Light and its value to you The value of light and its effect on us is far greater than most people realize. Light plays a remarkable role for maintaining health and general well being. Light is as important a supplement as any vitamin, mineral, or anti-oxidant. Proper exposure to beneficial wavelengths of light is absolutely essential for health maintenance. You can learn how to make the better use of light in your life through a few simple lifestyle changes. Light is a powerful regulator of the human circadian system, our biological body clock. The circadian clock controls physiological changes that occur with the natural light-dark cycle of the day. Circadian rhythm disorders are among the major causes of sleep disruption and seasonal affective disorder (SAD), also called winter onset depression. You can learn more about circadian rhythms by visiting our sections on enhancing sleep, circadian rhythms, SAD, and our section on jet lag. We are light-dependent beings. A lack of proper daily light levels will disrupt our internal body clock. The circadian body clock responds to a relatively narrow band of blue light known as the “action spectrum.” This blue light action spectrum, interestingly, correlates to the color of the blue sky. This blue light wavelength plays a major role in aligning and resetting the body clock through the control of release of hormones including the sleep hormone, melatonin. We work in buildings using artificial light that disrupt our circadian rhythms. We drive cars with tinted glass that lowers the transmission of beneficial light. When in the outdoors, many of us wear sunglasses blocking beneficial light from entering the retina. The result; it significantly reduces the light frequencies that we need every day. The best way to properly set your body clock is simply by getting natural light during the day. We are most sensitive to light in the early morning and late afternoon. Getting adequate light is relatively easy during much of the year. First step, take off your sunglasses! If you wear sunglasses often, you are depriving yourself of beneficial blue spectrum light. People are basically using sunglasses too often, not recognizing that it has an impact on health and well-being. Many who work indoors put on sunglasses the moment they go out to compensate for the brightness. When light is blocked in this manner it is sending a signal to the brain that it is night or dusk causing melatonin to be released. This can easily result in circadian sleep disorders and can worsen winter depression. Try this little experiment… The next time it is nice outside, when you are in a natural setting such as a park or in the woods, pay attention to your mood and how you are feeling with and without your sunglasses. Pay attention and you may notice a subtle but obvious change in your mood. This will be more pronounced during the shorter days of the year. It is important to condition yourself to take those sunglasses off when practical. It may be a little difficult at first as your eyes may need time to reacclimatize to natural light but you will desensitize rather quickly. Wearing a hat with a brim will help since direct sunlight is not required. Of course, there are times when sunglasses are quite important. You will want to continue to wear your sunglasses in very bright settings and when driving to reduce glare. If you are in a work environment with minimal exposure to direct light, take your breaks outside even if it is just ten minutes. When you are outside during lunch or on weekends, especially when in a natural setting, you want to allow your eyes to receive that natural, blue sky light. When at work, it will help to be near a window, but often the glass is blocking the important part of the blue spectrum since many modern glass windows contain tint. |
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A sensible person might argue that at 74, Connie Berto should be enjoying the quiet luxuries of retirement, like afternoon naps and baking pies. But like most Americans, Berto has picked the rush of an active, nonstop lifestyle over peace and quiet. “I’m always on the go, go, go,” said Berto, who lives in the Sleepy Hollow community in Marin County. “My husband and I have a lot of interests and volunteer work and grandchildren - 2-year-old twins that I babysit all the time. I have two horses in the backyard, and I do all the cleaning and the cooking myself.” And don’t get her started on the holidays. “With five kids and their spouses and trying to get Christmas presents for everybody, well, we’re always on a tight schedule,” she said. There’s no doubt, Berto said, that Americans are more stressed out than ever before. Doctors agree. In fact, they say, Americans are so riddled with stress these days that it’s making them sick. An office worker develops a strange rash from the daily pressures of dealing with a demanding boss. A child complains of a stomachache from too much homework or grueling daily soccer practices. A teenager lives on coffee and energy drinks in order to squeeze in more time for social activities. Chronic stress has been linked to depression, heart disease, autoimmune disorders, premature cell aging, and obesity and diabetes. It can cause hives and numbness, gastrointestinal problems and acne. It can make people more susceptible to the flu. The really frustrating part for doctors is that much of the stress patients experience is manufactured - the result of an increasingly connected society that has everyone expecting instant gratification, and instant results. Very few people are making the time to unplug and relax, even for just a few minutes every day.
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Monks spend years learning how to meditate. So can a machine induce similar levels of healthy calm in just 20 minutes? Simon Usborne plugs inPublished: 28 August 2007 - The Independent |
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By Merle Exit Most of us have experienced at least one treatment at a spa- a place where we go in order to relax and rejuvenate our bodies. Massages, body wraps and facials are great for both the skin and stress, while pedicures and manicures lend themselves more toward looks. But are there treatments for the mind?I once heard someone give a description of the mind: “The mind is a linear arrangement of multi-sensory total records of successive moments of ’now’.” There’s no wonder that we are so… I can’t think of the word… wait! Let’s grab the MindSpa. Plug the blue light glasses and earphones into the unit and do an “Alpha Recharge,” a 10-minute program that, due to the light and sound tones, should both relax and wake up my brain. It says that I can control the brightness of the lights as well as the volume of the tones. Great. I’ll just close my eyes.Good. My mind feels much better. As I was saying… we are so engrossed with the idea that we are losing our memories that we tend to forget how much data our minds have absorbed over the years. Excuse me. I need to check my email… must forward this one. Hmm… did I send out my bills?Sorry, back to the article. It says here that the MindSpa, based upon solid scientific principle, “utilizes specifically tuned frequencies of light and gentle sound to shift the mind into one of two major states depending upon desired outcome: either a deeply relaxed state, also known as the alpha state, or the beta state; a state of cognitive stimulation and focus.”Now that’s what I need. I’m going to put the white light glasses on and remove the plastic piece that’s blocks the outside world. In other words, I’m keeping my eyes open so I can finish this article. This particular program says that it’s for mental sharpness and has been frequently used by people with ADD.What is the difference between the CrystalWhite and CalmBlue led glasses?
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