The pillow smells like the sunlight, a precious smell. ~Haruki Murakami
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I'm feeling sleepys (-.-) zzZZ
Mother sings a sleepy-song,
Hushaby-oh!
A lovely little sleepy-song
Soft and low.
A song of little kittens
And fleecy, white sheep;
Of puppies and of bunnies
Going to sleep;
A song of little baby birds
Asleep in a tree.
A lovely little sleepy-song
Just for me.
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Dreams can be magic
If the truth is what you seek
Open up your heart
And you'll be forever free
When you dream
~Diana Ross
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Reminiscent of Doris Day, Kent boasts the same superb enunciation and a similar ability to sell a lyric without breaking a sweat.
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The term "cat's pajamas" comes from E.B. Katz, an English tailor of the late 1700's and early 1800's, who made the finest silk pajamas for royalty and other wealthy patrons.
'Nothing like a cat nap in Kat'z PJ's.'
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Always buy a good pair of shoes and a good bed
as if you aren't in one you are in the other.
~Gloria Hunniford
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Waking up to a new day is a gift, appreciate it.
Good morning and have a splendid day.
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Rest assured, researchers are constantly dreaming up new studies that demonstrate the importance of sleep for our health—physical and psychological. Take our quiz to test your knowledge of the latest findings in the field of sleep research.
Q: Sleep deprivation contributes to higher levels of inflammation, which increases the risk of heart attack and stroke. True or false?
TRUE: Researchers have found that people who got six or fewer hours of sleep tested 25 percent higher for C-reactive protein, a marker of inflammation and heart disease, compared to people who got six to nine hours of sleep.
The result was significant even when risk factors such as smoking, diabetes, obesity, and blood pressure were taken into account.
Inflammation caused by less or poor-quality sleep may increase the risk for heart disease and stroke. More research is needed to determine whether less sleep contributes directly to cardiovascular death or whether it's a moderating factor.
Q: A good night's sleep can improve memory and boost creativity. True or false?
TRUE: Recent research shows that sleep actually strengthens, reorganizes, and restructures our memories. While we sleep we hold on to the most emotional parts of our memories.
Subjects were shown a scene with an emotional object such as a car wreck. After a full night's sleep, subjects were more likely to recall the car wreck (the emotional object) rather than a palm tree in the background.
During sleep the areas of our brain that govern emotion and memory consolidation are at work. Researchers hypothesize that this nighttime brain activity may be what helps us to develop creative new ideas.
Q: Everyone suffers from insomnia at some point; it's nothing to worry about. True or false?
FALSE: Especially for men. A study of 1,000 middle-aged women and 741 men found that men with chronic insomnia were four times more likely to die during the 14-year follow-up period than men without insomnia who slept for six hours or more a night.
Chronic insomnia was defined, for the purposes of the study, as sleeping less than six hours a night. Risk of death was also higher for males who suffered from diabetes or hypertension.
Researchers were unclear as to why the mortality risk was greater for men than women, but cautioned people with health problems and insomnia to seek medical advice.
Q: We can successfully block out traffic noise while sleeping. True or false?
FALSE: While some of us may be more adept at blocking out nighttime noise than others, researchers have found that exposure to nighttime traffic noise not only disturbs sleep, but also may result in impaired neurobehavioural performance the next morning.
Train noise was ranked number one for waking and disturbing sleepers, followed by automobile traffic and airplane noise. However, when tested the next morning, sleepers' neurobehavioural performance was equally impaired by all three types of noise. Being exposed to more than one type of these noises did not increase their negative impact.
Researchers caution that children, the elderly, shift workers, and people who suffer from chronic medical conditions are most impacted by sleep disturbances. One solution may be to use white noise generated by fans or special machines to mask traffic noise.
Q: The number of hours we sleep has no effect on our weight. True or false?
TRUE and FALSE: If we want to lose body fat, researchers tell us we need to get a good night's sleep. In a small study, 10 women were put on a 1,450-calorie-a-day diet for 14 days and slept 8.5 hours a night. During this period, they lost 6.6 pounds of weight, made up of 3.1 pounds of fat and 3.3 pounds of fat-free body mass.
For another 14 days, caloric restriction was the same, but subjects slept for 5.5 hours a night. Weight loss was identical in both periods. However, during the period of restricted sleep, the women lost 1.3 pounds of fat and 5.3 pounds of fat-free body mass.
Adequate sleep also helped control the dieters' hunger by maintaining low levels of the hormone ghrelin that triggers feelings of hunger.
Q: Staying up late doesn't harm our health as much as pulling an all-nighter. True or false?
FALSE: In a recent study on rats, researchers restricted the animals' sleep to four hours a night for five nights. The effect on the rats' brains was similar to the effect of acute total sleep deprivation, what we experience when we pull an all-nighter.
We assume that we can always catch up on sleep, but researchers caution that a lack of sleep can be harmful. Even mild sleep restriction for a couple of nights can detrimentally affect a person's ability to perform cognitive tasks, such as work-related tasks or driving.
When researchers measured the rats' brain waves, they discovered that slow wave activity increased even while the rats were awake, indicating a need for sleep.
Research has also shown that restricted sleep can increase our resistance to insulin, which can increase our risk of developing diabetes.
Ellen Niemer is an editor at alive who likes to relax with a good book before she turns out the lights.
Natural sleep aids
Melatonin
Used to decrease the time it takes to fall asleep, melatonin increases feelings of sleepiness and may increase the length of time slept. Studies show that melatonin is safe to take for periods of up to three months. Fast-release melatonin may be more effective than the slow-release type.
5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP)
This amino acid may reduce insomnia; it plays a role in the biosynthesis of serotonin and melatonin from tryptophan.
Camomile
Taken as a tincture or a tea, camomile has been used for centuries as a soothing sleep aid. It is also noted for its anti-inflammatory and antibacterial properties
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How lovely are the portals of the night,
When stars come out to watch the daylight die.
~Thomas Cole
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That a day spent with dreaming and sunsets
and refreshing breezes cannot be bettered.
~ Nicholas Sparks
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Cats sleep anywhere; any table, any chair, top of piano, window ledge,
in the middle ... on the edge.
~Eleanor Farjeon
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Dreams are true while they last, and do we not live in dreams? ~Lord Alfred Tennyson
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In bed my real love has always been the
sleep that rescued me by allowing me to dream.
~Luigi Pirandello
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She got it all, she got it all, she got it all in her pink bedroom. ~ Rosanne Cash
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A normal nights sleep has three main parts.
• Quiet sleep. This is divided into stages 1-4. Each stage becomes more 'deep'. Quiet sleep is sometimes called deep sleep.
• REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep. REM sleep is when the brain is very active, but the body is limp apart from the eyes which move rapidly. Most dreaming occurs during REM sleep.
• Short periods of waking for 1-2 minutes.
Each night, about 4-5 periods of quiet sleep alternate with 4-5 periods of REM sleep. In addition, several short periods of waking for 1-2 minutes occur about every two hours or so, but occur more frequently towards the end of the nights sleep. The graph below shows a typical normal pattern of sleep in a young adult.
Normally, you do not remember the times that you wake if they last less than two minutes. If you are distracted during the wakeful times (for example, a partner snoring, traffic noise, fear of being awake, etc), then the wakeful times tend to last longer, and you are more likely to remember them.
What is insomnia?
Insomnia means poor sleep. About 1 in 5 adults do not get as much sleep as they would like. Poor sleep can mean:
• not being able to get off to sleep.
• waking up too early.
• waking for long periods in the night.
• not feeling refreshed after a nights sleep.
If you have poor sleep, you may be tired in the daytime, have reduced concentration, become irritable, or just not function well.
What is a normal amount of sleep?
Different people need different amounts of sleep. Some people function well and are not tired during the day with just 3-4 hours sleep a night. Most people need more than this. To need 6-8 hours per night is average. Most people establish a pattern that is normal for them in their early adult life. However, as you become older it is normal to sleep less. Many people in their 70s sleep less than six hours per night.
So, everyone is different. What is important is that the amount of sleep that you get is sufficient for you, and that you usually feel refreshed and not sleepy during the daytime. Therefore, the strict medical definition of insomnia is "a persistent difficulty falling or staying asleep, leading to impairment of daytime functioning".
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A unique monster-under-the-bed story with the perfect balance of giggles and shivers, this picture book relies on the power of humor over fear, appeals to a child’s love for creatures both alarming and absurd, and glorifies the scope of a child’s imagination.
One night, when Ethan checks under his bed for his monster, Gabe, he finds a note from him instead: "Gone fishing. Back in a week." Ethan knows that without Gabe’s familiar nightly scares he doesn't stand a chance of getting to sleep, so Ethan interviews potential substitutes to see if they've got the right equipment for the job—pointy teeth, sharp claws, and a long tail—but none of them proves scary enough for Ethan.
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'The streetlamp dies, another night is over, another day is dawning.'
~ Cats the Musical
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I fell asleep reading a dull book and dreamed I kept on reading,
so I awoke from sheer boredom.
~Heinrich Heine
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The cyclical story line echoes the soothing sounds and rhythms in the simple words, while Hartung’s careful blue palette portrays nighttime as restful and inviting rather than scary. A lovely, sensitive offering. ~Gillian Engberg
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It's all about the blanket.
Blanket, pillow, and red wine. You should always be asleep on a plane.
~Kate Moss
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Early bird or late riser? The mysteries of your sleep cycle may be unlocked by the hairs on your head, a new study says.
That's because the genes that regulate our body clocks can be found in hair-follicle cells, researchers have discovered.
(See "Secrets of Sleeping Soundly Uncovered.")
A tiny portion of the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus controls the human body clock, and RNA strands—protein-building chains of molecules—process these signals throughout the body in 24-hour cycles. (Get a genetics overview.)
Predicting Morning People
RNA strands containing the clock genes are found throughout the body—including in white blood cells and the inside of the mouth—but human hair is easiest for scientists to test.
So Makoto Akashi, of the Research Institute for Time Studies at Yamaguchi University in Japan, and colleagues pulled head and beard hairs from four test subjects at three-hour intervals for a full day. The subjects had already reported their preferred schedules for waking up and eating, among other lifestyle choices. (Take National Geographic magazine's sleep quiz.)
The test day occurred after the subjects had rigorously adhered to their preferred schedules for nine days—in other words, the morning people woke up early every day, and the late sleepers woke up late every day.
When the researchers tested the genes in the subjects' follicles, they found that body-clock gene activity peaked right after a subject had woken up, regardless of whether it was 6 a.m. or 10 a.m.
This suggests that the brain "turns on" the genes at different times of the morning in different people.
Other clock genes followed similar patterns, making it possible to predict "morning people" with just a pluck, the study said.
"Clock Gene" Tests to Give Health Warnings?
While most people may already know if they prefer to sleep in or wake up early, the new research might also provide insights into human health, researchers say. (See a human-body interactive.)
Disorders of the body clock have been implicated in high blood pressure, diabetes—even cancer. (Read about why we sleep in National Geographic magazine.)
The researchers also studied the hairs of rotating shift workers, who are at greater risk for body-clock disorders, for three weeks. Over that amount of time, the workers alternated from an early work shift (6:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.) to a late shift (3:00 p.m. to midnight).
But the three-week period wasn't enough time for the workers' internal clocks to readjust, according to measurements of follicle genes.
Even though the workers' lifestyle was shifted by seven hours, the clock-gene activity in their follicles shifted by only two hours—suggesting shift workers live in a state of jet lag, the study said.
The follicle test could be used to develop "working conditions that do not disturb clock function" by building in enough time to adjust, the authors wrote.
A noninvasive check for a clock disorder could serve as an early warning system, Akashi said: "I hope that our method will be used for regular health checks in schools and companies to keep healthy clocks."
Rachel Kaufman
for National Geographic News
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Look to the East, where up the lucid sky
The morning climbs! The day shall yet be fair.
~Celia Thaxter
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Better to get up late and be wide awake than to get up early and be asleep all day.
~ Anonymous
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Drs. Oz and Breus firmly believe you need 7 hours of sleep a night; good health depends not just on how long you sleep, it's how good your rest is as well. Dangers of disrupted sleep can include diabetes, obesity and in women, heart problems. In fact, if you're getting 5 hours of sleep a night, your chances for all these conditions increase by 50%.
Follow this plan to kick out the kids and embrace your REM.
Step 1: Get Rid of the Guilt
Do not try to make up for your own feelings of guilt by allowing kids to stay up later or letting them sleep in your bed. If you start this habit, you should be prepared for pattern to last 3 years. Instead, spend quality time together - preferably something that involves the whole family and physical activity. You'll all get the exercise you need and feel more tired from it!
Step 2: Set The Stage
A happy, healthy night's sleep starts with daytime activities. Talk with your children about bedroom expectations; mommies and daddies sleep in their room while kids sleep in theirs. A helpful activity to help set the sleeping stage is to role play by putting their toys to sleep.
Step 3: Take the Path of Most Resistance
When parents are exhausted, the tendency is to follow the path of least resistance. However, doing what's easiest to get your child back to sleep (like letting them sleep with you) is not what's healthiest for you or the child. Once you start sleep training, bed sharing must end entirely and immediately. There are no negotiations.
After a nightly disturbance, walk children back to their own bed. Yes, there may be sobs, screams and begging, but you must not cave in.
Step 4 - Bet on Bribery
A small investment for a good night's sleep can work wonders. Create a chart that chronicles sleeping behavior and rewards. A small, inexpensive reward can be given after a night in bed; at the end of the week, if the goal number of nights has been met, reward the entire family with a favorite activity.
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Little Bear is beyond excited. And Big Bear is, too. For the first time ever, each is sleeping in his own bedroom, as all big bears do. But when Little Bear snuggles down to sleep without Big Bear, everything feels different. Is that a monster he sees and footsteps he hears? Who's slowly opening the door...?
In this going-to-bed story beset by runaway imaginations, these brothers and "best buds" show their mutual care and concern for the other until both fall fast asleep.
Pedler's illustrations in bold, primary colour practically leap off the page in a book honoring this childhood rite of passage.
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