Sleep

From Maesk Group Counseling in Fort Lauderdale - Sleep and Yawning

Ever wonder why you yawn not only when you're tired, but when you're nervous or excited?  And why do others tend to yawn when you do?  This article, from The Wall Street Journal, discusses this.  And remember, if you're not getting the recommended 7-9 hours of sleep per night (for most adults), Maesk Group Counseling can help with your "sleep hygiene."  Just call or email and you'll be on your way to a better night's sleep!

The real reason we yawn

Yawning can be a problem at the office for Lindsay Eierman.

"I've explained, 'I'm sorry, I didn't get much sleep last night,' " says Ms. Eierman, a 26-year-old social worker from Durham, N.C.

But a lack of sleep may not be the problem.

Researchers are starting to unravel the mystery surrounding the yawn, one of the most common and often embarrassing behaviors. Yawning, they have discovered, is much more complicated than previously thought. Although all yawns look the same, they appear to have many different causes and to serve a variety of functions.

Yawning is believed to be a means to keep our brains alert in times of stress. Contagious yawning appears to have evolved in many animal species as a way to protect family and friends, by keeping everyone in the group vigilant. Changes in brain chemistry trigger yawns, which typically last about six seconds and often occur in clusters.

"What this tells us is it's a very complicated system, and there are probably many different roles for yawning," says Gregory Collins, a researcher at the University of Texas Health Science Center in San Antonio who has identified some of the chemical processes at work in the brain.

There are many misconceptions about yawning, which was long believed to be the body's way of correcting for a dearth of oxygen. Our tendency to yawn when other people yawn has long been incorrectly explained as primarily an expression of a person's empathy.

To unravel the mystery of yawning, scientists built upon early, observed clues. Yawning tends to occur more in summer. Most people yawn upon seeing someone else do it, but infants and people with autism or schizophrenia aren't so affected by this contagion effect. And certain people yawn at surprising times, like parachutists who are about to jump out of a plane or Olympic athletes getting ready to compete.

"There was probably some yawning soccer players in Brazil" before World Cup games, says Robert R. Provine, a neuroscientist at the University of Maryland, in Baltimore County.

From Maesk Group Counseling in Fort Lauderdale - Sleep More!

Think you can get by on five or six hours of sleep per night?  Or think because you don't sleep much during the week you can "catch up" on the weekend?  Guess again.  We now know that sleep is crucial to your physical and mental health.

Following is a great article from CNN which references the suggested hours of sleep per night for each age group.  And if you need help, Maesk Group Counseling can work with you on sleep hygiene, and help you get more and better quality sleep.  

Check out the article here.