Recently, the National Sleep Foundation asked people what kept them up at night, and it's no surprise that the most popular answers included financial worries, job stress and relationship stress. At the most basic biological level, the brain perceives these problems as threats it needs to process, deal with and solve; it can't turn off its alert system so that your sleep drive can take over.
Eliminating the stress in your life might seem like an impossible task. And it is. Instead of eliminating stress, trying minimizing it by employing effective coping mechanisms. For some, stress can be handled with meditation, yoga, walking or jogging. Ten-thousand steps a day (combined with a healthy diet) will help you lose weight, but stress reduction can be gained in short bursts of activity, like 10 quick jumping jacks or push-ups, or stepping away from your workday stress with a short walk. For more tips on coping with stress in your life, visit the Stress-Proof Your Life Challenge.
Bookend each night's rest with some light physical exercise: before you go to bed, do a soothing, 20-minute yoga routine to stretch your muscles and free them from the stress of the day, each morning, try Dr. Oz's 7-minute workout.
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