One of the most common complaints that my yoga students and patients
share with me is their inability to get a good night’s sleep. Almost
everyone will have an occasional bout of sleeplessness, but for some,
insomnia can linger for days or weeks, or even become a chronic
situation.
How much sleep a person needs is somewhat subjective. I’m a solid 7-hour a night person. That’s what it takes for me to wake up feeling
refreshed and ready to go. My grandmother, on the other hand, used to
say she only needed 5-6 hours a night in her later years to feel her
best, and she lived to 93!
The symptoms of insomnia are at minimum troublesome, and at worst,
debilitating: daytime fatigue or sleepiness, irritability, depression,
anxiety, tension headaches, GI symptoms, ongoing worry about sleep,
trouble with mental focus and attention. Beyond inconvenience,
insomnia’s effects can be much more serious: it’s implicated in car
accidents, medical and work errors, and linked to chronic diseases like
high blood pressure, depression, anxiety and obesity, and even cancer.
The potential causes of insomnia vary, but at the top of the list is
stress, followed by anxiety and depression. Other causes may include
prescription and over the counter medications, caffeine, nicotine and
alcohol, medical conditions such as chronic pain, breathing difficulties
or frequent urination (just to name a few), changes in your environment
or work schedule, poor sleep habits, eating too late in day and too
much, and “learned” insomnia linked to excessive worry about falling
asleep.
And as we age, the chances of developing insomnia go up due to the
following age related changes: changes in sleep pattern; a decrease in
activity levels, both social and physical; changes in health status; and
increase use of medications.
Can yoga help? Research indicates yes......We already know that the
three most common reasons for insomnia—stress, anxiety, depression—are
diminished greatly with regular yoga practice.
In addition, one study
found that yoga also helped with increased cognitive arousal, or when
the mind wakes up and is very busy right when you try to fall asleep or
wake in the middle of the night. Another study found that insomnia among menopausal women was decreased through an evening yoga practice.
When my students ask me what yoga pose is good for insomnia, I have
them immediately expand their view of sleeplessness. I do that by
suggesting that addressing insomnia with yoga starts first thing in the morning
and lasts all day!
What am I talking about? I recommend doing a more
active yoga practice early in the day if your energy level permits it.
This melds more naturally with the hormones in the body that, if
balanced correctly, will support a better night’s sleep.
And if you are
too tired for a vigorous asana practice, even a gentle one to get you
moving a bit and loosen up the physical tension that often accompanies a
poor night’s sleep, is beneficial.
From there, being mindful of what you are taking in during the day
that could have negative affects on sleep is really important. You
might set the intention at the end of your morning practice to pause
during the day before consuming things like food and drink, that could
keep you up at night, specifically caffeine, cigarettes, alcohol, and
medications that are stimulating.
I recommend trying to take at least
10-15 minutes of time out in nature during the day to reconnect to a
quieter, more peaceful reality. And in the evening, an earlier dinner-time, followed an hour or so
later with a gentle yoga practice is good preparation for sleep time.
Include poses you find quieting to your individual system, as well as
breathing practices that are calming, like ones that gradually lengthen
the exhalation part of the breath cycle, as one example.
A recorded
guided visualization, body scan, or meditation, or yoga nidra can
all help to shift your nervous system for arousal to calm in
preparation for bed. And if you still find you are having trouble falling asleep or you
awaken in the middle of the night, doing breath awareness and body scan
practices in bed often will get you back to sleep faster than doing
nothing at all. With yoga, done daily, may you have sweet,
uninterrupted, dreams!
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