Sleep and Muscle Growth

By Chad, 27 July, 2011

By Karen Tonnis

Your mission: To add bulk, or form some well-defined curves. The prescription: Get some sleep!

Crazy as it sounds, that's the advice you'll get from bodybuilders, trainers, professional coaches, and fitness experts in general. The fact is your body can only heal, repair, and grow during deep sleep.

You can be doing the right things—perfectly portioning out your food, doing hardcore lifting that pushes you to the edge—but all that effort will be negated without enough recovery.

A Couple Sleeping

You can't cheat on sleep. We know sleep is essential to life, just like eating and breathing are. But there are many theories as to exactly why we sleep, with no one clear answer.

One is that sleep "restores" what our bodies lose while we're awake. And recent findings actually support this theory, showing that many of the major restorative functions in the body, like muscle growth, tissue repair, protein synthesis, and the release of growth hormones occur mostly, or as noted above, only during sleep.

Hand on Alarm ClockWarning signs that you're sleep-deprived. Have a sneaking suspicion you might not be getting the sleep you need? You're not alone. An estimated 50 to 70 million people in the U.S. don't get adequate sleep every night. Here are a few classic signs:

  • Hitting the snooze button consistently on your alarm clock
  • Yawning uncontrollably and at inappropriate times (e.g. workplace meetings, parent-teacher conferences)
  • Feeling sluggish in the afternoon
  • Getting drowsy while driving
  • Having heavy eyelids and watery eyes
  • Experiencing memory lapses
  • Experiencing irritability and low energy
  • Feeling excessive hungriness or a complete lack of appetite

Woman Drinking CoffeeTips for catching quality Zs. Now that you know how important sleep is, don't let it get away from you. Here are some handy tips to make the most of your rest time.

  • From 4 to 6 hours before bedtime, avoid caffeine, alcohol, nicotine, and other chemicals that interfere with sleep.
  • Keep a regular sleep schedule. Go to bed at the same time every night, and wake up at the same time every morning. If you're getting enough sleep, you'll wake up automatically without an alarm clock.
  • Get regular exercise. Physical activity, especially aerobic exercise, can help you fall asleep faster and make your sleep more restful.
  • Have a relaxing bedtime routine that eases the transition between being awake and sleep time.
  • Sleep primarily at night. Short naps are great for recharging and catching up on missed sleep, but too many naps, and naps that are too long, can interfere with your regular schedule.

A Man Working OutMake the most of your workouts. Be honest with yourself. If you're doing the work and the healthy eating plan and you're still not seeing great results, it could be not enough sleep that's holding back your progress. Remember, your body is an incredible machine. Give it a chance to recover and build for the jump-start you've been looking for.

Article Source: P90x Newsletter Issue #91 07/26/11

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