What does normal sleep behavior look like?
Normal sleep patterns are influenced by many factors, including lighting conditions (day and night), cultural and social factors (shift work, raising children). However, experts agree on one thing: the average adult needs between 7 and 9 hours of sleep, with women needing slightly more than men.
During sleep, we go through several sleep phases in a certain sequence. These are repeated on average 4-7 times per night. A sequence consists of the following four phases:
- Falling asleep phase
- Stable sleep phase
- deep sleep phase
- REM sleep phase
Each individual phase is important and significant for our body and our health.
In the deep sleep phase, the body recovers. Impressions are processed and stored in our memory. Experts believe that the deep sleep phase is very important for learning.
The REM sleep phase stands for "Rapid Eye Movement" and is characterized by jerky eye movements. Interestingly, all other muscles in the body are completely relaxed during this phase - except for the eye muscles. The REM phase is also responsible for our dreams. As this phase is the last one before waking up, we can still remember the dream when we wake up. Because we go through all these sleep phases several times during the night, we dream not just once, but several times during sleep. However, we can only remember the last dream before waking up because we have already forgotten the others.
The physiological processes in the body also change during sleep. For example, our heartbeat slows down in the first three phases of sleep and our blood pressure drops. In the last phase of sleep, however, the heartbeat speeds up and blood pressure rises again. The hormone system also works at full speed and ensures the release of growth hormones. This is how our organs and muscles recover. While we sleep, more white blood cells circulate through the blood. This confirms the old adage that we should sleep a lot when we are ill. But the metabolism also works diligently during the night. When the night comes to an end and we wake up, more stress hormones are released.