Tag Archives: Asleep

Tiffany Haddish arrested for DUI and ‘found asleep behind the wheel’ as cops believe she had ‘smoked weed’

TIFFANY Haddish was arrested on suspicion of DUI after cops spotted her seemingly dozing off behind the wheel in Georgia early Friday morning.

The actress has been having a rough go as of late.

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Tiffany Haddish was arrested early Friday morning on suspicion of DUICredit: Getty Images – Getty

According to a report from TMZ, Peachtree City Police arrested the Girls Trip actress around 4 am.

Police responded to a call about a driver who had fallen asleep at the wheel, the outlet revealed.

The had a description of the vehicle and spotted Tiffany driving it, pulling into a neighborhood.

Officers stopped her and made the arrest, charging her with DUI and improper stopping on a roadway.

Police believe she smoke marijuana prior to her arrest.

She smiled in her mugshot photo, despite the serious nature of the accusations against her.

Tiffany was in police custody for a few hours.

Record obtained by TMZ show she posted $1,666 bond and left the jail at around 6:30am.

Tiffany has not yet addressed her arrest.

She has been going through it as of late, losing her grandmother, friend Bob Saget, a dog, and producer Carl Craig.

The comedian has been open about her marijuana use in the past, even admitting to driving under the influence.

SWAMP TOUR

During an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Tiffany recounted a wild night out with Jada Pinkett Smith.

She revealed that she, Jada and the actress’ husband, Will Smith.

Tiffany said she smoked “a whole bunch of weed because the doctor” said to.

Once she was high, she got a call from Jada confirming that she would be joining her on a swamp tour.

While under the influence, she drove a cheap rental car to where Jada and Will were staying and picked them up.

She drove the couple in the car to the tour.

Tiffany joked during the TV appearance that she was careful not to become the person “on TMZ who killed the Fresh Prince of Bel-Air,” seemingly noting the danger of driving while intoxicated.

Jada was unaware was Groupon was and thought they would be going on a private swamp tour.

She was shocked to see others waiting for a boat to go on the tour with them.

Tiffany joked that she “got a $20-a-day rental,” adding, “why would I have my own boat?”

She added: “I got a discount ticket to get on a swamp. We’re about to have $66 worth of fun, girl.”

DIFFICULTIES

In addition to her recent losses, Tiffany is fresh off a breakup.

In November, she split from Common after dating for almost a year.

She opened up to ET about their split, saying at the time: “I miss him. I miss him from time to time, but that’s with, I think, any intimate relationship that you might have, you miss them. But I’m fine with it. It’s cool.”



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Pittsburgh Steelers coach Mike Tomlin says he fell asleep before team clinched playoff spot

PITTSBURGH — While the rest of Pittsburgh was on the edge of its collective seat watching the Los Angeles Chargers and Las Vegas Raiders late Sunday night, Steelers coach Mike Tomlin was asleep.

Tomlin admitted he didn’t see the game-winning field goal in overtime by Raiders kicker Daniel Carlson that ultimately sent his team to the playoffs.

“I dozed off,” Tomlin said Tuesday. “I knew I had a workday waiting on me, or I assumed that I had a workday waiting on me. I think at one point, [the Raiders] were up by 15, and that number made you somewhat comfortable.

“I’m probably better off not having watched it.”

He’s not the only Steeler who missed the end of the Raiders’ 35-32 win in real time. Wide receiver Ray-Ray McCloud gathered with some teammates to watch the game, but because they kept rewinding it, the group was behind the live telecast when Carlson’s field goal prevented a tie that would’ve kept the Steelers (9-7-1) out of the playoffs.

“My little brother called me,” McCloud said Monday. “He was like, ‘It’s rigged, bro. It’s rigged.’ Then he called me back and was like, ‘You’re good, you’re good.’

“I was like, ‘They made it?’ So when I watched it personally, I already knew they made it. It was definitely a relief. It was a fun game.”

Now that the Steelers — who had just a 9% chance to make the playoffs entering the last day of the regular season, according to ESPN’s Football Power Index — are in the postseason, the challenge ahead is a tough one. They’ll face the Kansas City Chiefs (12-5) in the AFC wild-card round at Arrowhead Stadium on Sunday. Just three weeks ago, the visiting Steelers were blown out by the Chiefs 36-10.

“They handled us and handled us definitively,” Tomlin said. “And so we understand that. But at the same time, we’re not paralyzed by that. We accept that we didn’t play well enough last time. We accept that we didn’t plan well enough last time. But that’s the last time.”

Tomlin also acknowledged it wasn’t quite a performance his team could take much from.

“I don’t know how much you learn from it, to be quite honest with you,” he said. “They smashed us so definitively. More than anything, it’s like a reboot.”

In that game, Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes completed 23 of 30 attempts for 258 yards and three touchdowns, while Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger exited early and threw for 159 yards and a touchdown with an interception.

Since then, the Steelers have gutted out two straight wins against Cleveland Browns and the Baltimore Ravens to reach the playoffs.

“I can’t say enough about the group,” Tomlin said. “Their buy-in, their fight, their selflessness. You’re not in this tournament unless you’re all of those things and then some.

“We don’t think we’re unique compared to the other 13 teams, but we are appreciative of what it is that we’ve had to do to be a part of this field.”

The last two wins were partially fueled by the urgency of Roethlisberger’s lasts — his last home game and last regular-season game. And Tomlin said it’s “our intention” to keep riding that wave.

He also said the experience of those tight games coupled with the roller coaster of the season should help his club in the playoffs.

“We’re collectively getting comfortable in many circumstances where most are uncomfortable,” Tomlin said. “I think we’ve been hardened by this process. It hasn’t been an easy journey for us, and I think we’re getting comfortable with being in these scenarios.

“… I think we’re able to execute individually and collectively because of that experience. Hopefully, that helps us as we proceed into the playoffs. We understand that the playoffs are a different level.”

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Large Study Links Cannabis Use to Sleep Disruption, Especially Among Heavy Users

Getting roughly eight hours of sleep is crucial for most of us to avoid feeling like a zombie at work the next day. While some people use caffeine to keep alert during the day, others have turned to cannabis as a sleep aid.

 

Now, a large-scale study on the effects of cannabis on sleep duration and quality has called into question the drug’s reputation as a beneficial pre-slumber choice. 

Data on cannabis use and sleep duration for 21,729 adults were obtained from the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), a cross-sectional survey designed by the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). 

The authors of the new study, led by researchers at the University of Toronto in Canada, wanted to determine the relationship between recent cannabis use and sleep duration in a nationally representative sample from the US. Participants were required to report their age range, race, sex, education post high school, average hours worked per week, and other health-related variables. 

Sleep duration was categorized as short, optimal, or long, with short sleep defined as less than 6 hours, and long sleep defined as more than 9 hours on average weeknights or worknights.

Sleep quality measures were also part of the survey, with questions relating to difficulty falling asleep, ability to stay asleep, sleeping too much in the past two weeks, and whether participants had consulted a physician about sleeping issues. 

 

For cannabis use, participants were defined as ‘users’ if they had used cannabis in the past 30 days, which ended up being a total of 3,132 individuals or 14.5 percent of people surveyed. These users were then further categorized into how much they’d smoked in the last 30 days – ‘moderate use’ was less than 20 times, and ‘heavy use’ was more than 20 times. 

The cannabis users surveyed were 34 percent more likely to report sleeping fewer than 6 hours per night when compared to non-users, as well as being 56 percent more likely to report sleeping more than 9 hours when compared to non-users, after accounting for potential confounding factors.  

Recent cannabis users were also more likely to report having difficulty falling asleep, staying asleep, sleeping too much in the past two weeks, and having ever told a physician about sleeping problems. However, cannabis exposure was not associated with frequent daytime sleepiness.

“We determined there to be a possible exposure-response relationship between frequency of use and sleep duration; heavy users were at the greatest risk of both extremes of nightly sleep duration compared with non-users,” the team writes.

 

“With our cross-sectional analyses, we can only speculate that these findings may be related to an unknown consequence of repeated cannabis exposure alone or may be a reflection of other underlying sociodemographic or health factors.”

Previous findings have shown mixed results pertaining to the effectiveness of cannabis as a sleeping aid, with some studies showing that even a single cannabis exposure can reduce sleep-onset latency, increase total sleep time, and report less disruption once asleep.

“Despite insomnia being one of the most cited reasons for self-medication with cannabis or cannabinoids, the evidence base is overall inconsistent and of poor quality, as described in a recent systematic review,” the authors write.

Overall, the researchers wanted to get a glimpse into an association between sleep disturbances and recent cannabis use, especially now that it’s becoming more widely available. They speculate that with repeated use, the body can become more used to the drug, and actually increase sleep disruption.

There’s still much we don’t know about how cannabis and its various compounds affect our sleep, the researchers warn.

“A better understanding of the endocannabinoid-mediated effects on sleep can inform development of clinical guidelines to target improved long term health outcomes at the patient and population levels,” they write.

In the US, sleep deprivation has become a major public health concern, with only two-thirds of the population meeting the 7-9 hours of sleep per night recommendation, and almost half of American adults reporting daytime sleepiness every day.

In addition to this, more widespread legalization and decriminalization of cannabis in the US and Canada has led to a large uptake since the early 2000s, with 45 million reported users in 2019.

“Insufficient sleep in the modern world is a growing public health issue and sleep disturbances can be a major risk factor for initiating cannabis use,” the authors caution. 

“This can perpetuate cycles of increased cannabis use, progressive sleep disturbances, and acute cessation leading to withdrawal which may add further negative effects to sleep architecture and quality.” 

The study was published in the journal Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine.

 

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Teen says she nearly died after falling asleep, forgetting to change tampon

A teen claims she nearly died after falling asleep drunk and forgetting to change her tampon.

Ellie Makin said she developed toxic shock syndrome, but was dismissed by medics when she went to hospital for help.

The 18-year-old claims she was sent home, with doctors telling her she had “freshers flu”.

She had accidentally left in her tampon overnight after a night out, meaning it had been in for 12 hours.

The student woke to flu-like symptoms, nausea and dizziness, becoming sure she was ill with toxic shock syndrome.

She fainted and was taken to The University Hospital of North Durham by her university welfare tea, where she claims she told them about the tampon.

Ellie said she was discharged after three hours as doctors “dismissed” her concerns about toxic shock.

She claims they put her symptoms down to a viral infection as a result of going out drinking for university fresher celebrations.

But after she got worse the next day, doctors at Tameside General Hospital confirmed she had toxic shock syndrome and kept her in for five days.

The climate science student is now urging other teens to “trust their gut” and get a second opinion when they feel they’ve been dismissed.

Ellie, from Droylsden, Greater Manchester, said: “It had been freshers and I’d been going out quite a bit and I started to feel really run down with flu-like symptoms.

“My apple watch showed that my heart rate was 120 lying down when it’s normally 55, so that was concerning and I felt dizzy and sick as well.

“I’d drunkenly fallen asleep with a tampon in and left it in for 12 hours so I googled my symptoms and knew it was toxic shock.

“I told my mum and she rang welfare and they came to my door. When I answered the door I fainted so they took me to hospital.

“I had bloods done and they told me my white blood count was high but they couldn’t pinpoint where the infection was from so they just put it down as being a viral infection and discharged me.

“I knew it wasn’t a viral infection because I was dizzy and fainting – I said that I was worried it was toxic shock and told them about the tampon but they didn’t do anything about it.

“I feel like I was dismissed – they should’ve run the tests and not just put it down to freshers flu.”

After Ellie’s terrifying experience she now vows to be extra careful with tampons and is urging others to do the same and to make sure they push for a diagnosis if they have symptoms of toxic shock.
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‘Push for help’

Toxic shock syndrome (TSS) is a rare but potentially fatal condition caused by bacteria getting into the body and releasing harmful toxins.

The condition deteriorates rapidly and the infection can cause organ failure, or eventually death, if not treated immediately.

People using tampons are recommended to change them before going to sleep, and soon after waking up.

The teen now claims she’s dealing with relatively unknown long-term effects of the condition, including rapid hair loss, which has left her with a thinned hairline, and peeling skin on her hands and feet.

Ellie fears these effects could last up to six months after joining online support groups of people recovering from toxic shock syndrome and documenting the same struggles.

She said: “If there was even a chance it could’ve been toxic shock Durham Hospital should have run more tests, especially because of the fact that I’d left the tampon in for that long.

“They said it’s a fatal disease and you’re lucky to have caught it now. It was scary and made me feel annoyed about how Durham Hospital treated me.”

After her terrifying experience she now vows to be extra careful with tampons and is urging others to do the same and to make sure they push for a diagnosis if they have symptoms of toxic shock.

What are the symptoms of TSS?

  • A fever and high temperature: of 39C (102F) or above
  • Flu-like symptoms: headache, chills, muscle ache, sore throat, cough etc
  • Feeling and/or being sick
  • Diarrhoea
  • A widespread, sunburn-like rash
  • Redness in the whites of your eyes, lips and tongue
  • Dizziness and/or fainting
  • Difficulty breathing

A spokesperson for County Durham and Darlington NHS Foundation Trust said: “There are occasions when a patient develops further symptoms after leaving the care of our emergency department team, which would support a specific diagnosis.

“We encourage patients to return to hospital for further investigation when new symptoms emerge or existing symptoms persist.

“We’re sorry Ellie is unhappy with the care she received and would welcome an opportunity to discuss this and her overall experience with her, if she would find this helpful.”

This story originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced here with permission.

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Khabib rips Justin Gaethje over title shot demands: ‘You had an opportunity to become champion, but you fell asleep’

Retirement isn’t stopping Khabib Nurmagomedov from wading back into the lightweight fray.

The former UFC lightweight champion took aim at Justin Gaethje on Thursday over Gaethje’s calls for a title shot in the aftermath of UFC 268. Jumping into the comments section of an ESPN Instagram post, Nurmagomedov criticized Gaethje for his recent résumé and scoffed at the idea of Gaethje being most deserving challenger for the winner of UFC 269’s upcoming lightweight title bout between Charles Oliveira and Dustin Poirier.

“In last 8 fight, you got finished 3 times Justin. You had an opportunity to become champion, but you fell asleep,” Nurmagomedov wrote, adding a sleeping face emoji.

“Islam [Makhachev] is on the 9 win streak, 3 fight in 2021 and all finishes. Just shut up and admit that Islam deserves this title shot, not you.”

A coach and longtime confidant of Makhachev’s, Nurmagomedov choked Gaethje unconscious in the final fight of Nurmagomedov’s career with a second-round rear-naked choke in October 2020 at UFC 254.

Gaethje finally returned to the win column this past weekend with a three-round decision win over Michael Chandler at UFC 268 that is already on the shortlist for Fight of the Year. In the aftermath of the performance, Gaethje has publicly campaigned for the next UFC title shot. The 32-year-old American is the No. 3-ranked lightweight on MMA Fighting’s Global Rankings.

Makhachev, meanwhile, pulled off his own big win in recent weeks with a first-round submission of Dan Hooker at UFC 267. The 30-year-old Dagestan native has won nine consecutive UFC bouts and is MMA Fighting’s No. 5-ranked lightweight in the world.

Poll

Who should be the next UFC lightweight title challenger?

  • 61%
    Justin Gaethje

    (13 votes)

  • 38%
    Islam Makhachev

    (8 votes)



21 votes total

Vote Now



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A woman in British Columbia was asleep in her bed when a meteorite crash landed on her pillow

When you wish upon a shooting star, make sure to include “don’t crash into my house” in the fine print.

A woman in Canada was peacefully asleep when a meteorite crashed through her roof and landed right on her pillow.

Victoria News reports how Ruth Hamilton—who lives in a the town called Golden in the province of British Columbia—was catching some Zs while others in the area were captivated by a meteorite streaming through the night sky.

Her attention was soon drawn to the meteorite as well, however, as she suddenly felt a bunch of debris on her face causing her to wake up, startled, only to find a big hole in her ceiling and a space rock on her pillow.

NDTV continues to report how Hamilton then proceeded to call 911, who responded to the scene and checked out whether or not the rock could have come from some nearby construction. They confirmed that that wasn’t the case, and thereby deduced was the meteorite that had given the rest of Golden residents such a show earlier.

“I was shaking and scared when it happened, I thought someone had jumped in or it was a gun or something,” said Hamilton of the incident afterward. “It’s almost a relief when we realized it could only have fallen out of the sky.”

And a relief it was, as CBC notes how the meteorite had just missed Hamilton’s head by a few inches.

Experts at Western University in London, Ontario later confirmed that the rock had assuredly come from space.

  • ‘Extraordinary’ radio waves from the heart of the Milky Way discovered by scientists

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Canadian woman was asleep in bed when a meteorite crash landed right next to her head

When you wish upon a shooting star, make sure to include “don’t crash into my house” in the fine print.

A woman in Canada was peacefully asleep when a meteorite crashed through her roof and landed right on her pillow.

Victoria News reports how Ruth Hamilton—who lives in a the town called Golden in the province of British Columbia—was catching some Zs while others in the area were captivated by a meteorite streaming through the night sky.

Her attention was soon drawn to the meteorite as well, however, as she suddenly felt a bunch of debris on her face causing her to wake up, startled, only to find a big hole in her ceiling and a space rock on her pillow.

NDTV continues to report how Hamilton then proceeded to call 911, who responded to the scene and checked out whether or not the rock could have come from some nearby construction. They confirmed that that wasn’t the case, and thereby deduced was the meteorite that had given the rest of Golden residents such a show earlier.

“I was shaking and scared when it happened, I thought someone had jumped in or it was a gun or something,” said Hamilton of the incident afterward. “It’s almost a relief when we realized it could only have fallen out of the sky.”

And a relief it was, as CBC notes how the meteorite had just missed Hamilton’s head by a few inches.

Experts at Western University in London, Ontario later confirmed that the rock had assuredly come from space.

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How to fall asleep more quickly — the healthy way

“Falling asleep does take about 15 minutes for the healthy sleeper,” Robbins added. “Falling asleep is distinct from sleep itself, which can be frustrating when one is extremely tired.

“Nevertheless, be patient that sleep will come and the more you stress about not being asleep, the lower your chances of falling asleep,” she said.

Dozing off too quickly could be a sign that you are seriously sleep deprived, which can harm your physical and mental health.

Robbins, who coauthored the book “Sleep for Success!,” equates it to having been deprived of food. “If you are starved for food, you will devour your next meal immediately, whereas a well-nourished person might not be as ravenous and in dire need of nutrition immediately,” she said.

Adults need to sleep at least seven hours a night, while school-age kids need nine to 12 hours and teens need eight to 10 hours each night, according to the US Centers on Disease Control and Prevention.

What if you do sleep an adequate number of hours each night? Then falling asleep too quickly, as well as being tired during the day, could be a sign that the quality of your sleep is suffering.

“A lack of quality sleep occurs when there are multiple awakenings and arousal during the night,” said Dr. Raj Dasgupta, an assistant professor of clinical medicine at the Keck School of Medicine at the University of Southern California, who specializes in sleep.

“Those awakenings affect your ability to get to the deeper stages of sleep, such as slow wave sleep, also known as delta sleep, or rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, which are both essential if you want to function well and be alert,” Dasgupta said.

During the REM stage of sleep, we dream — and information and experiences are consolidated and stored in memory. In addition to impacting cognitive functioning, a recent study found spending less time in REM sleep is linked to a greater overall risk of death from any cause.

Slow wave or delta sleep is when the brain both rests and gets rid of toxins — a form of housekeeping that allows the body to heal and rejuvenate.

“The most important thing that you can do to increase your amount of deep sleep is to allow yourself adequate total sleep time,” according to the American Sleep Association.
One of the most common culprits that might interrupt your sleep during the night — sometimes without you even knowing it — is obstructive sleep apnea, where you snore, choke, gasp or stop breathing periodically during the night. Some 25 million Americans suffer from this form of sleep apnea, said the National Healthy Sleep Awareness Project.
Restless legs syndrome, a condition in which you (or your partner’s) legs twitch or shake during the night can also impact sleep quality. So can chronic pain, diabetes, heart disease, asthma and gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), to name a few. Medications can also impact sleep, as can various mental health disorders, according to the Cleveland Clinic.

“The take home message is that if you’re not getting quality sleep, that means its time to see a sleep specialist to see what’s going on,” Dasgupta said.

Sign up for for CNN’S Sleep, But Better newsletter. You’ll get more guidance and support for sleeping better.

How to fall asleep faster

Now that your expectations are realistic — it’s not healthy to go out like a light, and you shouldn’t worry if you need 10 to 20 minutes to fall asleep — what about those nights when sleep is overly elusive?

Get up! “If you can’t fall asleep after 20 minutes, get out of bed and go into another room where there is dim light, and do something calming until you feel drowsy again. The same applies when you wake in the night and can’t fall back asleep,” Dasgupta advises.

Robbins agrees: “Promise to never toss and turn — commit to leaving your bed if, for whatever reason, you toss and turn at night and experience difficulty falling asleep.”

Some people believe that it’s just as refreshing to your body to lie in bed with eyes closed but not sleeping. That’s just a pipe dream, Robbins said: “If we stay in bed, we’ll start to associate the bed with insomnia.”

Keep the bed sacred. Keeping your brain from seeing the bedroom as anything other than a place to sleep and have sex is how you train it to fall asleep when your head hits the pillow, Dasgupta said.

“You’re much more likely to drift off quickly if your brain knows exactly what to expect when you enter the bedroom,” he said.

That means don’t work or watch television in bed, and don’t make calls or check your cellphone. Blue lights from electronic devices tell our brains to wake up, not sleep.

Build a nest. Keep training your brain to expect sleep by nurturing the sleep process. Keep the room cool and dark. Science tells us that we sleep better in cooler temperatures of about 60 to 67 degrees Fahrenheit (15 to 20 degrees Celsius).

Ready a routine. Brush your teeth, take a relaxing warm bath or shower and then spend some time in dim light reading a book or listening to soothing music. You can try yoga or light stretches, but nothing that will rev you up. You’re teaching your brain to wind down.

Go to bed and get up at the same time each day, even on weekends or your days off, the CDC advises. Before long, it will become an entrenched habit.

Calm your whirling mind. For many people, this is the hardest part of falling asleep. In today’s frantic world packed with stress and anxiety, it can be hard to stop fretting over what you didn’t do or what you need to do next.

Practicing meditation is one evidence-based way to improve your ability to fall asleep, Robbins said.

“Meditation is the act of allowing thoughts to pass without devoting conscious attention to them,” she said. “This skill, when practiced over time, can translate to our ability to fall asleep when we adopt a meditative mindset.”

Keep a “worry list” by your bedside. Another way to calm your mind is to keep a stack of notecards by your bedside and use them to document your worries.

“Start a ritual of writing down anything on your mind before bed,” Robbins said. “No matter how stressful, small, large, put it down onto one of the notecards. Tell yourself there is nothing you can do about those tasks at night, leave them for the morning.”

Breathe deeply. “Deep long breaths matched with a mantra like ‘let go’ or ‘I am at peace’ can help you calm a busy mind and slip off into sleep,” Robbins said.

There are a variety of deep-breathing techniques experts recommend, but “the best research is behind six in, six out,” stress management expert Dr. Cynthia Ackrill told CNN in a prior interview.

Take a deep breath to a slow count of six, making sure that you can feel your stomach rise with your hand as it fills with air, explained Ackrill, an editor for Contentment magazine, which is produced by the American Institute of Stress.

“You want to use what is called soft belly breathing,” she said. “To soften your belly, let the diaphragm descend, push out on your belly a little bit and bring the breath down into that part.”

Release your breath to the same slow count of six. Pause and begin again. Repeat until you feel your body relax, Ackrill added.

Don’t stop dreaming. Keep up these habits and before long your brain will automatically know that pillow equals sleep. Then maybe that dream of falling asleep more quickly will come true after all — the healthy way.

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Why Am I Waking Up at 3 A.M.? Ways to Fight Insomnia and Fall Back Asleep

It’s normal to wake up a few times during the night, as the brain cycles through various stages of deeper and lighter sleep. Older people also often have to get out of bed to use the bathroom one or two times during the night. Waking up at night is usually harmless. Most people have no trouble falling back asleep and may not even remember their nighttime awakenings the next morning.

But if you frequently wake up in the middle of the night and find yourself struggling to fall back asleep, there could be an underlying problem. If this occurs at least three times a week over a period of at least three months, it could be chronic insomnia, said Dr. Kannan Ramar, a sleep medicine specialist at the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and former president of the American Academy of Sleep Medicine.

Two of the primary drivers of insomnia are stress and anxiety. If you wake up and look at the clock and then start worrying about having to be rested for work the next day, paying your bills or other life stresses, it could activate your sympathetic nervous system, which controls what’s known as the fight-or-flight response. Levels of adrenaline, the so-called stress hormone, will rise, increasing your heart rate and leading to a state of heightened arousal, making it particularly difficult to ease back into sleep.

“You might ask yourself, ‘Is this the same time I woke up last night? Why does this always happen?’” Dr. Ramar said. “Those thoughts are not helpful in terms of falling back asleep.”

If you find that you’ve been awake for 25 minutes or longer, experts advise you get out of bed and do a quiet activity that calms your mind — anything to quash the stressful thoughts that were keeping you awake. Gentle stretches or breathing exercises might help, as may meditation, which has been shown in studies to help combat chronic insomnia. You might sit on the couch and knit, or read a book or magazine in dim light. Experts recommend that you avoid reading on your smartphone, since the blue light these devices emit can suppress production of melatonin, the hormone that helps make us drowsy. You might, however, pull out your phone to use a soothing app like Calm or Headspace, which are designed to help with sleep and meditation.

Eventually, when you start to feel tired, get back into bed and try to doze off. Then, the next day, implement the following sleep hygiene habits to increase your odds of sleeping soundly through the night.

  • Limit your evening alcohol intake. In small amounts, alcohol can act as a sedative, causing you to fall asleep faster. But it can also cause you to wake up in the middle of the night as your body is metabolizing it. Studies show that consuming alcohol before bed can lead to poor quality sleep.

  • Avoid consuming any caffeine after 2 p.m. because it can linger in your system well into the evening. If you drink a cup of coffee at 3:30 p.m., about a quarter of the caffeine can still be in your system 12 hours later.

  • Avoid napping late in the day, as this can make it harder to fall and stay asleep at night. Taking late naps will reduce what scientists call your homeostatic sleep drive, which is essentially your body’s pressure to fall sleep in the evening. If you do want to nap during the day, make sure to do it in the morning or early afternoon, and keep it short, no longer than 30 minutes. “The closer you are to bedtime or the longer the nap is, the more likely you are to run into trouble,” said Dr. Sabra Abbott, an assistant professor of neurology in sleep medicine at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

  • Keep a strict sleep schedule. Waking up and going to bed at irregular times can throw off your body’s circadian rhythm, the innate 24-hour cycles that tell our bodies when to wake up and fall asleep, making it harder to sleep through the night. Try to get up at the same time each morning (aim to get at least 15 minutes of morning sunlight, which helps to shut down melatonin production) and get into bed at the same time in the evenings. Studies show that people who have irregular bedtime schedules are more likely to develop symptoms of insomnia.

  • If you frequently get up to use the bathroom, try to limit how much water or other fluids you drink in the evening two to four hours before bedtime.

If these measures don’t help, a sleep specialist can assess whether you might have a more significant underlying problem, such as sleep apnea or restless legs syndrome, that needs medical treatment. A sleep clinic could also connect you to a cognitive behavioral therapist who could help you identify and address any specific behaviors that might be causing your chronic insomnia.

Do you have a health question? Ask Well

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Technology Really Is Changing Human Circadian Rhythms, Scientists Say

We haven’t been dependent on natural light from the Sun since the invention of the light bulb in 1879.

Nowadays, many people spend most of the day not just in artificially lit rooms but also looking at screens – phones, computers, and TVs. Recently, there have been concerns that looking at bright screens in the evening can confuse your circadian rhythm, which is the internal clock that regulates our sleep-wake cycle.

 

We would assume that this means using a screen before bed might make it harder to fall asleep. In fact, there are many products you can buy to filter out the blue light from your screens, which promise to improve your sleep quality.

Do these products actually work? Does screen light change our circadian rhythm, and does this make it harder to fall asleep? The story is quite complicated.

How does the circadian rhythm work?

The circadian rhythm is an innate ‘body clock’ present in many forms of life including plants, fungi, and animals. In humans, the body clock is found in the hypothalamus.

The hypothalamus releases a hormone called melatonin. Melatonin is often referred to as the ‘sleep hormone’ as its levels are high at night but drop just before we wake up in the morning. The clock has an intrinsic rhythm, but it can also be adjusted in response to light.

Professor John Axelsson, an expert in sleep research from the Karolinska Institute explains that the “master clock … has a near 24-hour intrinsic rhythm and is very sensitive to light around dusk and dawn, so to fine-tune the circadian system; which allows the system to be dynamic and adapt to the seasonal changes in duration of day and night.”

 

Is technology changing our circadian rhythm?

Many aspects of modern technology, from the basic light bulb to the newest touchscreen phone, emit light. Professor Jamie Zeitzer from Stanford University says, “light is mainly doing two things to the clock. It is setting the time of the clock and it is changing the amplitude or strength of the clock.”

As our circadian rhythm changes melatonin levels, we can use the levels of this ‘sleep hormone’ to see what is affecting our body clock. Several studies have shown that bright, artificial light suppresses melatonin production in humans.

Interestingly, very bright artificial light is actually used as a therapy (called phototherapy) to help people who have very delayed biological clocks wake up and go to sleep earlier.

The intensity of light used for phototherapy is much higher than what is emitted by any screens or light bulbs we use. A 2014 study looked at a more realistic scenario: comparing the melatonin levels and sleep quality of people who either read a normal book or an electronic book before bed. They found that the participants who read the electronic book had reduced melatonin levels.

 

Dr Cele Richardson from Western Australia University says “There is evidence that 1.5 hours (or more) of bright screen use reduces the natural nighttime increase in melatonin, and this effect may compound over multiple nights.”

Importantly, she adds “however, this does not appear to translate to taking longer to fall asleep.”

What does this mean for our sleep patterns?

Whilst we know that melatonin has many effects in the body and is associated with the sleep-wake cycle, we don’t know exactly how reduced amounts of melatonin impact our quality of sleep.

There are numerous studies that look at technology use and sleep quality or the time it takes to fall asleep. Although many of these do find a correlation between screen time and sleep, the correlations are often weak and they don’t show that increased screen time causes problems sleeping.

For example, the 2014 study found that on average participants who read the printed books fell asleep 10 minutes before the e-book readers. Other studies compared people who used products that reduced the blue light from screens to normal screen users. These studies found only a 3-4 minute difference in the time it took to fall asleep.

 

As sleep is affected by many things, it is often difficult to make sure it is just the effect of screen time that you are measuring.

Another complication is highlighted by Dr Richardson: “A bi-directional relationship between technology use and sleep is likely. That is, technology use may affect sleep over time, yet individuals who have trouble sleeping may subsequently increase their technology use.”

The takeaway

Technology, specifically artificial light, does change our circadian rhythm. We know this because we can see differences in melatonin levels after screen use.

What effect this has on our sleep, particularly the time it takes to fall asleep, is not yet clear.

Article based on 4 expert answers to this question: Is technology changing our circadian rhythm?

This expert response was published in partnership with independent fact-checking platform Metafact.io. Subscribe to their weekly newsletter here.

 

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