The most common reason for difficulty in awakening is simply not getting enough good quality sleep. Most adults require 6 to 8 hours, and adolescents and teens can need up to 10 hours per night, although it’s not easy to convince a teenager that sleeping is more important than late-night computer gaming or text messaging with friends!

If you’re having difficulty awakening in the morning, there can be consequences. Feeling rushed in the morning increases your body’s production of stress hormones. Abnormal overproduction of stress hormones is thought to be the cause of many diseases, including obesity, heart disease, and high blood pressure.
Hurried late risers tend to skip breakfast, the most important meal of the day. Without proper nutrition to fuel your brain and body, your productivity at work or at school will suffer. And you may be surprised to learn that morning “brain fog” is one of the leading causes of automobile accidents.
If you have trouble awakening, you can even injure your back. While you sleep, your spinal discs fill with fluid, and that’s why you’re actually taller when you first wake up. But your back is also unstable until you have been awake and moving enough to squeeze out the excess fluid. If you’re rushing in the morning, you run a much greater risk of hurting your back.
Lastly, you can hurt your relationships. Nobody likes a grouch, and if you’re unpleasant in the morning, you’ll be avoided by friends, co-workers, and loved ones.
There is a chance that your difficulty in awakening might have a medical cause.
You’ll want to speak with your doctor if you suffer from one of the following, which are more prevalent than you might think:
- Sleep apnea. This is a treatable disorder in which breathing is disrupted during sleep. Symptoms of sleep apnea include snoring, waking up with a headache, and waking up during the night.
- Depression. Some individuals, particularly children and adolescents, deal with depression by sleeping a lot more than they actually need to.
- Periodic Limb Movements. These are movements of the arms and legs during sleep, and the effect can be like getting a tiring workout instead of a good night’s rest.
- Adopt a regular sleep schedule. If you develop the habit of going to bed at the same reasonable time every night, you’ll find it much easier to awaken on schedule, too.
- Use a dawn simulator.This is a special alarm clock that uses a gradually brightening light instead of a nerve-jangling buzzer. The increasing intensity of light simulates the rising sun, triggering the release of brain chemicals to awaken you gently and naturally.
- Don’t eat late at night. Eating before bedtime is guaranteed to make you sleep poorly. Your body needs to be resting, not digesting.
- Sleep under comfortable conditions. You spend one-third of your life in bed, so make sure that your sleeping environment is ideal. Trade in that creaky mattress and lumpy pillow, and make sure that your bedroom is cool, dark, and noise-free.
- Banish the brain fog.In Asia, millions of people engage in daily morning meditation or tai chi. This helps their brains to focus, and gets them ready for their busy day, so it would be wise to do what the Asians do!
- Drink 4 ounces (120 ml) of GoChi™ every day!The goji berry is another ancient Asian health secret, and GoChi is the best goji product on earth!
GoChi™ – Clinical study participants report easier awakening.

This groundbreaking clinical study has been published in the highly regarded Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine (JACM), and it can also be viewed on the U.S. Government’s encyclopedic PubMed website at www.pubmed.gov. The acceptance of our study by the independent experts of a peer-reviewed publication such as JACM represents a first for a functional juice beverage in the Direct Selling industry, and it demonstrates FreeLife’s ongoing commitment to supporting its claims with solid scientific research.
Wake up to a wonderful world, with GoChi!
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REFERENCES:
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health.
"2003 National Sleep Disorders Research Plan." Available at http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/prof/sleep/res_plan/sleep-rplan.pdf
Burch, B. "Difficulty awakening in the morning." The Eclectic Physician Q&A Archive. Retrieved August 25, 2008. Available at http://www.eclecticphysician.com/archive.php?action=Nbr&Nbr=10.
About.com. "Sleep Disorders: The 'Night Owl' Syndrome." Retrieved August 25, 2008. Available at http://sleepdisorders.about.com/cs/dsps/a/nightowl.htm.
Amagase H, Nance DM. "A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled, Clinical Study of the General Effects of a Standardized Lycium barbarum (Goji) Juice, GoChi™." J Altern Complement Med. 2008; 14(4), pp. 403-412. Abstract available on PubMed at http://www.pubmed.gov (PMID: 18447631).
Article Copyright:Health Watch Weekly Freelife International
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