Showing posts with label Sleep. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sleep. Show all posts

Monday, January 19, 2015

WAYS TO GET INSTANT YOUTH

Look and feel younger in minutes with these quick tips.

Smile!

Forcing yourself to smile actually makes you happier. And people perceive those with broad smiles as being younger than those who don't smile as much.

Sleep on your back.

When you sleep on your side or stomach, you bury your face into the pillow, "pressing in" wrinkles and crevices. Lying on your back also helps prevent fluid buildup in facial tissue, so you avoid that puffy look.

Stand tall!

Think of yourself as a puppet with a string coming out of the top of your head. Now imagine that someone's pulling on that string, causing you to sit (or stand) straight and hold your head high, with your chin tucked in slightly. You'll take 10 years off.

Lie back on a couch or easy chair with your legs higher than your heart.

This lets blood that has pooled in your legs drain downhill toward your heart. For a more active approach, lie on your back near a wall, placing your heels on the wall with your legs at a 45-degree angle. Hold the position for three minutes.

For shinier hair, point the blow-dryer down, not up.

Drying hair from above your brush instead of below will help close the cuticles for smoother, shinier hair.

Get a haircut.

Women: Keep your hair between your chin and shoulders for fuller-looking hair and a younger look.

Buy a new bra.

Ask to be fitted by a bra specialist, and you'll get the lift you may need.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT SLEEP

Tips from the people who know on what is keeping you up at night.

1. "Memory foam is very temperature dependent.
The foam can get a little hard in a cold bedroom. And if you're a hot sleeper, it may make you hotter."
-- Alan Hedge, PhD, professor of ergonomics at Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

2. "My research has found that any new smell, even one associated with relaxation, like lavender, can make you more alert and vigilant.
You're better off with a scent that makes you feel safe and comfortable. There really is something to cuddling up with your spouse's undershirt." 
-- Pamela Dalton, PhD, odor-perception expert and sensory psychologist at Monell Chemical Senses Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

3. "We expect to sleep for eight solid hours, but that's actually not normal compared with global populations and our own evolutionary history.
People naturally wake up two or three times a night. It's worrying about it that's the problem." 
-- Carol Worthman, PhD, an anthropologist at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia

4. "If you're not sleeping well, you may have acid reflux, even if you don't feel heartburn.
Try elevating your head by putting blocks under the top of the bed and sleeping on your left side. Or you can take a dose of Gaviscon (an over-the-counter remedy that creates a protective barrier against stomach acid)." 
--Patricia Raymond, MD, a gastroenterologist in Virginia Beach, Virginia

5. "If you like a firmer mattress and she likes a softer one, you don't have to compromise.
Get two singles, push them together, and use king sheets. Or you can buy a strap that attaches the mattresses to each other." 
--Alan Hedge, PhD

6. "One of the biggest disrupters of sleep is the pulling and tugging of sheets and blankets.
I tell couples that each person should have a sheet and blanket. If you pull a big comforter or duvet over the top when you make the bed, you really can't tell. Couples call me after I suggest that and say, 'Wow — you changed our marriage.'"
--Robert Oexman, chiropractor and director of the Sleep to Live Institute in Joplin, Missouri

7. "The cooler white and blue light emitted by a computer monitor stimulates brain activity and makes it difficult for your brain to wind down.
Download the software at stereopsis.com/flux. It gradually dims your screen at sundown, shifting your monitor's colors to warmer red hues." 
--Colin Grey, a time-management coach in London, England

8. "Watching TV at night may seem relaxing, but it beams light into your eyes, which is an 'alert' signal for the brain.
Read a book before bed instead." 
--Tara Brass, MD 

9. "To keep your room dark, use blackout draperies or shades — not blinds, because they never completely block out light. Install the shades as close to the glass as possible.
If you don't have the depth for an interior mount, extend the fabric several inches past the width of the window." 
-- Ian Gibbs, cofounder of the Shade Store in New York, New York

10. "A hot bath will increase your skin temperature, which eventually decreases your core body temperature.
Do the same thing for yourself that you'd do for a young child — make sure you take a bath a half hour or so before bedtime. "
-- Robert Oexman 

11. "A lot of people take bedtime pain relievers that contain caffeine and don't even realize it.
Excedrin has 65 milligrams of caffeine per tablet — if you take two, that's as much as a cup of coffee. Check the label: Caffeine is always listed as an active ingredient."
--Jan Engle, professor of pharmacy at the College of Pharmacy, University of Illinois at Chicago

12. "Lights that have a blue or green tint can turn down your production of melatonin, which makes it difficult to sleep.
If you must use a night-light, pick a 'low blue' one (lowbluelights.com)." 
-- Robert Oexman

13. "I'm not a fan of sleeping with two pillows if you're a back sleeper because it makes your upper back curve and strains the neck and back.
If you need to sleep up high for medical reasons, get a wedge and put your pillow on it." 
-- Karen Erickson, a chiropractor in New York, New York