Need a reason to hit the snooze button a few
more times? Sleep is as vital for survival as food, according to Dr.
Mary Susan Esther, president of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine
(AASM). And chances are you're more likely to burn the midnight oil to
finish all your work (and play) than you are to pass up dinner. But
chronic lack of sleep can lead to a host of health problems—such as high
blood pressure, obesity, depression, irregular hormone production, a
weakened immune system, memory lapses, constant irritability, and
decreased concentration and reaction times.
So are you spending
enough quality time between the sheets—asleep? See how many of the signs
below describe you. Then decide if a sleep deficit is holding you back.
(One thing that you should help you stay alert? Good diet habits.
1. You're not hungry for lunch.
A lack of sleep can make you constantly want to eat more, or
persistently feel like you're not hungry. It throws off your internal
clock resulting in abnormal feelings—which is why so many people lose or
gain weight during periods of sleeplessness.
2. You've looked at three other Web sites in the last 5 minutes—and checked your email twice. No,
you (probably) don't have Attention Deficit Disorder. Whether you're
writing a quick email or solving chemical equations; a lack of sleep can
make focusing seem impossible.
3. You can't remember where you put the car keys.
Your brain needs sleep to refresh and regenerate. Without it, your
short-term memory may be impaired—which is why pulling an all-nighter
rarely yields better results than getting quality shut-eye, according to
Dr. Neil Kline, a sleep physician and representative of the American
Sleep Association.
4. You can't carry on a conversation.
Come Saturday night you may work a party like a pro, but as long as
you're sleep-deficient, coming up with witty—or even coherent—one-liners
is out of the question.
5. You're drowsy at the wheel.
Your eyes may glaze over now and then when you're staring at the
computer screen or stuck in an endless meeting, but if you struggle to
stay awake behind the wheel—or doing any task that puts your life at
risk—you're not just bored. You need more sleep.
Caffeinated
drinks, blasting music, or rolling down the windows (in January) may
arouse you briefly, but it won't keep you alert for long drives.
6. You feel sick—and you never get sick.
Your immune system repairs and strengthens while you sleep. So in
addition to eating flu-fighting foods, log at least seven hours a night
to stay healthy all season.
Source: http://www.menshealth.com/health/need-more-sleep |