Sleep expert's animal 'chronotype' quiz is deeply insightful for understanding our sleep patterns

https://fed.brid.gy/r/https://www.upworthy.com/expert-sleep-quiz-for-chrontype

Why do we wake up shortly before our alarm goes off? It’s not by chance | The-14

Waking just before your alarm isn’t luck: your circadian body clock predicts routines, shifts hormones and prepares you for wakefulness naturally every morning.

The-14 Pictures

🌙 Did you know that the phases of the moon can affect your sleep? A new study shows that sleep cycles oscillate as the moon gets bigger and smaller. In the days leading up to a full moon, people go to sleep later and sleep for shorter periods. The pattern may indicate our circadian rhythms are synchronized with lunar cycles. 🌌

https://yt.drgnz.club/watch?v=Q17i1srjOqY

FallbackLink

https://youtu.be/Q17i1srjOqY

#MoonSleep #SleepCycles #LunarPhases

How phases of the moon can affect your sleep

Can lunar cycles play a part in how you sleep? A new study led by UW professor of biology Horacio de la Iglesia shows that sleep cycles in people oscillate as the moon gets bigger and smaller. In the days leading up to a full moon, people go to sleep later in the evening and sleep for shorter periods of time. The research team observed these variations in both urban and rural settings — from Indigenous communities in northern Argentina and college students in Seattle, a city of more than 750,000 with lots of streetlights and access to electricity at night time. The pattern may indicate that our natural circadian rhythms are somehow synchronized with the phases of the lunar cycle. The team confirmed that the evenings leading up to the full moon — when participants slept the least and went to bed the latest — have more natural light available after dusk. The waxing moon is increasingly brighter as it progresses toward a full moon, and generally rises in the late afternoon or early evening, placing it high in the sky during the evening after sunset. The waning moon also gives off significant light, but the moon rises so late in the evening you might not even see it at those points in the lunar cycle. Read more: https://www.washington.edu/news/2021/01/27/moon-sleep/

UW (University of Washington) | Invidious
Awake in the wee hours and I don’t want to be. #sleepcycles

Flipping from days to nocs, and back, is increasingly hard on the mind & body.

I remember, but cannot imagine, when it was fairly easy.

#midwives #medtwitter #hcw #sleepcycles