You're improving your LIFE
I want to support YOU through your health journey because I know how scary and frustrating it is to do it alone!
It is not a coincidence that you're reading this; timing is everything, and you are finally ready to take your health seriously. The problem you've been having is not knowing the necessary steps to heal your body and feel better. I created Kairos because there was zero support for my fitness journey when I was where you are. I have educated myself on proper nutrition and systematic coaching to keep you motivated to reach your goals. I know what you're going through and how scary and frustrating it is. Now is the time to change your life, body, and mind, and I'll be with you for the entire process.
Set specific, measurable goals for your physical activity.
Create a schedule for physical activity.
Choose activities that you enjoy and that are appropriate for your fitness level.
Monitor your progress and adjust your plan as needed.
Provide support
Clarity and direction
Increased self-awareness
Support and accountability
Personalized strategies
New perspectives
Assess your current eating habits.
Set specific, measurable goals.
Create a meal plan.
Shop and prepare food in advance.
Monitor your progress and make adjustments.
Identify and overcoming limiting beliefs or obstacles.
Set clear, specific, and measurable health goals.
Teach stress management and negative emotion management.
Develop self-awareness and emotional intelligence.
Provide guidance and support and holding accountable for progress.
Are you currently experiencing any long-term health problems or symptoms?
Have you ever been diagnosed with a condition that requires ongoing management?
Are you currently taking any medication on a regular basis?
Are you committed to making healthy lifestyle changes?
Do you have any specific health goals in mind?
Do you have any barriers or obstacles that you anticipate facing while making these changes?
Are you willing to commit time and effort to making these changes?
Do you feel like you are not making progress towards your health and wellness goals?
Do you feel like your current routine is not sustainable in the long-term?
Do you often feel overwhelmed or stressed when thinking about your health and wellness?
Do you feel like you have tried multiple approaches without success?
Do you feel like you are not motivated or have lost interest in your current health and wellness routine?
As your Health Coach, her goals include:
Certifications Include:
Clinical Health Coach- Iowa Chronic Care Consortium
Health and Life Coach - Health Coach Institute
Lifestyle Coach - Diabetes Training and Technical Assistance Center
Motivational Interviewing - Motivational Interviewing Network of Trainers (MINT)
9-Weeks of Sleep Enhancement
Sleep, and the Role it Plays in Having Good Health
Sleep and good sleep hygiene play a key role in maintaining good health throughout your lifetime. Over the next nine weeks we will cover a variety of topics from how lack of sleep impacts your body’s functioning to sharing techniques on how you can improve and enhance your sleep habits and hygiene. Sleep contributes to many factors that determine good health. They include rest, repair, and rejuvenation; an improved mood; a healthy heart; regulated blood sugar; improved mental function and enhanced toxin removal.
While we sleep, our bodies rest, repair damage to our physiological systems, and rejuvenate our bodies. It is for this reason that if you are sleeping properly, your body will feel refreshed after a good night’s sleep. For humans who are still growing, children and adolescents, during sleep, the body produces the hormones required for development. These same growth hormones are responsible for repairing tissue and cells in people of all ages. In fact, during sleep, the body produces cytokines which support the immune system and help to fight off infections. The body’s immune reaction to infection will not be as strong if the person is getting inadequate sleep. Thus, chronic sleep loss can make people more susceptible to common infections like cold and flu, but also over time, it can lead to a greater risk of immunodeficiency. Sleep also aids our bodies in reducing anxiety, depression and other mental health strains that are tied to stress.
When you wake up well rested, it can have a positive impact on your mood. In fact, it has been proven that people who lack adequate sleep are at higher risk of experiencing mental anguish. The long-term effects of sleep loss can result in irritability, anxiety, and depression. Developing good sleep hygiene and consistent sleep routines can help to resolve these issues.
Quality sleep helps to promote cardiac health. When we sleep, our heart rates slow down and our blood pressure decreases. This means that when we sleep, our heart and vascular systems are able to rest, rejuvenate, and not work as hard as they have to when we are awake. If an individual is subjected to inadequate sleep, the risk for a cardiovascular event such as heart attack or stroke increases. In turn, sleep loss causes high blood pressure that can remain high for extended periods of time. This increases the risk of heart disease, heart attack, and heart failure.
Sleep loss affects insulin production in the body. Insulin is the hormone that helps blood sugar enter the body’s cells. The body’s cells use this glucose as energy to power the body’s physiological systems. By sleeping for at least seven hours or more per night, this ensures the regulation of blood sugar within the body. When an adult gets less than seven hours sleep at night, there is an increased risk of them developing Type 2 diabetes. Lack of sleep causes greater resistance to insulin in the body and changes how the cells of the body use insulin. This in turn, leads to too much sugar in the bloodstream.
It is believed that sleep helps with memory and cognitive thinking. Sleep is necessary for the brain to grow, reorganize, restructure, and make new neural connections. Without these new neural connections, individuals would be unable to learn new information and form memories during sleep. When you are well rested, you have better critical thinking skills and decision-making skills.
People who are sleep deprived perform poorly when doing activities that need quick responses or multi-tasking. A good example of this is driving. When an individual lacks sleep, they don’t think clearly, become more forgetful, have a harder time learning new tasks and function at their best during the day. Both thinking quickly and accurately performing are reduced after a week of getting only five hours of sleep or less each night. This also impacts your judgement. Because of this those individuals who are sleep deprived, enact riskier behaviors as a result of their sleep loss. They make worse decisions because they are focused on the outcome of their actions, not the consequences. Therefore, a more rested individual makes better, faster, and thoroughly thought-out decisions; learn easier and function at their peak performance.
A good night’s sleep helps the glymphatic system (the brain’s waste management system). When we are awake, our brain’s neurons are firing on all cylinders and stimuli is constantly coming into the brain. The brain converts fuel into energy leaving behind waste proteins that accumulate during our waking hours. During sleep, the glymphatic system carries fresh fluid to the brain and mixes it with the waste protein filled fluid. The system then flushes out this mix of fluids from the brain and into the blood. During sleep, cells in the brain shrink, this allows larger gaps between brain tissue and allows more fluid to be pumped into the brain and flush toxins away. It is actually during non-REM sleep that this flushing away of toxins occurs. Chronic sleep loss can reduce the ability of the waste management system to flush away these toxins and can increase the risk of a number of distinct kinds of brain diseases.
Remember, getting enough decent quality sleep reduces your proclivity to acquiring many diseases and disorders such as heart disease, stroke, obesity, and dementia.
Next week, we will provide you with suggestions on how you can improve your sleep quality. Should you have any questions about ‘Sleep and the Role it Plays in Having Good Health’, please email me at info@kairoscoachingbylakeitha.com .
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info@kairoscoachingbylakeitha..com