
RunningBarb woke up this morning after a long, blissful sleep and felt as though I was in a state of nirvana. Well-rested, refreshed, and drenched in a deep calm. As though nothing was wrong with the world. Or anything else.
During much of my life I ignored sleep, thinking of it as a waste of time. I had Important Things To Do. I was Very Busy. I didn’t have time to spend just lying there. However during my big medical adventures I truly valued sleep to help me heal. I still do.
According to a 2024 post from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, getting enough sleep can help you:
- Get sick less often.
- Stay at a healthy weight.
- Reduce stress and improve your mood.
- Improve your heart health and metabolism.
- Lower your risk of chronic conditions like:
- Type 2 diabetes.
- Heart disease.
- High blood pressure.
- Stroke.
- Lessen the risk of motor vehicle crashes and related injury or death.
- Improve your attention and memory to better perform daily activities.
Sleeping also gives your brain a bath, cleaning out metabolic waste and “junk” proteins. (I don’t know what they are either, but for sure I don’t want junk in my brain.)
And, of course, there is dreaming. Sleep experts believe that dreaming may:
- Affect morning mood.
- Assist with emotional processing.
- Help you practice emotional response to stressful events.
- Support memory consolidation, helping your brain take memories and organize how they might be used in the future.
And there is also evidence that napping is a good idea. Works for me!
While all of that sounds very healthy and dry, there is even more to it. According to an American Psychological Association article:
Dreaming is the source of power for shamans, for it is during dreaming that a person may transcend the limitations of what we call “normal” waking states, fly to distant places, render the normally invisible forces behind events visible, and achieve information that may be personally and socially practical.
That sounds pretty cool.
I know not everyone has full control over their sleep schedule. Babies wake up, flights leave early, there are not enough hours in the day to do everything you need to do. However, we would be wise to heed the words of Homer in The Odyssey:
“There is a time for many words, and there is also a time for sleep.”
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