US Navy
- Set a sleep routine that relaxes you in the hours before bed — and follow it.
- When you’re stressed or overwhelmed, write out a plan that helps you focus on how you’ll face the challenges tomorrow.
- Recognize when you’re really tired. Nap. Ask others for help.
Growing evidence suggests that poor sleep habits harm our health, our relationships, even our jobs. So if you’re having trouble sleeping, then it’s time to get back to the basics — military style.
Special operators, who are sent on the US military’s most dangerous assignments, must sleep when they can and often face extreme sleep deprivation to complete their mission. Whether you’re a new parent, have a stressful job or are dealing with a difficult situation, there’s a lot you can learn from these elite operators.
To get a sense of how to sleep like a champ in the worst situations, we pored over sleep techniques for special operators and interviewed a former Navy SEAL who trains pro athletes, firefighters and police tactical teams on maximizing their performance.
"There’s not a harder job out there than being a mom or dad, working or stay at home," says Adam La Reau, who spent 12 years as a Navy SEAL and is the co-founder of O2x Human Performance, a company that trains and advises groups from the Chicago Blackhawks to the Boston Fire Department. "There’s definitely a sleep debt that could occur over time."
Small tweaks to your routine — what La Reau calls "1% changes" in a March 19 phone interview — will make a huge difference to your sleep.
These are the basics of sleep boot camp. Know these before you nod off.
Have a pre-sleep game plan.
Staff Sgt. Jordan Castelan/US Air Force
"It’s like a warm-up routine you do for a work-out," La Reau says, then ticks off a list of do-nots: Eat within two hours before bed, stare at bright lights or start playing Fortnite.
During this time, La Reau suggests activities that will calm your nerves, maybe reading, meditation, listening to music, dimming the lights.
Definitely: Turn off your electronics.
TV watchers, e-tablets readers, Fortnight gamers — "They’re getting crushed with light," says La Reau, whose O2x team includes half a dozen sleep scientists. "And that’s just going to disrupt their circadian rhythm, it’s going to trick your body into thinking it’s day and your body should be up."
Read more: A secret military technique could help you fall asleep in just 2 minutes
Put together a list or reminder of what you need to do the next day.
Petty Officer 1st Class Abe McNatt/US Navy
We all have a lot going on, especially new parents. La Reau says you need to tackle that head on.
In the hours before bed, put together a list or reminder of what you need to do the next day.
"Every time I go home, I have a list of what I need to do the next day … I feel like I’m prepared when I wake up in the morning," says La Reau. "I know exactly what I’m going to do and I sleep better at night for it."
Read more: A former Army sniper shares a trick for staying focused
Exercise is important, but well before bedtime.
Petty Officer 1st Class Abe McNatt/US Navy
Obviously. These are Navy SEALs.
See the rest of the story at Business Insider
See Also:
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- US Air Force planes can be rented for as little as $917 an hour — here’s how much bombers, fighters, and cargo planes go for
Source: Business Insider – sfellman@businessinsider.com (Sam Fellman)