February Foundation - Sleep
February Foundation #2 Sleep
This month we are focusing on the foundation. When I say
“foundation”, what comes to mind? Do you think of a house, a building or some
kind of structure? Do you think of the bottom or the base of something? All of
those images are what I want us to be thinking about for February. Foundation
is the base, the bottom or beginning of a structure that we will be building.
We will be building this structure, and it all starts with this part. The base.
The foundation.
We asked a few questions to start our foundation conversation:
What are the most important things we need in
place?
What barriers are you seeing to putting these in
place?
Who are we talking to about the plan?
No matter what answers you came up with, or how many other
questions this exercise brought up for you, this is really square one. This is
the foundation. What do you want to do. What is getting in the way, and what
supports are in place. Those are the basics we need to get started.
From there, we move into some tangible steps. Foundation can
mean a few things. The meaning we used last time was about the base of our
routine, as in the goals or the very reason we are trying to do this. That use
of foundation is especially helpful if you are just getting started, or making
sure you are still focused on the right things.
The next use of the word foundation brings us to our next
step: Putting the plan in motion.
If we were in a coaching session, talking about your routine,
I would ask you, once you have decided what the broad goals are, we would look
more closely at the smaller steps to get you there. If the broad goal is to
live healthier, and yes, that is the broadest goal possible. No matter how
broad we go, we can always zero in on the specific steps that make the most
sense for you.
And that is what I would ask about in our session: What are
the most foundational pieces to put in place first. The best way to think about
this is to go back to the basics. When I talk about basics, I really mean
basics. The foundation. Let’s look at some of these areas:
Sleep
There is nothing more foundational than sleep. To get more
scientific: Sleep is not simply rest, but an active biological process that
regulates nearly every major system in the body. During sleep, the brain
organizes and stores memories, clears metabolic waste, recalibrates emotional
responses, and restores cognitive capacity. Deep sleep supports physical repair
through growth hormone release, tissue recovery, and immune strengthening,
while REM sleep plays a central role in learning, creativity, and emotional
processing. Without sufficient sleep, attention, decision-making, reaction
time, and problem-solving ability decline in ways comparable to alcohol
impairment. That’s right: Being sleep deprived harms functioning like alcohol
does. In other words, being over-tired is akin to being drunk.
Sleep is also one of the strongest regulators of physical
health. Consistent, adequate sleep helps maintain hormonal balance, including
those that control hunger (ghrelin and leptin), stress (cortisol), and blood
sugar regulation (insulin sensitivity). Chronic sleep deprivation is associated
with increased risk of obesity, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes,
weakened immunity, and systemic inflammation. Even modest sleep restriction
over several nights can elevate stress hormones and reduce the body’s ability
to recover from physical or mental strain.
Equally important is sleep’s role in emotional stability and
mental health. During sleep, the brain processes emotional experiences and
reduces reactivity in threat-detection systems like the amygdala. Poor sleep
amplifies anxiety, irritability, and negative mood while lowering resilience
and motivation. Over time, disrupted sleep patterns are strongly linked with
depression, burnout, and decreased overall well-being.
In practical terms, sleep functions as a foundational health
behavior, playing a role in nutrition and movement, and everything else, but
often more even influential because it affects how effectively all other habits
work. Adequate, consistent sleep improves energy, focus, recovery, mood
regulation, and long-term health outcomes, making it one of the highest-impact
interventions for performance, resilience, and overall quality of life.
Comments
Post a Comment