Everyone loves to sleep, and I think I speak for most people when I say that waking up in the morning is extremely difficult. But, being late for school might not be the worst consequence of hitting snooze on your alarm.
There is actually a term for the drifting in and out of sleep in the morning: drockling. Sleep scientists created the term in the 1970s, but it is rarely used today (let's bring it back!!!!!).
There are five stages of the sleep cycle, the last of which is REM sleep.
REM sleep usually occurs 90 minutes after falling asleep, and is when the human body is deepest in sleep. With the unusual sleep schedules of the hard working person, you could be waking up not long after REM sleep. This is bad!
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The sleep cycle. |
Serotonin and dopamine are neurotransmitters, chemical messengers that regulate functions in your body. Serotonin helps to regulate sleep and dopamine makes you feel pleasure and euphoria. In REM sleep, serotonin is released in your body. This is why your body relaxes and sleep is so satisfying. When your body starts to wake itself up, dopamine is released into your bloodstream. This makes you feel more awake when your alarm goes off. But, when you snooze your alarm you confuse the natural cycle of your body. The entire cycle restarts. Dopamine is present in your bloodstream, but now that you are back asleep serotonin is released again. These chemicals have conflicting effects, which results in you being more groggy when you eventually do wake up.
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The signaling pathway of serotonin. |
The other part of this to consider is that when you fall asleep after your alarm wakes you up, it is not a full, restful sleep. You are experiencing what is called
fragmented sleep. Fragmented sleep is a sudden arousal out of sleep when you are deep in it. These aren't slight movements, rather you are woken up so much that you remember it later. Experiencing fragmented sleep can result in weight gain, mood problems, and extreme fatigue throughout the day.
Sleep is good for you, but only if it's good sleep. Consider this post your motivator to go to bed earlier and sleep better.
If you do, you'll learn better, be more creative, stay focused, make decisions, and be more happy in general.
So, while hitting the snooze button might bring some short term satisfaction and joy, you're much better off forcing yourself to get up right when you first hear the alarm go off. Trust me, you'll thank me later.
I would love to bring back drockling!! I find that setting my alarm 20 mins later to begin with has helped me avoid drockling, as well as forcing me to get all of my stuff ready the night before.
ReplyDeletethis blogpost was so interesting! I actually learned a lot from it :)
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ReplyDeleteI completely identify with this!!! Whenever I snooze my alarm I feel so much more tired when I finally wake up and throughout the day as opposed to when I wake up immediately... Now I know why! :)
ReplyDelete- Lola S.
This was super interesting, I snooze my alarm all the time, thanks for letting us know why!
ReplyDeleteSince I live off fragmented sleep, what's the deal here? Am I gonna die?
ReplyDeleteOn a more serious note, this was an amazing read.
Very interesting! I often snooze my alarms, but after reading this article, I think it is a good idea to break that habit.
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