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Health & Body

Why We Need Sleep to Survive

A1 A2 B1 B2

Sleep is not “wasted time”. It is nightly repair for your cells, hormones, brain, and immune system, so you can wake with real energy and protection against sickness.

A1 Level

How rest helps you feel ready for tomorrow

Sleep: Your Body’s Night Repair Time

How rest helps you feel ready for tomorrow

Mina is an office worker.
One morning, she sits on the bus and feels very tired.
Her eyes hurt.
Her head feels heavy.
She stayed up very late with her phone.

At work, she cannot think fast.
Simple emails feel hard.
She drinks more coffee, but she is still slow.
That night, she decides to try something new.

Mina turns off her phone early.
She makes her room dark and quiet.
She goes to bed one hour earlier.
She sleeps deeply.

In the morning, warm sunlight comes through the window.
Mina opens her eyes and feels different.
Her body feels light.
Her mind feels clear.
She walks to the bus with calm energy.

Sleep is your body’s repair time.
In the night, your cells fix small damage from the day.
Your brain rests.
Your energy fills up again.
Good sleep also helps your body stay strong against sickness.

You do not need a “perfect” night.
But when you sleep enough, your body can do its job: repair, clean, and make you ready for a new day.


Key Points

  • Sleep is the time when your body repairs itself.
  • Good sleep gives you clear thoughts and strong energy for the day.

Words to Know

sleep /sliːp/ (n) — natural rest when your eyes are closed
rest /rest/ (n) — time when your body and mind relax
tired /ˈtaɪərd/ (adj) — feeling low energy and needing sleep
energy /ˈenərdʒi/ (n) — power to move, think, and work
brain /breɪn/ (n) — part of the body that controls thoughts and feelings
health /helθ/ (n) — how well your body and mind work
repair /rɪˈper/ (v) — to fix something that is damaged
strong /strɔːŋ/ (adj) — having power and not getting sick easily


📝 Practice Questions

A1 – True/False

  1. Mina feels tired because she stayed up very late with her phone.
  2. Sleep is only for rest and does not repair the body.
  3. After more sleep, Mina feels light and clear in the morning.

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. How does Mina feel on the bus after a short night?
    A. Light and full of energy
    B. Slow and very tired
    C. Excited and happy

  2. What does Mina do to sleep better?
    A. Drinks more coffee before bed
    B. Keeps all the lights bright
    C. Turns off her phone and sleeps earlier

  3. What is one main job of sleep in the A1 story?
    A. To help Mina play more games
    B. To repair the body and give energy
    C. To make the night feel shorter

A1 – Short Answer

  1. How does Mina feel after sleeping earlier?
  2. What comes through the window in the morning?
  3. What does sleep help your body do at night?

A1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

A1 – Multiple Choice

  1. B
  2. C
  3. B

A1 – Short Answer

  1. She feels light and clear / fresh and ready.
  2. Warm sunlight.
  3. It repairs the body and restores energy.

A2 Level

Nighttime repair for your cells, brain, and mood

What Your Body Does While You Sleep

Nighttime repair for your cells, brain, and mood

On Friday afternoon, two friends sit on a bench at school.
Sara looks bright and relaxed.
Lina yawns again and again.

“You look so tired,” Sara says.
“I slept only four hours,” Lina answers.
“My brain feels slow. I read the same line three times.”

They laugh, but Lina feels worried.
“Why does one bad night feel so terrible?” she asks.

Sara remembers something she read.
“Health experts say the body works hard while we sleep,” she explains.
“Our cells repair small damage from the day.
Hormones that control stress and hunger reset.
And the brain cleans out waste, like a night shift cleaning team.”

Lina is surprised.
“So my body is busy at night, even when I just lie there?”

“Yes,” Sara says.
“Deep sleep is like sending your body to a repair shop.
Without it, your energy drops, your mood gets worse, and it is easier to catch a cold.”

Tiny Changes, Big Difference

Many adults need about seven to nine hours of sleep.
But even a small change can help.
The World Health Organization says good sleep supports overall health and immunity.
One simple step is to turn off screens 30 minutes before bed and make the room dark and quiet.

Lina looks at her phone.
“Maybe I’ll sleep earlier tonight,” she says.
“Tomorrow, I want my brain to feel fresh again.”


Key Points

  • During sleep, the body repairs cells, resets hormones, and cleans the brain.
  • Good sleep helps energy, mood, and immune strength in daily life.

Words to Know

cell /sel/ (n) — the small basic part of all living things
hormone /ˈhɔːrmoʊn/ (n) — body chemical that controls functions like stress or hunger
stress /stres/ (n) — feeling pressure or worry in body or mind
hunger /ˈhʌŋɡər/ (n) — the feeling that you want or need to eat
deep sleep /ˌdiːp ˈsliːp/ (n) — heavy sleep when the body repairs itself
immune system /ɪˈmjuːn ˌsɪstəm/ (n) — body system that fights sickness
waste /weɪst/ (n) — things the body does not need and wants to remove
screen /skriːn/ (n) — the flat part of a phone, tablet, or computer you look at
mood /muːd/ (n) — how you feel emotionally at a time
repair /rɪˈper/ (n) — the act of fixing something damaged


📝 Practice Questions

A2 – True/False

  1. Lina feels slow at school because she slept only four hours.
  2. Health experts say the brain cleans itself during sleep.
  3. The World Health Organization says sleep is not important for immunity.

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. What difference do we see between Sara and Lina?
    A. Sara looks bright; Lina is very tired
    B. Both feel full of energy
    C. Both stayed awake all night

  2. According to the article, what happens during deep sleep?
    A. Only dreams happen, nothing else
    B. Cells repair damage and hormones reset
    C. The body stops working completely

  3. What is one small change the article suggests?
    A. Eating a big meal just before bed
    B. Turning off screens 30 minutes before sleep
    C. Drinking more coffee late at night

A2 – Short Answer

  1. What does Lina say happens to her brain when she is very tired?
  2. What are two things the body does at night while you sleep?
  3. Why does Lina decide to sleep earlier?

A2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

A2 – Multiple Choice

  1. A
  2. B
  3. B

A2 – Short Answer

  1. She says her brain feels slow and must read the same line again.
  2. It repairs cells and resets hormones / cleans the brain.
  3. She wants to feel less tired and have a fresh brain.

B1 Level

How night repair shapes stress, hunger, memory, and immune strength

Sleep: The Hidden System Protecting Your Day

How night repair shapes stress, hunger, memory, and immune strength

On Monday morning, Jisoo stares at her computer screen.
She drank strong coffee, but her mind still feels slow.
Last week was full of late-night emails, extra work, and streaming shows.
Now her hands shake a little, and small problems feel huge.

By Wednesday, she notices a pattern.
On nights with five hours of broken sleep, she is angry and hungry all day.
On nights with seven or eight hours, she feels calmer and can focus.
Something is clearly happening while she sleeps.

A Full-Body Night Shift

Sleep is not “doing nothing.”
It is a full-body system working in the background.

First, your cells repair damage from movement, exercise, and normal wear.
Muscles rebuild.
Tissues recover.
This is why deep sleep is important after a long day.

Next, hormones quietly reset.
Stress hormones like cortisol should go down at night.
Hunger hormones shift so you feel normal, not desperate, around food.
When you cut sleep, studies from Harvard medical researchers say these hormones become unbalanced.
You may feel anxious, crave sugar, and lose patience more easily.

Your brain also does cleanup.
It stores important memories and removes waste products.
Without enough sleep, this cleaning system is weaker.
You may forget simple things, react slowly while driving, or make poor decisions at work.

Finally, your immune system uses the night to build defense cells.
With good sleep, you are better able to fight viruses and recover from illness.

Protecting Your Sleep in a Busy Life

Modern life pushes us to work late and check messages at all hours.
But your body needs a clear message: “Now it is time to rest.”

You can start small:

  • Choose a regular sleep and wake time most days.
  • Dim lights and avoid bright screens 30–60 minutes before bed.
  • Keep your bedroom cool, dark, and quiet if possible.

You may not control every night.
But when you protect your sleep, you protect your stress levels, your appetite, your memory, and your long-term health.


Key Points

  • Sleep runs a full-body repair system for cells, hormones, brain, and immune health.
  • Lack of sleep pushes stress and hunger out of balance and weakens memory.
  • Regular sleep habits in busy modern life are a powerful health tool.

Words to Know

cortisol /ˈkɔːrtɪˌzɔːl/ (n) — a main stress hormone in the body
appetite /ˈæpɪˌtaɪt/ (n) — the feeling of wanting to eat
craving /ˈkreɪvɪŋ/ (n) — a strong desire, often for food like sugar
immune /ɪˈmjuːn/ (adj) — protected against disease
virus /ˈvaɪrəs/ (n) — tiny germ that can cause illness
tissue /ˈtɪʃuː/ (n) — group of cells in the body, like muscle or skin
balance /ˈbæl.əns/ (n) — a healthy, stable state between different things
recover /rɪˈkʌvər/ (v) — to get better after sickness or tiredness
routine /ruːˈtiːn/ (n) — a regular, repeated way of doing things
decision /dɪˈsɪʒən/ (n) — a choice you make after thinking
focus /ˈfoʊkəs/ (v) — to give full attention to one thing
anxious /ˈæŋkʃəs/ (adj) — feeling nervous or worried


📝 Practice Questions

B1 – True/False

  1. Jisoo notices that she feels calmer on nights with more sleep.
  2. Stress and hunger hormones can be affected by how much we sleep.
  3. The article says sleep has no effect on the immune system.

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. What pattern does Jisoo see in her own life?
    A. Less sleep makes her feel calmer and focused
    B. More sleep makes her angry and hungry
    C. Nights with more sleep help her focus better

  2. What do Harvard medical researchers say about cutting sleep?
    A. It keeps hormones perfectly balanced
    B. It can push hormones out of balance
    C. It stops all hormone activity

  3. Which of these is NOT a result of poor sleep mentioned in the article?
    A. Slower reaction while driving
    B. Clearer memory and faster learning
    C. Weaker immune defenses

B1 – Short Answer

  1. How does lack of sleep change stress and hunger during the day?
  2. What are two body systems that repair or reset during sleep?
  3. What is one small habit that can protect your sleep in a busy life?

B1 – True/False

  1. True
  2. True
  3. False

B1 – Multiple Choice

  1. C
  2. B
  3. B

B1 – Short Answer

  1. Stress and hunger become unbalanced; she feels anxious and very hungry.
  2. The hormone system and the immune system / cells and brain.
  3. Keeping a regular sleep time or reducing screens before bed.

B2 Level

Why deep rest is a personal habit and a global health issue

When a Tired City Forgets to Sleep

Why deep rest is a personal habit and a global health issue

In a busy global city, lights stay on all night.
Offices glow at 11 p.m., food delivery scooters move through the streets, and subway trains still carry tired workers home.
One of them, Daniel, scrolls through work messages on his phone in a crowded train.
He tells himself he is “fine” with five hours of sleep.
But his body quietly tells a different story.

The Body’s Night Economy: Hormones, Brain Cleanup, Immune Defense

Each day, normal life places stress on the body.
Cells get tiny injuries.
Hormones that manage stress, hunger, and mood swing up and down.
The brain collects waste products as it works.
Sleep is the nightly “economy” that pays these bills.

During deep sleep, repair teams inside your body get to work.
Cells in muscles and tissues rebuild themselves.
Hormones such as cortisol, melatonin, and those that manage appetite move back toward a healthy rhythm.
Sleep researchers like Matthew Walker at UC Berkeley describe how this timing keeps us calm during the day and ready for rest at night.

Meanwhile, the brain’s cleaning system becomes more active.
Fluid moves through brain tissue and washes away waste, a process described in journals like Science and Nature.
When sleep is too short or too shallow, more waste remains.
Over many years, this may raise the risk of serious brain problems.

Your immune system also depends on sleep.
At night, it builds and trains cells that fight viruses and repair damage.
OECD health reports warn that chronic sleep loss is linked with higher rates of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease in many countries.

A Culture That Steals Sleep

Daniel’s problem is not only personal.
In many modern societies, long work hours, late-night screens, and “always online” culture push people to cut sleep.
Companies may quietly reward those who answer messages at midnight.
Cities sell food, entertainment, and short-term comfort 24 hours a day.

But there is a cost.
Tired workers make more mistakes.
Drivers react more slowly.
Students cannot remember what they study.
Over time, health systems carry the burden of more chronic disease.

Global sleep research centers and public health groups now treat sleep like a basic pillar of health—next to diet, movement, and mental wellbeing.
They argue that protecting sleep is not only a private choice but also a public health priority.

Building a Healthier Rhythm

Change can start very small:

  • Setting a “digital sunset” time when screens go off.
  • Protecting a regular sleep window, even if it is shorter on some nights.
  • Supporting workplaces and schools that respect rest instead of celebrating exhaustion.

For Daniel, the turning point comes after a small accident: he misses a red light on his bike ride home.
Nothing bad happens, but he finally feels scared.
He begins to notice how his mood, focus, and patience improve after just two or three nights of better sleep.

Our bodies evolved to follow day and night cycles.
When a whole city—and a whole planet—forgets this, health slowly breaks down.
When we honor sleep again, we do more than feel less tired.
We protect our brains, our hormones, our immune systems, and our shared future.


Key Points

  • Sleep runs complex systems for cell repair, hormone balance, brain waste removal, and immune defense.
  • Modern “always on” culture steals sleep and raises long-term health risks at a population level.
  • Protecting sleep is both a personal habit and a public health priority in global society.

Words to Know

chronic /ˈkrɑːnɪk/ (adj) — lasting for a long time, not just a short period
rhythm /ˈrɪðəm/ (n) — regular pattern, like repeated times of sleep and wake
exhaustion /ɪɡˈzɔːstʃən/ (n) — extreme tiredness with very low energy
obesity /oʊˈbiːsəti/ (n) — very high body fat that harms health
diabetes /ˌdaɪəˈbiːtiːz/ (n) — disease where the body has trouble controlling blood sugar
heart disease /ˈhɑːrt dɪˌziːz/ (n) — serious problems with the heart and blood vessels
melatonin /ˌmeləˈtoʊnɪn/ (n) — hormone that helps control sleep and wake cycles
lifestyle /ˈlaɪfstaɪl/ (n) — the usual way a person lives, including habits and routines
wellbeing /ˈwelˌbiːɪŋ/ (n) — state of being healthy, happy, and safe
accident /ˈæksɪdənt/ (n) — sudden bad event that is not planned
pillar /ˈpɪlər/ (n) — a main, important support for something
population /ˌpɒpjəˈleɪʃən/ (n) — all the people living in a place
priority /praɪˈɔːrəti/ (n) — something important that should come first
burden /ˈbɜːrdn/ (n) — a heavy load or responsibility
evolve /ɪˈvɒlv/ (v) — to slowly develop over a long time


📝 Practice Questions

B2 – True/False

  1. Daniel believes he is fine with five hours of sleep, but his body shows problems.
  2. OECD health reports connect chronic sleep loss only with short-term bad moods.
  3. Global sleep researchers treat sleep as a basic pillar of health.

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. What is the “night economy” image used to describe?
    A. People shopping late at night
    B. The body paying its daily “bills” through repair during sleep
    C. Companies selling sleep products

  2. According to the article, what can long-term lack of sleep increase?
    A. Only the number of dreams people have
    B. Risks of obesity, diabetes, and heart disease
    C. The number of hours in a day

  3. Which social pattern is described as stealing sleep?
    A. Short workdays and quiet nights
    B. “Always online” culture and very long work hours
    C. Cities that turn off lights early

B2 – Short Answer

  1. How does the brain’s cleaning system change when sleep is too short or shallow?
  2. What costs can a tired society face in work, study, and health systems?
  3. What is one personal change and one social change that could protect sleep?

B2 – True/False

  1. True
  2. False
  3. True

B2 – Multiple Choice

  1. B
  2. B
  3. B

B2 – Short Answer

  1. It removes less waste, so more waste remains in brain tissue.
  2. More mistakes at work or while driving, weaker learning, and higher medical burdens.
  3. Personal: set a digital sunset or fixed sleep window. Social: support work or school rules that respect rest.