13 Things About Sleep That You Don’t Know
Sleep: do you take it for granted, consider it an inconvenience, or look forward to it with relish? No matter what you think about sleep, there are undoubtedly many things you don’t know about it.
Here are 13 things about sleep that you don’t know.
1. Sleep is Essential for Your Bones
Did you know that lack of sleep disrupts the delicate bone-building cycle in your body? During sleep, your body repairs all the daily wear and tear on your bones, and when you don’t get enough sleep, your bones don’t get repaired.
2. Giraffes Sleep Least – Koalas the Most
Of all animals, giraffes sleep the least, taking 5-10 minute naps that total only 1.9 hours day. By comparison, the koala sleeps 22 hours a day.
3. Lack of Sleep Can Kill You
You can go 2 weeks without food, but only 10 days without sleep before you die. (Other sources claim the world’s record is 264 hours awake, which is 22 days.)
4. Snore Surgery
A kind of surgery for snoring that tightens the soft palate and throat has an extremely long name: uvulopalatopharyngoplasty!
5. Sleeping Pills
The use of sleeping pills by Americans has doubled during the last 4 years.
6. Time Spent Sleeping
If you live the average lifespan of 78 years, you’ll spend 26 of those years sleeping, and 6 of those years dreaming.
7. Falling Asleep
Normal time to fall asleep is between 10 and 15 minutes.
8. Eyes Open
People can sleep with their eyes open for short naps. They may not even know it!
9. Side Effects of Sleep Deprivation
Sleep-deprived individuals experience mental disturbances like paranoia and hallucinations, and also blurred vision, slurred speech, and memory lapses.
10. Sleeping Apart
About 1/4 of all married couples sleep in separate beds.
11. Dreaming in Color?
About 12% of dreamers experience their dreams in black and white, while everyone else dreams in color. Prior to color television, the percentage of black and white dreamers was higher.
12. Chronic Sleep Deprivation Harms Health
Sources say that some of the effects of chronic sleep deprivation (that is, sleep deprivation of a few hours a night that goes on for a long time, not a “marathon” of staying awake) include:
-Weakened immune system
-Increased risk of heart disease
-Increased risk of developing (or worsening) a stomach ulcer
-High blood pressure
13. Growth
Growing animals and people need sleep to grow properly, because growth hormone is released during sleep.
It’s amazing how sleep impacts our lives!