Thursday, 1 October 2020

SAND BED - FOR ULTIMATE COMFORT


PERFECT SLEEP ON A BED OF SAND

 

IMPORTANCE OF SLEEP

 

Sleep is an essential function that allows your body and mind to recharge, leaving you refreshed and alert when you wake up. In fact, sleep is as important to your health as diet, nutrition, and exercise. The right amount and quality of sleep improves attention, behavior, memory, and overall mental and physical health; it also helps the body maintain and regulate many vital functions. Without sleep you can't form or maintain the pathways in your brain that let you learn and create new memories, and it's harder to concentrate and respond quickly. Sleep is important to several brain functions, including how nerve cells (neurons) communicate with each other.

 

 

 

SLEEP DEPRIVATION EQUALS GETTING HIGH WITH SUBSTANCE ABUSE

 

Some of the most serious potential problems associated with chronic sleep deprivation are high blood pressure, diabetes, heart attack, heart failure or stroke. Other potential problems include obesity, depression, reduced immune system function and lower sex drive. Scientists measuring sleepiness have found that sleep deprivation leads to lower alertness and concentration. It's more difficult to focus and pay attention, so you're more easily confused. This hampers your ability to perform tasks that require logical reasoning or complex thought. Sleepiness also impairs judgment.

 

 

 

 

 

CIRCADIAN RHYTHM, SLEEP & MOOD

 

Our bodies, finely tuned machines that they are, have different control centers to regulate what we do and when we do it. These control centers are mostly governed by the environment and our genes. Probably the most well-known of these biological rhythms is the circadian rhythm. It controls most of our biological and behavioral functions.

Now, consider that each organ in the body has its own clock which needs to be synchronized through a master clock in the brain. Pretty cool imagery, right? The theory is that the circadian rhythm helps manage this process. So, when it is dysregulated, the body doesn’t get the opportunity to get in sync. As a result, motor, emotional, and interpersonal functioning is altered. What’s more: Sleep allows for this alignment to happen. It’s almost like the body’s chance to wind all the organ’s clocks to keep them running along the same time. It explains why you feel edgy or emotional when you’re overtired.

When the circadian rhythm is disturbed, sleep disorders and major physiological disturbances can happen. Sleep problems can mean cognitive impairments, such as a decrease in learning and attention capabilities, long-term memory, language development and emotions. These can take the form of insomnia, various waking times, and longer sleep times—all of which tend to be linked with psychiatric disorders.

It’s hard not recognize that there is an association between mood and rest, considering that people living with psychiatric disorders tend to complain of sleep disturbances. For instance, 50 to 80 percent of people living with autism tend to suffer from insomnia. What’s more, science has found genetic correlations with sleep disorders and schizophrenia, as well as altered patterns of the clock genes in people living with major depressive and bipolar disorders. It’s clock genes that impact cognition, mood, and reward-related behaviors.

There is some evidence that treating sleep problems can help lessen psychiatric episodes, but how?

 

HOW GOOD SLEEP HELPS THE BRAIN

 

The brain holds the master clock. But that isn’t the only thing it does. All day long it processes stimuli—events, sensations, emotions, to name a few. And it takes all that information and communicates with the rest of the body so it can react. Your brain does transfer this information chemically through a series of brain cell sites called synapses. These connections get overloaded after a while. Think about if you’re ever felt mentally drained. Most likely it’s because your brain cells and their synapses were firing fast and furious.

So besides helping to synchronize all the clocks in the body, sleep appears to be a state in which memories can be consolidated and stored, and instinctual behaviors can be rehearsed. Part of what we encode is emotion—anxiety, distress, reward.

MAKING A GOOD NIGHT’S SLEEP A REALITY

For sleep to be productive—resetting clocks and synapses and processing information, it needs to be set up to succeed. You tend to be tuned into the dark-and-light cycle of our days. The circadian rhythm is also tuned into this 24-hour cycle. But, for many who live with mental health issues, they are not. They tend to be night owls, or they sleep for long periods of time, or they have various types of insomnia. Basically, their rhythm is off.

Behaviors such as retiring and waking at the same time each night or doing a relaxing activity, such as reading, before bed are all possible ways to help get into a groove and reset the daily (as well as the circadian) rhythm. All of which might help lessen those sleepless nights and those grumpy, anxious days.  

 

 

 

 

INSPIRATION  

 

A fabric sheet spread out on the sea beach makes the ultimate bed.  On similar lines, this invention uses ordinary beach sand encased in fabric bag, to sleep on.

 

 

UNDERSTANDING THE CONTOURS OF THE HUMAN BODY

 

 

The bed that one sleeps on must provide firmness as well conform to the ever-shifting contours of the human body. When the human being is sleeping sideways the shoulder must go 4 to 5 inches deep into the medium/bed. At the same time the gap in the neck region must get filled up automatically with the medium being used.  

 

 

LIMITATIONS OF THE EXISTING CONTRAPTIONS 

 

The existing beds with various mattresses fail miserably to conform to the ever-shifting contours of the human body during the 8 hours of sleep. If they are too soft, then the firmness is sacrificed. When they are firm then they again fail to conform to the contours of the body. The result is lack of complete satisfaction, poor sleep, leading to low productivity all over the world.

 

 

OBJECTIVE - EASY FLOWABILITY WITH LOCKING IN  

 

 

The prime objective of the proposed invention is to facilitate a good night’s or day’s sleep by the very nature of shifting sand particles when the human being lying on the sand bed moves. The sand bed specially provides the equal and opposite reaction to the body when it stops moving, to sleep. A bean bag bed will not provide the same effect because the beans do not “lock in” like sand does. On the other hand, waterbed is too fluid and shifty. Accordingly, the proposed invention will have a bag/casing manufactured out of special fabric, like nylon which must be strong enough to hold the sand and yet have a cloth like feeling and flexibility to provide the required function.

 

 

VALUE ENGINEERED FRAMEWORK

 

 

The steel/wooden bed frame will be value engineered to house the sandbag/casing so that bare minimum sand is used to provide the necessary functions. The floor of the bed frame will be inclined down towards the head side and raised towards the foot side. This inclination will ensure that we have 6 inches of sand on the head side and just 2 inches on the foot side. Additionally, the bed frame will be designed to come apart, facilitate quick reassemble, for ease of packing & transport right up to the customer’s home. 

 


Collaborations are welcomed. rkhanna11@yahoo.ca  

Rohit Khanna - Industrial Engineer / Think tank


 

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