rested, but you’re getting into bed at 12:00 midnight and have to wake
up at 6:00 a.m., you’re likely to tell yourself, “Geez, I’m only going
to get six
hours of sleep tonight, but I need eight. I’m going to feel
exhausted in the morning.” Then, what happens as soon as your alarm
clock goes off and you open your eyes and you realize it’s time to
wake up? What’s the first thought that you think? It’s the same
thought you had before bed! “Geez, I only got six hours of sleep. I
feel exhausted.” It’s a self-fulfilling, self-sabotaging prophecy. If
you tell yourself you’re going to
feel tired in the morning, then you
are absolutely going to feel tired. If you believe that you need 8 hours
to feel rested, then you’re not going to feel rested on anything less.
But what if you changed your beliefs?
The mind-body connection is a powerful thing, and I believe we
must take responsibility for every aspect of our lives,
including the
power to wake up every day feeling energized, regardless of how
many hours of sleep we get.
I’ve experimented with various durations of sleep—from as little
as four hours to as many as nine. The other variable in my
experimentation was actively telling myself how I was going to feel
in
the morning, based on the amount of hours I slept. First, I tried
each duration of sleep, telling myself before bed that I was
not getting
enough sleep, and that I was going to feel exhausted in the morning.
On four hours of sleep, I woke up feeling exhausted.
On
five hours of sleep, I woke up feeling exhausted.
On six hours of sleep, you guessed it—exhausted.
Seven hours…. Eight hours… Nine hours… The hours of sleep I
got didn’t change how I felt when the alarm clock went off in the
morning. As long as I told myself before bed that I wasn’t getting
enough sleep, and that I was going to feel tired in the morning, that’s
exactly how I felt.
Then, I again experimented with each duration—from
nine hours
to four hours—this time reciting a bedtime affirmation and telling
myself that I was going to wake up feeling
energized in the morning:
“Thank you for giving me these
five hours of sleep tonight.
Five hours
is exactly what I need to feel rested and energized in the morning. My
body is capable of miraculous things, the least of which is generating
an abundance of energy from five restful hours of sleep. I believe that
I create
my experience of reality, and I choose to create waking up
tomorrow feeling energized and excited to take on my day, and I’m
grateful for that.”
What I found was that whether I got nine, eight, seven, six, five,
or even just four hours of sleep, as long as I consciously decided,
before bed, that I was getting the perfect amount of sleep—that the
hours were going to energize my body to
feel wonderful in the
morning—I consistently woke feeling better than I ever had before.
However, don’t take my word for it. I encourage you to experiment
with this yourself.
So, how many hours of sleep do you
really need? You tell me.
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