Do You Wake Up at 2 am?
Do you wake up too early in the morning? I'm not talking about when the birds
are singing and the sun is creeping over the horizon. I mean when it's still
dark and perhaps cold. When it seems that the rest of the world is asleep and
you're the only one awake. That time of the morning that no-one should have to
face...
Well take heart, you're not alone. And the solution may be easier than you
think!
Do you wake up too early in the morning when it's still dark and everyone else is asleep? Ugh!
Author: Jonni Good
Has this happened to you? You go to sleep easily, but 2 am comes
around and your eyes pop open. You're totally awake, but you
know you need more sleep. You look at the clock and groan - you
have to be up at 5 am to get ready for work, and you know you'll
be groggy, irritable, and fuzzy-brained if you can't get back to
sleep.
Your mind searches for the reason why you can't sleep. You go
over your recent fight with your husband, word for word, over
and over. Or you agonize over the poor grade you got on that
test. You may discover problems you didn't even know you had -
not enough time to yourself, too much stress, too little respect
from your family or coworkers.
The negative thoughts charge on, and you stay wide awake.
Is it depression? Is it stress? Do you need sleeping pills, or
anti-depressants?
Maybe. But before you begin medicating yourself, try this simple
experiment. Don't eat any sugar for a week, and don't drink any
alcohol after 5 in the afternoon.
You may discover that you can sleep just fine, just by making
those simple changes.
If you eat that big piece of chocolate cake or sip that glass of
whiskey just before going to bed, your blood stream will be
bombarded with the extra sugar. (Yes, I know that alcohol and
sugar aren't the same, but they both cause the 2 am wake-up
problem, for the same reason.)
Too much sugar (or too much alcohol) in the blood stream is a
dangerous situation, and your body will pull out all it's forces
to fight the "enemy." Unfortunately, the battle is fought too
aggressively, so by 2 am your blood stream has too little
glucose. And your brain needs glucose. Your brain realizes that
there's a big problem, so you need to wake up.
Protein can be reprocessed into glucose to feed the brain, but
it takes time. In the meantime, you lie there awake, with an
imbalance in your brain chemistry that tends to cause a
rehashing of everything negative from your day.
Your brain is looking for the cause of the problem but can't
find it, unless you understand that the 2 am wakening might be
caused by sugar or alcohol. The chances are fairly high that
your doctor will not ask you what you ate or drank if you go to
him for help. Since you don't know to look at your diet for a
clue to the problem, your brain looks everywhere else - at the
state of your marriage, at your financial situation, at your
children's school grades, at your career prospects...
Next time you wake up too early, think about what you ate and
drank last night. By finding the real cause of your insomnia,
you may be able to save yourself a trip to the doctor. You might
even give yourself an excuse for a healthier lifestyle at the
same time.
About the author:
Jonni Good is the author of a self-help book for sugar
addiction, and the owner of a website concerning sugar addiction
and natural weight loss. www.stress-free-weight-loss.com
from wake up
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