A Powerful Strategy for Sleeping Soundly

Quality sleep supports the immune system, aids in muscle recovery, and reduces the risk of chronic conditions such as heart disease and diabetes. It also boosts concentration, memory, and problem-solving abilities​​.

But have you ever had an tough day at work, come home still firing on all cylinders, and then, in the hour before going to bed, found yourself fuming over the day’s events while also planning strategies for the next day?

How did you end up sleeping that night? Did you fall asleep quickly? No?

I’m okay with your having the passion and drive at work, but we also need to decompress and allow ourselves to recover and regenerate.

This means calming down in the hours leading up to when you want to fall asleep.

One effective tactic to achieve sound sleep is "defending your last hour." This involves creating a calming pre-sleep routine, such as avoiding screens, engaging in relaxing activities, and establishing a consistent sleep schedule.

First, do not check your electronic devices within 2 hours of when you plan to go to sleep unless you absolutely have to.  You don’t need to be activating your brain at night; you need it to wind down and relax.

In the last hour before you want to fall asleep I suggest having a few activities that help you decompress and de-activate.

Take a hot bath.

Read a great fiction book.

Meditate.

Journal.

Talk to your loved ones. 

Imagine your life in a year from now if you deliberately and intentionally practice a wind-down ritual that helps you to sleep better.

Mentally compare that to a year of doomscrolling social media, email and the news.

Let’s defend our last hour and get some sleep!

Zzzzzzzz.

That’s it for this week! Let me know your thoughts in the comments.

Yours for health, wellbeing & peak performance - Dr. Greg

Greg Wells PhD

For Dr. Greg Wells, health and performance, particularly under extreme conditions, are personal and professional obsessions. As a scientist and physiologist, he has dedicated his career to making the science of human limits understandable and actionable. Dr. Wells has spoken to audiences all over the world at events such as TEDx and The Titan Summit, where he has shared the stage with Robin Sharma, Richard Branson, Steve Wozniak and Deepak Chopra.

For over 25 years, Dr. Wells has worked with some of the highest-performing individuals on the planet, including Olympic and World champions, and with organizations ranging from General Electric to BMO, Deloitte, KPMG, BMW, Audi, Sysco Foods, YPO and Air Canada. He is also committed to inspiring children and young adults through his close working relationship with school boards and independent schools.

A veteran endurance athlete, Dr. Wells has participated in the grueling Nanisivik Marathon 600 miles north of the Arctic Circle, Ironman Canada and the Tour D’Afrique, an 11,000 km cycling race that is the longest in the world. He is also a travel and expedition adventurer who has journeyed through every imaginable terrain and conditions in over 50 countries around the world.

Dr. Wells is author of three best-selling books – Superbodies, The Ripple Effect, and The Focus Effect – and hosted the award-winning Superbodies series, which aired on Olympic broadcasts worldwide in 2010 and 2012.

Dr. Wells has a PhD in Physiology, served as an Associate Professor of Kinesiology at the University of Toronto and is an exercise medicine researcher at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto.

He is the CEO and founder of The Wells Group, a global consulting firm committed to achieving the moonshot of helping teams, schools and businesses become places where people get healthy, perform optimally and ultimately - reach their potential.

http://www.drgregwells.com
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