Anecdote: Understand Blue Light, Our Sleep Cycles & How We Sleep Better
Credit: @rainbowsaretoobeautiful
I've just got a new pair of glasses. They are a bit special. Apart from being my first pair of transitions lenses, my new glasses have an extra added bonus that they help me fall sleep better. Confused? Well if I said they had blue light filters in them, some people might get a clue as to why. Understanding how we fall asleep and about our sleep cycles has helped our whole house sleep a bit better.
Sleep is extremely precious in our household. One of our kids has even been to the sleep neurology team at Evelina's Children's Hospital to help with his sleeping difficulties. I'd heard of things like light and deep sleep and had an idea that we dream during something called REM and thought that was about it.
But David going to the sleep clinic taught me about how we sleep, the cycles and what could help our son and why as his parents, we were waking tired in the morning. I've broken it down into falling asleep, stages 1-3 and REM.
Falling asleep
How does your body know it's time to fall asleep? Well, there, a special centre in the brain called the suprachiasmatic nucleus (SCN) which links to other parts of the brain that control hormones, body temperature etc that help us feel sleepy or wide awake. The SCN gets lots of external signals to help it turn on 'sleepy' feelings such as light, food, noise, and temperature.
For example, when there is less light going to the optic nerve to the SCN, this indicates it's getting dark and time for sleep. So the SCN sends signals to the hypothalamus to make melatonin, the hormone that triggers sleep, which is usually released for around 12 hours.
Bright screens and particularly blue light at night can confuse these signals. Binging on TV after it gets dark can mean less melatonin and therefore more difficulty in falling and staying asleep. This is where having glasses with blue light filters has come in very handy. I'm surrounded by blue light screens throughout my day. I'm busy on a laptop, I watch TV and even if I'm not directly involved my kids have blue light devices on all over the house.
The blue light filters on my glasses, cut out the blue light from the TV and devices to allow my body to naturally produce the melatonin it needs to fall and stay asleep. Some people who have difficulty with falling asleep, like my autistic kids, can benefit from taking additional melatonin and slow-release medication in particular to replicate our own natural sleep aid.
In the end, melatonin didn't work to help our kids sleep, but we looked very carefully at their bedtime routine, how we could reduce their blue light and how to make sure we were doing everything we could to help them get the sleep they (and we) needed.
Stages 1-3
Stage 1 - This is your first initial falling asleep stage where you are still aware of your surroundings but your body is preparing for more sleep. It's very easy to be woken from and doesn't usually last longer than a few minutes. If you've ever been one of those people who 'remembers falling asleep' it was probably remembering this.
Stage 2 - What most people think of as being 'light' sleep. Again you are easily woken during this but it's doing more than the first stage. Your body is processing information and maybe running routine maintenance. You come in and out of this type of sleep during the night and spent most of each night in this sleep stage.
Stage 3 - Deep Sleep. This is where you are really asleep - your brain and muscles relax and you don't really respond to external stimuli. I think of it as the 'physical rest and recuperation' part of sleep. You don't dream and your body does all its deep repair work. If you are woken from this, it feels really rough.
REM
Often known as a period of 'rapid eye movements' hence the acronym, this is the stage of sleep in which most dreaming occurs. Our eyes are not constantly moving, but may be related to what we see in our dreams. It's part of the night where you consolidate your thoughts. The rest of our body is quite still as we dream.
So what happens through the night?
Well, we go through several sleep cycles usually lasting around 90 minutes or so in adults and about half that time in children. Over the course of the night, the amount of time we spend in a particular stage of sleep begins to shift. Early in the night, we should spend more time in each deep sleep stage and then later on in the night and into the morning we should spend more time in REM. We also wake each night but don't realise it. With my blue light filters, I've been able to produce that melatonin that I need to help me drift back to sleep without noticing.
With this information, we were able to figure some things to help us understand what was happening with our family at night. We understood that David, our autistic son who went to the sleep clinic, wasn't usually waking before 1-2 am and so was probably getting his 'deep sleep' requirements. This explained why he wasn't tired much during the day and why when waking at night he felt refreshed. He has lots of blue light throughout his day and this was part of the reason for trying him on melatonin.
When David was waking, my hubby and I had often only recently gone to bed. As a result, we were having our deep sleep interrupted (as you can see in the Fitbit sleep cycles above). A couple of things have helped us. We've got routines to help us fall asleep and therefore get into deep sleep quicker. I've cut down my blue light with my glasses which is boosting my natural melatonin so I'm falling asleep and staying asleep better too.
We also helped David fall back asleep when he was waking by taking away his soothers. We discovered that when David would wake in the night he'd search for his soother and this would wake him up properly. By withdrawing it, he didn't think it was missing, didn't search for it and went back to sleep.
We still have challenges (not least David's younger sister waking up now) but sleep in our home is certainly better than it was a few years ago. Understanding a bit more about how we fall and stay asleep was fair