Real Food. Real Conversations.

Real Food. Real Conversations.


I Can Run on Fumes So Why Is Sleep So Important?

November 11, 2020

While many of us live each day without much of it, sleep is important for our everyday functioning and our overall health. It does so much!

I am talking with Karen Shopoff Rooff, a certified women's health coach with more than a decade of experience empowering professional women to build a realistic healthy lifestyle, about all things sleep!

Karen's blog, Well Balanced Women, and health & wellness ecourses combine easy-to-understand science with realistic tips to educate body-wise women, particularly in the transition times of pregnancy and perimenopause.

She is a nationally-known public speaker on women’s health, fitness, and wellness topics. Coach Karen's busy life as an entrepreneur, wife, and mom of three kids shows that you can have balance without having it all together.

Make sure to download her FREE meditation guide so you can get one step closer to restful sleep!

The Importance of Sleep

Many of us run on fumes, the idea os sleep happening one day. We think we can chug along, even if it may not be our idea of amazing, but the reality is that our brains are suffering.

Sleep helps us recharge for the next day. It's when our body is repairing itself to be fit and ready for a new day.

Not sleeping enough causes many issues, like foggy brain, weight gain, anxiety, irritability, and illness. But how do we get the sleep we need?

Having a routine

Creating a routine before sleep, helps set our hormones so that our brain feels safe. It allows our brain to shut down. When we shut down, we are able to fall asleep.

Your routine can be as simple or complex as you want it to be. If you have a harder time falling asleep, you may need a longer routine. Doing it in the same order, helps our brain know sleep is coming.

These are things that can help cue your brain that it's time to calm down and go to sleep:

Turning off the lights, or dimming themNo screensA shower or bathStretching, yoga or meditationReading

Benefits of sleep

Overall, sleep makes you happy. When you are happy, you can handle things better, you are nicer and more productive

While we sleep, our body gets a break physically and mentally. And it needs that. Our muscles repair, our immune system goes to work to fight whatever germs you have, and our brain gets a break.

Our brain lives in a sea of cortisol all day, so while we sleep, it gets a break from it. This helps the hormonal regulation between insulin and cortisol, which is important for us to function well.

It also helps the regulation between leptin and ghrelin, two hormones associated with hunger and feeling full. Lack of sleep makes you want to eat junk food because it didn't get what it needed in a good night's sleep so your body craves the junk.

Not getting sleep once in a while isn't an issue. It's the chronic fatigue that starts to wear you down. Exercise, nutrition, self care...all parts of our life come together with sleep because sleep affects each of them significantly.

The brain and sleep

Sleep reduces the overall inflammation in the body, including the area around the brain. Inflammation causes plaque deposits in our brain. These are associated with things like alzheimer's and dementia.

One thing happening in our brain when we wake up is we get the largest cortisol rush of the day. Back in time,