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By Rhea Wessel
Kerstin Schneiderbauer, a
freelance data analyst, was having trouble sleeping.
Her mind would keep running
through her work and to-do lists throughout the night when she was overloaded
with projects.
When she wasn’t working through an
assignment, worrying about where the next one was coming from interrupted her
night’s rest.
When a friend recommended a sleep
coach, Schneiderbauer initially resisted. “I thought, who needs a coach? I’ll
keep talking to my husband about it. But I had been doing that for a year and a
half,” said Schneiderbauer, who lives near
To her surprise, her first session
with sleep coach Christina Stefan wasn’t so straightforward. The session was
more like career, life and sleep coaching rolled into one.
Stefan wasn’t telling
Schneiderbauer what to do. “She was asking questions, also about my family,”
she said. Her primary problem was not being able to shut down from work. “I
never really closed the office door in a metaphorical sense.”
After five of her 10 sessions,
Schneiderbauer was sleeping better. She had learned a visual imaging technique
for calming herself if she was awake at night and changed key habits that
became apparent after keeping a sleep log. For starters, Schneiderbauer began
writing down in the evenings all her work to-dos for the next day so she could
switch gears, and expressing worries about work was banned from evening
conversation.
Almost half of us don’t sleep
well: 45% of the world’s population is impacted by sleep problems that threaten
health and quality of life, according to the organisers of World Sleep Day, citing a 2008 study.
And the health impacts are
serious. Poor sleep can be linked to obesity in children and many psychological
conditions such as depression, anxiety and psychosis in adults. In the
In the
Once just a resource for
sleep-deprived parents or professional athletes seeking peak performance, the
sleep coach is now for everyone. Sleep coaches charge different rates,
depending on location and experience, but anecdotal evidence suggests the
coaching costs 70-130 euros an hour in
It’s good business
Steven MacGregor, the founder of Leadership Academy Barcelona and an expert on executive health, describes sleeping as a “key professional skill” that must be learned and practiced, an activity that needs top priority every day. Jeff Bezos, CEO of Amazon, is said to prioritise eight hours of sleep as the most important thing after his 12 hours at the office, according to MacGregor. And Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington frequently talks about the value of good sleep. Huffington fell asleep at her desk one day and knocked her head so hard that she broke her cheekbone.
MacGregor, who teaches at IESE, IMD and other business schools, researches health and wellness for top performers. “We ask executives how they can take their own health and well-being more seriously to improve their thinking, decision-making and life as an executive,” he said. “The type of work that is affected by sleep deprivation is executive thinking, like dealing with uncertainties.”
Stefan also sees proper sleep as a
personal “resource” for executives that can help them make the right decisions
and handle stress. Yet many people fail to get help if they’re struggling to
rest. According to World Sleep Day organisers, most sleep disorders are
preventable or treatable, yet less than one-third of sufferers seek
professional help. “Sleep is still a taboo topic,” Stefan said.
Fitting sleep in
The good news is that sleep
doesn’t need to be done in a controlled environment, like your bedroom. Napping
or nodding off for a few minutes between meetings is equally beneficial. The
National Sleep Foundation says a nap of under 30 minutes can help you feel more
alert and improve your performance, without interfering with night-time sleep.
MacGregor advises executives who
fly frequently to teach themselves to sleep on planes, perhaps by rehearsing it
at home. Or maybe you’re among the lucky few whose company has installed a
sleeping pod in a break area. It’s there for a reason.
Inducing sleep
While counting sheep never really
works, there is something to be said for distraction. In Schneiderbauer’s case,
her coach advised her to create an image in her mind that stimulates relaxation
and evoke that image as needed. At Stefan’s
Schneiderbauer imagined diving
over a coral reef, feeling weightless and hearing only the sound of her own
breathing. “I see myself over the corals and with the fish, and I hear myself
breathing. Then I begin to shut down,” she said. Schneiderbauer evokes the
image one to two times a day in low-stress periods and up to 10 times a day
when she needs to calm down or nod off. “I really try to not only see a
picture, but to feel it. Now it’s automatic. Now it takes only minutes [to get
calm],” Schneiderbauer said.
A willingness to change
A sleep coach alone cannot make a
client sleep. The desire to change has to come from within, said Sibylle
Chaudhuri, a coach and trainer in
Chaudhuri once turned down a
client who was caring for her sick mother, wasn’t getting help with the kids
and house from her husband, and had a job. She wasn’t willing to find help to
lighten her load. The woman frequently woke up in the night and couldn’t fall
back asleep. She would say, “Can’t you just make me sleep? You’re [certified]
in neuro-linguistic programming, can’t you just make my brain do it?”, Chaudhuri
recalled. “This is self-development and you have to be ready to change your
thinking. Coaching is about change, and change is difficult for most people.”
Seeing the light
Part of achieving a breakthrough
is challenging your own beliefs. “Most people think that sleep is something
that just happens naturally, and it’s just supposed to happen, no matter how
you treat your body. I think the worst thing is to take [sleep] for granted.
It’s like going to the gym, we have to do something for our psyches and bodies
to sleep properly,” Chaudhuri said.
Chaudhuri said the secret to
sleeping better is really a change of lifestyle, and there’s rarely only one
reason that you can’t sleep well. “Usually it’s the sum of several bad habits. Usually it’s us who have done this to ourselves,”
Chaudhuri said. “The most difficult thing is that people have to change their
habits.”