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Slide 10 of 14

Get Your Sleep to Reduce Cravings

While it may not seem like sleep is related to eating, sleep does affect what and how much you eat. Not getting enough sleep will increase cortisol, the stress hormone, which increases cravings and hunger. This often means eating more refined carbs and other high-calorie comfort foods.

If you're trying to lose weight, aim for at least seven hours every night. Help promote sleep by turning off all electronics at least 30 minutes before bed. According to Sujay Kansagra, MD, Mattress Firm sleep health consultant and author of My Child Won't Sleep, "When engageing with content on social media, the brain releases chemicals such as norepinephrine and dopamine. This makes it harder on your body to fall asleep because these chemicals stimulate the 'wake centres' of your brain."

You can also take a hot shower, sip on warm herbal tea, do some yoga, make sure your bed is cosy, or read in bed to get you into snooze zone. Or have sex! Having an orgasm will help you fall asleep faster because it produces oxytocin (the cuddle or love hormone), Robert Glatter, MD, assistant professor of emergency medicine at Northwell Health Department of Emergency Medicine at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York, said, which inhibits cortisol.

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