What NASA Has Learned About Sleep:
Your body is ruled by external cues: You need both light and darkness alike, as a signal for when it's time to wake up and go bedtime. Without them, you'd be lost.
Your body doesn't automatically fall in line with a 24-hour cycle: Time cues keep you in check, as well as your body temperature. Without signal regulations every day, your sleep/wake …show more content…
Due to the enormous amounts of artificial light around us, the ability to change the thermostat, the change in social interactions through social media, and access to stimulants such as caffeine and depressants such as alcohol, we are like astronauts. We have to be more aware of the factors we can control to produce excellent sleep-quality.
What Astronauts Recommend:
Maintain a consistent sleep/wake schedule: Yes even on the weekends. Don't allow your mind and temptation to rule your sleep needs.
Wind down before bed: About an hour before your bedtime, power down. Meditate no electronics and give your body the proper relaxation time.
Add strong day/night cues: Get sunlight exposure as soon as you can in the mornings and add blackout curtains to sleep in complete darkness at night.
Create a sleep-promoting bedroom: Keep it dark, cool and noise-free, with the exception of a fan or white noise machine that stays