http://www.nytimes.com/2014/06/19/fashion/want-a-good-nights-sleep-make-a-plan.html?smid=fb-nytimes&WT.z_sma=ST_SWC_20140617&bicmp=AD&bicmlukp=WT.mc_id&bicmst=1388552400000&bicmet=1420088400000&_r=2
She Wasn’t Called ‘Sleepless Beauty’
Want a Good Night’s Sleep? Make a Plan.
JUNE 17, 2014
She Wasn’t Called ‘Sleepless Beauty’
Want a Good Night’s Sleep? Make a Plan.
JUNE 17, 2014
Dr. Amy Wechsler, a New
York dermatologist, recently had a patient walk into her office and point to a
wrinkle that had not been there a week before.
“I asked what had changed
in her life, and sure enough, she hadn’t been sleeping,” Dr. Wechsler said.
Beauty is sleep; sleep,
beauty. But in our harried multitasking worlds, sleep, like truth, can
sometimes be compromised.
Dr. Wechsler, the author of
“The Mind-Beauty Connection,” said that there’s
no quick fix to getting enough sleep, only a slow, mindful one.
“There has to be a plan,
you have to slow down,” she said. For those who are on the fast track and
desperate to look rested, Botox between the eyebrows can help fake it in the
short term, she said, but it does not address the root of the problem.
Nor do sleep aids like
Zolpidem (found in Ambien), which can be easy to abuse and hazardous to your health. The main issue for
most of us, according to Michael Breus, a psychologist who calls himself the Sleep
Doctor, is anxiety.
“And for that you need
something to calm your brain,” he said.
Enter the lavender pillows,
nap pods and masseuses. The sleep-wellness industry is on an upswing as
shut-eye becomes an increasingly sought-after beauty experience.
The National Center for
Complementary and Alternative Medicine, part of the National Institutes of
Health, has a section on its website dedicated
to treating sleep disorders with herbals and meditative
practices like tai chi. Canyon Ranch is on track to double the number of all-night sleep studies it has conducted
in 2013 and 2014. The number of guests choosing rest and relaxation programs at
Omega, a holistic center in upstate New York, has increased by over a third
since 2006. Other resort offerings include power napping classes, pillow menus and yogic sleep programs.
Yelo Spa, a
New York massage, reflexology and napping center open since 2007, has new
locations in São Paulo, Brazil, and San Juan, P.R., and has plans for its first
airport sleep spa in 2016, at Charles de Gaulle in Paris. Nicolas Ronco, the
owner of Yelo, opened the sleep-centric spa after noticing during a business
trip to Kyoto, Japan, that the city was peppered with reflexology-napping
centers in “the same way that New York had Starbucks.” Flummoxed by the West’s
emphasis on productive wakefulness at whatever cost (caffeine, pills, pure
will), he decided to focus on wellness instead.
So did Sharyn Rosart, a
book publisher and mother of two who had to “relearn how to fall asleep,” she
said, after weaning herself off Ambien, which caused “menacing nightmares” that
made her heart race. She has increased her yoga and Pilates, taking advantage
of the relaxation phases at the end of each class.
“Those things help to give
you the confidence that you can fall asleep on your own,” she said.
Ms. Rosart’s Pilates
teacher, Lawson Harris, conquers potential insomnia by putting herself through
a moving meditation before bed, the same one she guides students like Ms.
Rosart through at the end of class. “I sleep like a baby afterward,” she said.
But falling — and staying — asleep is
as much a mind game as a physiological experience. For that, Dr. Breus treats
patients with cognitive behavioral therapy techniques like “worry journals.” On
one page a problem is written out, and on an opposite page a solution, right
before bed. Even if the solution is “I’ll figure it out tomorrow,” said Dr.
Breus, the act of writing out what’s keeping their brains awake helps his
patients “close their minds to their lists of anxieties.” For those who wake up
in the middle of the night, he offers an MP3 of a progressive muscle relaxation
meditation, similar to what Ms. Harris practices.
Rubin Naiman, a
sleep and dream specialist who conducts workshops at ashrams and spas
nationwide, emphasized that people should avoid trying too hard to fall asleep
and that they need to learn how to “fall in love with sleep again,” adding that
it must be invoked “through ritual and pleasure.”
To that end, Dr. Naiman was
instrumental in forming the concept behindSleep Studio, a
store in SoHo where circadian rhythms set the tone. With luxury skin-care
products by Red Flower and Circ-Cell, featuring ingredients like sea fennel and
myrrh, silk pajamas and state-of-the-art mattresses, the store seems like a
haven for the slumber obsessed.
Cosmetics companies are also getting
into the game with products likeKneipp’s Deep Sleep Mineral Bath Salt, with
valerian and hops, andÈminence’s Age Corrective Night
line, made with lavender. Bath and Body Works has an aromatherapy
collection called Sleep, which
includes a pillow mist, sugar scrub and massage oil. And Hope Gillerman’s
essential oil line, which works with acupressure points to ease mind-body
stresses, includes a product called Natural Rest Sleep Remedy.
Herbals with calming qualities
include valerian and magnolia bark, according to Dr. Breus. As for the soothing
elements of lavender, he is supportive of it for setting the mood and causing a
relaxation response but not for putting you to sleep.
“You don’t just sniff something and
pass out,” he said. Dr. Breus advised against alcohol before bed because it
keeps you out of delta (deep) sleep, which is where most cellular repair takes
place. “Plus it’s a diuretic, which means bathroom breaks will interrupt
natural sleep,” he said.
But what if you forgo that glass of
wine, complete your worry journal, take a warm bath, sniff your lavender
pillow, drink some warm milk, read half of “War and Peace” and are still unable
to fall asleep?
This is when Dr. Naiman’s Jedi mind
tricks may prove helpful.
“Sleep is always there in the
background of your consciousness,” he said. “These clinical attempts at sleep
are imbued with a sense of determination, but that very thing undermines the
process.”
So, Dr. Naiman said: “The core issue
is learning to surrender, to let go. Sleep is delicious, it’s not just a
servant of waking life. It’s to be indulged.”
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