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Friday, November 15, 2024

The Surprising Benefit of Snoozing Your Alarm Clock

We have been told hitting the snooze button is a foul habit. But is it? Recently, I read an article in Scientific American that talks about how snoozing can actually be good for us!

A growing body of recent research says that snoozing just isn’t the “be all and end all” that we’ve got been told it’s. In some research, there’s actually no difference in health outcomes for chronic snoozers and non-snoozers! 

Yes, snoozing can shorten our sleep cycles, but it surely’s not the identical type of shortening that happens when REM (restorative) sleep is disturbed. Even half-hour of snoozing is okay! 

In fact, it appears that evidently snoozing may help shake off morning drowsiness by easing the transition from deep sleep to a lighter stage of sleep and waking up! The key thing to recollect is that we’ve got 4-5 sleep cycles: 2 in NREM (light sleep where it’s easy to wake someone up), 2 in REM, yet another in NREM.

Waking up mid-sleep could make us drowsy and disoriented. However, that is where snoozing could also be useful since the mini-naps may help shift us from deep to light sleep, in order that after we do get up, we feel more energetic and alert.  

The extra naps may even help us think higher through the day because snoozers feel less drained! Snoozing seems to forestall us from reverting to deep stages of sleep, increasing our cortisol levels (in way) and helping the brain get up, which, in turn, may help improve cognition. However, for individuals who are already getting insufficient or disturbed sleep, a 30-min snooze period could also be more detrimental than for somebody who’s sleeping 7–8 hours an evening.  

It is significant to grasp that snoozing will impact people in another way. Indeed, research shows that some people’s biological clocks—a built-in 24-hour cycle that helps the body regulate processes including wakefulness and sleep—are inclined to shift toward a “night owl” chronotype during adolescence, reaching peak “lateness” around age 20. At the top of the day, it’s best to do what works for you for where you might be in life, whether that isn’t any snoozing or snoozing for half-hour a day.  

Snoozing doesn’t replace nights’ sleep, but it will probably help some people sleep higher. More research is required, but what we do know is that snoozing doesn’t make someone “lazy”. For some people, it will probably really help them sleep higher and improve their wellbeing! 

Originally published by Dr. Caroline Leaf. Used with permission.
Photo Credit: ©Pexels/Miriam Alonso

Dr. Caroline Leaf is a communication pathologist, audiologist, and clinical and research neuroscientist with a Masters and PhD in Communication Pathology and a BSc in Logopaedics, specializing in psychoneurobiology and metacognitive neuropsychology. She was one in all the primary in her field to check how the brain can change (neuroplasticity) with directed mind input. Dr. Leaf is the host of the podcast Cleaning Up Your Mental Mess, has published in scientific journals, and is the creator of 18 bestselling books translated into 24 languages, including Cleaning Up Your Mental MessHow to Help Your Child Clean Up their Mental Messand Think, Learn, Succeed. She teaches at academic, medical, and neuroscience conferences, and to varied audiences around the globe. Take the Quiz: How Messy Is Your Mind? Download the app: Neurocycle App. Books by Dr. Leaf NEUROCYCLE20 for 20% off an internet subscription.

Dr. Caroline Leaf

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