Wednesday, July 13, 2011

I Want To Be A Morning Person But I Can't Sleep

8 Steps to a Better Nights sleep

Usually if you are having trouble getting out of bed, it may be the problems you have getting into bed. The body is on a cycle, going to bed after midnight effects that cycle no matter what age you are.


1. Eating before bed keeps your stomach and metabolism working and interferes with deep, healing sleep.

2. You must realize that if you want to make changes in your life you have to remove the phrase "I can't help it." There is no such thing. The ego makes up that phrase early in our life to make for not understanding how to change. Now you are a grown up.

3. You cannot fix problems or schedule the next in bed, in your head and expect a good nights sleep. As a matter of fact, you will inhibit your ability top recall dates and times by putting unnecessary stress on your body and mind just before you go into the most healing part of your day.


4. Stop eating after 8pm. You do not need anymore food to survive the night than the 3 or 4 meals you have already had. Nightmares are caused by late night eating. Your dreams turned into horrors because you are digesting in bed.

5. If you find your mind habitually drifting into problem solving and scheduling, interrupt that thinking with a list of good things in your life. This works.

6. Catch yourself during the day if you say or think, "I'm tired of ___." I'm tired of being fat, I'm tired of being late, etc. Stop feeding your mind junk food that has no emotional value.

7. You can tell yourself when to wake up in the morning, just before you go to sleep. My father taught me this and he learned it in Viet Nam. After you close your eyes, repeat the time you want to wake in the morning. "I will wake up at 7:30am, I will wake up at 7:3o in the morning, I will be up at 7:30. And you will.

8. When you get under the covers, try breathing The 8's. Breath in for 8 seconds, hold it for 8 seconds, breath out for eight seconds. Calms the mind and gives more oxygen to your brain.

A few hours after the sun goes down is when Melatonin starts to produce in your brain. It is time for bed. Go to bed, lay there and get used to being in the bed at that time. Tell yourself during the day you will be in bed by 10pm. And soon you will.

Do not expect these steps to a better nights sleep to work overnight. Realize, this will take time and eventually you will change your current habits. That is really all we are doing is changing a habit into a better one. Not changing your life. That can take decades.

Average sleep needed by humans.

Newborns (0-2 months) = 12 to 18 Hours

Infants (3 months to 1 year) = 14 to 15 Hours

Toddlers (1 to 3 years) = 12 to 14 Hours

Preschoolers (3 to 5 years) = 11 to 13 Hours

School-aged children (5 to 12 years) = 10 to 11 Hours

Teens and preteens (12 to 18 years) = 8.5 to 10 Hours

Adults
(18+) = 7.5 to 9 Hours

Raise taxes now!

Taxes haven't been this low since 1958.
Reagan raised taxes in a recession, that's how he got out of it.
The middle class have seen wages lowered for ten years, even more this month. The rich are wealthier than they have ever been.
Most commodity traders don't pay taxes because of a loop hole among thousands of loopholes for the wealthy. If Bush's tax policy created jobs, where are they?
Raise taxes now!

Raise taxes now -- the elders of the economy say so

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- First it was Greenspan. Now one by one, other elders of the economy are speaking out against deficits, and they're making the surprising argument for higher taxes.

Former Federal Reserve chairman Alan Greenspan was first and has taken the most extreme position, arguing that all of the Bush tax cuts of 2001 and 2003 should be allowed to expire.

Greenspan, no fan of big government and an initial backer of the Bush tax cuts, allows that higher taxes now could lead to slower economic growth, but has said that chipping away at the deficit is more important.

Joining him -- at varying degrees -- are David Stockman, former budget director in the Reagan White House, and former Treasury Secretaries Robert Rubin and Paul O'Neill.

The White House and most Democrats have argued for keeping the tax cuts in place for most households, but letting them expire for those earning more than $250,000, about 2% of the country.

Extending the tax cuts for everyone would cost the government $3.7 trillion over 10 years. Taxing the high-earners would get back about $700 billion of that.

David Stockman joins Greenspan at the far end, saying the nation can't afford to extend the tax cuts now. "You have to pay your bills. I say we can't afford the Bush tax cuts," Stockman told NPR this weekend.

http://money.cnn.com/2010/08/09/news/economy/elders_economy/index.htm

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