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Sleep Better Tonight |
Sleep Better |
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by Andrew W. Saul
Over the decades that I was a natural therapeutics consultant, the first questions I’d ask a new client were “Are you in pain?” and “Are you sleeping okay?” When one lady answered the second with a rather emphatic “No,” I knew it was time to consider lecithin.
"I sleep one, maybe two hours a night,” she said. She was just short of 50 and looked seriously tired: lined, strained and just barely coping. “So that’s why I’m here. I’ve been to doctors and tried what seemed like every medical option available.”
“I’m going to guess that lecithin has not been mentioned.”
“No, it has not,” she replied. “Why?”
“Doctors get little if any instruction in clinical nutrition in their medical schooling. A lot of people know this, including most doctors. But it drops off there. Sort of like everyone knows you should eat right, exercise, and stop smoking. Doing it is another matter.”
“Well,” she said, “if taking lechthin will enable me to sleep better, I’m game for it.”
"You might not care much for the taste,” I said. “Many people take the capsules, but capsules, big as they may look, do not provide a food-portion amount. It takes several tablespoons of lecithin granules to make an effective dose. Mixing them into yogurt works well."
"No problem. I’ll do it. Got little to lose, and a lot of waking hours to try it out.”
Well, she did. It was only a matter of days before I got a phone call.
“I’m sleeping seven hours a night now!” came a voice more relieved than happy.
"Great!” I replied. “That is terrific.” Then I asked the usual follow up question: “How much lecithin are you taking?”
“Not sure,” she answered. “I just walk around the house all day eating it right from the jar.”
Now THERE is a statement I will not soon forget, and this case was over thirty years back.
Why does it work? Because lecithin is high in phosphatidyl choline. Your body readily absorbs the choline, right into the brain, where it is made into acetylcholine.
Acetylcholine is the neurotransmitter of your parasympathetic nervous system, your "calm down and relax" or "rest and digest" part of the autonomic nervous system. More lecithin means more choline which means more acetylcholine. This is literally a food acting as a drug.
But it is a safe and natural tweak, as your body not only likes lecithin, the brain is literally one-third lechthin!
Learn more about lecithin at http://www.doctoryourself.com/lecithin.html .
1. Read for a
while. This will improve your mind while relaxing your body. 2. Get some fresh
air. Open a window, walk the dog. 3. Try some moderate
exercise, such as isometrics, yoga, or stretches. Couples have found
that lovemaking works well, too. 4. Get more
L-tryptophan in your diet. L-tryptophan is one of the essential amino
acids that your body uses to make neurotransmitters such as serotonin
and melatonin. These neurotransmitters are chemical nerve messengers
that help your brain to shut down for the night... and be fully awake during
the day. Seafood, chicken, milk, cheese, yogurt, beans and cashews are
foods that are high in L-tryptophan foods. More of the L-tryptophan in
dairy products gets to your brain when you have a carbohydrate along with
it. That's why cheese and crackers, or milk and a whole-grain cookie are
good bedtime snacks. If L-tryptophan is
taken as a nutritional sleep-aid, the target dose is around 1,000 to 1,500
mg, taken a couple of hours before bedtime. I think the supplement is
too expensive, and prefer food sources. I mean, you have to eat anyway,
right? 5. Vitamin B-3 as
niacin or niacinamide, in larger than RDA doses, will help induce sleep. Taking
between 100 and 500 milligrams about 20 minutes before bedtime usually works
best. The amount required varies considerably from one person to
another. Ideally, you take the least amount that makes you the most sleepy. If you use niacin, expect to experience a brief niacin
"flush" (like a hot flash or blushing sensation) which usually fades away goes away in
short time. The warm feeling is pleasant to most people, but may be
avoided by either taking less niacin at any one time, or by using niacinamide intead. A bit of practice
will tell you how much you need. 6. I'll say it again: LECITHIN makes
up nearly a third of your brain's dry weight. This natural
food substance is found in soy products and egg yolks and is available
as a supplement as well. Three or four tablespoons daily has
consistently shortened the time needed for people to go to sleep. 7. Prayer or
meditation may be very settling and help you sleep sooner and better.
Certainly there are other benefits as well. The Transcendental
Meditation technique has been shown to produce deep rest, reduced
anxiety, and very effective relief from insomnia (Miskiman,
D. E. "The Treatment of Insomnia by Transcendental Meditation," Scientific
Research on Transcendental Meditation: Collected Papers, Orme-Johnson, Domash and
Farrow, Eds., Vol. 1, MIU Press, 1974.) The Trappist
monastic tradition contains the phrase, "I
lie down, and sleep comes at once." Directly from the Bible,
we find: "For he gives to his beloved
sleep." (Psalms 127:2, RSV) 8. You may have heard about melatonin, the
body’s own natural sleep-promoting hormone. You can increase your body’s
melatonin production by keeping your bedroom as dark as humanly possible. You
can also try 3 to 6 mg of supplemental melatonin, taken about an hour before
bedtime. Melatonin is very safe: studies using over 200 mg/day failed to show
harm. Melatonin: Make your own How? Go to bed early and keep
your bedroom dark, and your body will make plenty for you. Consider
lining or doubling your curtains or drapes, adding blinds or a dark-colored
window shade, and getting rid of light-up digital clocks. Keep a nightlight
in your hallway for those ever-popular trips to the salle
de bain, but keep your bedroom door closed. These
steps, and others that you think of, will keep your sleeping environment
darker, and your melatonin (sleep hormone) production will go up. That “go to bed early”
comment will be quickly discounted by any number of readers, who might say,
“I can’t go to bed early. There is too much to do.” You might be right. My reply? If you are too busy to sleep, you are too busy.
Many people are sacrificing sleep time for family time, for TV, or,
increasingly, for work. In an age of
cheap, programmable DVD recorders, I think the TV excuse can be
flushed where it belongs without delay. I can hardly object to
family time, but kids should not be up late, either. Several school nurses have told me that an
eight-grader needs ten to twelve hours of sleep a night. If the school bus comes at 7 AM, that means
a pretty early bedtime. Easier said than done? Yes. But do the math: well-rested
kid(s) plus well-rested parent(s) has got to equal better quality time at
home, and better school performance.
It wouldn’t hurt for your children to make a little melatonin of their
own, now, would it? Back when I was in
grammar school, we actually got a grade on our report card that evaluated the
extent to which we were “rested and ready for work.” (I cannot help but
wonder why they didn’t think a little more deeply about the fact that we also
walked three-quarters of a mile each way to school, AND home for lunch, for a
total of three miles daily… at age 7?) At day’s end, I was as pooped as a farm
boy. I’ll bet your kids are more tired than they let on. Try it: they’ll hate it. But you will all sleep better, and that can
be a very big payoff. One of the best things
about natural sleep aids is that they are safe and not habit forming.
When your brain and body are well nourished, more restful sleep is a natural
result. You are feeding your body, not drugging it. Why avoid sleep medication? First of all, we get way
too much medication in general. Enough prescriptions were written in the
It is not getting any better. Today, nine million Americans take prescription sleeping pills. The worst part
of it is that even occasional (twice monthly) use of sleeping medication shortens life. Sleeping pill use is "associated with greater than threefold increased hazards of death even when prescribed less than 18 pills per year."
https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/bmjopen/2/1/e000850.full.pdf
Sleep is a natural
process, and natural methods are safe and effective. It is time for everyone
to start "just saying no" to excessively prescribed drugs... and
those over the counter drugs, too.
Copyright 2023 (revised), 2005 and
previous years Andrew W. Saul. Andrew Saul is the author
of the books FIRE YOUR DOCTOR! How to be
Independently Healthy (reader reviews at http://www.doctoryourself.com/review.html
) and DOCTOR YOURSELF: Natural Healing that Works. (reviewed at http://www.doctoryourself.com/saulbooks.html
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AN IMPORTANT NOTE: This page is not in any way offered as prescription, diagnosis nor treatment for any disease, illness, infirmity or physical condition. Any form of self-treatment or alternative health program necessarily must involve an individual's acceptance of some risk, and no one should assume otherwise. Persons needing medical care should obtain it from a physician. Consult your doctor before making any health decision. Neither the author nor the webmaster has authorized the use of their names or the use of any material contained within in connection with the sale, promotion or advertising of any product or apparatus. Single-copy reproduction for individual, non-commercial use is permitted providing no alterations of content are made, and credit is given. |
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