Apertures Media

Why Sleep?

Date Posted on  Jul 29, 2008 
Comments   
Written by  By beibee 

sleeping woman curled ~px258008 Why Sleep? bxp211389 Why Sleep?

TO SOME PEOPLE, sleep is a waste of time. Preferring a very busy daily schedule of business and social engagements, they only surrender to sleep when extremely tired. In contrast, others, enduring night after night of tossing and turning until the early hours of the morning, would give anything for a good night’s sleep.

Why do some find it so hard to sleep, while others are desperate to stay awake? Should we view sleep as a luxury or a necessity? To answer these questions, we need to understand what is going on while we are asleep.

The Mysteries of Falling Asleep

Exactly what makes a person lose consciousness and fall asleep remains a mystery. Researchers, however, have established that sleep is a complex process regulated by the brain and that it obeys a 24-hour biological clock.

As we get older, our sleeping habits change. A newborn sleeps for frequent short periods that total about 18 hours a day. According to sleep specialists, although some adults appear to need only three hours of sleep a day, others need up to ten hours.

Recent research has shown that variations in our biological clock also explain why some teenagers struggle to get out of bed in the morning. The biological clock seems to shift forward during puberty, making youngsters want to go to sleep later and wake up later. This sleep delay is common and tends to disappear in the mid-to-late teens.

Our biological clock is regulated by chemical substances, many of which have already been identified. One of them is melatonin, a hormone thought to trigger sleepiness. Melatonin is produced in the brain, and some scientists believe that it is responsible for the slowdown of the body’s metabolism that occurs prior to falling asleep. As melatonin is released, body temperature and blood flow to the brain are reduced, and our muscles gradually lose their tone and become flaccid. What happens next as the person descends into the mysterious world of sleep?

‘Nature’s Chief Nourisher’

Approximately two hours after we fall asleep, our eyes begin to quiver quickly back and forth. The observation of this phenomenon led scientists to divide sleep into two basic phases: REM (rapid eye movement) sleep and non-REM sleep. Non-REM sleep can be subdivided into four stages of progressively deeper sleep. During a healthy night’s sleep, REM sleep occurs several times, alternating with non-REM sleep.

RSS feed | Trackback URI

2 Comments »

Comment by tyna
2008-07-29 06:42:50

I am feeling very sleepy right now,2.47am here.

 
Comment by beibee
2008-08-05 08:42:36

please try have some sleep sister…

 
Name (required)
E-mail (required - never shown publicly)
URI
Subscribe to comments via email
Your Comment (smaller size | larger size)
You may use <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong> in your comment.

Comments links could be nofollow free.
Subscribe to RSS Feeds
  • Recent Comments:

    • Leandro Knighten: Hi, there. I would suggest you continue writing more posts, this would make your blog even more interesting, plus I guess you...
    • Joseph Wright: Heart attack is the number killer these days, this is probably due to the high cholesterol diets that we have::`
    • dating: I`ve read couple of articles here and could say it was really interesting, thanks for sharing that. keep it up and good work
    • Rebekah Champ: Hi. I definitely enjoyed reading your current article!. High standard written content. I would advise you to do posts much more...
    • vernon mann: in my view, all secret organizations are secret for a reason. if they were above board, why be secret? The Illuminati, The Secret...