Everyone knows that sleep is important to look and feel your
best, but what many people do not realize is that lack of sleep directly and
significantly reduces your ability to lose weight and keep it off! In fact a recent study suggests that missing
out on just 30 minutes of sleep per day can increase your risk of obesity and
diabetes.
There are several reasons for this phenomenon, but on one
level it is pretty easy to understand.
If you do not get enough sleep you will not have energy to live a
healthy, active lifestyle, and when you are tired it is very easy to skip
workouts and spontaneously reduce overall activity.
Sleep:
Your Body’s Best Friend
Sleep is
important for just about all the systems in your body, and lack of sleep
reduces cognitive function including reduced reaction time, impaired decision
making and memory. Sleep is also essential
for the repair and recovery of the body.
Even if
you think you get enough shut-eye you may still be suffering from the symptoms
of sleep deprivation. Unfortunately
just a little sleep deprivation can have a significant effect on weight gain.
How Lack
of Sleep Causes Weight Gain
Lack of
sleep increases the levels of a stress hormone called cortisol, and cortisol
increases appetite significantly. Sleep
deprivation also saps willpower and decision making ability so not only are you
hungrier – you are more likely to make poor food choices. Sleep deprivation is a stressor and when
you feel stressed you tend to choose high carb foods which boost serotonin.
At the
same time the body’s ability to handle carbs properly is reduced. Your cells become less sensitive to the
effects of insulin called insulin insensitivity which is what type 2 diabetes
is all about. If lack of sleep is a chronic
condition you quite literally can make yourself gain weight and become diabetic!
In
addition when you are really tired, a hormone called Ghrelin is boosted while
Leptin levels drop. This is quite
literally a double whammy because Ghrelin increases hungers and Leptin tells
you when you are full and satisfied. So you
are hungrier and yet you do not feel as satisfied when you do eat so you eat
more!
In fact, studies have shown increased calorie
intake of over 300 extra calories per day in sleep-deprived people.
How To Improve
the quality and time you spend sleeping
There
are simple steps to keep lack of sleep from sabotaging your weight loss
efforts. The first step is to figure out
your bedtime based on when you need to get up in the morning. Count back a full 8 hours and set that as
your bedtime. You also want to wake up
at the same time all the time because having a consistent bed-time and waking
time helps set your body clock.
It is
also important to avoid all sources of caffeine except for first thing in the
morning. Caffeine is not a horrible
thing, but too much too late can really have a big negative impact on your
sleep. Also avoid alcohol because
drinking reduces the quality of your sleep as well. Just cutting down or cutting out alcohol
and caffeine often makes a dramatic difference in sleep quality within a week
to 10 days.
The
other key is making sleep a priority. Sleep is directly linked to higher quality of
life and resistance to illness and disease.
Sleep is as or more important than diet and exercise so make getting a
good night’s rest a priority.
No comments:
Post a Comment