’s challenged the brain even more,” he said. “And the brain needs
to rest to function effectively. It can’t be wired to stimuli all the
time.”
And to anyone who has ever claimed sleep to be a waste of time, you
might be losing more time in the long run by opting for lively nights.
Jill Murphy Long, a former Newport Beach resident and author of the
newly released book “Permission to Nap,” says adequate sleep is equated
with longer lives.
“Because you’re giving your body time to repair,” explained the
author, who signed books at Fashion Island’s Spa Gregories on Friday.
“The first hours of sleep are when your body starts to repair itself on
the micro-level.”
Long and Ingalls agree that the art of relaxing is in preparing
yourself for rest.
The psychologist said he encourages his patients to create a “buffer
zone” between the time they are active and inactive.
“The buffer zone is a time of quiet,” he said. “The TV should be off,
you could route your calls to the answering machine, turn the cell phone
off and literally make the house quiet and more peaceful to prepare
yourself for rest.”
Long, whose book focuses on the need for napping and general resting
during the day, offers 101 ways to slip into the state of being relaxed.
Her suggestions include making tea (steeping loose leaves is good,
microwaving a tea bag is bad), aroma therapy, hand massages, meditating,
turning on a stone/water fountain, listening to classical music, changing
into sweats or pajamas and surrounding yourself with aesthetically
pleasing scenes.
For Long, who was inspired to write “Nap” by a Garfield comic about
the feline’s membership in a Nap of the Month Club, pretty scenes can
start small.
Even her water is lovely. Her method is to drop thin slices of
cucumber and oranges in a tall pitcher of water because that way you get
a slightly sweet yet fresh taste and also a pretty sight.
Long’s book targets a female audience because research has shown men
sleep more and better than women.
She said she encourages napping because most women feel they can’t
afford to take that break and most children and husbands interrupt a
woman from doing so.
Three years ago, which was when Long began writing “Nap,” she was
juggling her ad agency duties and being a mom. It occurred to her, after
reading the Garfield cartoon, that she needed permission to nap.
“Sleep experts say that if you nap for more than an hour, you wake up
with a sleep hangover,” the now-Colorado writer said. “The best napping
time is 20 minutes to half an hour.”
Both Long and Ingalls discourage people from drinking too much
caffeine, which keeps us wired longer than we think. With lattes, blended
mochas, teas and sodas consumed multiple times throughout the day, too
much caffeine can lead to insomnia.
The negative effects of sleeping too little include stress and
emotional changes.
The frontal lobes of the brain that let us live our daily routines,
solve problems and reason are also in charge of managing our emotions,
Ingalls said. So when these lobes are overworked, the emotions leak out.
“Your inhibitions are decreased, if there’s underlying frustrations or
irritability, you’re gonna be less able to control it,” he said. “Your
emotions are a signal. They’re a barometer for a possible need for rest.”
Which also explains why things seem better in the morning.
“Something emotionally traumatic or a large disappointment affects the
immune system and affects the brain, which subsequently affects the
body,” Ingalls said. “And when it’s exposed to something that’s
traumatic, it needs to rest even more.”
The need to sleep off a problem also connects to cognitive behavioral
therapy, which teaches people to gain perspective on a problem by
temporarily stepping away from it.
Long said relaxing and napping help her ward off colds and even
increase creativity.
But what do you do once you’ve mastered the art of relaxing and are
now ready to sleep?
Get a good mattress, to start.
Dick Roberts, manager of a Costa Mesa showroom for 1-800-Mattress,
said two-thirds of his customers visit his business because of sleeping
problems. In most cases, they’re not getting the right amount of sleep
because the mattress isn’t right for them.
“Everyone’s different,” Roberts said. “The key to a good night’s sleep
is blood circulation in your arms and legs. Mattress comfort affects
that. It’s good to have a mattress that is firm, to keep your body
straight.”
But there are three main types of mattress tops: firm, plush or
pillow-top plush. Every mattress has coils and metal underneath -- which
also can affect support-levels depending on your weight -- but the top
layers vary in firmness.
“When I’m trying to sell a mattress to a person to get them a better
sleep, I have to establish what is their comfort range, what type of job
do they do,” Roberts said. “We all have different comfort levels and
lifestyles.”
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