10 Foods and Suggestions to Improve Your Sleep

10 Foods and Suggestions to Improve Your Sleep

Sleep is essential for our overall health and well-being. Yet, many struggle to achieve restful sleep regularly. While there are various factors affecting sleep quality, diet plays a significant role. Certain foods contain compounds that can either promote or hinder sleep. Incorporating sleep-friendly foods into your diet can help regulate your sleep-wake cycle and improve sleep quality. Here are ten foods and suggestions to enhance your sleep:

 

1. Fish

Most fish, especially salmon, halibut and tuna boast vitamin B6, which is needed to make melatonin, a sleep-inducing hormone triggered by darkness.

 

2. Jasmine Rice

The greater amounts of insulin triggered by the high-glycemic-index meals increased the ratio of sleep-inducing tryptophan relative to other amino acids in the blood, allowing proportionately more to get into the brain.

 

3. Tart Cherry Juice

Melatonin-rich tart cherry juice has been shown to aid sleep. Drink a cup of tart cherry juice twice a day for relief of severe insomnia.


4. Yogurt

Dairy products boast healthy doses of calcium, helping to prevent being calcium-deficient, which may make it difficult to fall asleep.

 

5. Whole Grains

Whole grains are rich in magnesium and consuming too little magnesium may make it harder to stay asleep.

 

6. Kale

Green leafy vegetables boost healthy doses of calcium too.

 

7. Bananas

Bananas are well-known for being rich in potassium, they are also a good source of vitamin B6, which is needed to make melatonin.

 

8. Chickpeas

Chickpeas boast vitamin B6 too, which is needed to make melatonin. 

 

9. Fortified Cereals

Fortified cereals are also boast vitamin B6, which is needed to make melatonin.

 

10. Valerian tea

Qualified as a sedative, its active ingredients depress the central nervous system and relax smooth muscle tissue. In case you don’t have Valerian tea, try chamomile tea. It works for most people, but it’s not as effective as Valerian tea.


A good night’s sleep problem solver:

• Keep a sleep log for several weeks to help identify activities and behavior that may interfere with your sleep. Each day, write down the times you wake up and go to bed, and when you drink caffeinated beverages, exercise, and take naps.

• Exercise regularly, preferably in the late afternoon. Do not exercise strenuously with 2-3 hours of bedtime, as this may impair your ability to fall asleep.

• Don’t take a long nap during the day, this may make it more difficult to fall asleep at night.

• Eat at regular times during the day, and avoid a heavy meal close to bedtime.

• After lunch stay away from anything that contains caffeine.

• Don’t smoke for an hour or two before bedtime, in fact, don’t smoke at all.

• Avoid excessive mental situation before bedtime.

• Establish a schedule to help regulate your body’s inner clock. Go to bed and get up at about the same time every day, and follow the same bedtime preparations each night to create a sleep ritual.

• A warm bath or a few minutes of reading in bed, listening to soothing music, or meditating are all useful sleep rituals.

• Keep your bedroom dark and quiet.

• If you can’t sleep, don’t stay in bed fretting for more than 15 minutes or so. Get up, go to another room, and read or watch TV until you are sleepy. Be sure to get up at your regular time next day.

 

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