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It’s Free & Simple & You Can Do It Just About Anywhere: The Best Training Tip For Athletes Of All Ages

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It’s Free & Simple & You Can Do It Just About Anywhere: The Best Training Tip For Athletes Of All Ages

Forget hiring private trainers, mental coaches, and buying fancy hi-tech training equipment. There is evidence-based scientific research that one simple thing can improve an athlete’s performance above all else, and it’s free and easy. It’s called SLEEP.

In 2003 Harvard and Penn medical schools studied four groups of people for two weeks. They controlled each group’s amount of sleep: Group 1 went two days without sleep, 2, 3, and 4 had four/six/eight hours respectively. Then all the groups were monitored and tested in physical and psychological tasks. The obvious conclusion: as sleep time went down, so did their scores. But perhaps one of the most interesting things to come from the study; those that had four and six hours of sleep, matched the negative results of the group that pulled two all-nighters! So even just missing out on a few hours of sleep per night, can greatly affect a child’s performance on the field and in the classroom in drastic ways. (See this article by J.P. Nerbun for more)

Most parents know this. They just don’t know how to add more time in a day to help their kids to get more sleep. Teenagers in particular are sleeping less and are stressed more than ever before. Current studies show that between 60 and 70% of American teens are mildly to severely sleep-deprived. Depression, anxiety and mental illness have been steadily rising in teenagers and a lot of it can be attributed to lack of sleep. Researchers from the University of Texas Health Science Center in Houston found that teens who don’t get enough sleep are four times as likely to develop major depressive disorders than their peers who do get enough sleep.

Yes, it’s hard to find the time in our kids’ over-scheduled and busy lives. But sleep must be a priority, above school work, sports, and above almost all else. There is a way to do it, but it might involve making some radical changes in the way you approach their school and their sports. Read Here For More Suggestions.

According to Fatiguescience.com, and Sleepfoundation.org, here are 9 ways enough sleep (8-10 hours) versus a lack of sleep affects young people:

At School/Life

On The Field:

 

What All Young Athletes Should Be Doing (In addition to more sleep).

 

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